Anthropic has released Fable 5, its most powerful AI model yet. The model is said to outperform rivals like ChatGPT and Gemini across a variety of tasks.
Anthropic's restrictive AI model may push security experts to competitors, risking user base loss without enhancing safety outcomes.
The post Cybersecurity researchers criticize Anthropic’s Fable for strict guardrails that block defensive work appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The Anthropic-Pentagon rift highlights the complex ethical and operational challenges AI firms face in defense collaborations.
The post Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei uncertain about AI model’s role in Iran missile strike appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
OpenAI has filed confidentially for an initial public offering with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, the company announced Monday, entering a public market race alongside rival Anthropic, which filed just over a week earlier. The offering could value OpenAI, which counts roughly 900 million weekly active users, at close to its last private valuation […]
Apple used its annual WWDC 2026 developer conference at Apple Park to mount an aggressive response to sustained criticism over its AI capabilities, unveiling a sweeping overhaul of Siri and its broader Apple Intelligence platform powered in part by Google’s Gemini family of models. The upgraded Siri is positioned as more capable, more conversational, and […]
Anthropic has made its most powerful artificial intelligence model available to the public for the first time, releasing Claude Fable 5, a consumer-facing version of its previously restricted Mythos model, just days after a temporary infrastructure failure disrupted AI services for tens of thousands of users on productivity platform Notion. The dual developments in a […]
Defillama has begun tracking pre-IPO perpetual futures for Anthropic, OpenAI, SpaceX, and Quantinuum, as onchain traders are racing to bet on the year’s biggest private companies before they go public. Onchain Markets for Companies That Aren’t Public Yet Crypto data aggregator Defillama said it has added new pre-IPO perpetual futures markets spanning four closely watched […]
I’ve been using and writing about Microsoft Copilot since it was publicly released in 2023. I’ve reviewed it, written articles about using it more effectively, explained how to curb hallucinations in it and other similar tools, and detailed how to use it in concert with Microsoft 365. It’s also been my go-to generative AI (genAI) tool for personal projects and advice.
But the time has come for me to leave it behind for my personal use. It’s become abundantly clear that for those tasks, Google Gemini is better. Here’s why.
Copilot is inept at solving a tech problem
Like many people who know something about technology, I’m the IT staff for friends and family. I’ve often used Copilot to help solve issues I can’t fix myself. Sometimes Copilot helps. And other times…, well, the last time I turned to it for troubleshooting advice is when I realized it was time to abandon Copilot.
My wife had bought a new iPhone, and I noticed she was receiving texts sent to her email address but hadn’t recei