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-3 votes
1 answer
233 views

Certain people have been using software like Openclaw to let LLMs write emails and do actions on the internet that they hope will earn them money. A common situation that results from this is that ...
stickynotememo's user avatar
-1 votes
1 answer
137 views

What legal liability could arise if an AI company trained models on conversations it promised not to use for training? Several AI companies offer business-oriented tiers in which they publicly state ...
Sam's user avatar
  • 135
26 votes
3 answers
3k views

Uber Eats and several similar applications currently have features where they use a chatbot model to generate descriptions of menu items and even of the restaurant itself, if the restaurant does not ...
Obie 2.0's user avatar
  • 1,109
-2 votes
0 answers
177 views

What legal liability could arise if an AI company shared or sold customer conversations despite stating that the customer owns the inputs and outputs? Some AI companies offering business-oriented AI ...
Sam's user avatar
  • 135
-4 votes
0 answers
74 views

This is different from Can I ask AI to do things for me that I am contractually obligated not to do myself? because of how the circumstances appear to differ in the analogy where actually everyone is ...
interfect's user avatar
  • 7,153
-4 votes
1 answer
230 views

Say I am contractually obligated not to reverse-engineer a piece of software. But I would quite like to have a report on all its internal functions, of the sort produced by reverse-engineering. So I ...
interfect's user avatar
  • 7,153
5 votes
1 answer
402 views

Suppose you are an inventor with a patented invention. It is not a software invention but a computer method invention (e.g. the patented object is letan algorithm that solves a computational problem ...
Rinvent's user avatar
  • 53
3 votes
0 answers
178 views

Atlassian is s planning to use personal data to train AI models on, as by their website: Atlassian is changing how we use customer data on August 17, 2026. We’re updating how we use metadata and in-...
user's user avatar
  • 131
3 votes
1 answer
342 views

Suppose there is a business called "I create the best AI images" in which people pay the owner to create AI images of their desired subject by the owner using their mad AI prompt skillz1. In ...
Peter M's user avatar
  • 1,075
6 votes
1 answer
2k views

If you realise that AI has scraped the content of a novel you wrote can you claim damages for copyright breaches?
Neil Meyer's user avatar
  • 9,180
7 votes
2 answers
378 views

Assume the following: Company X builds a robot. The robot is capable of doing acts that would be the actus reus of crimes if done by a human. The robot follows many sorts of instructions without ...
interfect's user avatar
  • 7,153
7 votes
3 answers
1k views

X features an AI named Grok. Users can tag Grok in their posts to elicit a response from Grok. Grok can not only generate text, but also create pictures or alter them. A trend is currently going viral,...
James's user avatar
  • 2,803
4 votes
2 answers
2k views

I read in the DeepSeek License Agreement: Governing Law and Jurisdiction. This agreement will be governed and construed under PRC laws without regard to choice of law principles, and the UN Convention ...
Franck Dernoncourt's user avatar
25 votes
4 answers
4k views

In South Africa some law practitioners have gotten into trouble for using AI to do law research for them and then citing case law that turned out to be an AI hallucination. What would be the ...
Neil Meyer's user avatar
  • 9,180
25 votes
3 answers
6k views

I recently saw a viral video in which a man pulls into a Wendy's Drive-Thru in the US. An AI employee greets him over the microphone. The man asks for 1000 shakes, and the AI says yes. A human ...
James's user avatar
  • 2,803

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