Faux pas at Indian AI summit as Amodei and Altman refuse hands

Whoever thought it was a good idea to have these guys hold hands? (Picture: Government of India Press Information Bureau)
In what was expected to be a show of unity with Indian PM Narendra Modi on stage, AI leaders were asked to hold hands in solidarity.

Anthropic CEO Dario Amedei and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman were, however, for some reason, placed right next to each other on stage — and the acrimonious rivals promptly refused the gesture.

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Fei-Fei Li’s World Labs raises $1 billion for spatial intelligence, world models

Marble can make intricate 3D worlds from prompts or pictures, and Autodesk wants in. (Picture: World Labs)
As «the godmother of AI’s» world-building Marble model is taking off, some say World Labs has hit a $5 billion valuation, according to Reuters.

Most notably, they collected $200 million in funding from Autodesk — which makes 3D CAD software in a somewhat overlapping fashion.

They will now officially become advisors to World Labs, and are starting up a collaboration, writes TechCrunch.

— You might want to take an object that you’ve designed in our [platform], and put it in a context that you create through one of [World Labs’] prompts, says Daron Green, Autodesk’s chief scientist, to the website.

World Labs themselves have not provided a valuation from the funding round.

Read more: Autodesk’s announcement, World Lab’s announcement. More detail from TechCrunch, Reuters.

Google launches custom music generation in Gemini with Lyria 3 model

Gemini can now make you thirty seconds of music based on prompts or photos, and will even use Nano Banana for custom art for it.

They say the feature is for fun and games, and very specific music requests that can be personal, like making a tune about your mum’s home cooked plantains.

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Nvidia strikes «multi-year strategic partnership» with Meta for AI chips

Likely costing a significant measure of Meta’s capital expenditures, the deal is expected to be in tens of billions dollars or more.
Both Meta and Nvidia are announcing a long-term, multi-generational strategic partnership today — without mentioning the price.

Meta, already a top customer for Nvidia, will use their chips in a «large-scale deployment» to build out data centers «optimized for AI training and inference,» they say.

The cost of the deal will likely run into the tens of billions of dollars or more, CNBC reckons, and includes access to future chips as well as the current Blackwell and Vera Rubin generations.

— We do expect a good portion of Meta’s capex to go toward this Nvidia build-out, chip analyst Ben Bajarin of Creative Strategies tells CNBC.

Reuters notes that Meta is likely one of the top three customers accounting for more than half of Nvidia’s sales.

Read more: Meta announcement, Nvidia announcement. Writeups on CNBC, Reuters and The Verge.

Anthropic launches Claude Sonnet 4.6, «most capable yet»

Models are coming at breakneck speed from Anthropic. (Picture: Anthropic)
Sonnet 4.6 comes less than two weeks after Opus 4.6, and performs almost as well at the same old cost of $3/$15 per million tokens.

It features upgrades across coding, computer use, long context reasoning, agent planning, knowledge work and design, Anthropic says.

It is now the default model for the Free and Pro plans, and has a context window of 1 million tokens.

The model performs best in class for Agentic financial analysis and Office tasks on benchmarks, but it otherwise lags slightly behind Opus 4.6.

— Sonnet 4.6 offers strong performance at any thinking effort, even with extended thinking off, Anthropic writes.

Also, Claude in Excel now supports MCP connectors, so you can now import data and use everyday tools without ever leaving Excel.

Read more: Anthropic’s announcement, more on Axios, TechCrunch, Mashable.

Ireland enacts basic income for artists, says it creates more than they spend

Basic income schemes are closely watched in case AI supplants jobs at scale. (Picture: Images Money, CC BY 2.0)
After a pilot scheme lasting from 2022-25 with basic income for artists, the Irish Government is moving to make it permanent.

2,000 eligible artists will be randomly selected to get €325 per week, after the pilot found that for every €1 invested, society received €1.39 in return.

It’s not enough to live on, but it is enough to see artists through their arts without taking on side gigs and onerous secondary jobs.

During the pilot, artists reported they had more time for their art, produced more work, experienced a boost in well-being, had greater life satisfaction and that it reduced their anxiety.

— The BIA [Basic Income for Artists] pilot research has consistently demonstrated both the positive impact it has had on those in receipt of it and how difficult it is to work as an artist in Ireland, says Culture Minister Patrick O’Donovan.

This is the first such officially enacted Government-based basic income program in the world, O’Donovan says.

Read more: Irish Government announcement, writeups on IrishCentral and The Guardian.

Britain is launching public probe into children’s use of AI chatbots

It’s for the kids; restricting chatbot harm to children is a high priority for the UK. (Picture: generated).
After starting an investigation against x.com and Grok for creating sexualized images, the UK government is launching a new «consultation» into how chatbots interact with children.

— I am concerned about these AI chatbots… as is the prime minister, about the impact that’s having on children and young people, Technology Secretary Liz Kendall says, according to Reuters.

The first order of business is to make sure the chatbots follow the Online Safety Act, which doesn’t cover one-to-one interactions with chatbots as of today, Reuters says. This is mainly because it was enacted before they were on the radar, and this step will make it possible to regulate them like social media.

