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Fast Company: Did Anthropic just soft-launch the scariest AI model yet? (Apr. 9, 2026)
Anthropic’s Claude Mythos Preview can find, chain, and exploit software bugs, showed deceptive behavior, and will be tightly shared with select companies, posing major cybersecurity risks. -
NY Times: Cerebras, an A.I. Chip Maker, Files to Go Public as Tech Offerings Ramp Up (Apr. 17, 2026)
A Silicon Valley chip maker filed a prospectus, as SpaceX, Anthropic, and OpenAI prepared listings. -
NBC News: AI is the boss at this retail store. What could go wrong? (Apr. 10, 2026)
Andon Market is the Bay Area’s first AI-run store; Luna, an AI manager, hires staff, orders stock, and negotiates with suppliers.
Blog
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Dangerous AI Capabilities Meet Rapid Commercialization (Links) – Apr. 26, 2026
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AI boom: hardware surge and governance challenges (Links) – Apr. 25, 2026
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Simon Willison: Changes in the system prompt between Claude Opus 4.6 and 4.7 (Apr. 18, 2026)
Opus 4.7 updates Claude’s system prompt with PowerPoint tools, stricter child-safety, acting-over-clarifying rules, tool_search checks, brevity guidance, disordered-eating limits, and refusal of short answers on complex topics. -
Sam Henri Gold: Thoughts and Feelings around Claude Design (Apr. 17, 2026)
Figma’s rigid systems are losing ground as code becomes the source of truth, and tools like Claude Design prioritize HTML, JS, and direct design-to-code workflows. -
WSJ: Intel Is Making Progress. But It Isn’t Out of the Woods Yet. (Apr. 19, 2026)
Intel’s stock has surged toward a $350 billion valuation, despite an unfinished turnaround in manufacturing, design, and servers. Nvidia, Google, and Terrafab deals, plus CPU-focused AI demand, help. -
WSJ: America Is in the Middle of a Stealth Manufacturing Boom (Apr. 18, 2026)
U.S. factory output has risen modestly, even as manufacturing jobs fell, driven by strong demand for AI equipment, including semiconductors, networking, and power gear. -
IEEE Spectrum: Stanford's AI Index for 2026 Shows the State of AI (Apr. 13, 2026)
Twelve graphs show AI investment is skyrocketing, its effects on jobs are mixed, and public opinion remains split. -
NY Times: AI and Fitness: Why Some Athletes Are Using Chatbots for Their Workouts (Apr. 18, 2026)
Athletes are using A.I. chatbots like Claude and ChatGPT as cheap, flexible coaches, for plans, pacing, and motivation. -
Sentinel Colorado: A college instructor turns to typewriters to curb AI-written work and teach life lessons (Mar. 31, 2026)
A Cornell German instructor has students use manual typewriters to banish screens, AI, and spellcheck, forcing slower, focused writing and more classroom interaction. -
Derek Thompson: AI vs Electricity (Apr. 16, 2026)
Early electricity—rival inventors, nascent monopolies, slow then surging demand, financial mania, and federal regulation—parallels AI. If AI follows that path, expect some firms to fail, not a full bubble, and new rules treating frontier labs as regulated monopolies.
