Monday, June 15, 2026
States subpoena OpenAI over user safety, commercial practicesBusiness & Ethical AI

States subpoena OpenAI over user safety, commercial practices

A group of state attorneys general has sent a subpoena to OpenAI, asking for many internal records about user safety and business practices. The investigation may look at whether OpenAI's products exposed users, especially children and older adults, to misleading information or harm. The subpoena also requests documents about advertising, research on vulnerable groups, and how OpenAI's models behave. It is not clear how many states are involved, and some details remain confidential. OpenAI said it would work with the attorneys general and is taking the concerns seriously. asking for many internal records about user safety and business practices.

How Tech Firms Strain Power Grids With Surging AI DemandAI News & Trends

How Tech Firms Strain Power Grids With Surging AI Demand

Tech firms are using much more electricity as their AI data centers grow, which may be causing stress on local power grids. Planners and utilities appear to be struggling to keep up, and new data centers might need extra equipment and upgrades that are not ready yet. Some cities are trying different ways to deal with the demand, but there is uncertainty about who will pay for changes to the grid. Reports suggest that communities may see higher costs and other impacts, while some areas where data centers are built already face environmental problems. Experts warn that outages at large data centers could affect regional stability, and more studies may be needed to manage these risks.

Anthropic Urges Pause on Frontier AI, OpenAI Calls for Government OversightAI News & Trends

Anthropic Urges Pause on Frontier AI, OpenAI Calls for Government Oversight

Senior leaders at major AI labs like Anthropic, OpenAI, and DeepMind are discussing slowing down advanced AI research so that safety and rules can catch up. Anthropic suggests society should have the option to pause AI development, but did not stop its own work. OpenAI believes only governments, not companies, should decide on any slowdown. DeepMind has not publicly called for a pause but is still focused on safety research. There are open questions about how to make a pause work and if all countries could follow the same rules, and no lab has actually stopped its own AI projects yet.

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Anthropic Fable 5 adopts metered pricing, doubles Opus 4.8 rates
AI News & Trends3h ago

Anthropic Fable 5 adopts metered pricing, doubles Opus 4.8 rates

Anthropic has launched Claude Fable 5 with metered pricing, charging $10 per million input tokens and $50 per million output tokens, which may be about twice the price of the earlier Opus 4.8 model. For a short period, some users can try Fable 5 for free, but after that they will pay per use. Analysts suggest that this new pricing may encourage more trials at first, but later use might become more selective due to higher costs. Some reports show Fable 5 performs well on coding and analytics tasks, but requests involving certain sensitive topics are automatically sent to the less advanced Opus model. It appears that most users finish their Fable 5 sessions without switching to Opus, and the higher cost might be acceptable for teams with valuable tasks.

Xbox Rethinks Console Costs as Memory Prices Drive Up Hardware Expenses
AI News & Trends5h ago

Xbox Rethinks Console Costs as Memory Prices Drive Up Hardware Expenses

Xbox leaders say they are still committed to making consoles but may need to change how they build and sell them because the price of memory and other parts is going up. They might offer different storage options or bundle hardware with longer Game Pass commitments to help keep costs down, though no final decisions have been made. Xbox plans to keep making exclusive games to keep players interested, but it appears that Game Pass growth has not greatly increased console sales so far. Rising costs, especially for memory, may keep affecting all game systems, and some believe future consoles might be much more expensive if trends continue. Xbox's new plans may help, but it is not clear if they will stop falling console sales.

2026 Executive Book Lists Highlight AI, Compliance, and Leadership
Business & Ethical AI7h ago

2026 Executive Book Lists Highlight AI, Compliance, and Leadership

Recent book lists for executives in 2026 show a strong interest in topics like AI, compliance, and leadership. Surveys and roundups suggest that many leaders prefer books that blend practical advice with information about culture, risk, and technology. There appears to be a focus on books about third-party risk, AI governance, and leadership communication, with both technical manuals and narrative-driven books being popular. Some experts suggest that reading both types of books may help teams address both rules and human factors. Sustainability themes also seem to influence many executive book choices.

