Google, the company once known for including “Don’t be evil” in its code of conduct, just changed its corporate rules to ...
Google sparks debate on big tech's approach to AI safety and raises concerns about responsible tech development in military ...
Neither the public or the tech giants pushing artificial intelligence understand its long-term implications, warns former ...
Alphabet's Google on Wednesday announced updates to its Gemini family of large language models, including a new product line ...
Google on Wednesday released Gemini 2.0 — its "most capable" artificial intelligence model suite yet — to everyone. In ...
Google’s digital ad sales continued to grow at a healthy clip during the holiday season, but that wasn’t enough to offset ...
However, some experts seem even more concerned about something else that might threaten Google’s progress in the coming year.
The company’s historical reluctance to engage in military AI projects stems from employee-led protests in 2018, when workers ...
This week, the company deleted its pledge not to use AI for weapons or surveillance, a promise that had been in place since ...
Google changed its public AI policies to remove assertions that it would not develop AI applied to surveillance or weapons.
Google, a company that once went by the motto “don’t be evil,” appears to be changing tack. The tech giant on Tuesday ...
Google has updated its AI principles, and the changes suggest it could now provide AI tech for weapons and surveillance.