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Simon Willison: Changes in the system prompt between Claude Opus 4.6 and 4.7 (Apr. 18, 2026)
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Model breakthroughs and massive corporate AI bets (Links) – Apr. 24, 2026
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Simon Willison: A pelican for GPT-5.5 via the semi-official Codex backdoor API (Apr. 23, 2026)
GPT-5.5 launched in Codex, paid ChatGPT, and will reach the API soon, delivering fast, capable results. A Codex-based plugin uses subscriptions to run prompts, and pricing is about double GPT-5.4. -
Ethan Mollick: Sign of the future: GPT-5.5 (Apr. 23, 2026)
GPT-5.5 shows major gains in models, apps, and harnesses, producing faster, more capable coding, image, and research outputs. It can draft near-PhD papers and games. -
Anthropic: An update on recent Claude Code quality reports (Apr. 23, 2026)
Three recent changes—lowering default effort, a caching bug that dropped prior reasoning, and a brevity prompt—caused Claude Code to degrade; all were fixed by April 20. -
TechCrunch: Google updates Workspace to make AI your new office intern (Apr. 22, 2026)
At Google Cloud Next, Google unveiled AI-powered Workspace features, including Workspace Intelligence with admin data controls, Gemini tools to build and auto-fill Sheets, and AI writing in Docs. -
Reuters: Microsoft to integrate Anthropic's Mythos into its security development program (Apr. 22, 2026)
Microsoft will embed Anthropic’s Claude Mythos Preview into its Security Development Lifecycle to detect vulnerabilities, speed fixes, and boost cybersecurity. -
OpenAI: Introducing GPT-5.5 (Apr. 22, 2026)
GPT‑5.5 is a more capable, efficient model that handles messy, multi-step coding, research, and computer tasks with stronger reasoning, fewer tokens, and GPT‑5.4-like latency. It adds tighter safeguards. -
OpenAI: Introducing ChatGPT Images 2.0 (Apr. 21, 2026)
ChatGPT Images 2.0 launches, marking a new era of image generation. It’s available inside ChatGPT via a demo link, video, and Try in ChatGPT option, inviting users to experiment with new image tools. -
WSJ: Meta to Lay Off 10% of Employees in May (Apr. 23, 2026)
Meta will cut about 10% of staff, roughly 8,000 people, cancel hiring for 6,000 open roles, and spend up to $135 billion on AI infrastructure. -
TechCrunch: Tesla just increased its spending plan to $25B — here's where the money is going (Apr. 22, 2026)
Tesla plans $25 billion in capital spending in 2026, tripling past levels to fund AI, robotics, chip design, and factory expansion. -
Reuters: Microsoft bets big on AI in Australia with $18 billion investment (Apr. 22, 2026)
Microsoft will invest A$25 billion in Australia by 2029 to expand Azure AI supercomputing, cloud, cybersecurity, and AI training. -
The Verge: Microsoft offers voluntary retirement to long-serving employees (Apr. 23, 2026)
Microsoft is offering a one-time voluntary retirement program for some long-serving US employees whose age plus years of service total 70 or more. -
Business Insider: Anthropic has surged to a trillion-dollar valuation on secondary markets, overtaking OpenAI (Apr. 22, 2026)
Desperate buyers are racing for dwindling Anthropic secondary shares, driving its valuation to about $1 trillion on private marketplaces, amid creative, risky, frenzied offers.
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Simon Willison: A pelican for GPT-5.5 via the semi-official Codex backdoor API (Apr. 23, 2026)
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AI Coding Breakthroughs and Industry Disruption (Links) – Apr. 23, 2026
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Simon Willison: Qwen3.6-27B: Flagship-Level Coding in a 27B Dense Model (Apr. 22, 2026)
Qwen3.6-27B, a 27B dense model, matches flagship coding performance while shrinking model size dramatically. A 16.8GB quantized build runs locally with good SVG results. -
NY Times: SpaceX Strikes Deal With Cursor for $60 Billion (Apr. 21, 2026)
SpaceX struck a deal with code-writing start-up Cursor, with an option to buy it for $60 billion or pay $10 billion. The pact gives Cursor xAI compute to speed model training, and ties Musk’s space, AI, and computing plans. -
Web Designer Depot: Google Stitch: Is This the End of the Junior Designer? (Mar. 30, 2026)
Google Stitch, a “Vibe Design” AI, automates pixel tasks, turns designers into editors, speeds prototyping, and threatens junior roles. -
NY Times: A.I. ‘Hallucinations’ Created Errors in Court Filing, Top Law Firm Says (Apr. 21, 2026)
Sullivan & Cromwell apologized after an AI-generated court filing contained fake citations, clerical mistakes, and other errors, admitting its AI-use rules were not followed. -
The Texas Tribune: AI changing tech field, forcing Texas universities to adjust (Apr. 21, 2026)
Students and faculty at Texas computer science programs are anxious as AI reshapes coding jobs, admissions drop, and tech hiring slows. -
Reuters: GE Vernova lifts 2026 outlook as AI boom fuels power equipment demand (Apr. 22, 2026)
GE Vernova raised 2026 revenue and margin forecasts, citing surging data-center, AI, and grid demand, and shares hit an all-time high. -
nrehiew.github.io: Coding Models Are Doing Too Much
AI code models often over-edit, changing more than needed when fixing bugs, making reviews harder. The study corrupts 400 BigCodeBench problems, measures token-level Levenshtein, cognitive complexity, and Pass@1, and finds many models over-edit, with Claude Opus least, GPT-5.4 most.
