logo
6 ways Silicon Valley is getting close with the Pentagon

6 ways Silicon Valley is getting close with the Pentagon

Yahoo24-03-2025

OpenAI's release of ChatGPT in November 2022 spurred a race to develop advanced generative artificial intelligence models — one that has seen some companies shell out tens of billions of dollars on AI infrastructure. But that's not the only place major spending is happening.
Since then, the U.S. government has paid companies $700 million for AI-enabled defense and security, according to an analysis by Fortune in November. Before ChatGPT came out, the Defense Department was already working on more than 685 AI projects, according to C4ISRNET.
Tech companies working with U.S. defense and intelligence agencies isn't new — some semiconductor companies worked with the U.S. government at the start, for example. However, some tech companies shifted away from working with the U.S. government as the focus shifted more to consumers.
Now, some AI companies are getting closer to the federal government — forming partnerships to provide defense and intelligence agencies with AI in the name of national security.
Here are just a few ways AI companies are working with the U.S. government.
In 2017, the Pentagon established an AI program called Project Maven for processing drone footage to find potential drone strike targets. Google (GOOGL) was tapped for its AI — a contract that received backlash from thousands of its employees.
'Building this technology to assist the U.S. Government in military surveillance — and potentially lethal outcomes — is not acceptable,' Google employees said in a letter to Alphabet chief executive Sundar Pichai.
Despite not renewing its Project Maven contract, Google has pursued other partnerships with the U.S. government. In February, the company updated its AI Principles to remove a pledge to 'not pursue' AI that could be used for applications such as 'weapons or other technologies whose principal purpose or implementation is to cause or directly facilitate injury to people' and 'technologies that gather or use information for surveillance violating internationally accepted norms.'
Data annotation startup Scale AI announced in March that it had won a Defense Department contract for a project called Thunderforge. The program aims to integrate AI into U.S. military planning and operations, and is the department's 'first foray into integrating AI agents in and across military workflows to provide advanced decision-making support systems for military leaders,' Scale said.
The startup added that Anduril and Microsoft (MSFT) will initially develop and deploy the AI agents — 'always under human oversight' — for the Indo-Pacific Command (INDOPACOM) and European Command (EUCOM). Anduril, which develops autonomous systems used by the military, will integrate the startup's large language models into its modeling and simulation infrastructure for planning, while Microsoft will provide multimodal models.
Data analytics platform Palantir (PLTR) announced that it was delivering 'AI-defined vehicles' to the U.S. Army in March. The AI-enabled TITAN vehicles are part of a $178 million contract the company signed with the U.S. Army in 2024.
The TITAN system, which stands for Tactical Intelligence Targeting Access Node, has deep-sensing capabilities and 'seeks to enhance the automation of target recognition and geolocation from multiple sensors to reduce the sensor-to-shooter (S2S) timelines through target nominations and fuse the common intelligence picture,' according to Palantir.
TITAN was developed with partners including Northrop Grumman (NOC) and Anduril.
AI startup Anthropic and Palantir announced a partnership with Amazon Web Services (AMZN) in November to provide the startup's Claude AI models to U.S. intelligence and defense agencies. Anthropic's 3 and 3.5 family of AI models will be accessible through Palantir's AI Platform, while AWS will provide security and other benefits.
'The partnership facilitates the responsible application of AI, enabling the use of Claude within Palantir's products to support government operations such as processing vast amounts of complex data rapidly, elevating data driven insights, identifying patterns and trends more effectively, streamlining document review and preparation, and helping U.S. officials to make more informed decisions in time-sensitive situations while preserving their decision-making authorities,' Palantir said in a statement.
OpenAI launched a version of its chatbot called ChatGPT Gov in January to give U.S. government agencies another way to access its frontier AI models.
Through ChatGPT Gov, U.S. agencies can save and share conversations within their workspaces, use the flagship GPT-4o model, and build custom GPTs for use in government workspaces. OpenAI said the infrastructure would 'expedite internal authorization of OpenAI's tools for the handling of non-public sensitive data.'
'We believe the U.S. government's adoption of artificial intelligence can boost efficiency and productivity and is crucial for maintaining and enhancing America's global leadership⁠ in this technology,' the startup said.
Palantir and Anduril announced a 'consortium' in December to combine technologies to provide the Defense Department with AI infrastructure, such as Anduril's Lattice software system and Palantir's AI Platform.
'This partnership is focused on solving two main problems that limit the adoption of AI for national security purposes,' the companies said in a statement — data readiness and processing large amounts of data.
Both companies have been awarded large contracts with the Defense Department, including Palantir's $480 million deal with the U.S. Army for a prototype of its Maven Smart System in May, and Anduril's involvement with the Replicator initiative of thousands of drones and anti-drone systems in places such as the Indo-Pacific.
For the latest news, Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

