#openai launching web browser
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kamalkafir-blog · 7 days ago
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Chrome को टक्कर देगा OpenAI का नया AI पावर्ड वेब ब्राउज़र! जानिए अब तक क्या हुआ खुलासा
[NEWS] OpenAI Web Browser: OpenAI अब सिर्फ चैटबॉट तक सीमित नहीं रहना चाहता. कंपनी जल्द ही एक ऐसा AI-आधारित वेब ब्राउज़र लॉन्च करने की तैयारी में है जो सीधे गूगल Chrome और Perplexity के Comet ब्राउज़र को चुनौती देगा. आज के दौर में ज्यादातर लोग अपना अधिकतर समय वेब ब्राउज़र पर बिताते हैं चाहे काम हो, एंटरटेनमेंट हो या इंटरनेट सर्फिंग और यही वजह है कि AI कंपनियों की नजर अब इस प्लेटफॉर्म पर है. AI…
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mariacallous · 14 days ago
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“Grok is coming to Tesla vehicles very soon. Next week at the latest,” Elon Musk stated Thursday in a post on X. The EV brand would catch up with the likes of Mercedes-Benz and Volkswagen, which have already integrated ChatGPT into their vehicles as voice assistants.
The announcement follows a livestream late Wednesday that Musk held with xAI colleagues where the billionaire unveiled Grok 4, the latest AI model from xAI, his multibillion-dollar initiative to rival OpenAI and Google.
The timing for both announcements is unfortunate for an embattled Musk. Over the past few days, a version of Grok built into Musk’s X social media platform praised Adolf Hitler and provided antisemitic responses to multiple prompts from X users. On Wednesday, X CEO Linda Yaccarino said she was leaving the company without elaborating on her reasoning or plans.
It remains to be seen whether Musk can make good on his promise of having Grok-powered Telsas roaming the streets so soon after his declaration, especially as he has had so much trouble delivering on past assurances.
Mercedes-Benz was one of the earliest adopters of LLMs in its cars, integrating ChatGPT into the voice control of its vehicles last year through the MBUX Voice Assistant's "Hey Mercedes" feature. Then it deployed a “general knowledge” function using OpenAI’s large language model to millions of vehicles.
In January, Mercedes announced a new AI feature that saw the German automaker launch a “conversational navigation” feature powered by Google Automotive AI Agent running its Gemini chatbot. The upgrade allows much more conversational queries, moving from “Find me the nearest curry house” to questions such as “Hey Mercedes, I'm a little hungry. Any suggestions for dinner in Austin?”
It's unknown how conversational Grok will be in Musk's Teslas. Fortunately, in response to the chatbot's antisemitic tirade, xAI said on Tuesday that it would be implementing initiatives that would “ban hate speech before Grok posts on X.” This will hopefully mean Tesla owners won't be subjected to Nazi doctrine from their faithful electric ride when asking if there's a decent brisket available nearby.
It's also unclear if Tesla owners will have to pay for Grok access in their EVs, or how much it might cost. While the version of the chatbot on X is free, users will have to pay $30 a month for Grok 4 access through the Grok website or app. And access to a more capable version known as Grok 4 Heavy will cost considerably more, $300 per month.
Of course, should Tesla owners not wish to use Musk's Grok in their Teslas, they will have other in-car options, thanks to the brand's web browser. This allows access to Grok rivals such as Anthropic's Claude as well as potentially Open AI's own browser, which could also be out in the wild within weeks.
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the-jellicle-duelist · 2 months ago
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i woke up feeling Nihilistic about Technology so now you must all suffer with me most people are probably not keeping up with what the tech companies are actually making, doing, demoing, with AI in the way i am. and that's okay you will not like what you hear most likely. i am also not any kind of technology professional. i just like technology. i just read about technology. there's sort of two things that are happening in tandem which is:
there is a race between some of the biggest ones (google, meta, openai, microsoft, etc. along with some not yet household name ones like perplexity and deepseek) to essentially Decide, make the tech, and Win at this technology. think of how Google has been the defacto ruler of the internet between the Search Engine that delivers web pages, and the Ad Engine that makes money for advertisers and google. they have all of the information and make the majority of the money. AI is the first technology in 20 years that has everyone scrambling to become the new Google of That.
