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New judge’s ruling makes OpenAI keeping a record of all your ChatGPT chats one step closer to reality

by admin June 25, 2025



  • A federal judge rejected a ChatGPT user’s petition against her order that OpenAI preserve all ChatGPT chats
  • The order followed a request by The New York Times as part of its lawsuit against OpenAI and Microsoft
  • OpenAI plans to continue arguing against the ruling

OpenAI will be holding onto all of your conversations with ChatGPT and possibly sharing them with a lot of lawyers, even the ones you thought you deleted. That’s the upshot of an order from the federal judge overseeing a lawsuit brought against OpenAI by The New York Times over copyright infringement. Judge Ona Wang upheld her earlier order to preserve all ChatGPT conversations for evidence after rejecting a motion by ChatGPT user Aidan Hunt, one of several from ChatGPT users asking her to rescind the order over privacy and other concerns.

Judge Wang told OpenAI to “indefinitely” preserve ChatGPT’s outputs since the Times pointed out that would be a way to tell if the chatbot has illegally recreated articles without paying the original publishers. But finding those examples means hanging onto every intimate, awkward, or just private communication anyone’s had with the chatbot. Though what users write isn’t part of the order, it’s not hard to imagine working out who was conversing with ChatGPT about what personal topic based on what the AI wrote. In fact, the more personal the discussion, the easier it would probably be to identify the user.

Hunt pointed out that he had no warning that this might happen until he saw a report about the order in an online forum. and is now concerned that his conversations with ChatGPT might be disseminated, including “highly sensitive personal and commercial information.” He asked the judge to vacate the order or modify it to leave out especially private content, like conversations conducted in private mode, or when there are medical or legal matters discussed.


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According to Hunt, the judge was overstepping her bounds with the order because “this case involves important, novel constitutional questions about the privacy rights incident to artificial intelligence usage – a rapidly developing area of law – and the ability of a magistrate [judge] to institute a nationwide mass surveillance program by means of a discovery order in a civil case.”

Judge Wang rejected his request because they aren’t related to the copyright issue at hand. She emphasized that it’s about preservation, not disclosure, and that it’s hardly unique or uncommon for the courts to tell a private company to hold onto certain records for litigation. That’s technically correct, but, understandably, an everyday person using ChatGPT might not feel that way.

She also seemed to particularly dislike the mass surveillance accusation, quoting that section of Hunt’s petition and slamming it with the legal language equivalent of a diss track. Judge Wang added a “[sic]” to the quote from Hunt’s filing and a footnote pointing out that the petition “does not explain how a court’s document retention order that directs the preservation, segregation, and retention of certain privately held data by a private company for the limited purposes of litigation is, or could be, a “nationwide mass surveillance program.” It is not. The judiciary is not a law enforcement agency.”

That ‘sic burn’ aside, there’s still a chance the order will be rescinded or modified after OpenAI goes to court this week to push back against it as part of the larger paperwork battle around the lawsuit.

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Deleted but not gone

Hunt’s other concern is that, regardless of how this case goes, OpenAI will now have the ability to retain chats that users believed were deleted and could use them in the future. There are concerns over whether OpenAI will lean into protecting user privacy over legal expedience. OpenAI has so far argued in favor of that privacy and has asked the court for oral arguments to challenge the retention order that will take place this week. The company has said it wants to push back hard on behalf of its users. But in the meantime, your chat logs are in limbo.

Many may have felt that writing into ChatGPT is like talking to a friend who can keep a secret. Perhaps more will now understand that it still acts like a computer program, and the equivalent of your browser history and Google search terms are still in there. At the very least, hopefully, there will be more transparency. Even if it’s the courts demanding that AI companies retain sensitive data, users should be notified by the companies. We shouldn’t discover it by chance on a web forum.

And if OpenAI really wants to protect its users, it could start offering more granular controls: clear toggles for anonymous mode, stronger deletion guarantees, and alerts when conversations are being preserved for legal reasons. Until then, it might be wise to treat ChatGPT a bit less like a therapist and a bit more like a coworker who might be wearing a wire.

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June 25, 2025 0 comments
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Is the French Open the last time we'll see line judges at a Grand Slam?
Esports

Is the French Open the last time we’ll see line judges at a Grand Slam?

by admin May 28, 2025


  • Tom HamiltonMay 27, 2025, 04:12 PM ET

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      • Joined ESPN in 2011
      • Covered two Olympics, a pair of Rugby World Cups and two British & Irish Lions tours
      • Previously rugby editor, and became senior writer in 2018

PARIS — Welcome to the last stand of the line judges. They are a dying breed in tennis, but at the French Open, the organizers are hoping to hold back the inevitable tide of electronic line calling (ELC) for as long as possible.

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In almost every match here at Roland Garros, there will be a disputed point. The process is the same. The call is made, the player protests, the umpire gets down from their lofty perch, the player highlights the mark with their racket, and the umpire makes the call. It’s theater — and sometimes leads to an overturned call. Mirra Andreeva had one late in her first-round match with Cristina Bucsa on Tuesday, and turned, exasperated, to her box when her pleas for a call to be overturned were ignored.

