AI News Archive: July 12, 2026 — Part 4
Sourced from 500+ daily AI sources, scored by relevance.
- Orivon
Discover where your potential creates the most value
- YourOnlyAI
Find the right tool, not the hype.
- Glimpse
Distilled Internet
- Long-term Software Governance
Keep commercial software reliable for the long run.
- OGCanvas
A visual editor for dynamic Open Graph images
- Alson Shop
The AI-native bookstore for our storybooks
- LockIn for Chrome
Increase productivity with AI distraction blocking
- Mochi Analytics
Analytics you would actually want to look at
- Flowing
Ground your academic writing in your own papers.
- CONTRABAND VR Cinema
A theatrical experience with friends, from home.
- ServiceBeard
Sync your mailbox with your issue tracker
- Second Brain for AI v2
AI memory that connects the dots across every tool
- FetchSandbox
API integration testing that remembers what breaks
- Miora
Scale your creativity on editable canvas with agent memory
- JustVibe
The search engine for doing, with apps built for you
- SpaceXAI drops GrokInside: Last week's AI, caught up in 5
SpaceXAI releases GrokInside, a new AI model aimed at enhancing conversational capabilities.
- This Data Center IPO Is Next the Big Test for the AI Stock Trade
This Data Center IPO Is Next the Big Test for the AI Stock Trade Barron's
- Christopher Nolan Unloads on AI Slop
The younger generations see AI slop "for what it is." The post Christopher Nolan Unloads on AI Slop appeared first on Futurism .
- LinkedIn is the undisputed king of long-form AI slop, according to a study spanning five platforms
One in four longer social media posts is entirely AI-generated, according to a Pangram analysis. LinkedIn leads with 41 percent of long-form posts flagged as AI-written. The platform made up only a third of all posts scanned but accounted for nearly two-thirds of all detected AI content. Because the detection model tends to flag content conservatively, the real rate could be even higher. The article LinkedIn is the undisputed king of long-form AI slop, according to a study spanning five platforms appeared first on The Decoder .
- Offer Max
Every job application is a click, not an evening
- How terrorist groups are using AI to gain an edge in battle
How terrorist groups are using AI to gain an edge in battle
- Could Rovo detect organizational knowledge gaps before people notice them?
Could Rovo detect organizational knowledge gaps before people notice them? Atlassian Community
- Should Rovo refuse to answer when organizational knowledge quality is too low?
Should Rovo refuse to answer when organizational knowledge quality is too low? Atlassian Community
- AI Visibility
Check how ChatGPT, Gemini and Claude talk about your brand
- Should Rovo expose reasoning confidence instead of only providing answers?
Should Rovo expose reasoning confidence instead of only providing answers? Atlassian Community
- Should Rovo challenge users instead of always trying to help them?
Should Rovo challenge users instead of always trying to help them? Atlassian Community
- Amid criticism, Meta reins in new AI tool that automatically accessed public Instagram images
Meta has pulled the plug on a feature of a recently launched AI tool following criticism that it made Instagram accounts fodder for use in creating AI-generated images.
- Meta scraps AI image feature days after launch
Following privacy backlash.
- Meta withdraws its controversial AI image feature
Called "Muse Image," this proposed tool would have allowed users to use public-facing Instagram photos as references for generative AI.
- 3 Days After Introducing an AI Feature, Meta Hits Pause in Wake of Privacy Backlash
Muse Image allowed users to create AI-generated images from photos posted on Instagram—without permission. ‘We missed the mark,” Meta admits.
- Trinidad and Tobago signs agreements with US companies paving way for data centers in the Caribbean
Data centers could account for nearly 3% of the world’s projected electricity use by 2030, according to a recent United Nations University report
- Dcyde
Decision memory for you and your team
- Caribbean nation becomes first to sign deal with US companies for AI data centers
Caribbean nation becomes first to sign deal with US companies for AI data centers
- Trinidad and Tobago signs agreements with US companies paving way for data centers in the Caribbean
Data centers could account for nearly 3% of the world’s projected electricity use by 2030, according to a recent United Nations University report
- Caribbean nation becomes first to sign deal with US companies for AI data centers
Caribbean nation becomes first to sign deal with US companies for AI data centers
- Runwall
A Runtime security layer that lets AI agents execute safely
- 😹 Apple is suing OpenAI
PLUS: Meta pulled an Instagram AI feature, OpenAI is hiring for families, and AI rebrands lost their shine.
- Apple bites OpenAI with lawsuit
Apple bites OpenAI with lawsuit Boston Herald
- Apple sues OpenAI and two former employees for trade secrets theft
UPDATE 5-Apple sues OpenAI, two former employees for trade secrets theft
- Vincent 4.0
Local-first digital paper for visual thinking
- How Apple, OpenAI went from working together on AI to fighting over trade secrets
How Apple, OpenAI went from working together on AI to fighting over trade secrets
- ‘Elon is obsessed with me again’: Sam Altman hits back as Musk invokes Apple lawsuit against OpenAI
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and SpaceX's Elon Musk engage in a social media dispute following the launch of GPT-5.6, with Musk targeting Altman in memes.
- India's Tata Consultancy Services plans up to 8,900 AI deployment engineers, seeks AI acquisitions
India's Tata Consultancy Services plans up to 8,900 AI deployment engineers, seeks AI acquisitions
- Tata Consultancy Services plans up to 8,900 AI deployment engineers, seeks AI acquisitions
The strategy emerges amid investor concern that AI could disrupt India's $315 billion IT services industry by reducing demand for engineering teams, shortening project timelines and squeezing prices as clients seek a share of productivity gains
- Zhipu’s founder says frontier AI should stay open to everyone. His own government may disagree.
The founder of China’s most prominent AI lab has made an unambiguous case for openness. Frontier AI should stay broadly accessible rather than controlled by a select few, Zhipu’s Tang Jie wrote in an internal memo reviewed by Bloomberg. His argument inverts the usual security logic. Real safety comes from broad participation, sharing, and oversight, he […] This story continues at The Next Web
- Zhipu founder backs open-source AI as global security debate intensifies
Founder Tang Jie said frontier AI should remain widely accessible under open-source principles, arguing that transparency and broad participation offer stronger safeguards than restrictions
- Gymsly
Gym management software for the modern world
- Jokiinlari
AI running route planner — chat a run, get a real-road GPX.
- In-Hand Salary Calculator
Calculate your actual take-home salary after PF.
- Rovo
Rovo Atlassian Community