Articles from WebProNews

Primary tabs

Sam Altman’s Frustrated Admission: It Still Takes Longer to Train a Human Than to Build an AI

Sam Altman, the chief executive of OpenAI, made a characteristically provocative remark this week that has reignited debate about the trajectory of artificial intelligence development and its relationship to human cognition. In a post on X, Altman expressed visible frustration at the fact that it still takes longer to train a human being than it does to train an AI system — a statement that drew immediate and intense reactions from technologists, ethicists, and the broader public alike.

Binance’s Iran Problem: How Internal Compliance Failures Led to a Wave of Employee Firings and Renewed Regulatory Scrutiny

The world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange is once again grappling with questions about its willingness to enforce sanctions compliance — this time from within its own ranks. Binance, the trading platform that agreed to a landmark $4.3 billion settlement with U.S. authorities in 2023, has fired a group of employees connected to alleged efforts to serve Iranian users in violation of international sanctions, according to a report by The New York Times.

Spotify Wants to Know Why You Listen — And That Could Change Everything About Your Music Feed

For years, Spotify users have wrestled with a familiar frustration: the algorithm doesn’t understand context. You play a children’s lullaby playlist to get your toddler to sleep, and suddenly your Discover Weekly is flooded with nursery rhymes. You throw on ambient noise to focus at work, and your year-end Wrapped looks like you spent twelve months meditating.

The Green Bubble Gets a Lock: Apple Finally Brings End-to-End Encryption to Cross-Platform RCS Messaging

For years, the divide between Apple’s iMessage and Android’s messaging platforms has been one of the most visible — and most ridiculed — fault lines in consumer technology. The infamous green bubble, signaling a text sent to or from an Android device, has carried with it not just a color difference but a meaningful degradation in privacy and functionality.

PromptSpy: How Android Malware Is Now Weaponizing Google’s Gemini AI to Steal Your Data

A newly discovered Android malware strain called PromptSpy has earned a grim distinction: it is believed to be the first known mobile threat to integrate Google’s Gemini artificial intelligence model directly into its attack chain. Rather than simply exfiltrating raw data from infected devices, PromptSpy uses Gemini to intelligently parse and extract the most sensitive information from users’ notifications — a technique that marks a significant evolution in how cybercriminals are incorporating generative AI into their operations.

Winter Storm Wreaks Havoc on U.S. Air Travel: Inside the Cascading Flight Cancellations That Stranded Thousands

A powerful winter storm barreling across the eastern United States has thrown the nation’s air-travel system into disarray, canceling thousands of flights, stranding passengers at major hub airports, and exposing once again the fragility of American aviation infrastructure when confronted with severe weather. The disruption, which began building in late February 2026, has created what industry trackers are calling one of the most significant weather-related travel disruptions of the winter season.

The Local SEO Imperative: Why Small Businesses That Ignore Search Optimization Are Leaving Revenue on the Table

For decades, small business owners relied on word-of-mouth referrals, local newspaper ads, and the occasional Yellow Pages listing to attract customers. That playbook is now obsolete. Today, the storefront that doesn’t appear in a Google search result might as well not exist — and the data backing that assertion is staggering.

AI-Fueled Equipment Spending Surges as American Businesses Bet Big on Data Centers While Housing Falters

American businesses are pouring money into equipment at a pace that has surprised economists, driven largely by an insatiable appetite for artificial intelligence infrastructure. The surge in capital expenditure on data centers, servers, and related hardware is more than compensating for persistent weakness in residential construction, painting a complex but ultimately optimistic picture of the U.S. economy heading into the second half of 2025.

Anthropic Sounds the Alarm: Chinese AI Labs Are Harvesting Claude’s Intelligence as Washington Wrestles With Chip Export Controls

Anthropic, the San Francisco-based artificial intelligence company behind the Claude chatbot, has publicly accused Chinese AI laboratories of systematically extracting knowledge from its models — a practice known in the industry as “distillation” — reigniting a fierce debate over whether American AI superiority is being quietly siphoned away even as policymakers struggle to tighten export controls on advanced semiconductors.

Wall Street’s Two-Speed Economy: Why the Gap Between Rich and Poor Consumers Could Define Markets Through 2026

The American consumer has long been treated as a monolith by Wall Street strategists — a single engine powering roughly 70% of gross domestic product. But a growing body of evidence suggests that the consumer economy has fractured into two distinct tiers, and the divergence between wealthy and lower-income households is becoming one of the most consequential variables for equity markets heading into 2026.