New York Times seeks to amend copyright complaint against Microsoft

The New York Times has asked a court for permission to update its copyright lawsuit against OpenAI and Microsoft. The move follows a Supreme Court ruling that raised the bar for proving contributory infringement claims.

In a motion filed Thursday, the newspaper wants to strengthen its allegation that Microsoft contributed to copyright infringement by building a powerful supercomputer specifically for OpenAI. The filing comes after the Supreme Court sided with Cox Communications in a Sony case, requiring plaintiffs to show intentional inducement of illegal conduct.

Graham James, an NYT spokesperson, said the amendment clarifies the contributory infringement claim based on new law and discovery evidence. The Times also agreed to drop two other claims against the defendants.

Microsoft described the effort as a last-ditch attempt to salvage the case after unfavorable precedents. The newspaper alleges the supercomputer was designed to train models on its copyrighted articles without permission and helped boost Microsoft’s market value.

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Illustration of a federal jury dismissing Elon Musk's lawsuit against OpenAI in court.
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Jury dismisses Musk lawsuit against OpenAI as untimely

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A federal jury ruled Monday that Elon Musk waited too long to sue OpenAI and its leaders. The decision ended the high-profile case after three weeks of testimony.

Elon Musk's X has invoked a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision to argue that music publishers' copyright infringement claims against it should be dismissed. The platform contends the ruling rejects the theory of contributory liability alleged in the suit. Publishers disagree but agreed to pause discovery while briefing the issue.

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Five major book publishers and author Scott Turow filed a class action lawsuit against Meta and CEO Mark Zuckerberg in a US District Court in New York. They accuse the company of illegally using millions of copyrighted works to train its Llama AI models. Meta defends the practice as fair use.

A federal judge has reprimanded and fined four lawyers in a Mississippi dispute over solar project fees after they submitted filings with AI-generated citations to nonexistent cases.

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In a follow-up to its landmark Cox decision, the US Supreme Court has vacated a lower court ruling holding internet service provider Grande Communications liable for subscribers' copyright infringement and remanded it for reconsideration. The order, issued Monday, reinforces that ISPs face contributory liability only if they intend infringement, potentially benefiting other providers like Verizon.

OpenAI plans to release its upcoming ChatGPT 5.6 model first only to customers approved by the US federal government. The staggered rollout follows a recent executive order on voluntary AI model reviews.

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OpenAI has asked a federal court to allow testimony about a threatening message Elon Musk sent to company president Greg Brockman just before the Musk v. Altman trial began. In the exchange, Musk warned that Brockman and CEO Sam Altman would become 'the most hated men in America' if they rejected a settlement. The move could reveal Musk's motives in the ongoing litigation.

 

 

 

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