Copyrighted books can be used to train artificial intelligence models without authors’ consent, a federal judge ruled Monday. The decision marked a major victory ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Intellectual Property attorney helping artists tell their stories through film and media. The use of AI systems has become part of ...
Artificial intelligence companies don’t need permission from authors to train their large language models (LLMs) on legally acquired books, US District Judge William Alsup ruled Monday. The ...
What just happened? A federal court has delivered a split decision in a high-stakes copyright case that could reshape the future of artificial intelligence development. US District Judge William Alsup ...
On Monday, court documents revealed that AI company Anthropic spent millions of dollars physically scanning print books to build Claude, an AI assistant similar to ChatGPT. In the process, the company ...
U.S. District Judge William Alsup ruled on Monday that AI startup Anthropic acted lawfully when it trained its AI on copyrighted books. Anthropic used the copyrighted materials in an “exceedingly ...
Judge says Anthropic made fair use of books to train AI Fair use is key defense for tech companies in AI copyright cases Judge also says pirating authors' books could not be justified June 24 (Reuters ...
Judge William Alsup determined that Anthropic training its AI models on purchased copies of books is fair use. Judge William Alsup determined that Anthropic training its AI models on purchased copies ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results
Feedback