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Another publisher to sign the license agreement

The Guardian has become the latest news publisher to sign a deal with the owner of Chatgpt Openai on the license of content.

The deal will guarantee that the guardian receive compensation for using his journalist on ChatGPT and gets credit correctly on the platform. Under the deal, the guardian will also be able to use Openai Technology in-House.

The publisher said: “The Guardian Media Group Group today announced a strategic partnership with Openai, the leading company in artificial intelligence and publishing, that would bring the high -quality Guardian press to global ChatGPT users,” the publisher said.

“Under the partnership, the Guardian reports and archive press will be available as a news source inside Chatgpt, as well as publishing the short summaries attributed and articles.

“In addition, Guardian will also launch Chatgpt Enterprise to develop new products, features and tools.”

This announcement comes a year after the publication of the Guardian Approach to artificial intelligence Who said: “It will be a guidance principle of tools and models that we consider to use is the degree they looked at in major issues such as permission, transparency and fair reward.”

“This new partnership with OpenAI is intellectual property rights and the value associated with award -winning press, expanding our arrival and impact on the new masses and innovative platform services,” said Keith Anderwood, head of financial guardian and operations.

“Our partnership with Guardian Media Group is strengthening our goal of supporting the global level press and enriching the ChatGPT experience by providing access to the relevant news content. It is part of our comprehensive strategy to help publishers and masses on Take advantage of advanced artificial intelligence technology.

The move comes after joining legal action submitted on February 13 against Coher Coher Coher Cohere Canadian, which was accused of “participating in unauthorized use on a wide range of the content of the publisher in developing and operating the Wooily IQ.”

Chatgpt is already using the trustee press in its results and does not always include links.

For example, the Chatgpt question is asking the following question: “Summarizing today’s news from The Guardian” resulting in a summary of a 260 -word bullet of the main stories with no link to the address.

A claim asks: “What is the row of copyright that includes James Bond and the developer of real estate in Dubai?” Results in a summary of 140 words for the exclusive news report of Guardian with the link of the small guardian below.

The Guardian joins the likes of FT, Axel Springer, Hearst and News Corp who also signed the content licensing deals with Openai.

Other publishers deals include AI Reuters (with Meta) and DMG Media (with prorta.ai).

Mumsnet, The Intercept, and New York Times are among the publishers who sue Openai after using its content without permission to train its great language model.

Press Gazette collected a comprehensive summary of the AI ​​and litigation deals.

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