This year, Wimbledon will adopt electronic line calling. The line judges will no longer be there, hunched over in between points, bellowing guttural noises when a ball swings wide of the line. The Australian Open ushered in this technology in 2021, and the US Open followed suit in 2022. That leaves the French Open as the last to have this human touch.

Roland Garros organizers have indicated they’ll continue to use people until the players demand electronic line judging. Julian Finney/Getty Images

Some tournaments on clay have adopted ELC and had early problems. There have been calls where technology and the human eye have not matched. In Madrid, Alexander Zverev took a photo of a shot from Alejandro Davidovich Fokina that he deemed to have been out, but the ELC called in.

“I will talk to the supervisors, I will talk to the ATP because, as I said, this is not normal,” Zverev said afterwards. “For a mistake to happen like this, yes, one or two millimeters I understand, but four, five centimeters is not normal.” Afterwards, the ATP even moved to clarify a Tennis TV post about this — pointing to how ball marks on clay can be hard to read, given it is a dynamic surface.

Another look at the call 🧐 https://t.co/t0HHsl3YjC pic.twitter.com/lxdNuaqg6T

— Tennis TV (@TennisTV) April 27, 2025

There’s plenty of controversy in tournaments still using the human touch, too. Elsewhere, Aryna Sabalenka took a photograph of a call in Stuttgart during her quarterfinal against Elise Mertens. This was on a shot she felt was in but had been called out.

“Yeah, it was definitely in,” she said afterwards. “I understand. I mean, everyone can make mistakes, and I’m not the one who is going to be complaining with the referee … [but] if you make the mistake, I think you have to have guts to admit it and make a call.”

All the while, tournament organizers and the game’s stakeholders are creating educational videos showing why the human eye can be deceived by the mark left by the bounce and trajectory of a ball on clay. “I think it needs a little bit of adjustment,” Casper Ruud said. “I think there was a pretty bad error in the Zverev match in Madrid. I’ve seen some others. I thought the tutorial video that the ATP posted was [well] explained.”

2025 French Open Women’s Odds

While the calls for ELC keep getting stronger, Roland Garros pushes back. Gilles Moretton, the president of the FFT, says the French Open will maintain human line judges for as long as possible. “Regarding what happened in Madrid and what happened in Rome, the system … seems to be not perfect,” Morreton said. Morreton also talked about how important the line judges are as ambassadors of the sport.

“I think we are right to keep our referees and line judges at Roland Garros,” Morreton added. “For Roland Garros, we want to keep our linesmen as long as the players agree with that.”

Then came the qualification: “Unless the players are unanimous and come to us and say, ‘We won’t play if there isn’t a machine’ … then I think we’ve got a great future ahead of us to maintain this style of refereeing.”

But the noise from the players is growing. Novak Djokovic was asked for his thoughts on Monday. “Well, first I’ll say that I understand the people who are more traditionalists and who like to have the line umpires on the court. I think it’s part of our culture and tradition that has been there for decades. But if I have to choose between the two, I’m more of a proponent of technology. I would say it’s just more accurate, saves time, and just maybe also less people on the court.”

The players seem split at this point on the use of ELC on clay. Susan Mullane-USA TODAY Sports

Coco Gauff agreed and said, “If we have technology we should use it.” But she added, “I’m not going to be out here advocating and pushing for it. But yeah, if I had a preference I would choose to play on the court maybe where the robots are making the decisions.”

Ruud added, “I think I prefer … electric line calling, I think it works very well. I would say I prefer that. I think out of all the calls that are made, the margin of error is smaller with electronic line calling.”

2025 French Open Men’s Odds

There’s still some support for line judges, predominantly from the French contingent. Arthur Fils had previously issued his preference for human line judges, and Gael Monfils backed it up pre-tournament. “Quite honestly, we like to have things the old ways … I think it’s good to have line judges here because that’s the way I grew up,” Monfils said.

Stefanos Tsitsipas is also a proponent for the human eye. “That’s what makes clay special, in a way — that you can always review the shots. … Obviously, you can’t deny that electronic line-calling is the future, and everything is moving towards AI and artificial intelligence. But me, personally, I wouldn’t mind playing on clay with maybe the judgment of a human instead of a robot.”

And for others? Well, the flip-flopping between the two methods is just a little bit too much. “Honestly, I’m so confused, I don’t know, because I had a situation with the referee in Stuttgart, and also there was tricky calls with the Hawk-Eye system in Rome. So I’m really confused what I prefer, to be honest,” Sabalenka said.

Chances are that during the next two weeks, there will be a contentious, match-swinging call that increases the noise for ELC. It could also increase the noise for uniformity of using the technology across the four Slams. Roland Garros will continue resisting the pull of AI and robots, but for how long?





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May 28, 2025 0 comments
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