Search results
News Corp pens deal with OpenAI for use of newspapers By Proactive Investors
Investing.com· 6 days agoThursday’s deal is believed to be worth US$250 million over five years and will be paid to News Corp...
OpenAI partners with Wall Street Journal publisher News Corp.
VentureBeat· 6 days agoNews Corp., the famed company founded by billionaire media mogul Rupert Murdoch and which controls such outlets as ...
News Corp grants ChatGPT access to major publications for training
dpa international via Yahoo News· 6 days agoStreet Journal and the London Times in future, ChatGPT developer OpenAI announced on Wednesday....
WaPo Soft-Pedaled Harry’s Claims Against Its CEO: Report
The Daily Beast· 6 days agoEditors were reportedly told not to include an article about the royal’s phone hacking lawsuit in...
OpenAI, News Corp. sign multi-year content deal
Fox Business via AOL· 6 days agoNews Corp. and ChatGPT creator OpenAI on Wednesday announced a multi-year deal allowing the artificial intelligence startup to utilize content to support...
Media investment rules sparked by Telegraph bid in limbo after snap election call
The Telegraph via Yahoo Finance· 5 days agoMinisters have rushed through tough new laws on foreign investment in the media without exceptions...
Names and faces | Arkansas Democrat Gazette
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette· 7 days agoPrince Harry can't expand his privacy lawsuit against The Sun tabloid's publisher to add claims that Rupert Murdoch and other executives ...
Publishers Striking AI Deals Are Making a Fatal Error
The Atlantic· 5 days agoIn 2011, I sat at the Guggenheim Museum in New York and watched Rupert Murdoch announce the...
Washington Post downplays Prince Harry's allegations against Post CEO
Semafor via Yahoo News· 7 days agoOn Tuesday, a court in the United Kingdom ruled that Prince Harry could introduce new amendments in...
7 Companies That Went Downhill After Being Acquired
Cheapism via AOL· 6 days agoWho else remembers getting into scuffles with their friends over their top 8? (Thanks a lot, Tom). In 2005, Rupert Murdoch's