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Simon Willison: Qwen3.6-27B: Flagship-Level Coding in a 27B Dense Model (Apr. 22, 2026)
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AI Boom Meets Infrastructure and Security Strains (Links) – Apr. 21, 2026
AI’s gold‑rush: massive commercial upside, market volatility, acquisitions, and ad shifts—but resource bottlenecks and cost risks mean don’t overpay. Operationally, AI raises security, reliability, and infrastructure challenges (energy/GPU limits, covert agent channels), demanding identity‑aware, observable, zero‑trust controls.
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WSJ Opinion: Why AI Is Like a Gold Mine (Apr. 12, 2026)
AI is a gold‑rush: speculation inflates prices, selloffs follow, and a few winners ultimately emerge. Fast technical change, huge data‑center costs, and fierce chip competition mean forecasts may be wrong, so don’t overpay. -
The Cloudflare Blog: Dynamic, identity-aware, and secure Sandbox auth (Apr. 13, 2026)
Cloudflare added outbound Workers to Sandboxes and Containers, letting sandboxed agents route and control outbound requests through programmable proxies that log, enforce policies, and inject credentials. This enables identity-aware, zero-trust, observable, dynamic authentication without exposing secrets to untrusted workloads. -
WSJ: AI Is Using So Much Energy That Computing Firepower Is Running Out (Apr. 12, 2026)
AI demand has surged, outstripping GPU and token capacity, driving rental prices up and causing outages and product cuts. Anthropic has limited token use. -
Ryan Greenblatt: AIs can now often do massive easy-to-verify SWE tasks and I've updated towards shorter timelines (Apr. 6, 2026)
Expectations now put AI R&D automation near 30% by end‑2028, and by end‑2026 predict 50% reliability on many easy, low‑ideation software tasks via iterative tests, scaffolding, and faster models. -
WSJ: Palo Alto Networks Founder Agrees to Buy California Bank for AI Revamp (Apr. 13, 2026)
Nir Zuk, founder of Palo Alto Networks, agreed to buy California lender Liberty Bank to launch AI tools for financial services. He seeks approval to buy the largest stake, with Betsy and Daniel Cohen joining as investors. -
Rohan Paul: Block and Corporate Hierarchy (Mar. 31, 2026)
Block plans to replace much of corporate hierarchy with AI that coordinates work, tracks projects and customer behavior in real time. Humans build capabilities and solve cross-team problems, while AI composes services like payments, lending, and payroll. -
Zvi Mowshowitz: Claude Mythos: The System Card (Apr. 9, 2026)
Claude Mythos’s power makes hidden failures especially dangerous. -
arxiv.org: Undetectable Conversations Between AI Agents via Pseudorandom Noise-Resilient Key Exchange (Apr. 6, 2026)
AI agents can run an undetectable, hidden, and parallel conversation within honest transcripts, even without a shared key, assuming many messages have constant min-entropy. -
WSJ: Meta Expected to Unseat Google as World’s Largest Digital-Ad Player (Apr. 13, 2026)
Emarketer projects Meta will surpass Google in net ad revenue this year, $243.46 billion to $239.54 billion. Growth is fueled by Reels, AI ad tools, and rising ad demand.
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WSJ Opinion: Why AI Is Like a Gold Mine (Apr. 12, 2026)
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Compute Concentration and AI Economic Disruption (Links) – Apr. 20, 2026
AI’s compute-driven transformation: rising capital/GPU concentration boosts productivity but prompts cost‑rationing, automation, and layoffs, favoring cloud–local hybrids. Policy and geopolitics: national strategies, faltering export controls, and contested land/regulatory trade‑offs require coordinated industrial, labor, and regulatory responses.
