AI harms, copyright reform and new investment: five legal tech stories you might have missed - The Law Society
AI harms, copyright reform and new investment: five legal tech stories you might have missed The Law Society
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Microsoft deepens its commitment to Japan with $10 billion investment in AI infrastructure, cybersecurity, and workforce - Institutional Real Estate, Inc.
Microsoft deepens its commitment to Japan with $10 billion investment in AI infrastructure, cybersecurity, and workforce Institutional Real Estate, Inc.

Marc Andreessen on AI Winters and Agent Breakthroughs
This episode originally aired on the Latent Space Podcast. swyx and Alessio Fanelli speak with Marc Andreessen about the arc of AI from its origins in 1943 to today's breakthroughs in reasoning, coding agents, and self-improvement. They cover the parallels between AI scaling laws and Moore's Law, the architectural insight behind Claude Code and the Unix shell, the coming supply crunch in compute, and why the messy reality of 8 billion people means both AI utopians and doomers are too optimistic about the pace of change. Follow Marc Andreessen on X: https://twitter.com/pmarca Follow Shawn "swyx" Wang on X: https://twitter.com/swyx Follow Alessio Fanelli on X: https://twitter.com/FanaHOVA Listen to Latent Space . Stay Updated: Find a16z on YouTube: YouTube Find a16z on X Find a16z on LinkedI
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New J-PAL research and policy initiative to test and scale AI innovations to fight poverty
Project AI Evidence will connect governments, tech companies, and nonprofits with world-class economists at MIT and across J-PAL's global network to evaluate and improve AI solutions.

Tech Nonprofits to Feds: Don’t Weaponize Procurement to Undermine AI Trust and Safety
While the very public fight continues between the Department of Defense and Anthropic over whether the government can punish a company for refusing to allow its technology to be used for mass surveillance, another branch of the U.S. government is quietly working to ensure that this dispute will never happen again. How? By rewriting government procurement rules. Using procurement -- meaning, the processes by which governments acquire goods and services-- to accomplish policy goals is a time-honored and often appropriate strategy. The government literally expresses its politics and priorities by deciding where and how it spends its money. To that end, governments can and should give our tax dollars to companies and projects that serve the public interest, such as open-source software develop



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