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Anthropic’s India Expansion Sparks Legal Dispute Over Company Name

Anthropic’s India Expansion Sparks Legal Dispute Over Company Name
Anthropic’s push into the Indian market has run into a naming conflict with Anthropic Software, a local firm that has used the name since 2017. The Indian company filed a complaint in a Karnataka commercial court, seeking recognition of its prior use and damages of ₹10 million. The dispute highlights the challenges global AI firms face as they enter fast‑growing markets and underscores the importance of clear branding in India’s burgeoning AI sector. Read more →

Cashee Research Leverages AI to Transform Market Research

Cashee Research Leverages AI to Transform Market Research
Calgary‑based Cashee Research uses artificial intelligence to design and execute custom market‑research surveys, delivering fresh human data faster and at lower cost. The startup, founded by Addy Graves and Rose Wong, was selected for TechCrunch’s Startup Battlefield in 2025 and won the Enterprise Stage pitch at TechCrunch Disrupt. By combining AI‑generated survey plans with real‑world respondents, Cashee provides brands—especially small and medium‑size firms—with actionable insights that were previously too expensive or slow to obtain. The company has raised C$1.5 million in pre‑seed funding and is preparing a seed round to expand its U.S. presence and B2B business. Read more →

ChatGPT's Three-Year Impact on Tech, Markets, and Society

ChatGPT's Three-Year Impact on Tech, Markets, and Society
Three years after OpenAI introduced ChatGPT, the model has become a cultural and economic force. It tops app charts, reshapes perceptions of artificial intelligence, and fuels debates about its societal implications. Analysts highlight how the chatbot has boosted major tech stocks, especially Nvidia, while commentators warn of hype and potential bubbles. The discourse spans optimism about AI’s transformative power and caution about its volatility, reflecting both excitement and uncertainty in the tech ecosystem. Read more →

Leaked Documents Reveal OpenAI's Revenue Share and Rising Inference Costs with Microsoft

Leaked Documents Reveal OpenAI's Revenue Share and Rising Inference Costs with Microsoft
Newly obtained documents show that OpenAI paid Microsoft $493.8 million in revenue share for 2024 and $865.8 million for the first three quarters of the following year, reflecting a 20 percent share of OpenAI’s earnings. The data suggests OpenAI’s revenue may have topped $2.5 billion in 2024 and $4.33 billion in the first three quarters of the next year, while its cash‑based inference spend rose to $3.8 billion in 2024 and $8.65 billion in the first nine months of the subsequent period. The disparity between revenue and inference costs raises questions about the startup’s profitability, prompting both firms to decline comment. Read more →

Hero Launches Invite-Only Autocomplete SDK to Speed AI Prompting

Hero Launches Invite-Only Autocomplete SDK to Speed AI Prompting
Hero, a productivity startup founded by former Meta employees, announced an invite‑only autocompletion SDK that fills in AI prompts based on context. The SDK can populate travel details, image‑generation parameters and other fields, reducing back‑and‑forth interactions. Co‑founder Brad Kowalk said the technology finishes tasks "10 times faster" and opens use cases from travel to ads. Hero, which recently secured additional funding, is testing the feature in its own app and exploring partnerships with ad‑tech firm Koah Labs. Read more →

Amazon Issues Cease‑And‑Desist to Perplexity Over Agentic Shopping Bot

Amazon Issues Cease‑And‑Desist to Perplexity Over Agentic Shopping Bot
Amazon has sent a cease‑and‑desist letter to Perplexity, demanding that its AI‑powered shopping assistant, Comet, be removed from the Amazon marketplace. The e‑commerce giant warned that the bot violates its terms of service by failing to identify itself as an agent. Perplexity responded with a blog post defending its approach, arguing that the bot operates under human direction and therefore should inherit the same permissions as the user. Amazon countered that other third‑party agents openly identify themselves and that Perplexity could simply comply. The dispute revives earlier controversy over Perplexity’s web‑scraping practices and raises broader questions about the future of agentic AI on commercial platforms. Read more →

OpenAI Announces Timeline for Autonomous AI Researcher and Corporate Restructuring

OpenAI Announces Timeline for Autonomous AI Researcher and Corporate Restructuring
OpenAI revealed its goal to develop an intern‑level AI research assistant by September 2026 and a fully autonomous "legitimate AI researcher" by 2028. The announcement came during a livestream with CEO Sam Altman and chief scientist Jakub Pachocki, who described the upcoming system as capable of handling large research projects independently. In parallel, OpenAI transitioned to a public‑benefit corporation, freeing it from non‑profit constraints and allowing new capital‑raising opportunities. The nonprofit OpenAI Foundation will retain a 26% stake, oversee research direction, and commit $25 billion to disease‑curing initiatives, while the for‑profit arm plans massive infrastructure investment to support the ambitious AI roadmap. Read more →

Adobe Unveils AI Assistants for Express and Photoshop

Adobe Unveils AI Assistants for Express and Photoshop
Adobe announced AI‑driven assistants for its Creative Cloud apps Express and Photoshop. Express gains a new mode that lets users generate images and designs via text prompts, while Photoshop’s beta‑stage assistant lives in a sidebar and can understand layers, select objects and create masks. Users can task the assistants with repetitive edits such as background removal or color changes. Adobe also revealed a private‑beta project called “Project Moonlight” that aims to coordinate multiple assistants and link to creators’ social channels, and it is exploring integration with ChatGPT through OpenAI’s API. Additional AI features, including third‑party generative‑fill models and an AI‑powered mask in Premiere Pro, were also announced. Read more →

OpenAI Acquires Sky AI Interface from Software Applications, Boosting Mac Capabilities

