Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2026-03-11 12:57:00| Engadget

Anthropic has launched a new research initiative called Anthropic Institute and has revealed that its Public Policy team is opening its first office in Washington, DC this spring. The company has made the announcement just a couple of days after it sued the US government to challenge the supply chain risk designation it received from the Defense Department. As Axios notes, Anthropic is tripling its Public Policy team at a time when AI companies are establishing a presence in Washington, so that they can influence future policies around artificial intelligence. In Anthropics case, it might have to find a way to be re-accepted by the US government first after President Trump ordered federal agencies to stop using its technology. Sarah Heck, who joined the company as Head of External Affairs, will take over from co-founder Jack Clark as Head of Policy. Meanwhile, Clark has taken the role as Head of Public Benefit and will lead the Anthropic Institute. The company explains that the institutes role is to tell the world what it learns about the challenges that arise as AI firms develop more advanced AI systems. Examples include how powerful AI technologies will reshape jobs and economies and what kinds of threats theyll magnify or introduce. The institute will bring together and expand Anthropics current research teams: The Frontier Red Team that stress-tests AI systems, the Societal Impacts team that looks at how AI is used in the real world, and the Economic Research team that tracks AIs impact on jobs and the larger economy. Anthropic has hired Matt Botvinick, a former Senior Director of Research at Google DeepMind, and Zoë Hitzig, who studied AIs social and economic impacts at OpenAI, to be founding members of the Institute. This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/anthropic-is-opening-an-office-in-dc-while-battling-pentagon-in-court-115700127.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

LATEST NEWS

2026-03-11 12:00:00| Engadget

Meta announced new features today aimed at cracking down on scams perpetrated via its platforms. First, Meta is launching AI tools for identifying impersonator of brands and celebrities, as well as for detecting deceptive links, which should help it to quickly take down frauds. Second, it is adding new alerts to caution against interacting with a potentially fraudulent account. Facebook will roll out alerts for suspicious friend requests, WhatsApp is getting warnings for device linking requests, and Messenger will also issue warnings if an account seems suspect.Finally, Meta is also continuing to expand its processes for advertiser verification. The company said it aims to have verified advertisers account for 90 percent of its ads revenue by the end of the year, up from the current share of 70 percent. Last year, Meta estimated that marketing for scams and banned products could have been responsible for 10 percent of its 2024 revenue. The social media company has been ramping up its actions against scams, particularly those known as celeb bait. Last month, it sued three entities from Brazil and China that were behind scams that leveraged images and deepfakes of popular people to promote dubious products and investment schemes. Meta said today that over the course of 2025, it removed 159 million scam ads as well as 10.9 million Facebook and Instagram accounts tied to criminal scam centers.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/social-media/meta-rolls-out-new-features-for-scam-protection-110000173.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

2026-03-11 03:30:00| Engadget

At the start of the year, Google brought a host of new Gemini-powered features, including built-in Nano Banana image generation, to Chrome. After debuting in the United States, those features are now making their way to Chrome users in Canada, India and New Zealand, with support for 50 additional in tow. Among the new languages Gemini in Chrome can now converse in are French, Gujarati, Hindi and Spanish.   To try out Gemini in Chrome, tap the sparkle icon at the top right of the interface. This will open the sidebar interface Google introduced in January. From there, you can chat with the company's Gemini chatbot without the need to switch tabs. From the sidebar, you can also access Google's in-house image generator. Additionally, Gemini in Chrome offers integrations with Gmail, Maps, Calendar, YouTube and other Google apps. If you live outside Canada, India or New Zealand, Google says it will make Gemini in Chrome available in more countries and languages throughout the rest of 2026. Oh, and if dont want to use Gemini in Chrome, you can right click on the sparkle icon and select unpin to never see it again. This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/google-starts-rolling-out-gemini-in-chrome-to-users-in-canada-india-and-new-zealand-023000528.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

Latest from this category

12.03I guess this wasn't an Xbox after all
11.03Grammarly has disabled its tool offering generative-AI feedback credited to real writers
11.03Valve defends loot boxes in response to New York's lawsuit
11.03TikTok will let you stream full songs in its app if you're an Apple Music subscriber
11.03Microsoft's full screen 'Xbox Mode' will roll out to Windows 11 PCs in April
11.03Microsoft will start providing game studios with Project Helix consoles in 2027
11.03Tembo might just be the world's cutest drum machine
11.03Meta will let kids under 13 use WhatsApp with parent-managed accounts
Marketing and Advertising »

All news

12.03Sensex, Nifty slide as Strait of Hormuz attacks rekindle energy crisis fears
12.03US launches probe into major trading partners after tariffs struck down
12.03Nowhere to hide: Rupee breaches the 92 mark again
12.03Market volatility puts upcoming IPOs in a wait-and-watch mode
12.03Defence stocks build up on hopes war to spur spends
12.03A small US grocer is calling out the lower prices at big chains
12.03What role has cyber warfare played in Iran?
12.03Local factors insulate private credit market from global storm
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .