New Mexico State University Reaches $1 Million Settlement in Sexual Assault Lawsuit, Mandates Consent Training for Students

LAS CRUCES, N.M. — A student’s lawsuit against New Mexico State University, claiming sexual assault in 2022, has reached a resolution with the university agreeing to a $1 million settlement. This decision, made by the NMSU Board of Regents, prevents the case from going to trial. The lawsuit contended that the university failed to take necessary steps to avert the assault, allowing the accused student to continue attending classes while delaying an investigation into the allegations. The plaintiff argued that the university’s inaction not only compounded her trauma but also jeopardized the safety of other … Read more

Wordsmith Unveils Free Training Framework Designed to Empower Legal AI Engineers and Transform the Legal Profession

San Francisco, California – Legal technology startup Wordsmith has introduced a new training program designed specifically for legal AI engineers. This initiative includes multiple educational modules supported by online resources, marking a significant step in the evolution of legal technology training. The course is offered free of charge and primarily targets in-house legal teams, with the intention of catering to Wordsmith’s main clientele. Participants can expect to progress through the program from beginner to advanced levels over a period of about two months, advancing through different tiers of understanding and application. Ross McNairn, CEO of … Read more

Meta Secures Court Victory as Judge Dismisses Authors’ Lawsuit Over AI Training Practices

SAN FRANCISCO — A federal judge in California has delivered a significant ruling in the ongoing legal discourse surrounding the use of artificial intelligence to train models, yet the decision largely stems from missteps by the plaintiffs rather than an endorsement of Meta’s practices. On Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Vince Chhabria dismissed much of a lawsuit filed by a collective of authors who alleged that Meta improperly utilized their copyrighted literary works to develop its AI models. The judge noted that Meta purportedly sourced materials from LibGen, a controversial digital library that features a vast … Read more

Federal Judge Clears AI Startup Anthropic of Misuse Claims, Turning Copyright Training Into a Transformative Triumph

San Francisco, CA — A federal judge ruled Monday that copyrighted books can be utilized to train artificial intelligence models without the authors’ consent, marking a significant legal precedent for the tech industry. U.S. District Judge William Alsup’s decision favored Anthropic, a San Francisco-based startup co-founded by former OpenAI employees and backed by Amazon. The ruling comes after the company faced a lawsuit from authors Andrea Bartz, Charles Graeber, and Kirk Wallace, who claimed their works were used without authorization in the training of Anthropic’s AI assistant, Claude. In his ruling, Alsup stated that Anthropic’s … Read more