Disney employees are embracing AI, per screenshots of the company's "AI Adoption Dashboard." Some prolific AI users at Disney are using tens of millions of tokens a month. AI analysts say these tech ...
Interviews with current and former Palantir employees, along with internal Slack messages obtained by WIRED, suggest a workforce in turmoil. Around that time, two former employees reconnected by phone ...
Palantir struck an important agreement with the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The $300 million software deal expands the existing relationship between the two. This serves as an important reminder ...
Meta has found a new source of training data for its AI models: its own employees. The company plans to use data culled from the mouse movements and keystrokes of its own staff in its pursuit to build ...
PARIS — France’s armed forces are working on a data-management system powered by artificial intelligence as a sovereign equivalent to the U.S. Defense Department’s Project Maven, said Gen. Benoît ...
In an era where artificial intelligence is reshaping how organizations manage their people, only a few professionals have built the depth of expertise needed to move from implementation to invention.
Marine Corps colonel Drew Cukor says AI will completely change the way the United States fights wars – and maybe already has. The new book Project Maven focuses on Cukor and the Pentagon campaign to ...
Palantir's Maven Smart System uses machine learning to analyze data streams from satellites, drones, and radar. It is used by the U.S. military to improve intelligence analysis for high-stakes ...
The Trump administration says the United States has struck 11,000 targets in Iran since the U.S.-Israeli war on the country began. Critics have questioned the accuracy of the Maven system, the ...
PHOENIX (AZFamily) — The U.S. military says it hit about 1,000 targets in Iran during the first 24 hours of attacks, double the number struck during the 2003 “shock and awe” campaign in Iraq. The ...
Alexander Stepanov said that strikes were not always carried out on the correct targets, and the process of delivering precision strikes did not have a high degree of AI autonomy MOSCOW, March 25.
The rise of AI warfare speaks to the biggest moral and practical question there is: Who—or what—gets to decide to take a human life? And who bears that cost? In 2018, more than 3,000 Google workers ...