Recent News
News ArchiveDecember 2, 2024
More checks make AI fairer
Currently, AI engineers evaluate fairness with a single leaderboard number, but research from Princeton Engineering shows that reducing fairness to a single metric could lead to societal harm.
November 14, 2024
Tech policy conference highlighted the need for skilled talent across disciplines
"Tech Policy: The Next Ten Years” brought together significant figures in academia, government and the private sector to explore the agenda for tech policy and the role the United States will play in the global arena.
October 31, 2024
Tracking cell mutations, a new tool reveals how tumors evolve
Researchers at Princeton have created a new tool to track the progression of mutations in cancer cells, showing how tumors evolve over time and in space.
October 29, 2024
Mae Milano, expert in programming languages, joins the faculty
Mae Milano, an expert in programming languages, joined the computer science faculty as an assistant professor in January 2024.
October 15, 2024
Internet researchers reach beyond academia to close major security loophole
For years a potential disaster lurked in the internet’s encryption system, threatening the security of organizations and individuals worldwide. Princeton engineers have now squelched that threat.
October 15, 2024
For AI, secrecy often doesn’t improve security
Researchers at a group of leading universities including Princeton caution that regulating limit access to AI models’ inner workings is likely to do more harm than good.