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The top generative AI company, OpenAI, gave leading chatbots an “SAT test.” The chatbots failed miserably.
This is the first of a two-part look at how President-elect Donald J. Trump’s return to the White House could affect Microsoft. Today’s focus: the future of AI.
In a perfect universe, the persuasiveness of an argument would not be based mostly on who said it. In the world we live in, though, it is. And it’s hard to find a less credible entity to create a genAI accuracy test than OpenAI.
MIT researchers are pioneering a new method for robot training that could create an all-purpose robot brain for all robot types.
Specialized AI agents that autonomously work together as a team might be the next big leap in AI-based automation.
Even the best of relationships can go south; now, the two genAI tech giants appear headed toward a clash.
When it comes to AI deployment, people need someone to give them trust.
The FTC and the Department of Justice have both gone after a number of tech industry bigwigs in recent years. But Microsoft has been out of the legal limelight. How did that happen?
Never mind that recent project by two Harvard students showing how face-recognition glasses are a huge invasion of privacy. The glasses aren’t where danger lies!
A group of Harvard students experimented with AI-linked eyeglasses, offering a powerful peek into the AI nightmares coming for IT in 2025.
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