Character AI has become so popular, and rightfully so. The realistic conversations and myriad of creative possibilities are enough to keep users hooked. But as impressive as it is, some
California is moving closer to becoming the first state in the United States to regulate AI companion chatbots. Lawmakers have advanced SB 243, a bill designed to introduce safeguards for
Monetizing AI products remains a major challenge for startups. Many have employed subscription models, but they work in limited markets and exclude millions of potential users. Koah, a San Francisco–based
OpenAI announced on Tuesday that it will route sensitive conversations to advanced reasoning models such as GPT-5. The company also plans to introduce parental controls in the coming weeks. These
Meta has introduced new safeguards for its AI chatbots after concerns about teen safety online. The company confirmed the changes following a recent investigation that highlighted major gaps in its
Something really distressing is making headlines right now. The parents of 16-year-old Adam Raine have taken legal action in California. They’re suing OpenAI and CEO Sam Altman, saying that ChatGPT
Elon Musk’s AI company, xAI, has dropped a big surprise: Grok 2.5, the “best model last year,” is now open for public download on Hugging Face. Even cooler? Grok 3
Something odd happened at Elon Musk’s xAI. It seems Grok, the chatbot, had a “share” button that didn’t stay private. Instead, over 370,000 conversations accidentally appeared on Google, Bing, and
When OpenAI launched GPT-5, many expected a smooth leap forward. Instead, the release sparked mixed reactions. Some users said the new model felt too stiff compared to GPT-4o, which had
Elon Musk’s xAI has opened the doors to Grok 4 for everyone. That’s right, this high-end AI model is now free to use, no subscription needed. It’s a generous offer,