Everything old is new again.
The majority of companies are failing to see any returns on their AI investments, a report finds.
Psychologists have been sounding the alarm for months.
The company is dismantling the division it built two months ago, and is looking to downsize after a remarkably expensive hiring spree.
Creating a human fetus in a robot is a bioethical minefield.
AI news is officially unavoidable.
There's renewed focus on AI hardware, increasing holdings in Nvidia and TSMC in the March quarter despite critics warning of a bubble and oversupply risks.
So far the most Meta has to show for it is a glitchy chatbot, a growing chorus of irritated users, and frustrated shareholders who would like to have something show for the billions of dollars spent on the project.
Seems safe.
Let's revisit the AI classic, in an age where AI itself has become a buzzword.
Also being racist and giving bad medical information is fine, too.
Researchers at the National Ignition Facility achieved nuclear fusion ignition with the help of an AI program that essentially told them they were on the right track.
The AI chip arms race reportedly involves spooky surveillance tactics.
AI is not benign.
After losing top talent to Meta and fumbling key deals, the ChatGPT maker just dropped two massive announcements in a single week, a powerful counter-attack in the brutal war for AI supremacy.
It's the return of the pirates of Silicon Valley.
Taylor Swift and Melania Trump? You bet. Elon Musk and the author of this article? Not so much.
Some questions should not be answered.
"I am not robophobic. I have an Alexa at home."
'Star Wars' has had a contentious relationship with artificial intelligences for a very long time—and now that we find ourselves staring down the barrel of generative AI, the galaxy far, far away has given us the surprising language to denigrate it.