Apple's lawsuit is already hurting OpenAI
Digest more
The iPhone maker filed the suit Friday in a California federal court, accusing OpenAI and two former Apple employees who now work at the AI company of stealing trade secrets relat
OpenAI recently filed paperwork for its IPO, but advisors were not convinced that the company could (or should) fetch the trillion-dollar valuation that Altman is set on receiving. The company was essentially presented with two options: Go public later this year at a lower price target and at a market cap of less than $1 trillion,
Apple’s suit against OpenAI under Tim Cook echoes a familiar playbook, betting that litigation can delay a rival from upending the iPhone era.
The company’s desktop makes it clear that free ChatGPT users are not its focus.
The ChatGPT developer’s recent model beats releases from Elon Musk’s SpaceX and Alphabet’s Google on Artificial Analysis’s intelligence ranking.
OpenAI said its most advanced offering, GPT-5.6, is designed to complete more work while using significantly fewer tokens, a unit of data processed by AI models. This will make the software far more cost efficient for customers.
OpenAI hires Google Cloud director Philip Larson to scale AI solutions via the OpenAI Partner Network including AI model incentives, partner portals and channel enablement.
OpenAI is sunsetting its AI-powered browser after less than a year. But it's moving some agentic browsing features to its desktop app and a Chrome extension.
The 41-page lawsuit Apple filed against OpenAI for allegedly stealing trade secrets is a good read. Unless you’re OpenAI, that is. The suit alleges nothing short of a wide-scale corporate espionage campaign carried out by ex-Apple employees who joined OpenAI,
