AI News Archive: June 10, 2026 — Part 1
Sourced from 500+ daily AI sources, scored by relevance.
- Microsoft restricts Claude Fable for employees over data retention concerns
Anthropic released Claude Fable, its first Mythos-class AI model, yesterday and it's already causing concerns inside Microsoft. Sources tell me that Microsoft is limiting the use of Claude Fable 5 for employees because of Anthropic's new data retention requirements. While Microsoft quickly rolled out Claude Fable 5 to its GitHub Copilot and Foundry customers, I'm […]
Score: 97🌐 MovesJun 10, 2026https://www.theverge.com/report/947575/microsoft-claude-fable-5-restricted-internally - German Court Rules Google is Responsible for AI Overviews Errors
German Court Rules Google is Responsible for AI Overviews Errors The Information
Score: 92🌐 MovesJun 10, 2026https://www.theinformation.com/briefings/german-court-rules-google-responsible-ai-overviews-errors - Visa is plugging its payment network into ChatGPT to let AI agents shop for you
The companies announced the partnership Wednesday in San Francisco, where Visa outlined spending limits and fraud controls for agent-initiated transactions
- Tsinghua-Harvard Team's Acorn Robot Develops 'Zero-Data' Robot That Learns Through Instinct, Not Training Data
A team founded by Tsinghua and Harvard-educated researchers has created a robot that learns physical manipulation with zero training data, using only tactile sensors and instinct-driven trial and error to solve complex tasks like picking up a flat credit card.
- AI Predicts Brain Tumor Molecular Subtypes in Twelve Minutes
A new study introduces "Hetairos," an AI system designed to predict brain tumor molecular classifications from routine histological sections.
- White House offers to trade state AI preemption for federal online safety laws in new deal with Congress
The White House is negotiating with key senators to bundle federal preemption of state AI laws with three online safety bills, Axios reported. Senator Marsha Blackburn is leading the effort to finalise legislative text. The package would block state AI regulation for three years in exchange for passing the Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA), the […] This story continues at The Next Web
Score: 91🌐 MovesJun 10, 2026https://thenextweb.com/news/white-house-ai-preemption-kosa-no-fakes-deal - Apollo and Blackstone raise $35bn in chip financing deal for Anthropic
Transaction is one of the largest private credit fundraisings, fuelling Claude maker’s AI growth plans
- China drafts $295 billion plan to build national AI data center grid running on 80% homemade silicon — projected 2028 timeline could run into limits of local chip production
China is drafting a plan to spend roughly 2 trillion yuan over five years on a nationwide grid of AI data centers.
- World's First AI‑Designed Vaccine Tested in Humans For The First Time
Protection from threats that haven't even emerged. ScienceAlert stories are written, fact-checked, and edited by humans, never generated by AI. Don't miss a story, subscribe here.
Score: 90🌐 MovesJun 10, 2026https://www.sciencealert.com/worlds-first-ai-designed-vaccine-tested-in-humans-for-the-first-time - NEURA Robotics secures up to $1.4B Series C to scale physical AI and cognitive robotics platform
NEURA Robotics has announced up to $1.4 billion in Series C funding to accelerate the development of its physical AI platform. Investors include Tether, Qualcomm Technologies, Amazon, NVIDIA, imec.xpa...
- Manitoba sought U.S. help to develop large AI data centre and find private financial partner on $18B hydro dam
Manitoba sought U.S. help to develop large AI data centre and find private financial partner on $18B hydro dam CBC
- Samsung Heavy Industries recruits Greek shipowner and Supermicro to bring 50MW floating AI data centers to market — can be powered by solid oxide fuel cells running on liquefied natural gas
Besides Samsung Heavy, Japan’s MOL is also building a 73 MW floating data center with Karpowership for a 2027 deployment.
- JA Worldwide and IBM Expand Global Collaboration with Goal of Delivering AI and Digital Skills to Up to One Million High-School Students
JA Worldwide and IBM Expand Global Collaboration with Goal of Delivering AI and Digital Skills to Up to One Million High-School Students Toronto Star
- NTT sets sights on Nvidia, AI race with $500m optical network fund
NTT sets sights on Nvidia, AI race with $500m optical network fund Nikkei Asia
Score: 88🌐 MovesJun 10, 2026https://asia.nikkei.com/business/technology/ntt-sets-sights-on-nvidia-ai-race-with-500m-optical-network-fund - Exclusive: Mastercard launches protocol to let AI agents pay each other, send micropayments
Exclusive: Mastercard launches protocol to let AI agents pay each other, send micropayments Fortune
Score: 88🌐 MovesJun 10, 2026https://fortune.com/2026/06/10/mastercard-ai-payments-protocol-launch-agentic-finance/ - CISA Rewrites Federal Patching Requirements for AI Threat Era
The new directive gives federal agencies three days to fix the most dangerous flaws, while less severe issues can be deferred.
