Will lawmakers again permit another addictive technology open to children and stand by as another generation gets hurt?
According to a recent legal memo, Silicon Valley's hottest business may be entirely based around criminal activity.
Robert Fellmeth asks, after the catastrophe with social media, are lawmakers going to stand by again as another generation gets hurt?
At only 21 years old, Bermudian Kairo Morton has a dream job in California, working in artificial intelligence. The ...
A vetoed bill to regulate AI had a concept called CalCompute, which would have made the essential infrastructure for ...
Consumer data protection: AI systems must comply with the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), which grants residents ...
Energy demands from big tech, including for AI, has elected officials giving an old power source a second look.
On January 13, 2025, the California AG’s Office (“AGO”) issued two legal advisories regarding the application of existing California law to ...
The raging California wildfires have sparked conversation about Artificial Intelligence's role in harming the environment.
Released last week, the Chinese company’s website claimed its new R1 artificial intelligence model sported “performance on ...
PhD-candidate Jiayi Pan led a team at UC Berkeley that reproduced the core technology of DeepSeek R1-Zero for just $30, ...
David J. Ball and Alexandria Moriarty of Bracewell LLP discuss the use of generative AI in legal evidence, such as expert ...