Pentagon taps four commercial tech firms to expand military use of AI
Each company received a contract worth up to $200 million, according to a notice from the Chief Digital and AI Office. The firms will help the Defense Department develop agentic AI workflows for key national security missions.
'Leveraging commercially available solutions into an integrated capabilities approach will accelerate the use of advanced AI as part of our Joint mission essential tasks in our warfighting domain as well as intelligence, business, and enterprise information systems,' Chief Digital and AI Officer Doug Matty said in a statement.
The military services have adopted generative AI tools to varying degrees and for a range of tasks — from tech support to finding files. Agentic AI uses more advanced reasoning to address and act on more complex challenges.
The Pentagon didn't specify what missions the program would support, but the department has said it wants to use AI in areas like intelligence analysis, campaigning, logistics and data collection.
Following the announcement, Elon Musk-owned xAI — whose conversational AI chatbot goes by the name Grok — unveiled a U.S. government-specific production line called Grok for Government.
Grok has come under scrutiny after an update generated a slew of racists and antisemitic comments. In one instance, the chatbot referred to itself as 'MechaHitler.'
The award follows Musk's months-long push from within the White House to slash federal spending. Amid a public falling out earlier this summer, President Donald Trump has threatened to cancel government contracts awarded to Musk's companies. Under this new deal, however, the billionaire's federal work would expand.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fast Company
2 minutes ago
- Fast Company
Gmail's new ‘Manage Subscriptions' tool could change email marketing forever
Inbox fatigue is real. According to one analysis, the average person receives more than 120 emails a day, with some office-based staff receiving even more due to their work environment. From Substack newsletters to marketing emails from local stores (alongside standard business updates), it can be difficult to stay on top of it all. It's a challenge Google, owner of Gmail—the world's second-most-used email service after Apple Mail—has acknowledged and is now addressing. Beginning this week, the company is rolling out a new feature for Gmail users in select countries: Manage Subscriptions. The tool lets users see all their active email subscriptions in one place, along with a count of how many emails each sender has delivered in recent weeks. From there, unsubscribing takes just a single click. 'It can be easy to feel overwhelmed by the sheer volume of subscription emails clogging your inbox: Daily deal alerts that are basically spam, weekly newsletters from blogs you no longer read, promotional emails from retailers you haven't shopped in years can quickly pile up,' said Gmail director Chris Doan, in a company blog post announcing the feature earlier this month. For users, it's a welcome step toward reclaiming control of their inboxes. But for email marketers, this visibility—and the ease of opting out—could signal a reckoning. The feature reflects a broader trend, says Omar Merlo, an associate professor of marketing strategy at Imperial College London, wherein customers are looking for greater control, more meaningful content, and added value in their interactions with brands. 'If email doesn't meet that standard, people now have a faster and easier way to walk away,' Merlo says. 'This isn't the end of email marketing. It is perhaps the end of sloppy email marketing.' And while the tool may accelerate unsubscribes among already-disengaged users, some say it's unlikely to trigger a mass exodus, and could, in a sense, help marketers by reducing spam complaints. 'Unsubscribes are better than spam complaints,' says Desi Zhivkova, deliverability team lead at e-commerce marketing platform Omnisend. 'Giving users easier ways to opt out peacefully helps preserve sender reputation and improves long-term deliverability.' Richard Stone, managing director of PR agency Stone Junction, believes it could elevate the quality of email marketing. 'Email marketing has always been about creating a list of people who actually want to hear from you,' he says. 'All Gmail is doing is making that principle harder to ignore. In the long run, this kind of user control will lead to better relationships between brands and their audiences, not worse.'


Android Authority
2 minutes ago
- Android Authority
Your favorite wallpaper app is prettier than ever thanks to its Material 3 Expressive update
Rita El Khoury / Android Authority TL;DR Backdrops has been updated to version 6.0, integrating Google's Material 3 Expressive design language. UI enhancements include improved carousel, better loading animations, refreshed progress indicators, rounded corners, new icons, and diverse color palette pairings. The facelift improves the visual experience for users who regularly search for wallpapers within the app. Material 3 Expressive is the flavor of the season. We've seen plenty of Google apps work their way towards adopting the latest design language iteration for Android, and several of our favorite non-Google apps are also on board the Material 3 Expressive hype train. The popular wallpaper app Backdrops is also jumping on board, with the latest update bringing Material 3 Expressive to the app. The changelog for Backdrops shows that the app has been updated to v6.0 with Material 3 Expressive elements. Zac Kew-Denniss / Android Authority The changes are spread across the UI, such as the landing page carousel, which has a sweet animation. The animations for loading, progress, and refresh have also been refreshed. Elsewhere, there are new icons, more rounded corners, and more color palette pairings. Here's a quick run-through of some of the highlight changes that have come with the update: Many of us like to swap wallpapers frequently, even if just to keep our setup fresh. While most users will not spend more than a few seconds within a wallpaper app, we know many Android enthusiasts spend a lot of time hunting for the best wallpaper for their phone. This update thus feels right at home, letting us enjoy all the elements of good UI/UX design across apps. Got a tip? Talk to us! Email our staff at Email our staff at news@ . You can stay anonymous or get credit for the info, it's your choice.

