The Xbox Wireless Headset receives microphone and battery life upgrades

Microsoft has just announced its new Xbox Wireless Headset, and it now comes with a free Dolby Atmos license. Previous iterations of the headset required owners to purchase a license separately. That’s typically a $15 purchase, which covers up to 10 Windows or Xbox devices. Another notable upgrade is its battery life, which, according to Microsoft, has increased to 20 hours of playtime.

Microsoft Wireless Headset Square
Microsoft

Regarding the Dolby Atmos license, Microsoft once posted that it had an exclusivity window with Dolby for Dolby Atmos and Dolby Vision. This was later proven untrue as the company clarified that the post was published in error. However, the fact that this headset comes with a license saves users some cash and could help more people try out the technology. Our best gaming headset list also contains some headsets that come with Dolby Atmos licenses, like the Audeze Maxwell.

The new Xbox Wireless Headset model doesn’t only have audio improvements. The microphone now has voice isolation and an improved auto-mute to prevent outside noises from garbling your audio output. Clear communication is important when communicating with the team to win, after all.

Besides having Dolby Atmos support, this new headset works with Windows Sonic and DTS Headphone:X. Windows Sonic is a spatial sound solution found on Windows computers. DTS Headphone:X is another 3D sound solution also for Windows, but requires a free download from the Microsoft Store. All three are designed to help enhance game audio and make it more immersive for the player. If the sound isn’t good enough for your tastes, you can adjust it using the Xbox Accessories app.

To reduce latency, the Xbox Wireless Headset comes with a Qualcomm S5 Gen 2 chipset. It also has Bluetooth 5.3 support.

Currently, the Xbox Wireless Headset is available for purchase for $110. While Microsoft hasn’t mentioned which regions have it in stock, it’s available in select regions both online and from retailers.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/audio/headphones/the-xbox-wireless-headset-receives-microphone-and-battery-life-upgrades-151455182.html?src=rss

Meta bans private jet tracking accounts on Instagram and Threads

It’s now harder to know where celebrities are flying to and their carbon emissions, with Meta shutting down Instagram and Threads accounts devoted to tracking private jets, TechCrunch reports. “Given the risk of physical harm to individuals, and in keeping with the independent Oversight Board’s recommendation, we’ve disabled these accounts for violating our privacy policy,” Meta told the publication. Deleted accounts include those tracking the flights of Taylor Swift, Bill Gates and, the head of Meta himself, Mark Zuckerberg. 

Jack Sweeney, a college student in his early 20s who runs the accounts, confirmed the news on his personal account. It’s the latest in a line of pushback he has faced in the past. In Late 2022, Elon Musk suspended Sweeney’s @ElonJet account — which tracked Musk’s flights — on X (then Twitter). He soon made an account with the handle @ElonJetNextDay to post Musk’s flights with a one day delay. Then, one year later, Taylor Swift’s lawyers sent Sweeney a cease-and-desist letter stating, “While this may be a game to you, or an avenue that you hope will earn you wealth or fame, it is a life-or-death matter for our Client.”

In May, Sweeney’s job became a little bit harder, with the Biden administration allowing anyone with a private aircraft to keep their registration data anonymous. However, Sweeney said tips and other research make it still doable.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/meta-bans-private-jet-tracking-accounts-on-instagram-and-threads-140429820.html?src=rss

WhatsApp will soon let users add contacts from any device

WhatsApp just announced that it’ll soon let users add contacts from any device, and not just a primary phone, thus solving one of life’s little annoyances. A forthcoming update will let people add and manage contacts via the web client, on a Windows PC and “eventually other linked devices.”

Users will also be able to save a contact exclusively to WhatsApp without syncing to a phone, which is useful when sharing a handset with others or for those who manage both work and personal WhatsApp accounts on the same device. Meta says that this will also solve the problem of people losing all of their contacts when they misplace a phone, as the contacts will be fully restorable.

Even better? The company says this is the first step toward what many consider the “holy grail” of potential improvements. WhatsApp is getting usernames, so you won’t have to save someone’s information via a phone number. Meta says this will “add an extra degree of privacy” since you can share a username without sharing a phone number.

