Apple sues OpenAI over hardware secrets, calls unit «rotten to the core»

A jury will have to decide if OpenAI is guilty of systematic theft of Apple secrets (Picture: generated)
The lawsuit from Apple is a damning indictment of OpenAI for stealing technology, prototypes, business processes and even partner manufacturers from Apple’s former employees, 9to5Mac reports.

At the heart of it lies OpenAI’s chief hardware officer Tang Tan, who left his role as VP of Product Design at Apple in 2024 to work with Jony Ive, later joining OpenAI in the Io acquisition, and Chang Liu, who spent eight years at Apple as a Senior System Electrical Engineer before leaving for OpenAI in January.

The pair is accused of accessing confidential Apple systems and downloading «detailed information about unreleased products, engineering presentations, technical specifications, and proprietary project data,» The Verge reports.

The two have also been holding some interesting job interviews, Apple claims, where hires from Apple have been encouraged to lay out systems planning and to log into confidential systems and share trade secrets and restricted paperwork.

There are 400 ex-Apple employees at OpenAI, and the whole hardware business is «rotten to its core by its illegal reliance on misappropriated trade secrets,» the lawsuit alleges.

«We have no interest in other companies’ trade secrets,» OpenAI spokesperson Drew Pusateri tells The Guardian.

Read more: The actual filing. More on 9to5Mac, The Verge, The Guardian, TechCrunch and Daring Fireball. Discussion on r/Singularity and Hacker News.

ChatGPT desktop to become much-hyped superapp with new Work agent

The new ChatGPT desktop app puts all of OpenAI’s eggs in the same basket. (Picture: OpenAI)
UPDATE: OpenAI seems to have removed the chat history and put the chat itself in a popup window. If you don’t like this in the new app, and a lot of people don’t, it leaves the ChatGPT Classic app untouched, which can be used for pure chats like the old version. It will still recieve updates and won’t become obsolete.

Along with the release of GPT-5.6 today comes a new app that looks unremarkable at first, but is a one-stop-shop for all of OpenAI’s features.

The latest addition is called ChatGPT Work, which is billed as an agent that gathers information from your apps and workflows and turns them into spreadsheets, presentations, docs or PDFs and just about anything you want — even web apps.

It’s getting integrated into a much more interesting, upgraded ChatGPT desktop app that will combine Codex, Work, agentic browsing and the normal chat interface.

Continue reading “ChatGPT desktop to become much-hyped superapp with new Work agent”

OpenAI releases GPT-5.6 globally, with this pricing and availability

GPT-5.6-Luna is competitive with recently launched cheap models, while Sol is more expensive. (Picture: OpenAI)
GPT-5.6 was, as promised, released widely to all of OpenAI’s customers today — and will take around 24 hours to fully propagate.

The model reaches state-of-the-art status through many benchmarks, beats Fable and Mythos often, and scores a record on Arc-Agi-2 of 92.5% while being the first to actually solve a puzzle on Arc-Agi 3, measuring how it handles completely unknown situations.

GPT-5.6 comes in three versions; Sol as the flagship, top rated model, Terra as the mid-tier GPT-5.5-level model at half the price, and Luna as the dirt cheap model, likely comparable with GPT-5.4.

The pricing for Sol is at $5 input/$30 output, Terra is at $2.50 input/$25 output, and Luna ticks in at $1 input and $6 output, placing it in a good position to compete with the recently released Grok 4.5 and Muse Spark 1.1.

The Free and Go tiers on ChatGPT only get access to the Terra model, while Plus, Pro, Business and Enterprise can choose between all three, and set effort levels.

Pro and Enterprise users get Sol Pro in addition, which provides «the highest quality results on complex tasks.»

API users get access to the whole lot.

Read more: GPT-5.6 launch page.

Meta launches new Muse Spark, a «significant upgrade» on par with frontiers

The new Muse is not just dirt cheap, but sometimes matches the top tiered AIs. (Picture: Meta, generated)
The new Muse Spark 1.1 performs on level with, and sometimes surpasses, GPT-5.5 and Opus 4.8 in benchmarks.

It is specifically built for agents and coding, being able to write, debug and refactor large codebases and add features on the fly.

