I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology.
1 DeepSeek has unveiled two new experimental AI models
DeepSeek-V3.2 is designed to match OpenAI’s GPT-5’s reasoning capabilities. (Bloomberg $)
+ Here’s how DeepSeek slashes its models’ computational burden. (VentureBeat)
+ It’s achieved these results despite its limited access to powerful chips. (SCMP $)
2 OpenAI has issued a “code red” warning to its employees
It’s a call to arms to improve ChatGPT, or risk being overtaken. (The Information $)
+ Both Google and Anthropic are snapping at OpenAI’s heels. (FT $)
+ Advertising and other initiatives will be pushed back to accommodate the new focus. (WSJ $)
3 How to know when the AI bubble has burst
These are the signs to look out for. (Economist $)
+ Things could get a whole lot worse for the economy if and when it pops. (Axios)
+ We don’t really know how the AI investment surge is being financed. (The Guardian)
4 Some US states are making it illegal for AI to discriminate against you
California is the latest to give workers more power to fight algorithms. (WP $)
5 This AI startup is working on a post-transformer future
Transformer architecture underpins the current AI boom—but Pathway is developing something new. (WSJ $)
+ What the next frontier of AI could look like. (IEEE Spectrum)
6 India is demanding smartphone makers install a government app
Which privacy advocates say is unacceptable snooping. (FT $)
+ India’s tech talent is looking for opportunities outside the US. (Rest of World)
7 College students are desperate to sign up for AI majors
AI is now the second-largest major at MIT behind computer science. (NYT $)
+ AI’s giants want to take over the classroom. (MIT Technology Review)
8 America’s musical heritage is at serious risk
Much of it is stored on studio tapes, which are deteriorating over time. (NYT $)
+ The race to save our online lives from a digital dark age. (MIT Technology Review)
9 Celebrities are increasingly turning on AI
That doesn’t stop fans from casting them in slop videos anyway. (The Verge)
10 Samsung has revealed its first tri-folding phone
But will people actually want to buy it? (Bloomberg $)
+ It’ll cost more than $2,000 when it goes on sale in South Korea. (Reuters)
Quote of the day
#Download #AIs #impact #economy #DeepSeek #strikes