• TECHCRUNCH.COM
    OpenAI accidentally deleted potential evidence in NY Times copyright lawsuit
    Lawyers for The New York Times and Daily News, which are suing OpenAI for allegedly scraping their works to train its AI models without permission, say OpenAI engineers accidentally deleted data potentially relevant to the case. Earlier this fall, OpenAI agreed to provide two virtual machines so that counsel for The Times and Daily News could perform searches for their copyrighted content in its AI training sets. (Virtual machines are software-based computers that exist within another computers operating system, often used for the purposes of testing, backing up data, and running apps.) In a letter, attorneys for the publishers say that they and experts they hired have spent over 150 hours since November 1 searching OpenAIs training data.But on November 14, OpenAI engineers erased all the publishers search data stored on one of the virtual machines, according to the aforementioned letter, which was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York late Wednesday. OpenAI tried to recover the data and was mostly successful. However, because the folder structure and file names were irretrievably lost, the recovered data cannot be used to determine where the news plaintiffs copied articles were used to build [OpenAIs] models, per the letter.News plaintiffs have been forced to recreate their work from scratch using significant person-hours and computer processing time, counsel for The Times and Daily News wrote. The news plaintiffs learned only yesterday that the recovered data is unusable and that an entire weeks worth of its experts and lawyers work must be re-done, which is why this supplemental letter is being filed today.The plaintiffs counsel makes clear that they have no reason to believe the deletion was intentional. But they do say the incident underscores that OpenAI is in the best position to search its own datasets for potentially infringing content using its own tools. An OpenAI spokesperson declined to provide a statement.In this case and others, OpenAI has maintained that training models using publicly available data including articles from The Times and Daily News is fair use. In other words, in creating models likeGPT-4o, which learn from billions of examples of e-books, essays, and more to generate human-sounding text, OpenAI believes that it isnt required to license or otherwise pay for the examples even if it makes money from those models.That being said, OpenAI has inked licensing deals with a growing number of new publishers, including the Associated Press, Business Insider owner Axel Springer, Financial Times, People parent company Dotdash Meredith, and News Corp. OpenAI has declined to make the terms of these deals public, but one content partner, Dotdash, is reportedly being paid at least $16 million per year.OpenAI has neither confirmed nor denied that it trained its AI systems on any specific copyrighted works without permission.
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  • Boeing CEO to Employees: We Cant Afford Another Mistake
    submitted by /u/uhhhwhatok [link] [comments]
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    Diablo Immortal Concept Art Collection by Young Qin
    Discover a collection of concept art and illustrations by Young Qin, a senior Netease concept artist for Diablo Immortal. Young QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung QinYoung Qin
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    The Art Of Stephen Oakley
    Discover the art of The Art Of Stephen Oakley, Senior Concept Artist Sony Santa Monica. 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  • WWW.VG247.COM
    I want to add a different twist Final Fantasy 7 Remake Part 3 will rethink how it implements mini-games, says director Naoki Hamaguchi
    Gears & GambitsI want to add a different twist Final Fantasy 7 Remake Part 3 will rethink how it implements mini-games, says director Naoki HamaguchiThe as-yet-untitled Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth sequel is going to change things up a bit, as Hamaguchi vows to rearrange things slightly.Image credit: VG247 Article by Dom Peppiatt Editor-in-chief Additional contributions byAlex DonaldsonPublished on Nov. 21, 2024 There sure were a lot of mini-games in Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth, huh? By my count, there are 21 different activities you can experience as Cloud and his company venture out from Kalm and across the planet.Some are fantastic - Queens Blood probably rivals Final Fantasy 8s Triple Triad in terms of being one of the series best additions - but some pale in comparison. Glide de Chocobo? 3D Brawler? Cactuar Crush? Crunch-off? It feels like a lot of them were just there as filler, with less thought and polish than the obvious, keystone diversions.A cursory look online will show you that the proliferation of mini-games split the audience in two; some loved the variety, the challenge, the nonsense of it all, and some hated it. Pfft, its just busywork, they cry, needless time-wasting. Well, it turns out Square Enix has been paying attention to all you loud-mouth malcontents, and for Final Fantasy Remake Project, Part 3, the developer is keen to do things slightly differently.To see this content please enable targeting cookies. Just talking about Rebirth, I think I'm very happy with the volume and the balance of mini-games we have in that game, says Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth director, Naoki Hamaguchi, in an exclusive interview with VG247. And I think we very much achieved what we set out to do with the mini-games, as well. I'll