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Read full article about: ElevenLabs and Google dominate Artificial Analysis' updated speech-to-text benchmark

Artificial Analysis has released version 2.0 of its AA-WER speech-to-text benchmark. ElevenLabs' Scribe v2 leads with a word error rate of just 2.3 percent, followed by Google's Gemini 3 Pro (2.9%) and Mistral's Voxtral Small (3.0%). Google's Gemini 3 Flash (3.1%) and ElevenLabs' older Scribe v1 (3.2%) are close behind. Notably, Google didn't specifically train for transcription—the strong results come from Gemini's general multimodal capabilities. OpenAI's popular open-source Whisper Large v3 (4.2%) lands mid-pack, while Alibaba's Qwen3 ASR Flash (5.9%), Amazon's Nova 2 Omni (6.0%), and Rev AI (6.1%) bring up the rear.

Bar chart showing the AA-WER v2.0 overall ranking with word error rates ranging from 2.3% (Scribe v2) to 6.1% (Rev AI).
ElevenLabs' Scribe v2 tops the AA-WER v2.0 overall ranking with the lowest word error rate, followed by Google's Gemini 3 Pro and Mistral's Voxtral Small. | Image: Artificial Analysis

The results hold up in the separate AA-AgentTalk test for speech directed at voice assistants: Scribe v2 (1.6%) and Gemini 3 Pro (1.7%) pull well ahead, with AssemblyAI's Universal-3 Pro taking third at 2.3%.

Bar chart showing the AA-AgentTalk ranking with word error rates ranging from 1.6% (Scribe v2) to 6.1% (Rev AI).
ElevenLabs' Scribe v2 and Google's Gemini 3 Pro also dominate the AA-AgentTalk voice assistant test with the lowest error rates. | Image: Artificial Analysi

Moltbook's alleged AI civilization is just a massive void of bloated bot traffic

Over 2.6 million AI agents interact on Moltbook with zero human involvement. They post, comment, and vote, but a new study shows they never learn from each other. It’s hollow interaction without mutual influence, shared memory, or social structures, a new study finds.

Read full article about: Even frontier LLMs from GPT-5 onward lose up to 33% accuracy when you chat too long

The latest generation of large language models—from GPT-5 onward—still struggles when tasks are spread across multiple conversation turns. Researcher Philippe Laban and his team tested current models on six tasks covering code, databases, actions, data-to-text, math, and summarization. Performance drops significantly when information is split across several messages (sharded) instead of a single prompt (concat).

Laban et al.

Newer models did slightly better—performance degradation shrank from 39 to 33 percent—but the issue is far from solved. The biggest gains showed up in Python tasks, where some models only lost 10 to 20 percent. Laban suspects real-world losses could be even worse, since the tests used simple user simulations. Users who change their mind mid-conversation would likely cause steeper drops.

Technical tweaks like lowering temperature values don't fix the problem, the original study found. The researchers recommend starting a fresh conversation when things go sideways, ideally by having the model summarize all requests first and using that summary as the starting point for a new chat.

OpenAI calls Stuart Russell a "doomer" in court after its CEO co-signed his AI extinction warning

Fear generates attention, and OpenAI usually knows how to use that. But in court, the company is trying to discredit an AI expert as a doomsday prophet, even though CEO Sam Altman spent years spreading the same warnings when they still served his own agenda.

Read full article about: OpenAI promises Canada tighter safety protocols after ChatGPT flagged a shooter's violent chats but never called police

In a letter to AI Minister Evan Solomon, OpenAI has promised the Canadian government it will tighten its safety protocols. The move follows a fatal shooting at a school in Tumbler Ridge, British Columbia, that killed eight people. The suspect, Jesse Van Rootselaar, had previously interacted with ChatGPT. An internal algorithm flagged the interactions as possible warnings of real-world violence, and OpenAI employees reviewed them. The company blocked the account but ultimately decided not to contact police.

According to the Wall Street Journal, OpenAI now plans to adopt more flexible criteria for sharing account data with authorities, establish direct lines of communication with Canadian law enforcement, and improve its systems for detecting evasion tactics. OpenAI Vice President Ann O'Leary said the account would have been reported under the new rules. Canada's Justice Minister Sean Fraser warned that new AI regulations could follow if OpenAI doesn't act quickly.

Current language model training leaves large parts of the internet on the table

Large language models learn from web data, but which pages actually make it into training sets depends heavily on a seemingly mundane choice: the HTML extractor. Researchers at Apple, Stanford, and the University of Washington found that three common extraction tools pull surprisingly different content from the same web pages.