It was almost a year before a handful of Chinese AI chatbots received government approval for public release. Some questioned whether China’s stance on censorship might hobble the country’s AI ambitions.
An AI expert argues AI progress hasn’t stalled, it’s become invisible, which could leave us unprepared for the future.
As more users turn to ChatGPT for emotional support, experts weigh its potential to reshape mental health care.
Firms are pledging billions of dollars toward building out artificial intelligence networks. But jobs from that spending may be hard to come by.
Hiya, folks, welcome to TechCrunch’s regular AI newsletter. If you want this in your inbox every Wednesday, sign up here. The AI news cycle didn't
A study published today in the journal Nature by researchers at Columbia University described a new medical AI model that they say can accurately predict the activity of genes at the cellular level. In theory,
A new tech company is hoping to revolutionize the way we do laundry and we got to see it firsthand at CES 2025.
A multi-model approach gives us new kinds of collaborative architectures that will enhance what AI can do in our world.
Meta’s AI characters users might seem useless, but fake social media users can sometimes offer valuable insights into real human behavior.
Also making the list is the immense progress in the world of robots, which can now learn faster thanks to AI. This means we will soon have to wrestle with whether we will trust humanoid robots enough to welcome them into our most private spaces, and how we will feel if they are remotely controlled by human beings working abroad.
Interior lighting aimed at reducing motion sickness. Shiny new dashboard and windshield displays. And AI-powered voice assistants paired with abundant infotainment systems to keep you company on long drives.
An artificial intelligence feature on iPhones is generating fake news alerts, stoking concerns about the technology's ability to spread misinformation.