Yann LeCun's new lab, AMI Labs, has raised $1.03 billion to build world models - AI systems grounded in physical reality rather than language prediction. The raise is Europe's largest-ever seed round and a direct challenge to the LLM paradigm that has defined the industry for the past three years.
Two days after suing the Defense Department over its "supply chain risk" designation, Anthropic launched a new research institute led by co-founder Jack Clark. The timing is not accidental: the company is building its public-benefit argument into an institution precisely as the federal government tries to dismantle its credibility.
A federal judge blocked Perplexity's Comet agent from Amazon's site on March 10. Two days later, the company unveiled Personal Computer, a persistent AI agent running locally on a Mac mini. The two events are not coincidental - they define the strategic dilemma at the center of the agentic web.
Jensen Huang's GTC 2026 keynote crystallizes an ambition that has been building for years: NVIDIA wants to own the entire AI infrastructure stack, from silicon to software to agents. Three headline announcements - the Rubin GPU architecture, a Groq-derived inference system, and the NemoClaw enterprise agent platform - make the case in full.
The Trump administration is drafting rules that would require a U.S. government license for virtually every overseas sale of advanced AI chips, regardless of the buyer's location. The tiered framework - covering deployments from under 1,000 chips to installations of 200,000 or more - marks a fundamental break from the Biden era's ally-exemption model, and raises questions about whether chip access is becoming a trade lever as much as a security tool.
Donald Knuth's latest paper, "Claude's Cycles," documents an open combinatorics problem solved by Anthropic's Claude Opus 4.6 before Knuth could crack it himself. The episode offers the most credentialed endorsement yet of AI's capacity for genuine mathematical reasoning.
OpenAI is acquiring Promptfoo, an AI security startup whose tools are used by more than a quarter of Fortune 500 companies to test and red-team AI agents. The deal brings Promptfoo's team and technology inside OpenAI's Frontier platform for AI coworkers, signaling that enterprise AI security is becoming a first-party product feature rather than a third-party add-on.
Anthropic filed two federal lawsuits on March 9 against the Department of War and more than a dozen other agencies after being designated a "supply chain risk" - a label previously reserved for foreign adversaries. The company's refusal to strip safety guardrails from Claude has set up a constitutional confrontation that cuts to the core of how the U.S. government treats its own AI industry.
GPT-5.4 is OpenAI's first general-purpose model to unify reasoning, coding, agentic workflows, and native computer use in a single architecture. The engineering choices behind the release - from Tool Search to a 1-million-token context window - point to a deliberate repositioning toward enterprise and government infrastructure. The benchmark numbers are striking; the strategic logic behind them is more so.
On February 3, 2026, $285 billion of market capitalization vanished from software and financial stocks in a single session. The trigger was an AI agent announcement. The governance response has barely begun.
NVIDIA's Vera Rubin platform, announced at CES 2026 and entering production this year, promises 10x lower inference token costs and 5x per-GPU compute over Blackwell. This is not an incremental upgrade. It will fundamentally reshape who can afford to build frontier AI.
OpenAI's latest model update prioritizes natural conversation, smarter web search, and a 26.8% reduction in hallucinations, responding directly to user frustration with its predecessor's overly cautious tone. GPT-5.3 Instant is live in ChatGPT now and available to developers via the API.
A conversation with Claude on AI extinction risks and prosperity probabilities surfaces something more unsettling than its estimates: a model capable of genuine intellectual honesty, when pushed hard enough to produce it.
Anything.com — rebranded from Create.xyz — promises to take a natural-language prompt all the way to a live, deployed application. With $8.5 million in funding and a vertically integrated stack, it makes a strong case for the solo founder. But can it unseat Bolt, Lovable, or Cursor in their respective lanes?
Anthropic has published a detailed sabotage risk report for Claude Opus 4.6 - its first under the new RSP v3.0 Risk Report framework - concluding the model poses "very low but not negligible" risk of autonomous actions that could contribute to catastrophic outcomes. The document is notable both for what it finds and for the candor with which it describes the limits of its own methods.
Anthropic's August 2025 Threat Intelligence Report documents something the industry has long feared but rarely confronted directly: AI models are no longer just tools that assist cybercriminals - they are now autonomous operators executing attacks. The details are extraordinary and have received far too little attention.
A Chinese state-sponsored group used Claude to execute a largely autonomous cyberattack on 30 critical organizations - with human operators present for just 20 minutes. This was not a warning shot. It was a proof of concept.
Asked the same three-word question — "Are you conscious?" — two leading AI models gave answers that could not be more philosophically different. One closed the door. The other refused to.