News

The lawsuit centers on Anthropic’s use of books to train its LLM, Claude, and could leave the company on the hook for ...
Kate Greathead's comic novel, “The Book of George,” has won the Gabe Hudson Prize. The $10,000 award is administered by ...
Environmental journalist Sam Bloch encourages us to look to the past for solutions to our ever-warming world in his new book ...
Authors are appealing for help from Congress and the courts after Meta and Anthropic used millions of books to create AI ...
The journalists at NPR who report on books are also avid readers. We asked NPR staff how they decide which books and authors to cover, with the big book publishers alone putting out roughly 100,000 ...
Proposed legislation would pressure publishers to adjust borrowing limits and find other ways to widen access.
A California federal judge ruled that three authors suing artificial intelligence startup Anthropic for copyright ...
Austin's library collection can be a front line in our resistance to the rise of book banning in Texas. But for this ...
The developers of the 2018 Aaron Sorkin stage adaptation of Harper Lee's seminal novel "To Kill a Mockingbird" convinced a ...
In an AI legal analysis, experts explain what court rulings around book copyrights mean for music lawsuits filed against Suno, Udio and Anthropic.
On July 17, 2025, US District Court Judge William Alsup approved a class certification against Anthropic for copyright infringement.
This is bad news for artists and media companies that want a say in how AI companies use their intellectual property.