Hosted by Ben Byford, The Machine Ethics Podcast brings together interviews with academics, authors, business leaders, designers and engineers on the subject of autonomous algorithms, artificial intelligence, machine learning, and technology’s impact on society. Moral agents with Jen Semler This month, Ben met in-person with Jen Semler. They chatted about what AI is, philosopher and […]
The Machine Ethics podcast: moral agents with Jen Semler
Related articles
- UN opens its first Global Dialogue on AI Governance in Geneva
The United Nations convened its first Global Dialogue on AI Governance in Geneva on July 6, a two-day session established by the UN General Assembly as the first intergovernmental platform dedicated to AI. The UN said it brings together all 193 member states alongside private-sector and civil-society participants. The UN's Independent International Scientific Panel on AI presented a preliminary report to governments.
- UN science panel warns AI is outpacing safeguards as governance summit nears
In a July 5 feature previewing its Geneva meetings, UN News published interviews with the co-chairs of the new Global Dialogue on AI Governance and the UN's Independent International Scientific Panel on AI. Panel co-chair Yoshua Bengio said AI capabilities are outpacing scientific understanding and that science currently cannot guarantee advanced AI will not cause catastrophic harm. Co-chair Maria Ressa described AI-amplified disinformation as an 'information Armageddon.'
- xAI makes Grok Speech-to-Text and Text-to-Speech APIs generally available
xAI moved its Grok Speech-to-Text and Text-to-Speech APIs to general availability, giving developers audio transcription across 25 languages with batch and streaming modes plus natural-sounding speech generation. The move targets enterprise voice-agent developers building on the Grok platform. It is part of xAI's broader July 2026 developer-API expansion.
- Anthropic moves to close loopholes Chinese firms use to access Claude
The Financial Times reported Anthropic has stepped up efforts to detect and shut down unauthorized Claude access by Chinese companies, identifying workarounds such as routing employee accounts through overseas subsidiaries and reimbursing engineers for personal subscriptions accessed via VPNs. Anthropic's detection now monitors indicators like user time zones and targets relay services. The company frames the activity as distillation attacks meant to extract Claude's capabilities.
References
This article was originally published at AIHub. For the full piece, read the original article.
Discussion
Sign in to comment. Your account must be at least 1 day old.