← Volver a Noticias

Etiquetas: trademark

Enciclopedia Britannica y Merriam-Webster demandan a OpenAI por presunta infracción de derechos de autor

Enciclopedia Britannica y Merriam-Webster demandan a OpenAI por presunta infracción de derechos de autor
Encyclopedia Britannica and its subsidiary Merriam-Webster have filed a lawsuit against OpenAI, accusing the company of massive copyright infringement for scraping nearly 100,000 of their online articles to train its large language models. The complaint alleges that ChatGPT reproduces Britannica content, reduces web traffic and revenue, and violates trademark law. The case joins a growing wave of legal actions by publishers against AI firms, highlighting unresolved questions about the legality of using copyrighted material for AI training. A prior Anthropic case showed mixed rulings, underscoring the uncertainty that will shape future AI‑content use. Leer más

Encyclopedia Britannica demanda a OpenAI por reclamos de derechos de autor y marca registrada

Encyclopedia Britannica demanda a OpenAI por reclamos de derechos de autor y marca registrada
Encyclopedia Britannica has filed a lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging that the AI company infringed its copyright and trademark by using Britannica's protected content to train its models and by presenting verbatim excerpts in ChatGPT responses. The complaint also accuses OpenAI of attributing fabricated or "hallucinated" content to Britannica. OpenAI responded that its models are trained on publicly available data and operate under fair use. The case adds to a growing series of legal challenges faced by AI developers over the use of copyrighted material. Leer más

Enciclopedia Britannica y Merriam-Webster demandan a OpenAI por contenido generado por IA

Enciclopedia Britannica y Merriam-Webster demandan a OpenAI por contenido generado por IA
Encyclopedia Britannica and its subsidiary Merriam‑Webster have filed a copyright and trademark lawsuit against OpenAI in the Southern District of New York. The complaint alleges that OpenAI used thousands of the publishers’ articles as training data for ChatGPT and then generated responses that reproduce the content without permission, harming the publishers’ revenue and brand reputation. The case mirrors a prior suit against Perplexity and may be consolidated into a larger multidistrict litigation involving other news publishers. Leer más

La Corte Suprema se niega a escuchar el caso de derechos de autor de arte generado por IA

La Corte Suprema se niega a escuchar el caso de derechos de autor de arte generado por IA
The U.S. Supreme Court refused to review a lawsuit brought by computer scientist Stephen Thaler seeking copyright protection for an artwork produced by his own artificial‑intelligence system. The denial leaves in place lower‑court rulings that rejected Thaler’s claim, reinforcing the Copyright Office’s stance that works must be created by a human author to qualify for protection. The decision also underscores similar rejections of Thaler’s AI‑generated patent and trademark applications, highlighting ongoing legal challenges for creators using machine‑learning tools. Leer más

Tribunal Bloquea el Uso de 'Cameo' por OpenAI en la Herramienta de Video Sora

Tribunal Bloquea el Uso de 'Cameo' por OpenAI en la Herramienta de Video Sora
Cameo, the platform that lets celebrities sell short personalized videos, secured a preliminary victory in its trademark lawsuit against OpenAI. A California judge ruled that OpenAI’s Sora video‑generation feature cannot use the term “Cameo” or any confusingly similar variation. The decision includes a preliminary injunction that halts the use of the name, marking another notable intellectual‑property clash as AI companies expand video‑creation capabilities. Leer más

Asistente de IA OpenClaw sobrevive disputa de marca registrada, estafas y escrutinio de seguridad

Asistente de IA OpenClaw sobrevive disputa de marca registrada, estafas y escrutinio de seguridad
OpenClaw, formerly known as Clawdbot and Moltbot, is an open‑source AI assistant that integrates directly into messaging apps to automate tasks, remember conversations, and send proactive reminders. After a rapid rise in popularity, the project faced a trademark challenge from Anthropic, a wave of crypto‑related scams, and several security concerns tied to exposed deployments. Despite these setbacks, the developer has rebranded the tool as OpenClaw, addressed many of the vulnerabilities, and continues to attract interest from developers and early adopters who see it as a glimpse of what a truly personal AI assistant could become. Leer más

El repentino ascenso y la rebrandización caótica de Moltbot desencadena una fiebre por asistentes de IA

El repentino ascenso y la rebrandización caótica de Moltbot desencadena una fiebre por asistentes de IA
Moltbot, the open‑source AI assistant formerly known as Clawdbot, exploded in popularity after a rapid rebrand prompted by a trademark warning from Anthropic. The name change triggered a wave of opportunistic scams, fake cryptocurrency tokens, and social‑media handle hijackings. Despite the turmoil, Moltbot’s promise of a locally run, customizable digital assistant that integrates with messaging platforms such as WhatsApp, Telegram, Discord, iMessage, and Slack has captured the imagination of developers and AI enthusiasts, positioning it as a early example of personal AI automation. Leer más

Tribunal Bloquea el Uso de la Marca "Cameo" de OpenAI en la Aplicación Sora

Tribunal Bloquea el Uso de la Marca "Cameo" de OpenAI en la Aplicación Sora
OpenAI’s social app Sora, which introduced a deep‑fake feature called “Cameo,” faces a temporary restraining order from U.S. District Judge Eumi K. Lee. The order bars OpenAI from using the word “Cameo” and similar terms, after the video‑message platform Cameo asserted its trademark rights. The injunction, issued in November 2025, remains in effect pending a hearing in December, and OpenAI disputes the claim, saying it does not own exclusive rights to the term. Leer más

Las solicitudes de marca de Neuralink para "Telepatía" y "Telequinesis" enfrentan rechazo de la USPTO

Las solicitudes de marca de Neuralink para "Telepatía" y "Telequinesis" enfrentan rechazo de la USPTO
Elon Musk’s Neuralink filed trademark applications for its brain‑computer interface products named Telepathy and Telekinesis. The United States Patent and Trademark Office declined to move the filings forward, citing earlier “intent‑to‑use” applications by computer scientist Wesley Berry and an existing Telepathy Labs trademark. Neuralink has responded to the USPTO’s concerns, but the agency will still need to assess the likelihood of consumer confusion. If Berry’s applications mature into registered marks, Neuralink could be forced to negotiate a purchase, a consent agreement, or face potential infringement action. Leer más