After several authors and class members raised objections to Anthropic’s $1.5 billion settlement over its widespread book piracy to train AI, a federal judge has delayed final approvals of the ...
Twenty-eight writers say class action treatment lets AI companies extinguish high-value copyright claims on the cheap in a new lawsuit accusing Anthropic of infringing their work. Novelist Dave Eggers ...
Pages from the Anthropic website and the company's logo are displayed on a computer screen in New York on Feb. 26, 2026. (AP Photo/Patrick Sison, File) SAN FRANCISCO (CN) — A $1.5 billion settlement ...
“Mere knowledge” of infringement is not enough to hold internet service providers contributorily liable for copyright infringement, the US Supreme Court rules. Register for free to receive our ...
The Supreme Court unanimously ruled Wednesday that internet providers are not liable for copyright infringement by their users, delivering an opinion in Cox v. Sony and tossing a $1 billion verdict.
“Contributory liability cannot rest only on a provider’s knowledge of infringement and insufficient action to prevent it.” – Justice Clarence Thomas The U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday reversed a ...
In the statement, MCSN celebrated the payment as a new dawn for right owners in the Nigerian music industry, especially those in the grassroots, who the society promises would be beneficiaries, ...
Animation. The theme is Weightlessness. Objects and characters are cut loose from habitual meanings, also from tensions and gravitational limitations. A lyric Eric Satie track accompanies the film.
San Francisco software firms Splunk Inc. and Cribl Inc. failed to convince a federal court to give them post-trial wins in a long-running copyright battle over software interoperability. Judge William ...
This transcript was prepared by a transcription service. This version may not be in its final form and may be updated. Speaker 1: From the opinion pages of the Wall Street Journal, this is Potomac ...
When Harvard English professor Deidre S. Lynch read an article published in The Atlantic, titled “Search LibGen, the Pirated-Books Database that Meta Used to Train AI”, she learned for the first time ...
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