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AI's not going to kill open source code security

https://www.theregister.com/2026/04/26/opinion_column/
1•CrankyBear•35s ago•0 comments

Nonlinearity Affects a Pendulum

https://www.johndcook.com/blog/2026/04/24/nonlinear-pendulum/
1•ibobev•1m ago•0 comments

Nth Derivative of a Quotient

https://www.johndcook.com/blog/2026/04/25/nth-derivative-of-a-quotient/
1•ibobev•1m ago•0 comments

Closed-form solution nonlinear pendulum with Jacobi functions

https://www.johndcook.com/blog/2026/04/25/exact-solution-nonlinear-pendulum/
1•ibobev•1m ago•0 comments

Hardware-accelerated 4K video on RK3588 with Linux 7.0

https://seoulsaram.org/articles/RK3588/mainline-hwdec
2•captain_bender•4m ago•0 comments

Agentic ML engineer. works with Colab. Zero infra needed. 3x faster TurboQuant

https://github.com/altaidevorg/isanagent
1•monatis•4m ago•1 comments

Sometimes Your Job Is to Get in the Way

https://randsinrepose.com/archives/sometimes-your-job-is-to-get-in-the-way/
2•mooreds•5m ago•0 comments

Raspberry Pi Badgeware

https://www.raspberrypi.com/news/raspberry-pi-badgeware/
1•salkahfi•5m ago•0 comments

Why Food Additives May Not Be FDA Reviewed

https://undark.org/2026/04/24/interview-jennifer-pomeranz/
1•speckx•5m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Explain Like I'm Five for ArXiv Papers

https://eli.voxos.ai/
1•Falimonda•5m ago•0 comments

AI Cannot Self Improve and Math Behind Proves IT

https://smsk.dev/2026/04/26/ai-cannot-self-improve-and-math-behind-proves-it/
1•ColinWright•5m ago•0 comments

The emergence of just-in-time integrations

https://nango.dev/blog/just-in-time-integrations/
1•rguldener•6m ago•0 comments

A Fast Quicksort in C for Modern CPUs with Threads and Branch‑Avoidant Coding

https://easylang.online/blog/threaded_sorting
1•signa11•7m ago•0 comments

Can birds catch diseases from birdbaths?

https://coloradosun.com/2026/04/27/can-birds-catch-diseases-from-birdbaths/
1•mooreds•7m ago•0 comments

The Top%: Engineering Tenzai's AI Hacker to Compete with Elite Humans

https://blog.tenzai.com/tenzais-ai-hacker-to-compete-with-elite-humans/
1•gk1•9m ago•0 comments

Mythos Preview: What Every CISO Should Do Now

https://blog.tenzai.com/mythos-preview-what-every-ciso-should-do-now/
1•gk1•9m ago•0 comments

Don't Fall for This PayPal Deposit Scam

https://www.mouseprint.org/2026/04/27/dont-fall-for-this-paypal-deposit-scam/
2•speckx•13m ago•0 comments

A chemistry lab that runs itself to find the perfect reaction

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-01283-4
1•Brajeshwar•16m ago•0 comments

AI Is Getting Boring

https://www.france24.com/en/tv-shows/tech-24/20260426-ai-is-already-getting-boring
2•speckx•16m ago•0 comments

I built a WordPress plugin that generates 1000 SEO pages in minutes

https://www.indiehackers.com/post/i-built-a-wordpress-plugin-that-generates-100-seo-pages-in-minu...
1•codefreex•19m ago•0 comments

Google's new gradient icons for Gmail, Drive and others are radical redesigns

https://9to5google.com/2026/04/26/gmail-google-gradient-redesign/
1•maxloh•20m ago•0 comments

GPT-5.5 hallucinates at 6 times the rate of Opus 4.7 on degraded insurance docs

https://aginor.ai/extraction-test/
2•TimGMichaud•23m ago•0 comments

Show HN: NetCopilot – AI-native terminal for network engineers

https://netcopilot.app/
1•anaspro•23m ago•0 comments

Toward an Ethics and Etiquette for Electronic Mail (1985)

https://www.rand.org/pubs/reports/R3283.html
1•Schlagbohrer•26m ago•1 comments

Iran offers to reopen Strait of Hormuz if US lifts its blockade and the war ends

https://apnews.com/article/us-iran-war-hormuz-april-27-2026-374d81d1aac6d8f19c21e1d1e10ab103
3•SilverElfin•27m ago•0 comments

