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No one picks up a novel about divorce and cancer expecting levity. And yet, contra its unwieldy title, “Maggie; or, a Man and a Woman Walk Into a Bar,” Katie Yee’s buzzy debut is startlingly fleet. “A ...
Peter Vaira, who still spends three days a week at Weir LLP, the Philadelphia firm where he is special counsel, said he had ...
Author Christina di Pensare Revises 296-Year-Old "Modest Proposal" by Satirist Jonathan Swift in Her Book of Political Humor Compare the nation-building labor of a hedge fund manager flipping ...
The creator of Netflix's The Lincoln Lawyer David E. Kelley is the master of TV's legal drama shows, having worked on 8 of them in total.
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Supreme Court Supreme Court decides whether to allow parents to shield children from LGBTQ books in school Muslim and Christian families sought opt-out option for elementary school students in ...
The ruling in a case involving Amazon-backed Anthropic lends credibility to the notion that AI video generators that could one day compete with studios are doing something transformative.
A federal judge found that the startup Anthropic’s use of books to train its artificial-intelligence models was legal in some circumstances, a ruling that could have broad implications for AI ...
But, the judge ruled, AI companies shouldn’t be pirating the books they’re training on.
A federal judge in San Francisco has ruled that artificial intelligence company Anthropic did not violate US copyright law by using copyrighted books to train its AI system, in a landmark decision ...
A federal judge in San Francisco ruled late on Monday that Anthropic's use of books without permission to train its artificial intelligence system was legal under U.S. copyright law.