Jyunmi
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overall a really good thing for the industry and the technologies and people getting their hands on and availability and things like that.
Yeah, I am excited.
And yeah, I definitely want to, you know, make a point on that is the importance of having these moved into the open source world.
So that means, I mean, in clear terms, what that means is all of this is going to be available to be built into any new apps or services.
And the fact that those three components that you laid out are all significant pieces to that capability of being able to integrate.
So it sounds...
It sounds exciting.
Now we can hope and dream that we'll see what comes out of that really real soon.
Now, let's see.
I do have a few more stories here.
I think the next one is something that we should cover, and that's genai.nil.
So the U.S.
Defense Department has launched GenAI.mil, a new internal website that gives about 3 million military and civilian staff access to generative AI tools, starting with Google Cloud's Gemini for government.
GenAI.mil is a secure portal where people with a Defense Department access card can log in and use AI to search documents, summarize policy handbooks, create checklists, and analyze imagery or video for planning and training.
Gemini for government will run an impact level five, a U.S.
defense security standard for sensitive but unclassified data.
The Pentagon is pitching this as both an administrative helper and a competitive move in the global race for military AI, with leaders saying that they are pushing all of our chips in on AI as a fighting force.
Google stresses that the data from GenAI.mil will stay in a sovereign cloud and will not be used to train public models.
Training programs will teach personnel how to use the tool safely and reduce AI hallucinations by grounding responses in web search and defense data.
So why does this matter?