Key Takeaways
- OpenAI is fighting a court order to hand over 20 million ChatGPT user conversations
- The company argues this would violate user privacy and most chats are irrelevant to the copyright case
- The New York Times claims the logs are essential to prove copyright infringement
OpenAI Resists Court Order Over ChatGPT Conversations
OpenAI has asked a federal judge to reverse an order requiring the company to turn over 20 million anonymized ChatGPT chat logs in a copyright infringement lawsuit filed by The New York Times and other news outlets. The AI firm contends this would expose users’ private conversations and violate confidentiality.
The company stated that “99.99%” of the chat transcripts have no connection to the copyright allegations. In a court filing, OpenAI warned: “Anyone in the world who has used ChatGPT in the past three years must now face the possibility that their personal conversations will be handed over to The Times to sift through at will.”
News Outlets’ Position
The media organizations argue the chat logs are essential to determine if ChatGPT reproduced their copyrighted content. They also need the data to counter OpenAI’s claim that they “hacked” the chatbot’s responses to create evidence. The lawsuit alleges OpenAI misused news articles to train ChatGPT.
Court’s Privacy Assurance
Magistrate Judge Ona Wang stated user privacy would be protected through “exhaustive de-identification” and other safeguards. OpenAI faces a Friday deadline to produce the transcripts unless the order is reversed.
Conflicting Statements
OpenAI’s Chief Information Security Officer Dane Stuckey called the demand a privacy violation that would force them to “turn over tens of millions of highly personal conversations from people who have no connection to the Times’ baseless lawsuit.”
A New York Times spokesperson countered that OpenAI’s statement “purposely misleads its users and omits the facts,” clarifying that the court only ordered “a sample of chats, anonymized by OpenAI itself, under a legal protective order.”
This case joins numerous pending lawsuits against tech companies over alleged misuse of copyrighted material to train AI systems.



