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OpenAI Signs Deal With The Atlantic, Vox Media for Content, Product Collaborations

CIO Insider Team | Thursday, 30 May, 2024
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For content and product collaborations, OpenAI shook hands with The Atlantic and Vox Media have inked content and product collaborations with OpenAI, to assist the artificial intelligence company enhance and train its offerings.

OpenAI is known for having joined forces with numerous similar deals and now it has the key to the news content of The Atlantic and Vox Media's.

It is believed that these collaborations are not only vital for AI model training but profitable for news houses, who were excluded from a portion of the revenue generated by internet companies when they distribute their material.

Last week, OpenAI signed a deal with News Corp., the media powerhouse that owns the Wall Street Journal.

Further, OpenAI has the aid from The Verge and Vulture’s parent company, Vox Media in creating solutions for its customers and advertising partners.

Vox Media is said to have stated that OpenAI will be allowed access to its archives to help the Microsoft-backed business in improving its technology and the output of its popular chatbot,ChatGPT.

Another agreement allowing OpenAI to access to the publisher's content was also announced separately by The Atlantic.

OpenAI is known for having joined forces with numerous similar deals and now it has the key to the news content of The Atlantic and Vox Media's.

According to The Atlantic, OpenAI's technology will be piloted on an "experimental microsite, called Atlantic Labs," which will assist the media company investigate how AI may spur the creation of new features and products.

To assist news publishers in accelerating their deployment of AI, OpenAI and the World Association of News Publishers (WAN-IFRA) inked a separate agreement.

"There's a lot of fear in the media industry about partnering with tech platforms. But I'm absolutely convinced these deals can be beneficial if we've learned the right rules, structure them the right way, and hedge our bets," The Atlantic's CEO Nicholas Thompson said in a LinkedIn post.



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