The wider consultation will «include examining restrictions on children’s use of AI chatbots,» the government says, and will be conducted over the coming months, ending in a set of proposals by June, 2026.

Read more: UK government presentation, and Reuters, CNBC.

OpenAI introduces Lockdown Mode and Elevated Risk protections

Only secure access is granted in the new Lockdown Mode. (Picture: OpenAI)
ChatGPT can be useful, but also carries some risk — especially when it’s browsing the web or using apps.

That’s why OpenAI is now launching «an advanced, optional setting for higher risk users.»

The idea is to disable tools an adversary might use to «to exploit to exfiltrate sensitive data,» such as prompt injection attacks in files or on the web.

When using Lockdown Mode, web use is limited to cached content only, and no live network access is available outside of OpenAI’s «controlled network»

Most people will never need this feature, OpenAI says, but it might be useful for corporate execs, security teams, journalists and officials.

OpenAI is also launching an «Elevated Risk»-setting, that lets users fine-tune network access for Atlas and Codex.

Both features are coming to users «in the coming months.»

Read more: OpenAI’s announcement.

Anthropic won the Super Bowl ads war

Anthropic’s ad was about ads in chat responses, and it seems to have landed. (Picture: Screenshot)
While the AI Super Bowl ads had generally lower engagement than others — there was a battle over mindshare brewing between them.

Anthropic won that battle, and saw a jump in daily active users of 11%, CNBC writes, quoting BNP Paribas. In comparison, ChatGPT jumped 2.7% and Gemini added 1.4%.

Anthropic also won the battle over social media engagement, with more positive posts (25.5%) after their ad was shown than OpenAI (16.3%) — even though OpenAI led with 25K posts to Anthropic’s 10K.

Measuring through Instagram, OpenAI’s ad scored a 44% positive sentiment from 3,829 engagements on its post, while Anthropic scored 41% on 3,738 mentions, far behind the likes of Pepsi’s 33K mentions.

Read more: CNBC, Business Insider and Digiday.

Peter Steinberger of OpenClaw joins OpenAI, agents to become «core»

OpenClaw, the open agentic platform you can steer from your favorite app to do lots of useful things, went viral over the last the couple of weeks — with millions of views, downloads, and 100k stars on GitHub.

It also spawned Moltbook, and showed the future of intelligent AI agents for all to see — as the founder, Steinberger, was inundated with investment and job offers.

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Internal OpenAI model aids in physics discovery, answers expert maths quiz

OpenAI contributes to a solution for a physics problem that had long vexed scientists. (Picture: generated)
Having long said that discovery is the next benchmark, the model by OpenAI assisted researchers from the Institute for Advanced Study, Vanderbilt University, Cambridge University and Harvard in determining that gluons in some cases have amplitude, a key finding in quantum research.

The model helped scientists by simplifying expressions and made a simple formula for this general case.

Then it spent nearly 12 hours reasoning the new problem, verifying the formula and «producing a formal proof.»

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Anthropic closes $30 billion funding round at a $380 billion valuation

Anthropic secures what has become a normally enormous valuation. (Picture: Anthropic)
The round is the second largest tech investment in history, and puts Anthropic close to the top of the valuation range for AI labs, having grown its revenue ten times for every year the last three years.

Their current run-rate revenue sits at $14 billion, they say, well within that range.

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OpenAI introduces Codex-Spark, greatly improving coding speed

Codex-Spark is small, fast, and almost as good as the real thing. (Pictures: OpenAI)
Thanks to their recent collaboration with Cerebras, the new model delivers «more than 1000 tokens per second while remaining highly capable for real-world coding tasks.»

The drawback is that it’s text-only and only has a 128K context window, and it’s supposed to be used «where latency matters as much as intelligence.»

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ByteDance’s Seedance 2.0 video generator goes viral, prompts warnings

Kanye West can now sing perfectly in Mandarin, thanks to ByteDance’s new video model. (Picture: screenshot)
The new video generator, released on Thursday, is already being hyped by state media as bigger than the launch of DeepSeek, Reuters reports.

ByteDance has yet to publish any real numbers, but videos of Kim Kardashian and Kanye West singing in Mandarin have gone viral on Weibo and x.com with millions of views.

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Anthropic upgrades Claude’s free tier with file handling, connectors and skills

The free tier on Claude is leveling up, getting the most popular paid features. (Picture: Anthropic)
Using Sonnet 4.5, these features were previously only available on the paid tiers.

But now, Claude can create and manipulate Office files and PDFs for free.

Connectors are also available, which make it possible to link to Slack, Canva and others.

Anthropic is also making Skills free. These are saved prompts and workflows as a kind of template, that can be invoked at any time for repetitive tasks.

Finally, «Compaction» is becoming available on the free tier, which «summarizes earlier context automatically, so long conversations can continue without starting over.»

Together, these comprise «Claude’s most-used features,» Anthropic says.

Read more: Launch thread, writeup on Engadget.