Everything ever said on the internet was just the start of teaching artificial intelligence about humanity. Tech companies are now tapping into an older repository of knowledge: the library stacks.
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 ...
Editor's take: Generative AI models are powerful tools that can be exploited by scammers, criminals, and those looking to fabricate an entire writing career. These models can, in theory, generate an ...
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. Data, Analytics and AI Strategy Advisor and Researcher This verdict is complex, likely impacting how AI large language models ...
Participants at the American Library Association’s Annual Conference in Philadelphia last week sampled the profession’s digital technologies as well as hands-on innovations available in library spaces ...
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 ...
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 ...
The Seattle Public Library loves to promote books and reading. This monthly column is a space to share reading and book trends from a librarian’s perspective. If representations of AI in fiction are ...
A federal judge has sided with Anthropic in a major copyright ruling, declaring that artificial intelligence developers can train models using published books without authors’ consent. The decision, ...