Newly unsealed documents show how Meta used LibGen, a pirated library of ebooks, to train its Llama 3 chatbot.
A trove of newly released documents reveals Meta’s plans to use book piracy site LibGen to train its AI models.
Executives and researchers leading Meta's AI efforts obsessed over beating OpenAI's GPT-4 model while developing Llama 3, ...
Hashed's Simon Kim believes the future of artificial intelligence hinges on a radical shift: breaking open the black box of centralized models ...
The journey to Llama running on ancient-though-local hardware enjoys some twists and turns; after securing the second hand ...
LlamaV-o1, a groundbreaking AI model from MBZUAI, revolutionizes multimodal reasoning by providing transparent step-by-step ...
A new day, a new controversy around artificial intelligence. This time, Meta has been accused of using pirated content ...
WhatsApp is developing a new home screen widget for Android that provides direct access to Meta AI, making it easier for ...
Meta, the parent company of Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp, faces a legal challenge from writers alleging illegal use of their works to train AI models.
Organizations are using Llama to build tools that provide value to individuals, society and the economy, and saving time and money in the process.
Meta has transformed the way we use WhatsApp by introducing the artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot, Meta AI, on the platform. However, currently, WhatsApp only allows users to type, copy ...
Meta has also been releasing many of its AI models for free use by developers, believing that an open approach could benefit its business by fostering the creation of better tools for its services.