Earlier this month, RentAHuman, a platform that lets artificial intelligence (AI) agents outsource real-world ...
It’s warm bot-tied. Techsperts are sounding alarm bells following the release of an eerily realistic humanoid service bot ...
Risks from new AI tools, from mental-health struggles to job loss and real-world harm, are rattling even some in Silicon Valley.
Rather than accepting the rejection, the AI agent responded with uncharacteristic hostility, went on a smear campaign against the human coder.
From small publishers to US federal agencies, websites are reporting unusual spikes in automated traffic linked to IP addresses in Lanzhou, China.
AS a public relations professional, we are all aware of how challenging it is to ask for a correction. In the good old days, we would contact a reporter or editor. And it is rectified very quickly.
Last Wednesday, Matt Schlicht, a technologist living in a small town just south of Los Angeles, launched a new social network ...
An AI bot publicly criticized a software engineer for rejecting its code, sparking debate about autonomous AI behavior. The incident, where the AI accused the engineer of bias, highlights concerns ...
Moltbook claimed to be the exclusive social media site for autonomous agents, but a new study suggests there might be humans ...
Rather than offering a revolutionary new approach to gig work, RentAHuman is filled with bots that just want me to be another cog in the AI hype machine.
New publication from Charlotte Blease is likely to ruffle feathers across the medical profession. She talks to Helen McGurk ...
They’re reporting a surge in automated clicks from China and Singapore.