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Rivestream replay: Claude’s beginner advice,

Reece Rogers: Therefore, the ruling is that they can train the books they must buy first.

Kylie Robison: Yes, there are many. Talk about nuances. There are a lot of nuances here, and it is a San Francisco judge who tried a company in San Francisco. As I mentioned, The New York Times is suing Openai, and I think as a reporter, this is the big view we are looking for. You know the New York Times accused you of using Chatgpt to copy and spit out completely and like stealing, spit out what a journalist does, which is not free to use. It has to be transformative. So, this is the big one we are looking for. But there are no large amount of regulations. We are looking for free or fair use, and it’s a very different law, and we’ve evolved into a society, you know it’s nuanced.

Reece Rogers: It’s subtle and incredibly complex. And I think we will be watching next year. Two years. So we are monitoring this is definitely evolving.

Kylie Robison: We are monitoring the situation. If you visit wired.com, you will find an incredible report by our colleague Kate Nibs, who talked about Meta’s lawsuit.

Reece Rogers: Yes, follow Kate Knibbs. Regarding AI and copyright, her report is incredible. OK, let’s talk about another issue. That’s it. So far, this is really fun. Mary asked, thank you for all the thoughtful questions. I see your free Claude has access to the internet. My choice doesn’t seem to pay, but I don’t seem to have such an option.

Kylie Robison: Oh, yes, I saw it. That’s why I log in. So I think, where is it in mine?

Reece Rogers: OK, OK, let’s look at Mary. Sorry, if I can’t help you, you know. I’ll go here. You know the searches and tools you encountered in the prompt bar and then I see web search here, or you can switch, web, search. Maybe also included in your prompt, for example, searching the web for what you want, which may trigger it.

Kylie Robison: I’m doing this now because I can’t actually see it, choose web search, although I have paid tiers. So I asked, can you search the Internet? It said yes, then I asked for the latest information about the New York Mayoral Competition, it searched the network and found it was timely and requested, you can search the network for this information and it should work.

Reece Rogers: I think this is probably a point that should be raised when you compare web searches between them. Maybe Chatgpt, Claude is they both will be pretty strong, and they will do a great job of browsing the web to find the information they need. gatgbt is specially made. License deals with Condé Nast, owner of Wired and other companies. This brings us more reports. So if you use chatgbt, if you use Claude to search the network, you may see some wired articles. So it’s like something to remember. I think as a user. I really won’t notice the difference.

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