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Ryan Hurley on starting data-driven pillow company

* * * * * You can’t have a discussion about sports technology today without including athletes in that conversation. Their partnerships, investments and endorsements help fuel the space – they have emerged as major stakeholders in the sports tech ecosystem. The Athlete’s Voice series highlights the athletes leading the way and the projects and […]

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* * * * *

You can’t have a discussion about sports technology today without including athletes in that conversation. Their partnerships, investments and endorsements help fuel the space – they have emerged as major stakeholders in the sports tech ecosystem. The Athlete’s Voice series highlights the athletes leading the way and the projects and products they’re putting their influence behind.

* * * * *

Ryan Hurley was an All-American swimmer at the University of Virginia who competed in the US Olympic trials and world championships and won a pair of silver medals at the 2007 World University Games, in both 200-meter breaststroke and the 4×100 medley relay. After graduating in 2009, Hurley went to work in NBC’s famed page program before moving to roles at NBC Sports and SportsEngine.

In 2021, Hurley left the business to become a founder, starting a pillow company called Lagoon. Customers take a short quiz about their sleeping habits and get matched with a pillow type. Lagoon’s brand ambassadors include professional marathon runners Emma Bates, Grayson Murphy, Dakotah (Lindwurm) Popehn and Keira D’Amato, and it signed its first team partnership with USA Bobsled and Skeleton. Lagoon also offers a Sleep Performance Program aimed at helping youth sports organizations tout the importance of sleep to young athletes.

On his early professional goal . . .

I knew, coming out of the University of Virginia, that I really wanted to end up at NBC Sports, just because the Olympics had played such a big part in my life growing up. I remember back to the 1996 Olympics watching Tom Dolan compete in the 400 IM and win gold, thinking that was the coolest thing — and that made me a swimmer. The sport of swimming really made me who I am, not just athletically, but the drive, the determination, all those things that come along with competing at a high level.

So it was my dream to give back and to go to NBC Sports and be part of the organization that was promoting these great stories of these amazing athletes, to help foster the next generation. Getting into NBC, especially around the time of the Great Recession, was not an easy task. It was a year and a half after I graduated that I heard back from NBC.

On getting started as an NBC page . . .

I got my foot in the door. I got my first gig in NBC Sports, being one of the digital producers for NBCOlympics.com. I got to cover swimming for the Olympics for the London Olympic Games and got the chance to travel to London, Sochi and Rio in different capacities.

I started to love the business side of things. As the executive assistant to the president of NBC Olympics [Gary Zenkel], I was learning a little bit just by watching him in meetings, taking notes, things like that. I went back to get my MBA while I was working for him at Columbia.

On moving into business development . . .

I got to work on some major rights deals. I worked on bringing Thursday Night Football to NBC for the first time ever, which was super cool to be a part of. I worked on some NHL stuff, but then I worked on acquiring Universal Sports to become the Olympic Channel. I started loving the M&A side of things, and ultimately worked on the deal to acquire SportsEngine, which felt like such a natural extension of my whole passion about sports, which was the idea of getting more people to participate.

On SportsEngine . . .

Fast forward a couple of years. I had the opportunity to run a division of SportsEngine, move out to Minneapolis and get to see the technology side, not just the media side, of the sports industry. I then learned quickly how different technology is from media. I loved it, but there was a bigger itch inside me than I wanted to start my own thing one day. So, so ultimately, after 10 years at NBC Sports is when I finally took the plunge to start my own business.

Ryan Hurley, the focus of SBJ Tech's Athlete's Voices, is shown competing in running races.
Hurley, who is currently training for an ultramarathon this fall, has seen how good sleep reduces the risk of injuries. Courtesy of Ryan Hurley

On starting a pillow company . . .

Sleep as a category had always been something really interesting to me, and I traced that back to my days in swimming. Waking up at 4:15 in the morning, I just always placed a premium on sleep because it was something that I always knew I needed to treasure. I had some bad ideas in the sleep space that I won’t share, but I just got started thinking about pillows and how it was something that that everybody uses, that I know I had never made smart purchases around and thought that there had to be a better way.

On beginning Lagoon . . .

I have a little bit of imposter syndrome around how I started out because I didn’t have any background in textiles or consumer products. I was leaving a world where my experience was in media and B2B technology to try and create a physical product, but you don’t know what you don’t know.

