Meta is making its open source AI model, Llama, available to U.S. government agencies for use in defense and national security applications.
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According to a report, Chinese researchers have used an old version of Meta's open-source LLM to build an AI tool. The tool is meant for military purposes, but its capabilities are unknown.
Meta launched Llama 3.2 models, including vision and text-only models. Microsoft and Google have made these models available on their respective cloud platforms.
Mark Zuckerberg believes that open-source AI is the future of AI, fostering unrestricted innovation similar to how open-source development has accelerated progress in other fields.
Opera will allow users using Opera One to run LLMs locally on their computers. The browser supports more than 150 models from 50 families including LLMs from Meta, Google, and more.
Meta has released Code Llama, an open-source AI that can generate code and natural language responses to prompts. It supports popular programming languages such as Python, Javascript, and C++.
Qualcomm says it will team up with Meta so that its Llama 2 large language model for generative AI services can work on mobile devices without a need for cloud services, starting in 2024.
Llama 2 will be available for Microsoft's Azure customers with its safety tools. It will also be made available to run locally on Windows. It is free to use for research and commercial tasks.
Meta is preparing to launch LLaMA for researchers to assist in their work, according to Mark Zuckerberg. The large language model will also use an open model, accessible by researchers.
Version 1.11 of Minecraft, also known as the Exploration Update is now available for all Mac and PC users for free. The update brings lots of new locations, loot and content, including llama caravans.