Monday, June 1, 2026
Anthropic Settles for $1.5 Billion Over Pirated Books in AI TrainingAI News & Trends

Anthropic Settles for $1.5 Billion Over Pirated Books in AI Training

Courts in the U.S. generally find that it may be fair use for AI companies to train models on books if the books were lawfully bought or licensed. However, using pirated or illegally obtained books has led to legal problems. Anthropic agreed to pay $1.5 billion to settle claims that it stored and used pirated books for AI training, but the settlement does not allow future use of those books. Experts suggest that future court cases might focus more on whether AI companies got their data legally. There is no single rule yet, but courts seem to accept fair use more often if the data was legally acquired and the AI does not directly replace the original books.

Report Maps How AI Changes Investor Jobs, Skills, and Governance by 2026Business & Ethical AI

Report Maps How AI Changes Investor Jobs, Skills, and Governance by 2026

The report suggests that AI may change investor jobs by automating routine tasks, but key decisions and judgment are still led by humans. Investors might need new skills like using AI tools safely, checking for bias, and clear communication with clients. Regulations are expected to tighten, and firms may need better oversight and training for safe AI use. Pilot programs appear to keep humans involved in important decisions, and logs may be needed to track how AI is used. Overall, AI integration seems to mean shifting tasks rather than completely replacing investor jobs.

Dan Shipper's Every argues AI expands expert human workAI News & Trends

Dan Shipper's Every argues AI expands expert human work

Dan Shipper's Every essay suggests that AI may not simply replace human work, but instead increases the need for expert judgment and review. As AI makes basic tasks cheaper and faster, companies might need more people to refine and oversee AI output. Evidence from Every's team shows that after automating many tasks with AI, they hired more editors and specialists to ensure quality. Some reports suggest this pattern could happen in many jobs, with AI amplifying the importance of human skills like creativity and decision-making. Shipper recommends leaders focus on review processes and hiring experts to work with AI, rather than just cutting staff.

PitchBook: Agentic AI Shifts SaaS Valuations to Workflow OwnershipAI News & Trends

PitchBook: Agentic AI Shifts SaaS Valuations to Workflow Ownership

PitchBook's report suggests that agentic AI is changing how investors value SaaS companies, with more focus on workflow ownership instead of just revenue. It appears that owning data and process control may be more important than adding new features. Some sources say that as AI agents get more integrated, pricing models might shift from seat-based to usage or outcome-based. However, the adoption of these agents seems slower in some areas, and there may still be security and reliability challenges. Overall, investors might look at how deeply platforms integrate and control workflows when deciding where to put their money.

Latest News

Daloopa raises $47M Series C for AI-driven finance data platform
AI News & Trends3h ago

Daloopa raises $47M Series C for AI-driven finance data platform

Daloopa has raised $47 million in a Series C funding round, which may help the company hire more staff and expand its data coverage. The funding suggests Daloopa will continue developing AI-driven finance tools that link each data point to its source. New capital might also allow faster product rollouts and global expansion, though no clear timeline has been given. Analysts believe Daloopa could become an important platform as the finance industry moves toward more unified data and AI solutions.

Anthropic updates Claude Opus 4.8 with improved honesty, effort controls
AI News & Trends3h ago

Anthropic updates Claude Opus 4.8 with improved honesty, effort controls

Anthropic released Opus 4.8 for Claude in May 2026, focusing on better honesty and more control over how much effort the AI puts into tasks. Early feedback suggests the model now flags uncertainty more often, which may help catch errors and avoid overconfident mistakes. Testers report improvements in catching bugs and handling vague requests, and the model seems less wordy. Benchmarks show Opus 4.8 is competitive, especially in some coding tasks, and it may be cheaper to use. However, adoption still appears limited to early testing, so it is not clear yet how widely it will be used.

Anthropic Unveils Mythos AI, Most Powerful Claude Model
AI News & Trends5h ago

Anthropic Unveils Mythos AI, Most Powerful Claude Model

Anthropic has announced that its new AI model, Mythos, may become publicly available in the coming weeks, but there is no fixed launch date yet. Reports suggest that Mythos is the most capable Claude model so far, especially for security-related tasks. Early testing shows it might need large computing resources, which could raise costs and oversight challenges. There appear to be unresolved questions about who gets access, how much it will cost, and how to keep its use safe. The release could help developers and companies work faster but may also require stronger supervision and new rules.

