I've scoured the internet to find you the funniest/important/scary/fascinating technology stories of today.
1 DeepSeek introduced two new experimental artificial intelligence models
DeepSeek-V3.2 is designed to match the reasoning capabilities of OpenAI GPT-5. (Bloomberg $)
+ Here's how DeepSeek reduces the computational load of its models. (VentureBit)
+ The company achieved these results despite limited access to powerful chips. (SKMP $)
2 OpenAI issued a code red warning to its employees
This is a call to improve ChatGPT, otherwise you risk being overtaken. (Information $)
+ Both Google and Anthropic are hot on OpenAI's heels. (FT $)
+ Advertising and other initiatives will be pushed back to accommodate the new focus. (WSJ $)
3 How to Know if the AI ​​Bubble Has Burst
These are signs to look out for. (Economist $)
+ Things could get much worse for the economy if and when it implodes. (Axios)
+ We don't really know how the surge in AI investment is being financed. (Guardian)
4. Some US states prohibit AI from discriminating against you.
California is the latest country to give workers more power to fight algorithms. (W.P. $)
5. This AI startup is working on a post-transformation future
Transformative architecture is at the heart of the current AI boom, but Pathway is developing something new. (WSJ $)
+ What the next frontier of AI might look like. (IEEE spectrum)
6. India requires smartphone manufacturers to install a government app
Privacy advocates say it's unacceptable surveillance. (FT $)
+ Indian tech talent is looking for opportunities outside the US. (Rest of the world)
7 College Students Are Desperate to Enroll in Artificial Intelligence Majors
Artificial intelligence is currently the second largest major at MIT after computer science. (NOW $)
+ Artificial intelligence giants want to take over the classroom. (MIT Technology Review)
8. America's musical heritage is under serious threat.
Most of it is stored on studio tapes, which deteriorate over time. (NOW $)
+ The race to save our online lives from the dark digital age. (MIT Technology Review)
9. Celebrities are increasingly turning to artificial intelligence
Either way, that doesn't stop fans from filming them in lame videos. (Edge)
10. Samsung introduced its first triple foldable phone
But will people actually want to buy it? (Bloomberg $)
+ When it goes on sale in South Korea, it will cost over $2,000. (Reuters)
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