Tech giants follow footsteps of other major companies, including Amazon, Meta, OpenAI and Uber
Letters: <strong>Miguel Martinez Lucio</strong>, <strong>Dominic Crossley</strong> and <strong>Matthew Campbell </strong>respond to an article about the owner of X turning on Nigel Farage
Letter:<strong> </strong>If we are to take seriously the risk facing humanity, regulators need the power to ‘recall’ deployed models, as well as assess leading, not lagging, indicators of risk, writes <strong>Prof John McDermid</strong>
Tech boss suggests move to self-learning synthetic data though some warn this could cause ‘model collapse’
James Howells, 39, took council to court to try to force it to let him search site for hard drive thrown away by accident
Thierry Breton says EU is not trying to censor tech chief’s discussion with Alice Weidel of German far-right party
Mark Zuckerberg’s move to end factchecking in US reflects president-elect’s views on social media, says Haugen
Meta has provided over $100m for certified organizations to conduct factchecks on its platforms since 2016
Low-quality ‘slop’ generated by AI is crowding out genuine humans across the internet, but instead of regulating it, platforms such as Facebook are positively encouraging it. Where does this end, asks Arwa Mahdawi
Politicians criticise Mark Zuckerberg’s choice to scrap factcheckers, affecting Facebook, Instagram and Threads