New Judge’s decision makes Openai hold a list of all your chatgpt -chats one step closer to reality


  • A federal judge rejected a chatgpt -user’s petition against her order that Openai preserves all chatgpt -chats
  • The order followed a request from the New York Times as part of its trial against Openai and Microsoft
  • Openai is planning to continue arguing against the order

Openai holds on to all your conversations with chatgpt and possibly sharing them with a lot of lawyers, including those you thought you’ve deleted. It is the result of an order from the federal judge who oversees a trial brought against the Openai of New York Times over copyright infringement. Judge Ona Wang maintained his previous order to preserve all chatta -conversations for evidence after rejecting a proposal from Chatgpt -User Aidan Hunt, one of several from Chatgpt users asking her to resign from the order of privacy and other concerns.

Judge Wang told Openai that “indefinitely” preserve Chatgpt’s output since Times Pointed out that it would be a way to tell if the chatbot has illegally recreated articles without paying the original publishers. But finding these examples means hanging on any intimate, awkward or just private communication that someone had with the chatbot. Although what users write is not part of the order, it is not hard to imagine to prepare who was talking to chat about what personal topic based on what AI wrote. In fact, the more personal discussion, the easier it would be to identify the user.

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