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    A businesswoman reading about AI news

    The 15 Best Websites You Should Read to Learn About Developments in AI

    Richard Harroch
    TechnologyAI Technology & Telecommunications
    Oct 24, 2025

    By Richard D. Harroch and Dominique A. Harroch

    Artificial intelligence is reshaping every corner of business, technology, and society. From autonomous systems to generative creativity, breakthroughs now arrive weekly, and the ripple effects are transforming how companies operate and compete. Yet the sheer speed of innovation makes it hard to stay informed. The challenge isn’t finding information—it’s finding reliable, insightful, and regularly updated sources that help you understand what’s happening and why it matters.

    To help you navigate the AI landscape with clarity, we’ve curated a list of the 15 best websites to follow. These range from top-tier media outlets and research labs to community-driven platforms and specialized newsletters. Together, they give you a 360-degree view on AI—covering technology, business strategy, ethics, and practical applications. We compiled this information with research assistance from AI.

    1. AllBusiness.com

    Specialty: Practical business and startup advice with a growing focus on AI adoption.
    Why it matters: AllBusiness.com brings a unique perspective for entrepreneurs, executives, and small business owners who want to understand how AI can streamline operations, marketing, and decision-making. Unlike academic or tech-heavy sources, its articles focus on actionable insights—how AI tools impact productivity, sales, and innovation. Updated several times a week, it’s an accessible bridge between frontier technology and real-world business use.
    Website:https://www.allbusiness.com

    2. TechCrunch (AI Section)

    Specialty: Startup news, funding trends, and emerging technologies.
    Why it matters: TechCrunch covers the global innovation ecosystem, from stealth-mode AI startups to Big Tech product launches. Their dedicated AI coverage tracks venture capital trends, product announcements, and interviews with founders who are shaping the next generation of AI applications. The site updates daily, making it one of the most immediate ways to monitor the industry pulse.
    Website: https://www.techcrunch.com

    3. Forbes (AI and Innovation Channels)

    Specialty: Executive-level analysis of business, technology, and leadership.
    Why it matters: Forbes offers thought leadership pieces from business strategists, investors, and researchers. Its AI section includes features on how artificial intelligence is transforming industries—from finance to entertainment—and opinion pieces on governance, regulation, and the future of work. Forbes’ contributor model ensures a diverse set of voices and perspectives, with fresh updates daily.
    Website: https://www.forbes.com

    4. Time.com (AI and Technology Coverage)

    Specialty: Mainstream journalism that contextualizes AI’s social and ethical impacts.
    Why it matters: TIME takes a broader cultural lens, asking what these technologies mean for people, jobs, democracy, and humanity. Articles are published weekly or more often, blending expert interviews with accessible storytelling. TIME’s AI coverage often explores regulation, misinformation, and how emerging tools are reshaping art, education, and politics—an essential complement to the tech-first outlets.
    Website: https://www.time.com

    5. OpenAI Blog

    Specialty: Frontier research and product releases from one of the world’s leading AI labs.
    Why it matters: OpenAI’s blog is the definitive source for understanding its model updates, safety work, and the reasoning behind new features like GPT-5 or DALL-E. Posts range from deep technical explainers to accessible summaries and policy reflections. The blog is updated periodically—typically several times a quarter—but each post is a major event that sets the tone for the wider AI conversation.
    Website: https://www.openai.com/blog

    6. Anthropic Research and Blog

    Specialty: AI safety, interpretability, and responsible development.
    Why it matters: Anthropic, creator of Claude, emphasizes alignment and constitutional AI—building systems that behave according to human values. Their blog offers detailed research summaries, safety frameworks, and philosophical insights into AI governance. Posts are less frequent than news sites, but always substantive, balancing technical rigor with ethical reflection.
    Website: https://www.anthropic.co

    7. Substack (AI Writers and Newsletters)

    Specialty: Independent experts sharing specialized, in-depth commentary.
    Why it matters: Substack has become the intellectual salon of the AI world. Influential writers—such as Gary Marcus, Ethan Mollick, or the authors of The Algorithmic Bridge—use it to share unfiltered, long-form analysis on AI’s business and societal impacts. Most newsletters publish weekly or biweekly, offering more depth than news sites and less jargon than academic papers. Substack provides push notifications from its app.
    Website: https://www.substack.com

