3. Google under AI pressure
It's "code red" at Google as the search giant races to compete with the buzzy artificially intelligent chatbot ChatGPT. Google's "Atlas" project is testing a chatbot called "Apprentice Bard," which is intended to give complex answers to questions much the way ChatGPT does. Employees are also testing whether it could be integrated into a search engine. The news, reported by CNBC's Jennifer Elias, comes after employees pressured executives in December over how parent company Alphabet was going to respond to ChatGPT's sudden burst of popularity. At the time, CEO Sundar Pichai and Google AI chief Jeff Dean hinted that the company could release similar products during 2023.
4. Can't Snap out of it
Snap is stuck in a rut. The social media company posted its third straight disappointing quarterly earnings report Tuesday, sending the stock down double digits during off-hours trading. Things don't look like they'll pick up soon, either, after companies cut their digital ad budgets. In a letter to investors, Snap said it expects revenue to decline in the current quarter by between 2% and 10% compared with the year-ago period. Analysts had expected a small uptick in revenue. "On the monetization side, we anticipate that the operating environment will remain challenging, as we expect the headwinds we have faced over the past year to persist throughout Q1," the company said.
5. Dangerous radioactive capsule found
We've been hearing a lot about the tiny – we're talking 6 mm by 8 mm here – radioactive capsule that fell off a truck deep in a remote part of Australia. Thankfully, authorities said it was found after an extensive, nearly weeklong search about 1,100 kilometers north of Perth. The object, which is part of a measurement gauge, could have caused severe radiation burns and sickness for anyone who came in contact with it. Indeed, authorities told people to stay about three yards away from the device if they spotted it. (Then again, how could you spot such a tiny thing from that distance?) Mining company Rio Tinto apologized earlier this week for the mishap.
— CNBC's Mike Calia wrote this newsletter. Patti Domm, Carmen Reinicke, Jennifer Elias, Jonathan Vanian and Jenni Reid contributed.
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