This was very, very early days of Covid. I was ordering pillows from anywhere I could find them, and my dear wife suffered along with me as we tried no less than 50 to 60 different pillows from all the top competitors out there, just to see what options were available, what we like, what we didn’t like. And then from there, we started to come up with our own line — just the types of materials that we thought would work best. We started to build out a line to meet the needs of all different types of sleepers.

On meeting everyone’s needs . . .

Usually, the people that like the softest pillows are people that sleep on their stomach. Most people that sleep on their side or rotate are somewhere in the medium-soft [category]. And then some people do like something firmer, usually a side sleeper that stays in place. But there’s a million exceptions to that. That’s where having pillows that are adjustable — meaning you can add and remove the fill — really allows people to customize it.

On data-driven pillow-matching . . .

Probably the biggest differentiator and most useful piece of our business equation is easily matching somebody with the pillow that’s right for them. Our quiz is a two-minute quiz that you answer seven simple questions, but we have really good accuracy on the quiz, too. Our return rate is less than 5%, so I think we’re doing a pretty good job of matching people with the pillow that’s right for them.



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Future of ESPN’s MLB Rights

Morning Edition June 5, 2025 Rob Manfred told reporters, including FOS, that MLB hopes to decide on a new rights partner for rights currently held by ESPN before the All-Star Game. Here’s what we know. —Eric Fisher, David Rumsey, and Colin Salao Mark J. Rebilas-Imgan Images MLB is approaching an endgame on reselling national media […]

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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Morning Edition

June 5, 2025

Rob Manfred told reporters, including FOS, that MLB hopes to decide on a new rights partner for rights currently held by ESPN before the All-Star Game. Here’s what we know.

Eric Fisher, David Rumsey, and Colin Salao



Mark J. Rebilas-Imgan Images

MLB is approaching an endgame on reselling national media rights being abandoned by ESPN after this season, with a decision anticipated before next month’s All-Star Game. 

As team owners meet this week in New York, league commissioner Rob Manfred said discussions are ongoing with three bidders to cover the 2026–28 seasons. Two are known, with NBC potentially returning to baseball to expand its sports hold on Sunday nights, Apple TV+ looking to expand its presence beyond its current Friday night package, and a third suitor that Manfred declined to name. MLB could potentially break the ESPN rights into multiple parts.

“I’m hopeful that in the next few weeks, prior to the All-Star Game, we get something done,” Manfred said. “But when you’re having three different sets of conversations, it’s a lot. Each set of conversations involves a different group of content. We’re talking to three people about different packages.”

The rights deals would be interim ones to bridge to 2028, when MLB’s other national rights deals expire, and when Manfred is looking to repackage the sport’s national and local rights in a more centralized strategy. Because of that shorter time frame, the commissioner said he will look to prioritize reach over gaining maximum dollars. But he also acknowledged that the mutual opt-out with ESPN exercised earlier this year has created something of an awkward situation. 

“We agreed to the opt-out as a set of compromises that got us to the deal we had. We liked the deal we had,” Manfred said of ESPN. “Looking backwards, do I wish I wasn’t in a position to sell three years so we can line our rights up in 2028? The answer to that is yes.”

Next Steps in Tampa?

Manfred said progress is continuing on repairing hurricane-damaged Tropicana Field so the Rays can return there at or near Opening Day in 2026. The team’s long-term future, however, remains decidedly uncertain.

His comments follow the team’s decision in March to walk away from a deal with St. Petersburg, Fla., and Pinellas County to build a $1.3 billion stadium. The Rays are currently playing to sharply decreased and league-low attendance in the Yankees’ spring training facility, George M. Steinbrenner Field.

“The big contingency [for next year] is what happens with the [2025] hurricane season. There’s not much you can do about that besides keep your fingers crossed,” Manfred said. “Long-term, they’re going to honor their lease [at Tropicana Field] through 2028, but I don’t really have anything to add beyond that.”

More Business

In other matters that Manfred addressed:

  • Manfred said there is a “really positive” mood among owners as the league enjoys solid increases in both attendance and national TV viewership so far in the 2025 season. Other factors, such as the continued success of the pitch clock and popular stars such as the Dodgers’ Shohei Ohtani and the Yankees’ Aaron Judge are having significant impacts, too. “The product we’re putting on the field is better than it was five years ago,” Manfred said.
  • There is still no deal for MLB to be part of the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics. But as negotiating progresses with LA28 organizers, parallel talks are also happening with other league business partners. “We have some other partners that we need to talk to about changes that would need to be made to accommodate the Olympics,” Manfred said.
  • The commissioner cited strong buzz among owners about the league’s recent investment in the Athletes Unlimited Softball League. “They think we found a good organization and are excited to get going with that,” he said.
  • Manfred said the sentiments of U.S. President Donald Trump were among many inputs in his recent decision to reinstate the late Pete Rose. 

“I have respect for the office and paid attention to the advice that he gave,” he said. “But I had a lot of other people that we were weighing in on the topic as well.”


Nov 3, 2024; Charlotte, North Carolina, USA; New Orleans Saints quarterback Derek Carr (4) walks off before a game against the Carolina Panthers at Bank of America Stadium.

Almost a month removed from announcing his surprise retirement from the NFL, former Saints and Raiders quarterback Derek Carr is content with his decision to end his playing career—and walk away from another huge paycheck.

“That part was tough because I didn’t want to have surgery and just sit there and—it sounds crazy but—just take the Saints money,” Carr told Front Office Sports.

Carr, 34, retired with roughly $195.7 million in career earnings. With two seasons remaining on the four-year, $150 million contract he signed in 2023, Carr gave up the $30 million salary he was set to earn in 2025, but he kept a $10 million roster bonus that hit in March. 

The four-time Pro Bowler sustained a severe shoulder injury last season that jeopardized his future. “I wouldn’t have been able to play if I had the surgery,” Carr said. “And then if I tried to play with it, I wasn’t near 100%, and so that doesn’t help them, either. I just felt like it was the right thing to do for myself and for the team.”

Carr said the Saints wanted him to try to keep playing, but he couldn’t commit to another season, despite the financial benefit. 

“I never played just for the money,” he said. “I had a whole bunch of people tell me how crazy I was, and ‘Man, I would never have done that.’ That’s all cool, but I’ve gained all these things that the world has to offer, and it doesn’t really do anything for your heart. I knew my heart was at peace, and that’s really all that mattered.”

For more on Derek Carr’s post-retirement ventures and future in media, you can read David Rumsey’s full interview with the former NFL star here.


Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images

The 2025 NBA Finals series between the Thunder and Pacers is one of the most lopsided in history—at least based on the odds.

Oklahoma City is favored somewhere from -650 to -750, depending on the sportsbook, making the matchup one of the 10 most-lopsided NBA Finals, according to Sports Odds History.

Despite the gap—or perhaps because of it—bettors are putting their money on Indiana. 

According to data from DraftKings, 79% of the betting handle, which is the total amount of money wagered, is on the Pacers to upset the Thunder. DraftKings has the Pacers at +500 odds to win the series. The remaining 79% of the handle placed on the series winner belongs to the Thunder at -700, meaning that a bettor would have to place $7 to win $1 back.

DraftKings director of sports operations Johnny Avello tells Front Office Sports that betting trends were similar for previous playoff series, including when the Cavaliers were -425 favorites to beat the Pacers in the second round.

“It’s not that unusual because the bettors are reluctant to lay $7 to win $1,” says Avello.

The same trend can be seen on FanDuel, DraftKings’ biggest competitor, where the Thunder are -750 favorites. The Pacers have 95% of total series bets and 77% of the betting handle.

Most bettors, however, are putting money on OKC to cover the spread in Game 1 (-9), with 57% of the betting handle for Game 1 on OKC to cover. However, 66% of the handle is on the Pacers moneyline (+320), according to DraftKings.

Oklahoma City is also getting a lion’s share of the bets when it comes to the exact outcome of the series.

For bets on “Correct Score,” 64% of the betting handle and 41% of bets placed are on the Thunder to win in five games (+250), the most likely outcome based on the odds. An Oklahoma City sweep (+260) has 18% of the handle and 25% of bets placed. Pacers in six (+1400) has the most bets of any that have Indiana winning the series (5% handle, 9% bets placed).

While the odds show that the Pacers are a long shot to win the title, they have been underdogs throughout the playoffs. They have not been favored to win a series since the first round, and DraftKings gave Indiana 85-to-1 odds to win the title before the playoffs, the longest odds in the sportsbook’s history for any team that has made the Finals.

