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    Home»Artificial Intelligence»The Download: brain-melting heatwaves and unprecedented OpenAI restrictions
    Artificial Intelligence

    The Download: brain-melting heatwaves and unprecedented OpenAI restrictions

    AdminBy AdminJune 28, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read2 Views
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    The Download: brain-melting heatwaves and unprecedented OpenAI restrictions
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    I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology.

    1 The Trump administration has asked OpenAI to limit its next model release
    It wants to vet the first GPT 5.6 users before a wider launch. (Bloomberg $)
    + OpenAI said each of the initial partners will be government-approved. (FT $)
    + It’s the first US firm to be told to restrict an AI model before release. (Axios)
    + Anthropic is also still feuding with Washington. (MIT Technology Review)

    2 Apple and Xbox have hiked prices, blaming AI-driven chip costs
    Some MacBooks, iPads, and Xboxes are going up in price by over 20%. (BBC)
    + Apple’s shares plummeted after the announcement. (NBC)
    + AI data center demand has pushed up memory and storage prices. (WSJ $)
    + The shortages have been dubbed “RAMaggedon.” (The Verge)
     
    3 Colossal and the US are building an endangered species “biovault”
    It aims to cryptopreserve over 2,300 plant and animal samples. (Wired $)
    + It comes amid growing threats to endangered species protections. (NYT $)
    + Colossal is also growing chickens in artificial eggshells. (MIT Technology Review)
     
    4 The US has banned Polestar from selling its EVs due to anti-China rules
    The Sweden-based company is majority-owned by China’s Geely. (CNN)
    + The ban is because its connected-vehicle tech is linked to China. (Reuters $)
    + What happened to China’s overseas EV factory boom? (Rest of World)
     
    5 China is betting on humanoids to beat its demographic decline
    It wants the robots to narrow the labour gap. (FT $)
    + Gig workers are training humanoids at home. (MIT Technology Review)
     
    6 The “fingerprints” of a black hole’s event horizon have been detected
    The discovery was made by studying ripples in space-time. (AFP)
     
    7 OpenAI is now expected to delay its IPO until next year
    It’s been spooked by choppy global markets and SpaceX’s slump. (NYT $)
     
    8 Data centers have moved to the forefront of environmental lawsuits 
    The litigation is linked to energy sources, water consumption, and air pollution. (Guardian)

    9 A master gene that turns on human development has been uncovered
    It results in cells forming a human body. (New Scientist $)

    10 Grok’s most popular feature? Smut
    It accounts for “well over half” of the chatbot’s traffic. (The Information $)

    Quote of the day

    “The most advanced AI is built by a handful of American companies, on American soil, under American law, and what the rest of us are permitted to do with it can change on a Friday afternoon.”

    —Nathan Benaich, AI investor at London-based venture firm Air Street Capital, tells the Financial Times about the geopolitical reality of US AI dominance.

    One More Thing

    data archaeology concept

    MAX-O-MATIC


    How technology helped archaeologists dig deeper

    In 1991, construction workers in Manhattan unearthed hundreds of coffins. Further investigation revealed that the remains were between 200 and 300 years old, and they were all African and African American.

    This discovery came at an inflection point in scientific history. Breakthroughs in chemical and genetic analysis allowed researchers to figure out where many of these people were born, the physical challenges they faced, and even the routes they took from Africa to North America.

    Today, archaeologists are using techniques they could only dream of then: lasers, 3D photography, lidar, satellite imagery, and more. These tools are revealing where people came from, how ancient cities were built, and the lives of those who built them.



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