In addition, Nvidia Corp has been sued by three authors who claim that the company used their copyrighted books without permission to train its AI platform, NeMo. Similarly, Databricks Inc. is facing a lawsuit from three authors alleging copyright infringement for using their work in their AI platform, MosaicML. The authors claim that their large language model was trained on datasets that used Books3, which includes thousands of pirated books.
Key takeaways:
- European Union lawmakers have approved a landmark law governing artificial intelligence, which is set to reshape how businesses and organizations in Europe use AI.
- The New York Times has denied OpenAI’s claim of 'hacking' in a copyright dispute, stating that it simply used the first few words or sentences of its articles to prompt ChatGPT to recreate them.
- Nvidia Corp has been sued by three authors who claim that the company used their copyrighted books without permission to train its AI platform, NeMo.
- Databricks Inc. is facing a lawsuit from three authors who allege copyright infringement, claiming that their large language model was trained on datasets that used Books3, which includes thousands of pirated books.