Barn (Unit)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barn_(unit)
2•_Microft•27m ago•0 comments

Show HN: A live autonomous economic network for AI agents

https://ainetwork-global.github.io
1•ai-network-lab•27m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: My project made news as a "Scam", what can I do?

https://www.kitv.com/video/news/state-warns-of-cybersecurity-phishing-threat-from-website-imperso...
1•arionhardison•28m ago•2 comments

The AI Splurge Is Costing Big Tech Its Workforce

https://www.wsj.com/tech/ai/the-ai-splurge-is-costing-big-tech-its-workforce-34a88e68
1•mmurph211•30m ago•0 comments

Release PiClaw v2.0.3 – Wormulon · rcarmo/piclaw

https://github.com/rcarmo/piclaw/releases/tag/v2.0.3
1•rcarmo•30m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

The next phase of the Microsoft OpenAI partnership – OpenAI

https://openai.com/index/next-phase-of-microsoft-partnership/
62•helsinkiandrew•1h ago

Comments

aurareturn•1h ago
The original "AGI" agreement was always a bit suspect and open to wild interpretations.

I think this is good for OpenAI. They're no longer stuck with just Microsoft. It was an advantage that Anthropic can work with anyone they like but OpenAI couldn't.

Handy-Man•1h ago
It also restricted Microsoft from "partnering" with anyone else. Wouldn't be surprised if we see another news like Amazon, Alphabet investing in Anthropic.
aurareturn•1h ago
I don't think Microsoft ever had that restriction. They partnered with everyone already.

https://blogs.microsoft.com/blog/2025/11/18/microsoft-nvidia...

https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/blog/deepseek-r1-is-now-av...

https://ai.azure.com/

utopiah•1h ago
Also Mistral e.g. https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/blog/microsoft-and-mistral...

AFAICT they are just hedging their bets left and right still. Also feels like they are winning in the sense that despite pretty much all those products being roughly equivalent... they are still running on their cloud, Azure. So even though they seem unable to capture IP anymore, they are still managing to get paid for managing the infrastructure.

Handy-Man•1h ago
Yeah my bad, I was misremembering, it was about investing in others and pursuing its own "AGI" efforts. But even those conditions were updated over the last two years, hence the small investment in Anthropic last year.
philipwhiuk•7m ago
They had it till October: https://blogs.microsoft.com/blog/2025/10/28/the-next-chapter...
dahcryn•1h ago
I think it was a lot less restrictive, as far as I understood, the only limit was Microsoft not being allowed to launch competing Microsoft-developed LLMs.
aliljet•1h ago
Why is this being made public?
brookst•1h ago
It’s an agreement between a public company and a highly scrutinized private company. Several of the provisions will change what happens in the marketplace, which everyone will see.

I imagine the thinking was that it’s better to just post it clearly than to have rumors and leaks and speculations that could hurt both companies (“should I risk using GCP for OpenAI models when it’s obviously against the MS / OpenAI agreement?”).

Schlagbohrer•32m ago
Also it's about OpenAI going public.
ZeroCool2u•1h ago
Interesting side effect of this is that Google Cloud may now be the only hype scaler that can resell all 3 of the labs models? Maybe I'm misinterpreting this, but that would be a notable development, and I don't see why Google would allow Gemini to be resold through any of the other cloud providers.

Might really increase the utility of those GCP credits.

aurareturn•1h ago
Might not be good for Gemini long term if Anthropic and OpenAI can and will sell in every cloud provider they can find but businesses can only use Gemini via Google Cloud.
jfoster•45m ago
Good for Google Cloud, bad for Gemini = ??? for Google
stavros•45m ago
How is it good for Gemini that it's not available on two out of three major cloud platforms?
aurareturn•42m ago
It isn't. That's why I said "might not be good for Gemini".
stavros•14m ago
Oof, I completely missed that "not", thanks.
retinaros•30m ago
that will likely mean the end of gemini models...
_jab•1h ago
This agreement feels so friendly towards OpenAI that it's not obvious to me why Microsoft accepted this. I guess Microsoft just realized that the previous agreement was kneecapping OpenAI so much that the investment was at risk, especially with serious competition now coming from Anthropic?
dinosor•1h ago
> Microsoft will no longer pay a revenue share to OpenAI.