Score: 87🌐 MovesJun 10, 2026https://www.darkreading.com/cyber-risk/cisa-rewrites-federal-patching-requirements-ai-threat-era - Visa to Secure Payments for Shoppers on ChatGPT in OpenAI Partnership
Shoppers who use AI bots powered by OpenAI to buy products will have their purchases secured by Visa’s network, security infrastructure and credentialing capabilities, the payments company said.
- E.U. is ordering Meta to reopen WhatsApp to rival AI chatbots — and Meta is appealing
The European Commission says Meta's dominance in messaging gives it no right to block or charge competitors for WhatsApp API access
- Anthropic warns LLMs can crank out N-day exploits cheap and fast
Anthropic's Red Team tells defenders Mythos Preview can serve up N-days in hours, not weeks.
- £20m artificial intelligence tech ‘will speed up cancer diagnosis for millions’ of UK patients
More than four million patients have already received a faster lung cancer diagnosis or all-clear thanks to AI, the government have said
Score: 86🌐 MovesJun 10, 2026https://www.the-independent.com/news/health/cancer-diagnosis-nhs-uk-ai-artificial-intelligence-b2993293.html - OpenAI weighs Nvidia-backed lease for 10 GW Ohio data center campus
OpenAI is reportedly in advanced talks to lease a proposed 10-gigawatt data center campus in southern Ohio in an arrangement that could include financial backing from Nvidia. The campus could cost at least $500 billion to build at current prices for chips, power, and construction, The Information reported , citing people familiar with the discussions. OpenAI would control the computing equipment under a 20-year lease and begin payments once the site starts operating, with the first phase expected in 2028. Nvidia is expected to supply the hardware and guarantee both OpenAI’s lease obligations and the developer’s financing, the report added. The reported structure highlights a broader shift in AI infrastructure strategy, where model developers, chip suppliers, and energy providers are forging increasingly long-term partnerships to secure compute capacity amid surging demand. “These types of symbiotic deals are becoming the norm as AI infrastructure rolls out,” said Neil Shah, vice president for research and partner at Counterpoint Research. “If a CIO picks OpenAI to be the base layer, they shouldn’t just accept whatever infrastructure comes with it. CIOs need to negotiate and demand that OpenAI uses a mix of capacity so all your eggs are not in one premium basket like Nvidia.” OpenAI and Nvidia did not immediately respond to requests for comment. A deeper infrastructure partnership The reported financing arrangement would extend a relationship that OpenAI and Nvidia formalized last year. In September 2025, the companies announced a partnership to deploy at least 10 gigawatts of Nvidia systems, with Nvidia stating it intended to invest up to $100 billion in OpenAI as each gigawatt came online. The first phase is scheduled to use Nvidia’s Vera Rubin platform. A lease guarantee would add another layer to that relationship by linking Nvidia not only as OpenAI’s primary hardware supplier but also as a financial backstop for the infrastructure supporting its AI services. “When a chip supplier guarantees a customer’s lease and the developer’s financing, the relationship stops being vendor and customer. It becomes a sponsor and a tenant,” said Sanchit Vir Gogia, chief analyst at Greyhound Research. “For enterprises, standardizing on OpenAI is therefore no longer a model decision. It is exposure to a single economic gravity field spanning silicon, power, capital, and regulatory attention.” The site behind the proposal The campus described in report aligns with a project the US Department of Energy announced in March to redevelop the former Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant near Piketon, Ohio. Under that partnership, SB Energy, a SoftBank Group company, committed to building 10 gigawatts of new power generation capacity, including at least 9.2 gigawatts fueled by natural gas, along with billions of dollars in new transmission infrastructure. The department did not identify a tenant when it unveiled the project. If the reported negotiations result in a deal, OpenAI would become the operator of the compute infrastructure housed at the site. What CIOs should watch For enterprise buyers, the reported deal structure reinforces the need to evaluate AI suppliers beyond model capabilities and pricing, analysts said. Shah said CIOs should negotiate contracts that preserve infrastructure flexibility and avoid overdependence on a single compute ecosystem. “OpenAI needs to diversify and offer capacity built on more cost-effective clouds like AWS or Google Cloud,” he said. “Matching the right cloud infrastructure to the right enterprise workload will be a critical strategy for enterprises.” He also cautioned that projects of this scale typically take years to reach full capacity and carry significant execution risks. “A 10-gigawatt site won’t just appear overnight and will take at least a decade to fully build out,” Shah said. “Making long-term commitment decisions based on that timeline comes with massive uncertainties.” Gogia said scale should not be mistaken for access. “More compute does not cure scarcity,” he said. “It reschedules it.” The sharper risk is the financing, he added, which surfaces downstream as minimum commitments, reservation tiers, and usage thresholds even as token prices fall. “Scarcity does not disappear. It becomes contractual.” The reported lease remains under negotiation, and questions around financing, permitting, and deployment timelines remain unresolved, the report added.
