Music publishers allege that Anthropic violated copyright policies by using hundreds of songs to train its Claude chatbot.
The horror movies of 2025 promise to be a diverse bunch of chillers, in every possible genre, from big franchises to indie nightmares.
The AI company still argues that training Claude on copyrighted material constitutes fair use.
Welcome to Music Business Worldwide’s round-up – where we make sure you caught the five biggest stories to hit our headlines.
Artificial intelligence company Anthropic has reached an agreement with Universal Music and other music publishers over its ...
Skylar Dalziel, 22, got hold of the music by illegally accessing cloud storage accounts linked to the artists in question, ...
Anthropic has partly resolved a legal disagreement that saw the AI startup draw the ire of the music industry.
Bill Ackman’s Pershing Square Capital Management (PSCM) is closing out an investment fund that held a stake in Universal ...
Anthropic and the record labels that sued it over copyright concerns agree the Amazon-backed AI firm's products can't recite ...
EMI has been named the Number One record label of 2024. The Universal Music UK label topped the market share rankings with a 10.5 per cent share of combined consumption, according to data from the ...
Dalziel pleaded guilty in October 2024 at Luton Crown Court to nine copyright offences and four computer misuse offences. She was sentenced at the same court on today (January 3) to 21 months ...
Anthropic reaches agreement in copyright infringement lawsuit with music publishers over AI model training on protected song ...