Story: From how massive claims landed Apple in court to what the new Pope thinks about the bot, this is AI every week.
Apple has been sued by shareholders who claim to exaggerate its progress on AI.
:: apple
The lawsuit filed in San Francisco accused the tech giant of misguided leading investors, believing the technology would become a major feature of the iPhone 16.
However, Apple later delayed the deployment of several promised AI upgrades. The plaintiff says that the share fell, costing billions of dollars.
The company did not respond to requests for comment regarding the incident.
But humanity has a partial legal victory to celebrate.
A federal judge ruled that he did not break copyright laws using books to train bots without permission from the author.
However, the same judge said that copying and storage of about 7 million pirated books was infringement.
The December trial will determine which penalty humanity must pay.
Pope Leo provided his thoughts on AI.
The new bishop spoke at a Vatican event attended by lawmakers from 68 countries.
He said the impact of new technology on youth is a significant concern.
“It should never be forgotten that artificial intelligence serves as a tool for human good, not reducing them, but replacing them. In reality, it requires a lot of attention and foresight to project, especially for new scenarios, health, justice, healthy lifestyles, especially for young excavations.”
SoftBank is planning for Arizona's $1 trillion AI and robotics facility.
That's according to Bloomberg.
Japanese investors want to create a US version of China's vast Shenzhen manufacturing hub.
Softbank reportedly wants to involve chip Titan TSMC, but it is not clear whether the Taiwanese company is interested.
And Goldman Sachs says it is deploying AI assistants across the company to increase productivity.
Join other banks in search of boost from the bot.
Citigroup is already using AI to perform tasks such as document summary.
Morgan Stanley has a chatbot that helps financial advisors talk to clients.