The annual Worldwide Developers Conference starts Monday, June 10. Here are the new features, AI-powered and otherwise, potentially coming to your devices.
Eliot Higgins and his 28,000 forensic foot soldiers at Bellingcat have kept a miraculous nose for truthโand a sharp sense of its limitsโin Gaza, Ukraine, and everywhere else atrocities hide online.
Investor Marc Andreessen called tech ethics and safety teams โthe enemyโ in his โTechno-Optimist Manifestoโ last year. Today he clarified heโs in favor of online guardrails for his 9-year-old son.
Data on how often Googleโs new AI Overviews feature appears on search results suggests that the company reduced its visibility even before recommendations like adding glue to pizza sauce went viral.
An open letter signed by former and current employees at OpenAI and other AI giants calls for whistleblower protections as the artificial intelligence rapidly evolves.
Windows Recall takes a screenshot every five seconds. Cybersecurity researchers say the system is simple to abuseโand one ethical hacker has already built a tool to show how easy it really is.
Generative AI tools such as OpenAIโs ChatGPT and Microsoftโs Copilot are becoming part of everyday business life. But they come with privacy and security considerations you should know about.
The idea of an AI beauty pageant might seem laughable or grotesque, depending on whom you ask. But the World AI Creator Awards reflects something deeper about modern influencer culture.
Companies like Amazon and Microsoft are racing to set up new data centers in Europe, but behind the scenes there's concern about how to provide them enough power to meet AI's demands.
Google rushed out fixes after its AI search feature made errors that went viral. Fundamental limitations of generative AI mean that it will still screw up sometimes.
With over 60 countries holding elections in 2024, deepfakes and robocalls are being used to manipulate voters across the world. WIRED is tracking every instance of AI interference during this critical election year.
Liz Reid, Googleโs head of search, said in a blog post that the company had made adjustments to its new AI search feature after screenshots of its errors went viral.
AI is already being used and abused in elections around the world. From passive income scams to dead men endorsing their successors, fiction is proving stranger than reality.
More than 60 countries are holding elections in 2024. Throughout the year, WIRED will be tracking every instance of AIโs use in and around those campaigns.