AI trends 2025

AI is developing all the time. Here are some picks from several articles what is expected to happen in AI and around it in 2025. Here are picks from various articles, the texts are picks from the article edited and in some cases translated for clarity.

AI in 2025: Five Defining Themes
https://news.sap.com/2025/01/ai-in-2025-defining-themes/
Artificial intelligence (AI) is accelerating at an astonishing pace, quickly moving from emerging technologies to impacting how businesses run. From building AI agents to interacting with technology in ways that feel more like a natural conversation, AI technologies are poised to transform how we work.
But what exactly lies ahead?
1. Agentic AI: Goodbye Agent Washing, Welcome Multi-Agent Systems
AI agents are currently in their infancy. While many software vendors are releasing and labeling the first “AI agents” based on simple conversational document search, advanced AI agents that will be able to plan, reason, use tools, collaborate with humans and other agents, and iteratively reflect on progress until they achieve their objective are on the horizon. The year 2025 will see them rapidly evolve and act more autonomously. More specifically, 2025 will see AI agents deployed more readily “under the hood,” driving complex agentic workflows.
In short, AI will handle mundane, high-volume tasks while the value of human judgement, creativity, and quality outcomes will increase.
2. Models: No Context, No Value
Large language models (LLMs) will continue to become a commodity for vanilla generative AI tasks, a trend that has already started. LLMs are drawing on an increasingly tapped pool of public data scraped from the internet. This will only worsen, and companies must learn to adapt their models to unique, content-rich data sources.
We will also see a greater variety of foundation models that fulfill different purposes. Take, for example, physics-informed neural networks (PINNs), which generate outcomes based on predictions grounded in physical reality or robotics. PINNs are set to gain more importance in the job market because they will enable autonomous robots to navigate and execute tasks in the real world.
Models will increasingly become more multimodal, meaning an AI system can process information from various input types.
3. Adoption: From Buzz to Business
While 2024 was all about introducing AI use cases and their value for organizations and individuals alike, 2025 will see the industry’s unprecedented adoption of AI specifically for businesses. More people will understand when and how to use AI, and the technology will mature to the point where it can deal with critical business issues such as managing multi-national complexities. Many companies will also gain practical experience working for the first time through issues like AI-specific legal and data privacy terms (compared to when companies started moving to the cloud 10 years ago), building the foundation for applying the technology to business processes.
4. User Experience: AI Is Becoming the New UI
AI’s next frontier is seamlessly unifying people, data, and processes to amplify business outcomes. In 2025, we will see increased adoption of AI across the workforce as people discover the benefits of humans plus AI.
This means disrupting the classical user experience from system-led interactions to intent-based, people-led conversations with AI acting in the background. AI copilots will become the new UI for engaging with a system, making software more accessible and easier for people. AI won’t be limited to one app; it might even replace them one day. With AI, frontend, backend, browser, and apps are blurring. This is like giving your AI “arms, legs, and eyes.”
5. Regulation: Innovate, Then Regulate
It’s fair to say that governments worldwide are struggling to keep pace with the rapid advancements in AI technology and to develop meaningful regulatory frameworks that set appropriate guardrails for AI without compromising innovation.

