AI Styling Studio — Infinite avatar looks from just 1 photo.Try it now.

Latest AI News

Trump Admin releases Anthropic  Mythos to be used by more than 100 US companies, agencies

Trump Admin releases Anthropic Mythos to be used by more than 100 US companies, agencies

Two weeks into the ban that causedAnthropic to pull its powerful cybersecurity-oriented models, Mythos 5 and Fable 5, from the market, the Trump administration is softening its stance. It is now allowing Anthropic to make Mythos 5 available to more than 100 specific U.S. government agencies and companies, including allowing the non-American employees at those organizations to access to the model, bothSemaforandReutersreport. This list also includes Anthropic’s own non-American employees, who were included in the original ban that forbade non-Americans from accessing the models. “I have determined that appropriate safeguards are in place to permit certain trusted partners to access the Claude Mythos 5 Model,” Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick wrote to Anthropic’s chief compute officer Tom Brown on Friday, according to the missive seen by Semafor. Apparently, the administration did not address therelease of Fable 5 in this directive. This is a version of Mythos 5 that was widely released a couple of days before the ban because it was said to have more protections. Both models were pulled after those guardrails were allegedly bypassed easily by security researchers. Anthropic did not immediately respond to our request for comment. Anthropic on Friday publicly acknowledged the progressin a post on X, writing: “Since June 12, we’ve been working closely with the US government to restore access to Claude Mythos 5 and Fable 5. Today, the government notified us that Mythos 5, our strongest cybersecurity model, can be redeployed to a set of US organizations that operate and defend critical infrastructure. We’re restoring access for these organizations quickly, and we’re continuing to work with the government to expand access to Mythos 5 and make Fable 5 available for general use again.”

19 days ago

View

OpenAI’s Jalapeño chip is Big Tech’s spiciest move away from Nvidia

OpenAI’s Jalapeño chip is Big Tech’s spiciest move away from Nvidia

Nvidia has dominated the AI chip market for years, but the era of total dependence might be ending. OpenAI just shared its plans to spice things up withJalapeño, its custom inference chip built with Broadcom, joining Google, Apple, and SpaceX in a growing list of companies building their way out of single-supplier risk. The goal is less of a clean break and more of a hedge. Custom silicon means more control, hardware tuned to specific needs, and the kind of performance gains Apple unlocked when it ditched Intel. On this episode of TechCrunch’sEquitypodcast, hosts Kirsten Korosec, Anthony Ha, and Sean O’Kane dig into what the custom chip trend means for the industry and a few deals of the week worth watching. Listen to the full episode to hear more about: Subscribe to Equity onYouTube,Apple Podcasts,Overcast,Spotifyand all the casts. You also can follow Equity onXandThreads, at @EquityPod.