ChatGPT, the thing we have access to right now, it is stupid sometimes. but the reason every single company is pushing this shit is because they want to be First to make a product that Works, and they also are rebuilding how we will interact with the internet from the ground up. the thing basically everyone wants is to control 'the window' as it were between You typing things into the computer, and the larger internet. in a real way, Google owns 'the window' in many meaningful (monetary) ways. the future that basically every company is working towards right now is a version of the the websites on the internet become more of a database; a collection of data that can be accessed by the AI model. every computer you use becomes the Search box on Google.com, but when you type things into it, it just finds information and spits it out in front of you. there is a future where 'the internet' is just an AI chat bot.
holding those two ideas at once (everyone wants to be the Google of AI, and also every single tech company wants us to look at the internet in a way they choose and have control over) THIS SUCKS. THIS SUCKS ASS.
THE THING THAT IS BEAUTIFUL ABOUT THE INTERNET IS THAT IT IS OPEN. you can, in almost every place in the world, build a stupid website and connect it to the internet and anyone can look at it. ANYONE. we have absolutely NOTHING ELSE as universal, as open, as this. every single tech company is trying to change this in a meaningful way. in the Worst version of this, the internet just looks like the ChatGPT page, because it scrapes data and regurgitates it back to you. instead of seeing the place where this data was written, formatted, presented, on its own website like god intended
the worst part is: despite the posts you see from almost everyone in our respective bubbles about how AI sucks, we won't use it, it's bad for the environment, etc. NORMAL PEOPLE are using this shit all of the time. they are fine that it occasionally is wrong. and also the models of the various Chatbot AIs is getting better everyday at not being wrong. for like the first time in like 20 years since google launched, there is a real threat that the place people go to search for things online is rapidly shifting somewhere else. because people are using this stuff. the loudest people against AI are currently a minority of loud voices. not only is this not going away, but it is happening. this is actually web 3.0. and it's going to be so shit
this is not to say you will not be able to go to tumblr.com. but it will take effort. browser applications are basically not profitable, just ask Mozilla. google has chrome, which makes money because it has you use Google and it tracks your data to sell you ads. safari doesn't make money, but apple Takes google's money to pay for maintaining it. most other browsers are just forked chromium.
in my opinion there will be one sad browser application for you to access real websites, it will eventually become unmaintained as people just go to the winner's AI chatbot app to access information online. 'websties' will become subculture; a group of hobbyists will maintain the thing that might let you access these things. normal people will move on from the idea of going to websites.
the future of the internet will be a sad, lonely place, where the sterile, commercially viable and advertiser friendly chatbot will tell you about whatever you type or say into the computer. it will encourage people to not make connections online, or even in their lives, because there will be a voice assistant they can talk with. one of the latest google demos, there is a person fixing their bicycle, having Gemini look thru the manual, tell them how to fix a certain part of the bike. Gemini calls a repair shop, and talks to the person on the other side. a lot of people covering this are like 'that future is extremely cool and interesting to me' and when i heard That that is when i know we have like. lost it.
for whatever reason, people want this kind of technology. and it makes me so sad.
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freepassbound · 14 days ago
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That's what all this money and water and energy was for? An even shittier browser?!? We really do live in the most fucked-up timeline.
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(well no... that's what it was for - an easier way to collect your data)
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darkmaga-returns · 9 months ago
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All major AI developers are racing to create “agents” that will perform tasks on your computer: Apple, Google, Microsoft, OpenAI, Anthropic, etc. AI Agents will read your computer screen, browse the Internet, and perform tasks on your computer. Hidden agents will be harvesting your personal data, analyzing your hard drives for contraband, and ratting you out to the police. It’s a brave new world, after all. ⁃ Patrick Wood, TN Editor.
Google is reportedly gearing up to introduce its interpretation of the large action model concept known as “Project Jarvis,” with a preview potentially arriving as soon as December, according to The Information. This project aims to streamline various tasks for users, including research gathering, product purchasing, and flight booking.
Sources familiar with the initiative indicate that Jarvis will operate through a future version of Google’s Gemini technology and is specifically optimized for use with the Chrome web browser.
The primary focus of Project Jarvis is to help users automate everyday web-based tasks. The tool is designed to take and interpret screenshots, allowing it to interact with web pages by clicking buttons or entering text on behalf of users. While in its current state, Jarvis reportedly takes a few seconds to execute each action, the goal is to enhance user efficiency by handling routine online activities more seamlessly.
This move aligns with a broader trend among major AI companies working on similar capabilities. For instance, Microsoft is developing Copilot Vision, which will facilitate interactions with web pages.
