Meta will make AI bots more prominent in WhatsApp, a feature nobody really requested from the otherwise great chat app.
Meta allegedly used copyrighted journals, books and other materials from the LibGen dataset to train its Llama AI models.
A group of authors, including Ta-Nehisi Coates and Sarah Silverman, alleged in a court filing that Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg ...
A recent court filing in an ongoing lawsuit against Meta alleges Mark Zuckerberg approved the AI dataset despite internal ...
The company's plans to host millions or billions of fake AI-powered users are being rejected by real users. Don't follow Meta ...
Authors Accuse Meta Of Using Pirated Books To Train Its AI Model After Getting Approval From Mark Zuckerberg: Report Authors ...
Meta’s popular messaging app WhatsApp is testing a new design that gives prominent space to a suite of AI chatbots. The ...
Meta Platforms trained its AI models using pirated versions of copyrighted books, with the approval of its CEO Mark ...
Shares of Meta Platforms (NASDAQ: META) soared last year as the "Magnificent Seven" stock cracked the trillion-dollar mark ...
Brazil's federal government has issued an extrajudicial notice to Meta, demanding explanations for its decision to ...
DeFAI merges AI and DeFi, transforming crypto with on-chain automation, cutting-edge frameworks, and secure AI-powered ...