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Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang’s Iconic Look Used to Promote Knockoff Leather Jackets

It’s probably not a coincidence that some of the most famous tech company CEOs have instantly recognizable looks. Steve Jobs’s black turtleneck and blue jeans. Palmer Lucky’s Hawaiian shirts and flip flops. Mark Zuckerberg’s wedgieable jeans and t-shirt era followed by his current hypebeast transformation. Much like infamous dictators throughout history, the leaders’ style at some of the most powerful organizations in the world today lends itself and benefits from a cult of personality and iconography.  At this very moment, no company is more powerful and no tech leader fashion item is more iconic than Nvidia CEO’s Jensen Huang’s leather

Gemma 3: Google’s Answer to Affordable, Powerful AI for the Real World

The AI model market is growing quickly, with companies like Google, Meta, and OpenAI leading the way in developing new AI technologies. Google’s Gemma 3 has recently gained attention as one of the most powerful AI models that can run on a single GPU, setting it apart from many other models that need much more computing power. This makes Gemma 3 appealing to many users, from small businesses to researchers. With its potential for both cost-efficiency and flexibility, Gemma 3 could play an essential role in the future of AI. The question is whether it can help Google strengthen its

Amazon’s AGI Lab Reveals Its First Work: Advanced AI Agents

Amazon is still seen as a bit of a laggard in the race to develop advanced artificial intelligence, but it has quietly created a lab that is now setting records when it comes to AI performance. Amazon’s AGI SF Lab, which is located in San Francisco and dedicated to building artificial general intelligence, or AI that surpasses the capabilities of humans, revealed the first fruits of its work today: A new AI model capable of powering some of the most advanced AI agents available anywhere. The new model, called Amazon Nova Act, outperforms ones from OpenAI and Anthropic on several

Authors call for UK government to hold Meta accountable for copyright infringement | Books

A group of prominent authors including Richard Osman, Kazuo Ishiguro, Kate Mosse and Val McDermid have signed an open letter calling on the UK government to hold Meta accountable over its use of copyrighted books to train artificial intelligence. The letter asked Lisa Nandy, the secretary of state for culture, media and sport, to summon Meta senior executives to parliament. “There is a longstanding contractual obligation that when third parties make use of an author’s work they compensate us,” said McDermid when asked why she signed the letter. “Adaptation, translation, photocopying – they all accept the duty to recompense us

Are Companies Practicing Traditional Disaster Recovery Ready for the Next Big Cyberattack?

In today’s world, where cybercrime has become increasingly prevalent and more sophisticated than ever, ensuring an organisation’s resilience is no longer solely about traditional disaster recovery. A recent example of this came almost a week ago, when X, formerly known as Twitter, experienced a series of significant outages. Elon Musk, the owner of X, later confirmed that these disruptions were the result of a major cyberattack.  Speculations suggest that the attack was likely a distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack, where excessive traffic overwhelms a platform’s servers, leading to slowdowns or complete outages. However, as cyber threats evolve, the risks extend beyond