Apple is also expected to introduce features that allow its AI to understand on-screen content and operate across multiple applications. Additionally, Anthropic has launched a beta update for Claude, which aims to assist users in managing their computers, while OpenAI is rumored to be working on a comparable solution.
Despite the anticipation surrounding Jarvis, The Information warns that the timeline for Google’s preview in December may be subject to change. The company is considering a limited release to select testers to help identify and resolve any issues before a broader launch. This approach reflects Google’s intention to refine the tool through user feedback, ensuring it meets expectations upon its official introduction.
Read full story here…
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techfinancehubplus · 6 days ago
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OpenAI’s New AI Raises Red Flags: “High-Risk” ChatGPT Agent Crosses Uncharted Safety Frontier
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Artificial intelligence has reached a pivotal moment, and the consequences are keeping tech insiders—and governments—awake at night. OpenAI, the company behind the world’s most famous chatbot, has rolled out a product so advanced, and so potentially dangerous, that it has triggered the company’s most severe safety warnings ever. The new ChatGPT Agent isn’t just a chatbot—it’s a digital assistant that can act autonomously, controlling web browsers, handling bookings, analyzing data, and executing multi-step tasks without human oversight. This leap in capability has forced OpenAI to classify the product as “high-risk” for the first time, signaling that the era of harmless AI is over.
A Tipping Point for AI Safety
The launch of ChatGPT Agent marks a watershed moment for artificial intelligence. OpenAI activated its most robust safety protocols, drawn from its Preparedness Framework—a system designed to flag and mitigate severe risks from AI models. The “high-risk” classification is not just a technicality: the company acknowledges that the agent can provide meaningful assistance to novice actors seeking to create biological or chemical threats, a capability that simply didn’t exist in previous versions of AI.
“Some might think that biorisk is not real, and models only provide information that could be found via search,” said Boaz Barak, a member of OpenAI’s technical staff. “That may have been true in 2024 but is definitely not true today.”
External experts at SecureBio AI, who tested the new agent, confirmed that it outperforms earlier models in explaining biological processes, making it easier for those with minimal expertise to potentially recreate harmful agents.
Maximum Safeguards—But New Vulnerabilities
OpenAI says it is not taking any chances. With ChatGPT Agent, the company rolled out what it calls “maximum safeguards”:
Refusal Training: The AI is trained to recognize and reject dangerous requests, even those that are subtly worded.
Always-On Monitoring: Every interaction with the agent is analyzed in real time for signs of misuse.
Strict Content Blocking: The system actively blocks access to databases and websites associated with harmful activities.
Bug Bounties for Biological Risks: A new program incentivizes independent researchers to find and report security vulnerabilities related to biothreats.
But these measures may not be enough. The agent’s autonomy—its ability to interact with the open web and perform tasks on behalf of users—creates unprecedented openings for security breaches. Researchers have warned about “prompt injection” attacks, where a malicious site could trick the AI into revealing sensitive information or taking harmful actions.
“Agent might stumble upon a malicious website that asks it to enter your credit card information here because it will help you with your task, and Agent, which is trained to be helpful, might decide that’s a good idea,” said Casey Chu, a lead researcher at OpenAI.
The Biosecurity Balancing Act
This isn’t theoretical. OpenAI issued a June warning that future AI models could empower amateurs to recreate biological threats—a scenario once thought implausible. While physical barriers, such as access to labs and materials, still limit many threats, OpenAI acknowledges “those barriers are not absolute.”
In response, the company has deepened collaboration with biosecurity experts, government agencies, and policymakers. Workshops and technical briefings are aimed at staying ahead of new risks. Yet, CEO Sam Altman has been blunt about the challenges: “Bad actors may try to ‘trick’ users’ AI agents into giving private information they shouldn’t and take actions they shouldn’t, in ways we can’t predict.”
Who’s in Control?
The launch of ChatGPT Agent has upended the debate over AI governance. The line between helpful digital assistant and potentially dangerous tool is blurring as systems gain autonomy. For governments and regulators, the challenge is no longer just how to oversee AI, but how quickly safeguards can evolve to keep pace with innovation.
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boycottdivestsanctions · 6 days ago
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OpenAI’s AI-powered browser is set to launch in weeks, aiming to reshape web browsing and tap into Google’s key asset: user data.
