serious for real AI

Wall Street Journal owner News Corp struck a major content-licensing pact with generative artificial-intelligence company OpenAI, aiming to cash in on a technology that promises to have a profound impact on the news-publishing industry.

The deal could be worth more than $250 million over five years, including compensation in the form of cash and credits for use of OpenAI technology, according to people familiar with the situation. The deal lets OpenAI use content from News Corp’s consumer-facing news publications, including archives, to answer users’ queries and train its technology.

“The pact acknowledges that there is a premium for premium journalism,” News Corp Chief Executive Robert Thomson said in a memo to employees Wednesday. “The digital age has been characterized by the dominance of distributors, often at the expense of creators, and many media companies have been swept away by a remorseless technological tide. The onus is now on us to make the most of this providential opportunity.”

Publishers are seeking to ensure that they extract a hefty payment for the use of their intellectual property, setting up complex and sometimes tense negotiations across the industry. Many journalists, meanwhile, are concerned about the impact of AI on jobs in newsrooms whose ranks have already been thinned by years of cuts.

The News Corp-OpenAI deal is the latest illustration of the differing approaches adopted by publishers looking to address the rise of generative AI.

News Corp joins a growing list of publishers that have reached commercial partnerships with OpenAI, including Politico and Business Insider parent Axel Springer, the Associated Press, Le Monde, the Financial Times and IAC’s Dotdash Meredith, home of such publications as People and Better Homes & Gardens.

Other publishers, including the New York Times, have opted to battle OpenAI and its backer Microsoft in court, saying their content was used without permission to train artificial-intelligence tools and populate answers for users. OpenAI has said the lawsuit is without merit.

News Corp’s deal guarantees that content won’t become available on ChatGPT immediately after publication, according to a person familiar with the agreement.

In addition to providing content, News Corp will share journalistic expertise with OpenAI, the companies said.

https://www.wsj.com/business/media/openai-news-corp-strike-deal-23f186ba?mod=hp_lead_pos3

interesting deal
 
AI is already causing issues because cops are incompetent, A woman recently spent 6 months in jail because they relied 100% on the AI. She lives in TN and the crime happened in North Dakota. 1200 miles away. Any actual investigation would show she had never been to ND and had store purchases in TN at the times of the crimes. Yet they arrested her. Took her 1200 miles from home having nothing but AI facial recognition. They didnt even investigate while she was in jail. Her public defender had to do the investigation for them. Then after proving her innocence they realised her in the middle of winter with no money, phone, or any way to get home. Thats straight up attempted murder in my opinion. The public defenders pooled their own money to help her so she wouldnt die on the streets.
 
We are on the verge of fans being able to produce their own version of movies and entertainment. What will happen is people will use Hollywoods shitty version as a base to make what fans actually want to see. Then Hollywood will sue them because people wont want to see their version. People will ask why dont you just hire the people who make quality shit. to which they will say "fuck you, you will consume our shitty content or none at all." The politicians will be all for shutting it down after bribes/donations despite 90% of voters not supporting it. Then they will come right out and say the quiet part out loud. That you must consume their version because you are a bigot who needs to be educated by them.


Soon people will be able to make their own version of WWE with Hogan, Austin, and any other wrestler. Thats where the first big controversy will come from.
 
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