AI Research
New AI features for Rival Technologies | News

CANADA – Conversational research agency Rival Technologies, part of market research company Rival Group, has added features to modernise research processes and adopt mobile-first and AI methods.
Rival Technologies said it had added to its AI capabilities with a new Unstructured Data Agent tool to change open-ended survey feedback into insights, and support scalable qualitative analysis embedded within quantitative workflows.
The new AI feature follows the release of Rival Technologies’ Multi-Agent AI Framework earlier this year, which is a modular, scalable system of AI Agents designed to support the research process.
In addition, new features have been added which include Pinterest Pixel Tracking, joining existing integrations with Meta, Reddit and Taboola, and expanding the platform’s recruitment capabilities via QR codes, customer relationship management, and branded websites and apps
Other features include an Authoring Assistant pilot and AI Smart Probe, which support the creation of conversational chat surveys with tone suggestions and follow-ups, and a Community Health Dashboard, offering views on subscription trends, engagement rates, demographics and active participation.
A Thoughtfulness Score feature has been introduced to evaluate open-ended responses across video, voice and text on areas such as relevance, clarity and emotional depth.
There is also early access support for WhatsApp as a distribution channel, and back-end upgrades including mid-chat redirects, member management tools, open-ended paste prevention and survey distribution via external platforms.
Andrew Reid, founder and chief executive at Rival Technologies, said: “These updates are about giving insight teams what they actually need right now.
“Smarter recruitment, easier community management, new distribution channels, AI that actually saves you time and respects the participant experience.”
AI Research
AARP warns of “Grandparent Scams”

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (WSFA) – While artificial intelligence is rapidly transforming our world, a troubling trend shows scammers using it to steal from seniors, specifically grandparents.
You’ve probably heard the phrase ‘seeing is believing’ your whole life. But in an age of artificial intelligence, the turn of phrase doesn’t exactly stand the test of time. When it’s in the wrong hands, this new technology can make our senior citizens, who didn’t grow up in the digital age, a vulnerable population.
“One of the ways we see that being done is with what’s known as the grandparent scam,” Jamie Harding, AARP of Alabama Communications director, said. “The grandparent scam is basically, it usually happens late at night, they’re asleep, and someone calls them purporting to be their grandchild, they’re in trouble, they need money immediately.”
However, it isn’t actually their grandchild on the other end of the phone. Scammers have used AI technology to replicate the sound of their grandchild’s voice to try to take money.
“These are very sophisticated international crime rings, and they have access to a lot of very sophisticated technology,” Harding said.
To protect your family from these scams, Harding suggests having a code word that every member of your family knows so you can be sure it’s actually your loved one calling.
She also advises you not to answer phone calls from unknown numbers and to keep your personal information off the internet.
Not reading this story on the WSFA News App? Get news alerts FASTER and FREE in the Apple App Store and the Google Play Store!
Copyright 2025 WSFA. All rights reserved.
AI Research
Inside Austin’s Gauntlet AI, the Elite Bootcamp Forging “AI First” Builders

