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Perplexity shopping bot not welcome at Amazon shop

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Perplexity accused Amazon of using a “bully tactic” to scare “disruptive companies” from making shopping easier for people [File]
| Photo Credit: REUTERS

Amazon is demanding that artificial intelligence startup Perplexity put a stop to its bot shopping for people at the e-commerce giant’s retail platform, the companies said on Tuesday.

Amazon sent Perplexity a cease-and-desist letter that sets the stage for a lawsuit if AI agent Comet continues to serve as a personal shopper for customers.

“We’ve repeatedly requested that Perplexity remove Amazon from the Comet experience,” an Amazon spokesperson said in response to an AFP inquiry.

“Particularly in light of the significantly degraded shopping and customer service experience it provides.”

Amazon also contends that Comet’s automated shopping is violating terms of service by not disclosing it is independently doing the shopping for users.

In a blog post, San Francisco-based Perplexity accused Amazon of using a “bully tactic” to scare “disruptive companies” from making shopping easier for people.

Like other generative AI tools, Comet has evolved beyond finding information or crafting text to independently performing computer tasks such as booking reservations or tending to online shopping.

Amazon says Perplexity has failed to take personalised recommendations into account and its AI agent is making mistakes regarding delivery times.

The retail colossus also argued that Perplexity uses tactics to gain “unauthorized access” for shopping at the platform, failing to operate “transparently.”

Amazon is testing its own AI agents capable of handling all stages of shopping for customers and uses data it collects to target products and ads.

Perplexity, valued recently at some $20 billion, is among tech firms developing AI agents that work in web browsers, tending to internet tasks for users.

Generative AI star OpenAI last month launched a ChatGPT Atlas web browser on Apple computers that is capable of shopping at some websites.

Similar AI agent shopping capabilities are expected to be added to Google Chrome and Microsoft Edge browsers in coming months.

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Online porn showing strangulation to be banned in UK

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The plan follows an independent review which found that depictions of strangulation are rife online [File]
| Photo Credit: REUTERS

Possessing or publishing pornography showing strangulation or suffocation is to become a crime in the UK, the government announced Tuesday.

The plan follows an independent review which found that depictions of strangulation are rife online and that this had helped make the act a “sexual norm”, a government statement said.

Non-fatal strangulation is already a criminal offence in the UK, but it is not currently illegal to show it online.

These measures will help protect women and girls from online abuse, the government said.

“Viewing and sharing this kind of material online is not only deeply distressing, it is vile and dangerous,” technology minister Liz Kendall said.

“Those who post or promote such content are contributing to a culture of violence and abuse that has no place in our society.”

Tech platforms will be legally required to take “proactive steps” to prevent users from seeing such content, such as through moderation tools or stricter controls, the government said.

A separate amendment will extend the time limit for victims of intimate image abuse to report these crimes from six months to three years.

The UK implemented its Online Safety Act in July aiming to hinder youngsters from encountering content relating to porn as well as suicide, self-harm and eating disorders.

It requires websites and apps hosting potentially harmful pages and posts to implement age checks using measures such as facial imagery or credit cards.

Those found to be failing can face fines of up to £18 million ($23 million) or 10 percent of qualifying worldwide revenue, whichever is greater.

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Australia adds Reddit and Kick to social media platforms banning children under 16

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Australia’s eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant, who will enforce the social media ban, said the list of age-restricted platforms would evolve with new technologies [File]
| Photo Credit: REUTERS

Australia has added message board Reddit and livestreaming service Kick to its list of social media platforms that must ban children younger than 16 from holding accounts.

The platforms join Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, Threads, TikTok, X and YouTube in facing a world-first legal obligation to shut the accounts of younger Australian children from December 10, Communications Minister Anika Wells said on Wednesday.

Platforms that fail to take reasonable steps to exclude children younger than 16 could be punished with a fine of up to 50 million Australian dollars ($33 million).

“We have met with several of the social media platforms in the past month so that they understand there is no excuse for failure to implement this law,” Wells told reporters in Canberra.

“Online platforms use technology to target children with chilling control. We are merely asking that they use that same technology to keep children safe online,” Wells added.

Australia’s eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant, who will enforce the social media ban, said the list of age-restricted platforms would evolve with new technologies.

The nine platforms currently age-restricted meet the key requirement that their “sole or significant purpose is to enable online social interaction,” a government statement said.

Inman Grant said she would work with academics to evaluate the impacts of the ban, including whether children sleep or interact more or become more physically active.

“We’ll also look for unintended consequences and we’ll be gathering evidence” so that others could learn from Australia’s achievements, Inman Grant said.

Australia’s move is being closely watched by countries that share concerns about social media impacts on young children.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen told a United Nations forum in New York in September that she was “inspired” by Australia’s “common sense” move to legislate the age restriction.

