

That’s the neat part—you don’t [turn].
That’s the neat part—you don’t [turn].
I appreciate how the headline puts “progressive” and “democrat” in different groups.
Its completely reasonable to hold people to standards that they don’t want to be held to :3
“Dems demand what they’re entitled to by law.”
I pressed number two on your mom last night.
Its not ambiguous. It’s always the newest matching noun that’s the antecedent. In this case it’s wrong.
Headline is gramatically incorrect. Carlson posted the newsletter not Trump.
9.4 Billion over what
Why would they be coming from this shit river swimmer
“Immigration enforcement”
Oh I didn’t realize sorry :!
Gilt Gilted as in gold.
Edit: OOP didn’t realize this was a pun.
Yes which would allow them to handle distribution. Like IP address bans. A video store can’t sue a customer over copyright if they make a disc image of a CD. That’d on the copyright holder only. They can ban the customer though.
I honestly think they have zero case here. The article just says stuff about reddit claiming that antrhopic doesn’t have reddit users’ consent and something about reddit being a le to defend their users.
However U.S. law puts the copyright in the hands of the creator of it, NOT Reddit. I guess Reddit can cut IPs off, but I really don’t think they have a tort here.
Social media platform Reddit sued the artificial intelligence company Anthropic on Wednesday, alleging that it is illegally “scraping” the comments of millions of Reddit users to train its chatbot Claude.
Reddit claims that Anthropic has used automated bots to access Reddit’s content despite being asked not to do so, and “intentionally trained on the personal data of Reddit users without ever requesting their consent.”
Anthropic said in a statement that it disagreed with Reddit’s claims “and will defend ourselves vigorously.”
Reddit filed the lawsuit Wednesday in California Superior Court in San Francisco, where both companies are based.
“AI companies should not be allowed to scrape information and content from people without clear limitations on how they can use that data,” said Ben Lee, Reddit’s chief legal officer, in a statement Wednesday.
Reddit has previously entered licensing agreements with Google, OpenAI and other companies that are paying to be able to train their AI systems on the public commentary of Reddit’s more than 100 million daily users.
Those agreements “enable us to enforce meaningful protections for our users, including the right to delete your content, user privacy protections, and preventing users from being spammed using this content,” Lee said.
Here’s something I found on the web…
Is this the framed person?
*laugh track*