What confuses me about OpenAI is that, after poaching the copyright of so many sites to train their model, they expect those who use "GPT" in their product names to comply. They did this for Craiyon.com (their new name now), and unfortunately, I expect to see more of this legal hunting.
I'm glad that Reddit has finally asked for a piece of the cake and demanded a profit for their APIs and content.
The biggest hurdle that AI will face won't be a technical one, but rather copyright laws and EU guidelines.
I'm glad that Reddit has finally asked for a piece of the cake and demanded a profit for their APIs and content.
The biggest hurdle that AI will face won't be a technical one, but rather copyright laws and EU guidelines.