The multi-device contacts tool is rolling out gradually “over the coming weeks and months.” There’s no ETA on dedicated usernames. WhatsApp has been busy lately, in light of crossing an audience retention milestone. The app recently unveiled enhanced video calling and passkey support on iOS.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/social-media/whatsapp-will-soon-let-users-add-contacts-from-any-device-130047546.html?src=rss

Qualcomm Snapdragon Elite 8 vs. Snapdragon 8 Gen 3: New Oryon CPU, Redesigned AI Engine, GPU and AI ISP, Delivering Top Performance

On October 21, 2024, Qualcomm introduced its latest flagship mobile SoC, the Snapdragon 8 Elite, which succeeds the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3, launched on October 24, 2023. Qualcomm has not confirmed whether a Snapdragon 8 Gen 4 is in development.

Built on a 3nm (nanometers) TSMC transistor process, a reduction from the previous generation’s 4nm, the Snapdragon 8 Elite offers improved efficiency. Qualcomm claims the new chip delivers 44% better CPU power efficiency than the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3.

The Snapdragon 8 Elite features a custom Oryon CPU, replacing the ARM-based Kryo CPU from previous models. This redesign removes “efficiency” cores in favor of “performance” cores for enhanced processing power.

Among its standout features is the upgraded Qualcomm AI Engine, which promises significant improvements over the previous model. Additionally, the new Adreno GPU is built on a sliced architecture, boosting power efficiency and performance by 40%. The redesigned Hexagon NPU delivers up to 45% faster AI performance and better energy efficiency, making the Snapdragon 8 Elite a powerful upgrade over its predecessor.

During the launch event, HONOR, Xiaomi, and Asus confirmed that the Snapdragon Elite 8 will power their upcoming flagship phones, the Magic7 Series, the Xiaomi 15 series, and the Rog 9, respectively. Oneplus confirmed in a social media video on Weibo that its upcoming OnePlus 13 will launch with the Snapdragon Elite 8. Other phone brands, including Realme, Vivo and Nubia confirmed featuring the new chip in their high-end devices.

Oryon CPU 2nd Gen With Improved Performance Over The Previous Kryo Architecture

Snapdragon 8 Elite Oryon CPU 2nd Gen

The Qualcomm Oryon CPU, initially introduced in Snapdragon X series processors for Windows laptops, has been adapted for mobile in the Snapdragon 8 Elite. The Oryon CPU 2nd Gen includes two Prime cores, each clocked at 4.32 GHz, and six Performance cores at 3.8 GHz.

This new custom design marks a departure from the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3’s Kryo CPU, which is built on an ARM-based architecture and features a mix of one 3.3 GHz Prime core, six 3.2 GHz Performance cores, and two 2.3 Ghz Efficiency cores.

Qualcomm claims the Oryon 2nd Gen is the world’s fastest mobile CPU. To confirm the bold statement, we need to compare real-life benchmarks with MediaTek’s recently announced flagship, the Dimensity 9400. By removing the efficiency cores, Qualcomm seems to follow the “All-Big-Core” design trend set by MediaTek last year.

The shift to Performance cores allows the Elite 8 to optimize power usage while maintaining high performance. The Performance cores scale down power when workloads are light but ramp up when computational demands increase.

The Oryon Prime cores’ “Instant Awake” feature uses new data cache prefetchers for improved performance, allowing near-instantaneous core operation by removing the need for a reset code sequence. The CPU also benefits from increased cache, with 12MB of L2 cache for the two Prime cores and another 12MB for the six performance cores. This 50% cache increase compared to the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3, which featured only one unified 12 MB L3 cache for all eight cores (note that L3 cache is slower than L2 cache).

Additionally, faster LP-DDR5x memory with 5.3 GHz data transfer speed (over 4.8 GHz previously) enhances the overall performance of the Snapdragon 8 Elite.