AUSTIN, Texas — In the brave new world of artificial intelligence, talent is the new gold, and companies are in a frantic race to find it. While universities work to churn out computer science graduates, a new kind of school has emerged in Austin to meet the insatiable demand: Gauntlet AI.
Gauntlet AI bills itself as an elite training program. It’s a high-stakes, high-reward process designed to forge “AI-first” engineers and builders in a matter of weeks.
“We’re closer to Navy SEAL bootcamp training than a school,” said Ash Tilawat, Head of Product and Learning. “We take the smartest people in the world. We bring them into the same place for a 1000 hours over ten weeks and we make them go all in with building with AI.”
Austen Allred, the co-founder and CEO of Gauntlet AI, says when they claim to be looking for the smartest engineers in the world, it’s no exaggeration. The selection process is intensely rigorous.
“We accept around 2 percent of the applicants,” Allred explained. “We accept 98th percentile and above of raw intelligence, 95th percentile of coding ability, and then you start on The Gauntlet.”
ALSO| The 60-Second Guardian: Can a Swarm of Drones Stop a School Shooter?
The price of admission isn’t paid in dollars—there are no tuition fees. Instead, the cost is a student’s absolute, undivided attention.
“It is pretty grueling, but it’s invigorating and I love doing this,” said Nataly Smith, one of the “Gauntlet Challengers.”
Smith, whose passions lie in biotech and space, recently channeled her love for bioscience to complete one of the program’s challenges. Her team was tasked with building a project called “Geno.”
“It’s a tool where a person can upload their genomic data and get a statistical analysis of how likely they are to have different kinds of cancers,” Smith described.
Incredibly, her team built the AI-powered tool in just one week.
The ultimate prize waiting at the end of the grueling 10-week gauntlet is a guaranteed job offer with a starting salary of at least $200,000 a year. And hiring partners are already lining up to recruit challengers like Nataly.
“We very intentionally chose to partner with everything from seed-stage startups all the way to publicly traded companies,” said Brett Johnson, Gauntlet’s COO. “So Carvana is a hiring partner. Here in Austin, we have folks like Function Health. We have the Trilogy organization; we have Capital Factory just around the corner. We’re big into the Austin tech community and looking to double down on that.”
In a world desperate for skilled engineers, Gauntlet AI isn’t just training people; it’s manufacturing the very talent pipeline it believes will power the next wave of technological innovation.
AI Research
Endangered languages AI tools developed by UH researchers

University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa researchers have made a significant advance in studying how artificial intelligence (AI) understands endangered languages. This research could help communities document and maintain their languages, support language learning and make technology more accessible to speakers of minority languages.
The paper by Kaiying Lin, a PhD graduate in linguistics from UH Mānoa, and Department of Information and Computer Sciences Assistant Professor Haopeng Zhang, introduces the first benchmark for evaluating large language models (AI systems that process and generate text) on low-resource Austronesian languages. The study focuses on three Formosan (Indigenous peoples and languages of Taiwan) languages spoken in Taiwan—Atayal, Amis and Paiwan—that are at risk of disappearing.
Using a new benchmark called FORMOSANBENCH, Lin and Zhang tested AI systems on tasks such as machine translation, automatic speech recognition and text summarization. The findings revealed a large gap between AI performance in widely spoken languages such as English, and these smaller, endangered languages. Even when AI models were given examples or fine-tuned with extra data, they struggled to perform well.
“These results show that current AI systems are not yet capable of supporting low-resource languages,” Lin said.
Zhang added, “By highlighting these gaps, we hope to guide future development toward more inclusive technology that can help preserve endangered languages.”
The research team has made all datasets and code publicly available to encourage further work in this area. The preprint of the study is available online, and the study has been accepted into the 2025 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing in Suzhou, China, an internationally recognized premier AI conference.
The Department of Information and Computer Sciences is housed in UH Mānoa’s College of Natural Sciences, and the Department of Linguistics is housed in UH Mānoa’s College of Arts, Languages & Letters.
-
Business1 week ago
The Guardian view on Trump and the Fed: independence is no substitute for accountability | Editorial
-
Tools & Platforms4 weeks ago
Building Trust in Military AI Starts with Opening the Black Box – War on the Rocks
-
Ethics & Policy1 month ago
SDAIA Supports Saudi Arabia’s Leadership in Shaping Global AI Ethics, Policy, and Research – وكالة الأنباء السعودية
-
Events & Conferences4 months ago
Journey to 1000 models: Scaling Instagram’s recommendation system
-
Jobs & Careers2 months ago
Mumbai-based Perplexity Alternative Has 60k+ Users Without Funding
-
Education2 months ago
VEX Robotics launches AI-powered classroom robotics system
-
Podcasts & Talks2 months ago
Happy 4th of July! 🎆 Made with Veo 3 in Gemini
-
Funding & Business2 months ago
Kayak and Expedia race to build AI travel agents that turn social posts into itineraries
-
Education2 months ago
Macron says UK and France have duty to tackle illegal migration ‘with humanity, solidarity and firmness’ – UK politics live | Politics
-
Podcasts & Talks2 months ago
OpenAI 🤝 @teamganassi