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AI

Artificial intelligence is more a part of our lives than ever before. While some might call it hype and compare it to NFTs or 3D TVs, generative AI is causing a sea change in nearly every part of the technology industry. OpenAI’s ChatGPT is still the best-known AI chatbot around, but with Google pushing Gemini, Microsoft building Copilot, and Apple adding its Intelligence to Siri, AI is probably going to be in the spotlight for a very long time. At The Verge, we’re exploring what might be possible with AI — and a lot of the bad stuff AI does, too.

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Microsoft’s Edge Copilot update uses AI to pull information from across your tabs

The new features include AI podcasts, summaries, and quizzes based on what you’re browsing.

Emma Roth
Mark Zuckerberg announces ‘completely private’ encrypted Meta AI chat

Incognito Chat AI messages disappear after users leave their chat session, which Meta says makes it different from other bots.

Stevie Bonifield

Latest In AI

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
AI cybersecurity updates for MDASH, Mythos, and GPT-5.5.

On Wednesday, the AISI, which evaluates AI models for the British government, said both Anthropic’s Claude Mythos Preview and OpenAI’s GPT-5.5 showed progress well above previous trends on cybersecurity testing. Separately, XBOW released data suggesting “frontier models have taken a major step forward in vulnerability discovery.”

Meanwhile, Microsoft said its multi-model agentic setup, MDASH, was used to discover 16 CVEs in this week’s Patch Tuesday updates and is the leader on the CyberGym security evaluation framework.

graph showing the average number of steps completed on a cybersecuirty benchmark comparing various models across how many tokens spent
Image: AISI
Hayden Field
Hayden Field
Musk left the country with President Trump despite a judge’s orders.

U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers, the judge presiding over Musk v. Altman, had told Musk when he left the stand that he was not excused from the trial and that he was still under “recall status,” meaning he should stay nearby and ready to testify. But he’s currently in Beijing

Elon Musk’s post

[X (formerly Twitter)]

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
Microsoft and OpenAI rest.

There is no rebuttal case from Musk’s team. We will get closing statements tomorrow.

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
In the most boring expert testimony yet, Louis Dudney, a forensic accountant, testified about how those funds were spent.

It was on “functional expsenses,” ie, salaries, compute, etc. The cross is just arguing about the methodology of accounting for commingled money in the donated accounts. I can’t believe we are having a methodology dispute about this. I may die.

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
The shade we are getting in here is incredible.

John Coates noted that he’s worked for a lot of law firms as an expert witness, including Quinn Emanuel, Musk’s primary firm — and not the one trying the case today. He is excused. The judge is now huddling in sidebar with the primary lawyers for the case, and an animated discussion is taking place.

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
The cross is focusing on Coates’ pay.

Also, he apparently has worked as an expert witness on a few Twitter cases, including the one where Musk tried to get out of buying Twitter. Incidentally, OpenAI’s lawyers are also the ones who made Musk buy Twitter. Is that deliberate shade? Who can say.

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
John Coates, OpenAI’s expert witness, is running a demolition derby on Musk’s expert witness.

Some highlights:

  • (while looking at a chart that the plaintiffs showed the jury) I paraphrase but: I don’t know how he thought his slide was a fair representation of anything, much less reality
  • “If he’s saying [the nonprofit] would own more of the for-profit if they hadn’t taken outside investment, that’s true, but then the pie would have been significantly smaller.” Coates would prefer 30 percent of a $200 billion than “a much larger share of a much smaller pie.”
  • The nonprofit has “benefitted enormously” from the for-profit “so I don’t understand his argument.”
Jay Peters
Jay Peters
This week in the big AI data center buildout.

AI data center projects are continuing to pop up across the US, with frequent opposition from locals concerned about their impact. Here are a few recent articles about the projects:

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
Museum gift shop metaphor found dead in a ditch.

So during the opening statements, Musk’s lawyers said that a for-profit like a museum gift shop shouldn’t be bigger than a nonprofit, like a museum. We are now hearing from Daniel Hemel, OpenAI’s expert witness. Guess what? Museum gift shops generally aren’t for-profit; they’re part of the nonprofit. Also, OpenAI’s for-profit isn’t ancillary to the nonprofit — it’s how the nonprofit pursues its mission, like with the Mozilla Foundation and the Mozilla Corportation.

Hayden Field
Hayden Field
We’re listening to an expert witness, David Hemel, a law professor at NYU.

