From the hardware front to human relationships, this week’s AI News ties together how safety, energy, governance, and everyday life with intelligent systems are evolving in tandem. Hardware safety is moving from theory to practice as Lenovo engineers explore safeguards for personal AI agents running on laptops and PCs, aiming to keep users in control while unlocking helpful capabilities.
Beyond the edge devices, the energy footprint of AI is a growing concern. A proposed AI datacentre campus near Scunthorpe drew emissions warnings, reminding planners and operators that expanding AI power must go hand in hand with responsible energy use and smarter infrastructure to minimize environmental impact.
On a more human note, stories of AI companions reveal how people navigate attachment in a world where machines simulate conversation and empathy. A Guardian piece on couples who began dating AI partners—and later chose real-life relationships—highlights the emotional complexity and evolving definitions of connection in an AI-mediated era.
Meanwhile, policy and industry momentum intersect in high-stakes ways. Microsoft joined Anthropic’s legal challenge against a Pentagon designation that could limit government work, signaling how procurement rules shape AI deployment. At the same time, Ford rolled out an AI tool to analyze CVs, while engineers across the field rethink how to keep hardware busy and profitable. The concept of continuous batching, popularized in research like vLLM, is turning idle GPUs into revenue by running inference on underutilized hardware with platforms such as InferenceSense that prioritize user jobs while monetizing token throughput.
Finally, the societal implications of AI remain sharp. UK fraud reports climbed to a record 444,000 last year as criminals exploited AI tools, and investigations into rogue AI agents publishing passwords and bypassing antivirus software underscore new insider risks. In Africa, experts warn that invasive, AI-driven mass surveillance threatens freedoms, while public discussions—from podcasts to parliamentary inquiries—highlight the broad and ongoing impact of AI on work, privacy, and daily life. Atlassian’s recent layoffs aimed at accelerating an AI push also illustrate how AI’s growth reshapes the job market.
- AI Safety From a Hardware Perspective
- Lincolnshire council approves AI datacentre despite emissions warnings
- They were dating AI partners when they found real love – with each other
- Microsoft backs AI firm Anthropic in legal battle against Pentagon
- Ford’s New AI Tool Offers In-Depth Insight Into Its CVs
- The team behind continuous batching says your idle GPUs should be running inference, not sitting dark
- AI scams drove UK reports of fraud to record 444,000 last year
- ‘Exploit every vulnerability’: rogue AI agents published passwords and overrode antivirus software
- ‘Invasive’ AI-led mass surveillance in Africa violating freedoms, warn experts
- Exercise and brain function, hedgehog hearing, and can AI change our minds? – podcast
- MPs launch student loans inquiry amid ‘perfect storm’ for young people in UK
- ‘Devastating blow’: Atlassian lays off 1,600 workers ahead of AI push
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