20 days ago

View

It’s not about Anthropic vs. OpenAI anymore

It’s not about Anthropic vs. OpenAI anymore

The U.S. government is set to take an awful lot of control over which AI models get released. Two weeks after the U.S. governmentpulled Anthropic’s Fable and Mythos models, OpenAI’s new model seems to be headed for the same limbo. The Informationbroke the news Thursdaythat GPT 5.6 would be released only into limited preview, with the government approving the release “customer by customer” until a general release can be approved. If that preview only lasts a “couple of weeks,” as Altman reportedly projected, that might not be a particularly big problem. But Mythos has already been in preview for months, and there’s no indication it will make it to general release any time soon. Even a few weeks spent in review could significantly limit the economic upside of a costly new system, at a time when AI labs are trying desperately to improve their bottom lines. If the pace of model development slows as a result, it’s likely to put a similar chill on the ongoing data center buildout. If this goes bad, the entire industry could be at risk. Critically, OpenAI and Anthropic are now in the same exact position with the same problems facing them and the same disaster waiting if they fail. Conversations within the tech industry tend to focus on the role of one side or another in bringing this on, either accusing Anthropic of running a regulatory capture scheme or accusing OpenAI of cozying up to Trump to ice out a rival. It’s understandable; many of the most prominent people in the industry have billions of dollars riding on one company or the other. But what’s happening now is bigger than that. The cost of implementing a haphazard government approval process for every frontier model is obvious, and there’s no fix that helps one lab without helping the others. The most immediate problem is simply establishing a release process that makes sense. It’s fine for the government to test models before release (this is how it works for lots of consumer products) — but as GMU fellow (and soon-to-be OpenAI employee) Dean Ball detailedin an eloquent post this morning, it’s not clear what kind of safety assurances could be put in place to satisfy regulators. The U.S. government doesn’t have the expertise or capacity for the kind of testing that would be needed here. It’s not even clear what regulators would be trying to protect against, since there’s been no effort to articulate what risks the government is actually concerned about. It’s tempting to see the government process as the whole of the problem itself, but there are real concerns underneath. Even if you don’t believe the Mythos hype, there’s clear evidence of how AI tools are revolutionizing cybersecurity. There are similar processes at work inbioriskand alignment. Restricting model releases can’t be the whole answer in itself — that will only limit what’s available to the public — but there are real concerns to be addressed. The best ideas for addressing them, as laid out by Ball, will mean working together. It will mean trusting independent groups to guide the process, even if they don’t completely align with your goals. It will mean lining up behind the least-bad regulatory options available, instead of fighting every regulation tooth and nail. And most of all, it will mean fighting for AI as an industry, instead of seeing safety and regulation as opportunities to gain an advantage. For a lot of people working in AI, that will be a tough sell. Unfortunately, AI models have progressed to the point where their capabilities have real political consequences. Dealing with those consequences will require collective action. In the weeks to come, we’ll find out if that’s something the industry is capable of.

20 days ago

View

Why everyone from OpenAI to SpaceX is building their own chips (and turning up the heat on Nvidia)

Why everyone from OpenAI to SpaceX is building their own chips (and turning up the heat on Nvidia)

Loading the player… Nvidia has dominated the AI chip market for years, but the era of total dependence might be ending. OpenAI just shared its plans to spice things up withJalapeño, its custom inference chip built with Broadcom, joining Google, Apple, and SpaceX in a growing list of companies building their way out of single-supplier risk. The goal is less of a clean break and more of a hedge. Custom silicon means more control, hardware tuned to specific needs, and the kind of performance gains Apple unlocked when it ditched Intel. On this episode of TechCrunch’sEquitypodcast, hosts Kirsten Korosec, Anthony Ha, and Sean O’Kane dig into what the custom chip trend means for the industry and a few deals of the week worth watching. Subscribe to Equity onYouTube,Apple Podcasts,Overcast,Spotifyand all the casts. You also can follow Equity onXandThreads, at @EquityPod.

20 days ago

View

OpenAI poaches Uber India chief to lead its biggest market outside the U.S.

OpenAI poaches Uber India chief to lead its biggest market outside the U.S.

OpenAI is making yet another big, visible bet on India. It has appointed former Uber India and South Asia president Prabhjeet Singh as its first managing director for the country to scale its presence in what it has called its second-largest market after the U.S. Singh, who announced his resignation from Uber on Friday, will join OpenAI in September and report to Kiran Mani, the company’s managing director for Asia-Pacific, the company told TechCrunch. He will be responsible for OpenAI’s performance in India across consumer growth, enterprise adoption, partnerships, regulatory engagement, and operations, the company said. The hire marks OpenAI’s latest investment in India. The companyopened its first office in New Delhilast August and earlier this year said it wouldestablish new offices in Mumbai and Bengaluru. In 2024, it hired former Truecaller and Meta executive Pragya Misra to lead public policy and partnerships before expanding her role to head of strategy and global affairs last year. OpenAI had earlierbrought on former Twitter India head Rishi Jaitlyas a senior adviser to help establish its engagement with the Indian government on AI policy. Over the past few months, OpenAI struck partnerships in the nation spanninghigher education,enterprise payments,AI-powered commerce, andweb streaming, whilealso becoming partof the country’sgrowing data center build-out. OpenAI has pointed toIndia’s rapidly growing adoption of ChatGPTas a sign of the market’s importance. Indian conglomerates Reliance and Tata Group are also among its early partners in the market. The company has simultaneously ramped up hiring in India, withopeningsincluding AI deployment engineers, developer experience engineers, a developer marketing lead, a partner director, and solutions engineers. India has emerged as one of the key battlegrounds for U.S. AI companies, driven by its vast developer base, more than a billion internet users, and surging demand for generative AI. Rival Anthropicopened its India office in Bengaluruin late 2025 and earlier this yearnamed former Microsoft India managing director Irina Ghoseas its India head.

