China's lead in open-source AI jolts Washington and Silicon Valley. China’s ambition to turn its open-source artificial-intelligence models into a global standard has jolted American companies and policymakers, who fear U.S. models could be eclipsed and are mobilizing their responses to the threat, the WSJ reports. Chinese advances in AI have come one after another this year, starting with the widely heralded DeepSeek and its R1 reasoning model in January. This was followed by Alibaba’s Qwen and a flurry of others since July.
OpenAI's rocky GPT-5 rollout shows struggle to remain undisputed AI leader. OpenAI’s newest AI model, GPT-5, was supposed to cement the startup’s status as the undisputed leader in the AI race. Instead, it has had a tumultuous public launch, frustrating users and prompting Chief Executive Sam Altman to respond, the WSJ says. Users have flooded social media with embarrassing examples of how the chatbot failed to answer simple math questions or accurately draw a map of North America. Altman on Tuesday promised to imbue GPT-5 with a “warmer personality,” restored a popular model and introduced the capability for users to decide which kind of query they want to make.
Why China loves and fears Nvidia’s H20 chip. One reason: In late July, China’s cyberspace regulator summoned Nvidia representatives to discuss alleged “backdoor” security risks around the H20 chips, including the ability to track chip location and the possibility of a “kill switch” in the chips that would be operable under U.S. orders. Chinese officials have also raised concerns over proposed U.S. legislation seeking to add tracking capabilities for advanced chips sold abroad, WSJ reports.
CoreWeave revenue triples on hot AI demand. The firm's second-quarter revenue more than tripled from a year ago as the company works to keep up with soaring AI demand, WSJ reports.
Anthropic offers AI chatbot Claude to US government for $1. The news comes days after rival OpenAI had announced a similar offer last week, wherein ChatGPT Enterprise was made available to participating U.S. federal agencies for $1 per agency for the next year, Reuters reports.
Crypto firm Circle posts loss in first earnings report after IPO. Circle reported a net loss of $482 million in the second quarter, compared with a profit of $33 million a year ago. Analysts polled by FactSet had estimated a loss of $338 million, WSJ reports.
Crypto entrepreneur Do Kwon pleads guilty to fraud charges stemming from crypto crash. Disgraced cryptocurrency tycoon Do Kwon pleaded guilty to two criminal counts of fraud on Tuesday in connection with the $40 billion crash of his TerraUSD and Luna coins in 2022, WSJ reports.
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