Perplexity is in hot water for its AI-generated articles.
A Microsoft presentation reveals the company tried to sell Azure OpenAI's popular image generator, DALL-E, to the Department of Defense.
Bold predictions from pop culture's past may have inspired today's state-of-the-art technology.
Catch up on the biggest tech stories from this week.
AI is in dangerous legal territory. Could the queen of pop put an end to its free-wheeling ways?
Eric Schmidt is reportedly starting a tech-enabled arms dealer to sell drones to the Ukrainian government.
Sen. Chuck Schumer said Elon Musk is citing a ‘threat to humanity,’ while Mark Zuckerberg defended his not-so-open open source AI tools.
Lots of folks have concern about the direction of AI. Should we, uh, maybe heed those warnings?
The country's top censor says chatbots like Baidu's Ernie should not "undermine national unity" in what experts call a threat to free speech and human rights.
The country's Ministry of Electronics said it "is not considering bringing a law or regulating the growth of artificial intelligence in the country.”
The 99-year-old Cold War architect believes ChatGPT and other AI could reshape human consciousness and threaten Democracy itself.
The phone was once called the “crackberry" for its addictive nature. An upcoming film will chronicle the company Research in Motion's incredible rise and fall.
The Pentagon cited supposed threats from China as a key motivator for ramping up "responsible" military applications for artificial intelligence.
Over $2.1 trillion was spent globally on military expenditures last year, a .7% increase driven partly by liberal U.S. R&D spending on tech contracts.
AV development has taken "longer than I ever imagined," the Deputy Secretary of Defense said this week.
A new report from the Tech Oversight Project shows how tech giants have shifted their priorities under the threat of antitrust action.
The agency completed a 30-minute autonomous test flight over Fort Campbell, Kentucky.
One of the men most responsible for altering the course of global power in the 20th century has some thoughts on how the next hundred years will play out.
A U.S. official opposed legally binding instruments to limit the use of 'Killer Robots', instead favoring a "code of conduct."
The company is reportedly pursuing a cloud contract that aims to modernize the Pentagon's cloud tech and support the use of artificial intelligence.
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