The New York Times sued OpenAI in 2024. And OpenAI responded to the NYT, citing demands on ChatGPT content retention as an overreach.
OpenAI prioritized user privacy. But overlooked publisher rights.
In short, no publication was compensated for training AI models on their content. The days when AI companies scraped data for free are long over.
And that has led us here- to Amazon launching a content marketplace for AI content licensing, coupling it with its own AI products like Bedrock and Quick Suite.
The e-commerce giant is the second to pay heed to publishers’ rights (just after Microsoft announced its own a week ago).
But what if that’s not the whole picture?
It’s ignorant to assume Amazon’s entry as a simple expansion plan. Because when materialized, the business would become the gatekeeper for all sources of truth- for AI models. It’ll help regulate which content is legally usable, defining how well a model works.
That changes the whole game.
For creators, the purpose of their work might overlap. But its value can never be glossed over. Amazon’s marketplace will shift that.
Content is now a commodity, losing its expression. It’s algorithms and licensing fees that’ll determine a content’s value.
Works of intellect and passion turned into raw material- that might be the future we’re opting for. All the while, Amazon turns the flow and logistics of ideas into AI training fodder.