- Anthropic study shows AI needs hours, not weeks, to build exploits from security patches
Anthropic's security team found that its Mythos Preview AI model can turn security patches for Firefox and the Windows kernel into working exploits within hours, for a few thousand dollars and no specialized knowledge. Eight complete attack chains were finished before Microsoft's auto-updates had reached a single device. The old patch rhythm is obsolete, Anthropic argues. The article Anthropic study shows AI needs hours, not weeks, to build exploits from security patches appeared first on The Decoder .
Score: 86🌐 MovesJun 10, 2026https://the-decoder.com/anthropic-study-shows-ai-needs-hours-not-weeks-to-build-exploits-from-security-patches/ - Global watchdog calls for tighter controls on agentic AI in finance
Global watchdog calls for tighter controls on agentic AI in finance Reuters
- Meta deepens partnership with Ambani's Reliance with AI data centre
Meta deepens partnership with Ambani's Reliance with AI data centre Reuters
Score: 85🌐 MovesJun 10, 2026https://www.reuters.com/world/india/meta-ties-up-with-ambanis-reliance-ai-data-center-india-2026-06-10/ - EU: Apple Refused to Follow Rules Meant to Keep Siri AI in Check
EU: Apple Refused to Follow Rules Meant to Keep Siri AI in Check PCMag
Score: 85🌐 MovesJun 10, 2026https://www.pcmag.com/news/eu-apple-refused-to-follow-rules-meant-to-keep-siri-ai-in-check-wwdc-2026 - Taiwan eyes curbs on AI chip sales to China to align with US
Taiwan eyes curbs on AI chip sales to China to align with US The Straits Times
Score: 85🌐 MovesJun 10, 2026https://www.straitstimes.com/asia/east-asia/taiwan-eyes-curbs-on-ai-chip-sales-to-china-to-align-with-us?ref - SpaceX, OpenAI and Anthropic are hitting up investors for $280 billion to go public – but will that make AI’s giants more accountable?
SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic are going public - but will investors demand real AI accountability?
- Real-time AI-based radiotherapy planning for nasopharyngeal carcinoma: Development and validation
Real-time AI-based radiotherapy planning for nasopharyngeal carcinoma: Development and validation EurekAlert!
- NAVER Cloud joins the NVIDIA Nemotron Coalition: Collaborating toward sovereign AI
NAVER Cloud joins NVIDIA Nemotron Coalition for sovereign AI development
Score: 85🌐 MovesJun 10, 2026https://clova.ai/en/tech-blog/naver-cloud-joins-the-nvidia-nemotron-coalition-collaborating-toward-sovereign-ai - Apple rebuilds Siri from the ground up, but gaps remain
Apple has replaced Siri with a new AI-powered assistant that can search personal data, answer web queries, and understand on-screen content. The post Apple rebuilds Siri from the ground up, but gaps remain appeared first on MEDIANAMA .
Score: 85🌐 MovesJun 10, 2026https://www.medianama.com/2026/06/223-apple-rebuilds-siri-but-challenges-remain/ - Commission publishes Code of Practice on marking and labelling AI-generated content
The European Commission published the final Code of Practice on marking and labelling of AI-generated content.
- Introducing Waymo’s New Reference Model for Human Collision Avoidance
Waymo and TU Delft publish research on a breakthrough active inference framework to model human crash-avoidance behavior.
- Google’s New AI Price Cuts Should Make OpenAI and Anthropic Nervous
Google just cut the cost of its cheapest subscription offering by almost 40 percent.