20 days ago

View

OpenAI limits GPT-5.6 rollout after government request, says restrictions shouldn’t be the norm

OpenAI limits GPT-5.6 rollout after government request, says restrictions shouldn’t be the norm

OpenAI is limiting the release of its newest AI models to a “small group of trusted partners” at the behest of the U.S. government, the company said Friday. The next generation GPT-5.6 lineup includes Sol, its flagship model; Terra, a more balanced model for everyday use; and Luna, a faster, lower cost option. Although Sol is the company’s most powerful mode, the Trump administration has restricted the release of all three. OpenAI said the preview is limited to partners “whose participation has been shared with the government.” The administration’s requestcomes as the US government puts new pressure on AI companies to restrict their most advanced systems. After Anthropic released its most powerful public model Fable 5, the administration ordered the company to remove access for any foreign national, prompting Anthropic to take the model down entirely. The incident has brought up questions of how much power the government should have over AI model releases. Dean Ball, a former White House AI advisor andsoon-to-be OpenAI employee, says President Trump’srecent executive order— which asks certain AI companies to voluntarily submit their most advanced models for government review up to 30 days before release — has created ade facto involuntary licensing regimefor frontier AI, leading to heavy-handed restrictions. The problem compounds, Ball argues, when the government doesn’t have clearly defined safety standards, which could lead to endless launch delays that might not only give a hand to China in the AI race, but also jeopardize the billions of dollars going to AI infrastructure buildouts. And while OpenAI did as the administration asked this time around, the AI firm made it clear it wasn’t happy with the arrangement. “We don’t believe this kind of government access process should become the long-term default,” reads a Fridayblog post.“It keeps the best tools from users, developers, enterprises, cyber defenders, and global partners who need them.” OpenAI called the preview a “short-term step” that will put GPT-5.6 on the path to broader availability in the coming weeks, as the company works with the administration to develop a new executive order framework on cybersecurity, as well as a “repeatable process for future model releases.” OpenAI says GPT-5.6 Sol is its strongest model yet, with improved agentic capabilities in coding, biology and cybersecurity. Sol introduces a “max” reasoning effort mode and an “ultra” mode that uses coordinated subagents to solve highly complex tasks (just the sort of neat trick that sends your token usage skyrocketing). GPT-5.6 excels at several benchmarks, says OpenAI, including being slightly better at coding workflows than Anthropic’s Claude Mythos 5, which the Trump administration also effectively banned this month. OpenAI says GPT-5.6 Sol is also competitive with Mythos preview, but uses a third of the output tokens. To assuage any fears of its powerful models being unsafe, OpenAI says Sol includes its most robust security stack yet. It is, OpenAI says, heavily hardened against adversarial attacks and intentionally optimized to favor defensive cybersecurity work over offensive exploits. In other words, it’s designed to be hard to jailbreak, while prioritizing showing users how to defend against exploits, rather than how to hack into systems. OpenAI also says its safety guardrails are built directly into the core model’s behavior, rather than relying on a separate filter on top of it. The firm is likely trying to avoid the trap that caught Anthropic with Fable 5. In the brief moments when Fable 5 was available, whenever the model’s classifiers detected a high-risk topic— like cybersecurity, biology, or chemistry — it wouldn’t just block the prompt; it would route the request to an older model. The whole over-cautious flow and invisible downrouting led to many false positives and user backlash. While the GPT-5.6 models are initially available only to a select group of partners, OpenAI plans to make them more broadly available to people using ChatGPT, Codex, and the API soon. GPT-5.6 comes in three sizes with tiered pricing: Sol costs $5 per million input tokens and $30 per million output tokens; Terra costs half that; and Luna costs $1 and $6, respectively. OpenAI says it has also improved prompt caching to make repeated prompts cheaper and more predictable.

20 days ago

View

OpenAI Appoints Uber Veteran Prabhjeet Singh as India Managing Director

OpenAI Appoints Uber Veteran Prabhjeet Singh as India Managing Director

He will oversee consumer growth, enterprise partnerships, regulatory engagement, and operations across the country.

