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Amazon vs Perplexity: the AI agent war has arrived

about 8 hours ago
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Hello, and welcome to TechScape.I’m your host, Blake Montgomery.A tech titan and a startup are fighting over who controls the next phase of artificial intelligence.Amazon has sued Perplexity AI, a prominent artificial intelligence startup, over a shopping feature in that company’s browser that allows it to automate placing orders for users.Amazon accused Perplexity AI of covertly accessing customer accounts and disguising AI activity as human browsing.

The clash highlights an emerging debate over regulation of the growing use of AI agents, autonomous digital secretaries powered by AI, and their interaction with websites.Perplexity makes a browser called Comet, which includes an AI agent.Amazon does not want to allow Comet to shop for its users.The rejection has foundation in fact: Microsoft has found in research simulations that AI agents are quite susceptible to manipulation while shopping.The suit raises a host of questions.

Is Perplexity’s agent a rogue buyer with unacceptable security risks, or is Amazon bullying an insurgent competitor out of the game? Whose interests does a semi-autonomous AI agent represent, the customer or the agent’s maker, and who is liable for its misconduct? The next iteration of AI may hang in the balance of the suit,Perplexity is no champion of the common man against the overbearing dominance of Amazon,The startup has raised $1,5bn at a $20bn valuation, per TechCrunch,In the process, the company has vacuumed up textual content to train its various AI products with little concern for rights holders, clandestinely circumvent explicit prohibitions on unauthorized scraping.

Both Forbes and Wired have accused the company of directly plagiarizing their work with convincing documentation.The Verge has compiled a long, comprehensive list of Perplexity’s controversies.The company wants market share and money and seems willing to run roughshod over any competitor it can, tiny or titanic, to get it.Jeff Bezos, founder of Amazon, might have seen something of himself in that attitude; critics used to say he exhibited the same ruthlessness.He has, in fact, invested in Perplexity twice.

AI made notable incursions into two spheres last week: music and international relations.My colleague Aisha Down reports:Three songs generated by artificial intelligence topped music charts this week, reaching the highest spots on Spotify and Billboard charts.Walk My Walk and Livin’ on Borrowed Time by the outfit Breaking Rust topped Spotify’s “Viral 50” songs in the US, which documents the “most viral tracks right now” on a daily basis, according to the streaming service.A Dutch song, We Say No, No, No to an Asylum Center, an anti-migrant anthem by JW “Broken Veteran” that protests against the creation of new asylum centers, took the top position in Spotify’s global version of the viral chart around the same time.Breaking Rust also appeared in the top five on the global chart.

A study published last week by the streaming app Deezer estimates that 50,000 AI-generated songs are uploaded to the platform every day – 34% of all the music submitted,Podcasts might be next,An AI startup, Inception Point, is churning out 3,000 episodes per week, the Wrap reports,The startup’s distribution network has amassed 400,000 subscribers and 12m total episode downloads,The cost of each episode: $1.

In total, some 175,000 AI-generated podcast episodes exist on Apple Music and Spotify, per the Wrap.In diplomacy, AI firm Anthropic announced that it had detected and stopped a cyberattack – nearly entirely automated – by state-linked hackers in China.Aisha again:The US-based Anthropic said its coding tool, Claude Code, was “manipulated” by a Chinese state-sponsored group to attack 30 entities around the world in September, achieving a “handful of successful intrusions”.Sign up to TechScapeA weekly dive in to how technology is shaping our livesafter newsletter promotionThis was a “significant escalation” from previous AI-enabled attacks it monitored, it wrote in a blogpost, because Claude acted largely independently: 80 to 90% of the operations involved in the attack were performed without a human in the loop.“The actor achieved what we believe is the first documented case of a cyber-attack largely executed without human intervention at scale,” it wrote.

The slop hydra rears its head, vomiting into one part of life after another.Though we may stop one automated cyberattack, four more could come just as quickly; if one AI-made album is removed from Spotify, six more may take its place.In the near future, we may find ourselves wading through a daily flood of slop, drowning.Lies, damned lies and AI: the newest way to influence elections may be here to stayElon Musk’s Grok AI briefly says Trump won 2020 presidential electionAI is guzzling energy for slop content – could it be reimagined to help the climate?How Google’s DeepMind tool is ‘more quickly’ forecasting hurricane behaviorAnthropic announces $50bn plan for datacenter construction in USSoftBank sells stake in Nvidia for $5.8bn as it doubles down on OpenAI betsUS markets struggle amid tech sell-off and economic uncertainty
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Why Australia will win v why England can win: two Guardian cricket writers make their Ashes cases