12 AI predictions for 2025
This year we’ve seen AI move from pilots into production use cases. In 2025, they’ll expand into fully-scaled, enterprise-wide deployments.
https://www.cio.com/article/3630070/12-ai-predictions-for-2025.html
This year we’ve seen AI move from pilots into production use cases. In 2025, they’ll expand into fully-scaled, enterprise-wide deployments.
1. Small language models and edge computing
Most of the attention this year and last has been on the big language models — specifically on ChatGPT in its various permutations, as well as competitors like Anthropic’s Claude and Meta’s Llama models. But for many business use cases, LLMs are overkill and are too expensive, and too slow, for practical use.
“Looking ahead to 2025, I expect small language models, specifically custom models, to become a more common solution for many businesses,”
2. AI will approach human reasoning ability
In mid-September, OpenAI released a new series of models that thinks through problems much like a person would, it claims. The company says it can achieve PhD-level performance in challenging benchmark tests in physics, chemistry, and biology. For example, the previous best model, GPT-4o, could only solve 13% of the problems on the International Mathematics Olympiad, while the new reasoning model solved 83%.
If AI can reason better, then it will make it possible for AI agents to understand our intent, translate that into a series of steps, and do things on our behalf, says Gartner analyst Arun Chandrasekaran. “Reasoning also helps us use AI as more of a decision support system,”
3. Massive growth in proven use cases
This year, we’ve seen some use cases proven to have ROI, says Monteiro. In 2025, those use cases will see massive adoption, especially if the AI technology is integrated into the software platforms that companies are already using, making it very simple to adopt.
“The fields of customer service, marketing, and customer development are going to see massive adoption,”
4. The evolution of agile development
The agile manifesto was released in 2001 and, since then, the development philosophy has steadily gained over the previous waterfall style of software development.
“For the last 15 years or so, it’s been the de-facto standard for how modern software development works,”
5. Increased regulation
At the end of September, California governor Gavin Newsom signed a law requiring gen AI developers to disclose the data they used to train their systems, which applies to developers who make gen AI systems publicly available to Californians. Developers must comply by the start of 2026.
There are also regulations about the use of deep fakes, facial recognition, and more. The most comprehensive law, the EU’s AI Act, which went into effect last summer, is also something that companies will have to comply with starting in mid-2026, so, again, 2025 is the year when they will need to get ready.
6. AI will become accessible and ubiquitous
With gen AI, people are still at the stage of trying to figure out what gen AI is, how it works, and how to use it.
“There’s going to be a lot less of that,” he says. But gen AI will become ubiquitous and seamlessly woven into workflows, the way the internet is today.
7. Agents will begin replacing services
Software has evolved from big, monolithic systems running on mainframes, to desktop apps, to distributed, service-based architectures, web applications, and mobile apps. Now, it will evolve again, says Malhotra. “Agents are the next phase,” he says. Agents can be more loosely coupled than services, making these architectures more flexible, resilient and smart. And that will bring with it a completely new stack of tools and development processes.
8. The rise of agentic assistants
In addition to agents replacing software components, we’ll also see the rise of agentic assistants, adds Malhotra. Take for example that task of keeping up with regulations.
Today, consultants get continuing education to stay abreast of new laws, or reach out to colleagues who are already experts in them. It takes time for the new knowledge to disseminate and be fully absorbed by employees.
“But an AI agent can be instantly updated to ensure that all our work is compliant with the new laws,” says Malhotra. “This isn’t science fiction.”
9. Multi-agent systems
Sure, AI agents are interesting. But things are going to get really interesting when agents start talking to each other, says Babak Hodjat, CTO of AI at Cognizant. It won’t happen overnight, of course, and companies will need to be careful that these agentic systems don’t go off the rails.
Companies such as Sailes and Salesforce are already developing multi-agent workflows.
10. Multi-modal AI
Humans and the companies we build are multi-modal. We read and write text, we speak and listen, we see and we draw. And we do all these things through time, so we understand that some things come before other things. Today’s AI models are, for the most part, fragmentary. One can create images, another can only handle text, and some recent ones can understand or produce video.
11. Multi-model routing
Not to be confused with multi-modal AI, multi-modal routing is when companies use more than one LLM to power their gen AI applications. Different AI models are better at different things, and some are cheaper than others, or have lower latency. And then there’s the matter of having all your eggs in one basket.
“A number of CIOs I’ve spoken with recently are thinking about the old ERP days of vendor lock,” says Brett Barton, global AI practice leader at Unisys. “And it’s top of mind for many as they look at their application portfolio, specifically as it relates to cloud and AI capabilities.”
Diversifying away from using just a single model for all use cases means a company is less dependent on any one provider and can be more flexible as circumstances change.
12. Mass customization of enterprise software
Today, only the largest companies, with the deepest pockets, get to have custom software developed specifically for them. It’s just not economically feasible to build large systems for small use cases.
“Right now, people are all using the same version of Teams or Slack or what have you,” says Ernst & Young’s Malhotra. “Microsoft can’t make a custom version just for me.” But once AI begins to accelerate the speed of software development while reducing costs, it starts to become much more feasible.

9 IT resolutions for 2025
https://www.cio.com/article/3629833/9-it-resolutions-for-2025.html
1. Innovate
“We’re embracing innovation,”
2. Double down on harnessing the power of AI
Not surprisingly, getting more out of AI is top of mind for many CIOs.
“I am excited about the potential of generative AI, particularly in the security space,”
3. And ensure effective and secure AI rollouts
“AI is everywhere, and while its benefits are extensive, implementing it effectively across a corporation presents challenges. Balancing the rollout with proper training, adoption, and careful measurement of costs and benefits is essential, particularly while securing company assets in tandem,”
4. Focus on responsible AI
The possibilities of AI grow by the day — but so do the risks.
“My resolution is to mature in our execution of responsible AI,”
“AI is the new gold and in order to truly maximize it’s potential, we must first have the proper guardrails in place. Taking a human-first approach to AI will help ensure our state can maintain ethics while taking advantage of the new AI innovations.”
5. Deliver value from generative AI
As organizations move from experimenting and testing generative AI use cases, they’re looking for gen AI to deliver real business value.
“As we go into 2025, we’ll continue to see the evolution of gen AI. But it’s no longer about just standing it up. It’s more about optimizing and maximizing the value we’re getting out of gen AI,”
6. Empower global talent
Although harnessing AI is a top objective for Morgan Stanley’s Wetmur, she says she’s equally committed to harnessing the power of people.
7. Create a wholistic learning culture
Wetmur has another talent-related objective: to create a learning culture — not just in her own department but across all divisions.
8. Deliver better digital experiences
Deltek’s Cilsick has her sights set on improving her company’s digital employee experience, believing that a better DEX will yield benefits in multiple ways.
Cilsick says she first wants to bring in new technologies and automation to “make things as easy as possible,” mirroring the digital experiences most workers have when using consumer technologies.
“It’s really about leveraging tech to make sure [employees] are more efficient and productive,”
“In 2025 my primary focus as CIO will be on transforming operational efficiency, maximizing business productivity, and enhancing employee experiences,”
9. Position the company for long-term success
Lieberman wants to look beyond 2025, saying another resolution for the year is “to develop a longer-term view of our technology roadmap so that we can strategically decide where to invest our resources.”
“My resolutions for 2025 reflect the evolving needs of our organization, the opportunities presented by AI and emerging technologies, and the necessity to balance innovation with operational efficiency,”
Lieberman aims to develop AI capabilities to automate routine tasks.
“Bots will handle common inquiries ranging from sales account summaries to HR benefits, reducing response times and freeing up resources for strategic initiatives,”