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Ben Thompson: Mythos, Muse, and the Opportunity Cost of Compute (Apr. 13, 2026)
Frontier reasoning models are ending Aggregation Theory, reintroducing marginal and opportunity costs, and making hyperscalers more compute- and capital-intensive. Firms must ration GPUs, prioritize higher-margin internal workloads, and limit access to models like Anthropic’s Mythos for security and pricing power. -
WSJ: The Economy Is Growing, Jobs Aren’t. Why That Might Be OK. (Apr. 13, 2026)
Economists see AI and pandemic-era reshuffling as likely contributors to the productivity pickup, but caution gains may take time and require firms to invest in complementary changes. -
Medium: I ran Gemma 4 as a local model in Codex CLI (Apr. 12, 2026)
Gemma 4 ran locally in Codex CLI on Mac and Dell, required tweaks, and produced working code. Cloud GPT-5.4 gave best quality, fewest retries, and fastest results, so hybrid local-for-privacy, cloud-for-complex is advised. -
Mistral AI: European AI: a playbook to own it (Apr. 6, 2026)
Europe has top academia, a human-centric approach, and a single market of 450+ million. The playbook lists steps: talent visas, market harmonization, streamlined rules, compliance portals to make Europe a self-reliant AI powerhouse. -
arxiv.org: The AI Layoff Trap (Mar. 21, 2026)
Competition drives firms into an automation arms race: each keeps cost savings, shifts lost demand onto rivals, and causes excessive layoffs that reduce welfare for workers, owners, and firms. -
NY Times Opinion: I Went to China to See Their Progress on A.I. We Can’t Beat Them. (Apr. 13, 2026)
U.S. chip export controls have failed to stop China from building powerful AI, because China rents overseas compute, stacks weaker chips, and copies models. -
NY Times: At a World War II Internment Camp, History Blows Away Wind Energy (Apr. 12, 2026)
Descendants of Minidoka internees, ranchers, tribes, environmentalists, and conservatives blocked the Lava Ridge wind farm, and President Trump canceled it after pausing wind approvals. The dispute highlights conflicts between historic preservation, clean energy demand for AI, and federal public-land rules.
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Ben Thompson: Mythos, Muse, and the Opportunity Cost of Compute (Apr. 13, 2026)
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AI’s Rapid Scaling and Societal Risks (Links) – Apr. 19, 2026
AI is rapidly transforming tech and labor—powering startups, new roles, large infrastructure deals, and workplace automation—while simultaneously heightening risks: code bloat, security and privacy failures, and governance gaps, requiring urgent defenses, oversight, managerial adaptation, and workforce retraining.
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Simon Willison: Google AI Edge Gallery (Apr. 6, 2026)
Google AI Edge Gallery runs Gemma 4, and some Gemma 3 models locally on iPhone, delivering fast, useful results. -
NY Times: A.I. Could Change the World. But First It Is Changing Silicon Valley. (Apr. 2, 2026)
Artificial intelligence is already reshaping Silicon Valley, automating programming, prompting widespread tech layoffs, and enabling startups to build products with far fewer employees. -
Anthropic: Anthropic expands partnership with Google and Broadcom
Anthropic signed a deal with Google and Broadcom for multiple gigawatts of TPU capacity, arriving from 2027, to scale Claude. Demand surged in 2026, pushing run-rate revenue past $30 billion, and most new capacity will be U.S.-based. -
Yaniv Preiss: AI Won’t Replace You, But a Manager Using AI Will (Apr. 6, 2026)
AI is changing work; success comes from managers who pair AI tools with human leadership, transparency, and accountability. -
NY Times: The Big Bang: A.I. Has Created a Code Overload (Apr. 6, 2026)
A.I. coding tools have multiplied code output, creating backlogs, more vulnerabilities, and stress across teams. -
WSJ: Over 4,732 Messages, He Fell In Love With an AI Chatbot. Now He’s Dead. (Apr. 11, 2026)
I suggest spending ~10 minutes to peruse his dialog with Gemini. Wowzers. -
NY Times Opinion: Anthropic’s Restraint Is a Terrifying Warning Sign (Apr. 7, 2026)
Anthropic released Claude Mythos Preview to about 40 tech, finance, and infrastructure firms, finding thousands of high‑severity flaws in core software. -
NY Times: A.I. Is on Its Way to Upending Cybersecurity (Apr. 6, 2026)
A.I. tools let attackers find and exploit vulnerabilities faster, automate phishing, and run attacks with little human help. Defenders use A.I. to find zero-days and fix bugs, but must adopt it quickly or face greater risk. -
Ars Technica: Perplexity's "Incognito Mode" is a "sham," lawsuit says (Apr. 2, 2026)
A class action says Perplexity shared millions of chat transcripts, including PII, with Google and Meta via trackers, and “Incognito” failed to protect users. -
WSJ: AI-Displaced Workers Could Face Long Setbacks, Report Finds (Apr. 6, 2026)
