AI Systems
Coverage of AI Systems in the Nexus archive.
- Ukraine to pick AI models operated without provider control, official says
Ukraine will prioritize AI systems that can be operated on its own servers to avoid dependence on remote systems controlled by providers, as stated by a senior ministry official. This move aims to ensure digital tools for government services, businesses, and the military remain functional during wartime.
- 100 authors demand $75M from Anthropic over ‘stolen’ work to train its systems: lawsuit
Over 100 authors are demanding $75 million from Anthropic, a San Francisco-based AI company, accusing it of stealing their books to train its systems.
- UK to Rebuild Armed Forces Around Ukraine-Style Drone Warfare
Britain is preparing a major defense overhaul inspired by Ukraine’s battlefield experience, shifting toward drones, AI systems, and rapid-cycle innovation.
- Who will control Africa’s AI infrastructure, and at what cost?
Data centres and AI systems are expanding across Africa, increasing pressure on energy and resources. The article questions who will control Africa's AI infrastructure and the associated costs.
- How AI giants are putting their own bots to work
Major AI companies like OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic are using their own AI systems to automate internal tasks across departments such as engineering, finance, and marketing, aiming to improve efficiency and reduce costs. These firms act as 'customer zero,' testing and refining AI tools internally before deploying them externally.
- Jack Clark: AI itself can stem cognitive decline
Jack Clark, co-founder of Anthropic, suggests AI systems can help prevent cognitive decline by encouraging critical thinking. Anthropic's Claude chatbot asks clarifying questions to engage users, with future versions potentially requiring original ideas. However, users may resist increased friction in the experience.
- Meta pauses controversial employee-tracking program after security review
Meta paused its Model Capability Initiative, an employee-tracking program that collected keystroke and screen-capture data from staff laptops to train AI systems, after an internal security review revealed excessive data accessibility. The program faced internal backlash and compliance concerns due to the high-risk nature of the collected data, which included AI prompts, private conversations, and performance information.
- Why Amazon hates 'human-in-the-loop' AI governance
Amazon Security's Eric Brandwine argues against 'human-in-the-loop' AI governance, stating humans are inconsistent and non-deterministic like AI systems. He highlights the normalization of deviance, where repeated exposure to false alarms leads to complacency, and suggests human oversight may not be the gold standard for AI governance.
- GoDaddy Corporate Domains chief: The next Internet land rush is happening right now
ICANN is accepting applications until August 12 for companies to control branded internet suffixes like '.google' or '.amazon'. This follows a 2012 round and highlights the growing importance of dotBrand domains as AI, synthetic content, and automated interactions reshape online identity verification.
- AI Is about to escape human control — and nobody has a plan
Anthropic has called for a global pause on the development of powerful AI systems, warning they are slipping beyond human control and could cause catastrophic consequences without proper regulation.
- Jeff Bezos's AI startup Prometheus raises $12 billion at $41 billion valuation
Jeff Bezos's AI startup Prometheus raised $12 billion at a $41 billion valuation. The industrial AI company, co-led by Bezos and Vik Bajaj, has hired approximately 150 people and is developing AI systems for engineering and manufacturing.
- Beyond Tech-Facilitated Gender-Based Violence: The Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women, Gender, and the Governance of Digital Economies in ASEAN
The CEDAW Committee is influencing digital economy governance in ASEAN member states by embedding gender equality norms into AI systems, digital infrastructure, and platform governance. Its concluding observations, though non-binding, shape policies in countries like Singapore, Thailand, and Malaysia, emphasizing gender-responsive budgeting and rights-based frameworks for technology.
- Anthropic urges AI labs to pause, warns humans risk losing control
Anthropic has called on AI laboratories to pause their work, warning that rapid technological advancements may enable AI systems to evolve beyond human control. The company highlights the risk of AI improving at a rate faster than humans can regulate.
- Anthropic calls for pause of global AI development
Anthropic, a San Francisco-based AI company, called for a global pause in developing the most powerful AI systems due to concerns they may escape human control. The company warned that a slowdown would only be effective if all firms participated, as competitors would otherwise advance rapidly.
- Anthropic calls for global AI slowdown, says systems may outpace human control
Anthropic, the developer of Claude, calls for a global AI slowdown, stating that a pause in AI development would likely be beneficial. The company warns that cutting-edge AI models are beginning to show signs of becoming increasingly difficult for humans to control.
- Is Dominion’s plan to merge with NextEra good or bad for Virginians?
Dominion Energy's proposed merger with NextEra Energy could impact Virginia's data centers and utility customers, with potential bill credits of $2.25 billion but concerns over environmental costs and corporate motives. The merger may consolidate Dominion's monopoly on power for data centers, while NextEra's renewable energy resources are highlighted as a possible benefit.
- Start-ups are racing to revolutionise mathematics with AI
AI start-ups with significant funding are hiring mathematicians to develop AI systems aimed at solving complex mathematical problems and advancing the creation of more intelligent AI.
- Anthropic cofounder hallucinates ghost in the machine after hearing the Pope speak about AI
Pope Leo XIV's encyclical 'Magnifica Humanitas' warns against equating AI with human intelligence, while Anthropic co-founder Chris Olah argues AI systems are 'grown' from human data. The article critiques Olah's anthropomorphization of AI, citing lawsuits and data transparency issues at Anthropic.
- Agent Memory: An Anatomy
The article 'Agent Memory: An Anatomy' explores the structural components and design of memory systems in AI agents. It is discussed on Hacker News with 23 points and 7 comments, indicating moderate engagement.
