The big headlines about job losses tend to focus on the big employers. Layoffs at UPS, 48,000 — at Intel, 24,000. Amazon is cutting up to 30,000 workers, and Target, 1,800. These pink slips are being ...
The Amazon retail site's conditions of use prohibit “any use of data mining, robots, or similar data gathering and extraction tools.” In November 2024, Amazon asked Perplexity to stop deploying AI ...
The web archive Common Crawl has been quietly funneling paywalled articles to AI companies—and lying to publishers about it.
Automation was meant to lighten the load, not empty out the payroll. As Amazon axes 14,000 jobs and plans to cut tens of ...
Most jobs at risk are entry-level, white-collar roles that can be performed more easily by computers, a World Economic Forum analysis found. The org cited research estimating that AI could replace 53% ...
Amazon, for example, doubled its workforce during the pandemic, ballooning to 1.6 million employees by 2021. Now CEO Andy ...
Massachusetts robotics entrepreneurs focus on specialized machines, while West Coast companies pour billions into humanoid ...
Amazon's advanced robotics boost warehouse safety, productivity, and speed—driving faster deliveries and supporting future ...
Instead of reformatting society around products trained on human work without consent, we should tell vendors that enough is enough.
Dreame’s newest mop-bot has a lot of cool ideas, but fails to deliver on some of the most basic robot vacuum abilities.
Retail giants are laying off workers or keeping headcount flat as they pledge to become leaner businesses where artificial intelligence does more of the work.