A.I. in the Workplace


Google unveils Googlebook, a new line of AI-enhanced laptops



iOS 27 could completely overhaul the iPhone's Camera app, Bloomberg's Mark Gurman reports, making it more customizable and offering pro and hobbyist users more control over the image output of Apple's smartphone. The new camera options will join the other features Apple will reportedly highlight at WWDC 2026: performance improvements and AI.

The biggest change Apple is making to the Camera app is to make it more customizable. Rather than being stuck with the company's predetermined interface for shooting photos and capturing videos, you'll reportedly be able to tweak it to your liking. Bloomberg reports iPhones will still default to a familiar Apple interface, but individual widgets for controlling things like resolution, flash, or whether live photos are on or off will be able to be swapped for other options from a new "Add Widgets" tray. The app will reportedly also include more "advanced" options like controls for depth-of-field, exposure, and the company's photo styles feature.

Apple offers a theoretically easy way to tweak these settings on the iPhone by using the Camera Control button, but changing things from the touchscreen should be even easier. As part of these interface tweaks, Apple is also adding new grid and level features while you're capturing images and moving the toggle that lets you see all your available controls from the top right of the Camera app to the right of the shutter button.

Some of Apple's AI updates are coming to the camera, as well. Rather than having a separate interface for Visual Intelligence, you can only access it through the Camera Control. Apple is reportedly adding a new Siri mode to the Camera app for accessing AI features that use the camera, like using image search or translating text. AI will reportedly power new photo editing tools, too.

Siri's changes are equally massive. Besides being smarter, the AI assistant's glowing animation is moving from the border of iPhones to a new home in the Dynamic Island as part of Apple's planned updates. Users will also be able to type requests or searches through a new "Search or Ask" interface that's replacing iOS's existing Spotlight Search, Bloomberg writes. The interface will produce results shaped like cards, but can also launch into a chat interface for direct conversations with the new Siri. The tool can also tap into results from the web and supports voice input. As previously reported, past chats with Siri will be viewable in a standalone Siri app.

Other changes will be smaller. Apple will reportedly update Safari with a new start page, the Weather app will display more data, and the Image Playground app will be redesigned to be simpler to use. WWDC 2026 doesn't start until June 8, so more leaks are bound to be on the way, but at the very least, Apple appears to be preparing at least one interesting change that has little to do with AI.


Google just dropped a TON of Android news before I/O even starts, and honestly... I need a moment. 😅

Let's run through the highlights real quick:

🖥️ Googlebooks — yes, GOOGLEBOOKS — are a thing now. New laptops built around Gemini AI, made by Acer, ASUS, Dell, HP, and Lenovo. Coming this fall. (And yes, they had to clarify it's not the same as Google Books 💀)

🤖 Gemini Intelligence is getting baked into basically everything — Android, Wear OS, Android Auto, ChromeOS. It books spin classes, fills out forms, and wiggles a magic cursor at things on your screen. That last one is either brilliant or the new Clippy. Jury's out.

📱 Android 17 is bringing 3D emoji (called Noto 3D), a filler-word-removing speech tool called Rambler, and a feature called Pause Point that makes you wait 10 seconds before opening a doomscrolling app. You literally have to restart your phone to turn it off. Respect.

🍎 Google and Apple are actually playing nice now — easier iOS-to-Android switching AND Quick Share working with AirDrop. 2026 is wild.

🚗 Android Auto got a full glow-up with 3D maps, 60fps YouTube while parked, and Dolby Atmos in select cars.

📸 Instagram on Android tablets is FINALLY optimized. Only took 15 years. Better late than never, Meta.

So yeah. A lot just happened. What's got you most excited — or most worried? 

Google has introduced the Googlebook, an AI-first, Android-based operating system and a successor to the browser-only Chromebook. The device, launching this fall, will come in multiple shapes and sizes and enable users to access Android applications directly from their computers. The search giant also plans to roll out Android upgrades, including advanced capabilities for the Gemini assistant, enhanced emoji, and video quality improvements aimed at Instagram creators. It's all part of Google's strategy to compete with Apple's lower-cost MacBook Neo and upcoming AI-infused hardware announcements.
Harvard Seeks Crackdown on Grade Inflation as 60% Get Top Marks

Why Harvard College students are worried this week:

Harvard University faculty are set to begin voting Tuesday on the boldest attempt in decades to rein in grade inflation, an issue that’s drawn attention from the White House in its push to remake higher education.