explain what that was.I play a lot of games, a lot of open world games, and something I feel whilst playing a lot of these games is that you've got the core mechanics - or their fighting systems - and most of the content you'll encounter, most of the places you can go, most of what you'll be doing, can get repetitive. [These games] just use the same mechanics. There are no real changes, theres nothing new to experience around the different regions of these worlds.Hes right. Youll often see open world titles these days simply have all the various mini-games on offer available to you throughout the world; think of Far Cry, or Assassins Creed, or even The Witcher -- the various mini-games on offer populate the map, theyre not really locked to any one region. The world at large enjoys Gwent, or Orlog, or whatever else; it doesnt necessarily vary, region-to-region. Queen's Blood is the highlight of FF7 Rebirth - but will Part 3 have something similar? | Image credit: VG247But in making Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth feel like a whole planet rather than just one big open area, the development team made the conscious decision to put different mini-games in different regions. Not everyone, everywhere, enjoys the same thing, right? The downside is that some players thought there was simply too much to do, and a gulf of quality between the best of the best, and the worst of the worst.Obviously, theres a great battle system in Rebirth - and theres a lot of fun to be had in fighting the various different monsters in each region - but I wanted it to feel like a breath of fresh air when you entered each different region, continues Hamaguchi. That you feel like theres something new and exciting to do when you enter a new area. That you can experience something different with the mechanics. Thats why we wanted to put so many different mini-games in, and I feel we really managed to achieve our goal with that. Its simply a breath of fresh air in an open world (or open field, as we call it for Rebirth).But hes aware that doing the same thing again and again isnt necessarily going to get good results. Theres a law of diminishing returns, after all, and Final Fantasy is - and has always been - known for its desire to innovate and not rest on its laurels.So are we going to continue with this same balance going forward? Have we reached perfection? I think if we did just do the same thing again for the third game in the series, then it wouldnt really be very new or exciting anymore, he says. I want to add a different twist, rearrange things slightly for the next game, and have a slightly different look to things.We dont just want to make more of the same, we want to make new and exciting experiences. Not just a load of balls, as they say. | Image credit: Square EnixThere is very little information about Part 3 out there at the moment - we dont even know its name yet - but this is refreshing to hear. Its clear that Hamaguchi, alongside (assumedly returning) creative director Tetsuya Nomura and producer Yoshinori Kitase, want to keep things fresh for the third game. It needs to be a satisfying climax, after all, and were not going to get that simply by retreading old ground, are we?Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth is out now on PS5, and looks even better on the PS5 Pro (if you can afford one). Final Fantasy Remake Part 3 has no release date, but we may get it sooner than we thought.
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    Who says cannibalism and Valentine's Day don't mix? Yellowjackets Season 3 has a release date
    Bite MeWho says cannibalism and Valentine's Day don't mix? Yellowjackets Season 3 has a release dateLove and blood are in the air!Image credit: Paramount News by Oisin Kuhnke Contributor Published on Nov. 20, 2024 Calling all cannibalism lovers, Yellowjackets season 3 has a release date, and its timing is great, if a bit twisted.Fans of Yellowjackets have been desperate for the third season of the popular TV show since season 2 wrapped up early 2023, but last year's writer and actor strikes (understandably) delayed things a touch. There was some casting news earlier this year, which Community lovers will likely be quite happy about, but Showtime has finally set a release date for season 3: February 14, next year. Yes, that is Valentine's Day, which definitely tickles me a little bit given the whole cannibalism thing Yellowjackets has going on, but whoever said that there was nothing romantic about eating your best friend? Not me, that's for sure!To see this content please enable targeting cookies. For those that have never heard of Yellowjackets before, an official logline explains that it follows "the saga of a team of wildly talented high school girls soccer players who become the (un)lucky survivors of a plane crash deep in the remote northern wilderness. The series chronicles their descent from a complicated but thriving team to savage clans, while also tracking the lives theyve attempted to piece back together nearly 25 years later, proving that the past is never really past and what began out in the wilderness is far from over." To see this content please enable targeting cookies.A teaser for the new season can be seen above, which doesn't show all that much. On top of Joel McHale joining the cast, there's also Hilary Swank, as well as all the main cast members from the first two seasons. Fingers crossed neither of them bite the bullet too quickly. The show will arrive on Paramount+ with the Showtime plan on the aforementioned February 14 release date, before its linear debut on February 16 - international viewers will also be able to catch it on Paramount+.