“No quote, unquote expert or analyst is going to pick us, and that’s O.K. We like it better that way,” Indiana star Tyrese Haliburton said Tuesday.

Susan Mullane-Imagn Images

An American has not won a French Open singles title in more than a decade. Coco Gauff is the country’s last hope of ending the drought this year.

Gauff defeated fellow American Madison Keys in the quarterfinals Wednesday to advance to her second consecutive semifinals at Roland-Garros. She is the last remaining American in the tournament, man or woman, after Tommy Paul and Frances Tiafoe were knocked out in the men’s quarterfinals Tuesday.

The last American to win the French Open was Serena Williams in 2015, the longest gap among the four Grand Slams. The last American man was Andre Agassi in 1999.

Gauff was the last U.S. player to reach the finals of the lone Grand Slam played on clay back in 2022, the first Grand Slam final of her career. She was 18 years old at the time, and she has since won one Grand Slam (2023 US Open), hit her career-high ranking (No. 2), and amassed more than $24.3 million in career earnings. 

Now 21, Gauff will face France’s own Lois Boisson, the biggest Cinderella story of the tournament, who entered the French Open ranked No. 361. Gauff, however, will likely be up against the Paris crowd Thursday—something she said she’s had to deal with before. 

“I think there are two ways I have done it in the past. Either, A: just pretend they’re cheering for you, and B: just using it and not letting that get to you,” Gauff told reporters Wednesday.

While Gauff (-500) is the odds-on favorite to beat Boisson, she may not be favored regardless of whoever comes out of the other side of the bracket. Gauff will either face four-time French Open champion Iga Świątek, who has eliminated her from the Grand Slam in three consecutive years, or world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka.

Trending Up

Even if Gauff is unable to secure a title at Roland-Garros, the tournament was still a massive step in the right direction for U.S. tennis. Eight Americans made the round of 16 this year, the most in the last 40 years.

Five women made it (Amanda Anisimova, Gauff, Keys, Jessica Pegula, Hailey Baptiste), and three men (Paul, Tiafoe, Ben Shelton). Four advanced to the quarterfinals, including Paul and Tiafoe—the first time multiple men have made the final eight at Roland-Garros since 1995.

Clay is historically one of the weaker courts for U.S. players, as hard courts are more common locally while clay courts are common in Europe.

  • Saquon Barkley had a harness to help replicate his reverse hurdle for the Madden 26 cover shoot. Take a look.
  • The Blackhawks are expanding their training facility and adding a 2,000-seat arena for USHL’s Chicago Steel. Check out the renderings.
  • Former Michigan and NFL tight end Jake Butt said most of his friends bet on sports. “It’s probably 10-to-1 of people that bet,” Butt said on Next Up with Adam Breneman. Watch it here.

Are you less interested in the French Open when there are no American contenders left?

Wednesday’s result: 40% of respondents watched more baseball this year than last season.






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Catapult buys MIT spinout Perch for $28m — Capital Brief

The news: Sports technology company Catapult Group International has acquired athlete monitoring platform and Massachusetts Institute of Technology spinout Perch. The numbers: The US$18 million ($28 million) acquisition was completed on Wednesday, with US$3 million cash to be paid out of Catapult’s existing cash reserves at close. The remainder will be paid out in Catapult […]

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The news: Sports technology company Catapult Group International has acquired athlete monitoring platform and Massachusetts Institute of Technology spinout Perch.

The numbers: The US$18 million ($28 million) acquisition was completed on Wednesday, with US$3 million cash to be paid out of Catapult’s existing cash reserves at close.

The remainder will be paid out in Catapult shares across four tranches.

Perch shareholders are also eligible for an earn-out of up to US$10 million in additional shares over the period June 2027 to May 2028 if growth milestones for annual contract value (ACV) are met.

Shares will be valued at the 30-day volume-weighted average price ending prior to the release of Catapult’s financial year 2025 results.

Perch, founded in 2016, has an annual contract value of about US$2.5 million and has trained its computer vision algorithm across 40,000 unique users.

The context: Perch’s uses 3D cameras combined with computer vision and AI to automate tracking of athlete strength training, aiming to deliver real-time feedback and saving time compared to manual data collection.

What they said: “By bringing our solutions together, we’re building a smarter, more connected athlete monitoring system — on the field, in the gym and beyond,” Catapult CEO and managing director Will Lopes said.