The proposal under consideration would limit A grades in undergraduate courses to no more than 20% of the class plus four additional students. Roughly 60% of grades were an A in the academic year ending in mid-2025 at Harvard, more than double the rate in 2006. That fell to 53% in the fall semester after Harvard urged faculty to be more disciplined.

The outcome of the vote could be a catalyst for wider changes, with other schools potentially following Harvard's lead, and the White House having included grading reform in its proposed compact for select schools to sign in exchange for priority access to federal funding.

Anthropic is in discussions to secure at least $30 billion in a new funding round, aiming for a valuation exceeding $900 billion, Bloomberg reports, citing anonymous sources. The company is seeking fresh capital for expanding its infrastructure to meet the rising demand for Claude. The reported valuation would place it ahead of rival OpenAI, which was last valued at $852 billion in March. Anthropic, which may pursue an initial public offering later this year, has already attracted billions in investment from the likes of Google and Amazon.

Tech Titans Clash: Altman Defends Integrity in Musk Legal Showdown

OAKLAND, Calif. — The federal courtroom in Oakland transformed into a Silicon Valley arena Tuesday as OpenAI CEO Sam Altman took the stand to defend his reputation against a high-stakes lawsuit leveled by his former partner and benefactor, Elon Musk.

The trial, now in its third week, centers on a fundamental dispute over the soul of OpenAI. Musk alleges that Altman and co-founder Greg Brockman "double-crossed" him by pivoting from a non-profit mission to a "capitalistic venture" now valued at a staggering $852 billion.


Key Testimony: A Battle of Character

Altman’s appearance follows days of testimony from former allies who painted a starkly different picture of his leadership.

  • The Accusation: Musk’s legal team leveraged testimony from former board members Helen Toner and Tasha McCauley, as well as co-founder Ilya Sutskever, to depict Altman as dishonest and resistant to oversight.

  • The Evidence: Jurors were shown a 2023 memo from Sutskever alleging a "consistent pattern of lying" and a "directionally bad" text exchange with CTO Mira Murati that has since become a viral meme.

  • The Defense: Facing a barrage of questions, Altman remained firm. “I believe I am an honest and trustworthy businessperson,” he told the court, framing the lawsuit as a product of Musk’s "jealousy" over OpenAI's success.


Altman Strikes Back: Concerns Over Musk’s Control

Altman didn't just defend himself; he pivoted to critique Musk’s own history with the company. He detailed a "hair-raising" moment from OpenAI's early days when Musk allegedly suggested that control of the AI firm should eventually pass to his children.

"Part of the reason we started OpenAI is we didn’t think AGI could be under the control of any one person, no matter how good their intents are," Altman testified.

Altman further alleged that Musk repeatedly attempted to have Tesla absorb OpenAI—a move Altman claimed was entirely at odds with the startup's mission.


What’s at Stake?

The verdict of this jury trial will have ripples far beyond the courtroom, impacting the entire AI landscape:

PartyThe GoalThe Risk
Sam AltmanMaintain leadership and proceed toward a massive IPO.Permanent damage to his reputation as a "trustworthy" leader.
Elon MuskForce Altman out and redirect funds to OpenAI’s charitable arm.Public perception of "sour grapes" and aggressive business tactics.
AI IndustryClarity on the legal boundaries of non-profit vs. for-profit AI.Increased public skepticism and negative perception of AI safety.

As OpenAI, Musk’s xAI, and rival Anthropic all prepare for potential initial public offerings, the trial serves as a volatile backdrop to what could be some of the largest market debuts in history. For now, the jury is left to weigh the word of the world's richest man against the architect of the AI revolution.

