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The Financial Times is the latest media company to sign a deal with the artificial intelligence (AI) company OpenAI. The British newspaper announced on Monday "a strategic partnership and licensing agreement" with the maker of ChatGPT. They said it would allow the AI chatbot users to see information from the FT with attribution. It added that employees of the newspaper already have access to the technology. Other media organisations such as the Associated Press and Axel Springer, which owns Bild and Politico, struck licensing deals with OpenAI last year. How AI tools are trained is alarming cr...
Euronews (English)
If you’ve been to Florence, there’s a good chance you’ve wandered the hallowed halls of the Accademia Gallery in search of the city’s most famous inhabitant: Michelangelo’s David. Along with thousands of other visitors, you may have picked up a magnet to commemorate the encounter with this nude sculptural icon, completed in 1504. But this time-honoured, cheeky souvenir may be at risk of disappearing – curators are taking aim at the less-than-reverent magnets and souvenirs sold around Florence focusing on David’s genitalia, raising questions about freedom of expression. This is not the first ti...
Euronews (English)
It all started with a bench plaque in Royal York Crescent in Clifton, Bristol, UK. There, a sardonic bench tribute was paid to a cheating husband ‘Roger’, with an engraving that reads: “For My Love 06.09.69 - 25.12.23 Husband, Father, Adulterer Yes, Roger, I Knew” Delightful. Simply delightful. The mysterious plaque caused much merriment, but has also led several to question its authenticity, or if it could be the work of famed and elusive street artist Banksy – who is originally from Bristol. The birth date inscribed is 6/9/69, with the death date is 25/12/23 - which has raised some eyebrows....
Euronews (English)
The British Phonographic Industry (BPI) has sent a legal letter of complaint to company Jammable regarding the firm's 'deepfake' technology. Jammable, which until recently was known as Voicify, uses AI-based software to mimic artists' voices so that users can include these vocals in new compositions. According to BPI, the software may have been trained using copyrighted works, which constitutes an infringement of property rights. "The music industry has long embraced new technology to innovate and grow, but Voicify …and a growing number of others like them, are misusing AI technology by taking...
Euronews (English)
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