OpenAI prepping major ChatGPT overhaul ahead of IPO, Meta admits 20k+ Instagram accounts were hacked, Google reportedly orders more than 3M AI chips from Intel.
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Show Notes
NVIDIA and LG Expand AI Partnership
NVIDIA and LG are expanding their partnership across robotics, AI data centers, and autonomous vehicles. NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang said the companies are working closely to combine NVIDIA’s AI platforms with LG’s manufacturing, robotics, and infrastructure capabilities, supporting NVIDIA’s push beyond AI chips into industrial AI while positioning LG as a key deployment partner for factories, robots, and mobility systems.
Source: Chosun
OpenAI Reportedly Preparing Major ChatGPT Redesign
The Financial Times’ sources say OpenAI is preparing a major ChatGPT redesign that will expand into coding, image generation, and integrations with third-party apps like Canva and Booking.com. The overhaul could reportedly roll out in the coming weeks and is designed to make ChatGPT a broader productivity platform for consumers and businesses, helping OpenAI attract enterprise customers, compete more directly with Anthropic, and support its rumored IPO plans.
Source: Engadget
Meta Says 20,225 Instagram Accounts May Have Been Compromised
Meta told Maine’s Attorney General’s Office that 20,225 Instagram accounts may have been compromised after attackers exploited a bug in an AI-powered account recovery tool that let them redirect password reset links to their own email addresses. The flaw primarily affected users without two-factor authentication enabled, and Meta has since disabled the tool, reset affected accounts, and is notifying users while it investigates what data may have been accessed.
Source: SecurityWeek
Meta Accuses NSO Group of Violating Court Order
Meta says it has disrupted a phishing campaign linked to Israeli spyware maker NSO Group that targeted fewer than 10 WhatsApp users, primarily in Jordan and Lebanon, despite a court order banning NSO from targeting WhatsApp and its users. Meta is now asking a federal court to hold NSO in contempt, arguing the campaign violated an injunction that followed its long-running lawsuit over the Pegasus spyware platform.
Source: Engadget
UK Pushes Apple and Google to Block Nude Images for Minors
Speaking at London Tech Week, UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer says he’s given Apple and Google three months to block under-18-year-old users from taking, sending, or viewing nude images on smartphones and tablets, warning that the government will legislate otherwise. The proposal would require child-safety protections to be enabled by default, building on existing online safety rules as the government considers broader restrictions on children’s access to social media.
Source: BBC
Bending Spoons Files for U.S. IPO
Bending Spoons, the owner of Vimeo, WeTransfer, Eventbrite, and Evernote, has filed for a U.S. IPO. The company generated $1.31 billion in revenue in 2025 and $601 million in Q1 2026 alone, and Reuters previously reported it could seek a valuation of around $20 billion as investors continue to back its strategy of acquiring and restructuring struggling internet businesses.
Source: TechCrunch
Google and NVIDIA Look to Intel as AI Supply Chains Diversify
The Information’s sources say Google has ordered more than 3 million AI chips from Intel for delivery in 2028, while NVIDIA is testing Intel’s advanced packaging technology and 18A manufacturing process for future GPUs. The moves reflect growing concerns about relying too heavily on TSMC as AI demand strains capacity and could provide a major boost to Intel’s efforts to rebuild its contract chip manufacturing business.
Source: The Next Web
U.S. Pushes NATO Allies to Replace Huawei Equipment
Bloomberg’s sources say U.S. State Department China coordinator Joshua Young urged NATO allies to use newly expanded defense budgets to remove Huawei equipment from their telecom networks and replace it with other vendors’ gear. European leaders remain divided over a Huawei ban as countries like Germany and Spain resist EU-wide restrictions, despite concerns that Chinese vendors supply roughly a third to 40% of the continent’s 5G infrastructure.
Source: Bloomberg
Uber, Wayve, and Waymo Head Toward London Robotaxi Battle
Uber has opened an interest list for riders in the UK who want to be matched with robotaxis powered by Wayve’s self-driving technology, ahead of a planned London launch in the coming months pending regulatory approval. The service would put Uber and Wayve in direct competition with Waymo, which is already testing around 100 autonomous vehicles in London, setting up a key battle for leadership in Europe’s emerging robotaxi market.
Source: TechCrunch
Could Smartphones Be Driving Falling Birth Rates?
Two new studies from Middlebury College and the University of Cincinnati suggest smartphones may be a significant driver of falling birth rates, not because of radiation but because of how people use them. The Middlebury study found the iPhone’s early rollout may explain up to half of the U.S. fertility decline between 2007 and 2011 among people aged 15 to 24, while the University of Cincinnati study found teenage fertility rates fell faster across 128 countries as smartphones became widely adopted, though some economists say the evidence remains suggestive rather than conclusive.
Source: The New York Times
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