EBay on Tuesday turned down a $56 billion takeover bid by GameStop, describing it as "neither credible nor attractive." The online marketplace relayed the news in a letter from Chairman Paul Pressler that characterized its business as "strong (and) resilient." Analysts had questioned the viability of GameStop's cash-and-stock offer from the start, given that the company is less than one-quarter the size of its target. Investors appeared to agree, with eBay stock trading about $20 below the $125-per-share offer price. GameStop CEO Ryan Cohen has already threatened to take his bid directly to shareholders.

Google DeepMind offshoot Isomorphic Labs has successfully raised another $2.1 billion to fund its AI-driven drug development capabilities, Bloomberg reports. The investment, led by Thrive Capital, will support workforce expansion and software improvements. Despite facing criticism for its secrecy, the company is making strides towards pre-clinical trials for its drug candidates. The infusion marks a significant step in Isomorphic's goal of commercializing AI-designed pharmaceuticals, and it could signal a shift toward eventual independence from Google parent Alphabet.

Instructure said Tuesday that it reached a deal with the hackers who breached its widely used educational software, Canvas, last week. The Utah-based firm said ShinyHunters, the hacking group that claimed responsibility for the cyberattack, would return data stolen from thousands of schools, but didn't specify what it would give in return. The hackers said they'd accessed messages, email addresses, and other information for more than 275 million users around the world, shutting down Canvas for hours on Thursday — in the middle of most schools' crucial final-exams period.

After a string of AI controversies, The New York Times emailed a “periodic reminder” to freelancers on Tuesday, reminding them of the paper’s AI policy.

“To be clear on AI: All writing and visuals that freelancers submit to The Times must be the product of human creativity and craft, and all submissions must consist solely of their original reporting, writing, and other work,” reads the email, reviewed by Futurism. “Freelance contributors must not submit any material for publication that contains content generated, modified, or enhanced by [generative AI] tools, or that has been input into these tools.”

The email pointed its contributors to a detailed document on its “policy on freelancers’ use of generative AI tools,” which forbids the inclusion of AI-generated or AI-modified text and images in any reporting contributed to the paper. While AI tools are acceptable for “high-level” brainstorming, the notice warns, freelancers “may not use [generative AI] tools to help you write any part of a story.”

“Using [generative AI] tools to create, draft, guide, clean up, edit, improve, or rephrase your writing is strictly prohibited,” it continues. As for what specific tools the company’s actually speaking to, the document forbids “chatbots like Gemini, Claude, ChatGPT, and Perplexity; AI-powered search products like Google AI Overviews; and image generators like Adobe Firefly, DALL-E, and MidJourney.”

The reminder comes as the paper of record continues to grapple with AI-generated content, including preventable AI-spun errors, making its way into its pages. Back in March, the NYT faced scrutiny after a contributor to its competitive “Modern Love” column was publicly accused of using AI to generate an emotional personal essay; that writer later told Futurism that she’d used chatbots to conceptualize and edit the piece. Then, in April, the paper cut ties with a freelancer who admitted to using AI to cook up a book review that was found to be riddled with plagiarism after its publication.

And while these controversies indeed stemmed from the work of freelancers, the institution found itself in hot water yet again last week, when a substantial correction revealed that an article bylined by the NYT’s Canada Bureau chief contained an AI-fabricated quote weeks after publication. (As Futurism reported in March, a writer at Condé Nast’s Ars Technica was fired for a similar error.)

“An article on April 15 about the success that Mark Carney, the Liberal prime minister of Canada, has had in building cross-party alliances was updated after The Times learned that a remark attributed to Pierre Poilievre, the Conservative leader, was in fact an AI-generated summary of his views about Canadian politics that AI rendered as a quotation,” reads the update. “The reporter should have checked the accuracy of what the AI tool returned.”

Futurism reached out to the NYT to ask whether this kind of reminder is normal, and whether the notice has anything to do with its recent flurry of AI scandals. In response, the paper shared a statement saying that “we regularly provide updated guidance to freelancers and in this case we wanted to be clear about our policies regarding the use of AI.”

“In-house journalists have separate guidelines for using AI and approved GenAI tools,” the paper added.

Updated with a statement from The New York Times.