AI is replacing the jobs of the people building it
AI is displacing knowledge workers faster than physical laborers. The safest jobs right now are often the lowest paid ones.
Product updates, pricing changes, acquisitions, and the tools reshaping how businesses run their software stack.
AI is displacing knowledge workers faster than physical laborers. The safest jobs right now are often the lowest paid ones.
AI coding tools have made shipping code faster than ever. The debugging infrastructure to match hasn’t caught up yet. PlayerZero wants to fix that.
Peter Thiel’s Founders Fund is pouring $2 billion into an AI startup that puts AI-powered tracking collars on cows.
AI compliance startup Delve is accused of systematically fabricating security audits for over 400 clients. If alegations prove true, companies that bought into the “SOC 2 in days” hype could face severe legal consequences.
Vercel just updated its terms of service to quietly scrape code from free-tier users for AI training. If you are using the platform without paying, your private projects are officially on the menu.
Alt-X just launched an AI Excel plugin that automates complex real estate financial modeling entirely locally, keeping sensitive deal data completely safe from cloud-based AI models.
Windsurf is killing its popular credit system in favor of strict daily and weekly usage quotas. The sudden pricing shift immediately sparked backlash from developers who relied on the AI editor for its flexible, pay-as-you-go billing.
Perplexity AI unveiled a specialized version of its web browser for businesses. Comet Enterprise integrates advanced research and task automation directly into corporate workflows.
Alibaba just released a new enterprise AI tool called Wukong. The system coordinates multiple AI agents to handle repetitive back-office tasks and integrates directly into the DingTalk messaging platform.
The publisher of the world’s oldest English-language encyclopedia is taking OpenAI to federal court.
Encyclopedia Britannica claims the artificial intelligence company illegally trained its language models on nearly 100,000 copyrighted articles.