    8. MIT Technology Review – AI Section

    Specialty: Serious journalism at the intersection of research, business, and policy.
    Why it matters: Written by seasoned tech correspondents, MIT Technology Review provides fact-checked reporting that separates hype from reality. Its AI section offers clear, accessible explanations of complex research and the human consequences of automation. The site updates several times per week, making it one of the most balanced and credible voices in the space.
    Website: https://www.technologyreview.com

    9. Stanford Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence (HAI)

    Specialty: Research and policy analysis linking AI to real-world outcomes.
    Why it matters: Stanford HAI publishes academic studies, event recordings, and policy papers focused on ethical, transparent, and human-centered design. Their updates—usually weekly—are especially valuable for readers who want to understand governance and long-term impacts rather than product news.
    Website: https://hai.stanford.edu

    10. The Batch (DeepLearning.AI)

    Specialty: Curated weekly newsletter founded by Andrew Ng.
    Why it matters: “The Batch” distills the week’s most significant developments into a concise, easy-to-scan format, combining summaries of research papers with commentary on industry moves. It’s practical, neutral, and ideal for professionals who can spare 10 minutes a week to stay informed.
    Website: https://www.deeplearning.ai/the-batch

    11. The Wall Street Journal (AI and Tech Coverage)

    Specialty: Authoritative global reporting on business, markets, and emerging technology.
    Why it matters: The Wall Street Journal offers in-depth analysis of how AI affects finance, global markets, and corporate strategy. Its technology and artificial intelligence sections cover regulatory trends, data privacy issues, Big Tech developments, and AI’s economic impact. With daily updates and rigorous journalism, WSJ provides a balanced, business-oriented lens that complements more technical sources.
    Website: https://www.wsj.com

    12. Hugging Face Blog and Forums

    Specialty: Open-source AI models, developer tools, and community projects.
    Why it matters: Hugging Face has become the GitHub of machine learning. Its blog shares updates on open-source releases, research collaborations, and implementation guides, while its forums host active discussions among practitioners. Updated weekly, it’s the best place to learn how to build and deploy AI responsibly.
    Website: https://www.huggingface.co/blog

    13. Google DeepMind Blog

    Specialty: Research breakthroughs and scientific applications.
    Why it matters: DeepMind’s posts go deep on innovations in reinforcement learning, protein folding, and language modeling. They’re written clearly enough for educated readers and often accompanied by videos or visual summaries. The blog is updated every few weeks and remains one of the most authoritative voices in AI science.
    Website: https://www.deepmind.com/blog

    14. NVIDIA Technical Blog

    Specialty: Infrastructure, hardware optimization, and applied AI.
    Why it matters: For engineers and business leaders implementing AI, NVIDIA’s blog explains how to scale systems and improve performance. It features developer tutorials, model benchmarks, and case studies showing AI in fields like healthcare and robotics. Posts arrive multiple times per week and are highly practical.
    Website: https://developer.nvidia.com/blog

    15. The Gradient

    Specialty: Long-form essays and interviews by researchers and industry experts.
    Why it matters: The Gradient blends academic rigor with narrative clarity. Each piece dives deep into a specific topic—like transformer architecture or AI safety—making it perfect for readers who want more context than the average news story. Published every few weeks, it rewards slow, thoughtful reading.
    Website: https://www.thegradient.pub

    Why AI Is Evolving So Rapidly

    Three major forces drive AI’s current velocity. First, exponential scaling—more computing power, larger datasets, and more efficient architectures—has enabled systems like GPT-5 and Claude 3. Second, open collaboration means discoveries spread instantly: researchers share preprints, open-source code, and datasets across the globe within hours. Third, mass-market demand accelerates adoption. Businesses in finance, medicine, and education are experimenting with generative tools, feeding a feedback loop of data, investment, and innovation.

