AI Research
The Smartest Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stocks to Buy With $1,000

AI investing is still one of the most promising trends on the market.
Buying artificial intelligence (AI) stocks after the run they’ve had over the past few years may seem silly. However, the reality is that many of these companies are still experiencing rapid growth and anticipate even greater gains on the horizon.
By investing now, you can get in on the second wave of AI investing success before it hits. While it won’t be nearly as lucrative as the first round that occurred from 2023 to 2024, it should still provide market-beating results, making these stocks great buys now.
Image source: Getty Images.
AI Hardware: Taiwan Semiconductor and Nvidia
The demand for AI computing power appears to be insatiable. All of the AI hyperscalers are spending record amounts on building data centers in 2025, but they’re also projecting to top that number in 2026. This bodes well for companies supplying products to fill those data centers with the computing power needed for processing AI workloads.
Two of my favorites in this space are Nvidia (NVDA -3.38%) and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (TSM -3.05%). Nvidia makes graphics processing units (GPUs), which have been the primary computing muscle for AI workloads so far. Thousands of GPUs are connected in clusters due to their ability to process multiple calculations in parallel, creating a powerful computing machine designed for training and processing AI workloads.
Inside these GPUs are chips produced by Taiwan Semiconductor, the world’s leading contract chip manufacturer. TSMC also supplies chips to Nvidia’s competitors, such as Advanced Micro Devices, so it’s playing both sides of the arms race. This is a great position to be in, and it has led to impressive growth for TSMC.
Both Taiwan Semiconductor and Nvidia are capitalizing on massive data center demand, and have the growth to back it up. In Q2 FY 2026 (ending July 27), Nvidia’s revenue increased by 56% year over year. Taiwan Semiconductor’s revenue rose by 44% in its corresponding Q2, showcasing the strength of both of these businesses.
With data center demand only expected to increase, both of these companies make for smart buys now.
AI Hyperscalers: Amazon, Alphabet, and Meta Platforms
The AI hyperscalers are companies that spend a significant amount of money on AI computing capacity for internal use and to provide tools for consumers. Three major players in this space are Amazon (AMZN -1.16%), Alphabet (GOOG 0.56%) (GOOGL 0.63%), and Meta Platforms (META -1.69%).
Amazon makes this list due to the boost its cloud computing division, Amazon Web Services (AWS), is experiencing. Cloud computing is benefiting from the AI arms race because it allows clients to rent computing power from companies that have more resources than they do. AWS is the market leader in this space, and it is a huge part of Amazon’s business. Despite making up only 18% of Q2 revenue, it generated 53% of Amazon’s operating profits. AWS is a significant beneficiary of AI and is helping drive the stock higher.
Alphabet (GOOG 0.56%) (GOOGL 0.63%) also has a cloud computing wing with Google Cloud, but it’s also developing one of the highest-performing generative AI models: Gemini. Alphabet has integrated Gemini into nearly all of its products, including its most important, Google Search.
With the integration of generative AI into the traditional Google Search, Alphabet has bridged a gap that many investors feared would be the end for Google. This hasn’t been the case, and Alphabet’s impressive 12% growth in Google Search revenue in Q2 supports that. Despite its strong growth, Alphabet is by far the cheapest stock on this list, trading for less than 21 times forward earnings.
AMZN PE Ratio (Forward) data by YCharts
With Alphabet’s strength and strong position, combined with a cheap stock valuation, it’s an excellent one to buy now.
To round out this list, Meta Platforms (META -1.69%) is another smart pick. It’s the parent company of social media platforms Facebook and Instagram, and gets a huge amount of money from ads. As a result, it’s investing significant resources into improving how AI designs and targets ads, and it’s already seeing some effects. AI has already increased the amount of time users spend on Facebook and Instagram, and is also driving more ad conversions.
We’re just scratching the surface of what AI can do for Meta’s business, and with Meta spending a significant amount of money on top AI talent, it should be able to convert that into some substantial business wins.
