Fable took things to the next level. Book-tracking app under fire for offensive AI-generated summaries: 'There shouldn't be an AI algorithm that's ... [creating] harm' first appeared on The Cool Down.
Maybe they should have called it DeepFake, or DeepState, or better still Deep Selloff. Or maybe the other obvious deep thing that the indigenous AI
Biomedical engineers at Duke University have developed an AI-based platform that designs short proteins, termed peptides, capable of binding and destroying previously undruggable disease-causing proteins.
Despite the AI hype, the systems require consistent monitoring and staffing to put in place and maintain. The process can be complicated — and expensive.
One University of Tennessee at Chattanooga (UTC) student has developed the world’s first usable artificial intelligence (AI) network that can learn how to encry
AI phrenology might be bad, say Ivy League economics professors in 61-page paper about how AI phrenology is accurate.
DeepSeek stunned the tech world with the release of its R1 "reasoning" model, matching or exceeding OpenAI's reasoning model for a fraction of the cost.
A Yokohama Rubber Co. app can determine a tire's air pressure by recording the sound made when tapping on the tire.
The obvious answer would appear to be that the algorithm was likely trained on large tranches of Chinese data, and, thus, that data is influencing the algorithm’s output.
Major tech company's new AI algorithm can predict the weather with incredible accuracy — here's why it won't replace forecasters first appeared on The Cool Down.
Suspicions were confirmed when it was discovered that popular Chinese AI DeepSeek sends a tremendous amount of user data to servers in China.