Julia Angwin found that Grammarly was selling a deepfake of her mind from an article online. For eight months, Superhuman, Grammarly’s parent company, made fake editor versions of Stephen King, Kara Swisher, bell hooks and more, including Julia, without any knowledge, compensation or consent. Now, Julia is the lead plaintiff in a class-action lawsuit against Superhuman in a New York district court, alleging that the company violated New York and California publicity laws by not seeking consent before using their names in a paid service. In a guest essay for Times Opinion, Julia writes: Read the full piece here, for free , even without a Times subscription. submitted by /u/nytopinion
Originally posted by u/nytopinion on r/ArtificialInteligence