Score: 85🌐 MovesJun 10, 2026https://www.inc.com/chloe-aiello/googles-new-ai-price-cuts-should-make-openai-and-anthropic-nervous/91359297 - Power & Politics | Government unveils bill regulating social media, AI chatbots
Power & Politics | Government unveils bill regulating social media, AI chatbots CBC
- Siri AI arrives with Google inside, and much of the world is locked out
“We’ve all had that moment where you search for something you know is there, but it just won’t show up.” Apple’s Stacey Ford, vice president of OS Program Management, was talking about Spotlight at WWDC 2026, but she could have been describing the company’s AI ambitions. On Monday at Apple Park, the thing that wouldn’t […] The post Siri AI arrives with Google inside, and much of the world is locked out appeared first on AI News .
Score: 84🌐 MovesJun 10, 2026https://www.artificialintelligence-news.com/news/siri-ai-google-gemini-rollout/ - Microsoft AI Chief Warns Anthropic's Claude Consciousness Talk Is 'Really Dangerous'
Microsoft AI chief warns about Anthropic's Claude consciousness talk
Score: 83🌐 MovesJun 10, 2026https://opentools.ai/news/microsoft-ai-chief-anthropic-claude-consciousness-dangerous - Cyera, a Cybersecurity Start-up for the A.I. Era, Raises $600 Million
The five-year-old company is now valued at $12 billion.
Score: 83💰 MoneyJun 10, 2026https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/10/business/dealbook/cyera-ai-cybersecurity-funding.html - Florida lawsuit alleges wrongful arrest after AI facial recognition error
Robert Dillon was arrested at home in Florida despite living 300 miles away from where a crime was committed Sign up for the Breaking News US newsletter email A Florida man is suing several law enforcement agencies for his arrest and prosecution for allegedly luring a child after he was wrongly identified using faulty AI facial recognition software. According to the Jacksonville Beach police department, an algorithm returned a 93% probability that Robert Dillon was the man caught on security cameras at a McDonald’s in the town attempting to persuade an unaccompanied girl, aged younger than 12, to leave with him. Continue reading...
Score: 83🌐 MovesJun 10, 2026https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jun/10/florida-lawsuit-ai-facial-recognition - Anthropic CEO Says Government Should Be Able to Block New Models
Anthropic PBC Chief Executive Officer Dario Amodei said the government should have the power to block artificial intelligence developers from deploying new AI models if they present certain risks.
- Anthropic CEO calls for FAA-style regulation of powerful AI models: what enterprises should know
In a sweeping new essay titled " Policy on the AI Exponential ," Anthropic co-founder and CEO Dario Amodei publicly calls for new government regulations governing the release of powerful AI models — specifically comparing AI industry to commercial aviation, which follows regulations enforced by the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) — arguing that this is necessary to maintain public safety as AI capabilities and potential misuses grow. Alongside the essay, Anthropic released two comprehensive policy roadmaps: an Advanced AI Framework targeting catastrophic model risks, and an Economic Policy Framework addressing AI-driven labor displacement backed by $350 million in new funding. The timing couldn't be more important: yesterday, Anthropic released its most powerful general release model ever, Claude Fable 5 , and a more gated, updated version of the base Claude Mythos model, now known as Claude Mythos 5, which offers advanced defensive and offensive cyber capabilities. As Amodei noted on X following the release: “Anthropic has long advocated for transparency requirements for frontier AI, because the risks weren't yet clear enough to regulate precisely. That is no longer sufficient”. For technical decision-makers, CIOs, and enterprise architects, the essay is not just a political statement—it is a preview of the operational, regulatory, and workforce constraints that will govern the next generation of enterprise tech. Here are the top three takeaways enterprise leaders need to extract from Anthropic’s latest policy drop. 1. Frontier Models May Face "FAA-Style" Deployment Holds For the past three years, enterprises have built products on the assumption that AI API capabilities will only move in one direction: faster and more powerful. Anthropic’s Advanced AI Framework introduces a new variable: regulatory embargoes. Amodei explicitly compares the necessary AI regulatory regime to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), stating: “Frontier AI models, like airplanes, should be required to go through technical testing and auditing, and their release should be blocked or reversed as a threat to public safety if they do not meet high standards of safety”. The company is proposing that models trained using more than 10^25 floating-point operations (FLOPs)—or developed by companies with over $500 million in AI revenue or $1 billion in AI R&D—must undergo mandatory third-party testing. If these models present severe biological, cybersecurity, or autonomy risks, the government would have the legal authority to block, delay or deter their deployment. The Enterprise Implication: If your company licenses foundation models for core infrastructure, you must plan for supply chain volatility. A highly anticipated model update from an AI vendor could be delayed indefinitely by regulators, or an existing model could be revoked if post-release testing reveals autonomous threats. Tech leaders must design multi-model architectures that avoid locking into a single vendor, ensuring business continuity if a provider’s flagship model is blocked by a federal agency. 