AI on phones feels too much like homework — and Apple should use iOS 26's redesign to fix that
AI on phones feels too much like homework — and Apple should use iOS 26's redesign to fix that

Tom's Guide

time25 minutes ago

  • Tom's Guide

AI on phones feels too much like homework — and Apple should use iOS 26's redesign to fix that

Tech companies, especially the ones that make and sell phones, have been telling us how important AI is for several years, and offering a range of new AI-powered features that promise to make our lives easier. But despite promising that, it seems a bunch of those companies forgot the most important thing about new features — making sure people can actually find and use them. As someone who's spent a great deal of time reviewing new phones, nothing irritates me more than being told about new AI features and then having to do a bunch of research to figure out how to access them. Even Apple, a company that has made its own AI suite a lot more transparent, is guilty of this in some regard. And since iOS 19 (or iOS 26) is set to redesign the entire Apple ecosystem, WWDC 2025 is a chance for the company to make AI feel less like homework and transform it into something a lot simpler and more intuitive. I'll preface this with an admission that not all AI features are difficult to find. If it involves going through some kind of voice assistant, like Google Gemini or Siri, then AI capabilities are literally only a voice prompt away. Similarly AI photo editing features, like Google's Magic Editor, have long been available in photo gallery apps, like Google Photos or Apple's equivalent. But at the same time, considering all these features have been around for quite some time, their location and functionality have already been ingrained into our collective memories. Plus, once you know about one of those features, you can often find similar ones in the same spot. Or in the case of voice assistants, physically ask it about the kind of things it can do. There's also a bunch of AI working in the background that the user doesn't actually need to initiate. All that processing that happens to your photos? AI has a hand there, just as it does in helping translate foreign languages for you. We've also seen AI applied to software that helps manage the battery and displays, to help phones run more smoothly and efficiently. None of this is the flashy AI that gets promoted in keynote speeches or TV commercials. It's the boring stuff that makes your phone run and perform better, without you even realizing what's going on. But if a company is trying to add some fuel to the AI hype train, the focus ends up on the new and showy AI features that look and sound good. The problem is phone makers haven't put much consideration into helping users find the darn things. One good example I've found in this area are specialist translation apps — ones that do more than Google Translate. Samsung's Interpreter Mode is the one I've noticed this with most recently, offering the ability to translate two-way conversations happening in two different languages. I know that it exists, Samsung has talked about it at great length, but looking at a Galaxy S25, it's nowhere to be seen. It's not in the app drawer, nor the home screen, nor is it one of the default apps in the Quick Settings menu. Instead you either have to use the search bar to find Interpreter Mode, or change the Quick Settings features to include it — which isn't ideal when you only have 6-8 slots to choose from. The more I think about Galaxy AI features Samsung has talked about, the more I realize that I also have no idea where they are. The same is true for Apple Intelligence, Google Gemini and the countless other AI features that have been added to smartphones in recent years. I made a point of criticizing this in my review of the Xiaomi 15 Ultra, but the problem is a lot more widespread than that — and it's like phone makers don't realize this is a complete hindrance. In the days when new AI features weren't all that common, this probably wouldn't be so bad. Users get the time to get to grips with new features as they arrive, and by the time the next big software update comes around it'll be second nature. But the sheer number of new AI features being added to phones, and with little communication on how they work, makes this much more difficult. The distinct lack of official guidance on how to use new AI features is definitely getting in the way of me wanting to use them — and I doubt I'm the only one who feels that way. If phone makers really care about us using AI features more regularly, then this needs to change. I've often spoken about my severe lack of interest when it comes to using AI on phones, and a big part of that is due to the fact it's usually so difficult to find any of the new features. Back in the day, Apple would proudly declare that "it just works," with die-hard fans parroting that line for several years. But when your new smartphone comes with homework, it certainly isn't passing the intuitiveness test with a particularly good grade. Apple's not the only party guilty of this, but with WWDC set to majorly shake up how Apple software works, be it on iPhone, Mac or another Apple product, it's in a position to try and help users use Apple Intelligence without doing a thesis-load of research first. Who knows, maybe making AI actually intuitive can help make up for all its AI missteps over the past year.

