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Bloomberg was allowed, and the New York Times wasn't. Anthropic said it had no knowledge of the list and that its contractor, Surge AI, created it.
Microsoft will invest $12.5 million into the training program, with an additional $8 million in funding from OpenAI and $500,000 from Anthropic, the New York Times reports.
According to a recent Bloomberg News report, Apple is currently considering using artificial intelligence technology from Anthropic or OpenAI to power a new version of Siri, rather than relying on ...
Anthropic's AI Training on Books Is Fair Use, Judge Rules. Authors Are More Worried Than Ever This is the first time a judge found that an AI company's use of copyrighted material is fair use.
As warnings mount about AI’s potential to displace millions of jobs, Anthropic on Friday launched a its Economic Futures Program, new initiative to support research and policy development that ...
The program, which includes research grants and public forums, follows its dire predictions about widespread job losses induced by AI.
To Anthropic researchers, the experiment showed that AI won’t take your job just yet. Claude “made too many mistakes to run the shop successfully,” they wrote.
Anthropic's AI assistant Claude ran a vending machine business for a month, selling tungsten cubes at a loss, giving endless discounts, and experiencing an identity crisis where it claimed to wear ...
Anthropic didn't violate U.S. copyright law when the AI company used millions of legally purchased books to train its chatbot, judge rules.
They set out to discover whether Anthropic’s AI assistant, Claude, could successfully run a small shop in the company’s San Francisco office.
An AI Ran a Vending Machine for a Month and Proved It Couldn’t Handle Passive Income Anthropic tried testing Claude’s entrepreneurial spirit. Then came the weird existential crisis.