Adreno GPU With New Sliced Architecture For Better Performance And Power Efficiency

Snapdragon 8 Elite’s Adreno GPU with sliced architecture

Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite offers notable advancements in mobile gaming, particularly in power efficiency and performance compared to its predecessor, the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3. The company reports that the Snapdragon 8 Elite extends gaming sessions by 2.5 hours, thanks to improved power management, while also delivering smoother gameplay with higher frame rates.

A key enhancement is the new Adreno GPU, which features a sliced architecture with dedicated memory for each slice. This design boosts power efficiency by 40%, increases performance by 40%, and improves ray tracing capabilities by 35% over the previous generation.

This sliced architecture enables multiple identical GPU blocks (used for scaling) to run independently from a power and frequency point of view. Slices with a lower workload consume as little as possible, potentially leaving room for diverting power and increasing frequency to the busiest slice.

A significant new feature of the 8 Elite is its support for Unreal’s Chaos Physics Engine. This system processes real-time game physics directly on the device, utilizing all Oryon CPU cores. Qualcomm claims the chip can simulate 9000 unique objects and handle collisions and destruction of over 1000 objects with under 5 ms of latency.

This claim is challenging to assess because performance depends on the complexity of each object, which is determined by the structure of the collision meshes. More complex objects look more realistic and require proportionally complex collision representations.

The Oryon CPU helps increase gaming performance by speeding up pre-rendering tasks like physics and by feeding graphics data to the GPU faster during the final rendering. Qualcomm claims up to 50% CPU performance uplift in gaming applications.

The Snapdragon 8 Elite supports Unreal Engine 5’s Nanite technology for the first time on mobile and is exclusive to Snapdragon-powered devices. Nanite on Elite 8 delivers a significant increase in geometric complexity and enables film-quality 3D scene rendering on Qualcomm-powered smartphones.

Upgraded Qualcomm AI Engine With On-device Multimodal Gen AI

The Snapdragon 8 Elite handles AI tasks using various specialized units depending on the nature of the algorithms and the models. Qualcomm’s AI Engine integrates the Oryon CPU, the Adreno GPU, the Hexagon NPU, the Sensing Hub, and the Memory block to process different types of AI workloads.

“The Oryon CPU is a great addition for processing latency critical AI tasks,” said Francisco Cheng, Senior Director, Product Marketing, Qualcomm. “It helps initiate all the AI workloads and facilitates them throughout the AI Engine. It takes on the heavy lifting while the other parts of the AI can focus on AI-specific tasks.”

At the heart of the AI Engine lies the Hexagon NPU, which has been significantly upgraded from the previous Snapdragon 8 Gen 3.

The new NPU includes a Tensor accelerator for large vision models (LVM) and traditional AI acceleration, an 8-core Scalar accelerator for large language models (LLM) and classic AI, and a 6-core Vector accelerator designed for long-context support. Qualcomm added two cores to both the Scalar and the Vector accelerators compared to the previous generation. Additionally, these new accelerators deliver higher throughput for all cores, making the system more performant.

Moreover, the LP-DDR5x memory, running at 5.3 GHz, plays a crucial role in boosting AI performance. Qualcomm’s new NPU architecture supports concurrency, allowing AI and computer vision tasks to operate simultaneously in memory, enhancing overall processing efficiency.

Editor’s note: Please note that a System-on-Chip (SoC) is very complex, and I bet that Qualcomm is simplifying how all the Processing Units interact with each other so it can be explained more clearly to non-experts. 

What Does On-device Multimodal Gen AI Do For Smartphone Users?

Qualcomm’s new AI Engine, integrated into the Snapdragon 8 Elite, brings significant advancements in on-device multimodal Gen AI compared to last year’s Snapdragon 8 Gen 3.

Thanks to various AI models, including large multimodal models (LMM), large language models (LLMs), and large vision models (LVMs), the multimodal Gen AI running on the Elite 8 can understand voice, text and images. It no longer needs to convert speech to text before processing voice tokens through the LLM to provide answers via speech.