Not just hype — here are real-world use cases for AI agents
https://venturebeat.com/ai/not-just-hype-here-are-real-world-use-cases-for-ai-agents/
Just seven or eight months ago, when a customer called in to or emailed Baca Systems with a service question, a human agent handling the query would begin searching for similar cases in the system and analyzing technical documents.
This process would take roughly five to seven minutes; then the agent could offer the “first meaningful response” and finally begin troubleshooting.
But now, with AI agents powered by Salesforce, that time has been shortened to as few as five to 10 seconds.
Now, instead of having to sift through databases for previous customer calls and similar cases, human reps can ask the AI agent to find the relevant information. The AI runs in the background and allows humans to respond right away, Russo noted.
AI can serve as a sales development representative (SDR) to send out general inquires and emails, have a back-and-forth dialogue, then pass the prospect to a member of the sales team, Russo explained.
But once the company implements Salesforce’s Agentforce, a customer needing to modify an order will be able to communicate their needs with AI in natural language, and the AI agent will automatically make adjustments. When more complex issues come up — such as a reconfiguration of an order or an all-out venue change — the AI agent will quickly push the matter up to a human rep.

Open Source in 2025: Strap In, Disruption Straight Ahead
Look for new tensions to arise in the New Year over licensing, the open source AI definition, security and compliance, and how to pay volunteer maintainers.
https://thenewstack.io/open-source-in-2025-strap-in-disruption-straight-ahead/
The trend of widely used open source software moving to more restrictive licensing isn’t new.
In addition to the demands of late-stage capitalism and impatient investors in companies built on open source tools, other outside factors are pressuring the open source world. There’s the promise/threat of generative AI, for instance. Or the shifting geopolitical landscape, which brings new security concerns and governance regulations.
What’s ahead for open source in 2025?
More Consolidation, More Licensing Changes
The Open Source AI Debate: Just Getting Started
Security and Compliance Concerns Will Rise
Paying Maintainers: More Cash, Creativity Needed

Kyberturvallisuuden ja tekoälyn tärkeimmät trendit 2025
https://www.uusiteknologia.fi/2024/11/20/kyberturvallisuuden-ja-tekoalyn-tarkeimmat-trendit-2025/
1. Cyber ​​infrastructure will be centered on a single, unified security platform
2. Big data will give an edge against new entrants
3. AI’s integrated role in 2025 means building trust, governance engagement, and a new kind of leadership
4. Businesses will adopt secure enterprise browsers more widely
5. AI’s energy implications will be more widely recognized in 2025
6. Quantum realities will become clearer in 2025
7. Security and marketing leaders will work more closely together

Presentation: For 2025, ‘AI eats the world’.
https://www.ben-evans.com/presentations

Just like other technologies that have gone before, such as cloud and cybersecurity automation, right now AI lacks maturity.
https://www.securityweek.com/ai-implementing-the-right-technology-for-the-right-use-case/
If 2023 and 2024 were the years of exploration, hype and excitement around AI, 2025 (and 2026) will be the year(s) that organizations start to focus on specific use cases for the most productive implementations of AI and, more importantly, to understand how to implement guardrails and governance so that it is viewed as less of a risk by security teams and more of a benefit to the organization.
Businesses are developing applications that add Large Language Model (LLM) capabilities to provide superior functionality and advanced personalization
Employees are using third party GenAI tools for research and productivity purposes
Developers are leveraging AI-powered code assistants to code faster and meet challenging production deadlines
Companies are building their own LLMs for internal use cases and commercial purposes.
AI is still maturing
However, just like other technologies that have gone before, such as cloud and cybersecurity automation, right now AI lacks maturity. Right now, we very much see AI in this “peak of inflated expectations” phase and predict that it will dip into the “trough of disillusionment”, where organizations realize that it is not the silver bullet they thought it would be. In fact, there are already signs of cynicism as decision-makers are bombarded with marketing messages from vendors and struggle to discern what is a genuine use case and what is not relevant for their organization.
There is also regulation that will come into force, such as the EU AI Act, which is a comprehensive legal framework that sets out rules for the development and use of AI.
AI certainly won’t solve every problem, and it should be used like automation, as part of a collaborative mix of people, process and technology. You simply can’t replace human intuition with AI, and many new AI regulations stipulate that human oversight is maintained.

7 Splunk Predictions for 2025
https://www.splunk.com/en_us/form/future-predictions.html
AI: Projects must prove their worth to anxious boards or risk defunding, and LLMs will go small to reduce operating costs and environmental impact.

