Hugging Face settles lawsuit with AI startup FriendliAI over patent infringement accusation

Levy Health aims to assist women in detecting fertility issues earlier

Caroline Mitterdorfer began her fertility journey after a cancer diagnosis at age 27. She co-founded Levy Health to help speed Read more

Lenovo’s newest designs show that PCs can still be enjoyable

Large corporations typically play it safe when it comes to consumer hardware, sticking to incremental updates year after year. Lenovo, Read more

PowerSchool reveals massive data breach: Hackers steal students’ sensitive info!

Welcome to the Edtech World Big news in the education tech world! PowerSchool, the edtech giant, recently experienced a data Read more

Telegram’s Crypto Wallet Debuts in the United States

Telegram Expanding Access to Crypto Wallet Telegram is now offering its crypto wallet to its 87 million users in the Read more

Hugging Face settles lawsuit with FriendliAI over patent infringement

Hugging Face, the AI developer platform, has reached a confidential agreement with Korean AI startup FriendliAI to settle a lawsuit accusing Hugging Face of infringing on one of its patents. The agreement was filed on January 8 in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Delaware, with FriendliAI agreeing to dismiss its suit “with prejudice,” meaning it cannot be brought back to court.

FriendliAI had filed the suit nearly two years ago, alleging that Hugging Face had violated its patent on “batching with iteration-level scheduling.” The VC-backed FriendliAI, founded in 2021 and based in both Brooklyn and Redwood City, California, develops infrastructure solutions for AI.

According to FriendliAI, its patented technology improves the process of batching data fed into an AI system, allowing the system to process multiple requests simultaneously. The patent also covers AI systems that can send finished requests to a user and add new requests to a batch before processing the full batch.

See also  China compromised the US Treasury's Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), responsible for assessing foreign investments for potential national security threats.

Hugging Face, backed by $235 million from investors such as Google, Amazon, Nvidia, Intel, and Salesforce, is known for being one of the largest repositories of AI tools and models globally. The platform hosts models and tools, develops its own, and provides consulting services to help enterprises optimize and deploy AI solutions.

AI chatbots’ ability to maintain engagement

They stripped Linda Yaccarino of her blue check!