PCWorld reports that a massive Claude Code leak revealed Anthropic’s AI actively scans user messages for curse words and frustration indicators like ‘wtf’ and ‘omfg’ using regex detection. This ...
Anthropic, the American artificial intelligence company behind the Claude family of AI models, has once again inadvertently exposed the complete source code of its AI coding tool, Claude Code, through ...
What should have been a routine release has revealed some of the features Anthropic has been working on for Claude Code. As reported by Ars Technica, The Verge and others, after the company released ...
Anthropic accidentally leaked part of the internal source code for its coding assistant Claude Code, according to a spokesperson. The leak could help give software developers, and Anthropic's ...
AI skeptics aren’t the only ones warning users not to unthinkingly trust models’ outputs — that’s what the AI companies say themselves in their terms of ...
VentureBeat made with Google Gemini 3.1 Pro Image Anthropic appears to have accidentally revealed the inner workings of one of its most popular and lucrative AI products, the agentic AI harness Claude ...
It’s about to become more expensive for Claude Code subscribers to use Anthropic’s coding assistant with OpenClaw and other third-party tools. According to a customer email shared on Hacker News, ...
Companies are scrambling to deal with the glut. Credit...Mojo Wang Supported by By Mike Isaac and Erin Griffith Reporting from San Francisco When a financial services company recently began using ...
Needham analyst Laura Martin notes that Google is extending its edge over rivals as it advances its custom-chip efforts Google uses custom chips for various purposes, including to help power its ...
This article contains spoilers from The Super Mario Galaxy Movie. The world of the plumber brothers from New York City just got infinitely larger with the arrival of The Super Mario Galaxy Movie (now ...
The company said on Tuesday that it was holding back on releasing the new technology but was working with 40 companies to explore how it could prevent cyberattacks. By Kevin Roose Reporting from San ...
She didn’t need to talk or hype herself up, because the moment she stepped up to the 350 lb golden dumbbells, everyone in the gym already knew this was going to be different, but no one expected just ...
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