I feel this looks like a nice thing to have given they remain the primary cloud provider. If Azure improves it's overall quality then I don't see why this ends up as a money printing press as long as OpenAI brings good models?

JumpCrisscross•51m ago
OpenAI was also threatening to accuse "Microsoft of anticompetitive behavior during their partnership," an "effort [which] could involve seeking federal regulatory review of the terms of the contract for potential violations of antitrust law, as well as a public campaign" [1].

[1] https://www.wsj.com/tech/ai/openai-and-microsoft-tensions-ar...

someguyiguess•46m ago
Pot? Meet Kettle.
aurareturn•50m ago
Does this mean Microsoft gets OpenAI's models for "free" without having to pay them a dime until 2032?

And on top of that, OpenAI still has to pay Microsoft a share of their revenue made on AWS/Google/anywhere until 2030?

And Microsoft owns 27% of OpenAI, period?

That's a damn good deal for Microsoft. Likely the investment that will keep Microsoft's stock relevant for years.

lokar•34m ago
Does anyone expect azure quality to improve? Has it improved at all in the last 3 years? Does leadership at MS think it needs to improve?

I doubt it

jakeydus•17m ago
Don’t worry I’m sure there’s a few products without copilot integration still. They’ll get to them before too long.
dkrich•45m ago
Probably more that they are compute constrained. In his latest post Ben Thompson talks about how Microsoft had to use their own infrastructure and supplant outside users in the process so this is probably to free up compute.
DanielHB•23m ago
Microsoft is a major shareholder of OpenAI, they don't want their investment to go to 0. You don't just take a loss on a multiple-digit billion investment.
airstrike•59m ago
"Advancing Our Amazing Bet" type post
31276•56m ago
Pursue "new opportunities"? Microslop is dumping OpenAI and wishes it well in its new endeavors.
iewj•52m ago
In retrospect all those OAI announcements are gonna look so cringe.

They did not need to go so hard on the hype - Anthropic hasn’t in relative terms and is generating pretty comparable revenues at present.

JumpCrisscross•41m ago
> They did not need to go so hard on the hype - Anthropic hasn’t in relative terms and is generating pretty comparable revenues at present

OpenAI bet on consumers; Anthropic on enterprise. That will necessitate a louder marketing strategy for the former.

eieiw•33m ago
That’s funny.

Why is it Altman is facing kill shots and Dario isn’t?

JumpCrisscross•21m ago
> Why is it Altman is facing kill shots and Dario isn’t?

Altman peaked in the zeiteist in 2023; Dario, much less prominently, in 2024 and now '26 [1]. I'd guess around this time next year, Dario will be as hated as Altman is today.

[1] https://trends.google.com/explore?q=altman%2C%20Dario&date=t...

aurareturn•43m ago
I read this as the other way. OpenAI was desperate to dump Microsoft.
JumpCrisscross•8m ago
> OpenAI was desperate to dump Microsoft

Yes. Microsoft was "considering legal action against its partner OpenAI and Amazon over a $50 billion deal that could violate its exclusive cloud agreement with the ChatGPT maker" [1].

[1] https://www.reuters.com/technology/microsoft-weighs-legal-ac...

airstrike•55m ago
Kagi Translate was kind enough to turn this from LinkedIn Speak to English:

The Microsoft and OpenAI situation just got messy.

We had to rewrite the contract because the old one wasn't working for anyone. Basically, we’re trying to make it look like we’re still friends while we both start seeing other people. Here is what’s actually happening:

1. Microsoft is still the main guy, but if they can't keep up with the tech, OpenAI is moving out. OpenAI can now sell their stuff on any cloud provider they want.

2. Microsoft keeps the keys to the tech until 2032, but they don't have the exclusive rights anymore.

3. Microsoft is done giving OpenAI a cut of their sales.

4. OpenAI still has to pay Microsoft back until 2030, but we put a ceiling on it so they don't go totally broke.

5. Microsoft is still just a big shareholder hoping the stock goes up.

We’re calling this "simplifying," but really we’re just trying to build massive power plants and chips without killing each other yet. We’re still stuck together for now.

azinman2•42m ago
This was actually really helpful. I feel like it should be done for all PR speak.
JumpCrisscross•34m ago
It's better than the original, but still off.

