The company’s historical reluctance to engage in military AI projects stems from employee-led protests in 2018, when workers ...
Google abandons its "do no harm" AI stance, revising principles to allow military and surveillance applications while ...
Google has quietly deleted its pledge not to use AI for weapons or surveillance, a promise that had been in place since 2018.
Google’s involvement in the U.S. Department of Defense’s Project Maven in 2017 and 2018 is what led to the original AI ...
Google removed a pledge to not build AI for weapons or surveillance from its website this week. The change was first spotted ...
This change, first noticed by Bloomberg, marks a shift from the company's earlier stance on responsible AI development.
Google updated its artificial intelligence principles on Tuesday to remove commitments around not using the technology in ...
Google's parent company lifting a longstanding ban on artificial intelligence (AI) being used for developing weapons and ...
Google changed its public AI policies to remove assertions that it would not develop AI applied to surveillance or weapons.
Upon taking office, Trump immediately rescinded Biden’s executive order on AI safety, which had required companies to submit AI safety test results to the government before public release. The move ...
Google recently updated its guidelines about using AI for weapons and surveillance. The new update is in contrast to what ...
Leading AI developers, such as OpenAI and Anthropic, are threading a delicate needle to sell software to the United States ...