This year Big Tech got into the energy game in a big way, and if it wants to chase AI it’ll need even more energy in years to come.
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ByteDance, the China-based TikTok owner and political punching bag, is emerging as the nation’s answer to OpenAI.
Ignore the high-profile exodus of users to BlueSky and Meta’s Threads. Elon Musk’s X, née Twitter, might be doing just fine.
It’s not quite Christmas yet, but Amazon is putting cash in the stocking of its favorite AI startup, Anthropic.
Amazon wants to reduce its reliance on Nvidia and offer an alternative to Nvidia for Amazon Web Services clients in the process.
OpenAI wants to work on its active listening skills.
Meta is developing an artificial intelligence-based search engine to stake its claim in a rapidly growing market.
As OpenAI wraps its latest funding round — a $6.6 billion raise at a $157 billion valuation — it’s asking financial backers for exclusivity.
It’s not a hallucination: Artificial intelligence companies have actually managed to placate at least one national regulator.
Once upon a time, the biggest prestige battle in Silicon Valley was who had the best voice assistant. Then came ChatGPT.
An Apple patent to train AI without eating up power highlights the advantages and headwinds the tech giant may face in the market.
Though there are a lot of ways to protect AI models, monitoring user behavior is a vital piece of the puzzle.
The US Artificial Intelligence Safety Institute announced OpenAI and Anthropic agreed to allow it to test and evaluate new models for safety.
Because of the massive head start that bigger tech firms have, OpenAI may “find themselves boxed out.”
OpenAI allegedly issued overly-restrictive non-disclosure agreements that could penalize anyone who blows the whistle to government agencies.
AI’s energy needs are enormous, and could have a once-in-a-generation impact on the electricity market.