New York Times sues Perplexity AI for copyright infringement
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The arguments yesterday, Dec. 1, in Cox Communications v. Sony Entertainment confronted one of the central features of internet behavior as it has developed this century: the seemingly ineradicable interest of users
Artificial intelligence companies and the creative industries are locked in an ongoing battle, being played out in the courts. The thread that pulls all these lawsuits together is copyright.
Justice Amy Coney Barrett questioned on Monday why internet service providers would have any reason to assist in curbing copyright infringement by their users if the Supreme Court finds providers cannot be held liable for their users’ unlawful activity.
The Supreme Court will decide in the coming months after hearing oral arguments in Cox Communications v. Sony Music Entertainment.
The Chicago Tribune has filed a lawsuit against artificial intelligence search engine Perplexity on Thursday, alleging copyright infringement
The court will hear its big copyright case for the year during the first week of the December session, when on Monday, Dec. 1, it reviews a billion-dollar ruling against […]
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Lawyer's 6-year-old son uses AI to build copyright infringement generator
Rights holders had better buckle up for years of legal wrangling, IP lawyer tells The Reg You don't have to be smarter than a fifth grader (or even a first grader) to commit potential copyright infringement using AI tools.