Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg gave Meta's Llama team approval to train on copyrighted documents, according to a new court filing.
The plaintiffs argue that Meta intentionally used copyrighted works without permission. Newly unsealed documents suggest that ...
TRUMP’S LAST LEGAL HURDLE — Ten days out from his inauguration, President-elect Trump today faces one final legal spectacle ...
Sometimes, companies trying to homebrew their own uncreativity engines attempt to throw money at this problem, licensing ...
Nvidia has grown to be the world’s biggest company on the back of artificial intelligence. Now it’s giving back to the AI ...
Companies are using AI that detects human emotions. People are upset but also getting wise by gaming AI on this. Here's the ...
Wedbush analyst Dan Ives remains bullish and expects Tesla's market cap to hit $2 trillion in 2025, saying the coming four ...
Authors, including Ta-Nehisi Coates and comedian Sarah Silverman, accused Meta Platforms of using pirated books to train its ...
Let's find out what gives the gaming community those warm and fuzzy feelings when they play Fortnite Battle Royale.
Meta Platforms Inc. CEO Mark Zuckerberg approved the tech giant’s use of a pirated book dataset to train its AI model LLaMA, ...
Filling gaps in data sets or identifying outliers—that's the domain of the machine learning algorithm TabPFN, developed by a ...
Googles AI tool, Gemini, caused controversy by generating pictures of racially diverse Nazis and other historical ...