Openai and Google wa the US governme to exempt them to teach their artificial ielligence models with copyright coe. These companies argue that in order to keep the United States a leader in the field of artificial ielligence, they need to have more educational data.
According to Varge, Openai and Google have pressured the US governme to allow them to teach their artificial ielligence models with copyright coe. Both companies say “fair use” of data to teach artificial ielligence is the “issue of national security”. According to the law of fair use, artificial ielligence companies are allowed to use the owner’s coe without permission. Publishers, of course, have stopped this use.
Tutorials on Google and OpenAI without copyright barrier
Earlier, the US governme had called on industrial groups, private sector organizations and others to comme on US Preside AI Action Plan. The program was to be a US position in the field of artificial ielligence than other couries.

Openai also claims in its remarks that allowing artificial ielligence companies to access copyright coe helps the United States maiain its leadership in artificial ielligence. Openai says:
“There is no doubt that Chinese artificial ielligence developers will enjoy unlimited access to data – including copyright data – which improves their models. “If the developers of the People’s Republic of China have unlimited access to data and US companies remain without fair access, the competition for artificial ielligence is practically over.”
Google has similar opinions. Copyright, privacy and pate policies “can disrupt access to the data needed to train leading models.” The company claims that the policies of fair use are “critical” with exception to data mining aimed at training advanced artificial ielligence.
Ahropoc has also made a proposal to the governme but did not meion copyright material. The company calls on the US governme to create a system to evaluate the dangers of national security models of artificial ielligence and enhance export corols on artificial ielligence chips. Like Google and Openai, ahropic also suggests that the United States should strengthen its energy infrastructure to support artificial ielligence growth.



