Boards want AI roadmaps. Competitors are shipping AI features. And 74% of companies still can't make it pay. This piece breaks down the eight-point framework that separates disciplined AI adoption from expensive noise.
The partnership could revolutionize private equity fund management, enhancing efficiency but posing significant risks if AI tools fail in compliance.
The post Palantir partners with Kirkland & Ellis to develop AI tools for private equity appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Workday is aiming to help customers to develop and deploy agentic systems without compromising corporate security or compliance, unveiling a series of AI tools at its DevCon event this week.
Chief among them is Agent Passport, which validates an agent’s safety and compliance both before it is deployed, and continuously during its operation. When an agent attempts a task, Agent Passport can allow, block, or route the action appropriately, and problem agents can be stopped or restricted, based on company policy.
Agents will be vetted for a series of risks, including prompt injection, jailbreak and goal hijacking, system prompt extraction, leaks of employee data, and unsafe outputs. Those tests will be tied to public standards such as Mitre ATLAS, and will be performed by security partners, not by Workday. Security teams can view those attestations, receiving a signed, auditable record of who tested the agent, and what it was tested for.
Because every check is tied to a public standard, s
Microsoft's super app could significantly boost Copilot adoption, impacting revenue and competitive positioning in the AI market.
The post Microsoft builds super app integrating Copilot AI tools and chat into one platform appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Microsoft's super app could significantly boost Copilot adoption, impacting revenue and competitive positioning in the AI market.
The post Microsoft builds super app integrating Copilot AI tools and chat appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Richard Thackeray and Phil Snell respond to an article by Wendy Liu on using artificial intelligence
Wendy Liu’s thoughtful piece on AI and cognitive sovereignty raises real concerns about labour redundancies, the hype and the environmental cost (I avoid AI tools because thinking is supposed to be hard. It’s what makes us human, 24 May). But I think she allows those legitimate grievances to colour a separate and more interesting question: what is AI actually doing to the way we think?
I use AI heavily and it has changed how I think, but not in the way she fears. It has made me more curious, not less. I now ask questions that I wouldn’t have known to ask and explore territory I would never have had time to reach. Yes, I offload research, but that offloading doesn’t empty my mind, it frees it.
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CNN has filed a lawsuit against Perplexity, claiming that the startup's AI tools generate "verbatim" copies of its work, as reported earlier by CNN. The lawsuit, filed in a New York court on Thursday, also alleges that Perplexity provides users with information locked behind CNN's subscription.
Perplexity, which offers an AI "answer" engine along with the AI browser Comet, is accused of ignoring CNN's efforts "to recognize or block Perplexity's unidentified crawlers" from scraping its content. "Human beings report, research, write, edit, and create the content that Perplexity takes without permission or compensation," the lawsuit claims.
I …
Read the full story at The Verge.