We use cookies and other data for a number of reasons, such as keeping FT Sites reliable and secure, personalising content and ads, providing social media features and to analyse how our Sites are used.
Add this topic to your myFT Digest for news straight to your inbox
Their paper paved the way for the rise of large language models. But all have since left the Silicon Valley giant
Executives convene in Washington as Biden administration races to craft guardrails for the technology
This technology can help intelligence agencies sift through oceans of data but it is no substitute for humans — yet
And for everyone else it’s a data clean-up job, says JPMorgan
A shortage of company’s in-demand products provides opportunity to fledgling semiconductor groups
Past performance IS indicative of future returns, actually
Training machines to carry out human tasks will bring more efficiencies, job losses and risks. Here, FT journalists explain the potential of generative and God-like AI and the likely impact on industry sectors, in Q&As and graphics Supported by Infosys
Technology can improve customer service, ID checks and fraud prevention but concerns remain over decision making and impersonation
Machine learning works in the same way as human learning: repeating a process and making adjustments after mistakes, to gradually improve outcomes
In the short term, the technology threatens to make employees redundant; longer term, the danger is existential
New EU rules would make companies liable for misuse of the technology, but critics say regulators should only step in if needed
Lawyers and accountants charge handsomely for human expertise — but firms have still been embracing the technology
New tools can create compositions, clone voices and recommend songs to listeners — but can it match the human interaction with fans?
Sectors most likely to be affected are those involving language: advertising, journalism, consulting and law
Want to know the difference between supervised and unsupervised learning? Or the definition of God-like AI? Look it up here
Algorithms are already being used to check payment balances, detect suspicious transactions, and optimise insurance pricing
Computers can be trained to carry out complex tasks once performed only by humans — and often at a higher speed or accuracy
Technology veteran seen as critical in guiding Harrison.ai’s international growth in medical imaging
Secret service chief says some who oppose the war in Ukraine have already joined up
Microsoft, OpenAI and Cohere experiment with ‘synthetic data’ as they reach the limits of information created by humans
Ludo Hunter-Tilney talks us through the implications of AI-generated music and the reaction from the industry
Tech giant’s chief Satya Nadella defends premium price for new version of office software
More sectors will face similar battles over how to share the spoils in the age of AI
The technology makes it even more pressing that the justice system address transparency issues
Tesla boss gives rambling 90-minute talk about his artificial intelligence plans after launching rival company this week
UK Edition