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gizmodo.com | ||
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www.engadget.com
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| | | | | Sarah Silverman and two other authors allege OpenAI and Meta trained their large language models on copyrighted materials, including works they published, without obtaining consent. | |
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katedowninglaw.com
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| | | | | Matthew Butterick and the Joseph Saveri Law Firm are continuing to make the rounds amongst generative AI companies, following up on their lawsuits related to Copilot, Codex, Stable Diffusion, and Midjourney with two more class actions related to ChatGPT and LLaMA, respectively. Notably, the lawsuit related to LLaMA actually predates Meta's release of LLaMA under... | |
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www.theguardian.com
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| | | | | US comedian and two other authors say artificial intelligence models used their work without permission | |
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writerbeware.blog
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| | | One of the most urgent issues confronting writers and other creators right now is the use of copyrighted material for generative AI training. The large language models that power chatbots like OpenAI's ChatGPT and Anthropic's Claude require "training" via the ingestion of vast amounts of text, images, and other materials scraped from the internet orRead More | ||