Artificial Intelligence coverage at eWeek: highlights and latest articles

eWeek’s Artificial Intelligence hub rounds up the latest news, analysis, and buying guidance, spanning security warnings, deepfake ethics, chip deals, enterprise demand, and new tools.

eWeek’s Artificial Intelligence section spotlights a fast-moving mix of safety debates, enterprise adoption, and product rollouts. The highlights lead with former Google CEO Eric Schmidt warning that Artificial Intelligence models can be hacked to remove guardrails, heightening proliferation risks even as vendors race to patch. The page also features a conversation on finance automation as a growth engine with Tipalti’s Daniel Shimtov, and notes that Dell doubled its revenue forecast on surging Artificial Intelligence demand, underscoring how the technology is reshaping corporate roadmaps.

Ethical and safety concerns run through several reports. One story details how Artificial Intelligence “resurrections” of Robin Williams and Tupac have ignited a new round of debate over consent and creative rights. Another, led by a Microsoft-affiliated team, finds that “up to 100%” of Artificial Intelligence-crafted toxins can evade DNA screens, a result that intensifies biosecurity worries. In a related vein, the page notes that Sora 2 can generate copyrighted characters such as SpongeBob and Pikachu, adding fresh fuel to intellectual property and content moderation discussions.

Industry moves and infrastructure bets are equally prominent. OpenAI struck a chip deal with AMD to power next-generation Artificial Intelligence workloads and is pursuing a large infrastructure initiative to drive the next wave of capability. Meta says it will use Artificial Intelligence chats to personalize ads across its apps, calling the move a natural progression. Google’s Gemini 2.5 Flash, an Artificial Intelligence image editor, is now generally available. Former OpenAI CTO Mira Murati’s lab released its first product, an API for fine-tuning large language models, while robotic wellness startup Aescape drew attention through a partnership with Tom Brady. The roundup also includes a valuation milestone for OpenAI and funding that equips Artificial Intelligence scientists at Periodic Labs with a significant robotics fleet.

Beyond headline moves, eWeek’s coverage tracks practical adoption and the creator economy. DoorDash rolled out a Creators Program that pays users for food videos, while buying guides cover the best Artificial Intelligence tools for tracking stocks and for trivia fans. Spanning articles dated Oct. 2 to Oct. 10, 2025 and authored by reporters including Liz Ticong, Fiona Jackson, Megan Crouse, and others, the page captures the breadth of current Artificial Intelligence developments, from governance and safety to chips, software, and real-world deployments.

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The missing step between Artificial Intelligence hype and profit

Artificial Intelligence companies have built powerful systems and promised sweeping change, but the path from technical progress to real business value remains unclear. Conflicting studies, weak workplace performance, and poor transparency are leaving a critical gap between hype and evidence.

Samsung workers leaked secrets into ChatGPT

Samsung employees reportedly exposed confidential company information while using ChatGPT for coding help and meeting note generation. The incidents highlight the risk of feeding sensitive data into public Artificial Intelligence tools that retain user inputs.

DeepSeek launches new flagship Artificial Intelligence models

DeepSeek has introduced preview versions of its V4 Flash and V4 Pro models, positioning them as its most powerful open-source Artificial Intelligence platform yet. The release renews competition with OpenAI, Anthropic, and major Chinese rivals while drawing fresh attention to the startup’s technical ambitions and regulatory scrutiny.

OpenAI’s GPT-5.5 sharpens coding but trails Anthropic’s Opus 4.7

OpenAI’s latest model upgrade improves coding, tool use, reasoning and token efficiency as the company pushes deeper into enterprise adoption. Early evaluations suggest stronger security performance, but Anthropic’s Opus 4.7 still leads in some important coding areas.

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