We used the Copyleaks AI detector as a lab instrument to find which model is more likely to be flagged.
The post Claude vs Grok Which is Easier To Detect? appeared first on Copyleaks.
Meta announced on Tuesday that it's testing a Threads feature that lets users tag a Meta AI account to get answers to questions or context about a conversation on the platform. If you've spent any time looking at replies on X as of late, this new feature sounds a lot like Meta's take on people tagging xAI's Grok. But, as reported by Engadget, Threads users quickly discovered that you can't block the new Meta AI account, and they aren't happy about it.
Meta has invested heavily in AI as it works to catch up to rivals like OpenAI and Google, spending billions to hire AI talent. It launched a new AI model called Muse Spark in April, which it s …
Read the full story at The Verge.
The DePIN veteran is opening blockchain development to anyone using Claude or Codex, dropping the barrier from specialist engineering team to solo developer.
The feature is designed to help people get real-time context about trends and breaking stories, as well as receive recommendations, all within conversations.
The post Musk’s AI Ambitions Face Pressure as Grok Struggles to Keep Pace appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
Grok downloads fell from more than 20 million in January to around 8.3 million in April. Only 0.174% of surveyed US AI users said they paid for Grok in Q2 2026. Enterprise adoption of Grok remains weak as Anthropic’s Claude and Google’s Gemini grow. Elon Musk launched Grok in late 2023 with plans to challenge OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google in the AI market. Two years later, the numbers show the gap is widening instead of closing. New market data compiled by the Wall Street Journal points to slowing user growth, weak paid adoption, and limited enterprise traction as rivals rapidly expand across both consumer and business markets. At the same time, Musk’s own companies are now selling critical computing power to competitors instead of using it entirely for Grok’s development. Grok Downloads Collapse After January Spike Grok briefly captured major attention earlier this year after
Anthropic's AWS integration could reshape enterprise AI by enhancing accessibility, security, and autonomy, intensifying cloud competition.
The post Anthropic expands Claude access through general availability launch on Amazon Web Services appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
It seems that the software developers at Facebook, who are all in on AI-powered coding, came up with a notion they called “Claudeonomics” to measure their all in-ness. This manifested itself as an internal dashboard/scoreboard of who was burning the most tokens with Claude Code. The race was on to see who could burn through the most tokens.
Never mind whether this conflagration of Claude tokens was actually producing anything good. The chart merely gave boasting rights to the developer who cranked through the most processing power, declaring leaders as “Token Legend” and “Cache Wizard.”
Similar things were going on at Microsoft and Salesforce.
This is just the latest chapter in an age-old battle, and it is a really bad idea.
Maximum bad
Managing software developers is hard enough. There are many reasons why managing developers is hard, but chief among them is that it is difficult (if not impossible) to measure the process of writing software.
And that isn’t from a lack of trying. We
If you haven’t heard of Arm, you haven’t been paying attention to how ubiquitous the chipmaker has become. Arm’s processor designs power Macs, iPhones, and every other major smartphone line. Queries made through ChatGPT, Gemini, or Claude pass through an Arm-based chip at some point.
For more than 40 years, Arm’s focus was on chip design. Major device and AI chip makers then licensed those designs and turned them into hardware.
But the company’s focus is changing: Arm is now making hardware using its own AGI CPU, which OpenAI and Meta will use and which will allow the chipmaker itself to compete with the likes of Apple, Intel, Nvidia, Amazon and Google.
Arm’s envisions its new Performix software suite using “recipes” and AI insights to help engineers identify suspect code and CPU hotspots.
Alex Spinelli, who leads Arm’s software initiatives as senior vice president for AI and developer platforms, is as AI-native an engineer as you’ll find; he played a central role in the TensorFlow st