Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Webinar Expert TeamWebinar Expert Team

Tech News

HarperCollins is asking authors to license their books for AI training

An illustration of a glitchy pencil writing on paper.
Image: Hugo Herrera / The Verge

HarperCollins has agreed with an unnamed AI tech company to let the company use some nonfiction titles to train its models, 404 Media reports, but only if authors opt-in to having their books be used for training. Some authors are currently suing companies like OpenAI, accusing them of copyright infringement for training AI models on their works without permission.

According to a statement HarperCollins gave to 404 Media, the agreement protects authors’ “underlying value of their works and our shared revenue and royalty streams.” Author Daniel Kibblesmith posted screenshots of an email showing that he would be paid $2,500 if he allowed one of his books to be licensed.

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

World News

Regulators with the European Union want people to believe that the “dead hand” of government regulation actually enhances competition. The only thing their actions...

World News

While F.A. Hayek contributed much to the Austrian School of Economics, he also supported the establishment of the welfare state, believing that it was...

World News

John Hasnas has written a new book outlining how societies operate with mutual cooperation and common law. According to David Gordon, it is a...

Tech News

The Boox Palma 2 features a faster processor and a fingerprint reader. | Image: Boox Boox has announced the Palma 2, the next version...