Pam Kinnett's 11-year-old cat Grayson slipped out of her Plano garage while she was unloading groceries. The family searched, posted flyers, and eventually gave up hope. Then, after 103 days, Pam got a call: "I think we have your cat." Continue Reading →
OpenAI admitted yesterday that prompt injection attacks, which occur when an AI encounters malicious instructions hidden in content it processes and treats them as commands, may never be fully solved. In other words, the same access that makes agents valuable is exactly what makes them dangerous. Continue Reading →
It's official: ChatGPT is now a distribution platform. OpenAI announced the Apps SDK at DevDay in October, and this week opened general submissions through its Developer Platform. If you want to see it in action, early partners (like Booking.com, Canva, Coursera, Expedia, Figma, Spotify, and Zillow) are already live. Continue Reading →
Earlier this month, OpenAI declared "code red" after Google's Gemini 3 and Nano Banana Pro topped the LMArena leaderboards. Last week, OpenAI answered with GPT 5.2. Yesterday, OpenAI introduced a new image creation experience inside ChatGPT alongside a dedicated image model called GPT Image 1.5. The update packages image generation as a core capability of the platform and signals OpenAI’s intent to provide production-grade visual workflows. Continue Reading →

Creative Commons Pivots on AI

The Creative Commons logo has been the global symbol for the open web, signaling that knowledge is free to share, remix, and reuse. That era may be ending. In a recent blog post, CC announced tentative support for "pay-to-crawl" systems. You can read this as a policy update. You can also read it as a signal that the fair use defense for commercial AI training is under pressure. Continue Reading →