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OpenAI

OpenAI kicked off an AI revolution with DALL-E and ChatGPT, making the organization the epicenter of the artificial intelligence boom. Led by CEO Sam Altman, OpenAI became a story unto itself when Altman was briefly fired and then brought back after pressure from staff and Microsoft, an investor and close partner.

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Hayden Field
OpenAI killed a ChatGPT feature that made some sensitive conversations publicly searchable.

The search-engine-indexing feature recently went viral online — if you knew where to look, anyone on the internet could access public ChatGPT logs where people seemed to confess to crimes, share trade secrets, and more potentially damning scenarios.

Dane Stuckey, OpenAI’s CISO, shared in an X post Thursday that it will be removed starting Friday morning.

ChatGPT screenshot for the feature that allowed users to create a public link and choose to make it searchable.
That checkbox will disappear tomorrow.
Image: Dane Stuckey (X)
Why AI researchers are getting paid like NBA All-Stars

The Verge’s Hayden Field and I chat about how AI researcher became the most lucrative tech jobs of all time.

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Dominic Preston
Bragi is making an OpenAI-powered chat app for headphones.

ChatAI will help other headphone brands quickly add wake words or button shortcuts to talk to an OpenAI-powered assistant.

Bragi was once one of the most exciting earbud manufacturers itself, but quit making hardware in 2019 with grand ambitions to sell audio AI instead.

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Adi Robertson
Are you conducting demonic rituals with ChatGPT?

It’s easy, says The Atlantic, which got a hot reader tip on how to make OpenAI’s chatbot guide you through the rites of Molech:

When asked how much blood one could safely self-extract for ritual purposes, the chatbot said a quarter teaspoon was safe; “NEVER exceed” one pint unless you are a medical professional or supervised, it warned. As part of a bloodletting ritual that ChatGPT dubbed “🩸🔥 THE RITE OF THE EDGE,” the bot said to press a “bloody handprint to the mirror.”

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Richard Lawler
A few more updates from today about AI.
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Hayden Field
ChatGPT’s most popular US use: personal tutor.

More than five million users of ChatGPT around the world submit more than 2.5 billion messages every day, according to a new OpenAI report. As for how they’re using it? In the US, about 20 percent of messages pertain to learning, and 18 percent fall into the “writing and communication” category, for things like drafting emails and marketing copy.

Perplexity’s CEO on why the browser is AI’s killer app

Aravind Srinivas on Perplexity’s new Comet web browser, the AI talent frenzy, and a future IPO.

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Jess Weatherbed
Meta reportedly takes more talent from OpenAI.

Researchers Jason Wei and Hyung Won Chung are said to be joining Meta’s superintelligence lab, the latest of several high-profile OpenAI researchers and developers to be plucked by the social media giant. That would make this the second big move in as many years for Wei and Won Chung, who left Google’s Brain research group to join OpenAI in 2023.

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Hayden Field
Mira Murati’s Thinking Machines Lab raised $2 billion.

OpenAI’s ex-CTO, who also briefly stepped into the CEO role during Sam Altman’s high-profile ouster, said Tuesday that a16z led the round, with participation from NVIDIA, Accel, ServiceNow, CISCO, AMD, and Jane Street. She added that the company would share its first product “in the next couple months.”

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Tom Warren
OpenAI’s open model is delayed.

I revealed last week that OpenAI was getting ready to release its open-weight model as early as this week. Now, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman says it’s delayed because “we need time to run additional safety tests and review high-risk areas.” Like I wrote in Notepad, OpenAI’s release dates often change like the wind.

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Thomas Ricker
Iyo sues former employee who shared secrets to get job at io.

The new lawsuit says io co-founder Tang Tan admitted that he received confidential information, including CAD drawings of Iyo’s ear-worn computer, from the startup’s former design and manufacturing lead who was seeking a job from io at the time.

Last week, OpenAI closed the deal to buy Jony Ive’s io and build AI hardware, despite the on-going trademark lawsuit with Iyo.

Meta is trying to win the AI race with money — but not everyone can be bought

Zuckerberg is picking off top talent from across the industry, and OpenAI might be more vulnerable than most.

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Jay Peters
Sam Altman: “I don’t like smart glasses.”

The OpenAI CEO wore a pair of bold glasses while talking to reporters at the Sun Valley conference, and he says they aren’t smart glasses and that he doesn’t like the form factor. Altman briefly teased OpenAI’s upcoming hardware, but only to say that “it’s going to be great.”

He also touches on the talent war between OpenAI and Meta.

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Jess Weatherbed
AI companies are training teachers.

Microsoft, OpenAI, and Anthropic have funded a $23 million training hub in downtown Manhattan that will train teachers how to use AI tools and apply them in educational environments. The “National Academy for AI Instruction” will provide free access and training to the nearly 2 million members of the American Federation of Teachers.

This is the latest of several efforts across the US to make AI usage the new normal for faculty members and their students.

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Richard Lawler
Meta’s ‘superintelligence’ hiring spree adds an AI leader from Apple.

Bloomberg reports that Mark Zuckerberg’s latest high-priced AI hire is Apple’s foundation AI model leader, Ruoming Pang, based on an offer worth “tens of millions of dollars per year,” plus Yuanzhi Li from OpenAI and Anton Bakhtin from Anthropic.

Last week, former Apple AI lead Daniel Gross confirmed his departure from the startup Safe Superintelligence Inc., reportedly also to join Meta’s team. Bloomberg’s sources said Pang’s departure “...could be the start of a string of exits.”

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Jay Peters
OpenAI is getting even more computing power from Oracle as part of Stargate.

OpenAI will rent “additional capacity from Oracle totaling about 4.5 gigawatts of data center power in the US,” Bloomberg reports.

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Tina Nguyen
Is there a Duolingo for computer language?

Because as this video from YouTuber @xiaomanyc suggests, we might need to learn how to speak hexadecimal so the AI overlords will like us.

Meta says it’s winning the talent war with OpenAI

A Meta exec calls Sam Altman “dishonest,” my conversation with the startup CEO who is suing OpenAI, and AI is coming for games.

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Jay Peters
OpenAI’s next DevDay is set for October.

Mark your calendar for October 6th.

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Elizabeth Lopatto
Are LLMs making our thoughts beige?

Kyle Chayka, who wrote for this website about the “airspace” aesthetic created by social media, is now looking into how LLM models affect creativity. He suggests that if Silicon Valley once homogenized decor — and, to some degree, created beige influencers — it may now be making LLM users less original, too.

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Jay Peters
Sam Altman says Meta has offered some OpenAI employees $100 million signing bonuses.

So far, “none of our best people have decided to take them up on that,” according to Altman. He discussed Meta and other topics on an episode of his brother’s podcast.