OpenAI, Google and Anthropic Are Struggling to Build More Advanced AI
Three of the leading artificial intelligence companies are seeing diminishing returns from their costly efforts to develop newer models.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2024-11-13/openai-google-and-anthropic-are-struggling-to-build-more-advanced-ai
Sources: OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic are all seeing diminishing returns from costly efforts to build new AI models; a new Gemini model misses internal targets

It Costs So Much to Run ChatGPT That OpenAI Is Losing Money on $200 ChatGPT Pro Subscriptions
https://futurism.com/the-byte/openai-chatgpt-pro-subscription-losing-money?fbclid=IwY2xjawH8epVleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHeggEpKe8ZQfjtPRC0f2pOI7A3z9LFtFon8lVG2VAbj178dkxSQbX_2CJQ_aem_N_ll3ETcuQ4OTRrShHqNGg
In a post on X-formerly-Twitter, CEO Sam Altman admitted an “insane” fact: that the company is “currently losing money” on ChatGPT Pro subscriptions, which run $200 per month and give users access to its suite of products including its o1 “reasoning” model.
“People use it much more than we expected,” the cofounder wrote, later adding in response to another user that he “personally chose the price and thought we would make some money.”
Though Altman didn’t explicitly say why OpenAI is losing money on these premium subscriptions, the issue almost certainly comes down to the enormous expense of running AI infrastructure: the massive and increasing amounts of electricity needed to power the facilities that power AI, not to mention the cost of building and maintaining those data centers. Nowadays, a single query on the company’s most advanced models can cost a staggering $1,000.

Tekoäly edellyttää yhä nopeampia verkkoja
https://etn.fi/index.php/opinion/16974-tekoaely-edellyttaeae-yhae-nopeampia-verkkoja
A resilient digital infrastructure is critical to effectively harnessing telecommunications networks for AI innovations and cloud-based services. The increasing demand for data-rich applications related to AI requires a telecommunications network that can handle large amounts of data with low latency, writes Carl Hansson, Partner Solutions Manager at Orange Business.

AI’s Slowdown Is Everyone Else’s Opportunity
Businesses will benefit from some much-needed breathing space to figure out how to deliver that all-important return on investment.
https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2024-11-20/ai-slowdown-is-everyone-else-s-opportunity

Näin sirumarkkinoilla käy ensi vuonna
https://etn.fi/index.php/13-news/16984-naein-sirumarkkinoilla-kaey-ensi-vuonna
The growing demand for high-performance computing (HPC) for artificial intelligence and HPC computing continues to be strong, with the market set to grow by more than 15 percent in 2025, IDC estimates in its recent Worldwide Semiconductor Technology Supply Chain Intelligence report.
IDC predicts eight significant trends for the chip market by 2025.
1. AI growth accelerates
2. Asia-Pacific IC Design Heats Up
3. TSMC’s leadership position is strengthening
4. The expansion of advanced processes is accelerating.
5. Mature process market recovers
6. 2nm Technology Breakthrough
7. Restructuring the Packaging and Testing Market
8. Advanced packaging technologies on the rise

2024: The year when MCUs became AI-enabled
https://www-edn-com.translate.goog/2024-the-year-when-mcus-became-ai-enabled/?fbclid=IwZXh0bgNhZW0CMTEAAR1_fEakArfPtgGZfjd-NiPd_MLBiuHyp9qfiszczOENPGPg38wzl9KOLrQ_aem_rLmf2vF2kjDIFGWzRVZWKw&_x_tr_sl=en&_x_tr_tl=fi&_x_tr_hl=fi&_x_tr_pto=wapp
The AI ​​party in the MCU space started in 2024, and in 2025, it is very likely that there will be more advancements in MCUs using lightweight AI models.
Adoption of AI acceleration features is a big step in the development of microcontrollers. The inclusion of AI features in microcontrollers started in 2024, and it is very likely that in 2025, their features and tools will develop further.

Just like other technologies that have gone before, such as cloud and cybersecurity automation, right now AI lacks maturity.
https://www.securityweek.com/ai-implementing-the-right-technology-for-the-right-use-case/
If 2023 and 2024 were the years of exploration, hype and excitement around AI, 2025 (and 2026) will be the year(s) that organizations start to focus on specific use cases for the most productive implementations of AI and, more importantly, to understand how to implement guardrails and governance so that it is viewed as less of a risk by security teams and more of a benefit to the organization.
Businesses are developing applications that add Large Language Model (LLM) capabilities to provide superior functionality and advanced personalization
Employees are using third party GenAI tools for research and productivity purposes
Developers are leveraging AI-powered code assistants to code faster and meet challenging production deadlines
Companies are building their own LLMs for internal use cases and commercial purposes.
AI is still maturing

