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Ionic Defects Help Engineers Zap Away Ice With Electricity
During winter months, frost can unleash icy havoc on cars, planes, heat pumps, and much more. But thermal defrosting with heaters is very energy intensive, while chemical defrosting is expensive and toxic to the environment.
Jonathan…
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ChatGPT violated copyright law by harvesting musicians’ lyrics, German court rules | ChatGPT
A court in Munich has ruled that OpenAI’s chatbot ChatGPT violated German copyright laws by using hits from top-selling musicians to train its language models in what creative industry advocates described as a landmark European ruling.
The Munich regional court sided in favour of Germany’s music rights society GEMA, which said ChatGPT had harvested protected lyrics by popular artists to “learn” from them.
Collecting society GEMA, which manages the rights of composers, lyricists and music publishers and has approximately 100,000 members, filed the case against OpenAI in November 2024.
The lawsuit was seen as a key European test case in a campaign to stop AI scraping of creative output. OpenAI can appeal against the decision.
ChatGPT allows users to ask questions and type commands into a chatbot which responds with text that resembles human language patterns. The model underlying ChatGPT is trained on widely available data.
The case revolved around nine of the most recognisable German hits of recent decades, which were used by ChatGPT to hone its language capabilities.
They included Herbert Grönemeyer’s 1984 synth-pop sendup of masculinity, Männer (Men), and Helene Fischer’s Atemlos Durch die Nacht (Breathless Through the Night), which was the unofficial anthem of the German side during the 2014 football World Cup.
The presiding judge ordered OpenAI to pay undisclosed damages for using copyrighted material without permission.
GEMA legal adviser Kai Welp said the organisation now hoped to negotiate with OpenAI on how rights holders can be compensated.
The San Francisco-based company, whose founders include Sam Altman and Elon Musk, had said its language learning models absorbed entire training sets of data rather than storing or copying specific songs, the Munich court said.
Because its output is generated by users of the chatbot via their prompts, OpenAI said, they are the ones who should be held legally liable for it – an argument rejected by the court.
GEMA welcomed the decision as “the first landmark AI ruling in Europe”, saying it could have implications for other types of creative output.
Its chief executive, Tobias Holzmüller, said the decision proved “the internet is not a self-service store and human creative achievements are not free templates”.
“Today, we have set a precedent that protects and clarifies the rights of authors: even operators of AI tools such as ChatGPT must comply with copyright law. Today, we have successfully defended the livelihoods of music creators.”
Berlin law firm Raue, which represented GEMA, said in a statement that the court’s decision “sets an important precedent for the protection of creative works and sends a clear signal to the global tech industry” while creating “legal certainty for creators, music publishers and platforms across Europe”.
The ruling “is likely to have an impact far beyond Germany as a precedent”.
The German Journalists’ Association also hailed the ruling as “a milestone victory for copyright law”.
OpenAI said in a statement it would weigh an appeal. “We disagree with the ruling and are considering next steps,” it said.
“The decision is for a limited set of lyrics and does not impact the millions of people, businesses and developers in Germany that use our technology every day.”
It added: “We respect the rights of creators and content owners and are having productive conversations with many organisations around the world, so that they can also benefit from the opportunities of this technology.”
OpenAI has faced litigation in the US from authors and media groups claiming ChatGPT has been trained on their work without permission.
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US aircraft carrier moves into Latin America as Venezuela announces big military deployment – Dawn
- US aircraft carrier moves into Latin America as Venezuela announces big military deployment Dawn
- US aircraft carrier group arrives near Latin America BBC
- Venezuela prepares ‘massive deployment’ of forces in case of US attack Al Jazeera
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Michael Caine Partners With ElevenLabs To Clone Voice
Michael Caine and Liza Minelli are among a list of actors to lend their voices to ElevenLabs, the generative AI company that specializes in audio.
ElevenLabs has partnered with stars, both dead and alive, to launch the “Iconic Voice…
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The Masquerade Rages on into Season 19’s Midcycle — Overwatch 2 — Blizzard News
Season 19 lit the candles, cast the shadows, steeped in mystery, style, and spooky spectacles. But we’re not fading into the dark just yet! The midcycle masquerade is here, and it’s primed to keep the party going! This round brings a…
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Killer Films Partners With Wagner Entertainment On Upcoming Slate
EXCLUSIVE: Wagner Entertainment is teaming with Killer Films on a trio of female-directed elevated thrillers that blend distinctive style with broad commercial appeal. The inaugural slate, set to go into production in 2026, will feature three…
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Four Million Gamers Struggling for Survival in ARC Raiders® – Business Wire
- Four Million Gamers Struggling for Survival in ARC Raiders® Business Wire
- ARC Raiders has sold 2.5M copies Substack
- ARC Raiders Review Game Informer
- ARC Raiders is the Highest Rated Multiplayer Shooter in Almost a Decade Insider Gaming
- ARC…
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Samuel Chukwueze, Semi Ajayi and Nigeria embark on the long route to North America
Nigeria’s road to the FIFA World Cup, via Morocco
Nigeria needed a big win on the final matchday against Benin to reach the continental play-offs, and from hereon, the route to 2026 does not ease up. More competition, and teams just as…
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