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When Karandeep Anand’s 5-year-old daughter gets home from school, they fire up the artificial intelligence chatbot platform Character.AI so she can chat about her day with her favorite ...
Anthropic didn't violate U.S. copyright law when the AI company used millions of legally purchased books to train its chatbot, judge rules.
Real-world deployment patterns show customers using multiple AI models simultaneously, forcing a fundamental shift in enterprise AI architecture.
A federal judge ruled that Meta did not violate the law when it trained its AI models on 13 authors’ books.
A federal judge found that the startup Anthropic’s use of books to train its artificial-intelligence models was legal in some circumstances, a ruling that could have broad implications for AI ...
Using copyrighted books to train AI chatbot is 'fair use,' judge rules Can AI companies use authors' creative works to train their chatbots? A San Francisco judge says yes.
Key fair use ruling clarifies when books can be used for AI training In landmark ruling, judge likens AI training to schoolchildren learning to write.
Accidental, incidental, or, in Meta’s case, merely inexplicable privacy violations like this are rare and unsettling but almost always illuminating.
A state trooper was justified in shooting an armed man in Bolton, according to the Office of the Inspector General.
Surrey NanoSystems, Vantablack's creator, announced that it's tackling the reflectivity of satellites that threatens ground-based astronomical research.
A US District court told OpenAI to retain all ChatGPT outputs as the investigation into whether OpenAI broke The New York Times’ copyright continues.
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