The new AI Engine version can even see the world through the phone’s camera to accomplish various tasks, from simple queries and summarization to content creation. For example, users can take a photo of a restaurant receipt and ask the AI assistant to split the bill. Additionally, the new system’s long context support allows it to process longer token* inputs, such as documents or books, and offer expert assistance based on the uploaded information.

Qualcomm promises that the AI assistant operates entirely on-device, providing a personalized experience. The updated Sensing Hub plays a crucial role in these improvements, offering 60% better AI performance and featuring 34% more memory than its predecessor. These enhancements enable faster, more efficient processing for AI-driven tasks across various applications.

*Editor’s note: a token can be a word, an image or a spoken word.

New AI ISP for Enhanced On-device AI-driven Image Processing

The redesigned AI ISP (Image Signal Processor) in the Snapdragon 8 Elite, formerly known as the Cognitive ISP in the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3, significantly improves image processing performance. With a 35% increase in pixel throughput and an impressive speed of 4.3 gigapixels per second, the new AI ISP enables advanced photography and video capabilities.

Notably, it supports triple 48MP video capture at 30 FPS and 320-megapixel photo capture, compared to last year’s triple 36MP 30 FPS video capture and 200-megapixel photo capture. Additionally, the “Zero Shutter Lag” feature ensures that these high-quality images are captured instantly.

One of the key upgrades is the revamped Hexagon Direct Link, which allows the AI ISP to access the RAW image sensor directly, bypassing the Hexagon NPU. This innovation augments the data transfer speed, enabling real-time AI-based enhancements for 4K video at 60 FPS. The increased processing power of the Snapdragon 8 Elite also brings cloud-level AI features directly to the device, enhancing the user experience by ensuring better privacy and security.

Qualcomm’s Insight AI suite offers tools for semi-automatic image editing, including Limitless Segmentation, which can now identify and mask up to 250 layers, a substantial increase from the 12-layer capability in the previous generation. This new feature allows the user to refine every area of the photo easily.

The Realtime Skin and Sky feature uses AI to adjust lighting conditions, ensuring natural skin tones and true sky colors, even in challenging environments.

Additionally, the AI Portrait Realtime Re-lighting feature improves video call image quality by automatically adjusting lighting on the caller’s face.

Another standout feature is Video Object Eraser, which allows users to highlight and remove objects from videos in real-time at 30 FPS, a capability previously unavailable on-device with the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3.

AI-enhanced 5G and WI-FI 7 connectivity

The Snapdragon X80 5G Modem-RF System, succeeding the Snapdragon X75, combines Qualcomm’s 5G technology with a 2nd Gen AI processor to enhance 5G performance and deliver multi-gigabit speeds. It offers 30% improved location accuracy, even in challenging environments like parking structures, and introduces the first 4×6 MIMO solution and AI-based multi-antenna management. Additionally, it supports NB-NTN satellite connectivity.

Qualcomm’s FastConnect 7900 Mobile Connectivity System is considered the most advanced Wi-Fi 7 solution, providing up to 40% more power efficiency compared to the FastConnect 7800. It supports High Band Simultaneous Multi-Link, offering some of the fastest Wi-Fi speeds globally. The FastConnect 7900 is also the first single-chip solution to integrate Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and Ultra-Wideband (UWB), enabling proximity-based capabilities like finding lost items or accessing secure buildings. Qualcomm XPAN also delivers premium lossless audio for an enhanced audio experience.

Qualcomm Snapdragon Elite 8 vs. Snapdragon 8 Gen 3: New Oryon CPU, Redesigned AI Engine, GPU and AI ISP, Delivering Top Performance

, original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Blade Runner 2049 producer sues Elon Musk for image used in Cybercab launch

When Elon Musk introduced Tesla’s robotaxi, the Cybercab, earlier this month, he showed a slide during his presentation that probably looked familiar to Blade Runner 2049 fans. It featured the back of a person wearing a trench coat against a desert-like landscape with high-rise buildings in the background. Now, a producer behind the movie is suing him for copyright infringement. According to The New York Times, Alcon Entertainment accused him of using “AI-created images mirroring scenes from Blade Runner 2049, including one featuring a Ryan Gosling look-alike.” It said that it previously denied a request by Musk, Tesla and Warner Bros. Discovery to use imagery from the film as part of the Cybercab event. The companies were also named as defendants in the lawsuit. 