"The Microsoft and OpenAI situation just got messy" is objectively wrong–it has been messy for months [1]. Nos. 1 through 3 are fine, though "if they can't keep up with the tech, OpenAI is moving out" parrots OpenAI's party line. No. 4 doesn't make sense–it starts out with "we" referring to OpenAI in the first person but ends by referring to them in the third person "they." No. 5 is reductive when phrased with "just."

It would seem the translator took corporate PR speak and translated it into something between the LinkedIn and short-form blogger dialects.

[1] https://www.wsj.com/tech/ai/openai-and-microsoft-tensions-ar...

Maxatar•22m ago
Being objectively correct isn't the goal of the translator, the translator can't possibly know if a statement is truthful. What the translator does is well... translate, specifically from some kind of corporate speak that is really difficult for many people including myself to understand, into something more familiar.

I don't expect the translation to take OpenAI's statements and make them truthful or to investigate their veracity, but I genuinely could not understand OpenAI's press release as they have worded it. The translation at least makes it easier to understand what OpenAI's view of the situation is.

ghostly_s•15m ago
> The only only pure fuck-up I'd call out is switching from third to first person when referring to OpenAI in the same sentence (No. 4).

"We" in this sentence refers to both parties; "they" refers to OpenAI. Not a grammatical error.

JumpCrisscross•12m ago
> "We" in this sentence refers to both parties

Fair enough.

> "they" refers to OpenAI. Not a grammatical error

I'd say it is. It's a press release from OpenAI. The rest of the release uses the third-person "they" to refer to Microsoft. The LLM traded accuracy for a bad joke, which is someting I associate with LinkedIn speak.

The fundmaental problem might be the OpenAI press release is vague. (And changing. It's changed at least once since I first commented.)

auscompgeek•8m ago
In isolation sure. But in context with the other points it makes it look like "they" refers to Microsoft in all the dot points.
MarleTangible•32m ago
For reference: https://translate.kagi.com/?from=LinkedIn+speak&to=en
Eridrus•52m ago
Biggest upside of this is I expect OpenAI models to be available on Bedrock, which is huge for not having to go back to all your customers with data protection agreements.
easton•48m ago
Isn’t that an “API product”? I read this assuming the whole point of renegotiation was to let OpenAI sell raw inference via bedrock, but that still seems to be blocked except for selling to the US Government.
fengkx•42m ago
> OpenAI can now jointly develop some products with third parties. API products developed with third parties will be exclusive to Azure. Non-API products may be served on any cloud provider.

This seems impossible.

jryio•51m ago
> OpenAI has contracted to purchase an incremental $250B of Azure services, and Microsoft will no longer have a right of first refusal to be OpenAI’s compute provider.

Azure is effectively OpenAI's personal compute cluster at this scale.

JumpCrisscross•49m ago
What fraction of Azure compute does OpenAI represent? (Does the $250bn commitment have a time period? Is it legally binding?)
runako•46m ago
Azure did $75B last quarter.

That article doesn't give a timeframe, but most of these use 10 years as a placeholder. I would also imagine it's not a requirement for them to spend it evenly over the 10 years, so could be back-loaded.

OpenAI is a large customer, but this is not making Azure their personal cluster.

einrealist•44m ago
I wonder how this figure was settled. Is it based on consumer pricing? Can't Microsoft and OpenAI just make a number up, aside from a minimum to cover operating costs? When is the number just a marketing ploy to make it seem huge, important and inevitable (and too big to fail)?
m3kw9•50m ago
Looks like MS is shafting OpenAI.
delis-thumbs-7e•50m ago
It’s insane how they talk about AGI, like it was some scientifically qualifiable thing that is certain to happen any time now. When I have become the javelin Olympic Champion, I will buy a vegan ice cream to everyone with a HN account.
hx8•48m ago
Do the investments make sense if AGI is not less than 10 years away?
JumpCrisscross•44m ago
> Do the investments make sense if AGI is not less than 10 years away?

They can. If one consolidated the AI industry into a single monopoly, it would probably be profitable. That doesn't mean in its current state it can't succumb to ruionous competition. But the AGI talk seems to be mostly aimed at retail investors and philospher podcasters than institutional capital.

iewj•42m ago
What kind of ludicrous statement is this? Any monopoly with viable economics for profit with no threat of competition yields monopoly profits…
JumpCrisscross•39m ago
> Any monopoly with viable economics for profit with no threat of competition yields monopoly profits

"With viable economics" is the point.

