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Amazon strikes AI license agreement with Hearst and Condé Nast

Digiday Media Group’s Hearst and Condé Nast have signed a multi-year license agreement with Amazon to allow it to access the vast library of content held by both companies. Between Hirst and Kant Nast, Rufus will be available International Metropolis,,,,, GQ,,,,, Fashion and New Yorkerto name a few.

A spokesperson for Hurst confirmed Digiday The license agreement with Amazon will give Rufus extensive access to its newspapers and magazines. The publication also received confirmation from Condé Nast. More details about the arrangement have not been shared yet.

Designed to answer shoppers’ questions about product advice and other shopping-related needs. AI tools are trained in Amazon catalogs, customer reviews, community Q&A and “information from the web.” The powerful trade angle found in the Hearst and Condé Nast catalogs make publishers suitable for AI for training.

Over the past few years, content publishers and tech giants have sought more content training for AI. For Condé Nast, this actually marks the media company’s second largest AI deal, as it showed off its content in various publications in Chatgpt last year with OpenAI.

Amazon recently and its neighboring properties, and iconic newspapers are involved in lawsuits against copyright infringement.

These latest signatures are a continuation of the source between content creators that protect their intellectual property rights and the seemingly endless appetite of AI companies to train their various models.

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