
Continue reading “Apple says considering AI search in Safari, but «not good enough yet»”

Continue reading “Apple says considering AI search in Safari, but «not good enough yet»”

Google touts it as especially good for developers, improving on what many felt was already the best coding model.
Continue reading “Google drops new Gemini 2.5 Pro Preview, says it excels at coding”

This means changing the structure of it’s operational, for profit Limited Liability Company (LLC) to a Public Benefit Corporation (PBC) that will be controlled by it’s non-profit entity intended to «ensure that artificial general intelligence benefits all of humanity,» OpenAI writes in a blog post.
A Public Benefit Corporation is a profit-based company that legally commits to both profit and purpose — like «advancing AI for all» — and must consider that mission alongside shareholder value. It also has to publish a yearly «public benefit» report. It’s essentially a mission-specific corporate vehicle.
Continue reading “OpenAI scraps for-profit structure, but keeps door open for investments”

The case revolves around whether AI companies like Meta can use copyrighted works in the training of their models, which they claim is fair use, while the authors seek damages and compensation for the fact that they copied all of their work without authorization.
The case could upend the entire AI market, and Meta fears it would make them less competitive should they lose.
Continue reading “Judge in Meta’s copyright case questions fair use defense”

AdSense apparently began experimenting with ads for AI chatbots, or, as they call it «conversational AI,» in chatbots iAsk and Liner, according to Bloomberg, which is paywalled.
Just a test?
SEO roundtable quotes Bloomberg as saying that AdSense had «expanded to include conversations with chatbots operated by AI startups.»
Continue reading “Google’s AdSense experimenting with AI chatbots”

— The community of volunteers behind Wikipedia is the most important and unique element of Wikipedia’s success, the document begins.
Continue reading “Wikipedia to use AI — to augment editors, not content”

— I’d say maybe 20%, 30% of the code that is inside of our repos today and some of our projects are probably all written by software, said Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella during a conversation at LlamaCon, Meta’s AI developer conference, according to CNBC
Microsoft says they have made progress with Python, and less with C++ projects, but he is still pointing that some projects could be entirely written by AI.
Continue reading “Big Tech embraces AI coding, hitting 30% of software”

Meta’s blog post touts the potential of linking it with your other Meta accounts so it can get to know you better, and says the app will remember things about you that you explicitly ask it to retain — or information you already shared on Facebook, for example.
This is slightly off what ChatGPT offers outside the EU, where the app will add all previous chats to its «memory.» The memory feature in Meta AI is also not available in the EU, limiting this service to the USA and Canada for now.
Continue reading “Meta AIs new Llama 4 app has access to Facebook, Instagram”

The new feature will produce «improved product results» and show product cards with images and prices, pulling product reviews from sites like professional publishers and forums like reddit, and often presenting reviews with star ratings, writes The Verge.
Continue reading “ChatGPT debuts shopping and product reviews”

Enter AI agents to alleviate the press, they say, and 79 % of leaders concur. Most are now planning to use AI to boost productivity within the next 12 to 18 months.
Continue reading “Microsoft: 81% of SMBs see 2025 as pivotal year for AI at work”

The story doing the rounds this week is that an ai «bot» called Thy is running a four hour radio show on Australias CADA channel. It’s hit the mainstream press and is reported by The Verge, The Independent and The Sydney Morning Herald, to name few.
Continue reading “No, an AI is not running that radio show in Australia”

The same slide showed daily traffic was at 35 million active users.
Impressive growth
That signals an exponential growth from around 10 million monthly active users from late last year, reports Ars Technica.
It also shows the reach that’s been possible by defaulting to Gemini over Assistant on Android phones and the strength of offering 2.5 Pro to free users just a short while ago. Gemini is also the default assistant on Galaxy phones
Continue reading “Google’s Gemini reaches 350 million monthly users”

The company said in March that it anticipates revenue above $11.6 billion in 2025 – nearly tripling its 2024 numbers. It will then jump from $125B in 2029 to $174B in 2030.
Revenue will rise significantly once it can develop and charge for AI agents, and «free user monetization,» according to Slashdot.
What that «monetization» will entail is unclear so far, but Pymnts.com says they have considered things such as charging affiliate fees on links, giving it a cut of sales generated from the platform.
According to this post on r/singularity, they are not currently considering considering selling traditional advertising, but that references a December FT.com article and may well have changed.
Read more at paywalled The Information, a writeup on Pymnts.com, March 16. report on Reuters and discussion on r/singularity.

The two year deal included monthly payments and a share of ad revenue, writes The Verge.
The aim of the deal is to give Gemini the pride of being the default AI assistant og Galaxy phones, which sell a ton worldwide.
Should Google loose the trial, which is only for remedies after earlier being found guilty of a monopoly in advertising, they would be forbidden from deals like these, will have to sell Chrome, and open search data to licensing deals.
Read more at The Verge, at 9to5Google and a paywalled Bloomberg.

Now OpenAI’s ChatGPT head of product, Nick Turley, said in open court that they «would be interested» in buying it, according to Reuters.