Anthropic expands Claude Code with agentic platform, 1M token context
AI News & Trends7h ago

Anthropic expands Claude Code with agentic platform, 1M token context

Anthropic has expanded Claude Code from a simple terminal helper into a more advanced agentic platform with features like multi-step coding, large context windows, and dynamic subagents. Reports suggest Claude Code stands out for complex refactoring and handling large codebases, though its usage-based pricing may be costly for some. Market share data is limited, but capacity increases and new plan options may point to higher demand. Studies show AI coding tools might boost productivity for many, but some experienced developers take longer on complex tasks if verification is included. Organizations may still need skilled engineers to guide, review, and integrate the AI's output.

DoorDash adopts LLM simulation to cut chatbot hallucinations by 90%
AI News & Trends19h ago

DoorDash adopts LLM simulation to cut chatbot hallucinations by 90%

DoorDash created a new system using simulation and evaluation tools to test its chatbots, as manual quality checks could not keep up with changing customer conversations. The company uses an offline simulator to create realistic chat conversations and an automated evaluator that checks each conversation for specific rules. After making some fixes, DoorDash reportedly saw a 90% drop in chatbot hallucinations, though there may still be some gaps and costs. The team keeps adjusting the system and says early results suggest offline testing can help predict how the chatbot will perform with real customers.

Snowflake expands AI licensing, signs 17 publishers for six-figure deals
AI News & Trends19h ago

Snowflake expands AI licensing, signs 17 publishers for six-figure deals

Snowflake has signed at least 17 publishers, including big names like The Washington Post and Associated Press, to six-figure AI licensing deals. These deals let financial and business customers access trusted, verified news content through Snowflake's platform for use in internal AI tools. The agreements may vary, with some buyers paying a flat fee and others paying based on how much they use. Revenue from these deals appears meaningful but uneven, and future earnings are uncertain since payments can be unpredictable. Some concerns remain about how content is controlled, credited, and priced as more data providers join the platform.

OpenAI Caps Microsoft Revenue Share at $38 Billion
AI News & Trends19h ago

OpenAI Caps Microsoft Revenue Share at $38 Billion

OpenAI and Microsoft have agreed to cap Microsoft's share of OpenAI's revenue at $38 billion through 2030, according to a Reuters report. The terms suggest OpenAI will continue to pay about 20 percent of its revenue to Microsoft until the cap is reached. This cap may let OpenAI work with other cloud providers while giving Microsoft a steady, predictable return. Some analysts say the change could reduce antitrust concerns and help OpenAI grow by using more than one cloud. The exact timing of reaching the $38 billion cap is uncertain and depends on how OpenAI's business develops.

Anthropic commits $200B to Google Cloud, testing vendor lock-in
Business & Ethical AI19h ago

Anthropic commits $200B to Google Cloud, testing vendor lock-in

Anthropic may spend up to $200 billion on Google Cloud and chips, which could be over 40% of Alphabet's cloud revenue backlog, but Reuters could not confirm the contract details. The reported commitment appears to include data-center space, TPU chips, and cloud services, though exact terms and payment schedules are not public. Analysts say the deal highlights how big AI companies try to secure resources and discounts, but it might also create risks around relying on one vendor and lead to regulatory questions. There are still uncertainties about what the $200 billion covers and how the contract works. Policymakers and investors are watching for more details before making further decisions.

Qumulo launches Cloud AI Accelerator to boost GPU utilization by 64%
AI News & Trends21h ago

Qumulo launches Cloud AI Accelerator to boost GPU utilization by 64%

Qumulo has launched the Cloud AI Accelerator, which may help use GPUs better by keeping data close to where it is needed and making it easier to schedule jobs. The company says its new NeuralCache feature can cut GPU data-load times by up to 64 percent, but this number has not yet been independently checked. The service connects with other popular AI platforms like Microsoft AI Foundry, AWS Bedrock, and Google Vertex AI. Experts suggest that while this tool could reduce costs and speed up development, actual savings and performance improvements might depend on real-world testing. Current results are based on Qumulo's own claims, and more outside tests are needed to confirm these benefits.

Tensormesh Raises $20M for AI Inference Optimization
AI News & Trends21h ago

Tensormesh Raises $20M for AI Inference Optimization

Tensormesh, a San Francisco startup, raised $20 million to improve AI inference for businesses by using caching to lower costs and speed up responses. The company says its technology may help reduce the need for expensive GPUs by reusing answers to repeated prompts. Investors include AMD Ventures and CoreWeave, and the money will go toward more engineers and hardware partnerships. It appears the demand for AI inference savings is growing, but the company has not shared any customer names or independent results yet. Some analysts suggest it is still uncertain how quickly large companies will start using these types of caching solutions.