AI - open wide and say ‘ah!’ as the UK House of Lords debates open source This article is sponsored by:
Should LLMs and generative AI be more open and transparent? The mood music says yes. But what does ‘open’ really mean?
Should LLMs and generative AI be more open and transparent? The mood music says yes. But what does ‘open’ really mean?
NIST has called for support on a new consortium to develop responsible AI metrics. In the long run, this is likely to have a far more substantive impact on the future of AI than political gatherings that talk about not regulating AI and taking nice photos. Your help is needed.
The UK says it's the leader in AI safety. So does America. The EU's staking a claim here too. How easy is it going to be for everyone to 'play nicely'?
Organizing a global AI Summit was never going to be without its issues...as our mystery correspondent reveals...
As debate rages about AI, discussions about digital markets are nearing their conclusion. But the two are not unrelated, as we explain.
A Westminster forum on international digital trade finds one country more in focus than others. Why?
UK regulator passes a market inquiry over to competition authority - the game's afoot!
Do try to keep up now - a neo-liberal thinktank established by Margaret Thatcher is warning against deregulation!
Did the UK’s Brexit tsar really mean to suggest that Britain is a pirate when it comes to encouraging innovation?
A spin-off of the UK Forestry Commission has improved the services it provides its trade customers, and started a major program of re-factoring and replacement of some 300 applications.
The market's coming to C3.ai, says Tom Siebel of the rise of generative AI. But it's going to cost money to make the most of that opportunity and that's not a message that Wall Street's short termists may want to hear.
If the AI revolution is going to disrupt the workforce, what steps do private and public organizations need to take to mitigate the impact?
The UK Government talks a good story around building a digital economy, but the harsh reality is that more and more people are excluded due to lack of skills. A new House of Lords report doesn't pull its punches.