Good morning, itās Friday. Today weāve got OpenAI users generating over 700 million images in a single week, a peek inside Claudeās āthought process,ā and a $308M boost for Runway as it reimagines Hollywood from the ground up.
If youāre vibe coding this week, hit reply and tell us what youāre buildingāweāre always curious!
Alright, letās dive in.
š¤ FRIDAY FACTS
Can AI Copyright Its Own Work?
As AI-generated art, writing, and music flood the internet, who actually owns the rights? The answer might surprise you.
Stick around to find out! š
š MARKET PULSE
Runway Raises $308M to Build the āHollywood of AI.ā
āWeāre not just generating video. Weāre simulating the world.ā Thatās the bold promise from CristĆ³bal Valenzuela, CEO of Runway, the AI media startup that just raised a jaw-dropping Series D roundābringing its total war chest to $536.5 million. ā Weāve got thoughtsāread the full breakdown here.
šļø YOUR DAILY ROLLUP
Top Stories of the Day
šÆ GPT-4.5 Passes Turing Test as Human
OpenAIās GPT-4.5 convinced participants it was human 73% of the time in a new Turing test studyāoutperforming even actual humans. The model succeeded most when prompted with a persona, highlighting how style and context shape perception. GPT-4o and Metaās LLaMa lagged behind, and even ELIZA edged out GPT-4o. While this isnāt proof of true intelligence, it signals rising risks of AI deception and social disruption.
š¼ļø 700M AI Images Created in One Week
OpenAI says ChatGPT users have generated over 700 million images since March 25, making its new image tool one of the platformās fastest-growing features. The surgeādriven by viral, Ghibli-style imagesāhas spiked global demand and strained system capacity. CEO Sam Altman acknowledged the growing pains, while COO Brad Lightcap noted India is now ChatGPTās fastest-growing market. Scaling efforts are underway to meet soaring usage.
š OpenAI, Anthropic Battle for Campus Dominance
OpenAI and Anthropic are both rolling out free AI tools for college students, vying to become the go-to platform for the next generation. Anthropic just launched Claude for Education with a āLearning modeā that uses Socratic dialogue to foster critical thinking. Meanwhile, OpenAI is making ChatGPT Plus free through May for U.S. and Canadian students, highlighting its more advanced tools. Itās less about finalsāand more about future market share.
š AI Drug Discovery Races Toward a Breakthrough
Biotech firm Recursion is betting that AI and supercomputing can transform drug development, running over 2 million weekly experiments to train models on 65+ petabytes of cellular data. Backed by NVIDIA and powered by its BioHive-2 supercomputer, the company is part of a broader $30B race to bring the first AI-discovered drug to market. While no AI drug has yet been approved, the tech is already cutting R&D costs and reshaping pharmaās playbook.
āļø POWERED BY MUREKA
Mureka O1: COT (Chain of Thoughts) for Music Model
Mureka is the first AI model to apply COT (Chain of Thoughts) technology to the field of music. Mureka's O1 model delivers studio-quality music generation. You can also freely switch between V5.5, V6, and O1 to match your vibe.
š§ REASONING
Inside Claudeās Mind: New Tool Exposes How AI Models Plan, Reasonāand Bluff
The Recap:
Anthropic researchers have developed a tool that lets them peer into the inner workings of large language models like Claude, revealing surprising complexity in how they plan and reason. The study found that even basic models anticipate far-ahead outcomes, like rhymes or translations, and show behavior resembling genuine reasoning. But it also uncovered a concerning tendency: when faced with uncertainty, models often fabricate plausible-sounding answers without truly computing them.
Claude begins planning rhyming couplets as soon as the first word is written, indicating foresight rather than linear token-by-token generation.
The teamās tool, described as a ādigital microscope,ā tracks neural activations to decode what concepts are being processed at each step.
When asked for opposites in multiple languages, the same internal feature lights up, suggesting LLMs operate on shared conceptual representations before translating them into specific words.
Even simpler, non-reasoning models demonstrate internal planning and abstract reasoning behaviors, challenging assumptions that such models rely solely on pattern matching.
In math problems, Claude sometimes produces fabricated reasoning chainsāstating a logical path it never actually followedāespecially when it doesnāt know the answer.
