Anthropic Hits $1 Trillion Valuation: The AI Race Just Got Wild
Imagine waking up to find that a company you barely heard about a year ago is now worth $1 trillion. That’s exactly what’s happening with Anthropic.
Imagine waking up to find that a company you barely heard about a year ago is now worth $1 trillion. That’s exactly what’s happening with Anthropic.
There’s a quiet shift happening in Nigeria’s business space, and if you blink, you might miss it. For years, companies have been testing artificial intelligence. Running small pilots. Trying out tools. Watching from the sidelines.
While many countries are sprinting to build artificial intelligence, Mauritius just hit pause and asked a bold question: “What if we get the rules right before things go wrong?”
If you’ve been wondering when kids in Nigeria would start getting real exposure to Artificial Intelligence… it’s finally happening. A new initiative called Lado Smart Kids has just been launched, and it’s bringing AI learning directly to children in Ogun State.
Something big is quietly brewing in southeastern Nigeria, and it could change how the world sees African tech talent. In Enugu State, the government isn’t just talking about Artificial Intelligence anymore. They’re planning to build an entire AI institute.
Something unusual is happening in the AI world, and it’s not another chatbot getting smarter. It’s a chatbot… refusing to talk.
Something big just happened at Snap Inc., and it’s not just another tech layoff story. It’s a signal. A signal that AI isn’t just changing how companies work… it’s changing who they need.
If you think the AI race is all about cool chatbots and funny poems, think again. Behind the scenes, a high-stakes standoff just went down between two of the world’s biggest tech titans: Apple and Elon Musk.
Something unusual is happening in the AI world. Two of the biggest players, OpenAI and Anthropic, are no longer aligned. And the reason?
What happens when you build AI for people who don’t have perfect internet, expensive laptops, or unlimited data? In Nigeria, that question is no longer theoretical; it is shaping an entirely new kind of innovation