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Anthropic scanned and discarded millions of books to train its Claude AI assistant. It also used pirated content. Legal ...
The open letter and accompanying petition asking publishers "to make a pledge that they will never release books that were ...
ANDOVER — Julianne DiBlasi took a trip down memory lane in order to pen, and sketch, her latest interactive book about her hometown and illustrate the places she loves and misses. An artist and author ...
Anthropic didn't violate U.S. copyright law when the AI company used millions of legally purchased books to train its chatbot ...
The decision reveals that Anthropic pirated over 7 million books, then systematically purchased and destroyed millions of physical copies to create a digital "research library." ...
Policies from the Trump administration are already impacting readers, publishers and authors – and could continue given grant cuts and DEI reversals.
Our romance columnist will be updating this list all year. The Book Review Podcast: Each week, top authors and critics talk about the latest news in the literary world. Listen here.
Social media is undermining the power of protest by framing it as "cringe," making the front line of change weaker.
For Little Rock author Phyllis Hodges, reminding Arkansas children that "everybody has a story to tell" has made a yearslong journey to get her three "living history" books in more than 60 school ...
A US judge has ruled that using books to train artificial intelligence (AI) software is not a violation of US copyright law.
CHICAGO — One of the authors of the new bombshell Joe Biden book pulled back the curtain Thursday on how White House staffers truly felt about former White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre.
When asked about her inspiration behind the book, Rogers said she wanted a book that could make her children feel included.