Meta’s New Llama 3.1 AI Model Is Free, Powerful, and Risky
The newest version of Llama will make AI more accessible and customizable, but it will also stir up debate around the potential pitfalls of releasing AI without guardrails.
Society of Technology Professionals Newsletter
The newest version of Llama will make AI more accessible and customizable, but it will also stir up debate around the potential pitfalls of releasing AI without guardrails.
Algorithms designed to handle a car after it loses traction could potentially intervene on behalf of human drivers.
The Alphabet-owned driverless car service is getting aggressive against alleged vandals after a series of violent incidents in San Francisco.
OpenResearch released the first results of the most comprehensive study on giving unrestricted cash grants to impoverished Americans. Researchers say it will flame both sides of the debate over welfare.
The event caused chaos at airports, grocery stores, and Starbucks outlets.
Venture capitalists Ben Horowitz and Marc Andreessen claim the tech industry, California, and the country are doomed if we don’t embrace the former president.
We had a specialty chatbot to curate perfect days out in London and New York for under $100 each. We’re still recovering from our journeys.
A software update from cybersecurity company Crowdstrike appears to have inadvertently disrupted IT systems globally.
Tech companies—including OpenAI—are developing a new generation of AI assistants that can not only write code but debug, organize, and critique it, too.
With competing models—including many free ones—flooding the market, OpenAI is announcing a cheaper way to use its AI.