OpenAI's 'difficulties' started increasing

Ever since OpenAI introduced ChatGPT to the world, OpenAI has been in the headlines. But now it seems that the company is in trouble. Earlier in India, a news agency had filed a lawsuit against OpenAI, but now a new twist is being seen in the copyright case.
The troubles of OpenAI, the company that created ChatGPT, are not stopping, some time ago a news agency filed a copyright case against OpenAI in the High Court. This matter was not yet resolved when a new twist came in this case when Indian Book Publishers filed a copyright case against OpenAI in Delhi.
Not only in India, the company is also sued in America
A representative of Indian Book Publishers said that the ChatGPT chatbot uses content without permission, so a lawsuit has been filed to prevent ChatGPT from accessing the content. In courts around the world, news outlets, authors and musicians have accused OpenAI of using copyrighted content. Along with this, there is a demand to remove copyrighted content from OpenAI's platform.
The New Delhi-based Federation of Indian Publishers has informed Reuters that they have filed a case in the Delhi High Court, where a copyright case is already being heard against OpenAI.
Who all have filed a case against OpenAI?
The case has been filed by all the members of the Federation, including publishers like Bloomsbury, Cambridge University Press, Penguin Random House and Pan Macmillan, as well as Rupa Publications and S. Chand & Co. of India. Before these publishers, a news agency has also filed a copyright case against OpenAI.
What does OpenAI have to say?
Reacting to the ANI case, OpenAI says that the company is already facing such a lawsuit in the US and according to the laws in the US, the data has to be preserved as long as the case is going on. Not only this, OpenAI even says that OpenAI does not have any office in India, it does not work in India, even our servers are not in India.