AI companies would have to cough up most precious asset under proposal from California lawmaker
The days of artificial intelligence companies sweeping up endless data, copyrighted or not, could be coming to an end.
The days of artificial intelligence companies sweeping up endless data, copyrighted or not, could be coming to an end.
Leading AI companies have a favorite phrase when it comes to describing where they get the data to train their models: They say it’s “publicly available” on the internet.
Privacy is the next battleground for the AI debate, even as conflicts over copyright, accuracy and bias continue.
In early February, Microsoft accused the plaintiffs suing the software maker and its partner OpenAI over alleged AI privacy violations of evoking “doomsday hyperbole about AI as a threat to civilization.”
Consumers who say their privacy was violated by Microsoft Corp. and OpenAI LP’s products are urging California federal court not to dismiss their complaint, saying it clearly and in detail lays out the basis for their allegations.
Drowning in dating app fatogue, singles are reviving the analog practice of showing up and talking to strangers.
A new lawsuit claims dating apps, such as Tinder, Hinge, and The League, are designed to get you addicted.
A lawsuit filed on Valentine’s Day claims that several popular dating apps are “psychologically manipulative” and “addictive,” encouraging “compulsive” use by people on the platforms.
The lawsuit paints a picture of clandestine operations, claiming OpenAI harvested a staggering 300 billion words from the web.
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Dating apps suggest there’s a perfect match. New romcoms like One Day reveal a messier, lovelier reality
This article is more than 1 month oldKit Buchan
The genre is making a comeback on our screens. But these days we don’t expect a happy ending
Sat 24 Feb 2024 11.50 EST
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If it were a romcom, it would be called Love on Trial, and it would star Ryan Reynolds as a slick attorney whose heart is melted by an earnest activist (Katherine Heigl).