Tuesday, June 23, 2026
Mozilla's AI finds 271 Firefox bugs, some 15 years oldAI News & Trends

Mozilla's AI finds 271 Firefox bugs, some 15 years old

Mozilla engineers report that an AI harness using Anthropic's model found 271 old Firefox bugs, some dating back 15 years. The system may have sped up finding and fixing issues that survived previous testing methods. The process uses two separate AI agents: one to find crashes and another to verify them before humans check the results. Mozilla suggests this method keeps false positives low. The findings suggest that using advanced AI models could make fixing browser bugs much faster.

Studies show AI coding boosts speed, but review bottlenecks stall releasesAI News & Trends

Studies show AI coding boosts speed, but review bottlenecks stall releases

Recent research suggests that while AI helps developers write code faster, it does not always make software releases quicker because reviewing and integrating the extra code may create new delays. Studies show coding tasks may be finished 20 - 45 percent faster with AI, but review times for code appear to increase, and more bugs might be released. Only teams that change their workflows see big improvements, and most of a developer's time is still spent on tasks other than just writing code. Experts recommend updating work habits and tracking new metrics to get the most value from AI tools in software development.

Sanders proposes $7 trillion AI fund, wants 50% public stake in AI firmsBusiness & Ethical AI

Sanders proposes $7 trillion AI fund, wants 50% public stake in AI firms

Senator Sanders has proposed a plan where companies making at least $200 million a year from AI would give half their shares to a public fund, which might be worth about $7 trillion. A special commission would manage these shares and could give out about $1,000 a year to each person, but experts say this amount is not certain and depends on company profits. The bill does not have support from Republicans or other Democrats, and many say it is unlikely to pass in the current Congress. Some people worry the plan could lower company values and mix up government roles, while others say it could give the public more control over AI.

Unilever, PepsiCo Scale AI to Cut Costs, Accelerate Product CyclesAI News & Trends

Unilever, PepsiCo Scale AI to Cut Costs, Accelerate Product Cycles

Unilever and PepsiCo are using AI to cut costs and speed up product development, and early results suggest these tools give them a lasting competitive edge. AI models may help companies launch products faster, forecast demand more accurately, and manage supply chains better. Some studies report that Unilever's use of AI raised sales by 30 percent and cut extra inventory by 15 percent, while PepsiCo shortened development time from months to weeks. Experts note that the biggest gains may come to companies that make AI a key part of their daily operations, rather than a side project. The impact of AI on profits and growth is still uneven, but experts believe that how deeply a company uses AI will matter more than its size.

Gartner: AI Accelerates Vulnerabilities, Exposure Management Needs Network ContextAI News & Trends

Gartner: AI Accelerates Vulnerabilities, Exposure Management Needs Network Context

Gartner's new guidance suggests that using network context is important for managing security exposure, since counting vulnerabilities alone may not show real risk. AI tools now find thousands of weaknesses much faster than companies can fix them, so old ways of making simple lists may not work anymore. The report recommends focusing on which systems are most important, how easy they are to attack, and whether the problems can really be exploited. Steps like tagging assets, linking vulnerabilities to real risks, and automating fixes may help teams keep up. Reports to leadership should focus on reducing risk to business, not just on how many patches were applied.

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Kearney Study: 38% of CEOs See AI Hype, Prioritize Data Readiness
AI News & Trends5h ago

Kearney Study: 38% of CEOs See AI Hype, Prioritize Data Readiness

Kearney's study finds that 38% of CEOs believe there is still hype around AI and are focusing their budgets on careful rollouts instead of spending freely. The research suggests that companies get better results when they adopt AI in small, measured steps and make sure their data is clean and organized first. It appears that ongoing costs for data and maintenance can be as high as the initial setup. The study also recommends testing AI projects with clear goals before investing more money. While 62% of CEOs see AI as transformative, most think that real value only comes when data is reliable and workflows are improved.

ByteByteGo unveils AI playbook for engineering transformation at scale
AI News & Trends7h ago

ByteByteGo unveils AI playbook for engineering transformation at scale

ByteByteGo released a guide that may help big engineering teams use AI more effectively across their companies. The playbook suggests starting with small teams, led by a dedicated leader, who use AI in their daily work and then spread successful practices to the rest of the company. It warns about common mistakes, like treating AI as just another tool or focusing on the wrong metrics. Progress should be measured by real results, not just activity. The guide does not promise that every company will succeed, but it suggests that strong leaders and clear goals might help drive lasting change.

OpenAI Expands Enterprise Sales to 500, Boosts Recurring Revenue Push
AI News & Trends19h ago

OpenAI Expands Enterprise Sales to 500, Boosts Recurring Revenue Push

OpenAI has grown its enterprise sales team to over 500 people, which may signal a move toward larger and more regular contracts with big companies. The company appears to be shifting from simple API usage to more complicated, multi-year deals, and enterprises may soon see new pricing structures and rules. OpenAI's offers for big buyers include different types of contracts, such as seats for each user, usage by tokens, and custom solutions. Sources suggest that new contracts now require higher service availability, better data controls, and stronger security standards. Experts recommend that companies set clear rules and checks before buying AI, since deals are getting more complex and might involve several pricing models.