AI is a significant boost for the world’s largest companies, and I wouldn’t be surprised to see them outperform the broader market in the coming year as a result.
Keithen Drury has positions in Alphabet, Amazon, Meta Platforms, Nvidia, and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Alphabet, Amazon, Meta Platforms, Nvidia, and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
AI Research
UCR Researchers Bolster AI Against Rogue Rewiring

As generative AI models move from massive cloud servers to phones and cars, they’re stripped down to save power. But what gets trimmed can include the technology that stops them from spewing hate speech or offering roadmaps for criminal activity.
To counter this threat, researchers at the University of California, Riverside, have developed a method to preserve AI safeguards even when open-source AI models are stripped down to run on lower-power devices.
Unlike proprietary AI systems, open‑source models can be downloaded, modified, and run offline by anyone. Their accessibility promotes innovation and transparency but also creates challenges when it comes to oversight. Without the cloud infrastructure and constant monitoring available to closed systems, these models are vulnerable to misuse.
The UCR researchers focused on a key issue: carefully designed safety features erode when open-source AI models are reduced in size. This happens because lower‑power deployments often skip internal processing layers to conserve memory and computational power. Dropping layers improves the models’ speed and efficiency, but could also result in answers containing pornography, or detailed instructions for making weapons.
“Some of the skipped layers turn out to be essential for preventing unsafe outputs,” said Amit Roy-Chowdhury, professor of electrical and computer engineering and senior author of the study. “If you leave them out, the model may start answering questions it shouldn’t.”
The team’s solution was to retrain the model’s internal structure so that its ability to detect and block dangerous prompts is preserved, even when key layers are removed. Their approach avoids external filters or software patches. Instead, it changes how the model understands risky content at a fundamental level.
“Our goal was to make sure the model doesn’t forget how to behave safely when it’s been slimmed down,” said Saketh Bachu, UCR graduate student and co-lead author of the study.
To test their method, the researchers used LLaVA 1.5, a vision‑language model capable of processing both text and images. They found that certain combinations, such as pairing a harmless image with a malicious question, could bypass the model’s safety filters. In one instance, the altered model responded with detailed instructions for building a bomb.
After retraining, however, the model reliably refused to answer dangerous queries, even when deployed with only a fraction of its original architecture.
“This isn’t about adding filters or external guardrails,” Bachu said. “We’re changing the model’s internal understanding, so it’s on good behavior by default, even when it’s been modified.”
Bachu and co-lead author Erfan Shayegani, also a graduate student, describe the work as “benevolent hacking,” a way of fortifying models before vulnerabilities can be exploited. Their ultimate goal is to develop techniques that ensure safety across every internal layer, making AI more robust in real‑world conditions.
In addition to Roy-Chowdhury, Bachu, and Shayegani, the research team included doctoral students Arindam Dutta, Rohit Lal, and Trishna Chakraborty, and UCR faculty members Chengyu Song, Yue Dong, and Nael Abu-Ghazaleh. Their work is detailed in a paper presented this year at the International Conference on Machine Learning in Vancouver, Canada.
“There’s still more work to do,” Roy-Chowdhury said. “But this is a concrete step toward developing AI in a way that’s both open and responsible.”
AI Research
Should AI Get Legal Rights?

In one paper Eleos AI published, the nonprofit argues for evaluating AI consciousness using a “computational functionalism” approach. A similar idea was once championed by none other than Putnam, though he criticized it later in his career. The theory suggests that human minds can be thought of as specific kinds of computational systems. From there, you can then figure out if other computational systems, such as a chabot, have indicators of sentience similar to those of a human.
Eleos AI said in the paper that “a major challenge in applying” this approach “is that it involves significant judgment calls, both in formulating the indicators and in evaluating their presence or absence in AI systems.”
