While it still offers an online edition of its encyclopedia, as well as the Merriam-Webster dictionary, Britannica’s biggest business today is selling online education software to schools and libraries, the software it hopes to supercharge with AI.
Britannica’s CEO Jorge Cauz also told the Times about the company’s Britannica AI chatbot, which allows users to ask questions about its vast database of encyclopedic knowledge that it collected over two centuries from vetted academics and editors. The company similarly offers chatbot software for customer service use cases.
Britannica told the Times it is expecting revenue to double from two years ago, to $100 million.
https://gizmodo.com/encycloped...
They are pinning their future on providing AI products trained on their encyclopedias and research notes, putting them in somewhat direct competition with the other AI companies.
Unless it originates from the sky (which it won't)
What makes you think that? Both the US and Russia have airborne EWS systems that can spoof or jam GPS. Speaking of spoofing, that's the most common issue these days, not just straight-up signal jamming. Spoofing is much harder to deal with since the signals look legitimate.
When the weight of the paperwork equals the weight of the plane, the plane will fly. -- Donald Douglas