Perplexity's AI Agent Now Has a Brain That Learns From Its Own Mistakes
Brain is a self-improving memory layer that tracks what Computer did, what worked, and what failed—then uses it overnight to make the next task faster and cheaper.
Fast Company AI·
Dattani’s company, AIUC, is creating insurance standards for agent providers, giving enterprises a new way to assess risk and trust.
Read full articleBrain is a self-improving memory layer that tracks what Computer did, what worked, and what failed—then uses it overnight to make the next task faster and cheaper.
Anthropic's model restrictions highlight a growing shift as governments and enterprises place greater emphasis on access, control and AI sovereignty.
OpenAI introduces new spend controls and usage analytics for ChatGPT Enterprise, helping organizations manage costs and scale AI with confidence.
Google's AI agent could streamline ad management, but over-reliance on automation may risk flawed decisions impacting financial outcomes. The post Google launches Ask Ad Manager AI agent built on Gemini appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
A Microsoft and Huazhong University benchmark tested GPT-4o, GPT-5, Grok-3, and others on realistic enterprise data scenarios. Privacy violation rates hit 50.9%. More capable models made it worse, and the fix has nothing to do with model selection...
Toward Generalist Autonomous Research via Hypothesis-Tree Refinement
Microsoft has introduced usage-based billing for Copilot Cowork, which is now generally available. Microsoft unveiled Copilot Cowork in March, pitching it as an AI agent that’s capable of independently performing long-running, multi-step tasks — even when a user’s computer is off. It’s built on the same technology that underpins Anthropic’s Claude Cowork. Unlike Claude Cowork, which can interact directly with files and applications on a user’s computer, Copilot Cowork runs in Microsoft’s cloud environment and acts on documents held in a customer’s Microsoft 365 tenant. Copilot Cowork now comes with usage-based billing. Microsoft On Tuesday, Microsoft unveiled pricing details for Copilot Cowork, which involves usage-based billing in addition to a Microsoft 365 Copilot license ($30 per user each month for large enterprises before discounts, and $20 for Microsoft 365 Copilot for Business). The usage-based pricing is calculated from four components, according to Microsoft: “model
Bitcoin price prediction outlook shaped by SpaceX IPO liquidity shift while best crypto presales and AI agent crypto trends gain attention.