The Obvious, The Inevitable: Meta Wants Users’ Interactions With Its AI To Influence Feeds And Ads

Meta is about to take its relationship with users one step further, and not everyone is going to like it.

Meta is about to take its relationship with users one step further, and not everyone is going to like it.
For years, Slackbot was the friendly, but rather basic helper sitting quietly in the corner, good for reminders and witty replies but little else. That era is ending.

Microsoft has quietly entered a new era: crafting its own visual imagination.

It all began with the large language models (LLMs) war.

When someone searches for something on Google, whether it’s a product, a service, or just curiosity, chances are, the first few results they see aren’t there by coincidence.
Apple has long been celebrated as a pioneer in designing, developing, and selling consumer electronics and software.
Lovers will love it. Haters will hate it even more.

Firefox once stood tall, as a flagship of browsing freedom, innovation, and open source pride. Now it drifts away from its own former shadows.

Someone on Reddit claimed to have extracted the SynthID watermark that Google embeds in every Gemini-generated image. If this is true, the implications could be big.
In the ever-evolving world of AI, large language models (LLMs) have been making waves with their latest advancements.