AIBusinessSoftware

Krafton Commits $70 Million to Transform Into AI-First Gaming Giant

South Korean gaming giant Krafton, known for PUBG, is reportedly investing 100 billion won to become an “AI-first” company. Sources indicate the publisher plans to completely reorganize its operations around Agentic AI technology.

Major Corporate Restructuring Around AI

Krafton Inc., the South Korean publisher behind the global phenomenon PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds, is making a massive strategic pivot toward artificial intelligence, according to recent company announcements. Reports indicate the company plans to invest approximately 100 billion Korean won (about $70 million) to transform itself into what CEO Kim Changhan describes as an “AI-first” organization.

AISoftwareTechnology

Microsoft Copilot’s Factual Accuracy Challenges Highlight Persistent AI Hallucination Issues

Microsoft’s Copilot AI assistant demonstrates remarkable capabilities but suffers from persistent factual inaccuracies that researchers suggest are fundamental to large language model technology. New insights reveal these “hallucinations” may be mathematically unavoidable in current AI systems despite their integration across Microsoft’s product ecosystem.

The Dual Nature of AI Assistants

Microsoft’s Copilot presents as a remarkably capable digital assistant across the company’s product suite, including Microsoft 365 applications, Windows, Edge, and Bing, according to industry reports. The generative AI tool has become increasingly integrated into business workflows, assisting with documents ranging from sales reports to budget forecasts and marketing content.

AICybersecuritySoftware

Security Experts Advocate for AI Agent Management Mirroring Employee Protocols

As artificial intelligence becomes more integrated into business operations, security professionals are calling for AI agents to undergo similar vetting and monitoring as human employees. New guidelines suggest implementing role-based access controls and continuous auditing for AI systems to prevent data breaches and performance degradation.

AI Systems Require Employee-Level Security Protocols

Organizations should implement the same security controls for artificial intelligence agents as they do for human staff members, according to reports from cybersecurity experts. This approach includes comprehensive background checks, role-based access limitations, and continuous performance monitoring to mitigate potential risks.