How To Build Your Own Generative AI Toolkit To Stay Ahead At Work
How To Build Your Own Generative AI Toolkit To Stay Ahead At Work

Forbes

time2 hours ago

  • Forbes

How To Build Your Own Generative AI Toolkit To Stay Ahead At Work

How To Build Your Own Generative AI Toolkit To Stay Ahead At Work If you are waiting for your company to adopt AI, you are missing out on a personal opportunity to get ahead in your career. With generative AI you can build your own workflow, automate routine tasks, or create more compelling content. It doesn't take a technical background, but it helps if you have curiosity. The first question you should ask is: what is generative AI and what is a generative toolkit? Generative AI is a fancy term for artificial intelligence that creates new things by learning from existing data and using patterns to generate something original. A generative AI toolkit a collection of tools you can use to create new things like text, images, videos, or audio using AI. What Should Be In A Generative AI Toolkit To Help You Work Smarter? I use many tools that help me get things done more efficiently, and I encourage others to do the same. Don't let the sound of the following AI-related terms intimidate you. Once you start using them, they're easier than you might expect. Here are some of the tasks where I've found generative AI most useful, along with the tools that can help you do each one more effectively so you can be more productive and make a stronger impression. • Brainstorming: Use ChatGPT to generate ideas, outlines, and scripts for any content format. • Audio Creation: ElevenLabs can replicate your voice to narrate scripts. If you record your own voice or anything else, Adobe Podcast Enhance cleans up the audio and makes it studio-quality. • Visual Creation: Kling creates video clips quickly and inexpensively. Canva helps you design everything from presentations to videos to graphics. If you have a lot of expertise, you can use Photoshop as well. • Video Editing: Use Camtasia for editing and Submagic to add b-roll (video clips), captions, and supporting visuals. These platforms don't require a production team. Many are low-cost subscriptions or pay-per-use, making it easy to experiment and find your best-fit tools. How Can A Generative AI Toolkit Make You A More Effective Communicator? If you present ideas to clients, teams, or students, generative AI tools can help you create stronger, more polished content. I use them to work faster and communicate more clearly. Captions, visuals, and sound quality all contribute to how a message is received. Captions are essential, especially on mobile devices or in quiet settings. Submagic handles that seamlessly and can add visual enhancements to keep viewers engaged. Using ElevenLabs to adjust tone and pacing also improves how your message lands. These tools allow you to focus on the substance of your message while still producing something visually and audibly appealing. How Affordable Is It To Build Your Own Generative AI Toolkit? You don't need to invest thousands. Most of the tools I've mentioned are affordable and flexible. Some charge monthly. Others charge per project. Camtasia and Canva are widely used and offer significant value. Many people underestimate what Canva can do until they explore it. When I wanted to learn more, I took a short course through for under one hundred dollars. I have no affiliation with them (or any of the other tools I mention here), but the course was far more useful than a recent graduate-level university certification I completed from one of the top technology schools. That program cost thousands and didn't include real-world applications or hands-on training. How Does Curiosity Help You Get The Most From Your AI Toolkit? Learning how to use AI tools starts with curiosity. You don't need to understand every feature. You just need to be open to trying something new. People often wait until they feel completely prepared. That delay is what slows progress. I recently attended an event hosted by HRNxt, where we discussed how hard it can be to adopt new technologies. Jessica Hanan, Head of Workforce Enablement at Altruistic, told a story that captured the problem well. When cars were first introduced, some had fake horse heads attached to the front to make passengers feel more comfortable. We're in a similar place now with AI. People need help getting past their initial discomfort. One simple way to make adoption easier is to divide learning across a team. Assign one person to experiment with ChatGPT for scripting. Another can test ElevenLabs for voiceover. A third can use Adobe Podcast Enhance for audio quality. Someone else can explore for visuals. Make the group goal a final video project. That structure gives everyone a role and makes learning more purposeful. How Do You Know When Your Generative AI Toolkit Is Working? You'll know it's working when your process feels smoother. Maybe you spend less time on repetitive tasks or feel more confident creating something that used to take hours. You don't need dozens of tools. Just a few that work well for you. Once people get started, they tend to personalize their stack. One person might use their toolkit for presentations. Another may use it to create educational materials or social content. The point is to start building your own system that supports your work. What's The Best Way To Get Started With A Generative AI Toolkit? Start with one real task at work that takes too long or could be better. Choose one tool to improve that task. If you need clearer audio, try Adobe Podcast Enhance. If you want help writing, test ChatGPT. If you need short videos, explore Document what works and refine from there. This kind of simple experimentation builds your skills quickly without being overwhelming. Why Should You Build A Generative AI Toolkit Now? You don't have to wait for your company to catch up. The best time to start using AI is when you still have the space to experiment without pressure. The people gaining the most value from creating a generative AI toolkit are professionals who stay curious, take small steps, and learn by doing. This is your chance to get ahead while others hesitate. Pick one tool and share what you learn. The sooner you start, the more confident and capable you'll be when these tools become a standard part of work.

