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9 articles
Pope Leo XIV may not be able to disarm artificial intelligence, but the fact that Anthropic and the wider industry are listening shows where the rules fight now sits.
The University of Waterloo’s student AI prototypes are interesting precisely because they do not pretend to be a revolution, but target narrow, visible problems in learning and work.
If the personal statement once gave applicants room to stand out, generative AI has turned that space into a saturated, suspicious and harder-to-read layer of the admissions file.
Anthropic’s consultation with theologians and ethicists over Claude’s behavior turns AI alignment from a technical problem into a public question of values.
Chinese AI specialists in private firms reportedly now need approval before traveling abroad, a sign of how sharply Beijing is tightening its grip on human capital in artificial intelligence.
US federal authorities are beginning to treat violent hostility toward AI and tech infrastructure as a security signal, not just another round of cultural conflict around Silicon Valley.
The Pope’s first AI encyclical is not a technical text about models, but a political diagnosis of who now holds power over social infrastructure.
Stuart Russell warned during the Musk vs. Altman trial that making AI systems more capable without clear control does not look like a sensible move.
Carnegie Mellon and the Bosch Center for AI developed HTD, a system that helps humanoids with contact-rich tasks and a 90.9 percent higher success rate.