The Sun (Malaysia)

Financial Times enters into ChatGPT content deal

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SAN FRANCISCO: The Financial Times on Monday entered into a partnershi­p deal with ChatGPT creator OpenAI that will integrate the news outlet’s journalism into its chatbot.

The deal allows select attributed summaries, quotes and links from the FT’s reporting to appear in ChatGPT responses to relevant queries.

“This is an important agreement ... that recognises the value of our award-winning journalism and will give us early insights into how content is surfaced through AI,” said FT group CEO John Ridding.

The partnershi­p follows a series of recent content licensing agreements struck by OpenAI as it aims to enrich ChatGPT’s knowledge base with trustworth­y sources.

In the past few months, The Associated Press, Germany’s Axel Springer, French daily Le Monde and Spanish conglomera­te Prisa Media have also entered content deals with OpenAI.

Microsoft-backed OpenAI has been actively courting media companies as scrutiny increases around allegation­s of AI’s violation of copyright agreements and the technology’s potential for spreading misinforma­tion.

Talks toward a similar content sharing deal with the New York Times broke down, and the US news giant in December sued OpenAI in a US federal court.

The Times accused OpenAI of reproducin­g and repackagin­g portions of its exclusive reporting and articles when training the underlying language models powering ChatGPT.

OpenAI has strongly pushed back, arguing the use of publicly available data including news articles for general training purposes constitute­s fair use.

The lawsuit underscore­s simmering legal tensions between tech companies building large language models and financiall­y hard-hit news publishers fiercely protective of intellectu­al property.

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