Backlinks, Biscuits, and Bounce Rates: The Unlikely Recipe for SEO Success in Columbia, SC
Backlinks, Biscuits, and Bounce Rates: The Unlikely Recipe for SEO Success in Columbia, SC

Time Business News

time2 hours ago

  • Time Business News

Backlinks, Biscuits, and Bounce Rates: The Unlikely Recipe for SEO Success in Columbia, SC

Let's talk about biscuits and bounce rates—two things that should never be dry, but only one of them involves keywords, CTR, and Google's ever-fickle affection. Welcome to my world, where SEO in Columbia, SC is less about keyword stuffing and more about slow-roasted, context-rich strategy with a Southern twist. My team at Web Design Columbia (WDC if you're feeling friendly) has been in the SEO kitchen long enough to know that ranking a site isn't a bake-and-wait process. It's an unpredictable soufflé that responds to Google's latest mood swings, user behavior patterns, and, weirdly enough, the resolution of your image files. We've been doing this for nearly two decades—yes, since before Google even introduced the 'did you mean' feature. Back then, SEO meant hiding white text on a white background. Now it's about trust, authority, mobile readiness, and an obsession with structured data so strong you'd think we were training a robot butler. But here's what's different about SEO in Columbia, SC: it's not just about getting seen. It's about being understood by algorithms and the guy searching for tire repair while eating a Bojangles biscuit at 8:30 a.m. in Cayce. Over the years, numerous clickbait think pieces have declared SEO dead. (Spoiler: It's not.) What has changed is the shape it takes. From voice search optimizations to algorithm updates that now favor user experience over raw keyword volume, SEO is no longer a one-dimensional game. In fact, according to a recent Search Engine Journal report, 61% of marketers say improving SEO and growing their organic presence is a top inbound marketing priority. This brings us to Columbia, South Carolina. While we may not be the first city that comes to mind when you think of tech innovation, we're quietly rewriting the rules of smart, sustainable SEO. And by 'we,' I mean the developers, writers, designers, and caffeine-powered strategists at WDC who spend their days testing schema markup against the latest Google Search Console glitches and their nights wondering why Moz's domain authority scores change more often than our weather forecasts. Columbia, the heart of South Carolina, has all the ingredients for SEO brilliance: a diverse business landscape, a surprisingly fast-growing tech scene, and an audience that actually reads local content. We've universities, startups, nonprofits, and family-owned hardware stores all vying for page-one glory. In that fight, SEO in Columbia, SC has evolved into a fascinating hybrid—one that borrows from enterprise-grade tactics while staying grounded in human-centered storytelling. We've seen success with structured data integration, local citation curation, and a little trick called 'relevance stacking,' which—despite sounding like something from a Marvel script—is just a fancy way of saying 'making your site matter on multiple fronts.' But we've also seen what doesn't work. Sites overloaded with plugins, DIY SEO setups that ignore crawl budgets, and misguided efforts to rank for terms like 'best plumber universe Columbia SC 2025'—yes, that happened—usually fall flat. Here's a fun fact: Google's RankBrain now adjusts search result rankings based on inferred intent, time on site, and click-through patterns. That means you can't just optimize for 'Columbia dentist' anymore and consider it a job well done. You need to think like the algorithm but write like a human who occasionally misplaces their car keys and Google's 'weird bump on tongue' at 2 a.m. That's where WDC shines. We've built and managed content strategies that focus on nuanced query paths, conversational phrasing, and long-tail keywords that attract real traffic. This is the kind of approach that increased the local medical supply company's page views by 92% over three months, without spending a dime on ads. Still, even we get stumped. When Google's September 2023 Helpful Content Update rolled out, half the industry panicked. The other half—ourselves included—recalibrated. We had to rethink AI-written drafts, emphasize clarity over cleverness, and lean into E-E-A-T (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness). If you're not building those signals into your site, your rankings will crumble faster than a biscuit in sweet tea. We often tell clients that their website is like a house. Good design is like curb appeal, content is like interior décor, but what about SEO? That's the plumbing. You don't see it until it's broken. SEO in Columbia, SC often suffers not from harmful content, but from bad technical architecture—slow load times, messy mobile layouts, broken image links, or JS errors that block crawlers from indexing key pages. To fix that, we dig deep. And yes, I mean command-line deep. We've optimized AlmaLinux 9-based servers, fine-tuned Cloudflare CDN setups, and configured HTTP/2 and Brotli compression just to shave milliseconds off a time-to-first-byte (TTFB). All of this happens behind the curtain, but it impacts rankings in an obvious way. And while I love a good tool like Ahrefs or Semrush (we use both), there's still no replacement for human debugging. A robot can show you a crawl error. It can't tell you that your JavaScript modal is murdering your CTA visibility. Let's get spicy. One of the most significant flaws in modern SEO is the worship of tools. Everyone uses the same data sets from the same APIs. That's how you end up with hundreds of companies all trying to rank for the exact five keywords, none of which are relevant to how their customers search. We sidestep this issue with something radically simple: we ask your customers how they search. Then we build from that. We call it qualitative SEO, and it's a blend of psychology, storytelling, and common sense. One client told us their customers never searched for 'financial services,' but constantly used 'money help near me.' We adjusted their keyword targets and saw an eightfold increase in organic leads within six weeks. This is the heart of our SEO philosophy in Columbia, SC—stop chasing data; start chasing humans. There was once a company here in Columbia that hired an agency promising 500 backlinks in 30 days. You already know where this is going. Their rankings tanked, their domain was penalized, and worst of all, they were stuck in a 12-month contract with zero recourse. The truth? Not all backlinks are created equal. Google's 2024 spam policy update now penalizes sites that use AI-generated guest posts just to gain links. Meanwhile, links from legitimate, context-rich domains (like a respected local news outlet or a regional chamber of commerce) hold even more value than they did five years ago. At WDC, we build those connections the right way: through partnerships, sponsorships, genuine content, and, yes, articles like this one. Let's address the elephant in the SEO room—Google's algorithm changes are like moody teenagers. One week, they love you for your page speed, the next, they ghost you because you updated your meta description incorrectly. The March 2024 Core Update alone caused significant shake-ups, resulting in a loss of traffic for thousands of sites globally. Reddit threads turned into therapy sessions, and even some Fortune 500 companies saw double-digit drops in organic impressions. But here's the odd truth: Columbia didn't flinch. Or at least, SEO in Columbia, SC didn't. At Web Design Columbia, we've always treated SEO like jazz—improvised but rooted in structure. We didn't chase every trend. Instead, we focused on timeless fundamentals: content depth, site clarity, user behavior signals, and real-life engagement. That's why many of our clients saw either minimal impact or, in a few delightful cases, massive gains, while others across the U.S. were left rewriting entire sites. Of course, there were hiccups. One client's SEO manager insisted on switching everything to AI-written FAQs without proofreading. Their bounce rate skyrocketed. One question read: 'Can dogs vote in South Carolina?' So yes, automation is tremendous—but also, yikes. If your business doesn't show up on the local map pack, you're invisible. More than 40% of mobile searches now include 'near me' phrasing, and almost all of them are tied to location intent. That means ranking in Columbia isn't just about keywords anymore—it's about geography. We've worked hard to master this local frontier. We've optimized Google Business Profiles (GBP) to an extreme level—adding Q&As, product catalogs, service areas, appointment booking buttons, and even custom images