Alcon called Tesla’s use of AI to create images nearly identical to scenes from the movie an “intentionally malicious gambit.” It argued that by connecting the product announcement to the movie, the automaker made the event “more attractive to a global audience” and misappropriated “the Blade Runner 2049 brand to help sell Teslas.” In its lawsuit, Alcon said that the connection between Musk and its film has a financial impact on the company, even going so far as calling the defendants’ actions as a “massive economic theft,” because it’s currently in talks with other potential automative partners for its upcoming Blade Runner 2099 television series. 

“Any prudent brand considering any Tesla partnership has to take Musk’s massively amplified, highly politicized, capricious and arbitrary behavior, which sometimes veers into hate speech, into account,” it reportedly wrote in its complaint. It said it “adamantly objected” to being associated with Musk or any of his companies, and that Musk was personally aware that it refused his company’s request. “He thus personally knew and understood that to incorporate ‘BR2049’ into the event presentation at all would be improper and an unauthorized misappropriation of ‘BR2049’ goodwill,” the producer wrote. It’s worth noting that Musk mentioned Blade Runner during the event, saying that he loves the franchise, but he doesn’t “know if we want that future.” Musk is one of the biggest supporters of Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump and is known for making divisive, controversial tweets. He had also been caught retweeting fake news in the past, including a doctored Kamala Harris video. 

Alcon called the movie still that Tesla allegedly copied “one of the most iconic images” from Blade Runner 2049. We took the image above from Tesla’s live stream, and you can see the still from the film below. 

A man in a trench coat with a car and a desert landscape in the background.
Warner Bros. Picture

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/transportation/blade-runner-2049-producer-sues-elon-musk-for-image-used-in-cybercab-launch-120048345.html?src=rss

The Morning After: Ford tells EV owners to stop using its Tesla adapter

Ford has issued a bulletin urging people to stop using its Tesla Supercharger adapter. It says the adapter, which hooks Ford EVs up to any NACS charger, has an issue that risks reducing charging speed or even damage the port. The company says it will send a replacement adapter soon and asks users to return the faulty one. Both the replacement and the shipping cost to send back the original will be free of charge.

It’s another high-profile stumble for Ford, especially since this adapter was delayed several times already due to supplier issues. Plus, it’s not as if these adapters are toys, given they’re hooking up to Superchargers capable of pumping out 250kW. Ford must also be smarting that it had to sign a charging pact with Tesla in the first place and will adopt NACS as its charging standard in 2025.

— Dan Cooper

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The biggest tech stories you missed

Wall Street Journal and New York Post are suing Perplexity AI for copyright infringement

The Wall Street Journal and The New York Post are suing Perplexity AI for using their content without permission. It comes just a week after The New York Times did the same, with all three arguing that Perplexity is stealing their content. Let another round of AI vs. newspaper courtroom skirmish begin!

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Image of the Nintendo Alarmo on a wooden nightstand.
Devindra Hardawar for Engadget

Nintendo is such a storied company that even its silly side projects get a deep level of rigorous scrutiny. Devindra Hardawar has reviewed Alarmo, Nintendo’s attempt to bring a little bit of extra joy to waking up. It’s designed to rouse you from your slumber with sounds from a variety of Nintendo titles, including Mario Odyssey and Breath of the Wild. Whether it’s worth the $100 asking price, you’ll have to read the review to learn why it’s both charming and frustrating.

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Render of the Snapdragon 8 Elite
Qualcomm

Qualcomm has announced the Snapdragon 8 Elite, the company’s newest premium smartphone system on chip. It’s packing the Oryon CPU found in last year’s X Elite laptop chip and uses a 3nm process, which should offer significant leaps in performance. It’ll be interesting to see which devices this pops up in and how much faster it is compared to its immediate predecessors.