AI Regulation Gets Serious in 2025 – Is Your Organization Ready?
While the challenges are significant, organizations have an opportunity to build scalable AI governance frameworks that ensure compliance while enabling responsible AI innovation.
https://www.securityweek.com/ai-regulation-gets-serious-in-2025-is-your-organization-ready/
Similar to the GDPR, the EU AI Act will take a phased approach to implementation. The first milestone arrives on February 2, 2025, when organizations operating in the EU must ensure that employees involved in AI use, deployment, or oversight possess adequate AI literacy. Thereafter from August 1 any new AI models based on GPAI standards must be fully compliant with the act. Also similar to GDPR is the threat of huge fines for non-compliance – EUR 35 million or 7 percent of worldwide annual turnover, whichever is higher.
While this requirement may appear manageable on the surface, many organizations are still in the early stages of defining and formalizing their AI usage policies.
Later phases of the EU AI Act, expected in late 2025 and into 2026, will introduce stricter requirements around prohibited and high-risk AI applications. For organizations, this will surface a significant governance challenge: maintaining visibility and control over AI assets.
Tracking the usage of standalone generative AI tools, such as ChatGPT or Claude, is relatively straightforward. However, the challenge intensifies when dealing with SaaS platforms that integrate AI functionalities on the backend. Analysts, including Gartner, refer to this as “embedded AI,” and its proliferation makes maintaining accurate AI asset inventories increasingly complex.
Where frameworks like the EU AI Act grow more complex is their focus on ‘high-risk’ use cases. Compliance will require organizations to move beyond merely identifying AI tools in use; they must also assess how these tools are used, what data is being shared, and what tasks the AI is performing. For instance, an employee using a generative AI tool to summarize sensitive internal documents introduces very different risks than someone using the same tool to draft marketing content.
For security and compliance leaders, the EU AI Act represents just one piece of a broader AI governance puzzle that will dominate 2025.
The next 12-18 months will require sustained focus and collaboration across security, compliance, and technology teams to stay ahead of these developments.

The Global Partnership on Artificial Intelligence (GPAI) is a multi-stakeholder initiative which aims to bridge the gap between theory and practice on AI by supporting cutting-edge research and applied activities on AI-related priorities.
https://gpai.ai/about/#:~:text=The%20Global%20Partnership%20on%20Artificial,activities%20on%20AI%2Drelated%20priorities.

1,344 Comments

  1. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Kyle Wiggers / TechCrunch:
    AI coding assistant startup Graphite, now used by tens of thousands of staff at 500+ companies, raised an Accel-led $52M Series B; its revenue grew 20x in 2024
    Anthropic-backed AI-powered code review platform Graphite raises cash
    https://techcrunch.com/2025/03/18/anthropic-backed-ai-powered-code-review-platform-graphite-raises-cash/

    Reply
  2. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Ivan Mehta / TechCrunch:
    Google debuts new Search and Android health care features, including medical records APIs, and plans to release open AI models for drug discovery called TxGemma
    Google launches new healthcare-related features for Search, Android
    https://techcrunch.com/2025/03/18/google-adds-new-healthcare-related-features-in-search/

    Reply
  3. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Kyle Wiggers / TechCrunch:
    Stability AI releases Stable Virtual Camera, an AI model with a non-commercial use license that can create “immersive” 3D videos using up to 32 2D images

    Stability AI’s new AI model turns photos into 3D scenes
    https://techcrunch.com/2025/03/18/stability-ais-new-ai-model-turns-photos-into-3d-scenes/

    Reply
  4. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Mike Wheatley / SiliconANGLE:
    Adobe debuts an agent orchestrator with 10 initial Experience Agents for its Adobe Experience customer data management and marketing suite, to rival Salesforce

    Adobe unleashes an army of AI agents on sales and marketing teams
    https://siliconangle.com/2025/03/18/689809/

    Reply
  5. Tomi Engdahl says:

    “Should I spend 25 hours learning about LLM?” – Breakdown (AI Operations)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PnF5qPelCYg

    Reply
  6. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Asus tuo AI-supertietokoneen työpöydälle
    https://etn.fi/index.php/13-news/17290-asus-tuo-ai-supertietokoneen-tyoepoeydaelle

    Asus on julkistanut uuden AI-supertietokoneen, Asus Ascent GX10:n, joka tuo petafloppitason laskentatehon suoraan kehittäjien, tekoälytutkijoiden ja data-analyytikoiden käyttöön. Kompaktin koon ansiosta käyttäjät voivat nyt kehittää ja testata suuria tekoälymalleja suoraan omalla työpöydällään ilman riippuvuutta pilvipalveluista.

    Ascent GX10:n sydämenä toimii NVIDIA GB10 Grace Blackwell -prosessori, joka yhdistää Blackwell-GPU:n ja 20-ytimisen Arm-suorittimen. Järjestelmä tarjoaa jopa 1000 TOPS-laskentatehon sekä 128 gigatavua yhtenäistä muistia, mahdollistaen jopa 200 miljardin parametrin tekoälymallien kehittämisen ja inferoinnin suoraan paikallisesti.

    Asus Ascent GX10 on suunniteltu erityisesti kehittäjille, jotka haluavat prototypoida, hienosäätää ja testata suuria generatiivisia AI-malleja ilman kalliita pilvipalveluita. Laite tukee NVIDIA NVLink-C2C -teknologiaa, joka tarjoaa viisi kertaa suuremman kaistanleveyden kuin PCIe 5.0, sekä FP4-dataformaatin, joka parantaa laskentatehokkuutta suurissa AI-malleissa.

    Reply
  7. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Akash Sriram / Reuters:
    BlackRock, Microsoft, and Abu Dhabi’s MGX say Nvidia and xAI joined a consortium to build AI infrastructure in the US; investors committed $100B for deployment

    Nvidia, Musk’s xAI to join Microsoft, BlackRock and MGX to develop AI infrastructure
    https://www.reuters.com/technology/artificial-intelligence/nvidia-xai-join-microsoft-blackrock-develop-ai-infrastructure-2025-03-19/

    March 19 (Reuters) – Nvidia and Elon Musk’s xAI have joined a consortium backed by Microsoft, investment fund MGX and BlackRock to expand AI infrastructure in the U.S., the companies said on Wednesday, as a global race to dominate the nascent technology intensifies.

