Project Panama, an internal effort by Anthropic AI, involved scanning and destroying up to 2 million books to train artificial intelligence systems.
"If we keep the status quo where AI bots can leverage publisher content at will, the internet will become a shadow of itself," IAB CEO David Cohen said Monday at the group's annual meeting.
While the flagship Stranger Things series is over, we'll be heading back to Hawkins much sooner than later with the new ...
The more it is consumed, the more it is reshaped and shared. Human intelligence grows by absorbing knowledge, combi.
The Dalai Lama’s Grammy win for an audiobook, narration and storytelling has been described by Beijing as “a tool for ...
Leaders of the Arkansas Martin Luther King Jr. Commission are highlighting the significance of honoring African American history as an essential component of the ...
Despite proclaiming last February as National Black History Month, President Donald Trump's second term has been marked by ...
Juneteenth helped usher in the first generation of Black Americans who, like Woodson, was born free. “First Freedom: The ...
Newly unsealed documents suggest that Anthropic was well aware that destroying books to train its AI would look bad.
The idea started out as a simple blog. Twin sisters, who loved to read, began writing book reviews. The idea then grew to a ...
Sam Raimi's twisted new horror movie Send Help finds a woman and her boss stranded on an uninhabited island. Here's how the movie ends and what their respective fates actually mean.
Music publishers sue Anthropic for $3B over alleged torrenting of copyrighted songs to train Claude AI, marking tech industry's largest piracy lawsuit.