The tech rally is looking tired heading into second-quarter earnings season.
By Jason Lange and Courtney Rozen WASHINGTON, June 10 (Reuters) - Half of Americans fear that the rise of AI could put them or someone in their household out of work, according to a new Reuters/Ipsos ...
Companies have spent billions preparing for the AI revolution. They’ve invested in software, consultants, implementation ...
Justin Spelhaug runs Microsoft's $4B education AI effort. He says students' fear of AI taking their jobs is rational and the skill that beats it isn't technical.
Seema Shah, Chief Global Strategist at Principal Asset Management, recently pushed back against the growing chorus of ...
Roughly two-thirds of Americans believe AI is advancing at too fast a rate — even as a majority of adults are using chatbots, according to a new Pew Research Center study examining U.S. sentiment ...
Josh Schaefer, an analyst at Barron’s, went on Fox Business’s The Bottom Line this week with a blunt message for anyone ...
More than 50% of Americans believe artificial intelligence might cause someone in their household to lose their job, according to a poll conducted by Reuters and Ipsos. Those concerned were spread out ...
Investors learned to live with tariff uncertainty last year. Now, it's all about coping with the threat of AI changing everything. Investors learned to deal with tariff tumult last year. Now, they ...
A bold claim from the chip giant could quietly defuse one of the loudest fights over AI's footprint.
More than half of respondents in an Reuters/Ipsos poll said that they feared AI technology could cost someone in their household a job.
A product designer share how embracing her inner "mad scientist" and experimenting with AI helped her land a job at Adobe, ...