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A federal judge in California has issued a complicated ruling in one of the first major copyright cases involving AI training, finding that while using books to train AI models constitutes fair ...
A federal judge found that the startup Anthropic’s use of books to train its artificial-intelligence models was legal in some circumstances, a ruling that could have broad implications for AI ...
IBM sees enterprise customers are using ‘everything’ when it comes to AI, the challenge is matching the LLM to the right use case ...
Key fair use ruling clarifies when books can be used for AI training In landmark ruling, judge likens AI training to schoolchildren learning to write.
A federal judge ruled that Meta did not violate the law when it trained its AI models on 13 authors’ books.
The judge also ruled fair use law allowed Anthropic to take purchased physical books and scan them into a digital “research library” that can be used to train its models.
Anthropic’s use of copyrighted books to train its artificial intelligence assistant Claude was “exceedingly transformative and was a fair use,” a federal judge ruled.
A judge has sided with Anthropic in a copyright case that determined that the company training its AI models on purchased books is fair use.
Chhabria suggested a “potentially winning argument” in the Meta case would be market dilution, referring to the damage caused to copyright holders by AI products that could “flood the market ...
The court ruled that universal injunctions issued by lower courts likely exceed the authority Congress has granted them.
House prosecution spokesperson Antonio Bucoy has warned against the possible dismissal of Vice President Sara Duterte’s impeachment case by majority vote of the Senate impeachment court.