Google won't be forced to spin off its popular Chrome browser but must share data with competitors, a federal judge ruled on Tuesday.
Why it matters: Not having to sell Chrome is a major win for Google in the landmark antitrust case the Justice Department brought against the company back in 2020.
The National Football League has struck a content licensing deal with sports business news outlet Front Office Sports, FOS founder and CEO Adam White told Axios.
Why it matters: It's the first time the NFL has partnered with a sports business-focused news outlet to share content.
The Walt Disney Company on Tuesdaysaid it has agreed to pay $10 million to settle a children's privacy lawsuit with the Federal Trade Commission related to videos it uploaded on YouTube mostly during the pandemic.
Why it matters: It's the first known case in which a YouTube content provider has settled with the FTC over children's privacy violations since the agency's landmark settlement with YouTube and its parent Google in 2019.
Nearly 19,000 state and local government offices could lose access to vital cyber threat intelligence and affordable security tools by the end of the month.
Why it matters: Adversarial hackers have increasingly targeted local governments, law enforcement, utilities and schools in recent years.
Anthropic on Tuesday announced that it's raised $13 billion in new venture capital funding at a $183 billion post-money valuation.
Why it matters: This makes Anthropic the world's fourth-most valuable startup, tripling its valuation from this past spring, and gives it more capital firepower to compete with AI market leader OpenAI.
Condé Nast on Tuesday named Chloe Malle as its new head of editorial content of Vogue U.S., marking the most significant step taken by longtime Vogue leader Anna Wintour in mapping her succession plan.
Why it matters: Malle was a predictable pick for Wintour, who — since stepping down as Vogue's editor-in-chief in June — has mostly named Vogue loyalists to top positions within Condé Nast.
ChatGPT guardrails for teens and people in emotional distress will roll out by the end of the year, OpenAI promised Tuesday.
Why it matters: Stories about ChatGPT encouraging suicide or murder or failing to appropriately intervene have been accumulating recently, and people close to those harmed are blaming or suing OpenAI.
Several readers have asked why we're so AI-obsessed in our columns and business planning.
Our response: Imagine knowing electricity or the internet were coming ... before both fully and wholly upended business, culture and life. That's the AI moment we see unfolding today.
Why it matters: We want to pull back the curtain on what we're seeing and thinking, to encourage you to be equally curious and obsessed.