Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2025-02-14 16:55:56| Engadget

The Guardian Media Group, owner of The Guardian and The Observer newspapers, is partnering with OpenAI. The deal will see reporting from The Guardian appear as a news source within ChatGPT, alongside article extracts and short summaries. In return, OpenAI will provide the Guardian Media Group with access to ChatGPT Enterprise, which the company says it will use to develop new products, features and tools.       "This new partnership with OpenAI reflects the intellectual property rights and value associated with our award-winning journalism, expanding our reach and impact to new audiences and innovative platform services," said Keith Underwood, chief financial and operating officer of the Guardian Media Group. The Guardian Media Group joins a growing list of news publishers that are now working with OpenAI after an initial period of uncertainty over the company and its business model. What started as a trickle with The Associated Press in 2023 has since become a flood, with many of the English-speaking world's leading publishers inking deals with the AI startup.  In some ways, The Guardian has been more proactive than others. In 2023, the newspaper publish an article detailing its approach to generative AI. A year later, it announced a partnership with ProRata, a company that built a platform that allows AI platforms to attribute search results and share revenue with content owners. Today's announcement also comes after a major coalition of publishers, including The Guardian, announced a lawsuit against Cohere, a Canadian startup they allege improperly used more than 4,000 copyrighted works to train its AI models.   This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/the-guardian-is-the-latest-news-organization-to-partner-with-openai-155555243.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

LATEST NEWS

2025-02-14 16:00:00| Marketing Profs - Concepts, Strategies, Articles and Commentaries

Catch up on select AI news and developments from the past week or so. Stay in the know. Read the full article at MarketingProfs


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

2025-02-14 15:30:35| Engadget

The recipients of the US government's CHIPS and Science Act awards may not get the amount that they were initially promised. According to Reuters, the Trump administration is looking to assess and change the CHIPS Act's current requirements. After that, it's set to renegotiate some of the deals awarded by the Biden administration. It has also indicated a delay in some of the disbursements that are already scheduled, Reuters said. A spokesperson for Taiwan-based GlobalWafers said the company was notified by the program's office that CHIPS Act policies are under review because certain conditions do not align with Trump's executive orders. GlobalWafers is one of the program's awardees that was set to receive $406 million in grants.  Former president Joe Biden signed the CHIPS Act into law in 2022 to boost semiconductor production in the US. While each awardee has different milestones they need to achieve in order to get grants, the goal is to get them to build new foundries and upgrade existing ones in the country. The Trump administration is reportedly concerned with many of the previous administration's requirements for recipients. They include clauses added into contracts by Biden's team, the news organization's sources said, including requirements to use unionized labor when building factories and to provide factory workers with affordable childcare. The White House also isn't happy that some of the companies, such as Intel, announced expansion plans in China after being chosen as a recipient. The US government has yet to formally announce any changes to CHIPS Act policies, so it's not yet clear how extensive they will be and how previous deals will be affected. Bloomberg reported last year that the Biden administration rushed to finalize deals with recipients after Donald Trump won the presidential elections. Trump vocally criticized the program in the past, calling it "bad" and arguing that increasing tariffs would attract chip companies without the government having to award any grants. This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/computing/trump-administration-reportedly-eyes-renegotiating-chips-act-awards-143035924.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

Latest from this category

22.02Are LLM based chat bots vulnerable to SEO spam given the probabilistic nature of their responses? If a particular element of information is corroborated many times across the crawlable web does it influence results?
22.02OpenAI bans Chinese accounts using ChatGPT to edit code for social media surveillance
21.02Can somebody let this robot down?
21.02Bybit hacked for almost $1.5 billion in the biggest crypto theft ever
21.02Fortnites new season leans heavily on heist mechanics
21.02Apple is adding tens of thousands of recipes to News+
21.02Federal government reportedly plans to shut down its EV charging infrastructure
21.02Meta approves massive bonuses for executives after broad layoffs
Marketing and Advertising »

All news

22.02New York Mayor Eric Adams, a Democrat, sues Trump administration for return of $80 million it seized
22.02Coffee prices are at a 50-year high. Producers aren't celebrating
22.02As US exits foreign aid, who will fill the gap?
22.02Is Xi's sudden embrace of business for real? China is left guessing
22.02Alkem Labs promoters sell Rs 300-cr shares in block deal
22.02Sebi probes surge in thematic mutual fund schemes amid NFO arbitrage
22.02Godrej Industries surges 38% in five sessions on robust Q3 results
22.02Are LLM based chat bots vulnerable to SEO spam given the probabilistic nature of their responses? If a particular element of information is corroborated many times across the crawlable web does it influence results?
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .