AI News Archive: May 1, 2026 — Part 16
Sourced from 500+ daily AI sources, scored by relevance.
- Cyber experts take an optimistic view of AI-powered hacking
The annual showcase at the Centre for Emerging Technology and Security (CETaS) kicked off with a discussion on the implications of Claude Mythos . Opening the conference, Alexander (Sacha) Babuta, director of CETaS at the Alan Turing Institute, said that Anthropic’s latest frontier model, Claude Mythos Preview, demonstrates major improvements in mathematics, cyber security, software engineering and automated vulnerability detection. While the model can identify and autonomously exploit previously undiscovered vulnerabilities in real-world systems, he described an optimistic outlook of how Claude Mythos Preview could be used to secure enterprise IT. “Companies can use models like Anthropic Mythos to rapidly discover vulnerabilities in their own systems and patch them to strengthen digital security for everyone,” said Babuta. A study of the cyber crime community between the release of ChatGPT in 2022 and the end of 2025 revealed that cyber crime forums played host to a number of “dark AI
- ‘This is a real risk, we all could die as a result of artificial intelligence’ — the OpenAI trial took a dramatic turn as Elon Musk and Sam Altman faced off over AI’s real-world danger
A dramatic courtroom clash between Elon Musk and Sam Altman briefly turned into a stark warning about AI extinction risk — before the judge shut it down.
- AI Demand Is Outpacing the Scaffolding to Support It
From data center capacity to enterprise governance, the systems surrounding AI are struggling to keep pace with demand.
- AI is coming for jobs, and ‘We’re not ready,’ labor expert says
AI is coming for jobs, and ‘We’re not ready,’ labor expert says The Mercury News
- Agent 365 is now generally available! We’re extending the systems customers already use for identity, security, governance and management to every AI agent and their interactions across the enterprise. Read more…
The post Agent 365 is now generally available! We’re extending the systems customers already use for identity, security, governance and management to every AI agent and their interactions across the enterprise. Read more… appeared first on Source .
- Salesforce launches Agentforce Operations to fix the workflows breaking enterprise AI
Enterprise AI teams are hitting a wall — not because their models can't reason, but because the workflows underneath them were never built for agents. Tasks fail, handoffs break, and the problem compounds as organizations push agents deeper into back-office systems. A new architectural layer is emerging to address it: workflow execution control planes that impose deterministic structure on processes agents are expected to run. One of the companies bringing this to the forefront is Salesforce, with a new workflow platform that turns back-office workflows into a set of tasks for specialized agents to complete. Users can upload their processes or use one of the set Blueprints provided by Salesforce, and Agentforce Operations will break it down for agents. Salesforce senior vice president of Product, Sanjna Parulekar, told VentureBeat in an interview that the problem is that many enterprise workflows are not built for agents. “What we’ve observed with customers is that a lot of times, the
- OpenAI Introduces Password-Free Login for Millions of ChatGPT Users
OpenAI’s Advanced Account Security lets ChatGPT and Codex users replace passwords with passkeys or security keys, but recovery is limited. The post OpenAI Introduces Password-Free Login for Millions of ChatGPT Users appeared first on TechRepublic .
- OpenAI introduces security feature removing passwords, SMS and email recovery
OpenAI has introduced Advanced Account Security for ChatGPT users, replacing passwords and SMS recovery with stronger authentication methods. The post OpenAI introduces security feature removing passwords, SMS and email recovery appeared first on MEDIANAMA .
- Self-driving cars will no longer go scot-free in California as penalties go into effect
A September 2025 incident where San Bruno police couldn't ticket a Waymo for an illegal U-turn helped trigger California's sweeping new AV regulations.
- AV Companies Might be in Trouble Now As Cops Start Ticketing Driverless Cars
"These updates regulations further demonstrate the state's commitment to public safety." The post AV Companies Might be in Trouble Now As Cops Start Ticketing Driverless Cars appeared first on Futurism .
- Driverless Cars Will Be Subject to Moving-Violation Tickets in California Soon
By July, California will close legal loopholes that made driverless cars like Waymos exempt from some laws.
- Waymos, robotaxis can now be ticketed by California police. But how exactly?
Driverless cars haven't always obeyed the rules of the road but, unlike vehicles with humans behind the wheel, they've gotten away with it. That's about to change in California.
- New rule in California will allow police to ticket driverless cars
The new rule also requires manufacturers to ensure their self-driving vehicles move out of the way during emergencies
- New rule in California will allow police to ticket driverless cars
The new rule also requires manufacturers to ensure their self-driving vehicles move out of the way during emergencies
- Waymo Is Trying to Crack Down on Solo Kids in Driverless Cars
As adult riders report new age-verification checks, the self-driving car company says it’s continuing to “refine” its system in places where kids aren’t allowed to ride alone.
- GPT-5.5 matches Claude Mythos in cyber attack tests, UK AI Security Institute finds
OpenAI's GPT-5.5 is the second AI model capable of autonomously solving a full network attack simulation, according to the UK AI Security Institute. Its performance is nearly on par with Anthropic's Claude Mythos, which is still only available to a small group. GPT-5.5, meanwhile, is already shipping in ChatGPT and through the API. The article GPT-5.5 matches Claude Mythos in cyber attack tests, UK AI Security Institute finds appeared first on The Decoder .
- Call Coach IQ
Intelligent Conversation Analytics
- 92,000 Tech Workers Laid Off in 2026 as AI Replaces Roles
AI replaces 92,000 tech workers in 2026
- Women sue the men who used their Instagram feeds to create AI porn influencers
AI ModelForge is a platform that teaches men how to generate their own AI influencers.
- Musk vs. Altman: Elon’s apocalypse postponed
In his third and final day on the stand, plaintiff Elon Musk found himself on the defensive.
- Why are Elon Musk and Sam Altman clashing in court?
Battling over the origins and future of OpenAI
- All the evidence revealed so far in Musk v. Altman
The Musk v. Altman trial is underway, and that means exhibits, or the evidence to be presented in court, are being revealed piece by piece. So far, email exchanges, photos, and corporate documents are circulating from the earliest days of OpenAI - and from before the AI lab even had a name. Some high-level takeaways: […]
- Musk v. Altman
Who do people hate more - Sam Altman, or Elon Musk?
- Musk v. Altman is just getting started
Elon Musk spent the better part of three days on the witness stand this week in his lawsuit against OpenAI, and it’s already getting messy. Emails, texts, and his own tweets are surfacing in court, and there are plenty more witnesses to come. Musk’s argument against OpenAI? By converting the company to a for-profit model, Sam Altman betrayed the “nonprofit for the […]
- Pentagon clears 8 tech firms to deploy their AI on its classified networks
Pentagon clears 8 tech firms to deploy their AI on its classified networks Breaking Defense
- Pentagon makes agreements with 7 companies to add AI to classified networks
Advanced AI capabilities from NVIDIA, OpenAI, SpaceX, Reflection, AWS, Microsoft and Google will be made available at Impact Level 6 and 7.
- Pentagon signs classified AI deals with tech giants, snubs Anthropic
The Pentagon on Friday announced agreements with seven leading artificial intelligence companies to deploy their technology on classified military networks, a move that pointedly excludes Anthropic amid its ongoing dispute with the Defense Department.
- US military reaches deals with 7 tech companies to use their AI on classified systems
US military reaches deals with 7 tech companies to use their AI on classified systems Boston Herald
- Nvidia, Microsoft, Amazon expand classified military AI use
Nvidia, Microsoft, Amazon expand classified military AI use East Bay Times
- Nvidia, Microsoft, Amazon expand classified military AI use
Nvidia, Microsoft, Amazon expand classified military AI use The Mercury News
- Pentagon strikes classified AI deals with OpenAI, Google, and Nvidia — but not Anthropic
The flurry of deals leaves out Anthropic, which the department previously used for handling classified information.
- US military reaches deals with 7 tech companies to use their AI on classified systems
The Pentagon says it's partnering with seven tech companies to tap into their artificial intelligence in classified systems, allowing the military to boost its use of AI to help it fight wars
- US military reaches deals with 7 tech companies to use their AI on classified systems
US military reaches deals with 7 tech companies to use their AI on classified systems AP News
- US military reaches deals with 7 tech companies to use their AI on classified systems
US military reaches deals with 7 tech companies to use their AI on classified systems Houston Chronicle
- US military reaches deals with 7 tech companies to use their AI on classified systems
The Pentagon says it has reached deals with seven tech companies to use their artificial intelligence in its classified computer networks This will allow the military to tap into AI-powered capabilities to help it fight wars.
- Google, Nvidia and other tech titans sign AI deal with the Pentagon
The Department of Defense said agreements with eight companies would help establish the 'United States military as an AI-first fighting force.'
- Pentagon inks AI procurement deals with seven companies, leaves out Anthropic
The U.S. Defense Department today announced that it has inked artificial intelligence procurement contracts with seven tech firms. The group includes Amazon Web Service Inc., Google LLC, Microsoft Corp., Nvidia Corp., OpenAI Group PBC and SpaceX Corp. They are joined by a startup called Reflection AI Inc. that raised $2 billion in funding last year. […] The post Pentagon inks AI procurement deals with seven companies, leaves out Anthropic appeared first on SiliconANGLE .
- The Pentagon announces AI deals with OpenAI, Google, Microsoft, Amazon, Nvidia, and more — LLMs to be deployed on classified Department of War networks ‘for lawful operational use’
The U.S. Department of War announced agreements with seven AI providers, allowing it to deploy multiple LLMs for its use and avoiding lock up with a single vendor.
- Amazon Web Services, Microsoft and NVIDIA will provide AI tech to Pentagon
They join Google, OpenAI and xAI.
- The Rest of Big Tech Piles in to Take the Pentagon Deal That Anthropic Wouldn’t
Four new companies have agreed to let the U.S. military use their AI tech for classified work.
- Pentagon strikes deals with top firms to expand AI use within the military
Group of companies excludes Anthropic, which the U.S. Defense Department has labelled a supply-chain risk
- US military reaches deals with 7 tech companies to use their AI on classified systems
US military reaches deals with 7 tech companies to use their AI on classified systems Toronto Star
- Pentagon reaches agreements with top AI companies, but not Anthropic
Pentagon reaches agreements with top AI companies, but not Anthropic The Straits Times
- Pentagon reaches agreements with 7 leading AI companies
Pentagon reaches agreements with 7 leading AI companies The Straits Times
- Seven AI companies signed the Pentagon’s terms. The one that refused is worth $900 billion.
The Pentagon announced on 1 May that it has signed agreements with Nvidia, Microsoft, Amazon Web Services, and Reflection AI for expanded use of advanced artificial intelligence on classified military networks. The deals bring the total number of companies with such agreements to seven, following similar arrangements with SpaceX, OpenAI, and Google, which signed its own […] This story continues at The Next Web
- Eight tech giants sign Pentagon deals to build an "AI-first fighting force" across classified networks
Eight tech companies are supplying AI for classified US military networks, part of the Pentagon's push to build an "AI-first fighting force." Anthropic is notably absent from the list after the company rejected a usage clause and got flagged as a security risk. The article Eight tech giants sign Pentagon deals to build an "AI-first fighting force" across classified networks appeared first on The Decoder .
- US military reaches deals with 7 tech companies to use their AI on classified systems
US military reaches deals with 7 tech companies to use their AI on classified systems
- Pentagon reaches agreements with leading AI companies
The Pentagon has struck deals with seven major AI firms. These companies will integrate their advanced AI into the Defense Department's secure networks. This move aims to boost data analysis and improve decision-making for soldiers. It signals a shift towards an AI-first military. Meanwhile, Anthropic faces restrictions due to security concerns.
- Pentagon inks deals with AI giants, but not Anthropic
The pacts enable OpenAI, Google and SpaceX to bring top-tier artificial intelligence (AI) models onto the US military’s secure classified networks.
- AI Is changing the price of work
The pre-AI economy ran on inputs. That's about to change.