Critics of the legislation fear that banning young children from social media will impact the privacy of all users, who must establish they are older than 16.

Wells recently said the government seeks to keep platform users’ data as private as possible.

More than 140 Australian and international academics with expertise in fields related to technology and child welfare signed an open letter to Prime Minister Anthony Albanese last year opposing a social media age limit as “too blunt an instrument to address risks effectively.”

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IBM to cut thousands of roles in focus on software growth: Report

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IBM employed about 270,000 workers as of the end of 2024 [File]
| Photo Credit: REUTERS

IBM will cut thousands of roles this quarter while it continues to shift focus to higher-growth software and services, Bloomberg News reported on Tuesday.

“We routinely review our workforce through this lens and at times rebalance accordingly,” Bloomberg quoted a company spokesperson saying. “In the fourth quarter we are executing an action that will impact a low single-digit percentage of our global workforce.”

Under chief executive Arvind Krishna, IBM has honed in on software as it looks to benefit on increased spending on cloud services through its “Red Hat” division, as businesses integrate artificial intelligence technology.

However, IBM last month recorded a slowdown in growth in the key cloud software segment, raising alarm bells among investors betting heavily on Big Blue’s ability to benefit more from booming cloud services demand.

Its shares, which have risen over 35% this year, were down close to 2% on Tuesday.

IBM employed about 270,000 workers as of the end of 2024.

Some U.S. workers may be affected by the job reductions, but employment in the country is anticipated to remain roughly the same year over year, the report said, citing an IBM spokesperson.

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New Drug Kills Cancer 20,000x More Effectively With No Detectable Side Effects

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By restructuring a common chemotherapy drug, scientists increased its potency by 20,000 times. In a significant step forward for cancer therapy, researchers at Northwestern University have redesigned the molecular structure of a well-known chemotherapy drug, greatly increasing its solubility, effectiveness, and safety. For this study, the scientists created the drug entirely from scratch as a […]

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India tribunal lifts WhatsApp data-sharing ban, upholds Meta fine

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FILE PHOTO: An Indian appeals tribunal set aside an antitrust watchdog’s five-year ban on Meta-owned WhatsApp sharing user data with other Meta entities for advertising.
| Photo Credit: Reuters

An Indian appeals tribunal on Tuesday set aside an antitrust watchdog’s five-year ban on Meta-owned WhatsApp sharing user data with other Meta entities for advertising, but upheld a fine, marking a partial win for the U.S. tech major.

WhatsApp had challenged the Competition Commission of India’s November 2024 ban on data sharing between WhatsApp and other Meta entities, warning it may have to roll back some features.

Meta also criticised the CCI for not having the “technical expertise” to understand the ramifications of its order.

The National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) lifted the data-sharing ban, noting that “the rationale for the…ban was missing altogether”.

However, it upheld the $25.4 million fine that the CCI had imposed, saying Meta abused its dominance by imposing unfair conditions.

The case began in 2021 amid criticism of WhatsApp’s privacy policy changes, with the CCI’s probe finding that the policy pushed users to accept the change or risk losing access to the service.

“While we evaluate the written order, we continue to reiterate that WhatsApp’s 2021 privacy policy update did not change the privacy of people’s personal messages which remain end-to-end encrypted,” a spokersperson for Meta told Reuters in an emailed response.

India is Meta’s biggest market with the highest number of users on Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp worldwide.

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Apple to enter low-cost laptop market with budget Mac: Report

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FILE PHOTO: Apple is preparing to launch a budget Mac in the first half of next year, entering the low-cost laptop market for the first time.
| Photo Credit: Reuters

Apple is preparing to launch a budget Mac in the first half of next year, entering the low-cost laptop market for the first time, Bloomberg News reported on Tuesday.

The device, aimed to lure customers away from Google’s Chromebooks and entry-level Windows PCs, is made for students, businesses and casual users who primarily browse the web, work on documents or conduct light media editing, Bloomberg reported, citing people familiar with the matter.

Apple is also targeting would-be iPad buyers who might prefer a traditional laptop instead.

The iPhone maker aims to sell the laptop, code-named J700, well under $1,000 by using less-advanced components, the report said. It is currently in active testing at Apple and in early production with overseas suppliers.

Apple did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

The cheapest Mac currently available is the M4 MacBook Air, priced at $999, dropping to $899 with a student discount.

The laptop will have an iPhone processor and a lower-end LCD display, with the screen coming in slightly below 13.6 inches, the smallest of any current Mac, per the report.

It would be the first time that Apple has used an iPhone processor in a Mac, rather than a chip designed specifically for a computer, the report said. Internal tests have shown that the smartphone chip can perform better than the Mac-optimized M1 used in laptops as recently as a few years ago.