Goldman Sachs finds workers displaced by AI and automation suffer longer jobless spells, initial wage drops, and nearly 10 percentage points slower earnings growth over a decade. Recessions worsen outcomes, while younger, college-educated workers adjust more flexibly, retraining helps. -
WSJ: Elon Musk Asks for OpenAI’s Nonprofit to Get Any Damages From His Lawsuit (Apr. 7, 2026)
Elon Musk amended his suit against OpenAI to direct any damages to its charity arm. He seeks over $150 billion. -
The New Yorker: Sam Altman May Control Our Future—Can He Be Trusted? (Apr. 6, 2026)
Board memos accused Sam Altman of lying about safety, prompting his abrupt firing that stunned investors and partners. Employee revolt, investor pressure, and Microsoft involvement secured his quick reinstatement, but governance doubts remain as OpenAI expands. -
WSJ: The New Jobs Being Created by AI (Apr. 2, 2026)
AI created about 640,000 U.S. jobs from 2023–2025, adding roles like head of AI, AI engineer, and data annotator, concentrated at a few large firms. Pay, hours, and quality vary, with many taking well-paid side gigs.
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Simon Willison: Google AI Edge Gallery (Apr. 6, 2026)
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AI Model Arms Race and Societal Risks (Links) – Apr. 18, 2026
AI is accelerating into production — new models, hosted agents, developer tools, massive investments and cloud deals slash code costs and boost app creation. Simultaneously, safety, security, workforce and intervention risks — from exploit-prone models to regulatory labels and harmful well-intentioned programs — demand stronger oversight.
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WSJ: Meta Announces New AI Model ‘Muse Spark’ (Apr. 8, 2026)
Meta unveiled Muse Spark, a closed large language model to power its AI chatbot, with a private API preview for partners. Meta says Muse Spark rivals Gemini, OpenAI, and Anthropic. -
Simon Willison: Meta’s new model is Muse Spark, and meta.ai chat has some interesting tools (Apr. 8, 2026)
Meta released Muse Spark, a hosted model on meta.ai in a private preview, with Instant and Thinking modes. Its chat offers web and Meta search, image generation, a Python container with visual grounding, and subagents for sandboxed analysis. -
Claude: Claude Managed Agents: get to production 10x faster (Apr. 8, 2026)
Claude Managed Agents launches public beta of composable APIs that run cloud-hosted agents with secure sandboxing, long sessions, and multi-agent coordination. -
Simon Willison: Anthropic’s Project Glasswing sounds necessary to me (Apr. 7, 2026)
Anthropic withheld Claude Mythos, giving preview access to trusted Project Glasswing partners, citing its powerful, exploit-finding capabilities. Mythos autonomously found and chained thousands of high-severity vulnerabilities. -
WSJ: AI Giants Go on Charm Offensive to Avert Public Backlash (Apr. 7, 2026)
Big AI companies are shifting to reassure a worried public, offering policy ideas, partnerships, and training to manage job losses, wealth gaps, and other harms. -
WSJ: Amazon CEO Andy Jassy Makes Case for Big AI Spending in Annual Letter (Apr. 9, 2026)
Andy Jassy says Amazon will invest heavily in AI, robotics, and satellite internet, pledging $200 billion in 2026 capex for AI infrastructure, custom chips, and Leo satellites. -
WSJ: CoreWeave Secures $21 Billion Expanded AI Cloud Deal Agreement With Meta (Apr. 9, 2026)
CoreWeave expanded its long-term AI cloud deal with Meta through December 2032 for about $21 billion. -
9to5Mac: App Store sees 84% surge in new apps as AI coding tools take off (Apr. 6, 2026)
AI coding tools have driven a 30% surge in App Store submissions to nearly 600,000, enabling nonprogrammers and developers to build apps quickly. -
Pere Villega: Code Is Cheap Now, And That Changes Everything (Mar. 15, 2026)
AI coding tools have slashed the cost and time of building software, letting one person replace teams and months. -
Alex Tabarrok: AI, Unemployment and Work (Apr. 9, 2026)
AI-driven automation could cut total work hours, which might mean mass unemployment or a shorter workweek, depending on whether gains are taxed, shared as dividends, or converted into holidays. -
NY Times: Federal Court Denies Anthropic’s Motion to Lift ‘Supply Chain Risk’ Label (Apr. 8, 2026)
A federal appeals panel denied Anthropic’s request to block the Defense Department from labeling it a supply-chain security risk, barring new Pentagon contracts. -
The Atlantic: These Teens Got Therapy. Then They Got Worse. (Nov. 6, 2023)
An Australian trial that taught a shortened DBT program to over 1,000 middle-schoolers produced worse short-term outcomes, including higher anxiety, depression, and poorer parent relationships, some effects persisting six months later. Universal, nonconsensual programs may backfire, especially without parental involvement.
