A.I. in the Workplace

Sam Altman makes surprise courtroom appearance as potential jurors slam AI, Elon Musk



🚨 Google Employees Demand CEO Reject Classified AI Work with Pentagon 🚨

Over 600 Google employees, including many from its elite DeepMind AI lab, have sent a letter to CEO Sundar Pichai urging him to refuse any classified AI work with the Pentagon. This move comes just two months after rival AI company Anthropic was dropped by the Defense Department for requesting similar restrictions.

📝 Key Points from the Letter:

  • Employees want to ensure AI benefits humanity and is not used for inhumane or extremely harmful purposes, including lethal autonomous weapons and mass surveillance.
  • They argue that classified work would prevent Google from knowing how its technology is used, potentially allowing harmful applications without their knowledge or ability to stop them.
  • The letter highlights recent international law concerns, including President Trump’s threats against Iran and questionable military strikes.

🌐 Context:

  • AI is becoming increasingly central to modern warfare, sparking debate in the tech industry about military use of AI technology.
  • Pentagon leaders insist on the freedom to use commercial AI for "all lawful uses," but some AI workers believe these assurances are insufficient.
  • Anthropic, known for its chatbot Claude, was barred from working with the Defense Department after seeking to prevent its technology from being used for mass surveillance and lethal autonomous weapons.

🔄 Google's History:

  • In 2018, Google decided not to renew a Pentagon contract involving AI for drone imagery after employee protests.
  • The company pledged its AI would never be used for weapons or surveillance but has since sought more military contracts.
  • Last year, Google lifted its restrictions on AI use for weapons and surveillance and signed a deal for the Defense Department to use its Gemini AI technology.

📢 Employee Demands:

  • The letter urges Google to refuse any classified work to prevent potential harm to civil or human rights.
  • It cites a report that Google is negotiating a deal similar to OpenAI’s, which provides AI for classified workloads.

🚨 Anthropic's Claude Mythos: Game-Changer or Cyber Nightmare? 🚨

Anthropic just dropped Claude Mythos Preview—a super-smart AI that's already uncovered thousands of zero-day vulnerabilities in every major OS and browser. But it's so powerful, they're keeping it locked behind "Project Glasswing" with elite partners like Apple, Google, Microsoft, and JPMorgan. No public access! 🔒

Early drama: A contractor breach let outsiders peek in. EU regulators are on high alert, warning AI could turbocharge cyber threats. Poll says 48% of pros fear it as 2026's top attack vector.

Defensive powerhouse or hacker's dream? Anthropic says it's bolstering security—but is sharing with 50+ orgs really "safe"? What do you think—breakthrough or too risky? 

Oprah Winfrey has entered a multiyear exclusive deal with Amazon, allowing the company to distribute her podcast, book club and classic show episodes. "The Oprah Podcast" will expand to two episodes weekly, available on Amazon services including Prime Video and Audible. The partnership reflects Wondery's shift toward what Variety calls "celebrity- and personality-driven" content like the Kelce brothers' popular "New Heights" podcast. In a statement, Winfrey said, "Expanding our reach globally is an opportunity I embrace."

Canada is creating a sovereign wealth fund with initial investment of $25 billion (US$18.3 billion) from the federal government, Prime Minister Mark Carney announced. Canadian citizens will also be invited to invest in the fund, which will finance domestic projects and companies in areas such as infrastructure and energy. One analyst notes that countries typically use government-owned investment funds to manage surplus wealth, while Canada runs a current account deficit.
The legal battle between OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and Tesla CEO Elon Musk — who co-founded OpenAI with Altman, Greg Brockman and others — is underway. A nine-person jury has been selected; opening statements begin Tuesday. Musk alleges that Altman and Brockman, the company's president, went back on a pledge to keep OpenAI a nonprofit. The trial will unfold in two phases, with the jury's role limited to an advisory verdict. Musk is pursuing up to $134 billion in damages, which he said he intends to donate back to OpenAI's charitable efforts.

🚨 Sam Altman just dropped a bombshell: "Post-AGI, no one's gonna work—the economy's gonna collapse." 😱

This from the OpenAI CEO, days after unleashing GPT-5.5. He's joking about polyphasic sleep to keep up with his own AI... but warns we need policy NOW: robot taxes, 4-day weeks, wealth funds.

Meanwhile, AI fears are real—Molotovs at his house, global jitters. Is AGI utopia or dystopia?

📉 Is the AI Hype Hitting a Wall? OpenAI Faces IPO Turbulence

Big shifts are happening over at OpenAI, and the road to a potential IPO isn't as smooth as Sam Altman might have hoped.

Despite being the poster child for the AI revolution, a new report from the Wall Street Journal suggests the company is facing some serious growing pains:

  • Missed Targets: OpenAI reportedly missed internal goals for ChatGPT, failing to hit the 1 billion weekly active user mark by the end of last year.

  • Revenue Pressure: Competition from Google’s Gemini and Anthropic is heating up, leading to missed revenue targets as users and enterprises explore other options.