OpenAI Acquires Sky AI Interface from Software Applications, Boosting Mac Capabilities
OpenAI announced it has acquired Software Applications, Inc., the developer of Sky—a desktop AI assistant for Mac that can see the screen and act within apps. The purchase brings together OpenAI's large language models with a product designed to work alongside users throughout their day, from writing to coding. Sky’s founders, Ari Weinstein and Conrad Kramer, previously sold Workflow to Apple, where it became Shortcuts, while co‑founder Kim Beverett spent a decade at Apple on Safari and other core services. The deal, led by OpenAI executives Nick Turley and Fidji Simo, adds a new layer to Apple’s emerging AI ecosystem, which includes Apple Intelligence and a partnership that routes Siri queries to ChatGPT. Read more →

Silicon Valley Ramps Up AI Infrastructure as OpenAI Unveils New ChatGPT Feature

Silicon Valley Ramps Up AI Infrastructure as OpenAI Unveils New ChatGPT Feature
Silicon Valley dominated headlines this week with massive AI infrastructure deals. Nvidia announced a potential $100 billion investment in OpenAI, while OpenAI revealed plans to add five new Stargate data centers in partnership with Oracle and SoftBank, promising gigawatts of fresh capacity. Oracle financed the effort by selling $18 billion in bonds. At the same time, OpenAI launched Pulse, a personalized morning briefing feature in ChatGPT that currently runs only for $200‑a‑month Pro users due to server constraints. The flurry of investments and product launches raises questions about the balance between costly data‑center expansion and new AI services. Read more →

California’s SB 53 AI Safety Bill Targets Big AI Companies

California’s SB 53 AI Safety Bill Targets Big AI Companies
California’s Senate has approved SB 53, an AI safety bill that will be sent to Governor Gavin Newsom for signature. The legislation focuses on AI developers earning more than $500 million annually, requiring them to publish safety reports and report incidents to the state. It also creates a protected channel for employee concerns. Supporters cite the bill as a meaningful check on large AI firms such as OpenAI and Google DeepMind, while noting that smaller startups are largely exempt. The bill has earned backing from AI company Anthropic and reflects a state‑level push amid a federal environment that is less inclined toward regulation. Read more →

California’s SB 53 AI Safety Bill Targets Big AI Companies

California’s SB 53 AI Safety Bill Targets Big AI Companies
California’s Senate has approved SB 53, an AI safety bill that will be sent to Governor Gavin Newsom for signature. The legislation focuses on AI developers earning more than $500 million annually, requiring them to publish safety reports and report incidents to the state. It also creates a protected channel for employee concerns. Supporters cite the bill as a meaningful check on large AI firms such as OpenAI and Google DeepMind, while noting that smaller startups are largely exempt. The bill has earned backing from AI company Anthropic and reflects a state‑level push amid a federal environment that is less inclined toward regulation. Read more →

California’s SB 53 AI Safety Bill Targets Big AI Companies

California’s SB 53 AI Safety Bill Targets Big AI Companies
California’s Senate has approved SB 53, an AI safety bill that will be sent to Governor Gavin Newsom for signature. The legislation focuses on AI developers earning more than $500 million annually, requiring them to publish safety reports and report incidents to the state. It also creates a protected channel for employee concerns. Supporters cite the bill as a meaningful check on large AI firms such as OpenAI and Google DeepMind, while noting that smaller startups are largely exempt. The bill has earned backing from AI company Anthropic and reflects a state‑level push amid a federal environment that is less inclined toward regulation. Read more →

California’s SB 53 AI Safety Bill Targets Big AI Companies

California’s SB 53 AI Safety Bill Targets Big AI Companies
California’s Senate has approved SB 53, an AI safety bill that will be sent to Governor Gavin Newsom for signature. The legislation focuses on AI developers earning more than $500 million annually, requiring them to publish safety reports and report incidents to the state. It also creates a protected channel for employee concerns. Supporters cite the bill as a meaningful check on large AI firms such as OpenAI and Google DeepMind, while noting that smaller startups are largely exempt. The bill has earned backing from AI company Anthropic and reflects a state‑level push amid a federal environment that is less inclined toward regulation. Read more →

California’s SB 53 AI Safety Bill Targets Big AI Companies

California’s SB 53 AI Safety Bill Targets Big AI Companies
California’s Senate has approved SB 53, an AI safety bill that will be sent to Governor Gavin Newsom for signature. The legislation focuses on AI developers earning more than $500 million annually, requiring them to publish safety reports and report incidents to the state. It also creates a protected channel for employee concerns. Supporters cite the bill as a meaningful check on large AI firms such as OpenAI and Google DeepMind, while noting that smaller startups are largely exempt. The bill has earned backing from AI company Anthropic and reflects a state‑level push amid a federal environment that is less inclined toward regulation. Read more →

AI hires or human hustle? Inside the next frontier of startup operations at TechCrunch Disrupt 2025

AI hires or human hustle? Inside the next frontier of startup operations at TechCrunch Disrupt 2025
At TechCrunch Disrupt 2025, a panel explored how startups are swapping early hires for AI agents. Speakers included Caleb Peffer of Firecrawl, who enables developers and firms like Shopify and Zapier to embed AI on the live web; Jaspar Carmichael‑Jack of Artisan, whose “Stop Hiring Humans” campaign backs a $35 million effort to build AI employees; and Sarah Franklin of Lattice, a former Salesforce president who shared scaling insights. The discussion covered practical uses, ROI, and the balance between automation and human teams, highlighting a shift toward AI‑driven go‑to‑market functions. Read more →