AWS has removed its legal protections for customers using its video transcoding and streaming services, potentially exposing them to patent infringement claims from codec rights holders. The change ...
Every conversation I have with enterprise leaders today carries an unmistakable urgency about AI transformation. The economics have changed, possibilities have expanded dramatically, and the pressure ...
International Business Machines Corporation stock plunges; downgrade IBM to Hold as Anthropic's Claude Code threatens ...
Big Blue has been saying this itself since 2013 IBM’s share price slumped by 13 percent on Monday, seemingly caused by investors reacting to an Anthropic blog post that points out its Claude Code ...
— Craig Cincotta has moved to chief of staff for Microsoft’s Xbox division, formerly holding the role of Microsoft general ...
AWS now has confirmed its AI actually did delete and recreate an environment, but is blaming a human engineer for the mishap. AI firms blaming humans is becoming a recurring theme.
Amazon issued an unusually pointed rebuttal to a Financial Times report that its AI coding tools caused AWS outages, calling one key claim "entirely false." ...
December, when AWS engineers allowed internal AI assistant Kiro to implement system changes without human intervention. According to four people familiar with ...
By way of definition, AWS Strands is a model-driven framework (i.e. one that uses high-level designs to automatically generate code, which is often used for streamlining complex software development ...
Is this a forecast of how hopelessly AI-dependent our tech overlords will be going forward? The post Amazon’s Blundering AI Caused Multiple AWS Outages appeared first on Futurism.
Design-first and Bugfix workflows add flexibility to Kiro’s spec-heavy model, but analysts are split on whether the changes will result in increased adoption.
Facing backlash over rising prices for electricity, President Trump announced his administration is working with tech companies to sign pledges to pay more.