ChatGPT Ate My Trade Secret: Two Court Rulings That Could Reshape AI Confidentiality
What happens when you feed proprietary info into ChatGPT? Two new rulings say you just torched your trade secret status. Time to rethink that AI habit.
For twenty years, I've seen Silicon Valley chase shiny objects. Now, a legal expert is calling out patent policy for doing the same, clinging to outdated narratives while real innovation goes misunderstood.
What happens when you feed proprietary info into ChatGPT? Two new rulings say you just torched your trade secret status. Time to rethink that AI habit.
Picture this: your kid logs into a game, and boom — their biometrics are slurped up without a parent's nod. Privacy groups just called out the FTC for sleepwalking on age assurance.
An Italian energy giant just got slapped with €11.5 million in GDPR fines for spamming opted-out customers and forging contracts behind their backs. This isn't digital-age sloppiness—it's old-school hustling clashing with modern privacy laws.
Advertisers loved third-party cookies. Europe just pulled the plug—sort of. With GDPR and ePrivacy clashing over consent, the tracking empire crumbles.
A single missing inventor can now doom a patent forever. The Federal Circuit just proved it, striking down two patents in a ruling that exposes cracks in post-AIA law.
Picture Matthew McConaughey's drawl deciding your patent's fate: 'Alright, alright, alright.' USPTO just emailed that as an official April Fool's gag — and it's genius.
Steve Bannon's four-month prison stint for defying Congress? It might soon vanish. The Supreme Court just teed up the DOJ's motion to dismiss.
The Supreme Court's emergency docket looks unanimous from the outside. Justice Stevens' papers prove it's a battlefield of clashing memos and split votes.
Imagine your key video evidence in a high-stakes trial dismissed as fake. Deepfakes aren't sci-fi anymore—they're gumming up courtrooms, hiking costs for everyday litigants.
In a blow to patent holders, the Federal Circuit just ruled that 'allowing' a data packet counts as a patent claim's key 'action.' Centripetal's network security dreams? Dead on arrival.
Everyone figured GDPR would kill shady data deals overnight. Bounty UK proves companies cling to old tricks, even as fines loom larger than ever.
That newborn in the ER, mom undocumented—is she a citizen forever? Oral arguments say no, the 14th Amendment bends like gun rights did for AR-15s.