The Hypocrisy at the Heart of the AI Industry
Tech companies believe in intellectual property, but not yours.
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VOOZH | about |
Tech companies believe in intellectual property, but not yours.
Large language models don’t “learn”—they copy. And that could change everything for the tech industry.
At least 15 million videos have been snatched by tech companies.
Meta pirated millions of books to train its AI. Search through them here.
Dialogue from these movies and TV shows has been used by companies such as Apple and Anthropic to train AI systems.
“You shouldn’t have put your content on the internet if you didn’t want it to be on the internet,” Common Crawl’s executive director says.
Inside the data sets training new video-creating tools
Atlantic writers help you wrap your mind around artificial intelligence and a new machine age.
Tech companies believe in intellectual property, but not yours.
Large language models don’t “learn”—they copy. And that could change everything for the tech industry.
“You shouldn’t have put your content on the internet if you didn’t want it to be on the internet,” Common Crawl’s executive director says.
Inside the data sets training new video-creating tools
At least 15 million videos have been snatched by tech companies.
An ongoing investigation by The Atlantic to reveal the inner workings of generative AI
The video platform is quietly using AI to “improve clarity” in uploaded content. Why?
Can AI companies keep stealing books to train their models?
Three possible arguments against the tech company