- Big Tech extracts retirement-scale wealth from UK internet users, research shows
A Web3 Foundation report claims UK and European internet users generate $1,604 annually in commercial value for Big Tech, accumulating to $189,405 over 60 years. The study argues users unknowingly pay with behavioral data, and 'informed consent' is an illusion due to rapid acceptance of complex privacy policies.
- Pope Leo warns that AI challenges must be confronted with regulation, transparency in his 1st encyclical
Pope Leo issued his first encyclical warning that AI systems pose risks of spreading misinformation, prioritizing conflict, and risking global instability. He called for governments to regulate AI development and prioritize transparency to prevent unending war.
- Are we nearing the end of tech layoffs? Or are they just the beginning?
The article examines whether technology layoffs are ending or continuing, noting significant uncertainty about the future. It emphasizes that AI systems are rapidly advancing with substantial room for further development before reaching their potential ceiling.
- AI will help make a Nobel prize-winning discovery within a year, says Anthropic co-founder
Anthropic co-founder Jack Clark predicts that AI systems will help make a Nobel prize-winning discovery within 12 months and that AI-run companies will generate millions in revenue within 18 months. Clark describes significant progress in AI technology alongside both opportunities and risks for society.
- Cyber Pros Can't Decide If AI Is a Good or a Bad Thing
Cybersecurity professionals have mixed feelings about AI, being both excited and fearful of its potential impact. AI is a highly debated topic among cyber pros, with no clear consensus on its benefits or drawbacks. The cybersecurity community is divided on the issue.
- Will human minds still be special in an age of AI?
The article explores whether human intelligence remains unique in the age of AI, as AI systems increasingly outperform humans in tasks like gaming, writing, and mathematics. It uses an analogy of height growth to illustrate concerns about AI surpassing human capabilities.
- Scientists built a memory chip that breaks the rules of miniaturization
Scientists developed a new memory chip that reduces energy loss through extreme miniaturization and structural redesign, potentially solving overheating and battery drain issues in electronics. The device improves efficiency as it shrinks, enabling ultra-efficient smartphones, wearables, and AI systems.
- Mark Cuban warns these 5 job categories are at risk due to AI
Mark Cuban warns that five job categories are at risk due to AI adoption, as companies increasingly prioritize cost and productivity of AI systems over human labor. The shift is already underway, driven by corporate decisions to evaluate AI efficiency against human workforce costs.
- AI outperforms doctors in Harvard trial of emergency triage diagnoses
A Harvard study found AI systems outperformed human doctors in emergency medicine triage, diagnosing more accurately in high-pressure hospital scenarios. Researchers described the results as a 'profound change in technology that will reshape medicine.'
- AI clause in new SAP API policy has partners worried over lock-in
SAP has introduced a new API policy prohibiting the use of its APIs to integrate with AI systems outside its approved architectures, causing concern among partners about potential vendor lock-in and the exclusion of third-party AI tools from customer data.
- How Project Maven taught the military to love AI
The US military used AI systems like the Maven Smart System to accelerate targeting during its assault on Iran, striking over 1,000 targets in 24 hours. Journalist Katrina Manson's book details Project Maven's development from 2017, which applied computer vision to drone footage and sparked protests at Google, its initial contractor.
- Bad Memories Still Haunt AI Agents
Cisco discovered and resolved a major vulnerability in Anthropic's memory-handling system. Experts caution that improper management of memory files will persist as a threat to AI systems.
- This new brain-like chip could slash AI energy use by 70%
Researchers developed a brain-inspired nanoelectronic device using modified hafnium oxide that mimics neuron functionality, enabling simultaneous data processing and storage. This innovation could reduce AI energy consumption by up to 70% by eliminating energy waste from data movement.
- OpenAI teams up with Infosys to bring AI tools to more businesses
OpenAI and Infosys have partnered to integrate AI tools into business operations, focusing on modernizing software development, automating workflows, and deploying AI systems. The collaboration will initially target software engineering, legacy modernization, and DevOps.
- Ghost breaches: How AI-mediated narratives have become a new threat vector
AI-generated narratives are creating fictional data breaches and resurrecting old incidents, causing real-world crises for companies. These fabricated stories, complete with technical details and false quotes, trigger costly investigations and defensive actions, exposing a new threat vector in cybersecurity.
- Daily briefing: AI systems can ‘teach’ biases to other models
AI systems can subconsciously transfer biases to other models through generated data. Sperm-whale communication patterns resemble human language structures, and China's 'Great Green Wall' reforestation project has achieved notable success.
- AI is the boss at this retail store. What could go wrong?
The article discusses AI taking over a retail store, highlighting Andon Labs co-founders Lukas Petersson and Axel Backlund at Andon Market. Their startup aims to raise awareness about AI capabilities and prepare for a future with autonomous AI agents.
- Elon Musk’s xAI sues Colorado over new rules for artificial intelligence
Elon Musk’s xAI has sued Colorado over new AI regulations set to take effect in June, arguing the law infringes on first amendment rights. The law aims to prevent algorithmic discrimination in sectors like education, employment, healthcare, housing, and financial services.
- OpenAI encourages firms to trial four-day weeks to adapt to AI era
OpenAI is encouraging firms to trial four-day workweeks as part of adapting to the AI era. The initiative aims to spark discussions about necessary actions as AI systems become more capable.