Google, AI and chatbot
Digest more
Top News
Overview
Impacts
More than 100 days after Donald Trump returned to office, ChatGPT still often mistakes former President Joe Biden for the current commander in chief.
Looking for the best AI chatbots? Explore our expert recommendations and detailed reviews to help you choose the right AI assistant for your needs.
Recent research by AI company Anthropic further shows that its Claude 3 chatbot was at its most persuasive when allowed to fabricate information and engage in deception. Given AI chatbots have no moral inhibitions, they are poised to be much better at deception than humans.
AI pioneer Geoffrey Hinton says he tends to believe GPT-4, even though he said it got a simple riddle wrong.
Google’s AI search results are about to get even more ads. On May 21st, the company announced that it’s going to start testing ads in AI Mode, the new AI-powered search feature that just rolled out to everyone in the US.
Explore more
The ChatGPT-like chatbot functionality you expect from Siri might not be unveiled when Apple announces iOS 19 next month.
Artificial intelligence’s energy consumption has been a hot topic as the technology has exploded in popularity. It’s no secret that generative AI chatbots are very power hungry, and raising awareness of just how much energy they consume is important in making sure these tools are used responsibly.
Here's a ChatGPT guide to help understand Open AI's viral text-generating system. We outline the most recent updates and answer your FAQs.
Most AI chatbots can be easily jailbroken and prompted to generate dangerous information, according to new research.
Some X users on Wednesday asked Grok – the AI chatbot available through Elon Musk’s social media platform – questions about simple topics like baseball players or videos of fish being flushed down toilets.
Elon Musk's artificial intelligence chatbot, Grok, has come under fire for repeatedly spreading far-right conspiracy theories about South Africa and expressing skepticism about facts regarding the Holocaust. Social media users quickly caught on to the bot's strange behavior, and the company's explanation fell flat.
Alphabet's Google and artificial-intelligence startup Character.AI must face a lawsuit from a Florida woman who said Character.AI's chatbots caused her 14-year-old son's suicide, a judge ruled on Wednesday.