Software engineer Vishnu Mohandas decided he would quit Google in more ways than one when he learned the tech giant had briefly helped the US military develop AI to study drone footage. In 2020, he left his job working on Google Assistant and also stopped backing up all of his images to Google Photos.
Google is always developing fun, experimental AI use cases and letting users explore them on its Google Labs platform. Its latest experiment allows users to reimagine chess using Google's text-to-image generation technology.
Google is testing a new feature that will make it easier to verify the sources behind AI Overviews in the Google app for Android. Read on!
Google is investing $20 million to supercharge AI research in scientific fields, paving the way for groundbreaking innovations.
Tech giants continue to hone their prowess on AI; Goddiva partners with Zyler for virtual try-on; Tukatech uses gen AI for models.
Google Chrome might grab another generative AI feature called "Store Reviews." This recently spotted feature could "summarize" reviews sourced from websites like "Trust Pilot, ScamAdvisor, and more." The tipster claims Google is also working on a side panel that users could open to find every review available for a given website.
Millions of Americans will pop open their laptops to buy gifts this holiday season, but tech companies are racing to turn the job of online shopping over
One of the first AI image generators to be released back in 2022, Midjourney has proven immensely popular with users and art critics alike. It can output high-definition, photorealistic images in countless artistic styles based on natural language text prompts.
Google Chrome's upcoming feature uses AI to provide a summary of reviews from independent websites about the store or website you're visiting.
That ecosystem advantage, perhaps more so than the talent of their research teams, is what makes Google, Apple, Meta, and other corporate behemoths formidable in the AI wars. Thei
This week on the GeekWire Podcast, our guest is Sam Schillace, a deputy CTO at Microsoft and author of the new book, "No Prize for Pessimism," the first title from Microsoft's new publishing imprint,
Popular tech company AI models lack transparency in training data, Australian Senate Select Committee reports.