Alec Radford, a researcher who helped openai develop important AI technologies, has been summoned in a copyright case against AI startups. According to court filings Tuesday.
The plaintiff’s attorney’s filing in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California showed that Radford served as a subpoena on February 25th.
Radford, who left Openai late last year to pursue independent research, was the lead author of an inventive research paper on Openai’s Generation Pretraining Transformer (GPTS). GPTS supports Openai’s most popular products, including ChatGpt, the company’s AI-powered chatbot platform.
Radford joined Openai in 2016, a year after the company was founded. He worked on several models from the company’s GPT series, as well as Whisper, a speech recognition model, and Dall-E, a company’s image generation model.
The copyright case, “Re Openai Chatgpt Litigation,” was brought to by book authors such as Paul Tremblay, Sarah Silverman, and Michael Chabon. The plaintiffs also alleged that ChatGpt infringed their works by citing their belongings freely.
Last year, the court dismissed two of the plaintiffs’ claims against Openai, but allowed direct infringement claims to move forward. Openai maintains the use of copyrighted data for training. Fair use.
Redford is not the only famous person the author’s lawyer is trying to obsess with. The plaintiff’s lawyers moved to force the deposition of former Openi employees Dario Amodei and Benjamin Mann, who left the company to start humanity. Amodei and Mann have fought the move, claiming they are overburdened.
US Magistrate I controlled this week That amodei has to spend hours asking questions about the work he did for Openai in two copyright cases, including cases submitted by the Author Guild.