Ahead of the debut of Apple's private AI cloud next week, dubbed Private Cloud Compute, the technology giant says it will pay security researchers up to
The company invites security researchers to vet Private Cloud Compute, a server system that will process the most complex generative AI tasks for Apple Intelligence.
In June, Apple announced its entrance into the generative-AI race in the most Cupertino way possible, rebranding the technology "Apple Intelligence." Giannandrea has been shaping Apple's "AI" behind the scenes,
Apple's Craig Federighi explains Apple's approach to photo editing and why "even the ability to remove a water bottle led to lots of debates internally."
Apple on Wednesday released its next set of artificial intelligence (AI) features for beta-testing by developers, with some new AI features set to be released publicly in the iOS 18.1 update next week.
Apple Intelligence (at least for now) doesn’t allow users to add AI-generated manipulations to images like competing services do. Any images that have been edited using the new object removal feature will also be tagged as “Modified with Clean Up” in the Photos app and embedded with metadata to flag that they have been altered.
Apple has released an unprecedented amount of information on the security of its new AI systems, along with a commitment to pay up to $1 million to anyone who finds a problem with them. The new information, tools and rewards are part of Apple’s plan to ensure that its new Apple Intelligence systems are private and secure.
Kuo is bullish on Apple's yet-to-be-released AI features but said it would likely take new hardware iterations to grow iPhone sales.
iOS 18.2 will bring the second batch of Apple Intelligence features to users. The first batch, including features like a slightly smarter Siri and notification summaries, is set to launch next week with the official release of iOS 18.1.
During Apple’s recent annual iPhone event, where the company announced its new iPhone 16 series, it also unveiled a slew of new wearables and a new silicon strategy.
Apple's release notes for the iOS 18.2 and iPadOS 18.2 developer betas are available on Apple's website, but they don't list all the new features. And there's quite a few in this release, so here's an overview (focusing on Apple Intelligence).