Even the greats of the Ashes have been weighed down by 143 years of shared history, tradition and controversy. For keen observers of Australia and England, Ashes anxiety can cloud judgments, hopes and dreams. Personally, a heart still bearing the scars from more than a decade spent living behind enemy lines as a once all-conquering Australia failed to tie – let alone win – an Ashes series in England, now insists on managing expectations. But as the ICC’s top two-ranked men’s Test teams prepare for a contest set to be shaped as much by endurance as execution, the head is ready to rule with a quiet confidence that Australia will triumph in a fourth straight Ashes as hosts.The current Australia outfit falls short of the best the nation has produced just in this century

about 8 hours ago
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A trooper’s shove showed stardom doesn’t protect Black athletes from police | Etan Thomas

It was 1996, my first day stepping foot on Syracuse University’s campus. I saw a big student protest was taking place so, with my freshman’s inquisitive mind, I ventured over to see what was going on.I listened to a passionate sista named Kathy Ade, the president of Syracuse’s student African-American Society. She stood there with her Bantu knots and a megaphone addressing the crowd, discussing the fact that campus security was now going to be able to carry pepper spray. In the 90s – which my daughter Baby Sierra calls “the 1900s,” just to keep me humble – campus security carrying pepper spray was a big deal

about 9 hours ago
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The Breakdown | Could new Nations Championship transform Test rugby? The jury is out

There is logic to the fresh international format, due to launch next year, but glaring issues and logistical challenges tooOK, let’s just pick the ball up and run with it for a little while. A reimagined global Test landscape pitching the northern hemisphere against the south commencing next July. Twelve men’s national sides playing six games each with a final playoff weekend. Concluding with one champion team hoisting a shiny trophy aloft in front of, hopefully, a worldwide television audience of millions.On paper – and years of scribbling on the backs of envelopes have gone into this – there is some logic to it

about 11 hours ago
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Mark Wood declared fit for first Ashes Test as England seamers ‘lick their lips’ at surface

Mark Wood is fully fit and available for selection in the first Ashes Test on Friday, having come through an extended spell of bowling at full pace in the Perth Stadium nets without any problems – before emerging with his pads on to have a bat minutes later – as England’s seamers found conditions at the ground so good they were “licking their lips”.Wood’s left leg was heavily strapped throughout, as it has been since he returned after surgery to that knee in March, but the tightness in his hamstring that concerned him during the first day of England’s warm-up against the Lions at Lilac Hill last week has dissipated. It is believed that the scan he had last Friday was primarily intended to alleviate the player’s fitness worries, with the team’s medical staff never hugely concerned.Jamie Smith was one of the batters who faced Wood in the nets on Tuesday. “He was absolutely rapid today, I can tell you that first-hand,” he said

about 12 hours ago
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The Luka Era begins: inside the transformation powering the post-LeBron Lakers

Shipped out of Dallas and dropped into Hollywood, Dončić has responded with a leaner body, a louder voice and a growing command of the Lakers’ post-LeBron futureIt’s been nine and a half months since the trade that rocked the sports world was broken via a Shams Charania tweet. It was such a shock that the majority of his followers assumed he’d been hacked. Fresh off of a trip to the NBA finals, the young Slovenian superstar Luka Dončić was shipped off in the middle of the night to the Los Angeles Lakers for Anthony Davis, and the NBA as we know it was changed for ever. The fallout from one of the most shocking trades in sports history is still evolving: disgraced Mavericks general manager Nico Harrison, who spearheaded the transaction, was let go by the team last week, in a move Mavericks fans have been loudly clamoring for since news broke that their homegrown franchise player was being abruptly cast out to sea. But on the other side of the coin was a mixed blessing and a new beginning: Dončić, who had imagined spending his entire career in Dallas like his mentor Dirk Nowitzki, suddenly found himself recast as the face of the NBA’s most famous franchise under the bright lights of Hollywood

about 13 hours ago
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‘A drug that’s very safe and healthy‘: what ultrarunners can teach us about life | Sean Ingle

Imagine being able to run a marathon in three hours and 17 minutes. That is certainly no mean feat. But now think about trying to sustain that same pace for another nine hours. To most of us, the idea veers somewhere between the fantastical and the insane. Yet that is what Caitriona Jennings, a 45-year-old ultrarunner from Donegal, did this month when breaking the women’s world record for 100 miles

about 15 hours ago
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Ocado’s share price is back where it started. Are its robots just too fancy?

about 2 hours ago
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Visma approaches City grandee to act as chair if €20bn London listing goes ahead

about 4 hours ago
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What is Cloudflare – and why did its outage take down so many websites?

about 6 hours ago
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Cloudflare says ‘incident now resolved’ after outage causes error messages across the internet – as it happened

about 6 hours ago
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England turn to Noah Caluori for Argentina Test after triple injury blow

about 2 hours ago
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I can’t remember ever being so confident at the start of an away Ashes series | Mark Ramprakash

about 3 hours ago