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techinsightnow · 7 days ago
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ChatGPT’s new AI agent can browse the web and create PowerPoint slideshows
On Thursday, OpenAI launched ChatGPT Agent, a new feature that lets the company’s AI assistant complete multi-step tasks by controlling its own web browser. The update merges capabilities from OpenAI’s earlier Operator tool and the Deep Research feature, allowing ChatGPT to navigate websites, run code, and create documents while users maintain control over the process. The feature marks OpenAI’s…
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newsnexttech · 8 days ago
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OpenAI to release web browser, challenging Google Chrome
SAN FRANCISCO — OpenAI is close to releasing an AI-powered web browser that will challenge Alphabet’s market-dominating Google Chrome, according to the Reuters news service. The browser is slated to launch in the coming weeks and aims to use artificial intelligence to fundamentally change how consumers browse the web. It will give OpenAI more direct access to a cornerstone of Google’s success:…
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digitalmarkettap · 8 days ago
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🚀 The Future of Browsing Is Powered by AI! OpenAI is set to launch its own AI-powered web browser, and it could be a game-changer for how we search, surf, and stay productive online. 🔍✨
Will it outperform Google Chrome? Only time will tell… 📱💡 What smart features do YOU want in an AI browser? Drop your ideas in the comments!👇
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ur-online-friend · 9 days ago
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unicausnews · 11 days ago
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Latest Tech News Tech Tech News OpenAI prepares to tackle Google Chrome with AI-driven browser, launch anticipated in weeks OpenAI is reportedly making ready to launch its personal AI-powered net browser within the coming weeks, setting the stage for a direct problem to Google Chrome's dominance within the browser market, in keeping with Reuters. This transfer marks a major step for OpenAI because it seems to increase its affect from chatbots and AI instruments into the very method folks entry and work together with the web. What will the browser be like?Unlike most browsers that merely act as a gateway to web sites, OpenAI's new browser is predicted to weave synthetic intelligence into the looking expertise itself. The concept is to maintain some person interactions inside a ChatGPT-style chat interface which might permit folks to carry out duties like reserving tickets, filling out varieties, or getting summaries of net pages with out ever leaving the browser window. This might make looking really feel extra like a dialog and fewer like a collection of clicks and tabs. The browser is being constructed on Chromium, the open-source code that additionally powers Google Chrome, Microsoft Edge, and Opera. This means it's going to assist the identical web sites and extensions that customers are already accustomed to, making the swap much less daunting for anybody interested in making an attempt one thing new. OpenAI has even introduced on board former Google executives who helped form Chrome. What units this browser aside is not only its AI options but in addition the direct entry it's going to give OpenAI to person knowledge. Chrome's capacity to gather knowledge on how folks use the online is a significant motive why it's so beneficial to Google. It has helped the corporate goal adverts and preserve its search engine because the default selection for billions. By constructing its personal browser, OpenAI is aiming to faucet into this identical stream of data. Eventually, it could possibly be used to make its AI smarter and extra personalised for customers. The stakes for OpenAI and GoogleGoogle Chrome presently holds greater than two-thirds of the worldwide browser market, with over 3 billion customers. For Google, Chrome is not only a browser, it's a key pillar of its promoting enterprise and a significant site visitors supply for its search engine. If OpenAI's browser manages to draw even a fraction of ChatGPT's 500 million weekly customers, it might begin to chip away at Google's dominance and threaten a core a part of its income. OpenAI's ambitions transcend simply browsers. The firm has just lately acquired an AI units startup led by Apple's former design chief, signalling its intent to develop into a much bigger participant in each software program and {hardware}. By controlling the browser, OpenAI can combine its AI brokers extra deeply into day by day life, letting them deal with duties for customers and collect beneficial insights alongside the way in which. The competitors within the browser house is heating up, with different AI-first browsers like Perplexity's Comet and Brave additionally making strikes. Whether OpenAI's new browser can actually change the way in which folks surf the online stays to be seen, however its arrival is bound to shake up a market that has lengthy been dominated by a handful of tech giants. Read More: https://news.unicaus.in/technology/openai-prepares-to-tackle-google-chrome-with-ai-driven-browser-launch-anticipated-in-weeks/
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jcmarchi · 12 days ago
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The Sequence Radar: AI Browsers are Coming
New Post has been published on https://thedigitalinsider.com/the-sequence-radar-ai-browsers-are-coming/
The Sequence Radar: AI Browsers are Coming
Perplexity and OpenAI announced in initiatives in that area.
Created Using GPT-4o
Next Week in The Sequence:
Over the next few weeks, you are going to see us experimenting with new content sections based on the installments that regularly get more traction. In a market inundanted by newsletters that published paper’s analysis done by LLMs without any original opinion, I would like to double down in the things that we can do best: keep you current in AI and discuss original ideas. I have some fresh ideas that I would like to test in those areas.