US bans Anthropic's Fable 5, Mythos 5 access for foreign nationals
AI News & Trends19h ago

US bans Anthropic's Fable 5, Mythos 5 access for foreign nationals

On June 12, 2026, the U.S. government told Anthropic to stop access to its advanced AI models, Fable 5 and Mythos 5, for all foreign nationals. Because Anthropic could not easily check users' nationalities, the company took both models offline for everyone around the world. The order was based on export rules that say sharing certain technology with foreign people, even inside the U.S., may need special permission. Anthropic disagreed with the order and said it might hurt new AI model releases. Experts suggest this episode highlights gaps in current laws and may lead to clearer rules in the future.

Sunday Book Review Unveils Top 2026 Executive Compliance Reads
Institutional Intelligence & Tribal Knowledge19h ago

Sunday Book Review Unveils Top 2026 Executive Compliance Reads

The Sunday Book Review highlights top executive compliance books for 2026 that may help leaders with risk, ethics, and program design. The list suggests matching a broad enterprise-view book with a detailed manual, plus a few guides for practical use. Titles include Corporate Risks and Leadership, which reviewers say gives clear advice for executives, and the 2026 SCCE manual, which appears to serve as a detailed checklist. Practitioner picks might help with real-world issues and influence skills, and Intentional Integrity seems to offer stories that could support ethical company culture. This mix may give leaders what they need for both big-picture strategy and daily compliance tasks.

AeroFarms Rebounds with Palm Ventures as Vertical Farming Shifts Focus
AI News & Trends21h ago

AeroFarms Rebounds with Palm Ventures as Vertical Farming Shifts Focus

After many bankruptcies in the vertical farming sector from 2023 to 2025, investors became much more careful and focused on costs. AeroFarms was recapitalized by Palm Ventures in June 2026, which suggests that funding may still be possible for companies that show strong business results. The sector now seems to favor farms with proven retailer partnerships, solid financial backers, and improved cost controls. New technologies like AI, better LED lighting, and water recirculation might help farms lower their costs. Success in vertical farming appears to depend less on growing quickly and more on steady, smart business practices.

Anthropic, OpenAI, DeepMind Split on AI Development Pause
AI News & Trends21h ago

Anthropic, OpenAI, DeepMind Split on AI Development Pause

Anthropic, OpenAI, and DeepMind all show some support for slowing or pausing advanced AI development, but they differ on who should make that decision and how it should be checked. Anthropic suggests society should be ready to pause AI development, but says the pause must be international and verified by others. OpenAI says only democratic governments, not individual companies, should set the rules and pace. DeepMind appears open to a global pause only if all major developers agree. These statements suggest there might be more interest in slowing AI, but there are still big challenges and disagreements about how to do it.

Dapple raises $30M seed for AI infrastructure OS
AI News & Trends21h ago

Dapple raises $30M seed for AI infrastructure OS

Dapple has raised $30 million in a seed round to build an operating system for AI infrastructure, which is much higher than the average seed funding for similar startups. Analysts suggest this large investment may signal more money going to companies that aim to make AI easier for businesses, though high costs for GPUs and cloud services remain a concern. Dapple faces competition from other companies offering AI control platforms, and big tech companies may have an advantage due to their large budgets. Most businesses use many automation tools and now want a single platform to manage them. Reports suggest only a small portion of companies have fully adopted advanced AI workflows, and Dapple may need to grow quickly while managing its spending carefully.

Salesforce acquires m3ter, pivots to usage-based AI pricing
AI News & Trends21h ago

Salesforce acquires m3ter, pivots to usage-based AI pricing

Salesforce recently announced plans to buy m3ter, a company that measures and manages how much customers use software, and may move to usage-based pricing for its AI products. Around the same time, Salesforce confirmed layoffs, with reports suggesting fewer than 1,000 jobs cut, as the company shifts toward AI-focused roles. This move appears to be part of a larger strategy to reduce costs and focus on new AI revenue models, but some reports say employees feel uncertain. The stock price has dropped, and Wall Street's reaction is mixed, with some analysts citing possible short-term challenges from layoffs and the m3ter deal. More information on the changes and their effects may come when Salesforce shares its next financial results.