The agentic capabilities are very competitive, Meta says. It can work with little human intervention and sometimes scores better than Fable on these tasks.

On computer use, Meta claims it understands workflows and can write scripts when it’s faster and work directly when it’s simpler.

Perhaps the biggest selling point is the cost, and just like Grok 4.5 yesterday, competition on price and speed is picking up. Muse Spark 1.1 is only $1.25 per million input tokens and $4.25 per million out, and is, as Zuckerberg puts it, at a very low cost.

The new Spark is available in Thinking mode on Meta AI through meta.ai and the app, while U.S. developers can access it in public preview through the new Meta Model API, where there is a waitlist. There is no word on when it is coming to Europe.

Read more: Meta’s presentation, Alexandr Wang’s X post, Zuckerberg’s X post, Axios, Reuters, and CNBC.

A new Grok 4.5 is out, competing on price and efficiency

The latest Grok is more efficient than other frontier models, at less than half the cost. (Picture: generated)
The latest model from SpaceXAI, previously X.ai, compares well to Opus 4.8 and GPT-5.5 on benchmarks, but where it really shines is on token efficiency and cost.

The model was trained on «tens of thousands of GB300 GPUs» with a particular focus on per-token intelligence, leading to 4.2x lower token use than Opus 4.8 on the same tasks.

The model otherwise does what you would expect of a modern AI, being proficient in coding, science, engineering and math — along with doing complex models in Excel and navigating PowerPoint and Word.

The second standout performance for the model is the price, ticking in at merely $2 per million input tokens and $6 for a million in output.

Compare this to Claude Opus 4.8 at $5 per million inputs and $25 for a million out at twice the token use and slower speed, and Grok starts looking reasonable.

The model was developed in collaboration with recently acquired Cursor and is available on all their plans, as well as in Grok Build and the SpaceXAI console, but not in Europe, where it is expected to launch in mid-July.

Read more: SpaceXAI’s presentation, Elon Musk’s X post 1, post 2. Writeups on TechCrunch and Gizmodo. Discussion on r/Singularity and Hacker News.

OpenAI upgrades ChatGPT’s voice model for more natural speech

GPT-Live is better at waiting for its turn to speak, and you can interrupt for a better back-and-forth. (Picture: OpenAI)
150 million people use their voice to interact with ChatGPT per week, OpenAI says, and many have waited patiently since 2024 for an upgrade.

The new GPT-Live uses a «full duplex architecture» that separates out the underlying language model and continuously processes speech.

This means it can do «mmm’s» and «yeah’s» during a conversation to indicate it is actively listening, but more importantly it can listen and speak at the same time.

OpenAI says GPT-Live makes decisions «many times per second» on whether to speak, listen, pause or interrupt, letting it engage more naturally in conversations — and do live translation.

The new model delegates more complex tasks to «the latest frontier model» (currently GPT-5.5) for reasoning or web search and gets back to you as soon as it is ready, sometimes showing cue cards for at-a-glance responses in the app.

GPT-Live is available today by tapping the Voice-button in the app or on the web for Go, Plus and Pro subscribers, and there is a GPT-Live-1 mini for the free tiers.

Read more: OpenAI’s presentation, launch thread, writeups on TechCrunch, The Verge, and Engadget.

GPT-5.6 Sol, Terra and Luna are set for general release on Thursday

OpenAI has announced the general release of GPT-5.6 tomorrow. (Picture: OpenAI)
GPT-5.6 was officially unveiled a little over a week ago, but got hampered by a US government intervention for cyber risks and national security, having been shown in benchmarks to beat Anthropic’s Mythos.

At launch, it got released only to some 20 «trusted partners,» and OpenAI promised a general release «in the coming weeks.»

Now those weeks have passed, the government has lifted its restrictions without further explanation, and both OpenAI’s X account and CEO Sam Altman are posting that it will «launch publicly this Thursday.»

This comes after extensive testing by the Center for AI Standards and Innovation within the Department of Commerce, aided by experts from OpenAI, who stayed on call for «potential questions,» Axios reports.

No account has been given as to what specifically caused the delayed launch or what conditions the government had for its release.

