India and the European Union finalized a historic free trade agreement on Tuesday, potentially impacting 2 billion people, according to the Associated Press. The deal, described by the EU chief as the "mother of all deals," concluded nearly two decades of negotiations and aims to deepen economic and strategic ties between the two major markets.
The agreement comes as Washington increasingly focuses on both India and the EU, the Associated Press reported. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi welcomed European Council President Antonio Costa and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in New Delhi for the meeting where the deal was announced.
In other news, Mistral AI, a French artificial intelligence company, launched Mistral Vibe 2.0, a significant upgrade to its terminal-based coding agent, on Tuesday, according to VentureBeat. This move represents the company's most aggressive push into the AI-assisted software development market and marks a transition from a free testing phase to a commercial product integrated with paid subscription plans. Mistral CEO Arthur Mensch told Bloomberg Television at the World Economic Forum in Davos that the company expects to cross 1 billion.
Meanwhile, in Los Angeles, a landmark trial began this week involving Meta's Instagram, ByteDance's TikTok, and Google's YouTube, Fortune reported. The companies face claims that their platforms deliberately addict and harm children. Jury selection started in the Los Angeles County Superior Court and is expected to take several days. Snapchat parent company Snap Inc. settled the case last week for an undisclosed sum.
In China, artificial intelligence is becoming an integral part of the curriculum for some children, according to NPR. Fifth grader Li Zichen demonstrated a remote-controlled robot in his Beijing elementary school classroom. The robot can lift and move blocks and be programmed using AI.
Also, Fortune reported on the dangers of poorly managed AI systems. The article suggests that the real risk of AI lies not in a "Terminator"-style apocalypse, but in "runaway swarms of badly-run agentic systems creating chaos," referencing Disney's "Fantasia" as a more apt analogy.
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