Investment Firms Adopt AI to Automate Research, Keep Humans In Loop
Institutional Intelligence & Tribal Knowledge19h ago

Investment Firms Adopt AI to Automate Research, Keep Humans In Loop

Investment firms are starting to use AI to make research faster, but they still keep humans in charge of final decisions. AI may help with tasks like summarizing documents, sorting large lists, and searching data, but analysts check and approve the results. Different tools have different strengths, so firms might use a mix of them. Best practices suggest that every AI output should be reviewed by a person, especially for important decisions. Firms measure things like speed, mistake rate, and user happiness to decide if new AI workflows are ready for regular use.

Salesforce acquires Fin for $3.6B, boosts AI customer service
AI News & Trends19h ago

Salesforce acquires Fin for $3.6B, boosts AI customer service

Salesforce has agreed to buy Fin, an AI customer service company, in a deal worth about $3.6 billion. The deal may close in late 2027 if regulators approve it. Salesforce says this purchase should make its Agentforce AI framework stronger and help customers launch support agents faster. Fin's AI handles support across many channels and reportedly solves most issues without a person. Some changes for Fin's customers might happen after the deal is final, but near-term disruption appears unlikely.

OpenAI burned $3.7 billion in Q1 2026, raising sustainability questions
AI News & Trends19h ago

OpenAI burned $3.7 billion in Q1 2026, raising sustainability questions

OpenAI reportedly spent $3.7 billion in the first quarter of 2026, which is over half of its $5.7 billion in revenue. Most of this spending appears to go toward running and training large AI models, with compute being the biggest cost. Although OpenAI has over $73 billion in cash, there are concerns about whether current spending can keep up with revenue growth. Some estimates suggest OpenAI's yearly cash burn could reach $27 billion, and break-even may not happen before 2030. These figures highlight the high costs and uncertainty around the sustainability of advanced AI development.

Investors Adopt Hybrid AI Stacks, Blend LLMs and Finance Platforms
Business & Ethical AI21h ago

Investors Adopt Hybrid AI Stacks, Blend LLMs and Finance Platforms

Investors are starting to use both general large language models (LLMs) and finance-specific platforms together, but picking the right tool for each task can be unclear. Studies suggest general LLMs like GPT-4o may have about 47% accuracy on finance questions, while platforms like AlphaSense could offer more reliable and easier-to-check data. A combination approach seems to work best: use LLMs for flexible tasks and finance platforms for trusted sources. Adoption of AI agents in finance appears to be growing but is still cautious due to data and oversight challenges. Experts recommend keeping humans in charge of final decisions and using clear steps to manage risks and trace responsibilities.

Nadella Defines AI 'Learning Loop' as Lasting Company Advantage
AI News & Trends21h ago

Nadella Defines AI 'Learning Loop' as Lasting Company Advantage

Satya Nadella suggests that combining human judgment with company-owned AI, called the "learning loop," may give companies a lasting advantage. This approach links employee knowledge with AI systems trained on their own data, creating something competitors cannot easily copy. Experts warn that just renting AI tools might increase risks and loss of control. Case studies like Tesla, Walmart, and Microsoft appear to show that continuously learning from daily operations can make organizations stronger. However, Nadella emphasizes that people remain key, as human oversight and judgment guide the AI's improvement.

Microsoft's 2026 Work Trend Index Reveals How AI Affects Culture
Business & Ethical AI21h ago

Microsoft's 2026 Work Trend Index Reveals How AI Affects Culture

Microsoft's 2026 Work Trend Index suggests that when managers model how to use AI, employees see more value and trust in AI systems. The study indicates that organizational factors may matter more than individual attitudes for most AI impacts. Experts recommend clearly defining what AI can and cannot do, keeping team rituals to preserve culture, and encouraging safe experimentation with AI. Upskilling employees and tracking culture health regularly may help prevent problems and build trust as AI becomes part of daily work.

Star Google AI Researcher Shazeer Joins OpenAI
AI News & Trends21h ago

Star Google AI Researcher Shazeer Joins OpenAI

Noam Shazeer, a well-known AI researcher from Google and co-author of the Transformer paper, has joined OpenAI after about twenty years at Google. His move comes during a time when several top researchers are leaving Google DeepMind, raising questions about how AI companies keep their talent. Reports suggest Shazeer will work on model architecture at OpenAI, which may help make their AI systems more efficient, but details about his project are not clear yet. This change shows that big AI labs are actively competing for experts, and it is not certain if Google's current team can make up for losing Shazeer.