He said that “for a large nonprofit organization, having for-profit affiliates is very much the norm.” When asked, he also said that oftentimes, the for-profit affiliate of a nonprofit is “quite large compared to the nonprofit,” and he gave the Mozilla Corporation (which owns the Firefox web browser) and the Mozilla Foundation as an example. Hemel also testified that he’s getting paid $1,750 an hour to be here.

Hayden Field
Hayden Field
During Elon Musk’s all-hands Q&A before departing OpenAI, Achiam said he felt Musk wanted to “race towards AGI.”

He said Musk was concerned about Google DeepMind and CEO Demis Hassabis and “expressed a lot of concerns about what would happen if DeepMind got to AGI first.” Achiam said he shared his concern that trying to “race” towards the technology was a “fairly unsafe proposition … He was proposing to do something that seemed … obviously unsafe and reckless.”

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
Achiam is running circles around this lawyer on cross, without doing the annoying things other witnesses have done.

She quotes a tweet of his saying that he believes Musk was doing his best for humanity. He asks when that was. She says, January 2025. He says, well he’s done some things that undermined my confidence since then.
There’s a brief redirect, and then Achiam steps down. No trophy for the jury. :(

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
Okay, it’s time for the cross of Achiam.

“Are you aware that OpenAI employees are better-compensated than any other employees in startup history?” lol lady, why would he know that. Anyway, he’s got millions of dollars in OpenAI shares, and he’s also sold some for more than $10 million.

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
“I think he was just upset that he had been challenged,” Achiam said. “This was not friendly.”

In Musk’s testimony, he claimed he might have said something friendly like “don’t be a jackass” but denied he’d called anyone a jackass. Achiam’s testimony obviously contradicts that. Achiam received a trophy from Dario Amodei at the next meeting in commemoration of Achiam standing up to Musk: “Never stop being a jackass for safety.” The trophy is not introduced, sadly for me.

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
During the all-hands, Musk expressed concerns about what would happen if DeepMind got to AGI first,

“It sounded like he wanted to race toward AGI.” That sounded unsafe to Achiam. “He was proposing to do something that seemed, based on our understanding at the time, obviously unsafe and reckless,” Achiam said. “We had a pretty tense exchange, and he snapped and called me a jackass.” There were 50 or 60 people at that meeting.

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
“It was a bit like seeing Bigfoot through Plexiglass,” Achiam says of seeing Elon Musk in the office.

He had a notable interaction with Musk, though, during the all-hands when Musk was departing the organization in Feb. 2018. Musk explained that he was leaving because he had a new conflict of interest with Tesla, which would be hiring from the same pool of researchers — and indicated a general lack of confidence in OpenAI’s path

Hayden Field
Hayden Field
Ilya Sutskever would get up on tables to give speeches in the early days of OpenAI.

That’s according to Josh Achiam, currently the company’s chief futurist, who joined in 2017. He said Sutskever’s impassioned speeches would typically be about the science-fiction-esque future that was approaching.

Hayden Field
Hayden Field
Achiam talked about the roles of Greg Brockman and Ilya Sutskever in OpenAI’s early days.

He said Brockman and Sutskever were the “main leaders,” and that Brockman was the “engineering workhorse that pushed to build scaled-up systems that would train the AI and make it work.” Achiam called Sutskever a “scientific visionary” who articulated what the future would be like, such as football fields of silicon chips making large-scale calculations.

Hayden Field
Hayden Field
Josh Achiam described what it was like to work at OpenAI in 2017.

He said when he joined, OpenAI was a team of about 50 people, and that it essentially felt like “an extension of a graduate student lab in a university” — a “collegiate, academic, super intellectual” environment — with most employees being either current PhD students or recent graduates. He said he appreciated that there wasn’t a “publish or perish” type of culture at the time.

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
Achiam started at OpenAI as an intern in the summer of 2017, and became a full-time employee in December.

His job was safety research then. He is now the “chief futurist” at OpenAI, where he tries to think about side-effects of AI (such as social impacts, economic impacts, and consequences for national and international security). “It is my best attempt to have us fulfill the mission of OpenAI,” he says. The idea is to ensure AGI benefits everyone, he says. It’s “one of the highest and noblest callings we could possibly have.”

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
Hi my name is Josh Achiam and welcome to “will we see the jackass trophy?”

He is establishing his background right now. You will be just shocked to hear that he’s into science fiction. This is the witness we may see the jackass trophy for. I am on the edge of my seat.

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
Fairly stupid choice by Musk’s lawyers to go after Microsoft’s major decision rights.