3 minutes ago
Trump is signaling a change on Ukraine. What does it mean for Putin?: ANALYSIS
LONDON -- President Donald Trump had promised a "major statement" on Russia on Monday, and it did look like a big shift in his approach to the war in Ukraine. But significant uncertainty remains amid a lack of key details. Sitting in the Oval Office with NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte, and apparently fed up with being slow-walked by Russian President Vladimir Putin, Trump threatened the Kremlin with tough tariffs if it doesn't make a deal to end the war within 50 days. But perhaps more important was Trump's shift on weapons. After months of seeming to threaten he might cut off military aid to Ukraine entirely, on Monday Trump promised "billions" in weapons would be sent, now that Europe will pay for them. Trump and Rutte announced that other NATO countries have now agreed to purchase U.S. weapons on Ukraine's behalf. Much remained unclear about the deal, but Rutte claimed it meant Ukraine will now be able to get "massive" amounts of military equipment, including ammunition and missiles. European allies, he and Trump said, would also be able to now rush equipment from their own depleted stocks to Ukraine, knowing it can be backfilled. If Trump now permits a substantial amount of U.S. weapons to continue to flow to Ukraine, that would mark an important change. Since Trump took office, many in Ukraine and European capitals have thought that might well be the best-case scenario for Ukraine, given the U.S. president's clear hostility to continuing U.S. donations. Most of all, it would send a very different message to Putin. For months, Putin has believed, Ukraine's U.S. military backstop has been dissolving under Trump. That has emboldened Putin to push harder in military action against Ukraine. If this deal reverses that, it may start to change Putin's perception. But the details will matter. The Patriot missile defense systems Trump has authorized to send are important, given Russia's hugely increased air attacks. But a real test now will be what other weapons will Ukraine receive. Trump also said the U.S. would send "various pieces of very sophisticated military equipment." For now, the Pentagon is still working out what will be sent, two U.S. officials told ABC News on Monday. But Trump on Monday did appear to be much closer to U.S. allies' view of the war. In contrast to the Oval Office meeting in February where he berated Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, on Monday Trump praised Ukraine as "courageous" and spoke of the "amazing" "esprit de corps" of European countries in uniting to defend it. On Putin, Trump again expressed frustration, at one point coming close to repeating former President Joe Biden, who called Putin "a killer." "I don't want to say he's an assassin, but he's a tough guy. It's been proven over the years. He's fooled a lot of people," Trump said, listing off recent former presidents he said Putin had duped. Trump said Putin "didn't fool me," but he expressed surprise that what he called his "nice" phone calls with Putin had turned out not to mean anything. "I always hang up say, 'Well, that was a nice phone call.' And then missiles launched into Kyiv or some other city, and it's strange. And after that happens, three or four times, you say the talk doesn't mean anything," Trump said. "I go home, I tell the first lady, 'And I spoke with Vladimir today. We had a wonderful conversation.' She said, 'Oh, really? Another city was just hit.'" The key question now is how seriously will Putin take Trump's new approach? The tariff threat also currently remains vague and some experts have expressed doubts it can be effectively imposed. So-called "secondary tariffs" to punish countries that import Russian oil and gas could have a potent effect but are complicated and, for example, could require a major showdown with China. An obvious question is why did Trump choose to give Putin 50 days before imposing 100% tariffs? One possible explanation is that period is how long Russia's current summer offensive is predicted to last. Axios reported recently that Putin himself even told Trump in a recent phone call that he intended to push hard for the next 60 days. The Trump administration may hope Putin will be more inclined to negotiate once Russia's offensive exhausts itself, particularly if it goes badly. Intensified sanctions -- if they come -- and greatly increased weapons might slowly push Putin towards real negotiations, if his summer offensive fails to achieve much. But Putin may not believe Trump has the patience to stick with a hard line. Tatiana Stanovaya, a Russia analyst and founder of wrote on X that many in Russia's elite viewed Trump's new approach as just a temporary maneuver to test Putin. "Once it becomes evident that such pressure is ineffective -- expected to be soon -- Trump is likely to revert to a diplomatic course, including exerting pressure on Ukraine to reach a compromise," Stanovaya said, summarizing the group's thinking. In the short term, Putin is likely to continue to push as hard as he can. He believes he's winning. Only when he starts thinking otherwise might he negotiate.