The European Accessibility Act (EAA) represents a landmark shift toward inclusivity, aiming to harmonize accessibility standards across the European Union to ensure products and services are accessible to everyone, including those with disabilities.
While the adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) can help enterprises operate more efficiently, there is significant risk associated with it, including lawsuits, AI misuse and biased data.
The European Union plans to pump 1.4 billion euros into artificial intelligence (AI) and deep tech research next year.
While some behind the AI boom may be assuring Americans there's nothing to worry about, many are looking to their congressional representatives for answers – and intervention.
The European Union has tossed a wrench in the works of chipmaker Nvidia's proposed acquisition of Tel Aviv-based AI workload management startup Run:ai.
Speakers from various international organizations at the New York City Bar Association's "UN Summit of the Future: International Regulation of AI" webinar discussed whether global AI regulation is possible and what's holding it back.
The rise of artificial intelligence is prompting European data center developers to confront environmental challenges, as growing demand for high-powered, energy-intensive facilities pressures the industry to adapt.
Last week, the tragic news broke that US teenager Sewell Seltzer III took his own life after forming a deep emotional attachment to an artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot on the Character.AI website.
The EU AI Act, which went into force on August 1, 2024, introduces specific rules for artificial intelligence (AI) systems, especially those
Organizations aim to empower stakeholders with generative capabilities that streamline workflows, transforming traditionally manual processes into automated efficiencies. However, the complexities of real-time automated engagements amplify the risk associated with AI.
Apple Intelligence has launched in the EU as part of macOS Sequoia 15.1; here’s when the iPhone will follow suit.
Open-source software—in which a developer releases the source code for a product and allows anyone else to reuse and remix it to their liking—is at the foundation of Google’s Android, Apple’s iOS and all four of the largest web browsers.