If your artistic style is more stick-figure than Picasso, Microsoft has a remedy to boost your creativity: adding artificial intelligence to its Paint application.
Last week, Reuters reported that Facebook owner Meta's open source Llama model is being used by the Chinese military. According to the report, the military-focused AI tool dubbed "ChatBIT" is being developed to gather intelligence and provide information for operational decision-making,
Parmy Olson is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering technology. A former reporter for the Wall Street Journal and Forbes, she is author of “Supremacy: AI, ChatGPT and the Race That Will Change the World.”
Llama has seen adoption as the building block of internal AI models for AT&T, Goldman Sachs, and Shopify. From January 2024 to July, Llama usage grew tenfold, which demonstrates rapid adoption.
In late 2022, Facebook parent Meta saw ChatGPT go viral and went all in on developing its own version of generative artificial intelligence. But a whistleblower claims in a new lawsuit that after she pointed out that the social media giant’s revenue projections for the technology were inflated by $1.
As Facebook's parent company has aggressively injected Meta AI into its products, it has fueled its systems with a bounty of customer data. Why it matters: Meta knows a ton about you and billions of other people.
In an era where artificial intelligence is revolutionising every aspect of our lives, a 17-year-old high school senior is making waves in the health and fitness tech
Who needs friends and influencers Mark Zuckerberg has announced that users can expect a significant increase in AI-generated content on Facebook and Instagram. During Meta's third-quarter earnings conference call,
The improvement to the tech giant's AI system has led to an 8% increase in the amount of time spent on Facebook and a 6% increase on Instagram.
Workers at artificial intelligence companies want Congress to grant them specific whistleblower protection, arguing that advancements in the technology pose threats that they can’t legally expose under current law.
“Our AI investments continue to require serious infrastructure and I expect to continue investing significantly there,” Zuckerberg said. Meanwhile, Meta’s social networks, including Facebook and Instagram, continue to drive the bulk of the busines
For the current quarter, Arista sees no sign of the AI demand letting up. It’s anticipating revenue of between $1.85 billion and $1.9 billion, well ahead of the Street’s forecast of $1.8 billion. It also forecast an adjusted operating margin of 44%, compared to the analyst forecast of 43.5%.