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Meta accelerates voice-powered AI push

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Meta accelerates voice-powered AI push

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Mark Zuckerberg is building up the voice capabilities of Meta’s artificial intelligence this year, as the social media giant pushes forward with plans to generate revenues from the fast-developing technology.

Meta is planning to introduce improved voice features into its latest open-source large language model, Llama 4, expected in the coming weeks, said people familiar with the matter, as it bets that future so-called AI-powered agents will be conversational rather than text-led.

The company has been particularly focused on making the conversation between a user and its voice model closer to a two-way natural dialogue, allowing for interruptions from the user rather than a more rigid question and answer format, one person said.

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The voice push comes as Zuckerberg, chief executive, has outlined bold plans to make the $1.7tn Silicon Valley company the “AI leader”, calling 2025 a make-or-break year for many of its AI products, as the group races against rivals such as OpenAI, Microsoft and Google to commercialise the technology.

This has led the company to look at trialling premium subscriptions for its AI assistant Meta AI, for agentic tasks such as booking reservations and video creation, said two people familiar with the matter. It is also considering introducing paid advertising or sponsored posts into the search results of its AI assistant, one of the people said.

Zuckerberg this year revealed plans to build an AI engineering agent that has the coding and problem-solving abilities of a mid-level engineer, which he said has a potentially “very large market”.

Meta declined to comment.

The group’s chief product officer Chris Cox on Wednesday highlighted some of its plans for Llama 4, saying it would be an “omni model” whereby speech would “be native . . . rather than translating voice into text, sending text to the LLM, getting text out, and turning that back into speech”.

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Speaking at the Morgan Stanley technology, media & telecom conference, he added: “I believe it’s a huge deal for the interface product, the idea that you can talk to the internet and just ask it anything. I think we are still wrapping our heads around how powerful that is.”

Meta has also been discussing the guardrails that the newest Llama model should have around what it can output and whether to lower them, two people familiar with the matter said.

The discussions come amid a flurry of launches from rivals and warnings from newly appointed ‘AI tsar’ David Sacks, a Silicon Valley venture capitalist, who has said he wants to ensure US AI models are not politically biased or “woke”.

OpenAI released its voice mode last year and has focused on giving it distinct personalities, while Grok 3, created by Elon Musk’s xAI and available on the X platform, rolled out its voice features to select users late last month.

The Grok model was specifically designed to have fewer guardrails, including an “unhinged mode” that deliberately responds in ways intended to be “objectionable, inappropriate, and offensive”, according to the company.

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Meta last year unveiled a less “sanctimonious” version of its AI model for its third Llama iteration, following criticism that Llama 2 was refusing to answer innocent questions.

Allowing users to interact with an AI assistant using voice commands is a major feature of Meta’s Ray Bans smart glasses, which have recently become a big hit among consumers. The group has accelerated its plans to build lightweight headsets that can usurp the smartphone as consumers’ main computing device.

Additional reporting by Melissa Heikkilä in London

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Video: Snowstorm Causes 100-Vehicle Pileup in Michigan

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Video: Snowstorm Causes 100-Vehicle Pileup in Michigan

new video loaded: Snowstorm Causes 100-Vehicle Pileup in Michigan

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Snowstorm Causes 100-Vehicle Pileup in Michigan

More than 100 vehicles slipped and crashed into one another in a chain-reaction pileup on a Michigan interstate on Monday.

“I seen it way ahead and I had to go. I had to go out. I went off the edge.” “This guy got hit too.”

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More than 100 vehicles slipped and crashed into one another in a chain-reaction pileup on a Michigan interstate on Monday.

By Jackeline Luna

January 19, 2026

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Top U.S. archbishops denounce American foreign policy

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Top U.S. archbishops denounce American foreign policy

From right, U.S. Cardinals, Joseph Tobin of Newark, and Blase Cupich of Chicago, attend a press conference at the North American College in Rome on May 9, 2025. Along with Cardinal Robert McElroy, archbishop of Washington (not pictured), the men issued a strongly worded statement on Monday criticizing the Trump administration’s foreign policy.

