Five of Canada’s leading news organizations have filed a lawsuit against OpenAI, accusing the company of copyright infringement and seeking potential damages in the billions. The Canadian Press, Torstar, The Globe and Mail, Postmedia, and CBC/Radio-Canada allege that OpenAI unlawfully “scraped” substantial content from their websites.
The lawsuit accuses OpenAI of violating Canadian copyright laws and "unjustly enriching" itself "at the expense" of the news media companies.
A group of artists who say they were given early access to OpenAI's Sora video generation model released a version of the tool to the public.
A group of prominent Canadian news organizations sued ChatGPT maker OpenAI on Friday, extending the fight over artificial intelligence and copyright beyond the United States. The lawsuit, brought by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation,
Many great AI video generators have emerged since Sora blew people away, but it's hard not to feel like a kid with their nose pressed up against the glass of the toy store, wondering why we can't play with the toys just a little bit. Here's why I think OpenAI and the rest of the reticent AI video creation models are still locked away.
OpenAI is funding academic research into algorithms that can predict humans’ moral judgements.
The ChatGPT maker is looking to scale from its 250 million weekly active user base by betting big on data centers that can continue powering its AI.
ChatGPT refuses to say one specific name – and people are worried - Asking the AI bot to write the name ‘David Mayer’ causes it to prematurely end the chat
Here's what you need to know this week about artificial intelligence in the Bay Area: Amazon doubles down on Anthropic, Trump seeks AI czar, lawsuit against OpenAI moves forward, Inflection makes three purchases and a pivot,
Generative AI may not be coming for your job, but it’s certainly coming to your job. Worldwide, 75% of knowledge workers now use gen AI in their work, according to a recent Microsoft/ LinkedIn survey.