Model welfare is, of course, a nascent and still evolving field. It’s got plenty of critics, including Mustafa Suleyman, the CEO of Microsoft AI, who recently published a blog about “seemingly conscious AI.”
“This is both premature, and frankly dangerous,” Suleyman wrote, referring generally to the field of model welfare research. “All of this will exacerbate delusions, create yet more dependence-related problems, prey on our psychological vulnerabilities, introduce new dimensions of polarization, complicate existing struggles for rights, and create a huge new category error for society.”
Suleyman wrote that “there is zero evidence” today that conscious AI exists. He included a link to a paper that Long coauthored in 2023 that proposed a new framework for evaluating whether an AI system has “indicator properties” of consciousness. (Suleyman did not respond to a request for comment from WIRED.)
I chatted with Long and Campbell shortly after Suleyman published his blog. They told me that, while they agreed with much of what he said, they don’t believe model welfare research should cease to exist. Rather, they argue that the harms Suleyman referenced are the exact reasons why they want to study the topic in the first place.
“When you have a big, confusing problem or question, the one way to guarantee you’re not going to solve it is to throw your hands up and be like ‘Oh wow, this is too complicated,’” Campbell says. “I think we should at least try.”
Testing Consciousness
Model welfare researchers primarily concern themselves with questions of consciousness. If we can prove that you and I are conscious, they argue, then the same logic could be applied to large language models. To be clear, neither Long nor Campbell think that AI is conscious today, and they also aren’t sure it ever will be. But they want to develop tests that would allow us to prove it.
“The delusions are from people who are concerned with the actual question, ‘Is this AI, conscious?’ and having a scientific framework for thinking about that, I think, is just robustly good,” Long says.
But in a world where AI research can be packaged into sensational headlines and social media videos, heady philosophical questions and mind-bending experiments can easily be misconstrued. Take what happened when Anthropic published a safety report that showed Claude Opus 4 may take “harmful actions” in extreme circumstances, like blackmailing a fictional engineer to prevent it from being shut off.
AI Research
Trends in patent filing for artificial intelligence-assisted medical technologies | Smart & Biggar

[co-authors: Jessica Lee, Noam Amitay and Sarah McLaughlin]
Medical technologies incorporating artificial intelligence (AI) are an emerging area of innovation with the potential to transform healthcare. Employing techniques such as machine learning, deep learning and natural language processing,1 AI enables machine-based systems that can make predictions, recommendations or decisions that influence real or virtual environments based on a given set of objectives.2 For example, AI-based medical systems can collect medical data, analyze medical data and assist in medical treatment, or provide informed recommendations or decisions.3 According to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), some key areas in which AI are applied in medical devices include: 4
- Image acquisition and processing
- Diagnosis, prognosis, and risk assessment
- Early disease detection
- Identification of new patterns in human physiology and disease progression
- Development of personalized diagnostics
- Therapeutic treatment response monitoring
Patent filing data related to these application areas can help us see emerging trends.
Table of contents
Analysis strategy
We identified nine subcategories of interest:
- Image acquisition and processing
- Medical image acquisition
- Pre-processing of medical imaging
- Pattern recognition and classification for image-based diagnosis
- Diagnosis, prognosis and risk management
- Early disease detection
- Identification of new patterns in physiology and disease
- Development of personalized diagnostics and medicine
- Therapeutic treatment response monitoring
- Clinical workflow management
- Surgical planning/implants
We searched patent filings in each subcategory from 2001 to 2023. In the results below, the number of patent filings are based on patent families, each patent family being a collection of patent documents covering the same technology, which have at least one priority document in common.5
What has been filed over the years?
The number of patents filed in each subcategory of AI-assisted applications for medical technologies from 2001 to 2023 is shown below.
We see that patenting activities are concentrating in the areas of treatment response monitoring, identification of new patterns in physiology and disease, clinical workflow management, pattern recognition and classification for image-based diagnosis, and development of personalized diagnostics and medicine. This suggests that research and development efforts are focused on these areas.
