Sunday, June 14, 2026
AeroFarms Rebounds with Palm Ventures as Vertical Farming Shifts FocusAI News & Trends

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 PauseAI News & Trends

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 OSAI News & Trends

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 pricingAI News & Trends

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.

Latest News

Instagram expands "Your Algorithm" to all English-speaking accounts
AI News & Trends5h ago

Instagram expands "Your Algorithm" to all English-speaking accounts

Instagram is expanding its "Your Algorithm" feature to all English-speaking users, letting people edit the topics that affect their recommendations. This feature may help users see fewer unwanted clips and give creators better signals about what viewers want. Users can add or remove up to 100 topics, and changes update what is shown in their Feed, Reels, and soon Explore. Some early reports call the feature still in "testing" and results like increased engagement might vary. Instagram says a wider language rollout is planned, but for now, only English accounts have access.

Zero-Click Searches Hit 68% in 2026, Reshaping SaaS Marketing
AI News & Trends5h ago

Zero-Click Searches Hit 68% in 2026, Reshaping SaaS Marketing

Zero-click searches may have reached 68% of Google queries in the U.S. by early 2026, according to recent studies. This suggests that most people finish their research on the search results page without visiting a website. Analysts say this trend may push SaaS marketers to focus more on brand visibility and citations rather than just getting visitors to their sites. The increase in zero-click searches appears linked to more featured snippets, knowledge panels, and AI-generated answers, especially on mobile. Marketers are now testing new tactics like publishing original data, optimizing for snippets, and tracking brand mentions to adapt to these changes.

DC's New Drip Pricing Ban Expands Liability to Third Parties
Institutional Intelligence & Tribal Knowledge5h ago

DC's New Drip Pricing Ban Expands Liability to Third Parties

Washington D.C.'s new law bans drip pricing, making it illegal for sellers to show prices that leave out required fees until checkout. The rule may hold not only sellers but also third parties, like payment processors and marketing vendors, responsible if they help hide fees. Companies must now include all mandatory charges (except taxes and real shipping) in the first price shown to customers. This change could make prices look higher at first, but it might help shoppers by making costs clearer and easier to compare. How the law is enforced, especially for subscriptions and hotels, may still change as cases go to court.

US Commerce Bans Anthropic's Fable 5, Mythos 5 AI Models Globally
AI News & Trends5h ago

US Commerce Bans Anthropic's Fable 5, Mythos 5 AI Models Globally

On June 12, 2026, the U.S. Commerce Department ordered Anthropic to disable global access to its advanced AI models Fable 5 and Mythos 5. Anthropic could not separate users by nationality, so it shut down both models for everyone. The decision is widely seen as the first time a government forced a company to take an advanced AI model offline, and may create major challenges for companies using these models. Experts suggest the rules might change again, and other companies could face similar actions if their models are considered too advanced. There is no set timeline for when access might return, and affected companies are looking for backup solutions.

Air Force adopts Salesforce for $72M, plans future AI integration
AI News & Trends7h ago

Air Force adopts Salesforce for $72M, plans future AI integration

The U.S. Air Force has agreed to use Salesforce software in a $72 million deal that may help combine many separate systems into one platform. This new system is expected to support future AI tools and make decision-making, training, and logistics easier and faster. Experts suggest this move might be a test case for wider use across the Department of Defense, but it is not certain how quickly it will be used or how effective it will be. The Air Force's use of Salesforce appears to focus on data consolidation and easier adoption of AI, but training workers may still be a challenge.

42 states subpoena OpenAI over consumer, health data practices
AI News & Trends7h ago

42 states subpoena OpenAI over consumer, health data practices

A group of 42 state attorneys general subpoenaed OpenAI in June 2026, asking for records about how the company handles consumer and health data, advertising, and policies for minors and the elderly. This move suggests that state officials want to see if OpenAI's actual practices match its safety and privacy claims. OpenAI said it is working with the investigation and takes the issues seriously, but it is not clear how long the process might take. The investigation may lead to further actions if gaps are found, and new state AI laws could shape what OpenAI is required to show.

Dynatrace expands AI Observability with LLM quality metrics
Business & Ethical AI7h ago

Dynatrace expands AI Observability with LLM quality metrics

Dynatrace is adding new ways to check the quality of large language models (LLMs), not just their speed and uptime. Experts say LLMs may give answers that sound good but can be wrong or biased, so teams now watch extra metrics like accuracy and fairness. The latest advice suggests tracking things like error rates, cost, and answer quality, and connecting these with normal performance data. Quality checks may include human review for risky tasks and scheduled tests to spot problems early. Reports suggest that trust in AI systems may rise when companies combine good monitoring, clear rules, and responsible behavior from leaders.

NTT DATA Expands Salesforce Practice in East Africa
AI News & Trends7h ago

NTT DATA Expands Salesforce Practice in East Africa

NTT DATA has announced plans to expand its Salesforce services in East Africa, responding to what appears to be increasing demand for cloud CRM and data-driven customer engagement in the region. The company is adding tools like Agentforce, MuleSoft, and Data 360, and plans to strengthen local skills through training. NTT DATA's recent acquisition of EXAH may help them tailor solutions to local needs and speed up AI uses in Salesforce. Analysts suggest growth depends on how quickly local talent can be certified and adopted by clients, with strong demand possibly pointing to a scale-up phase for Salesforce services in East Africa.

FTI unveils $80.5M modular plant in Louisiana, creating 500 jobs
AI News & Trends7h ago

FTI unveils $80.5M modular plant in Louisiana, creating 500 jobs

Faith Technologies Incorporated (FTI) announced plans for an $80.5 million modular manufacturing plant in Ouachita Parish, Louisiana, which is expected to create around 500 jobs. The company says the plant will use modular and lean methods to build electrical houses and substations, aiming to make construction faster, safer, and more consistent. Reports suggest this approach may lower labor hours and improve quality by moving work indoors. While 500 jobs is a small part of Louisiana's recent manufacturing growth, the project might offer higher wages and benefit from local incentives. Construction could start later this year, with production lines starting up in phases if permits are approved.

Google Developer forum unveils early user feedback on Vertex AI features
AI News & Trends9h ago

Google Developer forum unveils early user feedback on Vertex AI features

The Google Developer forum shares early user feedback on Vertex AI features, showing real questions and issues developers face as they try new tools. Users discuss topics like cost, training restarts, and how to use new features such as Gemini 1.5 Flash and context caching. Some posts suggest that features like Imagen 3 may still be improving, as users see mixed results. Advice from the forum may help others avoid problems and shows that some best practices, like saving frequent checkpoints, might help jobs recover from interruptions. Security and cost concerns also appear as common discussion points, and the forum seems to act as an early alert for issues before they show up in official Google documentation.