Following the editor in August, the homepages of Google Docs, Sheets, and Slides now have Material 3 Expressive. There’s the search app bar and large FAB, which is the only component themed with ...
To provide participants with basic knowledge and understanding related to the regulatory functions for the security of nuclear material, nuclear facilities and associated activities. The course will ...
CAMP HUMPHREYS, Republic of Korea — U.S. Army Garrison Humphreys hosted a two day Hazardous Material Inventory and Disposal training, Sept. 11-12, to prepare personnel for the Army’s transition to a ...
NEW YORK — Artificial intelligence company Anthropic has agreed to pay $1.5 billion to settle a class-action lawsuit by book authors who say the company took pirated copies of their works to train its ...
Microsoft 365 Copilot is an AI-based tool that will help you to create the most beautiful presentation in PowerPoint. If you are a busy person and you have a lot of work to do every day. Copilot will ...
CHICAGO (WLS) -- While in the Chicago area Friday, U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Kristi Noem touted her department is in the midst of a hiring surge, with more than 80,000 ...
A federal judge has sided with Anthropic in a major copyright ruling, declaring that artificial intelligence developers can train models using published books without authors’ consent. The decision, ...
A ruling in a U.S. District Court has effectively given permission to train artificial intelligence models using copyrighted works, in a decision that's extremely problematic for creative industries.
Judge says Anthropic made fair use of books to train AI Fair use is key defense for tech companies in AI copyright cases Judge also says pirating authors' books could not be justified June 24 (Reuters ...
Federal judge William Alsup ruled that it was legal for Anthropic to train its AI models on published books without the authors’ permission. This marks the first time that the courts have given ...
AI companies claim their tools couldn't exist without training on copyrighted material. It turns out, they could — it's just really hard. To prove it, AI researchers trained a new model that's less ...