20 days ago

View

Early Bird pricing ends tonight for TechCrunch Founder Summit

Early Bird pricing ends tonight for TechCrunch Founder Summit

Tonight is your last chance to save up to $190 on your pass toTechCrunch Founder Summit 2026. Early Bird pricing endstoday, at 11:59 p.m. PT, after which rates increase. Founders rarely scale alone. The fastest path to growth comes from learning from founders who’ve already done it, connecting with peers tackling similar challenges, and building relationships with investors who can help accelerate your next stage of growth. OnNovember 4 in Boston, more than1,000 founders and investorswill gather for a highly curated day of tactical learning, candid conversations, and meaningful networking designed to help founders make smarter decisions and grow faster. Don’t wait until prices increase.Register before 11:59 p.m. PT tonightto save up to $190. Bringing your team? Groups of four or more can save up to 30%. Every session, discussion, and networking opportunity is designed around the real challenges founders face as they build, fund, and scale their companies. You’ll connect with: Whether you’re preparing to raise capital, refining your go-to-market strategy, or planning your next growth milestone, Founder Summit creates opportunities for conversations that can change the trajectory of your business. Founder Summitfocuses on the decisions that define a startup’s future. Through breakout sessions and roundtable discussions, you’ll gain practical guidance on topics including: These founder-led conversations deliver practical takeaways you can apply immediately. Past speakers have included: Additional speakers have represented Sequoia Capital, NFX, Glasswing Ventures, Wing Venture Capital, Construct Capital, Greylock, Precursor Ventures, and more. The 2026 agenda is coming soon, with additional founders, operators, and investors to be announced.Check the event page for agenda updates. Interested in leading a discussion?Submit a roundtable or breakout session topicfor a chance to be voted onto the agenda by the TechCrunch audience. The deadline is in less than 24 hours.Early Bird pricing ends tonight at 11:59 p.m. PT.Join the founders, operators, and investors shaping the next generation of startups. Gain practical insights, build valuable relationships, and leave with strategies you can put into action immediately. Registerbefore 11:59 p.m. PT tonight to save up to $190 on your pass and up to 30% when registering as a group. Interested in exhibiting at TechCrunch Founder Summit 2026?Reserve your exhibit tableand connect directly with founders, investors, and startup decision-makers.

20 days ago

View

AI Labs are the New Battleground for Enterprise AI

AI Labs are the New Battleground for Enterprise AI

AI labs are increasingly functioning as co-creation hubs where solutions are prototyped, tested, and refined before deployment.

20 days ago

View

Inside SpaceX’s Thin Float Sinking the IPO Rally

Inside SpaceX’s Thin Float Sinking the IPO Rally

SpaceX went public with an incredibly thin public float, with only a tiny fraction of its total shares available to trade. When the buyers rushed in, the floor fell out.

20 days ago

View

Google Finance App for Android Announced With AI Portfolio Tools, Real-Time Market Updates

Google Finance App for Android Announced With AI Portfolio Tools, Real-Time Market Updates

Google on Thursday announced the Google Finance app for Android. It allows users to track watch lists, monitor real-time market data, and receive AI-generated insights. The company will also expand its capabilities to bring features like live earnings calls and today's new portfolio in the coming months. Alongside, the web experience has been upgraded with new portfolio management tools. Google says users can now access scheduled market briefings powered by AI.

20 days ago

View

Gnani.ai Launches New Speech-to-Text Model, Claims to Outperform Global Rivals

Gnani.ai Launches New Speech-to-Text Model, Claims to Outperform Global Rivals

Gnani.ai said Prisma v2.5 delivers lower word error rates for rural Hindi and noisy Dravidian speech than competing models.

20 days ago

View

PreviousPage 34 of 269Next

Enviar tu herramienta

Submit AI Tools – The ultimate platform to discover, submit, and explore the best AI tools across various categories.Listed on codetrendy.com

PoweredByAI.app es un directorio de herramientas de IA que ayuda a personas, empresas y creadores a descubrir las mejores herramientas de IA para escritura, programación, diseño, productividad y más.

© 2026 , Producto de011BQ. Todos los derechos reservados.