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SponsoredPublic agency leaders want tangible results from AI and machine learning (ML). The trouble is figuring out how to get beyond pilot projects and proofs of concept.
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The state legislature’s judiciary committee has approved legislation aimed at discouraging and potentially punishing deceptive election campaign tactics, specifically AI-generated deepfakes.
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With AI fueling a data center boom, Minnesota cities are confronting a rising number of development proposals – and concern from residents. The debate touches everything from energy use to noise pollution.
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The chief state’s attorney, with support from the State Police and the Connecticut Police Chief’s Association, is pausing deployment of AI-powered tools to deepen understanding and set rules around their use.
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Artificial intelligence is reshaping state departments of transportation, enabling them to create new processes and workflows around data governance — and make better use of information collected.
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A new type of artificial intelligence is helping city governments spot problems like potholes faster and with more accuracy than ever before, but government must maintain traditional privacy standards.
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Colleges are using artificial intelligence to augment student advising and analyze data, but some experts warn it could confine their thinking by steering them toward statistically common paths.
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The organization’s new initiative — the AI and Emerging Technology Forum — aims to help cities, towns and villages to better understand what AI tools can do and how to use them.
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Comprised of prominent people throughout the city, Midland of Tomorrow arrives in the wake of an AI data center approval. Its members hope to ensure AI is properly used.
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Anthropic’s Mythos AI will further compress the time between vulnerability discovery and attack, the report says, pushing cybersecurity teams to rethink defenses and operational risk.
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A school district in Nebraska is contracting with the online platform Goalbook, which special education teachers said makes it easier to write individualized education plans (IEPs) so they can focus on other things.
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The U.S. government is preparing to make a version of Anthropic PBC’s powerful new artificial intelligence model available to federal agencies amid concerns the tool could increase cybersecurity risk.
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Committees in both chambers of the Illinois General Assembly have heard bills that would implement various restrictions and give recommendations on the use of AI in state government and certain industries.
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As AI creates uncertainty around specific technical skills, universities and employers are rethinking how to embed AI fluency, real-world experience and soft skills into education through private-public partnerships.
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Stanford researcher Chris Agnew says educational goals, not tools, should be the jumping-off point for ed-tech strategy, starting with what kids need to be able to do, then what learning experiences they need.
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The legislation would require conversational chatbots to disclose to minors they are not human, or mental health professionals. It now needs just the governor’s signature to become law.
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Renner, seriously injured in a snowplow accident in 2023, will also become a brand partner and star in a documentary for the public safety tech provider. The company’s COO discusses the deal.
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Following a one-year pilot project to explore the use of ChatGPT, Pennsylvania is ready to deploy AI tools to thousands of workers across dozens of agencies. The move is part of a greater shift to embed AI statewide.
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The Apex Town Council voted unanimously to enact the moratorium on data centers, data processing facilities and cryptocurrency mining operations, following months of public opposition to a proposed project.
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A private Jesuit university in California is developing a new AI center to advance research in areas such as health care and medical imaging, information access, intelligent robotics and human-computer interaction.
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Houston Independent School District will expand its pilot of AI-focused "Future 2" schools from two to six this fall, and an internal email suggested the program may eventually reach 100 schools.