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Mother sues tech company after ‘Game of Thrones’ AI chatbot allegedly drove son to suicide

The mother of 14-year-old Sewell Setzer III is suing Character.AI, the tech company that created a 'Game of Thrones' AI chatbot she believes drove...

Secret Service apologized after officials broke into salon ahead of Harris rally, reports

Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle turns in resignationSecret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle resigned after brutal questioning over security lapses at Donald Trump's rally in...

Your horoscope for the week ahead: Unleash your charms and see what happens | CBC Life

Letting your inner rebel out to play could do wonders for your mood at the start of this week, particularly as love-and-beauty-ruling Venus sextiles unpredictable...

Meet ‘genius girl’ Guo Wenjing, co-founder of tech firm backed by US$135 million funding

Guo won a silver medal in the International Olympiad in Informatics (IOI) in 2015 and was later admitted to Harvard University, where she earned...

Amazon wins $2b contract to store ‘top secret’ Australian military intelligence

In short:Three data centres will be built in secret locations to host Australia's military secrets.Amazon has won the $2 billion contract to store the...

Google’s emissions shot up 48% over five years due to AI

Rachel Metz  |  BloombergGoogle’s emissions climbed by almost half over five years, as the company has infused artificial intelligence throughout many of its core products...

Can AI find you the cheapest plane tickets? How Google and Skyscanner compared.

How to start planning a trip with AIPlan your next vacation with the help of AI.Problem SolvedSkyscanner’s Savvy Search and Google’s Gemini are AI-powered...

Facial recognition is growing more powerful. Experts say patchwork regulations aren’t enough | CBC News

Some police services in Canada are using facial recognition technology to help solve crimes, while other police forces say human rights and privacy concerns...

ANALYSIS | There’s an old problem Canada’s new foreign-interference law won’t fix | CBC News

To understand Canada's failure to criminally prosecute foreign collusion, an old news report from Washington offers a useful starting point.In 1981, a Canadian correspondent made an observation: when...

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