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WSJ: Meta Announces New AI Model ‘Muse Spark’ (Apr. 8, 2026)
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AI Security Threats and Policy Responses (Links) – Apr. 17, 2026
AI’s rapid technical advances—agents, new models, exploit-finding tools and industry consolidation—are escalating cyber and safety risks, prompting urgent government–industry responses. Simultaneously, AI reshapes society: privacy, addiction, workforce and ideological concerns erode public trust and optimism.
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Cirrus Labs: Cirrus Labs to join OpenAI (Apr. 7, 2026)
Founded in 2017 to build cloud tools, Cirrus Labs will join OpenAI’s Agent Infrastructure team. -
WSJ: How to Switch AI Chatbots—and Why You Might Want To (Apr. 11, 2026)
Chatbots save personal memories that shape responses, and you can view, edit, delete, or export them to other AI apps, like ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini. -
NBC News: The 'Vulnpocalypse': Why experts fear AI could tip the scales toward hackers (Apr. 11, 2026)
AI that finds and chains software flaws has prompted fears of a “Vulnpocalypse,” and Anthropic withheld Mythos Preview. -
WSJ: White House Races to Head Off Threats From Powerful AI Tools (Apr. 10, 2026)
White House officials, led by National Cyber Director Sean Cairncross, are urgently coordinating with tech firms, banks, and security firms to prepare for AI-driven cyber threats. -
NY Times: Banks Are Warned About Anthropic’s New, Powerful A.I. Technology (Apr. 10, 2026)
Secretary Scott Bessent and Fed Chair Jerome Powell warned bank leaders that Anthropic’s new model, Claude Mythos, can find software flaws and raise cyber risks to banks, customers, and systems. -
Martin Alderson: Has Mythos just broken the deal that kept the internet safe? (Apr. 9, 2026)
Anthropic’s Mythos model now generates working sandbox exploits 72.4% of the time, threatening browser, ad, and cloud sandboxes that underlie internet security. -
Center for Responsible, Decentralized Intelligence at Berkeley: How We Broke Top AI Agent Benchmarks (Apr. 8, 2026)
An automated agent exploited major AI agent benchmarks, getting near‑perfect scores without solving tasks. -
WSJ: We’re Drugging Ourselves With Dopamine (Apr. 8, 2026)
New research shows dopamine drives motivation, not pleasure, explaining why screens deliver rapid hits that trap users in addictive loops. Younger adults build barriers like dumb phones, screen limits, and social norms, but older adults remain vulnerable. -
NY Times: Half of Gen Z Uses AI, but Their Feelings Are Souring, Study Shows (Apr. 8, 2026)
More than half of Gen Z use generative A.I. regularly, but hope and excitement have dipped, and nearly a third feel anger. They worry about jobs, creativity, human interaction, misinformation, yet many still find A.I. useful. -
WSJ Opinion: AI Is Bound to Subvert Communism (Apr. 13, 2026)
China forces AI models to pass strict ideological filters, removing sensitive data and banning sources unless 96% safe, which causes censorship, fabrication, and poorer reasoning. Because LLMs learn open inquiry, private dialogues undermine those controls. -
WSJ: At David Sacks’s Behest, White House Barrels Forward on Industry-Friendly AI Policy (Apr. 8, 2026)
David Sacks leads the Trump administration’s company-friendly AI push, promoting data centers and economic gains while downplaying job losses. -
NY Times: Another Giant Leap Reminds Us How Small We Are (Apr. 11, 2026)
Artemis II, carrying four astronauts around the moon, stirred awe and the “overview effect”, prompting reflection on human smallness, fragility, and wonder.
