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Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito quoted a five-decades-old case in a decision Friday that favored parents fighting to opt their children out of instruction involving LGBTQ+ books.
Newsletter Evening Briefing Americas America’s Very Bad Mood Bodes Ill for Tone-Deaf Wall Street Get caught up.
Sometimes, a movie is great, and then a twist ending comes along and turns it into schlock. Other times, the movie is unbelievable throughout its entire runtime, but its twist ending makes it even ...
The ruling in a case involving Amazon-backed Anthropic lends credibility to the notion that AI video generators that could one day compete with studios are doing something transformative.
Anthropic didn’t break the law when it trained its chatbot with copyrighted books, a judge said, but it must go to trial for allegedly using pirated books.
In a test case for the artificial intelligence industry, a federal judge has ruled that AI company Anthropic didn’t break the law by training its chatbot Claude on millions of copyrighted books.
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