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Multi-source AI news clustered, deduplicated, and scored 0–100 across authority, cluster strength, headline signal, and time decay.

  1. Ride-share driver files fraudulent claims with AI images. A daughter's comment exposed the fraud (Florida, USA) https://www.huffingtonpost.jp/entry/story_jp_6a1552e0e4b062ca52d4da4b #huffingtonpost #WORLD #ai #rideshare #florida

    A ride-share driver in Florida was caught attempting to defraud customers using AI-generated images. The driver allegedly submitted fake receipts for rides that never occurred, but their daughter's observation helped expose the scheme. This incident highlights a new avenue for AI-powered fraud in the gig economy. AI

  2. AI images in copyright law: When prompting protects and why copying is allowed The Higher Regional Court of Düsseldorf sets strict limits on the protection of A

    Germany's Higher Regional Court in Düsseldorf has ruled that purely machine-generated output, such as AI images, is generally not eligible for copyright protection. To claim copyright, a human must demonstrate significant creative influence beyond simple text prompting. This decision clarifies that basic prompting is insufficient to establish authorship for AI-generated works. AI

    AI images in copyright law: When prompting protects and why copying is allowed The Higher Regional Court of Düsseldorf sets strict limits on the protection of A

    IMPACT This ruling clarifies that significant human creative input is required for AI-generated works to be copyrighted, impacting creators and the legal landscape of AI art.