Innovation & Design

US judge allows company to train AI using copyrighted literary materials

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Breaking News   来源:U.S.  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:Kettering fan and photographer Peter Short said the ground's four floodlights were a local landmark and were sadly missed.

Kettering fan and photographer Peter Short said the ground's four floodlights were a local landmark and were sadly missed.

Mr Laws and Galbraith were using a ground-floor flat in the block of 12 homes on Violet Close to make so-called cannabis shatter, prosecutor David Brooke KC said.At about 00:40 BST, their "sophisticated" factory exploded, killing Archie, who lived upstairs with his parents and baby brother, and totally destroying six homes, the court heard.

US judge allows company to train AI using copyrighted literary materials

Archie's mother Katherine Errington and seven-week-old brother Finlay were buried beneath bricks and debris, the pair having to be dug out and pulled to safety by his father Robbie York, the court heard.There was then a "fierce fire" and the block ultimately had to be demolished, with dozens of people losing their homes and treasured possessions, Mr Brooke said.Archie had been asleep in his living room when the blast occurred and was killed instantly, while his father, mother and baby brother all "miraculously" survived, the court heard.

US judge allows company to train AI using copyrighted literary materials

Mr Brooke said there had also been an "enormous impact" on the local area, with the damage and costs to Newcastle City Council valued at £3.7m, 81 adults and 59 children from 51 homes displaced and 10 households having to be permanently rehoused.Ms Errington told the court her son's death had "broken us in ways I didn't know possible" and the family had "lost everything", adding she felt "survivor's guilt".

US judge allows company to train AI using copyrighted literary materials

In a fury, she angrily told Galbraith he "took risks for profit" before screaming at him: "You killed my son."

"This was your choice," Ms Errington said. "We will never forgive you for what you did to our beautiful boy."The inquiry was announced in

after warnings from health watchdog the Care Quality Commission (CQC) and a damninginto the deaths of two men in Essex.

Bereaved families and campaigners launched a petition, signed by 100,000 people, calling for mental health deaths in the county to be debated in Parliament.Six months later, the former NHS North Essex Partnership Trust was

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