What do the annual numbers tell us?
Let’s look at the annual number of patent filings for the categories and subcategories listed above. The following four graphs show the global patent filing trends over time for the categories of AI-assisted medical technologies related to: image acquisition and processing; diagnosis, prognosis and risk management; treatment response monitoring; and workflow management.
When looking at the patent filings on an annual basis, the numbers confirm the expected significant uptick in patenting activities in recent years for all categories searched. They also show that, within the four categories, the subcategories showing the fastest rate of growth were: pattern recognition and classification for image-based diagnosis, identification of new patterns in human physiology and disease, treatment response monitoring, and clinical workflow management.
Above: Global patent filing trends over time for categories of AI-assisted medical technologies related to image acquisition and processing.
Above: Global patent filing trends over time for categories of AI-assisted medical technologies related to more accurate diagnosis, prognosis and risk management.
Above: Global patent filing trends over time for AI-assisted medical technologies related to treatment response monitoring.
Above: Global patent filing trends over time for categories of AI-assisted medical technologies related to workflow management.
Where is R&D happening?
By looking at where the inventors are located, we can see where R&D activities are occurring. We found that the two most frequent inventor locations are the United States (50.3%) and China (26.2%). Both Australia and Canada are amongst the ten most frequent inventor locations, with Canada ranking seventh and Australia ranking ninth in the five subcategories that have the highest patenting activities from 2001-2023.
Where are the destination markets?
The filing destinations provide a clue as to the intended markets or locations of commercial partnerships. The United States (30.6%) and China (29.4%) again are the pace leaders. Canada is the seventh most frequent destination jurisdiction with 3.2% of patent filings. Australia is the eighth most frequent destination jurisdiction with 3.1% of patent filings.
Takeaways
Our analysis found that the leading subcategories of AI-assisted medical technology patent applications from 2001 to 2023 include treatment response monitoring, identification of new patterns in human physiology and disease, clinical workflow management, pattern recognition and classification for image-based diagnosis as well as development of personalized diagnostics and medicine.
In more recent years, we found the fastest growth in the areas of pattern recognition and classification for image-based diagnosis, identification of new patterns in human physiology and disease, treatment response monitoring, and clinical workflow management, suggesting that R&D efforts are being concentrated in these areas.
We saw that patent filings in the areas of early disease detection and surgical/implant monitoring increased later than the other categories, suggesting these may be emerging areas of growth.
Although, as expected, the United States and China are consistently the leading jurisdictions in both inventor location and destination patent offices, Canada and Australia are frequently in the top ten.
Patent intelligence provides powerful tools for decision makers in looking at what might be shaping our future. With recent geopolitical changes and policy updates in key primary markets, as well as shifts in trade relationships, patent filings give us insight into how these aspects impact innovation. For everyone, it provides exciting clues as to what emerging technologies may shape our lives.
References
1. Alowais et.al., Revolutionizing healthcare: the role of artificial intelligence in clinical practice (2023), BMC Medical Education, 23:689.
2. U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning in Software as a Medical Device.
3. Bitkina et.al., Application of artificial intelligence in medical technologies: a systematic review of main trends (2023), Digital Health, 9:1-15.
4. Artificial Intelligence Program: Research on AI/ML-Based Medical Devices | FDA.
5. INPADOC extended patent family.
[View source.]
-
Business6 days ago
The Guardian view on Trump and the Fed: independence is no substitute for accountability | Editorial
-
Tools & Platforms3 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
-
Funding & Business2 months ago
Kayak and Expedia race to build AI travel agents that turn social posts into itineraries
-
Podcasts & Talks2 months ago
Happy 4th of July! 🎆 Made with Veo 3 in Gemini
-
Podcasts & Talks2 months ago
OpenAI 🤝 @teamganassi
-
Education2 months ago
Macron says UK and France have duty to tackle illegal migration ‘with humanity, solidarity and firmness’ – UK politics live | Politics