Logitech G325 Lightspeed gaming headset review: cheap wireless cans that don’t sound too shabby
Call of Duty: Next: Activision geht gegen bekannten CoD-Leaker vor
Activision geht juristisch gegen den Leaker TheGhostOfHope vor und betont, dass Leaks unabhängig von ihrer Richtigkeit schaden.
Attempt to get copyright on wholly AI-generated art gunned down by US Supreme Court
The highest legal authority in the USA has refused to take a case involving a Missouri computer scientist who wants to copyright art created by his own generative AI system. The compsci guy in question, Dr Stephen Thaler, appealed to the Supreme Court justices after lower courts upheld a US Copyright Office decision that his art doesn't make the cut for copyright protection, because it wasn't created by a human.
As reported by Reuters, Thaler's generative AI tech is the winningly dorkish "Device for the Autonomous Bootstrapping of Unified Sentience", aka DABUS. He applied for a US federal copyright registration, asking for DABUS to be recognised as the author of a picture of a train tunnel surrounded by mucky green and purple vegetation, called "A Recent Entrance to Paradise".