Apple reported Mac sales of $8.73 billion in the fourth quarter, compared with estimates of $8.59 billion. It forecast holiday-quarter iPhone sales and overall revenue that surpassed Wall Street expectations last month.

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Scientists Discover New Way To Block “Root Cause” of Diabetic Complications

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The drug candidate shows promise in filling existing treatment gaps. A new experimental drug has been shown to lessen cell damage, inflammation, and organ injury linked to diabetes. In research led by scientists at NYU Langone Health, tests in mice revealed that the potential treatment stops two proteins, RAGE and DIAPH1, from interacting. This specific […]

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Stability AI largely wins UK court battle against Getty Images over copyright and trademark

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Artificial intelligence company Stability AI mostly prevailed against Getty Images Tuesday in a British court battle over intellectual property.

Seattle-based Getty had accused Stability AI of infringing its copyright and trademark by scraping 12 million images from its website, without permission, to train its popular image generator, Stable Diffusion.

The closely followed case at Britain’s High Court was among the first in a wave of lawsuits involving generative AI as movie studios, authors and artists challenged tech companies’ use of their works to train AI chatbots.

Tech companies have long argued that “fair use” or “fair dealing” legal doctrines in the United States and United Kingdom allow them to train their AI systems on large troves of writings or images. Tuesday’s ruling provides some clarity but still leaves big unanswered questions over copyright and AI, experts said.

According to the judge’s written ruling, Getty narrowly won its argument that Stability had infringed its trademark, but lost the rest of its case.

Both sides claimed victory.

“This is a significant win for intellectual property owners,” Getty Images said in a statement.

Shares of Getty dipped 3% before the opening bell in the U.S.

Stability, based in London, said it was pleased with the ruling.

“This final ruling ultimately resolves the copyright concerns that were the core issue,” Stability’s General Counsel Christian Dowell said.

Getty had accused Stability of both primary and secondary copyright infringement.

Legal experts said the first one involves the act of reproducing something without permission — similar to a dodgy factory churning out counterfeit Chanel handbags or pirated CDs — while the second involves importing those copies from another country.

In this case, Getty said Stability’s use of its image library to train and develop Stable Diffusion’s AI model amounted to breach of primary copyright. Stability responded that the case doesn’t belong in the United Kingdom because the AI model’s training technically happened elsewhere, on computers run by U.S. tech giant Amazon.

During the three-week trial in June, Getty dropped its primary copyright allegations, in a sign that it didn’t think they would succeed. But it still pursued the secondary infringement claims. Even if Stability’s AI training happened outside the U.K., Getty said offering the Stable Diffusion service to British users amounted to importing unlawful copies of its images into the country.

Justice Joanna Smith rejected Getty’s claims, ruling that Stable Diffusion’s AI didn’t infringe copyright because it doesn’t “store or reproduce any Copyright Works (and has never done so).”

Getty also sued for trademark infringement because its watermark appeared on some of the images generated by Stability’s chatbot.

The judge sided with Getty but added that the case only partially succeeded, and that her findings are “both historic and extremely limited in scope.”

“While I have found instances of trademark infringement, I have been unable to determine that these were widespread,” she said.

Experts said Getty’s move to drop part of its copyright case means AI training is still in legal limbo.

“The decision leaves the U.K. without a meaningful verdict on the lawfulness of an AI model’s process of learning from copyright materials,” said Iain Connor, an intellectual property partner at law firm Michelmores.

Smith said there was “very real societal importance” in deciding how to strike a balance between the creative and tech industries. But she added that the court can only rule on the “diminished” case that remained and couldn’t consider “issues that have been abandoned.”

A Getty spokeswoman declined to say whether there would be an appeal.

Getty is also pursuing a copyright infringement lawsuit in the United States against Stability. It originally sued in 2023 but refiled the case in a San Francisco federal court in August.

The Getty lawsuits are among a slew of cases that highlight how the generative AI boom is fueling a clash between tech companies and creative industries.

AI companies are now fighting more than 50 copyright lawsuits — so many that a tech industry lobby group has called on President Donald Trump for help stop the court fights, saying they threaten AI innovation.

Among the cases, Anthropic agreed to pay $1.5 billion to settle a class-action lawsuit by authors while a federal judge dismissed a similar lawsuit from 13 authors against Meta Platforms. Warner Bros. has sued Midjourney for copyright infringement, as have Disney and Universal in separate lawsuits, alleging that its image generator creates copyrighted characters.

Published – November 05, 2025 10:16 am IST

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Common Antidepressant Sertraline Found to Lift Mood Within Two Weeks

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A new analysis of the PANDA clinical trial reveals that the antidepressant sertraline improves certain emotional symptoms of depression and anxiety within two weeks of starting treatment. A new analysis led by researchers at UCL has found that one of the most widely prescribed antidepressants, sertraline, produces modest but meaningful improvements in key symptoms of […]

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