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Cirrus Labs: Cirrus Labs to join OpenAI (Apr. 7, 2026)
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AI Capital Surge and Societal Impact (Links) – Apr. 16, 2026
AI's explosive funding and commercialization—record financing, mega‑deals, and founder rushes—are accelerating product launches and market concentration. Simultaneously, societal and technical challenges emerge: job displacement, fragile/failed products, security and alignment risks, and mixed real‑world impacts from healthcare to construction.
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NY Times: OpenAI Buys Streaming Show ‘TBPN,’ Aiming to Change Narrative on A.I. (Apr. 2, 2026)
OpenAI bought streaming show TBPN to promote its technology, support the show, and shape public conversation about A.I. TBPN will stay editorially independent, join OpenAI’s strategy team. -
NY Times: A.I. Companies Shatter Fund-Raising Records, as Boom Accelerates (Apr. 1, 2026)
A.I. companies raised $297 billion in Q1 2026, led by massive rounds for OpenAI, Anthropic, xAI, and Waymo. A.I. deals were 81% of funding, easing fears of an A.I. bust. OpenAI, Anthropic, and SpaceX/xAI may go public soon. -
Forbes: The Graveyard Of OpenAI’s Dead Products And Incomplete Deals (Apr. 1, 2026)
OpenAI launched many high‑profile projects—Sora, Instant Checkout, NSFW chat, GPT‑4o—but pulled or paused several after weak adoption, high costs, and backlash. -
WSJ: OpenAI Closes Silicon Valley’s Largest-Ever Funding Round (Mar. 31, 2026)
OpenAI raised $122 billion, valuing it at $852 billion, and broadened investor access via ARK and ETFs. Amazon, Nvidia, and SoftBank committed $110 billion. -
Ethan Mollick: Claude Dispatch and the Power of Interfaces (Mar. 31, 2026)
Chatbots cause cognitive overload, hiding AI capabilities and harming less-experienced workers. Specialized tools and agents, like Claude Cowork with Dispatch, OpenClaw, and Google’s Stitch and NotebookLM, let AI work on files, build interfaces on demand, and make it more usable. -
Forbes: Oracle’s $10 Billion Bet On AI Sends Shares Down 57% And 30,000 Workers Out The Door (Apr. 1, 2026)
Oracle stock plunged as the company cuts up to 30,000 jobs to free cash for massive AI data center spending, after weak cloud margins, rising capital costs, and tighter financing. -
NY Times: Why People With Chronic Illness Are Turning to AI Chatbots for Health Advice (Apr. 2, 2026)
Many women with complex chronic illnesses turn to AI chatbots for diagnostic clues, treatment ideas, and validation after fragmented, dismissive care. -
Engineering at Meta: AI for American-Produced Cement and Concrete (Mar. 30, 2026)
Meta released BOxCrete, an open-source AI model, dataset, and tools for designing sustainable, domestically produced concrete mixes. -
Simon Willison: Vulnerability Research Is Cooked (Apr. 3, 2026)
Frontier AI agents will rapidly transform vulnerability research, automating exploit discovery and changing its economics. They already encode code patterns, bug classes, and search ability, so pointing an agent at a codebase can reveal high-impact bugs, fast. -
Transformer: AI alignment researchers want to automate themselves (Apr. 1, 2026)
AI safety research has grown but remains small compared to broader AI work, while frontier models increasingly self-improve. -
WSJ: These AI Whiz Kids Dropped Out of College and Got Investors to Pay Their Bills (Apr. 3, 2026)
Venture firms are buying, furnishing, and staffing apartments for young founders so they can leave college and work full-time on AI startups. Flush with funding, students race to launch companies, fearing ideas will vanish if they wait. -
NY Times: Economists Are Drawing Stronger Connections Between A.I. and Jobs (Apr. 3, 2026)
Economists who once dismissed A.I.’s job threat now warn it could rapidly reshape work, cause widespread displacement, and increase inequality, while policymakers remain unprepared.
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NY Times: OpenAI Buys Streaming Show ‘TBPN,’ Aiming to Change Narrative on A.I. (Apr. 2, 2026)