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Ai Artificial Intelligence Archive

Archives for February 2026

Terrence O'Brien
Terrence O'Brien
A former Trump advisor calls the fight with Anthropic “attempted corporate murder.”

Dean Ball, who worked as a senior AI policy advisor, said on X that designating Anthropic as a “supply chain risk” or threatening to invoke the Defense Production Act could have a chilling effect on the entire industry. Alan Rozenshtein, a former DOJ official specializing in technology law, told Politico this could be the first step toward partial nationalization of the AI industry.

Hayden Field
Hayden Field
OpenAI reached a new agreement with the Pentagon.

CEO Sam Altman wrote on X that the agreement allowed the US military to “deploy our models in their classified network.” He said the agreement reflects OpenAI’s desire for prohibitions on domestic mass surveillance and “human responsibility for the use of force, including for autonomous weapon systems.” Altman also wrote that OpenAI is “asking the DoW to offer these same terms to all AI companies, which in our opinion we think everyone should be willing to accept.” This follows a rollercoaster week of negotiations between Anthropic and the Pentagon.

Sam Altman’s post

[X (formerly Twitter)]

Trump orders federal agencies to drop Anthropic’s AITrump orders federal agencies to drop Anthropic’s AI
Hayden Field and Richard Lawler
Hayden Field
Hayden Field
Even Ilya Sutskever weighed in on the Anthropic-Pentagon situation.

The OpenAI co-founder, who left after CEO Sam Altman’s ouster and reinstatement and then started his own AI startup called Safe Superintelligence, posted on X:

It’s extremely good that Anthropic has not backed down, and it’s siginficant that OpenAI has taken a similar stance.

In the future, there will be much more challenging situations of this nature, and it will be critical for the relevant leaders to rise up to the occasion, for fierce competitors to put their differences aside. Good to see that happen today.

We don’t have to have unsupervised killer robots

AI companies could stand together to draw red lines on military AI — why aren’t they?

Hayden Field
Thomas Ricker
Thomas Ricker
OpenAI would have alerted police to Canadian shooter if account was discovered today.

That’s the takeaway from Altman and Co’s new safety protocols that govern when to involve law enforcement. The changes come after a fatal shooting at a school in Tumbler Ridge, British Columbia. this month that killed eight and left dozens injured.

The suspect’s interactions with ChatGPT suggested the possibility of real-world violence and led OpenAI to shut down the account, but not notify police.

Stevie Bonifield
Stevie Bonifield
Google Translate is using Gemini AI to offer alternative translations based on context.

In December, Google Translate started using Gemini AI to improve translations for colloquial phrases and idioms that might not make sense in other languages, and now the Translate app also offers alternative phrasings on iOS or Android.

Users can also ask the AI for more context with new “Understand” and “Ask” buttons.

A screenshot of Google Translate with a new “show alternatives” button.
Image: Google
Terrence O'Brien
Terrence O'Brien
Qobuz is automatically detecting and labeling AI music now, too.

Deezer started labeling AI content last year. Now Qobuz is doing the same. It’s also enacting an AI charter promising “The heart of Qobuz is and will remain human,” saying curation and editorial won’t be AI-driven. It stopped short of banning AI content, which some customers have been asking for.