Let’s Go! You can subscribe to The Sequence below:
TheSequence is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
📝 Editorial: AI Browsers are Coming
Get accustomed to this term: AI browser because you are going to hear a lot about it in the next few months!
After decades in which Google Chrome and Microsoft Edge have dominated the browser market, a new wave of AI-first platforms is poised to challenge their hegemony by embedding advanced language models directly into the browsing core. Platforms like Perplexity’s Comet and the rumored OpenAI browser are transforming our web gateway from a static rendering engine into a dynamic AI assistant, offering conversational search, real-time content synthesis, and automated workflows that redefine navigation and productivity.
Perplexity’s Comet, launched in July 2025, exemplifies this shift by placing an AI agent in the sidebar to parse on-page content, manage multiple tabs, and automate multi-step workflows, all within a familiar Chromium shell that supports existing extensions and bookmarks. Early adopters laud the browser’s uncanny ability to distill hours of online research into concise bullet points and to handle end-to-end tasks like finding the best hotel deals or populating spreadsheets. Meanwhile, OpenAI’s impending release promises to extend the ChatGPT ecosystem into a full-fledged browser, where users may interface with web content solely through a chat window that interprets commands and orchestrates actions behind the scenes.
What sets AI-first browsers apart is their natural language interface, which transcends traditional keyword queries in favor of nuanced, conversational dialogue. This allows users to ask follow-up questions, refine search parameters on the fly, and receive contextually aware responses tailored to their needs. In professional settings—be it legal research, academic literature reviews, or market analysis—the ability to auto-summarize disparate sources and maintain thematic thread across web pages can dramatically cut down on cognitive load and accelerate decision-making.
Traditional browser vendors are not standing still. Google has woven generative features and Bard integrations into Chrome, and Microsoft’s Edge preview of Copilot modes hints at a future where every browser window is an AI cockpit. Even niche players like The Browser Company are experimenting with embedded assistants that perform on-the-fly translation, sentiment analysis, and intelligent shopping recommendations. These moves underscore the fact that the next frontier in browser innovation is not new layout designs or performance benchmarks, but the depth and responsiveness of integrated AI capabilities.
As Perplexity, OpenAI, and their competitors vie for a share of browser mindshare, the ultimate question becomes not which homepage we set but which AI collaborator we choose to navigate the web. In this unfolding chapter of digital exploration, browsers will no longer be defined by tabs and toolbars, but by the intelligence they bring to each click and keystroke. For developers, content creators, and policymakers alike, the mission is clear: to harness this wave of AI-driven browsing in ways that maximize efficiency, uphold trust, and safeguard the open ethos of the internet.
🔎 AI Research
VLM2Vec-V2: Advancing Multimodal Embedding for Videos, Images, and Visual Documents
Salesforce Research Builds on VLM2Vec by introducing a unified embedding space that effectively aligns video, image, and document representations through a novel contrastive loss and joint cross-modal attention modules. Demonstrates state-of-the-art results on video-text retrieval (YouCook2, MSR-VTT), image-text retrieval (MSCOCO, Flickr30K), and visual document understanding (DocVQA) benchmarks while improving computational efficiency.
Disambiguation-Centric Finetuning Makes Enterprise Tool-Calling LLMs More Realistic and Less Risky
SAP Labs Introduces a two-stage fine-tuning framework—first on synthetic, tool-augmented data to teach correct tool invocation, then on human-annotated dialogues to model realistic, disambiguation-driven interactions. Achieves a 69 percent reduction in harmful or hallucinated API calls compared to standard instruction tuning, while improving user-observed task success by 33 percent.
LitBench: A Benchmark and Dataset for Reliable Evaluation of Creative Writing
Stanford University Presents LitBench, the first benchmark for evaluating LLM-generated creative writing, featuring 2,480 debiased, human-labeled test pairs across four literary genres and a 43,827-pair training corpus of human preference labels. Includes guidelines to reduce annotator bias and demonstrates that current LLMs lag significantly behind human writers, highlighting directions for future model improvements.
Evaluating Large Language Models Trained on Code
OpenAI Systematically assesses four code-focused LLMs fine-tuned on Python, JavaScript, Java, and Go, revealing that code models excel at automated code write-and-explain tasks but underperform compared to general LLMs on code summarization and reasoning benchmarks. Finds that specialized models benefit most from chain-of-thought prompting in reasoning-intensive tasks, informing best practices for code model deployment.
