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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 ...
It’s a rebellion of collective memory that resurfaces as images in Cunha’s curated exhibition ‘Retratistas do Morro’ at ...
A federal judge ruled that Meta did not violate the law when it trained its AI models on 13 authors’ books.
As Lyon celebrated the Liberation, survivors of the death camps tried to reconnect with daily life, despite hardship, silence ...
Architects NLÉ complete Zaria Court, the adaptive reuse of a historic building in Kigali with facilities for sport, entertainment and more ...
What to read next? View weekly lists of bestselling books, reviews and recommendations compiled by the staff of.
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.
On the day that Pat met Jim Dasterson in the barrier, he had less than a dollar in one pocket and an ounce of gin in the ...
A University of Florida law student is arguing First Amendment rights in an investigation by administrators after antisemitic social media posts.
Spanning 20,000 square feet, fashion designer Aisha Rao's built her dream home in Hyderabad as a rich, maximalist commitment ...
That's the upshot of a first-of-its-kind ruling by a federal judge in San Francisco on Monday in an ongoing copyright infringement case that pits a group of authors against a major AI company.
It is no surprise that Steve Bannon has picked Butterworth’s. In spite of opening only last year, the quirky French-style bistro is already the Maga crowd’s preferred watering hole. Bannon, whose ...
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