A new report says advanced artificial intelligence systems have the potential to create extreme new risks, such as fueling widespread job losses, enabling terrorism or running amok.
Switzerland has found itself excluded from a select group of countries that will have unrestricted access to essential artificial intelligence (AI) chips under new U.S. regulations.
A day-long event filled with MIT speakers, including Sally Kornbluth and Sir Tim Berners-Lee, touched on AI sustainability and US-China competition.
A European company is setting new standards in the global artificial intelligence (AI) competition. AI Business Solutions AG, based in Switzerland, announces its commitment to helping European businesses stay competitive in the global marketplace with AI solutions to be unveiled later this year.
Switzerland is excluded by the US from the allied countries for unlimited access to chips required for artificial intelligence.
Machine learning and AI professionals in Switzerland cost, on average, 17% less than their counterparts in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Talking about leading by example and transparency, the big theme at Davos was collaboration. So let’s talk about the AI Alliance. This is an international community of 140 tech developers led by IBM and Meta. Tell us about the alliance and its advocacy efforts. How does this group plan to promote safer and more ethical AI?
Safe Ecosystem Foundation – Safe Ecosystem Foundation proudly unveils Safe Agentathon—the first-ever hackathon focused on DeFAI, which fuses the power of the decentralized financial ecosystem with AI-driven analytics and automation.
Talk of AI agents is everywhere in Davos. AI pioneer Yoshua Bengio warned against them.
As Davos prepares to host the World Economic Forum, business leaders are talking about what AI and Donald Trump will mean in 2025.
At the World Economic Forum’s annual gathering in Davos, AI is the word that’s been on every major corporate leader’s lips. Here’s what they’re saying.
On Tuesday, Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei predicted that AI models may surpass human capabilities "in almost everything" within two to three years, according to a Wall Street Journal interview at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.