Apple could be forced to detail more of its AI activity, after a proposal asks shareholders to expose whether Apple is truly working ethically in the field when training Apple Intelligence.
Wall Street is mainly focused on Apple's iPhone sales in China and any guidance related to its March quarter, which could include iPhone SE4 sales.
Researchers are developing robots that promise to automate a process that has always relied on human workers—and bees.
The AI tech DeepSeek used to train its reasoning model might be just what Apple needs for major Apple Intelligence developments on iPhone.
Apple is expected to report tepid quarterly revenue growth on Thursday as its slow roll-out of artificial intelligence features and tough Chinese competition weighed on iPhone demand during the crucial holiday-shopping season.
Existing open-source AI approaches are still not entirely open, which is a challenge that former Google and Apple engineers alongside a coalition of 13 universities are looking to solve.
Shares of Apple charged higher on Monday, bucking the trend as its large-cap tech peers tumbled on concerns about overspending on AI.
The news of the focus on AI came as part of a leaked memo from Apple's head of AI John Giannandrea. According to memo, the AI group is "focused on revamping the underlying infrastructure of Siri and improving the company's in-house AI models."
Apple released a software update for iPhones, iPads and Macs that turns Apple Intelligence on by default for users with supported devices.
These days, nothing is certain about the tech market or the world at large. Even Nvidia's seemingly bulletproof stock took a hammering on Monday, enduring