The AI divide putting open weights models in spotlight
…research projects and proofs of concept that, while impressive for their size or innovation, still fell far short of OpenAI, Anthropic, or Google's top models. But Qwen 3.5, Google's…
…research projects and proofs of concept that, while impressive for their size or innovation, still fell far short of OpenAI, Anthropic, or Google's top models. But Qwen 3.5, Google's…
…MORE CONTEXT Anthropic mocks up Claude Design to draft fancy new pink slips for marketing teams Anthropic squeezes enterprises by ejecting bundled tokens from seat deal Attention data hoarders: Alexa loses its…
…a proprietary service from OpenAI or Anthropic … not to mention having all your internal company data flowing through their systems?" Enter Thunderbolt . According to the product announcement, Mozilla envisions Thunderbolt as "a…
…revealing that a result was sponsored – didn't materially change things. With an explicit warning, 55.5 percent still chose the sponsored product. And when the AI models were directed to hide…
…Broadcom, and its spiritual sibling Cloud Software Group, offers a muddier example of product death strategies, by keeping software alive but only offering it in bundles –completely changing the way it is…
…Literally Agents hooked into GitHub can steal creds – but Anthropic, Google, and Microsoft haven't warned users Customers revolt as GitHub Copilot 'fixes' rate limits Anthropic's Project Glasswing CVE tally is…
…To excuse its covetous behavior, GitHub in its FAQs notes that Anthropic , JetBrains , and corporate parent Microsoft operate similar opt-out data use policies. The rationale for the change, according to Rodriguez…
…AI biz Anthropic recently boasted that its latest model, Mythos, is so effective at finding security flaws in systems that it would wreak havoc on the internet if it was made publicly…
…The first of its inhouse MTIA chips was released in 2023. “(The) MTIA 300 will be used for ranking and recommendations training, and is already in production. MTIA 400, 450 and 500…
…However, the company’s story keeps changing: First it attributed the publicly exposed info to "intentional behavior" and "unclear documentation," then threw bug-bounty service HackerOne under the bus. The drama appears…