AI News Roundup – August 11, 2025
AI’s promise of opportunity masks a reality of managed displacement
Source: AI News | VentureBeat | Published: 2025-08-10
This article expresses concerns about the societal impact of artificial intelligence beyond its technological capabilities. The piece argues that we need to critically examine AI’s broader implications and potential displacement effects rather than simply focusing on technical advancement.
Robotics founder Brett Adcock’s weekly round-up of AI and robotics
Source: Brett Adcock | X.com | Published: 2025-08-10
A useful summary of major news from Meta, Google, OpenAI, Figure, Microsoft, Z ai, Skild AI, Limx Dynamics, Syncere, Daxo Robotics, X-Humanoid, and more.
Suvianna Grecu, AI for Change: Without rules, AI risks ‘trust crisis’
Source: AI News | Published: 2025-08-08
Suvianna Grecu, Founder of AI for Change Foundation, warns that the rapid deployment of AI without proper governance could lead to a “trust crisis.” She emphasises that prioritising speed over safety in AI development risks “automating harm at scale” and calls for strong regulatory frameworks.
Alan Turing Institute: Humanities are key to the future of AI
Source: AI News | Published: 2025-08-07
The Alan Turing Institute, along with several partner organisations, has launched a new initiative called ‘Doing AI Differently’ that emphasises the importance of incorporating humanities and human-centred approaches in AI development. This marks a shift from treating AI purely as a mathematical challenge to recognising the crucial role of human perspectives in shaping AI’s future.
What Is NVIDIA’s Three-Computer Solution for Robotics?
Source: NVIDIA Blog | Published: 2025-08-08
NVIDIA has introduced a concept called “Physical AI” that focuses on implementing artificial intelligence in real-world autonomous systems, including robots, visual AI agents, and automated industrial facilities. This development represents a significant milestone in merging AI with physical applications.
OpenAI has finally released open-weight language models
Source: Artificial intelligence – MIT Technology Review | Published: 2025-08-05
OpenAI has released its first open-weight large language models, called “gpt-oss,” since GPT-2 in 2019. These models come in two sizes, perform comparably to OpenAI’s o3-mini and o4-mini models, and can be freely downloaded and modified, unlike their web-based counterparts.
News Wrap: WK / Harvey, Hebbia, Litera, Frontline +
Source: Artificial Lawyer | Published: 2025-08-09
Wolters Kluwer has entered into a content licensing agreement with Harvey that covers their US and German content. Due to the incomplete nature of the source text, additional details about the agreement and other mentioned companies (Hebbia, Litera, Frontline) are not available.
Errors found in US judge’s withdrawn decision stink of AI
Source: The Verge | Published: 2025-07-25
A US district court judge had to retract his ruling in a biopharma securities case after it was discovered to contain fabricated quotes and incorrect case information. The errors were similar to mistakes found in other legal cases where AI tools were suspected to have been used, though it’s unclear if AI was involved in this instance.
Trump is bringing back the AI law moratorium
Source: The Verge | Published: 2025-07-23
The White House has revealed its new “AI Action Plan,” which includes a revival of the previously failed AI law moratorium proposal. This resurrection of the controversial policy, which had earlier failed to pass through Congress, marks a significant shift in the administration’s approach to AI regulation.
Delta Air Lines is using AI to set the maximum price you’re willing to pay
Source: The Verge | Published: 2025-07-18
Delta Air Lines is implementing AI-powered dynamic pricing technology to personalize airfare costs based on individual customer data and willingness to pay, as revealed during their earnings call. This strategic move aims to maximize revenue by customising ticket prices for each passenger.
This report was automatically generated by an LLM and then lightly edited by humans for presentation purposes. All content belongs to the respective creators.