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Authors petition publishers to curtail their use of AI

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Analysis   来源:Health  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:A doctor who spoke on condition of anonymity said that most of them were "brought dead to hospital" due to suffocation or broken ribs. The massive crowds had delayed ambulances getting to the site of the crush.

A doctor who spoke on condition of anonymity said that most of them were "brought dead to hospital" due to suffocation or broken ribs. The massive crowds had delayed ambulances getting to the site of the crush.

Edinburgh's Filmhouse will open its doors again on 27 June, after a lengthy campaign to save and refurbish it and guarantee its future.Originally opened in a repurposed church in 1978, the cinema was shuttered following the collapse of its parent charity Centre for the Moving Image.

Authors petition publishers to curtail their use of AI

Since then, the building has undergone a £2m refurbishment that has seen a complete internal refit to the public areas and screens, and "substantial" repairs to the roof and stonework.The venue will boast a total capacity of 350 seats and the former three-screen cinema will now offer a fourth, seating 24, for private screenings.A-listers from the film world got behind the campaign to save the well-loved cinema, including patrons Jack Lowden and Charlotte Wells and supporters Dougray Scott, Brian Cox, and Emma Thompson.

Authors petition publishers to curtail their use of AI

When the cinema opens, it will show a programme of films missed during the venue's almost three year closure.Lowden, whose film credits include Dunkirk and the upcoming Tornado, said the reopened cinema would provide a lift to Scotland's film-makers and storytellers.

Authors petition publishers to curtail their use of AI

"Filmhouse is a place utterly dedicated to the promotion and celebration of independent cinema," he said.

"To have such a place on the streets of our capital providing the platform to give our world-class film-makers and storytellers the lift-off they need, and continue to ask the big questions of ourselves through cinema, is exciting and vital."A spokesperson for Aldi UK told the BBC, that they are "under the same ownership but operate as completely separate businesses".

Mondelēz, which submitted the lawsuit in May, said it had reached out to Aldi several times about the "confusingly similar packaging".Although Aldi did discontinue or alter the packaging of some products, the supermarket has continued making "unacceptable copies", the lawsuit stated.

The company claimed that if Aldi is allowed to continued with its product lines, it will "irreparably harm" the Mondelēz brand.The lawsuit included side-by-side pictures comparing the appearances of Mondelēz' product with Aldi's.

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