We've officially made it to iPhone season (it comes around every September), and today, Apple is finally going to showcase its latest iPhone 17 lineup. That means we'll get to separate fact from rumor ...
The Powerball jackpot soared to an estimated $1.8 billion for Saturday night's drawing after no tickets came up winners of Wednesday's $1.4 billion grand prize, Powerball said. Saturday's pot of gold ...
Settlement largest publicly reported copyright recovery in history, plaintiffs say Anthropic to destroy downloaded books, may face future infringement claims Fair-use debate continues in other AI ...
The Powerball jackpot has climbed to an estimated $1.8 billion ahead of Saturday night’s drawing, making it the second-largest lottery prize in U.S. history. The jackpot has an estimated cash value of ...
It’s time to get on board with Windows 11. Four years after launching its current operating system, Microsoft will cease support for Windows 10 on October 14, 2025. Though Microsoft has quietly given ...
NEW YORK — Artificial intelligence company Anthropic has agreed to pay $1.5 billion to settle a class-action lawsuit by book authors who say the company took pirated copies of their works to train its ...
(NEXSTAR) — The Powerball jackpot is colossal, coming in at an estimated $1.8 billion after no ticket was able to match the numbers drawn Wednesday night. At its current size, the jackpot ranks as the ...
Authors who join in the deal will be eligible to share in the settlement fund. They'll also be paid $3,000 per book used by the Amazon-backed company for training. By Winston Cho Anthropic will pay $1 ...
Aliss Higham is a Newsweek reporter based in Glasgow, Scotland. Her focus is reporting on Social Security, other government benefits and personal finance. She has previously extensively covered U.S.
The settlement is the largest payout in the history of U.S. copyright cases and could lead more A.I. companies to pay rights holders for use of their works. By Cade Metz Reporting from San Francisco ...
“When I think about the trip today, I wouldn’t do it again – it was so dangerous. What I remember is that many people died, they drowned … there were too many people on that boat.” Anas Modamani, who ...
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