March 12, 2024, 8:34 a.m. | Steve Dent

Engadget www.engadget.com

It's getting hard to keep up with copyright lawsuits against generative AI, with a new proposed class action hitting the courts last week. This time, authors are suing NVIDIA over its AI platform NeMo, a language model that allows businesses to create and train their own chatbots, Ars Technica reported. They claim the company trained it on a controversial dataset that illegally used their books without consent.


Authors Abdi Nazemian, Brian Keene and Stewart O’Nan demanded a jury trial …

ai copyright ai platform ars technica arts & entertainment authors books & publishing business businesses chatbots class class action company legal & law matters copyright copyright infringement copyright lawsuits courts generative infringement language language model lawsuits nemo nvidia platform suing train

Data Architect

@ University of Texas at Austin | Austin, TX

Data ETL Engineer

@ University of Texas at Austin | Austin, TX

Lead GNSS Data Scientist

@ Lurra Systems | Melbourne

Senior Machine Learning Engineer (MLOps)

@ Promaton | Remote, Europe

Research Scientist, Demography and Survey Science, University Grad

@ Meta | Menlo Park, CA | New York City

Computer Vision Engineer, XR

@ Meta | Burlingame, CA