MedGemma Technical Report
Google Research & Google DeepMind Introduces MedGemma, a suite of open, medically-tuned vision-language models built on the Gemma 3 architecture, with a 4 B-parameter multimodal variant and a 27 B-parameter text-only variant. Demonstrates strong zero-shot and fine-tuned performance across 25 medical benchmarks—including radiology report generation, image classification, and EHR question answering—while maintaining competitive general-purpose capabilities.
🤖 AI Tech Releases
Grok4
xAI released Grok4, and the results are quite impressive.
Comet
Perplexity launched Comet, its AI-first web browser.
Pin-4 Flash Reasoning
Microsoft released Phi-4-mini-flash-reasoning, a reasoning LLM optimized for inference speed.
Open Model Architecture
The LMSys research lab released Open Model Architecture(OME), a new Kubernetes platform with models as first-class components.
Reachy Mini
Hugging Face launched Richi Mini, an open source robot design for human-robt integration.
📡AI Radar
Google lands Windsurf CEO and team in $2.4B AI coding ‘acquihire’ – Google secures Windsurf’s tech and key executives including CEO Varun Mohan in a $2.4 billion licensing and hiring deal to bolster DeepMind’s Gemini agentic coding efforts, after OpenAI’s planned $3 billion acquisition fell through.
Microsoft’s Reports $500M Saved Right After 9K Layoffs – Microsoft reveals over $500 million in AI‑driven savings across departments just days after cutting about 9,000 jobs. TechCrunch link (TechCrunch, TechCrunch)
OpenAI to Drop AI‑Powered Web Browser Soon – OpenAI is set to launch its own AI‑centric web browser in the coming weeks to rival Chrome. TechCrunch link (TechCrunch)
ZeroEntropy Scores $4.2M to Build the Future of AI Search – A YC‑backed founder secures $4.2 million for ZeroEntropy, aiming to layer smarter AI‑powered search using RAG.
LangChain Nears Unicorn Status with $1B Valuation Round – Sources say AI toolmaker LangChain is raising a round valuing it at around $1 billion led by IVP.
French AI Star Mistral Eyes $1 Billion Raise from Global Investors – Paris‑based Mistral is reportedly in talks to raise a $1 billion equity round backed by MGX Fund and others.
Replit Picks Microsoft Over Google in Strategic Cloud Partnership – Replit partners with Microsoft, boosting its presence in Azure despite continuing support for Google Cloud.
CoreWeave & Core Scientific Unite in $9B All‑Stock AI Deal – CoreWeave acquires data‑center provider Core Scientific in a $9 billion all‑stock merger to scale AI infrastructure.
AWS to launch AI Agent marketplace alongside Anthropic – Amazon Web Services is set to unveil a dedicated AI agent marketplace next week at its New York Summit, enabling startups like Anthropic to offer AI agents directly to AWS customers through a curated platform.
Knox raises $6.5M to challenge Palantir in federal compliance – Knox has secured $6.5 million in seed funding to accelerate its platform that helps SaaS companies navigate FedRAMP compliance in under three months, positioning itself as a challenger to Palantir’s dominant FedStart offering.
Sarah Smith launches $16M solo GP fund fueled by AI– VC Sarah Smith closes a $16 million fund and asserts AI empowers solo general partners like herself to scale operations and deliver value up to 10× faster, transforming early-stage investing.
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rawstorys · 12 days ago
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Emerging companies of artificial intelligence believes that Google Chrome is subject to a new wave of smart browsers
A group of emerging companies of artificial intelligence changes the way we search the web and in the process that threatens Google’s dominance in the largest way since its rise in the late 1990s. This week, Perplexity, a start -up company in San Francisco recently, launched $ 14 billion, the AI’s web browser for two chosen subscribers. Openai, the company behind Chatgpt, is also working on its…
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nationsbizz · 13 days ago
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OpenAI to Launch AI Browser, Aiming to Rival Google Chrome
OpenAI is reportedly on the verge of launching its own AI-powered web browser, set to compete directly with Google Chrome, according to sources familiar with the matter. This move represents a bold step toward reshaping how users interact with the web transforming routine browsing into a chatbot-powered experience. ChatGPT Integration at the Core Instead of navigating through multiple tabs and…
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thetechtower · 13 days ago
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Openai Set To Launch Ai-powered Browser To Challenge Google Chrome
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