WASHINGTON, March 2 (Reuters) - Three U.S. cabinet agencies on Monday moved to cease use of Anthropic's AI products, joining the military in directing staff to use models from rivals such ‌as OpenAI ...
After Anthropic refused flat out to agree to apply Claude AI to autonomous weapons and mass surveillance of American citizens, OpenAI jumps right into bed with the United States Department of War.
A UK government proposal to remove King Charles III’s brother, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, from the line of succession to the monarchy gained momentum as governments in Australia and New Zealand ...
I can't stand opening the Microsoft Store. It's slow to load, confusing to browse, and full of ads for things I don't care about. Luckily, thanks to a new feature, I don't have to open the Microsoft ...
The first project to make use of an accelerated review process for housing will turn a parking lot in the Bronx to 84 affordable homes. Voters approved ballot measures last year that will enable the ...
You know the song and you’ve probably sung it before. Back to the same ol’ place, sweet home Hammond, Indiana OK, that’s not how it goes, but if things continue to trend in a certain direction, the ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. U.S. President Donald Trump said Feb. 13 that President Volodymyr Zelensky needs to "get moving" to secure a peace deal with ...
Indian officials moved to counter concerns that the country may have made too many concessions to secure lower tariffs from the US after a surprise trade deal announced by President Donald Trump this ...
The state of California is losing yet another tech company to Florida. In a dramatic sign of the rising allure of low-tax, pro-business states, quantum computing firm D-Wave Quantum Inc. announced it ...
It happens all the time in golf, particularly on the green. Your ball is in the way of someone else's ball and it's his or her turn to putt. Less frequently, two balls are so close to each other in ...
President Trump appears to have cooled on the idea of a military strike against Iran, but as WSJ’s Sune Engel Rasmussen explains, continuing volatility motivating his warnings still remains. Photo: ...