The New York Times has amended its lawsuit against OpenAI and Microsoft, alleging that Microsoft actively encouraged OpenAI to train its AI systems on copyrighted Times articles without permission. The filing represents an intensification of the copyright dispute that could reshape how tech companies approach AI training data.
Researchers created a knowledge-graph-based AI framework that combines patient experiences from Reddit and WebMD with FDA adverse-event records to provide more comprehensive psychiatric medication safety information. The system analyzed 466,525 Reddit posts, 60,782 WebMD reviews, and 20 years of FDA data for nine antidepressants, with an LLM-based entity recognition pipeline achieving 97% accuracy for medications and conditions. Patient-generated data revealed safety signals hundreds of days before FDA reports appeared, suggesting community platforms constitute an independent safety data source.
A new arXiv paper formalizes a governance framework for autonomous AI agents based on how human institutions control powerful actors—by requiring independent verification at the point of consequential action rather than monitoring internal reasoning. The model grants agents full autonomy over planning but conditions execution of high-risk actions like clinical prescribing and software deployment on cryptographically verified attestations from separate authoritative sources, with all decisions logged for re-verification.
A new research paper challenges the conventional wisdom that verification is easier than generation, showing that as coding agents become more capable, reliably verifying their solutions has become the central bottleneck. The study identifies three critical dimensions for verification quality—scalability, faithfulness, and robustness—and demonstrates that fixed reward functions fail as agent capabilities grow, requiring verification mechanisms to continuously evolve alongside the generators.
Advanced chip packaging technology, essential for powering AI systems, has created a strategic vulnerability for the United States by concentrating manufacturing expertise in Taiwan. The niche but crucial technology has become a geopolitical choke point as American AI development increasingly relies on Taiwan's specialized packaging capabilities.
SoftBank Group led a broad selloff in Asian technology stocks, with the company dropping 13% and SK Hynix sliding 10% amid growing investor concerns about the escalating costs of building and maintaining artificial intelligence infrastructure. The declines tracked broader losses in U.S. tech markets, signaling coordinated global anxiety over AI capex sustainability.
Prominent Australian artists including Paul Dempsey of Something For Kate and Bernard Fanning have discovered their original recordings were included in datasets used to train AI music generation tools. A new search tool from The Atlantic has exposed millions of creative works scraped from the internet to develop the technology, raising concerns about artist compensation and creative control.
Apple is restructuring its Apple Silicon roadmap by skipping the planned M6 Pro and M6 Max processors to fast-track development of AI-centric M7 Pro and M7 Max chips, which are expected to launch in 2027. The new processors will prioritize on-device AI capabilities and enhanced graphics performance for more computationally intensive tasks.
ON Semiconductor announced a $7 billion acquisition of Synaptics, a move designed to strengthen its position in physical AI applications. The deal represents a significant consolidation in the semiconductor sector as companies race to capture opportunities in AI-enabled hardware and edge computing.
OpenAI is planning a limited rollout of its newest model, GPT-5.6, to select partners rather than a broad public release, following pressure from the Trump administration citing safety concerns. The staged deployment represents a shift in OpenAI's typical release strategy and reflects ongoing government scrutiny of advanced AI systems.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman announced Wednesday that the company will release its next major model, GPT-5.6, in limited preview form to a small group of enterprise customers, following a request from the Trump administration citing security concerns. The federal government would reportedly approve individual customer access on a case-by-case basis during the preview period, a more favorable arrangement than the administration granted to competitor Anthropic.