2. Cybersecurity Around AI Is Now Critical Infrastructure Anthropic’s push for regulation is heavily motivated by the recent escalation in AI-driven cybersecurity threats. Amodei explicitly references Anthropic's own Claude Mythos Preview, noting that its ability to discover high-severity vulnerabilities across major operating systems "scrambled" the global cybersecurity landscape. Under Anthropic's proposed framework, securing the AI development environment is paramount. Frontier developers would be required to protect their model weights from both external cyberattackers and insider threats. Furthermore, companies must develop channels to report "model distillation attacks"—where competitors or bad actors use a primary model to train a cheaper, unaligned clone. The Enterprise Implication: The stakes for enterprise security are twofold. First, defensive AI capabilities will become a prerequisite; as Amodei warns, attackers using frontier models to probe for vulnerabilities will outpace traditional, human-led defense. Second, enterprises that fine-tune open-weight models or host proprietary instances locally will likely face intense new compliance and infosec burdens. Treating model weights as highly classified corporate secrets will become the new industry standard. 3. Plan for Structural Labor Displacement, Not Just Efficiency Perhaps the most sobering aspect of the announcement is Anthropic’s Economic Policy Framework. The company is publicly acknowledging that if AI achieves its predicted capabilities, it will act as a "general substitute for labor" rather than just a productivity tool. Amodei frames this bluntly: “The key challenge in such a world won’t be incentivizing growth, but finding a way for everyone to share in the benefits”. To back this up, Anthropic is committing $350 million to address economic disruption: $200 million for an Economic Futures Research Fund to pilot public policy solutions, and $150 million for a national fellowship program. The framework actively plans for scenarios where AI drives unemployment to 5%, 10%, or even unprecedented levels, advocating for policies like wage insurance, universal basic income, and sovereign wealth models. The Enterprise Implication: For tech leaders and HR departments, the AI transition is about to become a labor relations minefield. The economic framework notes that companies "can choose to retrain and redeploy rather than reduce headcount," but admits voluntary action is not a substitute for government response. Enterprises looking to integrate AI heavily should begin implementing workforce transition plans immediately. Leaders who view AI solely as a mechanism for fast cost-cutting through layoffs may soon find themselves crossways with new "pro-employment incentives" or retention tax policies proposed by advocates to slow job displacement. What Enterprises Should Do Now Anthropic’s announcement marks a turning point in the AI industry's dialogue with Washington and the global market. As Amodei posted: "Many of these policy ideas have common-sense appeal across the political spectrum, and the sooner we act on them, the sooner everyone shares in AI's benefits". For the enterprise, the message is clear: the era of "move fast and break things" in generative AI is closing. The era of rigorous compliance, systemic security, and complex workforce transitions is fast approaching. To prepare for this shift, enterprises must first decouple their AI strategies from single-vendor dependencies. If a flagship model is suddenly blocked or recalled under the proposed FAA-style regulatory powers, organizations reliant on that specific API will face immediate operational paralysis. IT leaders should build multi-model architectures that allow them to swap out foundation models seamlessly, ensuring business continuity in a highly regulated ecosystem. Second, technical decision-makers must elevate AI infrastructure to the level of critical cybersecurity. With frontier AI systems now capable of discovering high-severity software vulnerabilities at scale, the threat surface is expanding rapidly. Companies that fine-tune models or host them internally must lock down their development environments against both external and insider threats, matching the rigorous security standards Anthropic is demanding of the broader industry. Finally, leadership teams need a proactive, rather than reactive, labor strategy. Anthropic explicitly warns against using AI solely for cost savings through layoffs, encouraging enterprises to actively seek new use cases that allow them to retain and retrain their existing workforce. As governments potentially deploy pro-employment tax incentives and wage insurance policies to slow job displacement, companies that aggressively cut headcount to fund AI adoption may find themselves on the wrong side of both public sentiment and upcoming economic regulations.