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  • WWW.NINTENDOLIFE.COM
    Random: Uh-Oh, Some Dragon Quest III HD-2D Remake Players Are Struggling With The "Small" Text
    "The Switch screen is hard on my farsightedness".Dragon Quest III HD-2D Remake has been out for a week now and while it's getting a lot of praise in its home country of Japan, it seems some players are struggling with the game - especially on the Switch.As highlighted by Automaton Media, an article by Weekly Josei Prime has quoted some local player reviews of the game, and one common problem that seems to be popping up with many longtime Dragon Quest III players is the size of the text in this latest remake. Many players are claiming the "small" text is hurting their eyes.Read the full article on nintendolife.com
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    MvC: Fighting Collection Shows Off Bonus Comic Included With Physical Version
    Image: Marvel, CapcomIn case you missed it, Marvel vs Capcom Fighting Collection: Arcade Classics is getting a physical Switch release this week.If you do happen to be picking up a hard copy, select regions and stores will be offering a bonus physical comic while supplies last. It's a "new" 32 page physical copy and will come "packed in the game". Here's a teaser, courtesy of Capcom's socials and the GameStop website:Capcom has listed this deal in the US for the Switch and PlayStation physical releases at GameStop, Amazon, Best Buy and Walmart. It will be available for $50 USD or your regional equivalent.When this collection was released for the Switch in September, we called it a stunning showcase of '90s fighter evolution, awarding it an "excellent" nine out of ten stars. Wanna take you for a rideSubscribe to Nintendo Life on YouTube785kWatch on YouTube Will you be picking up the physical collection? Let us know in the comments.Related GamesSee AlsoShare:340 Liam is a news writer and reviewer for Nintendo Life and Pure Xbox. He's been writing about games for more than 15 years and is a lifelong fan of Mario and Master Chief. Hold on there, you need to login to post a comment...Related ArticlesMario & Luigi's Future In Doubt As A Potential Sony Acquisition EmergesUpdate: Kadokawa acknowledges Sony's offerNew Metal Gear Solid: Master Collection Update Leaves The Switch BehindLa-li-lu-le-lower resolutionReview: Dragon Quest III HD-2D Remake (Switch) - Square Doesn't Drop The Ball, Just Some FramesThe wait is finally overNew Switch Emulator Devs Are Jumping Through Hoops To Avoid A Nintendo TakedownNinjas in 3... 2... 1...
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  • TECHCRUNCH.COM
    Lighthouse, an analytics provider for the hospitality sector, lights up with $370M at a $1B valuation
    Here is yet one more sign of the travel industrys noticeable boom: a major growth round for one of the B2B startups servicing it. Lighthouse, a data analytics platform for hotels and others in the hospitality industry, has closed a Series C of $370 million. The KKR-led round catapults Lighthouse to a valuation of over $1 billion.The funding will be used to continue building out more data sets, analytics tools and AI functionality, the company said. It may also be using this large capital injection for acquisitions to evolve its business: the company has made four acquisitions to date, and one from earlier this year Stardekk has built all-in-one hotel software for managing reservations and more.The company is based out of London, and this is one of the biggest rounds for a startup based in the city, as well as one of the biggest rounds for the travel sector, for this year.For those tracking how Europes startup ecosystem is performing at the moment, Lighthouses funding track record is instructive: the company raised $80 million in 2021, at a peak moment for fundraising.This latest round is an affirmation from investors that its been doing the right things in the last several years.In Europe, startups have been beaten by slower activity across a number of segments of tech, geopolitical turmoil and slow economic growth. Lighthouse has aimed its business at a global market (currently estimated to be worth some $15 trillion annually), and its focus on business intelligence and applying newer technology like AI to providing it, underscores how data-driven businesses continue to see opportunities.The companys core set of tools are not directly related to taking bookings or managing staff and accounts per se. Instead, its focus is on business intelligence, specifically analytics and insights. It says that it crunches 400 terabytes of travel and market data daily, and leverages AI to provide insights to customers, with products targeting large hotel chains, and others targeting smaller operations.It says it has more than 70,000 hospitality providers using its tools, with some of the big names including Holiday Inn, Radisson and NH Hotel Group.The round is a testament to the demand among hotels for better tooling to improve its pricing and overall offer to customers, at a time when we have more choice than ever before, and more ways of finding and booking hotels.Were just getting started in making hospitality data and tools more powerful, accessible, and affordable, said Sean Fitzpatrick, CEO of Lighthouse, in a statement. I couldnt be more energized by what were working towards. Were hopefully speaking with him later today to hear more.The companys previous round included Spectrum Equity, F-Prime Capital, Eight Roads Ventures, and Highgate Technology Ventures, and all of these investors are also participating in this latest Series C.
