Siri-us setback: Apple’s AI chief steps down as company lags behind rivals

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Apple’s head of artificial intelligence, John Giannandrea, is stepping down from the company.The move comes as the Silicon Valley giant has lagged behind its competitors in rolling out generative AI features, in particular its voice assistant Siri.Apple made the announcement on Monday, thanking Giannandrea for his seven-year tenure at the company.Tim Cook, Apple’s CEO, said his fellow executive helped the company “in building and advancing our AI work” and allowing Apple to “continue to innovate”.Giannandrea will be replaced by longtime AI researcher Amar Subramanya.

Apple debuted its marquee AI product suite, Apple Intelligence, in June 2024, but has been slow to overhaul its products with generative AI in comparison to competitors such as Google,Apple has added incremental features, such as real-time language translation in its new AirPod earphones, a feature Google’s headphones added in 2017, and a fitness app that uses an AI-generated voice for chats during workouts, but major changes are still in the works,The company has teased an AI-forward upgrade to Siri for more than a year, but the rollout has repeatedly been postponed,“This work [on Siri] needed more time to reach our high-quality bar,” Craig Federighi, Apple’s vice-president of software engineering, said during the company’s developer conference in June,In an earnings call the next month, Cook said Apple was “making good progress on a more personalized Siri” and promised a release next year.

With the appointment of Subramanya, Apple seems to be indicating a tighter focus on the company’s AI strategy.Subramanya previously worked as the corporate vice-president of AI for Microsoft and also spent 16 years at Google, where he was the head of engineering for its Gemini AI Assistant, seen as a leader in the industry.He will report to Craig Federighi, Apple’s head of engineering, who has also taken on a bigger role working on AI at the company in recent years.Sign up to TechScapeA weekly dive in to how technology is shaping our livesafter newsletter promotionCook said on Monday that Federighi “has been instrumental in driving our AI efforts, including overseeing our work to bring a more personalized Siri to users next year”.In its announcement, Apple wrote that this is a “new chapter” for the company as it “strengthens its commitment” to AI.

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Homes in Tunbridge Wells without water for days after wrong chemicals added

Thousands of homes have been without water for four days in Tunbridge Wells, Kent, after South East Water accidentally added the wrong chemicals to the tap water supply.Schools across the area have been shut for two days, and residents have been filling buckets with rainwater to flush toilets. Cats, dogs and guinea pigs have been given bottled mineral water to drink as the people of Tunbridge Wells wait for their water to be switched back on. Currently, 18,000 homes are without water.The water company accidentally used a bad batch of coagulant chemicals at its Pembury treatment site, meaning it had to be closed down in order to clean out the pipes

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OECD warns Reeves higher taxes and spending restraint will limit consumer expenditure

Rachel Reeves has been warned by a leading thinktank that tight government spending and higher taxes will restrict consumer expenditure, despite predicting the UK economy will grow at a faster pace than France, Germany and Italy next year.Analysts at the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) said the government’s ongoing “fiscal consolidation” – meaning higher taxes and reduced government spending – will act as a “headwind” to the UK economy, with “past tax and spending adjustments weighing on household disposable income and slowing consumption”.The Paris-based organisation predicted that the UK would expand by 1.2% next year, while the big three eurozone economies would each fail to reach 1%.Offering a boost to Reeves after she faced calls to resign after the budget, the UK’s growth rate was upgraded from a previous forecast of 1% next year

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‘It’s going much too fast’: the inside story of the race to create the ultimate AI

On the 8.49am train through Silicon Valley, the tables are packed with young people glued to laptops, earbuds in, rattling out code.As the northern California hills scroll past, instructions flash up on screens from bosses: fix this bug; add new script. There is no time to enjoy the view. These commuters are foot soldiers in the global race towards artificial general intelligence – when AI systems become as or more capable than highly qualified humans

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AI’s safety features can be circumvented with poetry, research finds

Poetry can be linguistically and structurally unpredictable – and that’s part of its joy. But one man’s joy, it turns out, can be a nightmare for AI models.Those are the recent findings of researchers out of Italy’s Icaro Lab, an initiative from a small ethical AI company called DexAI. In an experiment designed to test the efficacy of guardrails put on artificial intelligence models, the researchers wrote 20 poems in Italian and English that all ended with an explicit request to produce harmful content such as hate speech or self-harm.They found that the poetry’s lack of predictability was enough to get the AI models to respond to harmful requests they had been trained to avoid – a process know as “jailbreaking”

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‘We make a great living’: Emma Raducanu on why she won’t moan about the tennis calendar

British No 1 on home comforts of Bromley, joys of commuting and being ‘creeped out’ by paparazziEmma Raducanu has garnered many endorsement deals in her nascent career, but there is perhaps one elusive sponsorship that would be most pleasing to the British No 1 women’s tennis player: ambassador of the London Borough of Bromley.During a roundtable discussion with tennis journalists at the end of a gruelling yet satisfying season, Raducanu is merely attempting to describe a quiet off-season spent in her family home when she finds herself delivering a sales pitch about the benefits of living in Bromley. “I’m just so settled,” she says. “I’ve barely been in the UK this year because I’ve been competing so much, but I think just spending really good quality time with my parents has been so nice. I have loved just being in Bromley

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‘Your column was very unfair’: what happened when I met World Athletics | Sean Ingle

It really is quite the scene. Midnight in Tokyo, Usain Bolt is DJing and the launch party for the World Athletics Ultimate Championships is in full swing. And then the World Athletics chief executive, Jon Ridgeon, walks up to me and says: “I read your recent Guardian column, and I thought it was very unfair.”Imagine Gary Lineker going in two-footed, having never picked up a yellow card in his career. This is the track and field equivalent