Lawsuit says OpenAI violated US authors’ copyrights to train AI chatbot

By Blake Brittain (Reuters) – Two U.S. authors sued OpenAI in San Francisco federal court on Wednesday, claiming in a proposed class action that the company misused their works to “train” its popular generative artificial-intelligence system ChatGPT. Massachusetts-based writers Paul Tremblay and Mona Awad said ChatGPT mined data copied from thousands of books without permission,…

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US Supreme Court tosses Hetronic’s $96 million trademark win against European distributor

By Blake Brittain WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Limiting the foreign reach of American trademark law, the U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday threw out a $96 million jury award for Methode Electronics Inc’s Hetronic International in its fight with its former European distributor for selling Hetronic-branded products with unauthorized parts. The decision overturned a lower court’s ruling…

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Oil settles higher, trade choppy as tight supply vie with rate hike fear

By Arathy Somasekhar HOUSTON (Reuters) -Oil prices settled higher on Thursday after flip flopping during the session, supported by a bigger draw than expected in U.S. crude inventories but pressured by fears that rising interest rates could dent global economic growth. Brent crude futures rose 31 cents, or 0.4%, to $74.34 a barrel. U.S. West…

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Factbox-Financial firms line up spot bitcoin exchange-traded fund applications

(Reuters) – Financial firms are once again lining up to attempt to get their proposed spot bitcoin exchange-traded-funds approved by the U.S. securities regulator. The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has rejected dozens of applications, saying the proposals have not met anti-fraud and investor protection standards. These are the major firms with live SEC applications:…

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US House Republicans seek testimony from Hunter Biden investigators

By David Morgan WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. House Republicans sought testimony on Thursday from more than a dozen officials from the Justice Department, FBI and other government agencies involved in the federal tax investigation of President Joe Biden’s son, Hunter. Three Republican committee chairs in the House of Representatives said the testimony is necessary in…

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Fed says 57 firms set to use ‘FedNow’ instant payments after late July launch

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. Federal Reserve announced on Thursday that 57 firms have been certified to utilize its “FedNow” instant payments system after it launches in late July. The Fed did not provide a specific date for the launch, but 41 banks and 15 service providers, including large firms like JPMorgan Chase, Bank of…

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