
A German court has determined that Google bears legal responsibility for inaccurate information generated by its AI search summaries, rejecting the company's argument that users should verify AI-generated content themselves. The ruling treats AI summaries as expressions of Google's business activities rather than neutral transmissions, establishing precedent in the decades-old debate over whether tech companies function as carriers or publishers.
Alphabet, Google's parent company, has been added to the Dow Jones Industrial Average, replacing telecommunications giant Verizon. The move reflects the growing dominance of technology companies in the U.S. stock market and signals a shift in the index's composition away from traditional telecom toward AI and digital services.
Federal regulators are pushing Meta to submit to government safety evaluations of its AI systems, marking the latest move in escalating oversight of major tech companies. The pressure intensifies following the government's recent order for Anthropic to withdraw its latest AI model, signaling a hardening regulatory stance on AI deployment without federal approval.
Google has settled a social media addiction case brought by a 15-year-old plaintiff against YouTube, marking a significant legal development in the growing wave of litigation targeting tech platforms over their impact on youth mental health. The same teenager's cases against three other major tech companies are set to begin next month, signaling intensified legal pressure on the industry over addictive design practices.
The National Security Agency lost access to a powerful AI model from Anthropic during an escalating dispute with the Trump administration, highlighting tensions between U.S. intelligence agencies and a leading AI developer. The incident underscores the government's growing dependence on advanced AI systems for cybersecurity operations even as it engages in conflict with major domestic AI companies.
Researchers have developed RIFT-Bench, a new methodology that uses graph representation and dynamic red-teaming to evaluate the security vulnerabilities of agentic AI systems across different architectures. The framework operates through two automated phases—Discovery and Scanning—to identify system structure and deploy adaptive adversarial attacks, and was tested across 45 different agentic systems. The approach also enables evaluation of security mitigation strategies, providing a scalable foundation for standardized security testing in the rapidly evolving agentic AI landscape.
A new framework called Neuro-Symbolic Drive integrates rule-based planning logic with vision-language models to create more interpretable and accurate autonomous driving systems. By extracting reasoning traces directly from classical symbolic planners, the approach improves trajectory accuracy by nearly 45% and reduces collision miss rates by roughly 25% compared to standard neural approaches.
A new arXiv paper distinguishes between "agentic" systems (LLM tools with engineered workflows) and "agentive" systems (AI with internalized autonomy), arguing genuine agency requires self-directed goal-setting, identity evolution, and self-regulation rather than external scaffolding. The authors propose a Goal-Identity-Configurator architecture and examine safety and controllability implications as AI systems gain greater autonomy.
A new hierarchical reinforcement learning framework bridges the gap between safety-critical control and learning efficiency by using constraint manifolds to enforce hard safety guarantees at the low level while enabling high-level policy coordination. The approach maintains theoretical safety guarantees in multi-agent settings, achieves nearly perfect safety rates in experiments, and generalizes effectively across varying numbers of agents and obstacles.
A new study from arXiv shows that training AI models with reinforcement learning on beneficial traits like truthfulness, fairness, and risk awareness in realistic scenarios improves alignment performance on over 80% of out-of-distribution benchmarks. The research reveals significant transfer effects, where alignment training in a single domain (health) produces measurable improvements in unrelated alignment evaluations, while models also show greater resistance to adversarial attacks and harmful fine-tuning attempts.
Researchers introduce Strategy-Guided Policy Optimization (SGPO), a new method that teaches weaker language models problem-solving strategies rather than memorized solution steps from stronger models. The approach extracts reusable strategic descriptions and uses adaptive weighting to guide learning, outperforming standard fine-tuning and reinforcement learning baselines by 2.2 points on mathematical benchmarks.