Read more: Teknotum: On the launch, On the restrictions. OpenAI’s X post, Altman’s X post. Writeup on Axios.

Meta launches Muse Image generator, teases video model

A sample from Muse Image, Alexandr Wang as a plushie. (Picture: Meta)
Muse Image catapulted directly to the second place on Arena.ai’s leaderboard in the categories for Text-to-Image and Image Edit, ahead of Nano Banana 2 and just behind GPT-Image-2.

It’s the first image generator from the Superintelligence Lab and pairs with Muse Spark to reason, search the web, and plan before it generates an image.

Meta also says it knows you from your Facebook and Instagram feeds, giving it a layer of contextual awareness, and it lets you tag any Instagram account for inclusion in your images.

The latter is automatically enabled, meaning anyone on Meta.ai can tag your Instagram content in AI generations, unless you explicitly opt out.

Continue reading “Meta launches Muse Image generator, teases video model”

Claude Cowork heads to mobile and the web; is mostly used for office tasks

Cowork is moving to the cloud, where it can be accessed from everywhere. (Picture: Anthropic)
Anthropic is freeing Cowork from the computer, transferring relevant files, emails and notes to continue your tasks in the cloud long after you’ve left the home/office.

That means you can now set up Cowork on your computer, close it, and have projects run independently, sending updates and confirmation requests to your phone or the web.

While releasing this update, Anthropic is also revealing a few usage stats for the app. It turns out, it is hardly used for coding or software design at all.

Rather, 90% of usage is knowledge work and business operations; things like drafting memos and reports from raw data, or turning a contacts list or transcripts into sales leads.

These are routine tasks that involve a lot of data parsing or housekeeping that are essential parts of office work, but is rarely advertised. Anthropic calls it «work around the work.»

The new features should be available on claude.ai and in the sidebar of the iOS or Android apps, rolling out «over the next several weeks» for Max users, with «more plans to follow.»

Read more: Anthropic’s announcement, launch thread, TechCrunch and The Verge.

ByteDance, Alibaba ditch emotional chatbots after Chinese regulation

The insanely popular custom chatbots become a thing of the past in China. (Picture: generated)
The popular chatbots Doubao and Qwen are shutting down their personalization features after China enacts the world’s first regulation of «anthropomorphic» AI agents.

They had both offered the ability to create custom agents and chatbots that would establish emotional bonds with users, and act as humanlike companions.

As of July 15, this becomes illegal in China, after the awkwardly specifically named «Interim Measures for the Administration of Artificial Intelligence Anthropomorphic Interaction Services» goes into effect.

This is the first regulation of its kind, and bans bots that «simulate human personality traits, thinking patterns and communication styles to provide sustained emotional interaction,» The South China Morning Post writes.

The personalized service of the two chatbots were used by millions, many of them kids, and often replaced real-life human interaction, as one in seven young adults in China used them to form romantic relationships, Decrypt.io writes.

UNICEF has hailed the new law, calling it a «pioneering policy [that] marks a significant global step towards regulating AI powered emotional interaction services.»

Read more: The South China Morning Post, Decrypt.io, Wikipedia, and UNICEF.

Wang says Meta is catching up to GPT-5.5, Opus with new «Watermelon»

Meta’s new «Watermelon» is coming soon, they promise. (Picture: generated)
Meta’s successor to «Avocado», or Muse Spark, is already in training and uses «an order of magnitude» more power, the head of the Superintelligence Lab, Alexandr Wang, said at an internal meeting.

The model is «coming soon» and will bring «big improvements in coding and agentic capabilities,» he adds in an X post.

The upcoming model has caught up with OpenAI’s GPT-5.5, he said, according to Business Insider, and added later on X that Opus is not far off.

Muse Spark was launched in April and performed sometimes on level with GPT-5.4, launched in March, quickly followed by GPT-5.5.

GPT-5.5 is, however, not the current state of the art any more, that would be Claude Fable or newly launched GPT-5.6, both of which face restrictions by the US government.

This isn’t discouraging the Superintelligence head, saying «I think you’ll like what we have cooking» on X.

Read more: Business Insider, Wang’s X post.