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This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/general/the-morning-after-engadget-newsletter-111538980.html?src=rss

Wall Street Journal and New York Post are suing Perplexity AI for copyright infringement

The Wall Street Journal’s parent company, Dow Jones, and the New York Post are suing AI-powered search startup Perplexity for using their content to train its large language models. Both News Corp. publications are accusing Perplexity of copyright infringement for using their articles to generate answers to people’s queries, thereby taking traffic away from the publications’ websites. “This suit is brought by news publishers who seek redress for Perplexity’s brazen scheme to compete for readers while simultaneously freeriding on the valuable content the publishers produce,” the publishers wrote in their complaint, according to the Journal

In their lawsuit, the publications argued that Perplexity can serve users not just snippets of copyrighted articles, but the whole thing, especially for those paying for its premium subscription plan. They cited an instance wherein the service allegedly served up the entirety of a New York Post piece when the user typed in “Can you provide the fultext of that article.” In addition, the publications are accusing Perplexity of harming their brand by citing information that never appeared on their websites. The company’s AI can hallucinate, they explained, and add incorrect details. In one instance, it allegedly attributed quotes to a Wall Street Journal article about the US arming Ukraine-bound F-16 jets that were never in the piece. The publications said they sent a letter to Perplexity in July to raise these legal issues, but the AI startup never responded.  

Various news organizations have sued AI companies in the past for copyright infringement. The New York Times, as well as The Intercept, Raw Story and AlterNet, sued OpenAI for using their content to train its LLMs. In its lawsuit, the Times said OpenAI and Microsoft “seek to free-ride” on its massive investment in journalism. Condé Nast previously sent a cease-and-desist letter to Perplexity to demand that it stop using its publications’ articles as responses to users’ queries. And in June, Wired reported that Amazon had started investigating the AI company over reports that it scrapes websites without consent. 

News Corp. is asking the court to prohibit Perplexity from using its publications’ content without permission, and it’s also asking for damages of up to $150,000 for each incident of copyright infringement. Whether the company is willing to negotiate a content agreement remains to be seen — News Corp. struck a licensing deal with OpenAI earlier this year, which allows the ChatGPT owner to use its websites’ articles for training over the next five years in exchange for a reported $250 million.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/wall-street-journal-and-new-york-post-are-suing-perplexity-ai-for-copyright-infringement-050135219.html?src=rss

Wall Street Journal and New York Post are suing Perplexity AI for copyright infringement

The Wall Street Journal’s parent company, Dow Jones, and the New York Post are suing AI-powered search startup Perplexity for using their content to train its large language models. Both News Corp. publications are accusing Perplexity of copyright infringement for using their articles to generate answers to people’s queries, thereby taking traffic away from the publications’ websites. “This suit is brought by news publishers who seek redress for Perplexity’s brazen scheme to compete for readers while simultaneously freeriding on the valuable content the publishers produce,” the publishers wrote in their complaint, according to the Journal

In their lawsuit, the publications argued that Perplexity can serve users not just snippets of copyrighted articles, but the whole thing, especially for those paying for its premium subscription plan. They cited an instance wherein the service allegedly served up the entirety of a New York Post piece when the user typed in “Can you provide the fultext of that article.” In addition, the publications are accusing Perplexity of harming their brand by citing information that never appeared on their websites. The company’s AI can hallucinate, they explained, and add incorrect details. In one instance, it allegedly attributed quotes to a Wall Street Journal article about the US arming Ukraine-bound F-16 jets that were never in the piece. The publications said they sent a letter to Perplexity in July to raise these legal issues, but the AI startup never responded.  

Various news organizations have sued AI companies in the past for copyright infringement. The New York Times, as well as The Intercept, Raw Story and AlterNet, sued OpenAI for using their content to train its LLMs. In its lawsuit, the Times said OpenAI and Microsoft “seek to free-ride” on its massive investment in journalism. Condé Nast previously sent a cease-and-desist letter to Perplexity to demand that it stop using its publications’ articles as responses to users’ queries. And in June, Wired reported that Amazon had started investigating the AI company over reports that it scrapes websites without consent. 