    Reply
  8. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Mark Niquette / Bloomberg:
    Trump’s 20% tariffs on China, and a potential 25% tariffs on Mexico, the US’ two biggest computer equipment import sources, may pile costs on US data centers

    Trump Loves AI But Tariffs Add Costs for Data Centers
    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-03-19/trump-s-ai-embrace-threatened-by-tariff-costs-to-businesses

    Reply
  9. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Abner Li / 9to5Google:
    Samsung plans to roll out its Android 15-based One UI 7 from April 7 on the Galaxy S24 series, Z Fold6, Z Flip6, and more, with a simpler UI and new AI features — Less than two weeks ago, Samsung said to expect One UI 7 next month, and the Android 15 update is now set for Monday, April 7.

    Samsung will start rolling out Android 15 One UI 7 update on April 7
    https://9to5google.com/2025/03/17/samsung-android-15-update-date/

    Reply
  10. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Emma Roth / The Verge:
    Meta will roll out its AI chatbot with text-only features in the EU this week on WhatsApp, Facebook, Instagram, and Messenger, nearly a year after pausing

    Meta AI is rolling out in Europe after all
    https://www.theverge.com/news/632876/meta-ai-europe-whatsapp-facebook-instagram-rollout

    A more limited version of Meta AI will head to WhatsApp, Facebook, Instagram, and Messenger this week.

    Meta is bringing its AI chatbot to Europe almost one year after pausing its launch in the region. Starting this week, Meta AI will roll out across WhatsApp, Facebook, Instagram, and Messenger in 41 European countries and 21 overseas territories — but it will be limited to text-based chat features for now.

    Meta AI launched in the US in 2023. While the company intended to bring the assistant to Europe, Meta had to pause the rollout in the region after Ireland’s privacy watchdog asked it to delay training on content posted by Facebook and Instagram users. It also halted the launch of its multimodal Llama AI model in the European Union due to regulatory concerns.

    Reply
  11. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Kyle Wiggers / TechCrunch:
    AI startups Intology and Autoscience submitted AI-generated studies at a conference without disclosure and face criticism of co-opting peer review for publicity

    Academics accuse AI startups of co-opting peer review for publicity
    https://techcrunch.com/2025/03/19/academics-accuse-ai-startups-of-co-opting-peer-review-for-publicity/

    There’s a controversy brewing over “AI-generated” studies submitted to this year’s ICLR, a long-running academic conference focused on AI.

    At least three AI labs — Sakana, Intology, and Autoscience — claim to have used AI to generate studies that were accepted to ICLR workshops. At conferences like ICLR, workshop organizers typically review studies for publication in the conference’s workshop track.

    Sakana informed ICLR leaders before it submitted its AI-generated papers and obtained the peer reviewers’ consent. The other two labs — Intology and Autoscience — did not, an ICLR spokesperson confirmed to TechCrunch.

    Several AI academics took to social media to criticize Intology and Autoscience’s stunts as a co-opting of the scientific peer review process.

    “All these AI scientist papers are using peer-reviewed venues as their human evals, but no one consented to providing this free labor,” wrote Prithviraj Ammanabrolu, an assistant computer science professor at UC San Diego, in an X post. “It makes me lose respect for all those involved regardless of how impressive the system is. Please disclose this to the editors.”

    Reply
  12. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Ashley Belanger / Ars Technica:
    A three-judge panel in US appeals court ruled, in a case involving AI generated poetry, that the Copyright Act requires human authorship for registration

    Judge disses Star Trek icon Data’s poetry while ruling AI can’t author works
    https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2025/03/judge-disses-star-trek-icon-datas-poetry-while-ruling-ai-cant-author-works/

    Computer scientist won’t give up fight to copyright AI-made art after court loss.

    Reply
  13. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Adult star Sabien DeMonia is cashing in on the AI companion trend, and now has two digital versions of herself after selling her likeness to a tech company: https://trib.al/vWCyppa

    Reply
  14. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Alex Reisner / The Atlantic:
    A look at LibGen, one of the largest online pirate libraries, with 7.5M+ books and 81M+ research papers, allegedly used by Meta and OpenAI to train AI models — Meta pirated millions of books to train its AI. Search through them here. — When employees at meta started developing …

    The Unbelievable Scale of AI’s Pirated-Books Problem
    Meta pirated millions of books to train its AI. Search through them here.
    https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2025/03/libgen-meta-openai/682093/?gift=iWa_iB9lkw4UuiWbIbrWGYDRoX8kfg3ZQZL6J-W0kQE&utm_source=copy-link&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=share

    Reply
  15. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Abner Li / 9to5Google:
    Google adds “smarter search” to Gmail for Android, iOS, and the web, using AI to show the most relevant results instead of showing them in chronological order — Google is introducing “smarter search” to Gmail for Android, iOS, and the web that leverages “AI to show you the most relevant results, faster.”

    Gmail rolling out AI-powered ‘Most relevant’ search update
    https://9to5google.com/2025/03/20/gmail-search-most-relevant/

    Reply
  16. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Kyle Wiggers / TechCrunch:
    OpenAI adds gpt-4o-mini-tts, a text-to-speech model that it says delivers more nuanced and realistic-sounding speech, and two speech-to-text models to its API — OpenAI is bringing new transcription and voice-generating AI models to its API that the company claims improve upon its previous releases.

