OpenAI and Anthropic Are at War — Over Who Pays When AI Kills
Something unusual is happening in the AI world. Two of the biggest players, OpenAI and Anthropic, are no longer aligned. And the reason?
Something unusual is happening in the AI world. Two of the biggest players, OpenAI and Anthropic, are no longer aligned. And the reason?
A few months ago, making a cinematic scene meant cameras, actors, lighting rigs, editors… and a lot of money. Now?
It was supposed to be a big win. A fast-rising AI startup. A multi-billion-dollar exit. And one of the biggest tech companies in the world, Meta writing the cheque. But now? The story has taken a sharp, almost cinematic turn.
AI is moving fast. Governments? Not always. But across Africa, something interesting is happening. Instead of rushing to create complex, standalone AI laws, many countries are taking a smarter and faster route. They’re regulating AI through something they already have: data protection laws.
Something big is changing inside Nigeria’s financial system. For years, banks and fintech companies have relied heavily on manual processes and basic monitoring tools to track suspicious financial activity. But as digital banking, instant payments, and fintech platforms continue to grow, financial crime has also become faster, smarter, and harder to detect.
Imagine spending billions of dollars building one of the smartest AI systems in the world… only to discover that someone might be quietly studying it, question by question, until they can recreate something similar. That’s essentially the story unfolding right now in the global AI race.