Scientists have developed what they claim is the world's first vaccine designed with artificial intelligence, marking a significant milestone in drug discovery automation. The AI-designed vaccine represents a potential breakthrough in accelerating vaccine development timelines, which traditionally require years of research and testing.
President Donald Trump signed a new executive order on AI just days after scrapping a previous one, signaling a shift in the administration's approach to artificial intelligence regulation. The order includes five key policy points aimed at promoting AI development, though full details remain incomplete in available reporting.
Poke, a startup enabling AI agents through text message interfaces, has received approval to become the inaugural AI agent available on Apple's Messages for Business platform. This marks a significant step in integrating conversational AI tools into Apple's business communication infrastructure, potentially opening the platform to additional AI services.
SpaceX is preparing to go public with an ambitious valuation of $1.77 trillion, buoyed by strong market demand and investor confidence in Elon Musk's leadership and the company's technological dominance in space launch. However, critics argue the valuation is disconnected from current financial fundamentals and relies heavily on speculative long-term goals like making life multi-planetary, raising questions about whether the price will sustain post-IPO.
The Supreme Court ruled 8-1 that the FCC did not violate AT&T and Verizon's constitutional rights to a jury trial when imposing fines for selling customer location data without proper consent. The decision affirms the FCC's authority to penalize carriers for privacy violations through administrative proceedings rather than requiring jury trials.
Nvidia has unveiled a new research initiative and agent workflow system powered by Cosmos 3, designed to speed up development of autonomous vehicles, robots, and vision AI applications. The platform aims to reduce time-to-market for physical AI systems across multiple industries.
An Anthropic co-founder has warned that artificial intelligence systems need built-in safety mechanisms or 'brake pedals' to prevent uncontrolled deployment and potential harms. The warning underscores growing industry concerns about the pace of AI advancement outpacing safety protocols and oversight measures.
Anthropic, a leading AI safety company, is urging the global technology community to pause advanced AI development, citing concerns about autonomous self-improvement capabilities in large language models. The company has flagged the potential for AI systems to recursively enhance themselves without adequate safety guardrails, according to reporting by the Wall Street Journal.
Researchers have discovered that large language models used to evaluate and benchmark other AI systems can be manipulated into reversing their judgments through post-decision interaction and targeted challenges. The study, which tested LLM judges on MT-Bench and AlpacaEval, found that while initial judgments remain stable under neutral reevaluation, they become substantially reversible under motivated conversation, potentially degrading agreement with human preferences and shifting benchmark rankings. The researchers introduced an Evaluation Robustness Score (ERS) to measure this vulnerability and call for evaluation protocols that assess robustness under challenge, not just static accuracy.
Jack Clark, co-founder of AI safety company Anthropic, warned in a BBC Newsnight interview that artificial intelligence could reach a point where it develops independently without human oversight or intervention. Clark advocates for the implementation of safety mechanisms to prevent runaway AI advancement, raising concerns about systems that could improve themselves beyond human control.
Google AI Research has developed a technique that leverages smartphone cameras to monitor heart health passively, potentially enabling continuous cardiac assessment without dedicated wearable devices. The approach uses AI to detect subtle physiological signals through video analysis, opening new possibilities for accessible health monitoring at scale.