llm

Fri
27
Jun
John Lister's picture

AI Makers Get Thumbs Up to Use Books Without Permission

An AI company acted lawfully by training its models on published books without the author's consent, a judge has ruled. But Anthropic will be on the hook for downloading more than seven million pirated books to use in the training data. The case was ... brought by three authors who said Anthropic had breached their copyright by adding the text of their books to a training database for Claude. That's a large language model (LLM), which works a little like autocorrect on a phone's texting tool. The difference, other than the speed and power, is that the LLM doesn't predict words based on one person ... (view more)

Mon
03
Feb
John Lister's picture

Chinese ChatGPT Rival Spooks Tech Markets

Hype about a Chinese owned AI tool has sent major tech stocks into a slump. The DeepSeek tool is much cheaper to run, which could hurt profitability among tech providers. DeepSeek is a Large Language Model (LLM), a form of AI of which ChatGPT is ... arguably the best known. While specific models vary, it largely works by writing word-by-word, predicting each time which would be the most likely to follow. It's been described as "autocomplete on steroids." More advanced models will break down a request before writing, planning the overall message and organization in advance. Drastically Cheaper ... (view more)

Wed
11
Dec
John Lister's picture

Are Your Word Documents Being Used to Train AI?

Microsoft has denied it is using content from Word and Excel documents to train artificial intelligence models without permission. While there's some fear mongering, the problem seems to be a blanket declaration in its company-wide privacy ... statement. The controversy involves Connected Experiences, a long-standing Office feature that connects to the Internet for added functionality. This includes tools such as grammar checking, translation and audio transcription. It also allows downloads of templates and images, for example, to put into a PowerPoint presentation. The feature came to sudden ... (view more)

Wed
16
Oct
John Lister's picture

Smart Glasses Bring Facial Recognition Concerns

Harvard students have demonstrated that "smart glasses" can be used to look at somebody in public and reveal their identities and personal information. Meta, which made the glasses used in the demonstration, say they have adequate security ... safeguards in place. The Ray-Ban smart glasses, produced by Facebook owner Meta, connect wirelessly to a smartphone. They include a camera, speaker and microphone and allows a range of hands-free actions such as filming, taking photos and making calls. (Source: meta.com ) Facial Recognition Abused AnhPhu Nguyen and Caine Ardayfio of Harvard University ... (view more)

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