Billionaire Elon Musk has sued the world-leading AI company and its chief,Sam Altman,for breaking their founding agreement about working to benefit humanity.
First it was the “Magnificent Seven” and now,it seems,Nvidia might be “The One”. Following last week’s extraordinary result,the future of the sharemarket may depend on it.
Microsoft plans to disrupt the traditional console gaming market,saying it wants its games to as big and popular as they could possibly be.
The hackers broke into the corporate email system and accessed the accounts of members of the company’s leadership team,as well as those of employees on its cybersecurity and legal teams.
Paolo Benanti is the go-to person on artificial intelligence and he has the ear of Pope Francis and of some of Silicon Valley’s top engineers and executives.
Members of Australia’s technology sector have given a measured tick of approval to federal government’s move to regulate high-risk AI use cases.
It comes as worries over smartphone demand weigh on Apple’s stock in recent weeks.
Some new personal computers that run Microsoft’s Windows 11 operating system will have a special “Copilot key” that launches the software giant’s AI chatbot.
Controversy at OpenAI led to his firing and rehiring last month. In the end,Altman’s reputation has only been burnished by his temporary downfall.
The lawsuit contends that millions of articles published by the Times were used to train automated chatbots.
It’s hard not to be concerned as some of the biggest companies in the world race to be the kings of artificial intelligence. They can’t be trusted.