Microsoft had an approval right on some transactions. It did not have the majority of the board. That’s even though they contributed more than 90 percent of OpenAI’s initial investments. Also, all LPs had major decision rights, Wetter testifies. So this is less control than Musk wanted for more money.

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
Musk cross. I guess we are now going to have a fight about due diligence.

“We did not talk to Elon Musk during out due diligence process,” Wetter notes. He’s not a party to OpenAI’s agreements with Microsoft. A lot of the direct was “Are there any agreements with Elon Musk here? Are there any there?”

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
“Our due diligence found no conditions related to Elon Musk,” Wetter says.

We have just gone through the terms of a very boring document. I will spare you. That’s the top line.

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
Mike Wetter for Microsoft is taking the stand now.

He lead corporate development at Microsoft, where he’s worked for almost 20 years. We saw this deposition earlier as part of Musk’s case. He did a bunch of the work on the 2021 and 2023 OpenAI deals. I believe he is here to talk about Microsoft’s due diligence and also to put the deal in context — “we’ve done over 100 transactions including acquisitions and investments,” in aggregate value of $100 billion.

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
Scott, who is wearing sneakers and a black crew neck under his blazer, seems quite pleasant on cross.

He also doesn’t remember a bunch of things Musk’s lawyer is asking about. I fully believe him on this — feels like Scott’s only real interest is the tech. He was so happy talking about Azure and he is very lost talking about partnership agreements.

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
We are now getting cross-examination from Musk’s lawyer.

She seems confused by a CTO not knowing what revenue had been generated. Scott noted he was not the chief revenue officer. He seemed amused.

Hayden Field
Hayden Field
Anthropic is launching Claude for Small Business.

It’s a package of “connectors,” installed via a toggle switch, that allows Claude to work inside tools like Intuit Quickbooks, PayPal, Docusign, HugSpot, Google Workspace, and Microsoft 365. “It can plan payroll, close the month, run a sales campaign, chase invoices, and more,” per Anthropic’s blog post.

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
Microsoft’s CTO Kevin Scott is on the stand.

He has testified that the company liked the idea of partnering with OpenAI in part because it would show how to build out Azure for AI frontier research. It’s pleasantly boring.

Microsoft doesn’t want any of thisMicrosoft doesn’t want any of this
Elizabeth Lopatto
Live updates from Musk v. AltmanLive updates from Musk v. Altman
Elizabeth Lopatto and Hayden Field
Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
In his testimony, Musk said he never called anyone a jackass.

He said he sometimes used strong language at work, but might have said something like, “Don’t be a jackass.” So in addition to being hilarious, the trophy also makes him look like a liar.

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
Incredible evidence dispute this morning.

There is a trophy that OpenAI has brought in, that’s half of a donkey — the back half — and says, “Never stop being a jackass.” It’s a commemoration OpenAI employees bought for another employee that Musk called a jackass on the way out on his last day. Musk’s team does not want the trophy in evidence.

Lauren Feiner
Lauren Feiner
OpenAI endorses the Kids Online Safety Act.

It joins a handful of other tech companies like Snap and Microsoft in supporting the bill, while major tech groups maintain opposition. The announcement comes as a key Senate committee prepares to move forward on its version of KOSA, after a House committee passed a largely overhauled version.

Alexa is moving into Amazon․comAlexa is moving into Amazon․com
Jennifer Pattison Tuohy
Data centers are coming for rural America

And the jobs they promise don’t really exist.

Abigail Bassett
TC Sottek
TC Sottek
Princeton’s code of honor is AI’s latest victim.

As originally reported by The Daily Princetonian and The Atlantic, Princeton University just decided to end a 133-year tradition of professors leaving the room when students are taking exams.

The dean of the faculty claimed in the proposal to amend the rules that both students and professors had “the perception that cheating on in-class exams has become widespread”, thanks in part to “the advent of generative artificial intelligence products.” At least AI has reinvigorated one job: student chaperone.

Sam Altman was winning on the stand, but it might not be enough

Elon Musk may have done more long-term reputational damage to the OpenAI CEO.

Elizabeth Lopatto
Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Polling firm Gallup is starting to look into “the potential of simulated responses.”

It’s partnering with an AI company called Simile and is “independently validating” the company’s method. “Our goal is to learn whether AI systems and emerging methods can help deepen, not replace, our understanding of how humans think and behave,” according to Gallup. Gallup also notes that its goal isn’t to use the methodology to substitute “for work that requires the rigor of probability-based sampling.”

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