In what attorneys are calling one of the largest copyright recovery settlements in U.S. history, Anthropic
has agreed to pay out $1.5 billion to rightsholders whose titles the AI company pirated to train its large language model, with a hearing for preliminary court approval set for today. Apple could soon be
the next tech company to be put on trial for copyright infringement after authors Grady Hendrix and Jennifer Roberson filed a proposed class-action lawsuit on Friday, also accusing it of piracy in its AI training. The
National Book Festival, held on Saturday in Washington, D.C., went off without a hitch despite a nearby protest against the National Guard’s presence in the capital and the Trump administration’s ongoing assault on the Library of Congress. Students in Louisville, Ky., are
checking out library books at record rates after their public school district instituted a cellphone ban, reports
Wave News. Patreon has revamped its newsletter functionality in an attempt to
woo popular writers away from Substack, per
Adweek.
New York magazine questions whether media outlets even
want to publish cultural criticism anymore amid an ever-shrinking market for the genre. For
Lit Hub, Viking veteran Paul Slovak
rounds up some of the imprint’s most surprising titles on the eve of its centenary. Over at the
New Yorker, Carmen Maria Machado revisits
Jacqueline Harpman’s I Who Have Never Known Men, the 1995 dystopian novel that’s gotten a second life on BookTok.
The Nation sits down with
Rebecca Solnit to talk writing and reading in an anti-book political moment. And
BookPage founder
Michael Alan Zibart has died at 78.