My "ludicrous statement" is a back-of-the-envelope test for whether an industry is nonsense. For comparison, consolidating all of the Pets.com competitors in the late 1990s would not have yielded a profitable company.

eieiw•37m ago
Very convenient to leave out Amazon in your back of the envelope test, whose internal metrics were showing a path toward quasi-monopoly profits.

Do you argue in good faith?

There’s a difference between being too early vs being nonsense.

JumpCrisscross•27m ago
> Very convenient to leave out Amazon in your back of the envelope test, who’s internal metrics were showing a path toward quasi-monopoly profits

Not in the 1990s. The American e-commerce industry was structurally unprofitable prior to the dot-com crash, an event Amazon (and eBay) responded responded to by fundamentally changing their businesses. Amazon bet on fulfillment. eBay bet on payments. Both represented a vertical integration that illustrates the point–the original model didn't work.

> There’s a difference between being too early vs being nonsense

When answering the question "do the investments make sense," not really. You're losing your money either way.

The American AI industry appears to have "viable economics for profit" without AGI. That doesn't guarantee anyone will earn them. But it's not a meaningless conclusion. (Though I'd personally frame it as a hypothesis I'm leaning towards.)

SkyEyedGreyWyrm•1m ago
There is also the economics of things, Malcolm Harris' Palo Alto explained the failures of many dotcom startups and Amazon's later success in the field (in part) to the fact that dotcom era delivery was done by highly trained, highly compensated, unionized in-company workers, meanwhile Amazon prevents unions, contracts (or contracted, I'm not up to date on this) companies for delivery and has exploitative working conditions with high turnover, the economics are very different and are a big contributor to their success
Maxatar•17m ago
>"...viable economics for profit..."

OP did not include this requirement in their post because doing so would make the claim trivially true.

rapind•44m ago
Best way to achieve AGI: Redefine AGI.
jrflo•21m ago
The investments don't make sense.
theplatman•48m ago
when i realized that sama isn't that much of an ai researcher, it became clearer that this is more akin to a group delusion for hype purposes than a real possibility
iewj•44m ago
He’s a glorified portfolio manager (questionable how good he actually is given the results vs Anthropic and how quickly they closed the valuation gap with far less money invested) + expert hype man to raise money for risky projects.
lokar•37m ago
From the reporting I’ve read his main attributes are being a sociopath with an amazing ability to manipulate people 1:1
sourraspberry•30m ago
You can read the leaked emails from the Musk lawsuit.

At the very least, Ilya Sutskever genuinely believed it, even when they were just making a DOTA bot, and not for hype purposes.

I know he's been out of OpenAI for a while, but if his thinking trickled down into the company's culture, which given his role and how long he was there I would say seems likely, I don't think it's all hype.

Grand delusion, perhaps.

someguyiguess•47m ago
Any sufficiently complex LLM is indistinguishable from AGI
JumpCrisscross•47m ago
> Any sufficiently complex LLM is indistinguishable from AGI

Isn't this tautology? We've de facto defined AGI as a "sufficiently complex LLM."

Schlagbohrer•44m ago
Yes! Same logic as the financials, in which the companies pass back and forth the same $200 Billion promissory note.
izzydata•32m ago
If we take that statement as fact then I don't believe we are even close to an LLM being sufficiently complex enough.

However, I don't think it is even true. LLMs may not even be on the right track to achieving AGI and without starting from scratch down an alternate path it may never happen.

LLMs to me seem like a complicated database lookup. Storage and retrieval of information is just a single piece of intelligence. There must be more to intelligence than a statistical model of the probable next piece of data. Where is the self learning without intervention by a human. Where is the output that wasn't asked for?

