Generative Artificial Intelligence at U-M

The University of Michigan homepage for generative Artificial Intelligence outlines a custom suite of services, campuswide availability, events, videos, news and resources for students, faculty and staff.

The University of Michigan presents a centralized generative Artificial Intelligence site that highlights campuswide services, events and resources. The site states U-M is the first university to offer a custom suite of generative Artificial Intelligence tools and emphasizes equity, accessibility and privacy. Services are available to faculty, staff and students across the Ann Arbor, Flint, Dearborn and Michigan Medicine campuses. Prominent U-M offerings listed on the page include Go Blue, a mobile AI assistant for campus life; U-M GPT, which provides access to models such as GPT-4o, DALL-E 3, Llama 3 and Claude 3.5 Haiku; U-M Maizey, which lets users upload custom datasets to create private or shareable personalized GPTs; and the U-M GPT Toolkit for users who require full control over their AI environments and models.

The site also documents U-M Google generative Artificial Intelligence services, calling out Google Gemini for conversation, translation and information retrieval tasks and NotebookLM as an AI-powered research and note-taking assistant. A prominent carousel and events feed promote upcoming symposia and community programming, with links to events such as AI and health symposia, the Michigan AI Symposium and other campus presentations. Embedded videos showcase topics including privacy in the age of Artificial Intelligence, examples of how the university uses Artificial Intelligence and guides for faculty to create AI tutors for Canvas courses. The homepage links to additional event and video pages for more coverage.

Resources and community materials are organized into clear categories, including students, faculty and instructors, staff, AI tools, research, prompt literacy, a prompt library and training options. The site also aggregates recent AI news items with headlines and sources, for example a U-M research story on translating languages with Artificial Intelligence (September 2, 2025), a University of Michigan Medical School story on emergency medicine positioning Artificial Intelligence departmentwide (August 27, 2025), a TechCrunch article on Google Gemini (August 26, 2025) and a PBS News piece about using an AI chatbot for therapy or health advice (August 25, 2025). Footer information points users to Information and Technology Services and contact links for support and ITS resources.

68

Impact Score

Artificial Intelligence divides employers as hiring and headcount shift

U.S. hiring beat expectations in April, but employers remain split on whether Artificial Intelligence should drive layoffs, productivity gains, or internal redeployment. At the same time, candidate use of Artificial Intelligence is outpacing employer adoption in hiring, adding new pressure to screening and entry-level recruiting.

What businesses need to know about the EU cyber resilience act

The EU cyber resilience act is turning product cybersecurity into a legal requirement for companies that sell digital products into the European Union. A key compliance milestone arrives in September 2026, well before the full regulation takes effect in 2027.

Claude Mythos and cyber insurance’s next inflection point

Claude Mythos is being treated by governments and regulators as a potential systemic cyber risk with implications for financial stability and insurance markets. Its emergence is intensifying pressure on insurers to clarify whether Artificial Intelligence-enabled cyber losses are covered, excluded, or require new stand-alone products.

OpenAI expands ChatGPT ads with self-serve manager

OpenAI is widening its ChatGPT ads pilot with a beta self-serve Ads Manager, new bidding options and broader measurement tools. The push signals a deeper move into advertising as the company expands the program into several international markets.

Contact Us

Got questions? Use the form to contact us.

Contact Form

Clicking next sends a verification code to your email. After verifying, you can enter your message.