OpenAI Can't Patent 'GPT' Trademark, Confirms US Govt
OpenAI Can't Patent 'GPT' Trademark, Confirms US Govt
OpenAI has got the market firing with AI tools and chatbots but the ChatGPT maker cannot own the trademark for the technology.

In a setback for OpenAI, the US Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) has refused to allow the Sam Altman-run company to register the word GPT (generative pre-trained transformer) as a trademark.

The Microsoft-backed company argued in its application with the US PTO that GPT is not a “descriptive word” because consumers will not immediately understand what the underlying wording “generative pre-trained transformer” means.

“The trademark examining attorney is not convinced. The Internet evidence demonstrates the extensive and pervasive use in the software industry of the acronym ‘GPT’ in connection with software that features similar AI technology with ask and answer functions based on pre-trained data sets,” the US PTO wrote in its decision.

The fact that consumers may not know the underlying words of the acronym “does not alter the fact that relevant purchasers are adapted to recognising that the term ‘GPT’ is commonly used in connection with software to identify a particular type of software that features this AI ask and answer technology”.

As generative AI use surged last year, several AI companies added GPT to their product names. However, GPT became popular after OpenAI launched the AI model ChatGPT that takes user prompts to answer in a way humans do.

The company started calling its custom chatbots GPTs and has just released its text-to-video generation model called Sora. Reports also claim OpenAI has scored a deal which values the AI giant at a whopping $80 billion thanks to its conquest in the AI arena over the last 12 months.

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