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Source channel @githubtrending · Post #14693 · May 10

#jupyter_notebook#a2a#agentic_ai#dapr#dapr_pub_sub#dapr_service_invocation#dapr_sidecar#dapr_workflow#docker#kafka#kubernetes#langmem#mcp#openai#openai_agents_sdk#openai_api#postgresql_database#rabbitmq#rancher_desktop#redis#serverless_containers The Dapr Agentic Cloud Ascent (DACA) design pattern helps you build powerful, scalable AI systems that can handle millions of AI agents working together without crashing. It uses Dapr technology with Kubernetes to efficiently manage many AI agents as lightweight virtual actors, ensuring fast response, reliability, and easy scaling. You can start small using free or low-cost cloud tools and grow to planet-scale systems. The OpenAI Agents SDK is recommended for beginners because it is simple, flexible, and gives you good control to develop AI agents quickly. This approach saves costs, avoids vendor lock-in, and supports resilient, event-driven AI workflows, making it ideal for developers aiming to create advanced, cloud-native AI applications[1][2][3][4]. https://github.com/panaversity/learn-agentic-ai

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AI & Law

@ai_and_law · Post #369 · 08/07/2024, 07:04 AM

AI Music Startups Defend Fair Use Amid Copyright Lawsuits AI music startups Suno and Udio are pushing back against copyright infringement lawsuits from major record labels, claiming their methods fall under fair use. They argue that their AI models, trained on copyrighted music, encourage innovation and competition within the industry. The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) filed lawsuits in June, accusing Suno and Udio of massive unlicensed copying. The startups assert that using sound recordings to teach AI models new musical patterns aligns with copyright law's intent to foster new artistic expressions. They contend that their practices are akin to learning and not infringing. In defense, Suno likened their training approach to a child learning to create new music by listening to existing tracks. Both companies maintain that major labels misunderstand the technology and are attempting to stifle competition. The RIAA, however, argues that the startups have failed to obtain proper consent for using copyrighted works, threatening the livelihoods of original artists. #AI#CopyrightLaw#FairUse#LegalTech#AIandLaw#RIAA#ArtificialIntelligence