Fable 5 will eat up all your tokens, some users say, as Anthropic resets limits

Fable 5 is the most expensive model from Anthropic, and it uses a lot of subagents. (Picture: Anthropic)
Just as people are digging into their allocation of Claude Fable 5 usage on the paid tiers, they are running up to another wall: The model is very expensive and will chew through your alotted tokens in no time at all.

One ML engineer on reddit said it tore through a 5 page research paper while comparing it to a whitepaper with 174 subagents to review the results from 7 original agents and «ate through my max 20x 5 hour limit in ~15 minutes.»

X reactions
User BridgeMind on X said he paid $321 for Opus 4.8 to do all the work, while X user Adam Door posted that it burned through his $200 Max subscription in ~30 minutes, and yet another post says «Fable 5 burned 28% of my weekly limit AND used up my 5 hour limit with two prompts in about 30 minutes.»

Continue reading “Fable 5 will eat up all your tokens, some users say, as Anthropic resets limits”

Meta’s AI fallback plan: Forming a cloud computing company

Meta could soon be renting out excess compute, as it continues to build out capacity. (Picture: Adobe)
Already sitting on one of the world’s largest compute clusters with plans to add some $145 billion worth more just this year — Meta is making contingency plans.

Bloomberg (paywalled) is reporting that they are now planning to form a cloud computing company to compete with AWS, Azure and Google Cloud, aiming to sell «excess capacity» to paying customers.

The idea is a hedge against overcapacity, Axios reports, quoting Zuckerberg as saying in May: «that is an option that we have, and that is partially what gives us confidence in investing in building this out.»

The new unit would offer raw compute to companies looking to train models, or could offer access to models from other AI labs and rent out the infrastructure to power them. This would be similar to services from Amazon and Azure.

SpaceX, now incorporating X.ai, faced a similar problem when their compute power got bigger than their needs, and struck deals with Anthropic and Google to sell excess compute access, Reuters notes.

It is estimated that Meta currently sits on 20 gigawatts of capacity, and it plans to add another 14 GW over the next years, Axios says.

Read more: Bloomberg (paywalled), Axios, Reuters, CNBC, and Engadget.

US government lifts restrictions on Anthropic’s Fable 5

Fable 5 spooked the government enough to ban it, but now it’s back online with even stronger safeguards. (Picture: Shutterstock)
As of July 1, the Mythos-class model is available on wide release to paying customers, after the Commerce department lifted their export controls on June 30.

Anthropic hails the news, but cautions that recent events have highlighted the need for a «consistent way to assess and fix potential «jailbreaks,»» after two weeks of grueling exchanges with the administration.

Commerce secretary Howard Lutnick said on X that they had «worked closely with Anthropic to […] ensure alignment across the US Government and strengthen America’s leadership in AI,» Axios reports.

The Fable 5 model became somewhat of a joke in the AI community for having such strong safeguards that it would not answer anything even remotely related to security or biology, but Amazon engineers got it to output code for an exploit, leading to the export ban on June 12.

This behavior is now blocked 99% of the time, and Anthropic has agreed to even further safeguards on the model, pledging to work even more closely with the government in the future, including on vetting pre-release models.

Read more: Anthropic’s announcement and X post, Lutnick’s letter, Axios, Politico, CNBC.

Apple says security updates must be more frequent due to AI hacking

AI accelerated hacking is changing how Apple deals with system patches. (Picture: generated)
After releasing a 26.5.2 update across its devices to fix over 25 bugs today, Apple said the fixes were originally intended for the next point release of their operating systems — the 26.6.

Concerns about AI-accelerated hacking tools made the company push up the updates sooner in a dedicated release, according to Reuters.

This is the new reality, they say, where the time to develop malware has been greatly reduced by AI — and the time window for fixing bugs has likewise decreased.

Apple did not say if any of the vulnerabilities they rectified in the latest release had been exploited in the wild yet, which used to be the criteria for a rapid response.

The company is one of the «trusted partners» on Project Glasswing, and enjoys access to Anthropic’s Mythos Preview model to probe and detect flaws in their software, MacRumors notes, but it is not known if Mythos was used in this particular case.

Read more: Reuters, MacRumors, 9to5Mac.