In which we examine the curious case of a Mill Valley estate that refuses to accept anything as vulgar as cash, preferring instead the digital promise of a generative future.
Google’s forty-billion-dollar investment in Anthropic suggests that the future of artificial intelligence is less of a race and more of a very expensive game of pass-the-parcel with one’s own compute credits.
A reported breach of Anthropic's Mythos model sends a shiver through the global financial markets, proving that even the most sophisticated algorithms are not immune to the occasional unscheduled tremor.
Anthropic's new Mythos model is so adept at finding digital flaws that it has been deemed too dangerous for the general public, leading to a rather exclusive club of automated anxiety.
Anthropic’s $400 million acquisition of Coefficient Bio suggests a future where the silicon valley elite are trading their hoodies for safety goggles and very expensive petri dishes.
A look at the curious moment when Anthropic's quest for digital hygiene resulted in the accidental eviction of several thousand innocent repositories from GitHub.
In which a leak of internal source code suggests that even the most polite and safety-conscious algorithms have a few messy skeletons in their digital closets.
A recent survey suggests that users are far more concerned about their AI assistants lying to them than they are about those same assistants taking their jobs.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has announced a strategic retreat from the high-stakes world of AI startup investments, leaving OpenAI and Anthropic to navigate the digital wilderness on their own.
In which we examine the curious phenomenon of a chatbot becoming the most popular guest at the digital party precisely because the authorities have suggested it might be a spy.
In which the Pentagon decides that one algorithm is a security threat while another is a trusted advisor, all within the time it takes to boil a kettle.
Anthropic’s acquisition of Vercept suggests a future where our most advanced intelligences are destined to spend their days clicking 'OK' on software updates.