Disney, Universal sue AI firm Midjourney
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As consumers switch from Google search to ChatGPT, a new kind of bot is scraping data for AI. People are replacing Google search with artificial intelligence tools like ChatGPT, a major shift that has unleashed a new kind of bot loose on the web.
The battle over the future of AI-generated content escalated on Wednesday as two Hollywood titans sued a fast-growing AI start-up for copyright infringement.
A new posting by Sam Altman contains lots of assumptions about the future of AI. I mindfully unpack the matter, including predictions about AGI and ASI. An insider scoop.
Two huge movie studios are suing Midjourney, claiming the firm’s AI has been trained on their copyrighted material – the entrance of the Hollywood giants into this legal fight could be a watershed mom
Google has offered buyouts to another swath of its workforce across several key divisions in a fresh round of cost cutting coming ahead of a court decision that could order a breakup of its internet empire.
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A new machine learning approach tries to better emulate the human brain, in hopes of creating more capable agentic AI.
Pat Casey, Co-Founder and CTO of ServiceNow, discusses the company's latest launch in Singapore, the ServiceNow Protected Platform. He dives deeper into how the Singapore's secure, regulatory-compliant sovereign AI platform is designed to accelerate AI innovation in the city state.
Discover how Fujitsu’s LLM vulnerability scanner uncovers hidden AI risks and vulnerabilities, plus learn best practices for safe and secure AI adoption.
BI's list of business leaders spans various sectors. All are helping their companies drive AI adoption while navigating data safety.
Disney and Universal are the first major Hollywood studios to file copyright infringement lawsuits against AI companies, marking a pivotal moment in the ongoing fight by artists, newspapers and content makers to stop AI firms from using their work as training data.
Following a slew of complaints from editors, a Wikimedia Foundation spokesperson confirmed to 404 Media that it’s pausing the two-week test, which began on June 2nd. The experiment put AI-generated summaries at the top of articles for users who opted in.