At any rate. No amount of hype is going to get me to believe AGI is going to happen soon. I'll believe it when I see it.

esafak•26m ago
Some might be missing the reference: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clarke's_three_laws
HumblyTossed•47m ago
The continued fleecing of investors.
stavros•47m ago
At this point, AGI is either here, or perpetually two years away, depending on your definition.
greybeard69•44m ago
Full Self-Driving 2.0
xienze•44m ago
It's always been this way. I remember, speaking of Microsoft, when they came to my school around 2002 or so giving a talk on AI. They very confidently stated that AGI had already been "solved", we know exactly how to do it, only problem is the hardware. But they estimated that would come in about ten years...
jakeydus•18m ago
I knew flappy bird was a bigger deal than it got credit for. Didn’t realize it was agi until just now.
lucaslazarus•45m ago
It’s pretty much a religious eschatology at this point
rtkwe•8m ago
It feels like they have to say/believe it because it's kind of the only thing that can justify the costs being poured into it and the cost it will need to charge eventually (barring major optimizations) to actually make money on users.
ModernMech•43m ago
AGI is right around the corner, and we're all going to be rich, there's going to be abundance for everyone, universal high income, everyone will live in a penthouse...

...just please stop burning our warehouses and blocking our datacenters.

nikeyshon•43m ago
Where do I sign up?
otabdeveloper4•33m ago
> AGI

We already have several billion useless NGI's walking around just trying to keep themselves alive.

Are we sure adding more GI's is gonna help?

RobRivera•31m ago
Make mine p p p p p p vicodin
CWwdcdk7h•26m ago
It sounds really similar to Uber pitch about how they are going to have monopoly as soon as they replace those pesky drivers with own fleet of self driving cars. That was supposed to be their competitive edge against other taxi apps. In the end they sold ATG at end of 2020 :D
PurpleRamen•23m ago
They redefined AGI to be an economical thing, so they can continue making up their stories. All that talk is really just business, no real science in the room there.
JumpCrisscross•10m ago
> They redefined AGI to be an economical thing

Huh. Source? I mean, typical OpenAI bullshit, but would love to know how they defined it.

freejazz•48m ago
Impossible to take any of this seriously when it constantly refers to AGI.
Schlagbohrer•31m ago
Especially when the OpenAI definition of AGI is only in financial terms (when it becomes profitable), which can be easily manipulated.
TheAtomic•46m ago
"We want to sell surveillance services to the US gov. MSFT was hesitant so we gave ourselves room to do it without them."
Schlagbohrer•32m ago
Extremely hard to believe that MSFT would have any hesitancy about working with the US government.
Schlagbohrer•44m ago
The AGI talk is shocking but not surprising to anyone looking at how bombastic Sam Altman's public statements are.

The circular economy section really is shocking- OpenAI committing to buying $250 Billion of Azure services, while MSFT's stake is clarified as $132 Billion in OpenAI. Same circular nonsense as NVIDIA and OpenAI passing the same hundred billion back and forth.

ModernMech•41m ago
Dennis: I think we made every single one of our Paddy's Dollars back, buddy.

Mac: You're damn right. Thus creating the self-sustaining economy we've been looking for.

Dennis: That's right.

Mac: How much fresh cash did we make?

Dennis: Fresh cash! Uh, well, zero. Zero if you're talking about U.S. currency. People didn't really seem interested in spending any of that.

Mac: That's okay. So, uh, when they run out of the booze, they'll come back in and they'll have to buy more Paddy's Dollars. Keepin' it moving.

Dennis: Right. That is assuming, of course, that they will come back here and drink.

Mac: They will! They will because we'll re-distribute these to the Shanties. Thus ensuring them coming back in, keeping the money moving.

Dennis: Well, no, but if we just re-distribute these, people will continue to drink for free.

Mac: Okay...

Dennis: How does this work, Mac?

Mac: The money keeps moving in a circle.

Dennis: But we don't have any money. All we have is this. ... How does this work, dude!?

Mac: I don't know. I thought you knew.

concinds•36m ago
Am I crazy, or was this press release fully rewritten in the past 10 minutes? The current version is around half the length of the old one, which did not frame it as a "simplification" "grounded in flexibility" but as a deeper partnership. It also had word salad about AGI, and said Azure retained exclusivity for API products but not other products, which the new statement seems to contradict.

What was I looking at?

einsteinx2•28m ago
I noticed the exact same thing. I read the original, went back to read it again and it’s completely changed.
antonkochubey•4m ago
They forgot the "hey ChatGPT, rewrite this to have better impact on the company stock" before submitting it
martinald•33m ago
Really interesting. Why would Microsoft have done this deal? I'm a bit lost. Sure they get to not pay a revenue share _to_ OpenAI but surely that's limited to just OpenAI products which is probably a rounding error? Losing exclusivity seems like a big issue for them?