with embedded GPS EXIF data. And while all of that might sound overkill, SEO in Columbia, SC is a competition, and the map pack is a three-slot race. We've seen firsthand how accurate business citations, reviews with relevant keywords, and geotagged content can boost a client from obscurity to local domination. However, there's a caveat: GBP is buggy. Updates disappear. Hours get changed by 'Google users.' Reviews vanish or get flagged. We've developed internal monitoring tools just to babysit GBPs. It's a blessing, but also a babysitting gig you didn't ask for. Visual search is changing the way people interact with the web. Tools like Google Lens and Pinterest Lens are becoming smarter every month. Globally, there are over 8 billion visual searches per month. People are now taking pictures of signs, menus, products, and even furniture to search, rather than typing at all. So, how does this affect SEO in Columbia, SC? Here's the twist: Columbia's abundance of small retail shops, boutiques, and service providers are goldmines for visual search—if their image SEO is done right. We optimize alt tags, compress media using AVIF or WebP formats, and ensure all visuals are served responsively. When done right, it allows a local clothing store to appear when someone snaps a photo of a similar outfit in Charlotte. We also work with AI tools like Google Vision AI to 'preview' how Google classifies our images—just in case it accidentally labels your dentist chair as a 'leather recliner.' Let's get technical for a moment. Schema markup, also known as structured data, helps Google understand your content. Think of it like metadata on steroids. We've used it to enhance listings with star ratings, FAQ dropdowns, product pricing, and even job postings. But structured data isn't magic. Some schema types still aren't fully supported in search results. Others conflict with Google's guidelines (especially if you fake reviews or try to auto-generate stars). A competitor in Columbia once tried to fake 5-star reviews using the 'Review' schema—it worked for a week until their entire page was delisted. SEO in Columbia, SC, benefits from schema done correctly. We customize JSON-LD tags for each page, run structured testing in Search Console, and avoid pushing markup that isn't supported in rich results. It's a bit like SEO seasoning—you want to sprinkle, not pour. There's something magical about mid-sized markets. They're not flooded like NYC or LA, and that means your SEO efforts go further. Columbia has just enough competition to keep things interesting, but not so much that a small business needs a $10,000/mo retainer just to rank for 'best cupcakes.' In fact, that's where Web Design Columbia stands out most. We've worked with clients whose monthly SEO budget was lower than the cost of a Netflix family plan—and still delivered results. We don't cut corners; we just know which ones matter. We also know the terrain. We know that West Columbia users search differently from Forest Acres users. We've observed the behavior of USC students compared to business professionals near Gervais Street. And we build SEO strategies accordingly. If there's one thing I've learned from nearly 20 years in SEO, it's this: every time Google makes things more complicated, it's also an opportunity for the smart, the nimble, and the downright stubborn to win. And stubborn is something we do really well in South Carolina. SEO in Columbia, SC, isn't about keeping up with global trends. It's about understanding them, adapting them, and applying them with a uniquely local mindset. It's about getting your content in front of the people who actually matter—your customers—without trying to trick Google or fake authority. Whether you're selling cupcakes, cleaning HVACs, or running a law firm, Columbia's search landscape is ready for you to show up. And if you want a partner who's been doing this since Wi-Fi was still considered magic, see what Web Design Columbia can do for you. There's no secret sauce. There's just a team that cares, prices that make sense, and strategies that don't crumble at the first algorithm update. And if you're ready to taste what better rankings look like (served with a side of Southern charm), come check out the latest SEO tricks by Web Design Columbia. We promise not to talk about biscuits too much. TIME BUSINESS NEWS

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store