Future battlefields will be shaped by AI weapons that defense firms and Big Tech are vying to build for the military. Guardrails are lagging.
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hallucination in AI is a pervasive, core issue that might not be easily solvable.
It’s not a hallucination: Artificial intelligence companies have actually managed to placate at least one national regulator.
Google filed a formal complaint with the European Union, saying that Microsoft abuses its market dominance as a software maker.
Quarterly earnings at tech giants Meta and Microsoft surged, indicating that multi-billion dollar AI investments are starting to pay off.
Though there are a lot of ways to protect AI models, monitoring user behavior is a vital piece of the puzzle.
Microsoft’s generative AI search patents could help it gain ground against Google — especially amid its recent antitrust loss.
In the face of a wide-spread outage, such as what occurred with Crowdstrike last Friday, there’s only so much the company can do, one expert said.
After serving as the driving force for a blistering market rise, the so-called Magnificent Seven have taken an epic stumble in 2025.
Apple, Amazon, Microsoft and Meta all report earnings this week. Wall Street is dying for any hint that heavy investment in AI is paying off.
A single file in a defective software update caused a global IT outage that disrupted airports, banks, hotels, trains, hospitals, and more.
Microsoft’s gaming division Xbox announced it’s splitting its hugely popular subscription service Game Pass into two subscription tiers.
Patenting this kind of tech could benefit Google in more ways than one.
Along with mitigating hallucinations, this tech creates an audit trail for more transparency between the model and its users.
Hedge funds are still all in on the AI boom that drove the Magnificent Seven’s gains, they just think it’s creating value elsewhere now.
“There are still going to be things that classical computers are better at.”