News Corp. is asking the court to prohibit Perplexity from using its publications’ content without permission, and it’s also asking for damages of up to $150,000 for each incident of copyright infringement. Whether the company is willing to negotiate a content agreement remains to be seen — News Corp. struck a licensing deal with OpenAI earlier this year, which allows the ChatGPT owner to use its websites’ articles for training over the next five years in exchange for a reported $250 million.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/wall-street-journal-and-new-york-post-are-suing-perplexity-ai-for-copyright-infringement-050135219.html?src=rss

Wall Street Journal and New York Post are suing Perplexity AI for copyright infringement

The Wall Street Journal’s parent company, Dow Jones, and the New York Post are suing AI-powered search startup Perplexity for using their content to train its large language models. Both News Corp. publications are accusing Perplexity of copyright infringement for using their articles to generate answers to people’s queries, thereby taking traffic away from the publications’ websites. “This suit is brought by news publishers who seek redress for Perplexity’s brazen scheme to compete for readers while simultaneously freeriding on the valuable content the publishers produce,” the publishers wrote in their complaint, according to the Journal

In their lawsuit, the publications argued that Perplexity can serve users not just snippets of copyrighted articles, but the whole thing, especially for those paying for its premium subscription plan. They cited an instance wherein the service allegedly served up the entirety of a New York Post piece when the user typed in “Can you provide the fultext of that article.” In addition, the publications are accusing Perplexity of harming their brand by citing information that never appeared on their websites. The company’s AI can hallucinate, they explained, and add incorrect details. In one instance, it allegedly attributed quotes to a Wall Street Journal article about the US arming Ukraine-bound F-16 jets that were never in the piece. The publications said they sent a letter to Perplexity in July to raise these legal issues, but the AI startup never responded.  

Various news organizations have sued AI companies in the past for copyright infringement. The New York Times, as well as The Intercept, Raw Story and AlterNet, sued OpenAI for using their content to train its LLMs. In its lawsuit, the Times said OpenAI and Microsoft “seek to free-ride” on its massive investment in journalism. Condé Nast previously sent a cease-and-desist letter to Perplexity to demand that it stop using its publications’ articles as responses to users’ queries. And in June, Wired reported that Amazon had started investigating the AI company over reports that it scrapes websites without consent. 

News Corp. is asking the court to prohibit Perplexity from using its publications’ content without permission, and it’s also asking for damages of up to $150,000 for each incident of copyright infringement. Whether the company is willing to negotiate a content agreement remains to be seen — News Corp. struck a licensing deal with OpenAI earlier this year, which allows the ChatGPT owner to use its websites’ articles for training over the next five years in exchange for a reported $250 million.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/wall-street-journal-and-new-york-post-are-suing-perplexity-ai-for-copyright-infringement-050135219.html?src=rss

Star Trek: Section 31 will premiere on January 25

It’s been over half a decade since we first heard rumblings of a Section 31 spinoff, and now we finally have a release date. Star Trek: Section 31 will be exclusively available on Paramount+ starting Friday, January 25. The news came during a Star Trek universe panel at Comic Con over the weekend.

The movie stars Michelle Yeoh as Emperor Philippa Georgiou, a role she played in Star Trek: Discovery. She joins a “secret division of Starfleet” that must protect the United Federation of Planets while she faces the “sins of her past.” Alongside Yeoh, Star Trek: Section 31 stars actors such as Sam Richardson and Omari Hardwick.

An adaptation focused solely on Section 31 and starring Yeoh has been in the works since 2019. At the time, CBS All Access (now Paramount+) announced it would be a TV show focused on her character, Captain Georgiou. Then, in 2023, the production officially got the green light but, instead, as a movie. The news came just one month after Yeoh won the Best Actress Oscar for her role in Everything Everywhere All At Once (lesson: winning prestigious awards can get things going).

Paramount+ released a teaser for Star Trek: Section 31 in July, which you can watch here.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/streaming/star-trek-section-31-will-premiere-on-january-25-123023747.html?src=rss