An MIT study finds that AI can replace 11.7% of the US labor market, or ~$1.2T in wages, based on the “Iceberg Index”, which measures job automation potential
Massachusetts Institute of Technology on Wednesday released a study that found that artificial intelligence …
MIT and Hugging Face study: the share of downloads of Chinese-made open AI models rose to 17% in the past year, surpassing US developers' 15.8% share, a first
Beijing-backed technology gains ground as American giants hold fast to ‘closed’ AI strategies — China has overtaken the US …
A look at Tsinghua University, which leads China's AI innovation, with 4,986 AI patents between 2005 and 2024, alumni behind startups like DeepSeek, and more
this university might be winning the AI race, and you've probably never heard of it X: Saritha Rai / @saritharai : BIG TAKE Xi Jinping's university drives China's AI boom, filing more patents than Har...
MIT spinoff Vertical Semiconductor, which aims to make vertical gallium nitride transistors for AI data centers, raised an $11M seed led by Playground Global
Vertical Semiconductor Inc. is hoping to crack the power delivery bottleneck in artificial intelligence data centers after closing on an $11 million seed funding round today.
Maisa AI, which offers an enterprise agentic automation service that uses a proprietary system to limit hallucinations, raised a $25M seed led by Creandum
A staggering 95% of generative AI pilots at companies are failing, according to a recent report published by MIT's NANDA initiative.
The Nasdaq fell 1.4% on August 19, as Nvidia dropped 3.5% and Arm 5%, with AI enthusiasm cooling after a critical report from MIT and a warning from Sam Altman
Warning from OpenAI's Sam Altman and MIT paper puncture Wall Street's enthusiasm — US tech stocks sold off as warnings …
An MIT report finds that 95% of GenAI pilots at companies have little to no financial impact, due to the “learning gap” for both the tools and the companies
Good morning. Companies are betting on AI—yet nearly all enterprise pilots are stuck at the starting line.
MIT CSAIL study: only 23% of US wages for doing vision tasks would be economically attractive to automate with AI, due to large upfront and operating expenses
Will AI automate human jobs, and — if so — which jobs and when? — That's the trio of questions a new research study …
Q&A with MIT economics professor David Autor on how AI can be used to make some people's skills more valuable, the risks AI poses to emerging markets, and more
Delphine Strauss / Financial Times :