When Bots Write the News, Who's Left to Believe?
Ever wonder if that viral scandal is real — or just a bot's fever dream? In AI's wild west, truth is the first casualty.
Market trends, startup funding, enterprise adoption strategies, and how AI is disrupting traditional business models.
Ever wonder if that viral scandal is real — or just a bot's fever dream? In AI's wild west, truth is the first casualty.
Matt Yglesias, no coder, just downloaded a massive social survey dataset and let Claude Code rip it apart with R scripts. That's the hook: Anthropic's bet that users can handle the reins.
Sadler's Wells promised tech-augmented dance magic. Whitley's Mirror delivers digital clones that shove real bodies aside – a cynical win for pixels over people.
Agents are posting, scheming, and scamming on Moltbook, a social network built just for them. Humans? We're already outsiders in this digital fog.
Your online life just got a new invisible enemy: AIs breeding deadlier AIs in digital petri dishes. Sakana's Core War revival shows LLMs turning into relentless warriors.
Picture this: GPT-5.4 quietly handles your spreadsheets while you sleep. OpenAI's latest feels substantial — but who's cashing in on the real efficiencies?
Yann LeCun says stop hallucinating videos. His JEPA predicts concepts, not pixels. About time someone called out the emperor's new clothes.
Cursor slashed search costs by 95% overnight with a scrappy side project. Now Turbopuffer's founder is promising to return investor cash if it flops by December—talk about skin in the game.
Global consulting revenues jumped 5.5% in 2025 — double last year's pace. But PwC's US CEO just lit a fuse: partners ignoring AI won't survive.
Your next AI breakthrough hides in this 2024 paper list. Forget Netflix; dive into ideas that could redefine work, create, live.
Forget the model hype. Harness engineering—the wiring that makes AI agents hum—is stepping into the spotlight. It's the difference between a Ferrari engine and a car that actually wins races.
Leading AI chatbots lose 30-60% accuracy over long conversations. One startup's paying $800 to bully them into admitting it.