George Dyson claims Google scanned books for AI training, not public reading
George Dyson claims Google scanned books for AI training, not public reading The passage offers a vague anecdote about a 2005 visit by historian George Dyson to Google and his observation that scanned books were intended for AI use. It lacks specific names, dates, transactions, or actionable leads, and does not implicate high‑ranking officials or reveal novel misconduct. While it hints at early AI data collection, the claim is already widely reported and provides little investigative direction. Key insights: Dyson visited Google in 2005 at engineers' invitation.; He wrote an essay noting Google was scanning books for AI, not public consumption.; The comment reflects early awareness of large‑scale data harvesting for machine learning.
Summary
George Dyson claims Google scanned books for AI training, not public reading The passage offers a vague anecdote about a 2005 visit by historian George Dyson to Google and his observation that scanned books were intended for AI use. It lacks specific names, dates, transactions, or actionable leads, and does not implicate high‑ranking officials or reveal novel misconduct. While it hints at early AI data collection, the claim is already widely reported and provides little investigative direction. Key insights: Dyson visited Google in 2005 at engineers' invitation.; He wrote an essay noting Google was scanning books for AI, not public consumption.; The comment reflects early awareness of large‑scale data harvesting for machine learning.
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