- Anthropic pledges $200 million to research AI's economic impact as CEO suggests job loss solutions
Anthropic pledges $200 million to research AI's economic impact as CEO suggests job loss solutions Toronto Star
- Canada introduces legislation to ban social media for children under 16, regulate AI chatbots
Canada introduces legislation to ban social media for children under 16, regulate AI chatbots Reuters
- China-based operatives used ChatGPT to shape AI data centers and tariff debates
OpenAI has banned China-linked accounts that used ChatGPT to draft social media influence campaigns targeting U.S. debates over tariffs and AI data centers, the company said Wednesday. Why it matters: The campaigns don't appear to have been effective, but they show how pro-China actors are testing AI tools to amplify existing political and economic divisions in the U.S. Driving the news: OpenAI said it uncovered two operations that used ChatGPT to generate posts, comments and political cartoons about U.S. tech policy. One campaign, dubbed "Data Center Bandwagon," generated comments and comics claiming AI data centers were driving up electricity prices for American families. A second operation, "Tech and Tariffs," used ChatGPT to create content and political cartoons criticizing Trump's tariffs and the U.S. push for global tech dominance. The big picture: Both campaigns latched onto already-heated debates. A recent Harvard/MIT poll found 32% of Americans oppose data centers in their area, while 40% support them. Seven in 10 Americans said in a Harris poll released in March that Trump's tariffs have caused them to pay higher prices. "This was not a case of an influence operation creating a debate," Ben Nimmo, principal investigator on OpenAI's intelligence and investigations team, told reporters. "The debate existed already. This was an influence operation from China trying to interfere in it." Reality check: OpenAI said the campaigns failed to gain much online traction. However, an OpenAI official told reporters that this appears to be the first time the company has seen a China-linked operation using its models to meddle in the AI data center debate. Zoom in: In the data center campaign, users OpenAI believes were linked to a Chinese government contractor asked ChatGPT to create comic strips about power grid capacity and electricity prices. The images were later posted to X via likely inauthentic accounts, alongside links to legitimate news stories about data center power demand. A separate group, which OpenAI could not directly attribute, used ChatGPT to create political cartoons of President Trump that criticized U.S. tech and tariff policies. In one cartoon, Trump is depicted wearing American flag pants that say "America First" while holding a mallet with the words "Tech Dominance" on them and swinging it into a wall that reads "Global Future." The bottom line: OpenAI says the campaigns are an early sign of how foreign influence operators may use AI tools to scale content around U.S. political flashpoints. Go deeper : Foreign disinformation enters AI-powered era
Score: 82🌐 MovesJun 10, 2026https://www.axios.com/2026/06/10/openai-china-ai-data-center-tariffs-chatgpt - AI agents to match physical workforce at TCS soon: Chairman N Chandrasekaran
AI agents to match physical workforce at TCS soon: Chairman N Chandrasekaran
- Anthropic's Amodei suggests universal basic income could offset 'intrinsic' AI-related job losses
Anthropic's Amodei suggests universal basic income could offset 'intrinsic' AI-related job losses Business Insider
Score: 82🌐 MovesJun 10, 2026https://www.businessinsider.com/anthropic-ceo-dario-amodei-ai-related-job-displacement-policy-plan-2026-6 - Only 3 iPhones can access the best version of Siri AI — here’s which features are exclusive to Apple's 'most powerful on-device model', AFM Core Advanced, and whether you should care about them
We explain which iPhones can access the best version of Siri AI and the significance of Apple's AFM Core Advanced model.
- TDK to buy US maker of AI data center cooling components for up to $400m
TDK to buy US maker of AI data center cooling components for up to $400m Nikkei Asia
- Anthropic backs mandatory testing for frontier AI models
The AI company's CEO Dario Amodei suggested tax measures including “universal capital accounts” to respond to AI-driven job losses.
- Only iPhone 17 Pro users will get some of iOS 27s AI tools
iOS 27 brings Siri AI to many iPhones, but expressive voices and advanced dictation are exclusive to the iPhone 17 lineup.
Score: 82🌐 MovesJun 10, 2026https://mashable.com/tech/iphone-17-and-other-m4-devices-will-get-advanced-ai-tools-ios-27 - Innocent Man Freed After Spending Over 50 Days in Jail Due to Horribly Inaccurate AI Facial Recognition Tech
"The technology is simply too dangerous for law enforcement to be using at all." The post Innocent Man Freed After Spending Over 50 Days in Jail Due to Horribly Inaccurate AI Facial Recognition Tech appeared first on Futurism .
Score: 82🌐 MovesJun 10, 2026https://futurism.com/artificial-intelligence/innocent-man-jail-ai-facial-recognition-arrest