CNN Sues Perplexity Over Copyright Infringement
In brief
- CNN is suing Perplexity for unlawfully copying and distributing its content.
- The network tried to negotiate a licensing deal with Perplexity last year but failed to reach an agreement.
- This lawsuit is part of a larger effort to ensure news providers are fairly compensated.
- Major news companies are filing copyright infringement suits and striking content licensing deals with AI firms.
- Perplexity faces similar challenges from other major publishers, including The New York Times and the Chicago Tribune.
- The lawsuit will determine if Perplexity must pay for using CNN's content, with a decision that may impact how AI companies use news from other providers in the future.
Terms in this brief
- Perplexity
- A company that uses AI to analyze and distribute content, including news articles. This lawsuit highlights how Perplexity's business model relies on accessing and distributing content from various sources, which has led to legal challenges regarding copyright issues.
Read full story at CNN →
More briefs
New York Launches Empire AI Consortium
New York State has launched Empire AI, a consortium of public and private research universities to advance artificial intelligence research. The consortium has a board with all member universities represented and has received a $10 million gift from the Simons Foundation for computer hardware. Empire AI will have a significant economic impact with $30 to 40 million invested in new computing hardware, and it will be operational in a few weeks.
Mistral AI Expands Industrial Engineering Solutions
Mistral AI has announced new solutions for industrial engineering. The company is working with Airbus and BMW Group to improve design and operations. Mistral AI's new solutions will help companies speed up design and production. This matters because it can save companies time and money. For example, Mistral AI's partnership with Airbus will support the next decade of innovation. The company's new solutions will continue to grow and improve industrial engineering in the future.
Mistral Vibe Launches as Single Agent for Work and Code
Mistral Vibe is now one agent for long-running, multi-step work. It catches up across your inbox and calendar, runs deep research, drafts deliverables, and orchestrates the recurring processes that run your day-to-day. It also takes coding work from request to merged change, across the web app, your editor, and your terminal. Vibe runs on flagship Mistral models optimized for reasoning, agentic tasks, tool calls, and coding. This matters because it can turn a morning of admin into a single prompt for one person, or run the processes that keep a business moving for an organisation. Vibe's Work Mode can connect to Google Workspace, Outlook, and SharePoint, and surface patterns and anomalies in data. It can also draft reports and documents, ready for editing and sharing. Vibe will continue to evolve and improve its capabilities.
Google Unveils Compact AI Board for Local Processing
Google has introduced the Coral Board, a tiny single-board computer designed specifically for running AI models locally on devices. This new hardware allows developers and researchers to perform complex AI tasks directly on devices without needing internet connectivity. The Coral Board is powered by the latest Gemma 3 chips, enabling it to handle machine learning workloads efficiently. This technology is particularly useful for applications where latency is critical, such as real-time language translation or image recognition on mobile devices. By processing data locally, the Coral Board also enhances privacy and reduces reliance on cloud-based services. With this release, Google continues to expand its offerings in edge computing, a trend that promises to bring AI capabilities closer to users. Developers can expect more tools and updates as AI technology advances, making local processing even faster and more accessible.
Mistral AI Launches Vibe, a Comprehensive Work Bot
Mistral AI has rebranded its chatbot Le Chat as Vibe, introducing a trio of tools designed for work efficiency. The new system includes a chatbot, coding agents, and a dedicated Work Mode that integrates with platforms like Google Workspace, Outlook, Slack, or GitHub to manage tasks such as emails, reports, and pull requests independently. This move positions Mistral directly against major competitors like OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic, who also offer similar agent-based tools. The integration of Vibe into popular productivity tools aims to streamline workflows by handling routine tasks autonomously. While Mistral hasn’t set specific usage limits, the focus is on providing developers and researchers with a versatile tool that can adapt to various professional needs. This underscores Mistral’s ambition to compete in the growing AI assistant market. Looking ahead, Vibe could potentially disrupt how teams manage their daily tasks, offering a unified platform for both personal and team productivity. The lack of concrete usage restrictions suggests Mistral is aiming for broad adoption, making it a key player to watch in the evolution of workplace AI tools.