Nvidia, AI and chips
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State lawmakers are slamming the breaks on AI therapy as stories of chatbots offering inappropriate and even dangerous responses pile up.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang on Wednesday dismissed concern about an end to a spending boom on artificial intelligence chips, projecting opportunities will expand into a multi-trillion-dollar market over the next five years.
Roughly 16 percent of professionals sometimes pretend to use AI, according to the survey of more than 1,000 full time workers.
An AI-generated video released by Japan’s government warns Tokyo’s 20 million residents what to expect if Mount Fuji, the breathtakingly beautiful volcano that looms over their city, ever erupts.
A Bain alum turned her translation frustration into Bluente, an AI startup that just raised $1.5 million.
The company behind the Claude chatbot said it caught a hacker using its chatbot to identify, hack and extort at least 17 companies.
Nvidia's sophisticated chips have been an important part of the AI boom. On Wednesday it said demand for its products remains strong, especially from big tech firms including Instagram-owner Meta, and ChatGPT-maker OpenAI, as they race to build-out AI.
Anthropic said cybercriminals used AI to conduct hacking operations with smaller teams and fewer technical skills.
VTEX's agentic AI automates routine enterprise commerce tasks, delivers insights and lets humans focus on high-impact decisions.
AI tools are changing the game for software development, but killing a $1.2 trillion industry will be a stretch.
A new Stanford analysis finds early-career workers—especially in fields like software engineering and customer service—are seeing steep job losses.