A report shows Apple analyzes everyone's photos with AI before you can opt out, raising questions about its privacy claims.
As an idea, Apple’s notification summaries are great.
We should demand the same transparency wherever AI is applied — such as health insurance payment denials, for example. That’s as true for Apple (itself currently planning to extend Apple News into new markets) as it is for anyone else in the business of using AI to get things done.
Apple reminds us of its strong privacy commitment for Siri, saying voice data isn't used for ads ahead of a crucial Apple Intelligence update.
Apple said on Monday it would release an update to better indicate that its notification summaries are generated by artificial intelligence. "A software
To completely turn off the AI software, just head to your settings, scroll down and tap Apple Intelligence and Siri. Now, assuming you previously turned Apple Intelligence on, just toggle the top button off. This will kill all of the AI functionalities, from the Writing Tools to the email summaries to Genmoji, until you enable them again.
AMD's latest Ryzen AI Max chips probably wouldn't have existed without Apple, an AMD executive has admitted, thanks to the popularity of Apple Silicon.
Yet, amidst this flurry of advancements, Apple has quietly charted its own path—one rooted in privacy, security, and incremental progress. While some critics perceive Apple as lagging behind in the AI race,
AMD's Ryzen AI Max chips came as a huge surprise at CES 2025. They're basically super-powered versions of the company's Ryzen AI hardware with up to 16 CPU cores and 50 RDNA 3.5 graphics cores, alongside a pool of as much as 128GB integrated RAM.
Apple Intelligence is incorrectly summarizing news stories in your notifications. Here's a look at what Apple's doing about it—and how you can to turn those AI summaries off.