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Gregorio Borgia/AP

The three highest-ranking heads of Roman Catholic archdioceses in the United States issued a strongly worded statement on Monday criticizing the Trump administration’s foreign policy — without mentioning President Trump by name.

Cardinals Blase Cupich, archbishop of Chicago, Robert McElroy, archbishop of Washington, and Joseph Tobin, archbishop of Newark, say America’s actions raise moral questions.

“Our country’s moral role in confronting evil around the world, sustaining the right to life and human dignity, and supporting religious liberty are all under examination,” the statement reads. “And the building of just and sustainable peace, so crucial to humanity’s well-being now and in the future, is being reduced to partisan categories that encourage polarization and destructive policies.”

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They continued, “We seek a foreign policy that respects and advances the right to human life, religious liberty, and the enhancement of human dignity throughout the world, especially through economic assistance.”

The senior leaders cited the recent events in Venezuela, Ukraine and Greenland, which they said “have raised basic questions about the use of military force and the meaning of peace.”

The White House did not immediately respond to NPR’s request for comment.

The statement by the American cardinals was inspired by a recent speech Pope Leo XIV gave to ambassadors to the Holy See. In it, he criticized the weakening of multilateralism.

“A diplomacy that promotes dialogue and seeks consensus among all parties is being replaced by a diplomacy based on force, by either individuals or groups of allies. War is back in vogue and a zeal for war is spreading,” Leo said in his Jan. 9 address. “Peace is sought through weapons as a condition for asserting one’s own dominion. This gravely threatens the rule of law, which is the foundation of all peaceful civil coexistence.”

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Cupich said in a comment explaining the reasoning behind the archbishops’ statement, “As pastors entrusted with the teaching of our people, we cannot stand by while decisions are made that condemn millions to lives trapped permanently at the edge of existence,” he said. “Pope Leo has given us clear direction and we must apply his teachings to the conduct of our nation and its leaders.”

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Woman died after riding Revenge of the Mummy coaster at Universal Orlando, report says

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Woman died after riding Revenge of the Mummy coaster at Universal Orlando, report says

A 70-year-old woman died in November after riding the Revenge of the Mummy roller coaster at Universal Studios in Orlando, according to a report from the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services.

The woman became unresponsive while riding the attraction on Nov. 25, the state agency said in its latest quarterly report on injuries at theme parks, which covers the last three months of 2025. She later died at a hospital, it said. The report did not provide additional details about the circumstances surrounding her death.

CBS News has reached out to Universal Orlando.

Revenge of the Mummy is an elaborate-looking indoor ride that incorporates elements of a typical roller coaster, strapping riders into conjoined carts that whisk them along a dimly-lit track filled with jerks and jump scares, as promotional materials for the experience show. 

According to a description of the ride published in a Universal Studios safety guide, Revenge of the Mummy “is a high-speed roller coaster ride that includes sudden and dramatic acceleration, climbing, tilting, and dropping.” At times, the ride reaches speeds of up to 45 mph, CBS affiliage WKMG reported.

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The ride has a minimum height requirement of 4 feet tall and isn’t suitable for passengers with a variety of medical conditions, including those who are susceptible to motion sickness or dizziness, or who have histories of heart conditions, abnormal blood pressure, back issues, neck issues, medical sensitivities to strobe effects, medical sensitivities to fog effects and any “other conditions which may be aggravated” by the ride, the safety description says.

This was the second death linked to a Universal Studios ride last year, Florida’s previous theme park injury report showed. On Sept. 17, a 32-year-old man died after riding the park’s Stardust Racers roller coaster. Citing a medical examiner’s report, WKMG reported that the man’s cause of death was determined to be “multiple blunt impact injuries.”

Earlier, in August, a 32-year-old woman was injured on the Revenge of the Mummy ride, according to the report, which said she suffered neck pain and motion sickness.

Florida law requires theme parks in the state to report ride-related injuries that require hospital stays of at least 24 hours.

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