Reese Rogers: So the ruling was that they could train books that they must buy first.
Kylie Robson: Yes, and there is a lot. Talk about the nuances. There are a lot of nuances here a judge in San Francisco for one trial for one company. The New York Times, as it was reported, sues Openai, and I think, as correspondents, this is a big thing we look forward to. You know that the New York Times claims that you can use ChatGPT to copy it completely and spit, and like plagiarism, spit what their correspondents have done, and this is not free use. It should be transformative. How does this shake that we look at. But there is not like a complete organization. We look at free or fair use, which is a completely different law, and we have evolved as a society, you know that it is accurate.
Reese Rogers: It is incredibly accurate and complex. And I think something we will watch for the next year. Two years. So it is certain that it is an advanced situation that we watch.
Kylie Robson: We are watching the situation. If you go to Wired.com, you will find an incredible report from our colleague, Kate Nipps, who talked about a dead case for this problem exactly.
Reese Rogers: Yes, follow Kate Knibbs. Its reports are incredible when it comes to Amnesty International and copyright. Well, let’s get another question. This was. This has been really enjoyable yet. Thank you, everyone, for all your studied questions, I asked Mary. I see your free Claude has access to the Internet. I don’t seem to have this option, although it is pushed.
Kylie Robson: Oh, yes, I saw that. Then for this reason I log in. So I was like, where is it in my country?
Reese Rogers: Well, well, let’s take a look, Mary. I am sorry if I cannot help you with this, you know. Go here. You know where to say, search and tools from the claim tape, then see a search for the web here, or you can switch a web, search and turn off. You may also include your demands, search the web for everything you are looking for, and this may lead to this.
Kylie Robson: I am doing it now at my end, because I actually do not see like, choose to search on the web, although I have a paid layer. So I asked, can you search the web. He said yes, then I asked for updates on the municipal race in New York, inspection of the web and found it on the claim only and ask like, can you search the web for this information and this should succeed.
Reese Rogers: I think this may be a point where I should put it when you compare the web that you are looking for. Perhaps ChatGPT, and Claude is that both will be somewhat strong, and they will look a good web to find the information you need. Chatgbt was specifically. The license deals with Conde Nast, the owner of WIRED, and other companies as well. This brings more reports. So if you are using Chatgbt, you may see some wired articles necessarily, if you are looking for the web with Claud. This is something to take into account. I feel like a user. I will not really notice the difference.
https://media.wired.com/photos/662bb0a4686afc207a6e8aec/191:100/w_1280,c_limit/AI-Unlocked_16x9.jpg
Source link