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Artists fight back against AI programs that are copying their styles

San Francisco (AFP) - Artists outraged by artificial intelligence that copies in seconds the styles they have sacrificed years to develop are waging battle online and in court.

Fury erupted in the art community last year with the release of generative artificial intelligence (AI) programs that can convincingly carry out commands such as drawing a dog like cartoonist Sarah Andersen would, or a nymph the way illustrator Karla Ortiz might do.

Such style-swiping AI works are cranked out without the original artist's consent, credit or compensation -- the three C's at the heart of a fight to change all that.

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Elon Musk slams Dilbert backlash as 'racist' against whites

Twitter CEO Elon Musk is slamming the fallout over Dilbert cartoonist Scott Adams' comments bashing Blacks as "racist" against whites.

Newspapers across the nation have dropped the Dilbert comic strip since Adams unleashed a tirade Wednesday on his YouTube program saying that white people should "get the hell away from Black people." Adams also called Black people a "hate group," adding: "I don't want to have anything to do with them." Adams has continued to defend his comments.

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Rupert Murdoch and Elon Musk roasted as they sat together at Super Bowl: 'Shame Lex Luther had to miss it'

During the big game on Sunday, Elon Musk, the CEO of Twitter, was spotted sitting with Rupert Murdoch, the owner of Fox and other right-leaning outlets and tabloids. It led viewers to remark that they were very well matched as two men who profit off of evil, as one Twitter user put it.

"It's a shame that Lex Luther had to miss the game with his friends," mocked Elie Mystal.

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Watch: Congresswoman gets GOP ‘expert’ witness to admit he is not a Twitter expert

Lawyer Jonathan Turley has become one of the Republican Party's favorite lawyers. A self-proclaimed Democrat, he frequently appears in Congress as an expert witness for Republicans.

Such is the case this week in the first hearing from the so-called "weaponization committee," when Turley was there to comment on Twitter and other issues.

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Conservative freakout has made social media companies scared to enforce rules against violence: House witness

During a House hearing on Wednesday, Rep. Summer Lee (D-PA) pointed out that social media accounts are actually giving conservatives an edge on their platforms because there has been such an uprising.

She noted that the hearing "would be funny if it weren't real life. I understand my colleagues on the other side of the aisle want to be victims so very badly but if I understand correctly, public criticism and allegations of anti-conservative bias are actually making Twitter and other social media companies less willing to enforce their own policies against political conservatives; correct?"

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Republican rants ​there’s a Chinese conspiracy behind the Democratic support of solar panels

WASHINGTON — Rep. Byron Donalds (R-FL) just found out that Democrats support green energy, but he believes it's all really about Hunter Biden.

According to the Republican lawmaker, the hearing with Twitter executives answered a lot of questions about Hunter Biden's business deals.

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Website that tries to get people to kill themselves is still online

Mother Jones is calling out a website that thrives on targeting people to get them to kill themselves.

Their cover story in the March/April issue attacks the site Kiwi Farms, which is a message board akin to 4chan or 8chan, but people use the site to plan and coordinate attacks on the lives of people they hope to destroy.

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Google to release ChatGPT-like bot named Bard

Google said Monday it will release a conversational chatbot named Bard, launching a rivalry with Microsoft that has invested billions of dollars in ChatGPT, a language AI app that convincingly mimics human writing.

"We've been working on an experimental conversational AI service... that we're calling Bard. And today, we're taking another step forward by opening it up to trusted testers ahead of making it more widely available to the public in the coming weeks," said Google CEO Sundar Pichai in a blog post.

Judge uses AI app 'ChatGPT' to help make court ruling

The new artificial intelligence site ChatGPT has brought people together to make silly poems and even social media tweets, but one judge is using it to formulate case decisions.

While the site has been an annoyance for teachers testing for plagiarism or outright false information, this proves to be the fist time a judge is admitting to using AI to formulate a ruling, Vice News reported.

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Former NFL player Derrick Dockery quietly becomes a guardian for TikTok on Capitol Hill

Former National Football League player Derrick Dockery quietly joined the lobbying efforts for the Chinese social media site TikTok and has been working as a lobbyist in Washington, D.C., since 2020, federal records show.

The ex-offensive lineman, who played for the Dallas Cowboys, Buffalo Bills and the franchise now known as the Washington Commanders during his 10-year professional career, spent a few years doing internships and low-level work for Republicans on Capitol Hill before joining the team at ByteDance, the parent company of TikTok.

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Judge strikes down Matt Gaetz claim voter suppression is free speech

A far-right social media influencer was arrested in 2021 after working online to suppress votes targeting people of color in 2016. Things aren't going well in court for them, however.

"Douglass Mackey, aka Ricky Vaughn, 31, of West Palm Beach, was charged by criminal complaint in the Eastern District of New York," the Justice Department said in a release after the arrest. "He was taken into custody ... in West Palm Beach and made his initial appearance before U.S. Magistrate Judge Bruce E. Reinhart of the Southern District of Florida."

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Secret Twitter video shows employees tried to warn of 'shooting in the streets' on Jan. 6

New Twitter CEO Elon Musk has spent the past several weeks releasing information he calls the "Twitter Files," which shows what he considers to be inappropriate bias against conservatives in the company.

What hasn't been revealed, however, is that members of Twitter's safety policy team spoke on a video conference to talk about expectations for Jan. 6, 2021, the day in which the U.S. Congress came under attack by supporters of former President Donald Trump.

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J6 report reveals how Twitter and other social networks were used to fuel the insurrection

While a debate brews over the White House, Homeland Security, Pentagon, Secret Service and FBI failures on and around Jan. 6, another piece of the equation is being cited by Rolling Stone attacking social media sites like Twitter and Facebook, which allowed insurrectionists to propagate throughout their platforms.

After the Jan. 6 attack, "Twitter employees raged at their own company and its leadership, blaming them for the social media giant’s inept handling of Donald Trump and other top MAGA figures’ incitement to violence," the report explained.

“Do you want to have more blood on your hands?” said a staffer to top executive Del Harvey, when asking whether Trump could cause more violence.

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