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Meta executives acquired pirated books for AI training despite ethical concerns. Recent court rulings on AI copyright infringement show mixed results for authors.
Generative AI chatbots such as OpenAI's ChatGPT, Google's Gemini and Anthropic's Claude have become hugely popular ... This ...
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.
Buried in the details of a recent split ruling against Anthropic is a surprising revelation: the generative AI company destroyed millions of physical books by cutting off ...
A judge’s decision that Anthropic‘s use of copyrighted books to train its AI models is a “fair use” is likely only the start of lengthy litigation to resolve one of the most hotly ...
Anthropic can partially fend off copyright lawsuit from book authors Anthropic copied books without permission and used them for LLM training. Admissibility depends on the method of procurement ...
A federal judge in San Francisco ruled late on Monday that Anthropic's use of books without permission to train its artificial intelligence system was legal under U.S. copyright law.
Federal judge William Alsup ruled that it was legal for Anthropic to train its AI models on published books without the authors’ permission. This marks the first time that the courts have given ...
A federal judge in San Francisco ruled late Monday that Anthropic's use of books without permission to train its artificial intelligence system was legal under U.S. copyright law.Siding with tech ...
Reddit is claiming in a new lawsuit that Anthropic intentionally scraped Reddit users' personal data without their consent and then put their data to work training Claude.
Anthropic releases custom AI chatbot for classified spy work "Claude Gov" is already handling classified information for the US government.
Reddit sues Anthropic for allegedly using its data to train AI without permission Reddit's content is a gold mine for teaching AI to sound human — and Reddit isn’t about to let it go for free.