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Elon Musk Sure Made Lots of Predictions at Davos

WIRED

Humanoid robots, space travel, the science of aging--Musk was willing to weigh in on all of it at this week's World Economic Forum. But his predictions rarely work out the way he says they will. Elon Musk speaks during the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting in Davos, Switzerland on Thursday. Elon Musk, the richest man on Earth, is very good at making money. His track record of predicting the future is less stellar.


How Claude Code Is Reshaping Software--and Anthropic

WIRED

WIRED spoke with Boris Cherny, head of Claude Code, about how the viral coding tool is changing the way Anthropic works. Engineers in Silicon Valley have been raving about Anthropic's AI coding tool, Claude Code, for months. But recently, the buzz feels as if it's reached a fever pitch. Earlier this week, I sat down with Boris Cherny, head of Claude Code, to try to understand how the company is meeting this moment. "We built the simplest possible thing," said Cherny. "The craziest thing was learning three months ago that half of the sales team at Anthropic uses Claude Code every week."


"Dr. Google" had its issues. Can ChatGPT Health do better?

MIT Technology Review

OpenAIโ€™s newest product, which is intended to provide health advice, is no replacement for a doctor. But it might be better than searching the web for your symptoms.


Scarlett Johansson and Cate Blanchett back campaign accusing AI firms of theft

The Guardian

Johansson was dragged into the AI debate after OpenAI's voice assistant used her vocal likeness, prompting the actor to say she was'angered' by the move. Johansson was dragged into the AI debate after OpenAI's voice assistant used her vocal likeness, prompting the actor to say she was'angered' by the move. Scarlett Johansson, Cate Blanchett, REM and Jodi Picoult are among hundreds of Hollywood stars, musicians and authors backing a new campaign accusing AI companies of "theft" of their work. The "Stealing Isn't Innovation" drive launched on Thursday with the support of approximately 800 creative professionals and bands. It adds: "Artists, writers, and creators of all kinds are banding together with a simple message: Stealing our work is not innovation.


I love AI. But the more I use it, the more I hate it

PCWorld

When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. Excitement has turned into disdain. The more I use it, the more I hate it. Artificial intelligence, like Mondays, is becoming universally disliked--so much so that I feel redundant writing about how much I've grown to hate it lately. And yet, I find myself using it more and more.


A-List creatives sign up to fight AI, say it enables 'theft at a grand scale'

Engadget

Bungie's Marathon arrives on March 5 How to claim Verizon's $20 outage credit A-List creatives sign up to fight AI, say it enables'theft at a grand scale' Scarlett Johansson, R.E.M., Vince Gilligan and hundreds of others proclaim that'stealing isn't innovation.' Actors, musicians and writers team up to fight AI'theft at a grand scale' (Stealing isn't innovation) Scarlett Johannsson, R.E.M., Vince Gilligan and over 700 other artists are demanding that tech companies stop "stealing" their work in order to train AI models. A new campaign called " Stealing isn't Innovation " demands that AI companies take "the responsible, ethical route" through licensing and partnerships, according to the website. "America's creative community is the envy of the world and creates jobs, economic growth and exports," a statement on the website reads. The group adds that the "illegal intellectual property grab" has resulted in an information ecosystem dominated by "misinformation, deepfakes and a vapid artificial avalanche of low-quality materials ['AI slop'] threatening America's AI superiority and international competitiveness." However, actors, musicians and authors take issue with that idea, particularly when they see their likenesses or work repurposed as slop or worse by large language models (LLMs).


Apple taps Google Gemini to power Apple Intelligence

FOX News

Apple's Google artificial intelligence partnership will launch a Siri overhaul using Gemini's large language models, the tech giants announced.


The Download: Yann LeCun's new venture, and lithium's on the rise

MIT Technology Review

Plus: Trump has climbed down from his plan for the US to take Greenland. Yann LeCun's new venture is a contrarian bet against large language models Yann LeCun is a Turing Award recipient and a top AI researcher, but he has long been a contrarian figure in the tech world. He believes that the industry's current obsession with large language models is wrong-headed and will ultimately fail to solve many pressing problems. Instead, he thinks we should be betting on world models--a different type of AI that accurately reflects the dynamics of the real world. Perhaps it's no surprise, then, that he recently left Meta, where he had served as chief scientist for FAIR (Fundamental AI Research), the company's influential research lab that he founded. LeCun sat down with MIT Technology Review in an exclusive online interview from his Paris apartment to discuss his new venture, life after Meta, the future of artificial intelligence, and why he thinks the industry is chasing the wrong ideas.


Congratulations to the #AAAI2026 outstanding paper award winners

AIHub

We consider the problem of modifying a description logic concept in light of models represented as pointed interpretations. We call this setting model change, and distinguish three main kinds of changes: eviction, which consists of only removing models; reception, which incorporates models; and revision, which combines removal with incorporation of models in a single operation. We introduce a formal notion of revision and argue that it does not reduce to a simple combination of eviction and reception, contrary to intuition. We provide positive and negative results on the compatibility of eviction and reception for EL-bottom and ALC description logic concepts and on the compatibility of revision for ALC concepts.


A Wikipedia Group Made a Guide to Detect AI Writing. Now a Plug-In Uses It to 'Humanize' Chatbots

WIRED

A Wikipedia Group Made a Guide to Detect AI Writing. The web's best resource for spotting AI writing has ironically become a manual for AI models to hide it. On Saturday, tech entrepreneur Siqi Chen released an open source plug-in for Anthropic's Claude Code AI assistant that instructs the AI model to stop writing like an AI model. Called Humanizer, the simple prompt plug-in feeds Claude a list of 24 language and formatting patterns that Wikipedia editors have listed as chatbot giveaways. Chen published the plug-in on GitHub, where it has picked up more than 1,600 stars as of Monday.