“The acquisition strengthens our Performance & Health vertical and accelerates our mission to deliver intuitive, end-to-end solutions for professional sports.



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Shokz OpenFit 2+ review: A marked improvement for an incremental price increase

Why you can trust TechRadar We spend hours testing every product or service we review, so you can be sure you’re buying the best. Find out more about how we test. Shokz OpenFit 2+: One minute review After just 24 hours with the Shokz OpenFit 2+ I can already tell they’re great headphones that are […]

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We spend hours testing every product or service we review, so you can be sure you’re buying the best. Find out more about how we test.

Shokz OpenFit 2+: One minute review

After just 24 hours with the Shokz OpenFit 2+ I can already tell they’re great headphones that are worthy of inclusion in our best open-ear headphones buying guide, and perhaps our best running headphones guide as well.

They’re comfortable to wear, even for glasses wearers like myself, with Shokz’ flexible nickel-titanium alloy ear hooks looping over your ears and weighted down by a bulbous end, while the driver sits snugly against your temples.



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HELIOS Partners with NHL Rising Star Matthew Knies to Revolutionize Youth Sports Training

Article content Sorry, your browser doesn’t support embedded videos. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Exclusive articles from Barbara Shecter, Joe O’Connor, Gabriel Friedman, and others. Daily content from Financial Times, the world’s leading global business publication. Unlimited online access to […]

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PORTSMOUTH, N.H. — HELIOS, a leader in sports technology innovation, proudly announces a groundbreaking partnership with Toronto Maple Leafs forward Matthew Knies. This collaboration aims to redefine youth sports training, starting with ice hockey player development, by delivering performance data, personalized insights, and automated shift video to players and coaches.

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“HELIOS has completely changed the landscape for developing youth hockey players. I’m excited to work with HELIOS and drive the game forward.” -Matthew Knies

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As the youth sports industry evolves, with projections estimating a market size of $70 billion by 2030, the demand for individualized training solutions has never been higher. HELIOS stands at the forefront of this transformation, offering cutting-edge technologies that empower young athletes to reach their full potential.

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Matthew Knies, known for his relentless work ethic and explosive approach to the game, embodies the synergy between athletic excellence and sports science. His partnership with HELIOS underscores a shared commitment to fostering the next generation of athletes through innovative training methodologies.

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“When I was younger there wasn’t any way to track what I was doing. I always dreamed of having something like this,”

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“Now, HELIOS has completely changed the landscape for developing youth hockey players. I’m excited to work with HELIOS and drive the game forward.”

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HELIOS’ platform leverages cutting edge AI-wearable technology to provide objective insights on skating performance, enabling athletes and coaches to optimize training and development . This approach not only enhances performance but also prioritizes injury prevention and individualized athlete development.

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“Matthew’s development pathway aligns perfectly with our mission,”

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stated Bill Near, CEO of HELIOS.

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“Together, we’re setting a new standard for how young athletes train and grow in their respective sports.”

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About HELIOS

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HELIOS is the leading wearable technology and data platform for ice hockey, providing coaches, players, and parents with unmatched insight into on-ice performance. Trusted across programs at all levels, from elite youth to professional, HELIOS is redefining how development is measured and achieved.

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About Matthew Knies

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Matthew Knies is a forward for the Toronto Maple Leafs and one of the NHL’s most promising young players. A standout in the USHL and at the University of Minnesota, he earned All-American honors and helped Team USA win gold at the IIHF World Junior Championship. Off the ice, Knies is dedicated to helping young athletes train smarter and reach their potential.

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https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20250604253145/en/

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Reddit sues AI company Anthropic for allegedly ‘scraping’ user comments to train chatbot Claude – 960 The Ref

Social media platform Reddit sued the artificial intelligence company Anthropic on Wednesday, alleging that it is illegally “scraping” the comments of millions of Reddit users to train its chatbot Claude. Reddit claims that Anthropic has used automated bots to access Reddit’s content despite being asked not to do so, and “intentionally trained on the personal […]

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Social media platform Reddit sued the artificial intelligence company Anthropic on Wednesday, alleging that it is illegally “scraping” the comments of millions of Reddit users to train its chatbot Claude.

Reddit claims that Anthropic has used automated bots to access Reddit’s content despite being asked not to do so, and “intentionally trained on the personal data of Reddit users without ever requesting their consent.”

Anthropic said in a statement that it disagreed with Reddit’s claims “and will defend ourselves vigorously.”

