OpenAI loses privacy fight for ChatGPT message logs in NYT lawsuit

OpenAI is on the verge of losing its fight to keep their users' chat logs private, instead of turning them over to the NYT.
Your logs belongs belong to us, the NYT lawyers say, and the court agrees. (Picture: Adobe)
OpenAI has been fighting tooth and nail to preserve the privacy of their users’ messages in the lawsuit brought by The New York Times in 2023.

A new judgement could now mean they have to turn over more than 20 million chat logs, and many more messages, from the chatbot, reports Reuters.

The logs themselves should be anonymized by OpenAI in a way that pleases the court, but their content could be easy to pin down, and OpenAI has promised to appeal to the presiding Judge.

This is merely the discovery phase of the ongoing trial, where lawyers for the NYT have said the messages are necessary to discover whether ChatGPT did indeed copy verbatim text from them.

OpenAI must now first anonymize the logs, and then submit them to the court, and NYT’s attorneys, seven days later.

Read more: Reuters has the scoop.

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