Anthropic’s Dual Battlefront: Navigating Political Headwinds While Racing AI Rivals
The Political Firestorm Surrounding AI Safety While most AI companies focus primarily on technological competition, Anthropic finds itself fighting on…
The Political Firestorm Surrounding AI Safety While most AI companies focus primarily on technological competition, Anthropic finds itself fighting on…
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Meta Platforms is launching comprehensive AI parental controls across its social media applications, giving parents oversight of teen interactions with artificial intelligence. The features will initially debut on Instagram in English-speaking markets before expanding globally. This move comes amid growing scrutiny of how social platforms manage youth mental health and AI engagement.
Meta Platforms has announced new parental controls specifically designed to monitor and manage how teenagers interact with artificial intelligence systems across its social media applications. According to reports, these tools will provide parents with unprecedented visibility and control over their children’s engagements with AI assistants and characters.
SK Telecom’s recently launched AI division is implementing a voluntary retirement program for its 1,000 employees. The company describes the move as a supportive measure during organizational integration rather than a downsizing effort. Employees who remain may face reassignments to regional offices as the telecom giant consolidates its AI operations.
SK Telecom, South Korea’s telecommunications leader, is implementing significant changes at its newly established AI division just weeks after its launch, according to reports. The company’s AI CIC (Company-in-Company) unit is offering a voluntary retirement program to employees as part of broader organizational integration efforts, sources indicate.
AI Investment Frenzy Mirrors Historical Cargo Cult Behavior The AI Gold Rush: Innovation or Imitation? As artificial intelligence companies command…
The Human Edge in Algorithmic Finance In a surprising reversal for an industry built on mathematical models and computational power,…
Salesforce faces a proposed class action lawsuit from authors claiming the company used pirated books to train its AI software. The case adds to mounting legal challenges against tech firms over AI training practices.
Cloud computing giant Salesforce is facing a proposed class action lawsuit from two authors who allege the company used thousands of copyrighted books without permission to train its artificial intelligence systems, according to reports filed this week.
In a significant policy reversal that’s ignited intense debate across the tech industry, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman is defending the…