Reddit filed the lawsuit Wednesday in California Superior Court in San Francisco, where both companies are based.

“AI companies should not be allowed to scrape information and content from people without clear limitations on how they can use that data,” said Ben Lee, Reddit’s chief legal officer, in a statement Wednesday.

Reddit has previously entered licensing agreements with Google, OpenAI and other companies that are paying to be able to train their AI systems on the public commentary of Reddit’s more than 100 million daily users.

Those agreements “enable us to enforce meaningful protections for our users, including the right to delete your content, user privacy protections, and preventing users from being spammed using this content,” Lee said.

The licensing deals also helped the 20-year-old online platform raise money ahead of its Wall Street debut as a publicly traded company last year Among those who stood to benefit was OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, who accumulated a stake as an early Reddit investor that made him one of the company’s biggest shareholders.

Anthropic was formed by former OpenAI executives in 2021 and its flagship Claude chatbot remains a key competitor to OpenAI’s ChatGPT. While OpenAI has close ties to Microsoft, Anthropic’s primary commercial partner is Amazon, which is using Claude to improve its widely used Alexa voice assistant.

Much like other AI companies, Anthropic has relied heavily on websites such as Wikipedia and Reddit that are deep troves of written materials that can help teach an AI assistant the patterns of human language.

In a 2021 paper co-authored by Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei — cited in the lawsuit — researchers at the company identified the subreddits, or subject-matter forums, that contained the highest quality AI training data, such as those focused on gardening, history, relationship advice or thoughts people have in the shower.

Anthropic in 2023 argued in a letter to the U.S. Copyright Office that the “way Claude was trained qualifies as a quintessentially lawful use of materials,” by making copies of information to perform a statistical analysis of a large body of data. It is already battling a lawsuit from major music publishers alleging that Claude regurgitates the lyrics of copyrighted songs.

But Reddit’s lawsuit is different from others brought against AI companies because it doesn’t allege copyright infringement. Instead, it focuses on the alleged breach of Reddit’s terms of use, and the unfair competition, it says, was created.

——

The Associated Press and OpenAI have a licensing and technology agreement that allows OpenAI access to part of AP’s text archives.





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Is a new Garmin sleep tracker about to drop? Stand by tech fans

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Sleep trackers measure your wellbeing while you rest. | Credit: Getty Images Can’t get enough Garmin gear? You’re in luck, as the American brand’s latest high-tech fitness monitor looks to be just around the corner. After months of […]

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 Fitness sleep tracker.

Sleep trackers measure your wellbeing while you rest. | Credit: Getty Images

Can’t get enough Garmin gear? You’re in luck, as the American brand’s latest high-tech fitness monitor looks to be just around the corner.

After months of rumours, a new report from the usually reliable Fitness Tracker Test website has revealed loads of new details about Garmin’s upcoming sleep tracker, including its name: the Index Sleep Monitor.

The report suggests that the new Whoop-style device attaches to your upper arm with an adjustable Velcro strap and uses an optical sensor to measure your sleep. Next to the sensor is an LED light and an ‘integrated vibration module’, which can be used to gently wake you from a long sleep.

According to the report, the new Sleep Index Monitor will feature an array of different health monitors, including a blood oxygen saturation monitor and sleep score tracker.

The rechargeable device is rumoured to boast around a week of battery life, and is expected to hit the market in the coming months for roughly $170.

Expected features for the new Garmin sleep monitor

Wearable fitness bands strap onto your upper arm and provide 24/7 information about your health and fitness. Popular models like the Whoop 4.0 paint a vivid picture of your sleep and recovery by measuring various health metrics.

You can also log activities, food, and alcohol consumption in the Whoop app to access a more in-depth analysis. The latest Garmin device will likely link to the Garmin Connect app, so you can see your sleep stats from your phone.

Unlike Garmin watches, Whoop uses a subscription model. You pay an annual subscription of $239 (£229), or a monthly fee of $30 (£27) to access its health tracking services.

Garmin has been experimenting with paywalls in recent months, and currently charges $6.99 (£6.99) monthly or $69 (£69.99) annually for access to its Active Intelligence AI, which sends personalised health insights and suggestions to your Garmin watch.


  • The best Garmin watches: make the right choice for the sport you love

  • The best GPS watches: feature-packed timepieces to keep you on course



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