Grammarly
Grammarly business and news from across the web.- AI Yi-Yi!Grammarly has been accused of cloning an individual's voice without permission. Another AI company has reportedly offered to do the same for a fee of $2,000, raising concerns about AI's use of personal data and intellectual property.
- First Grammarly cloned me without permission. Then another AI company asked if it could do the same—for $2,000The author discusses personal experiences with AI companies like Grammarly and GPTZero cloning their identity and work without permission. This raises significant concerns about AI ethics, copyright infringement, and the existential threat AI poses to writers and artists, particularly regarding the unauthorized use of creative work for training AI models.
- Engadget Podcast: Apple's $599 MacBook Neo is astoundingThe Engadget Podcast discusses Apple's new $599 MacBook Neo, highlighting its user experience and comparing it to Windows PCs. The hosts also cover the M4 iPad Air and M5 MacBook Pro models. Additionally, the episode touches on the state of electric vehicles and a lawsuit against Grammarly.
- Morning Legal BriefsGrammarly is facing a class action lawsuit concerning its AI-powered 'Expert Review' feature. The lawsuit alleges issues with how the AI handles user data and its review capabilities.
- Grammarly has disabled its tool offering generative-AI feedback credited to real writersGrammarly has disabled its Expert Review feature, which provided AI-generated writing feedback attributed to real writers without their permission. Superhuman CEO Shishir Mehrotra announced the decision on LinkedIn, stating the company will reassess the feature. The tool had faced criticism from living writers who were displeased with their likeness being used.