To Google, user search data is the all-important secret sauce that enables it to innovate and outperform rivals.
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A single point of software failure can turn entire industries into teetering Jenga towers. Next time could be a lot worse.
Intel’s recent patent could help track down when AI slips up after it’s shipped out.
IBM may want to use household appliances to track users and time ads.
Apple shifting production to India is just the latest sign that the world’s most populous nation may be a winner in global trade reordering.
Honeywell plans to spin off its advanced materials unit as a publicly listed company so it can prioritize “megatrends.”
The United Nations, which just published a report on cybercrime, is pushing forward on a controversial new treaty to combat it.
Obesity drugmaker Rivus is working with banks to complete a US public listing that could happen before the end of the year.
IBM is booting up its domestic production, setting aside $150 billion to make computers in the US over the next five years.
While wrist-worn controllers may be the next frontier of artificial reality technology, it’s likely not the end goal for AR control.
Given that AI systems can’t always be totally accurate, observing when they make mistakes could mitigate a lot of harm.
Autonomous machines may need to be proactive, not reactive, to keep accidents from happening.
Back in 2020, Google’s huge market share of the internet search market hovered at about 92% by most metrics
Central to the trial is one question: Just who, exactly, are Meta’s competitors? The FTC’s answer may be narrower than you’d expect.
Fixing the noise problem is key to scaling these devices to more than a few thousand qubits.
So far this year, investors have greatly gold compared bitcoin. So if it’s not digital gold, what is bitcoin exactly?