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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In an era when seemingly every tech company is vying to win the AI race, power has become the name of the game.
The US is trying to box China out of AI development. The problem is the Asian nation is also the source of invaluable AI talent.
Sony said Tuesday that Playstation 5 sales rose over the past fiscal year, but it lowered its sales guidance over the next year.
Quarterly earnings at tech giants Meta and Microsoft surged, indicating that multi-billion dollar AI investments are starting to pay off.
The platform says it plans to identify and label content created by other AI tools, like Adobe’s Firefly and OpenAI’s Dall-E.
The US worries that models like ChatGPT could allow China to launch cyberattacks or even design biological weapons.
Microsoft may want its language models to prove their worth.
After serving as the driving force for a blistering market rise, the so-called Magnificent Seven have taken an epic stumble in 2025.
Does the AI hype actually hold any substance? As long as you don’t get distracted by shiny things, these venture capitalists say.
The bank plans to take its profits off the table and repurpose them for new investments — primarily in energy and firms listed in Japan.
The patent highlights that tech firms of all manner are interested in reading people’s emotions.
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.”