French publishers and authors are taking Meta to court, accusing the social media company of using their works without permission to train its artificial intelligence model.
One way AI developers access the content they need to train their models is by ‘scraping’ data from millions of websites. Today, under UK law, organisations can only ‘scrape’ websites without ...
Does storing copyrighted material amount to infringement? Read what the amicus curiae in the ANI vs OpenAI case said about ...
The global sprint to develop artificial intelligence technologies is intensifying, fueled by substantial investments from ...
AI-generated translations pose legal, copyright, and data security risks for language service providers and enterprises.
Disney wins $100m copyright trial against animator over Moana plagiarism claims - Animator Buck Woodall claimed Disney copied ...
A California federal jury said on Monday that Disney's hit film "Moana" did not infringe an artist's copyrights related to ...
A man surnamed Chiang (江) is facing charges of personal privacy violations and offenses against sexual morality (妨害風化罪) for ...
Discover why human content remains vital for your content strategy and maintaining authenticity, even with AI writing on the ...
Content licensing has long been an important revenue stream for digital media companies. For decades, it allowed publishers to monetize their content by ...
Nintendo has won a lengthy legal battle in the French Supreme Court against the company Dstorage, which owns and operates the ...
The free version of Microsoft’s generative AI chatbot is available in a standalone app, in the Edge browser, and on the web.