Claude maker Anthropic's use of copyright-protected books in its AI training process was "exceedingly transformative" and fair use, US senior district judge William Alsup ruled on Monday. It's the ...
The AI company is publishing a new “constitution” that teaches its chatbot how to think, not just what to do.
Artificial intelligence firm Anthropic will pay $1.5 billion to settle a lawsuit from a group of book authors and publishers, according to a filing, marking the largest U.S. copyright settlement of ...
Robin Hood, the legendary antihero, is beloved for stealing from the rich and giving to the poor. But what if he stole from the rich and then gave to his own bank account, with the explicit intent of ...
Anthropic has settled a class action lawsuit with a group of fiction and nonfiction authors, as announced in a filing on Tuesday with the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. Anthropic had won a partial ...
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 ...
The change to Claude’s constitution and seeming embrace of the idea that it may one day have an independent consciousness ...
The newly revised document offers a roadmap for what Anthropic says is a safer and more helpful chatbot experience.
Writing is a wonderful profession… in writers’ dreams! In reality, it’s a grind that’s comically unprofitable for the vast majority, to say nothing of the tortured ennui that comes with having to deal ...
Anthropic is the company behind AI chatbot Claude. Claude maker Anthropic's use of copyright-protected books in its AI training process was "exceedingly transformative" and fair use, US senior ...
"This historic settlement will benefit all class members," says Justin Nelson, a lawyer for the authors, though details have yet to be released. By Winston Cho Anthropic has settled a lawsuit from ...
The settlement is the largest payout in the history of U.S. copyright cases and could lead more A.I. companies to pay rights holders for use of their works. By Cade Metz Reporting from San Francisco ...