Corrections that appeared in print on Wednesday, Oct. 2, 2024.
BUSINESS
An article on Monday about California Gov. Gavin Newsom vetoing an artificial intelligence safety bill misstated the title of Patrick Hall. He is an assistant professor of decision sciences at George Washington University, not an assistant professor of information systems at Georgetown University.
An article on Tuesday about new technologies that could help utilities better plan for the risk of extreme weather referred imprecisely to the development of ChatGPT. Microsoft is an investor in ChatGPT and uses it in its products, but it did not develop it, Open AI did.
ARTS
An article on Monday about the heirs of a Dutch museum director who donated a trove of Rembrandt paintings to the Mauritshuis museum wanting them returned to the family misstated when the forger Han Van Meegeren’s trial took place. He was convicted in 1947, not long after Abraham Bredius’s death. (Bredius died in 1946.)
A Critic’s Notebook article on Sept. 27 about four Off Broadway shows that tackle political issues in imaginative ways misidentified an event in “Medea.” It was filicide, not matricide.
Errors are corrected during the press run whenever possible, so some errors noted here may not have appeared in all editions.
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Source: Elections - nytimes.com