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The Salt Path” is a memoir of resilience and courage that captured the hearts of millions and which was subsequently adapted ...
Recent courtroom wins for Meta and Anthropic look like setbacks for copyright owners, but they may actually show the media ...
Anthropic didn't violate U.S. copyright law when the AI company used millions of legally purchased books to train its chatbot ...
Oprah Winfrey has selected Bruce Holsinger's novel "Culpability" as her latest book club pick. The story explores the ethics ...
Opinion: Loeb & Loeb's Tal Dickstein analyzes what two major decisions that allowed tech companies to use copyrighted ...
In two landmark cases, US District Judges ruled Meta and Anthropic did not violate copyright law when training large language ...
A federal judge on Wednesday sided with Facebook parent Meta Platforms in dismissing a copyright infringement lawsuit from a group of authors who accused the company of stealing their works to train ...
U.S. District Judge William Alsup of San Francisco said in a ruling filed late Monday that the AI system’s distilling from thousands of written works to be able to produce its own passages of text ...
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.
A summary of select court decisions addressing whether the use of copyrighted materials to train generative AI (GenAI) tools constitutes fair use.
U.S. District Judge Vince Chhabria found that 13 authors who sued Meta “made the wrong arguments.” But the judge also said that the ruling is limited to the authors in the case and does not ...