OpenAI released a new series of videos made using its text-to-video generator. Here’s how they were made. In the last month, ...
The stars are aligned for accelerated growth in the UK’s space economy, thanks to an active venture capital community, close ...
AI models were better than human experts at predicting the ratings Belgian beers received on a popular review site, researchers found. Crafting a good-tasting beer is a difficult task. Big ...
The answer could determine who gets to shape the future of the technology. Suddenly, “open source” is the latest buzzword in AI circles. Meta has pledged to create open-source artificial ...
The company says it’s proof that quality AI models don’t have to include controversial copyrighted content. Since the beginning of the generative AI boom, there has been a fight over how large ...
Self-driving company Waabi is using a generative AI model to help predict the movement of vehicles, it announced today. The ...
After three years, the AI Act, the EU’s new sweeping AI law, jumped through its final bureaucratic hoop last week when the European Parliament voted to approve it. (You can catch up on the five main ...
Longevity clinics offer a mix of services that largely cater to the wealthy. Now there’s a push to establish their work as a credible medical field. On a bright chilly day last December, a crowd ...
Plus: the EU has announced a raft of new Big Tech probes This is today's edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology.
Insilico is part of a wave of companies betting on AI as the "next amazing revolution" in biology Alex Zhavoronkov has been messing around with artificial intelligence for more than a decade.
When wastewater surveillance turns into a hunt for a single infected individual, the ethics get tricky. This article first appeared in The Checkup, MIT Technology Review’s weekly biotech newsletter.