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The federal judge upheld the ruling directing Openai to keep logs and data scheduled for removal after suing the tech giant after a news outlet that includes the Daily News.
The new ruling issued Thursday in Manhattan federal court denied the company’s objection to an earlier court order directing OpenAI to maintain the data used by OpenAI to train artificial intelligence bots.
Openai executives claim that they are simply protecting users’ privacy by opposing data retention requests or orders.
However, the plaintiff’s lawyer said the privacy debate was nothing more than a distraction.
“It’s like a magician who tries to misdirect the public’s attention,” said Stephen Lieberman, a lawyer representing the news and several other media outlets.
“That’s absolutely wrong. The judge has made it clear that the plaintiff doesn’t want to receive information that personally identifies users of these conversations. If data is handed over, it will only be handed over anonymously.”
A key discussion of publishers at the heart of their lawsuit is that the data that bolsters the company’s popular ChatGPT includes millions of copyrighted works from news organizations.
The publication claims that such content is being used without consent or payment. This leads to large-scale copyright infringement.
Various reports have put the company in value of $300 billion, making it one of the most valuable private companies in the world thanks to ChatGPT, an online chat box released in 2022.
But when it comes to ingredients (the ingredients that redistributed creative content), Openi took a cheap and easy way, Lieberman said.
“They just stole it from the authors of newspapers, magazines and books,” he said.
A representative from Openai did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Openai claims that the vast amount of data used to train artificial intelligence bots is protected by “fair use” rules. Doctrine applies to rules that allow copyrighted work to be used for purposes such as criticism, commentary, news reporting, education, research, and more.
However, newspaper lawyers argue that fair use tests involve converting copyrighted works into new ones, and that new works cannot compete with the original in the same market.
The court rejected Openai’s position that the newspapers were not creating “snippets of evidence” that people are using ChatGpt or Openai’s API products to get news instead of paying for it.
The New York Times originally filed a lawsuit in December 2023. The news filed a lawsuit along with other newspapers from its affiliate Medianews Group and Tribune Publishing, filed in April 2024.
Other outlets included Mercury News, the Denver Post, the Orange County Register, St. Paul Pioneer Press, Tribune Publishing’s Chicago Tribune, the Orlando Sentinel and the South Florida Sun Sentinel.
2025 New York Daily News. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
Citation: Federal judges refuse to maintain data deletion in newspaper copyright lawsuits (June 30, 2025). From July 1, 2025 https://techxplore.com/news/2025-06-federal-denies-openai-deleting-newpaper.html
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