Old IT makes its bid for AI relevance
Pendulum is swinging back to companies in areas such as servers, more general chips and software
The New York Times AI·
Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, issued an order requiring safety and privacy guardrails for artificial intelligence companies contracting with the state.
Read full articlePendulum is swinging back to companies in areas such as servers, more general chips and software
An EO requiring pre-deployment review of frontier AI models would likely increase the workload at NIST's Center for AI Standards and Innovation.
Companies should capitalize on the efficiencies AI offers to change how people experience their work.
Settlement, which includes no admission of wrongdoing, covers roughly 36m eligible devices in class-action lawsuit Apple on Tuesday agreed to pay $250m to settle a class-action lawsuit accusing it of misleading millions of iPhone buyers by falsely touting artificial intelligence capabilities for its Siri voice assistant in late 2024. Plaintiffs accused the California tech giant of having “promoted AI capabilities that did not exist at the time, do not exist now, and will not exist for two or more years” in order to boost iPhone sales, according to the suit. Apple’s more “personalized” version of Siri still has not been fully released despite its announcement nearly two years ago. Continue reading...
PALO ALTO, Calif., May 5, 2026 — Broadcom Inc., a global technology leader that designs, develops, and supplies semiconductor and infrastructure software solutions, today announced VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF) 9.1, […] The post Broadcom Announces VMware Cloud Foundation 9.1 appeared first on AIwire.
It's being called the most consequential courtroom drama Silicon Valley has ever produced. Elon Musk, the world's richest man, is squaring off against Sam Altman, the man who put artificial intelligence in everyone's pocket, in a federal courthouse in Oakland, California.
Many companies are benefiting from the feedback loop being created by AI demand. Just don’t call it “parabolic.”
Chris Larsen, who hails from California, plans to spend $3.5 million to help Alex Bores, a New York congressional candidate at the center of a proxy war over A.I. regulation.