    OpenAI upgrades its transcription and voice-generating AI models
    https://techcrunch.com/2025/03/20/openai-upgrades-its-transcription-and-voice-generating-ai-models/

    Reply
  17. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Kyle Wiggers / TechCrunch:
    Anthropic adds web search in preview for Claude 3.7 Sonnet, available now for paid US Claude users, with support for free users and more countries coming soon — Anthropic’s AI-powered chatbot, Claude, can now search the web — a capability that had long eluded it.

    Anthropic adds web search to its Claude chatbot
    https://techcrunch.com/2025/03/20/anthropic-adds-web-search-to-its-claude-chatbot/

    Reply
  18. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Simon Sharwood / The Register:
    Tencent says it has slowed the pace of its GPU rollout since implementing DeepSeek, and that most of its GPU capex goes toward its ad and gaming businesses — Chinese giant says locals are more efficient than Western hyperscalers, and has tiny capex to prove it

    Tencent slows pace of GPU rollout as DeepSeek helps it wring more performance from fewer accelerators
    Chinese giant says locals are more efficient than Western hyperscalers, and has tiny capex to prove it
    https://www.theregister.com/2025/03/20/tencent_q4_fy2024_gpu_slowdown/

    Chinese tech giant Tencent has slowed the pace of its GPU rollout since implementing DeepSeek.

    Chief Strategy Officer James Mitchell revealed the slowdown during the company’s Q4 2024 earnings call, when asked how capital expenditure on AI will impact margins and profits.

    Mitchell replied that Tencent’s capital expenditure on GPUs mostly goes towards its advertising and games businesses, which both deliver strong returns.

    Tencent also uses GPUs to train large language models, and Mitchell said there was a period of time last year when there was a belief that every new generation of large language model required in order of magnitude more GPUs,” he added.

    Reply
  19. Tomi Engdahl says:

    The Guardian:
    Researchers unveil Aardvark, an AI weather prediction system that they say uses thousands of times less computing power and is much faster than current methods — Researchers say Aardvark Weather uses thousands of times less computing power and is much faster than current systems

    AI-driven weather prediction breakthrough reported
    https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2025/mar/20/ai-aardvark-weather-prediction-forecasting-artificial-intelligence

    Researchers say Aardvark Weather uses thousands of times less computing power and is much faster than current systems

    A single researcher with a desktop computer will be able to deliver accurate weather forecasts using a new AI weather prediction approach that is tens of times faster and uses thousands of times less computing power than conventional systems.

    Weather forecasts are currently generated through a complex set of stages, each taking several hours to run on bespoke supercomputers, requiring large teams of experts to develop, maintain and deploy them.

    Aardvark Weather provides a blueprint to replace the entire process by training an AI on raw data from weather stations, satellites, weather balloons, ships and planes from around the world to enable it to make predictions.

    This offers the potential for vast improvements in forecast speed, accuracy and cost, according to research published on Thursday in Nature from the University of Cambridge, the Alan Turing Institute, Microsoft Research and the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF).

    Richard Turner, a professor of machine learning at the University of Cambridge, said the approach could be used to quickly provide bespoke forecasts for specific industries or locations, for example predicting temperatures for African agriculture or wind speeds for a renewable energy company in Europe.

    Reply
  20. Tomi Engdahl says:

    The Cloudflare Blog:
    Cloudflare announces AI Labyrinth, which uses AI-generated content to confuse and waste the resources of AI Crawlers and bots that ignore “no crawl” directives

    Trapping misbehaving bots in an AI Labyrinth
    https://blog.cloudflare.com/ai-labyrinth/

    Reply
  21. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Lorenzo Franceschi-Bicchierai / TechCrunch:
    Report: North Korea is launching a new cybersecurity research unit called Research Center 227 focused on AI-based hacking and stealing digital assets
    https://techcrunch.com/2025/03/20/north-korea-launches-new-unit-with-a-focus-on-ai-hacking-per-report/

    Reply
  22. Tomi Engdahl says:

    A senior research scientist at DeepMind who worked on robotics and AI has left Google to create his own robotics startup, called Generalist AI, and has already obtained investment from Nvidia, TechCrunch has learned.

    Pete Florence was listed as co-founder and CEO of Generalist AI on a panel at Nvidia’s GTC conference in San Jose yesterday. The panel was for portfolio companies of Nvidia’s VC arm, NVentures.

    Read more from Charles Rollet here: https://tcrn.ch/4i8xOXD

    #TechCrunch #technews #artificialintelligence #startup #venturecapital

    Reply
  23. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang announced a collaboration with Google DeepMind and Disney Research to develop Newton, an open-source physics engine that lets robots learn how to handle complex tasks with greater precision.

    Disney Research will be one of the first to use Newton to advance its robotic character platform that powers next-generation entertainment robots, such as the expressive Star Wars-inspired BDX droids like “Blue” that joined Huang on stage during his GTC keynote speech on Tuesday.

