Merriam-Webster claims OpenAI used approximately 100,000 articles, encyclopedia and dictionary entries to train ChatGPT without authorisation. View on euronews ...
Encyclopedia Britannica and Merriam-Webster say that OpenAI violated the copyright of almost 100,000 articles by using them for LLM training.
The group, which also runs the online version of the Merriam-Webster dictionary, is alleging that OpenAI misused Britannica’s reference materials to train AI models. Encyclopaedia Britannica is suing ...
The return of lawful access in Bill C-22 has unsurprisingly focused on the government’s significant shift on warrantless ...
Encyclopedia Britannica is suing OpenAI for scraping nearly 100,000 articles to train its AI models without permission, alleging copyright infringement and more. The post ChatGPT’s latest enemy is the ...
The lawsuit argues that OpenAI’s use of their content could produce a positive feedback loop in which declining advertising ...
When Samuel Morse simplified the telegraph into dots and dashes, he created a system where meaning depended entirely on precise timing and spacing. This elegant solution sparked a deeper puzzle: if ...
The Trump administration is nearing a key milestone in its “Make America Healthy Again” agenda — proposing a definition of ultraprocessed foods. Stricter scrutiny of nutrition and food additives has ...
Britannica and Merriam-Webster accuse OpenAI of using nearly 1,00,000 copyrighted articles without consent, reigniting a global debate over AI training and intellectual property rights.
Bangladesh’s RTI framework ranks highly in global legal ratings, but the prolonged vacancy in the Information Commission has left the law without its central enforcement mechanism ...
Online users searched for answers after viewing images and reading articles about the former U.S. first lady allegedly spending time in a hospital.
Most organizations compete on brand and distribution, but here’s how data, experimentation and organizational design can ...