    Equally important is the policy and ethics dimension. Governments and institutions are racing to set standards for safety, transparency, and intellectual property. As a result, the frontier in AI isn’t just technological—it’s legal, social, and cultural. That’s why a well-rounded reading list should include research labs, journalists, business thinkers, and ethicists.

    How to Stay Informed on AI Without Being Overwhelmed

    A simple strategy works best: subscribe to two weekly newsletters (such as The Batch and Import AI), skim two daily news outlets (TechCrunch and Forbes), and bookmark three lab blogs (OpenAI, Anthropic, DeepMind). Then, once a month, read something reflective—like an essay from The Gradient or a policy piece from Stanford HAI.

    For entrepreneurs and executives, complement those with business-focused perspectives from AllBusiness.com and Time.com, which keep you grounded in how AI is actually changing strategy, leadership, and work.

    Best AI Websites Summary

    Artificial intelligence isn’t one field—it’s a global, multi-disciplinary movement touching nearly every aspect of business and life. Staying current doesn’t require hours of reading; it requires choosing wisely. The 15 sources listed here combine credibility, regular updates, and diversity of perspective—so you’ll see not only what’s new, but why it matters.

    As AI continues to accelerate, the people who thrive will be those who read broadly, think critically, and connect the dots early. Use these sites as your guideposts, and you’ll stay not just informed—but ready for what’s next.

    More articles:

    • An Intro to ChatGPT: 10 Frequently Asked Questions
    • 5 ChatGPT Prompts to Help You Prepare a Business Plan
    • 10 Tips to Help You Master ChatGPT
    • 10 Essential Business Skills for Success According to AI

    About the Authors

    Dominique A. Harroch is the Chief of Staff at AllBusiness.com. She has been the Chief of Staff or Operations Leader for multiple companies where she leveraged her extensive experience in operations management, strategic planning, and team leadership to drive organizational success. With a background that spans over two decades in operations leadership, event planning at her own start-up and marketing at various financial and retail companies. Dominique is known for her ability to optimize processes, manage complex projects and lead high-performing teams. She holds a BA in English and Psychology from U.C. Berkeley and an MBA from the University of San Francisco. She can be reached via LinkedIn.

    Richard D. Harroch is a Senior Advisor to CEOs, management teams, and Boards of Directors. He is an expert on M&A, venture capital, startups, and business contracts. He was the Managing Director and Global Head of M&A at VantagePoint Capital Partners, a venture capital fund in the San Francisco area. His focus is on internet, digital media, AI and technology companies. He was the founder of several Internet companies. His articles have appeared online in Forbes, Fortune, TIME, MSN, Yahoo, Fox Business and AllBusiness.com. Richard is the author of several books on startups and entrepreneurship as well as the co-author of Poker for Dummies and a Wall Street Journal-bestselling book on small business. He is the co-author of a 1,500-page book published by Bloomberg on mergers and acquisitions of privately held companies. He was also a corporate and M&A partner at the international law firm of Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe. He has been involved in over 200 M&A transactions and 250 startup financings. He can be reached through LinkedIn.

    Copyright © by Richard D. Harroch. All rights reserved.

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    Profile: Richard Harroch

    Richard D. Harroch is a Senior Advisor to CEOs, management teams, and Boards of Directors. He is an expert on M&A, venture capital, startups, and business contracts. He was the Managing Director and Global Head of M&A at VantagePoint Capital Partners, a venture capital fund in the San Francisco area. His focus is on internet, digital media, AI and technology companies. He was the founder of several Internet companies. His articles have appeared online in Forbes, Fortune, MSN, Yahoo, Fox Business and AllBusiness.com. Richard is the author of several books on startups and entrepreneurship as well as the co-author of Poker for Dummies and a Wall Street Journal-bestselling book on small business. He is the co-author of a 1,500-page book published by Bloomberg on mergers and acquisitions of privately held companies. He was also a corporate and M&A partner at the international law firm of Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe. He has been involved in over 200 M&A transactions and 250 startup financings. He can be reached through LinkedIn.

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