  • The $600 Billion Question: CEO Sam Altman has been on a "buy everything" spree for data center capacity, but CFO Sarah Friar and the board are now questioning if the spending is sustainable if growth continues to slow.

  • IPO Tension: While Altman is pushing for a public listing by the end of this year, leadership is reportedly divided on whether the company’s internal controls are ready for the bright lights of the stock market.

The Bottom Line: OpenAI recently raised a staggering $122 billion, but with massive computing costs, they could burn through that in just three years.

With Elon Musk’s lawsuit heading to court and internal debates over spending, the next few months will be a massive test for the future of Generative AI.

What do you think? Is the "AI bubble" starting to leak, or is this just the standard friction of a tech giant finding its footing? Let’s talk in the comments! 👇

China has decided to block Meta’s $2 billion acquisition of agentic AI startup Manus.

- Manus was a Singaporean-incorporated firm, but its founders hailed from China. Launched in March 2025, Manus is a general AI agent capable of automating complex tasks, ranging from S&P 500 analysis to drafting sales pitches. In July, Manus relocated its China-based staff to Singapore, cutting dozens of roles in the process. Meta announced its acquisition in December after Manus surpassed $100 million in annualized revenue.

- Beijing’s agencies have since moved to discourage a repeat of the Manus maneuver, which was completed with unusual speed. The buyout triggered a Beijing probe into illegal foreign investment and tech exports shortly after its December announcement. Agencies including the National Development and Reform Commission have told key AI firms including Moonshot AI and Stepfun in recent weeks they should reject capital of US origin in funding rounds unless explicitly approved.

- It shows two messages. First, the decoupling force does not only come from the US and from China too. Second, it may not 100% be about the tech of Manus but the loophole that Chinese AI tech firms can be sold this way. It is a message to all AI firms in China and a sign of tighter scrutiny.

🚀 Rumor Alert: Is OpenAI Planning a Smartphone? 📱

Industry analyst Ming-Chi Kuo has dropped some intriguing hints about OpenAI’s potential hardware expansion! According to Kuo, OpenAI might be teaming up with MediaTek, Qualcomm, and Luxshare to develop a smartphone. 🤝

Here’s what we know so far:

🔹 Chip Development: OpenAI is reportedly working with MediaTek and Qualcomm to create a custom smartphone chip.
🔹 Manufacturing: Luxshare is set to co-design and manufacture the device.
🔹 AI-Powered: Instead of traditional apps, the phone could rely on AI agents to handle tasks, offering more flexibility and functionality.
🔹 User Context: The smartphone aims to continuously understand user context, providing a more personalized experience.
🔹 Hybrid Models: A mix of on-device and cloud-based AI models will manage various requests and tasks.

📅 Timeline:

  • Specifications and component suppliers to be finalized by the end of 2026 or Q1 2027.
  • Mass production expected to start in 2028.

This move aligns with OpenAI’s earlier hints about launching a hardware product by the second half of 2026, which was initially rumored to be uniquely designed earbuds. 🎧

OpenAI hasn’t commented on these rumors yet, but if true, this could be a game-changer in the tech world! 🌐

If you’re an artificial-intelligence startup or investor in China, you may be able to enter—but leaving is another matter. With apologies to the Eagles, that is the message from Beijing’s decision Monday to unwind Meta’s $2 billion acquisition of AI firm Manus.

China’s National Development and Reform Commission canceled the deal, which had closed in December, through a one-sentence notice offering no explanation. It is difficult to see how antitrust concerns would apply here. A more plausible reason is Beijing’s broader unease over the national-security implications of its expanding AI sector.

President Xi Jinping wants China to build an AI industry capable of competing with the United States. The Manus episode highlights the obstacles in that effort. Beijing would prefer AI research to remain concentrated in state-owned enterprises or companies closely aligned with the government. Those firms have achieved notable progress, and the U.S. should not underestimate them. Yet China’s entrepreneurial talent and innovative capacity extend far beyond what the Communist Party can fully control—or finance.

That mix of heavy state oversight and government-directed capital has driven a growing number of Chinese AI firms overseas. Singapore has become a favored destination, and Manus relocated its headquarters there from China in July. The move gave the company greater access to foreign investment, including U.S. capital, and created exit opportunities such as a sale to a larger company like Meta.

Even so, Beijing still appears to regard Manus as a Chinese company. One striking feature of Monday’s ruling is that China is effectively blocking an American company’s purchase of a Singapore-based firm—despite having no obvious jurisdictional claim.

But Beijing retains leverage. In March, Chinese authorities reportedly summoned Manus co-founders Xiao Hong and Ji Yichao to Beijing to discuss compliance with foreign-investment rules. Reports indicate they have not been permitted to leave the country since. In China, control of a company’s executives can matter more than formal corporate law.

Mr. Xi wants to keep more AI talent and innovation inside China. A sensible first question would be why so much of that talent is trying to leave.