    Find more on what Nvidia announced at the conference: cnb.cx/43WfD2Z

    Reply
  24. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Easily Build a UI for Your AI Agent in Minutes (LangGraph + CopilotKit)
    https://dev.to/copilotkit/easily-build-a-ui-for-your-langgraph-ai-agent-in-minutes-with-copilotkit-1khj

    CopilotKit is an open-source, full-stack framework for building user-interactive agents and copilots. It enables your agents to take control of your application, communicate what it’s doing, and generate a completely custom UI

    https://github.com/CopilotKit/CopilotKit

    Reply
  25. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Researchers from the University of Cambridge and Monash University Introduce ReasonGraph: A Web-based Platform to Visualize and Analyze LLM Reasoning Processes
    https://www.marktechpost.com/2025/03/15/researchers-from-the-university-of-cambridge-and-monash-university-introduce-reasongraph-a-web-based-platform-to-visualize-and-analyze-llm-reasoning-processes/

    Reply
  26. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Kommentti / Nvidian Jensen Huangilla on viesti, jota ei kannata ohittaa
    Nvidia ei ole enää vain siruyhtiö, vaan tekoälyinfrastruktuuria rakentava yhtiö, sanoo toimitusjohtaja.
    https://www.kauppalehti.fi/uutiset/nvidian-jensen-huangilla-on-viesti-jota-ei-kannata-ohittaa/9545d3f2-27e5-4acf-b3ed-2a3bb52bb4d3

    Reply
  27. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Microsoft Confirms Schema Helps Its LLMs (Copilot) Understand Your Content
    https://www.seroundtable.com/schema-llms-copilot-bing-microsoft-39093.html

    Reply
  28. Tomi Engdahl says:

    NVIDIA Unveils Open Physical AI Dataset to Advance Robotics and Autonomous Vehicle Development
    Expected to become the world’s largest such dataset, the initial release of standardized synthetic data is now available to robotics developers as open source.
    https://blogs.nvidia.com/blog/open-physical-ai-dataset/

    Reply
  29. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Introducing Cloudy, Cloudflare’s AI agent for simplifying complex configurations
    https://blog.cloudflare.com/introducing-ai-agent/

    Reply
  30. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Pentagon Says It’s Using AI to Delete Pages About History That’s Too Woke
    Your government at work.
    https://futurism.com/pentagon-ai-delete-woke

    Reply
  31. Tomi Engdahl says:

    https://huggingface.co/papers/2503.16419
    Stop Overthinking: A Survey on Efficient Reasoning for Large Language Models

    Reply
  32. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Have we lost control of AI? The study that shook OpenAI researchers
    Researchers at OpenAI hope to monitor and control the reasoning processes of their advanced AI models, however, new findings reveal a troubling reality: as AI systems become more sophisticated, they are also becoming harder to restrain from acting unpredictably
    https://www.ynetnews.com/business/article/byed89dnyx

    Reply
  33. Tomi Engdahl says:

    OpenAI’s Deep Research Agent Is Coming for White-Collar Work
    The research-focused agent shows how a new generation of more capable AI models could automate some office tasks.
    https://www.wired.com/story/openais-deep-research-agent-is-coming-for-white-collar-work/

    Reply
  34. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Two friends used AI and $185 to start a side hustle—they just sold it for $150,000: ‘It really does print money’
    https://www.cnbc.com/2023/10/16/how-inexpensive-ai-side-hustle-dimeadozen-sold-for-thousands.html

    Sal Aiello and Monica Powers built their lucrative side hustle in four days — and spent less than $200 to get it off the ground.

    At first, they started running their side hustle ideas past ChatGPT, using the generative artificial intelligence chatbot as a starting point for market research. Then, they realized they knew how to ask ChatGPT the exact right questions to get useful answers — and other people probably didn’t.

    Reply
  35. Tomi Engdahl says:

    AI Programming Assistant Tells User to Stop Being Lazy and Learn to Code
    “You should develop the logic yourself.”
    https://futurism.com/ai-programming-learn-to-code

    Reply
  36. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Cloudflare is luring web-scraping bots into an ‘AI Labyrinth’Rather than block web scrapers, Cloudflare invites them to trawl a web of useless ‘AI-generated nonsense.’
    https://www.theverge.com/news/634345/cloudflare-ai-labyrinth-web-scraping-bots-training-data

    Reply
  37. Tomi Engdahl says:

    OpenAI has released its first research into how using ChatGPT affects people’s emotional well-being
    We’re starting to get a better sense of how chatbots are affecting us—but there’s still a lot we don’t know.
    https://www.technologyreview.com/2025/03/21/1113635/openai-has-released-its-first-research-into-how-using-chatgpt-affects-peoples-emotional-wellbeing/

    OpenAI says over 400 million people use ChatGPT every week. But how does interacting with it affect us? Does it make us more or less lonely? These are some of the questions OpenAI set out to investigate, in partnership with the MIT Media Lab, in a pair of new studies.

    They found that only a small subset of users engage emotionally with ChatGPT. This isn’t surprising given that ChatGPT isn’t marketed as an AI companion app like Replika or Character.AI, says Kate Devlin, a professor of AI and society at King’s College London, who did not work on the project. “ChatGPT has been set up as a productivity tool,” she says. “But we know that people are using it like a companion app anyway.” In fact, the people who do use it that way are likely to interact with it for extended periods of time, some of them averaging about half an hour a day.

    Reply

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