AI, Trump and artificial intelligence models
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President Donald Trump on Tuesday signed an executive order seeking early government access for the most advanced AI models to weigh cybersecurity risks and protect critical infrastructure.
Critics say Trump plan to test AI models is short-sighted, performative.
Alphabet Inc.’s Google, Microsoft Corp. and xAI have agreed to give the US government early access to their artificial intelligence models to assess the systems’ capabilities and help improve their security before the
Anthropic is sharing access to its most advanced AI model, Mythos, with the EU after the bloc sought permission over cybersecurity concerns.
OpenAI unveiled the GPT-5 models less than a week ago, but the launch of the long-awaited ChatGPT upgrade hasn't been as smooth as the AI company might have hoped. GPT-5 was met with plenty of criticism soon after users started experiencing the new AI ...
Recently, JPMorgan Chase announced a shift in how it manages access to consumer banking data, introducing new data access fees for third-party aggregators. While the move focuses on infrastructure cost-sharing and consumer data stewardship, it reflects an ...
President Donald Trump on Tuesday privately signed a scaled-back executive order that would give AI and tech companies a brief window to let the federal government voluntarily review AI models. The order comes after the federal government has had repeated conversations with leading AI companies,