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  • TECHCRUNCH.COM
    DOJ: Google must sell Chrome to end monopoly
    The United States Department of Justice argued Wednesday that Google should divest its Chrome browser as part of a remedy to break up the companys illegal monopoly in online search, according to a filing with the U.S District Court of the District of Columbia. Google would not be allowed to re-enter the search market for five years if the DOJs proposed remedy is approved.Ultimately, it will be up to District Court Judge Amit Mehta to decide what Googles final punishment will be, a decision that could fundamentally change one of the worlds largest businesses and alter the structure of the internet as we know it. That phase of the trial is expected to kick off sometime in 2025.Judge Mehta ruled in August that Google was an illegal monopoly for abusing its power over the search business. The judge also took issue with Googles control of various gateways to the internet and the companys payments to third parties in order to retain its status as a default search engine.The DOJs latest filing suggested that Googles ownership of Android and Chrome, which are key distribution channels for its search business, pose a significant challenge to apply remedies for making the search market competitive.The Justice Department proposed other remedies to address the search giants monopoly, including that Google spin off its Android mobile operating system. The filing noted that Google and other partners might be against that spin-off and suggested strict remedies, including not using Android to disadvantage its search competitors. The DOJ hinted that if Google fails to put limitations on Android, it should be forced to sell it off.Prosecutors also argued that the company should be prohibited from entering into exclusionary third-party contracts with browser or phone companies, such as Googles contract with Apple, which is to be the default search engine on all Apple products.The DOJ also argued that Google should license its search data along with ad click data to rivals.Additionally, the DOJ also jotted out conditions prohibiting Google from entering the browser market again five years after the company spins off Chrome. Plus, it also proposed that after the Chrome sale, Google shouldnt acquire or own any rival ad text search, query-based AI product, or ads technology. Whats more, the document outlined provisions for publishers to opt out of Google using their data to train AI models.If the court accepts these remedies, Google will face a serious setback as a competitor to OpenAI, Microsoft, and Anthropic in AI technology.Googles responseIn reponse, Google said DOJs latest filing was a radical interventionist agenda that would harm people the U.S. and the countrys tech prowess in the world. DOJs wildly overbroad proposal goes miles beyond the Courts decision. It would break a range of Google products even beyond Search that people love and find helpful in their everyday lives, president of global affairs and Googles chief legal officer Kent Walker said in a blog post. Walker made additional arguments that the proposal would put security and privacy of users at stake, detoriate quality of Chrome and Android, and hurt services like Mozilla Firefox, which depends on Goolge Search.He added that if the proposal goes through, it will hamper peoples ability to access Google Search. Plus, it would damage the companys prospects in AI race. DOJs approach would result in unprecedented government overreach that would harm American consumers, developers, and small businesses and jeopardize Americas global economic and technological leadership at precisely the moment its needed most, he said.The company is set to file its reponse to this filing next month.The Wednesday filing confirms earlier reports that prosecutors were considering pushing Google to spin off Chrome, which controls about 61% of the browser market in the U.S., according to web traffic service StatCounter.
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