A battle between the makers of artificial intelligence chatbots and publishers of online content is brewing. Publishers say they should be compensated by companies like Microsoft, Google and OpenAI for using their material to train chatbots.
WSJ reporter Keach Hagey joins host Zoe Thomas to discuss each side of the argument.
Photo: John Minchillo/Associated Press
0:00 Why online publishers are upset
1:50 How are publishers protecting their data from AI training models?
3:23 What companies like Microsoft and Google are saying about publishers' concerns
6:00 Do publishers actually have any recourse for compensation?
Tech News Briefing
WSJ’s tech podcast featuring breaking news, scoops and tips on tech innovations and policy debates, plus exclusive interviews with movers and shakers in the industry.
For more episodes of WSJ’s Tech News Briefing: https://link.chtbl.com/WSJTechNewsBriefing
#AI #Publisher #WSJ
WSJ reporter Keach Hagey joins host Zoe Thomas to discuss each side of the argument.
Photo: John Minchillo/Associated Press
0:00 Why online publishers are upset
1:50 How are publishers protecting their data from AI training models?
3:23 What companies like Microsoft and Google are saying about publishers' concerns
6:00 Do publishers actually have any recourse for compensation?
Tech News Briefing
WSJ’s tech podcast featuring breaking news, scoops and tips on tech innovations and policy debates, plus exclusive interviews with movers and shakers in the industry.
For more episodes of WSJ’s Tech News Briefing: https://link.chtbl.com/WSJTechNewsBriefing
#AI #Publisher #WSJ
- Category
- Television
- Tags
- online publishers, ai chatbot, ai
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