AI News - March 09, 2025

Hello,

💌 Welcome to Our AI Weekly Roundup! 💌

We're excited to bring you this week's roundup of the most fascinating AI news, updates, and breakthroughs! Grab a cup of your favorite beverage, sit back, and explore the incredible world of AI with us.

🔥 Top AI Stories of the Week

  1. The World Health Organization announces a new AI collaboration center will be opened at Delft University in the Netherlands. [Link]

  2. Scale.ai is being investigated by the U.S. Department of Labor for non compliance with the Fair Labor Wages Act. [Link]

  3. New AI Tools are spotting flaws in scientific research papers. [Link]

  4. ChatGPT for MacOS can now edit your code. [Link]

  5. The U.S. State Department will use AI to monitor student social media posts and revoke their visas if they appear to be supporting Hamas. [Link]

  6. Judge denies Elon Musk’s bid to stop OpenAI from converting from a non-profit to a for-profit company. [Link]

  7. Anthropic is proposing a number of policy recommendations to the Trump Administration. [Link]

  8. Israel is using AI models trained with huge amounts of surveillance data gathered by Israel’s intelligence services. [Link]

  9. The Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) has awarded their 2025 Turing Awards to Andrew Barto and Richard Sutton for their work in developing reinforcement learning. [Link]

  10. Cosmetics giant Estee Lauder and Microsoft have partnered to form an AI Innovation Lab. [Link]

  11. Columbia University student Roy Lane uses AI to defeat Amazon AWS’s technical interviews. He now faces disciplinary action from the university. [Link]

  12. Microsoft corporation has released a new voice activated AI assistant called Dragon Copilot that is specifically designed for medical professionals. [Link]

  13. China has developed an AI cardiologist called CardioMind to act as a copilot for cardiologists in Shanghai hospitals. [Link]

  14. The Fred Hutch Cancer Center has deployed an AI model called GI Genius to help detect colon cancer, gaining some early success. [Link]