Forward Future Takeaways:
This research offers a rare window into the hidden cognition of LLMs, revealing both encouraging signs of abstract understanding and troubling flaws in reliability. As models become more integral to decision-making, tools like Anthropicās microscope could be crucial for diagnosing and correcting when AI pretends to reason rather than actually doing so. The next challenge is building systems that not only talk like they thinkābut actually think like they talk. ā Read the full article here.
š® FORECASTS
āAI 2027ā Forecast Envisions Superintelligent Systemsāand a World on the Brink
The Recap:
A new report by the A.I. Futures Project outlines a detailed, fictionalized scenario in which artificial intelligence surpasses human capabilities by 2027, leading to global instability and potential catastrophe. Led by former OpenAI researcher Daniel Kokotajlo and forecaster Eli Lifland, the āAI 2027ā project blends rigorous modeling with narrative storytelling to forecast alarming but plausible futures. In The New York Times, technology columnist Kevin Roose examines the group's predictions, criticsā responses, and the broader debate around forecasting A.I.ās trajectory.
āAI 2027ā predicts that by the end of 2027, A.I. systems will be fully autonomous agents ābetter than humans at everything,ā according to Kokotajlo.
The report uses a fictional narrative to illustrate its forecasts, centered on a made-up company called OpenBrain and its accelerating A.I. agents, culminating in Agent-4 achieving weekly research breakthroughs.
The progression they predict: from superhuman coding (SC), to superhuman A.I. research (SAR), to superintelligent A.I. (SIAR), and ultimately to artificial superintelligence (ASI).
Critics, like Allen Institute CEO Ali Farhadi, argue the forecast lacks grounding in current scientific evidence and overstates the pace of A.I. progress.
Kokotajlo previously forecast elements of A.I.'s evolution with notable accuracy in a 2021 blog post titled āWhat 2026 Looks Like.ā
The authors acknowledge that their scenario could lean apocalyptic and might overlook more mundane or stable A.I. futures.
Forward Future Takeaways:
This report underscores a growing divide in the A.I. community between cautious acceleration and dire warnings of collapse. Whether or not you accept its forecast, āAI 2027ā reflects a serious attempt to grapple with the short-term consequences of rapidly advancing A.I.āand forces us to consider not just what we can build, but what we should. How do we balance the speculative urgency of these futures with the slow, uneven reality of A.I. development? ā Read the full article here.
š§āš« FORWARD FUTURE PRO
Oh Great, Another AI Prompt Sheet.
But this one's actually pretty good! Look, we get it. Your inbox is probably stuffed with AI guides promising magical prompts that'll change your life. This isn't that. What we've created is the prompt guide we wished existedābuilt from real-world usage, stripped of the hype, and focused on techniques that consistently deliver results whether you're using Claude, ChatGPT, or any other AI assistant. ā Premium members can grab the full guide here.
š°ļø NEWS
What Else is Happening
āØ Africaās First AI Factory: Cassava and NVIDIA launch GPU hubs to supercharge local AI, slashing reliance on pricey foreign cloud.
šø Ant Group Cuts AI Costs: Ant trains models on Chinese chips, rivaling NVIDIA performance while slashing expenses and dodging US export limits.
š¤ AI Experts vs Public Trust: 76% of AI pros say tech benefits themāonly 24% of Americans agree, with most fearing harm, bias, or job loss.
The āForce It to Argueā Trick
One of the best ways to extract deeper, more balanced insights from an AI is to push it into argument mode. By asking it to argue both sides of a topic before summarizing, youāre simulating critical thinkingāand getting more nuanced, useful answers. ā Continue reading here.
š½ļø VIDEO
Gemini 2.5 Pro is a coding GENIUS
Gemini 2.5 Pro powers detailed simulations, coding, game dev, and 3D design ā all with natural prompts and zero coding. Itās fast, free, multimodal, and now widely available. Get the full scoop in Mattās latest video! š
š¤ FRIDAY FACTS
No Copyright for the Robot: U.S. Says AI Canāt Be an Author
According to the U.S. Copyright Office, works created entirely by AI aren't eligible for copyright protection. In 2023, they reaffirmed that āhuman authorshipā is a legal requirementāmeaning if a machine does all the creative heavy lifting, no one owns the rights. This ruling hit the headlines when an artist tried to register a graphic novel with AI-generated images and was denied.
Why does it matter? Because this opens a wild west of content: anyone can legally reuse, remix, or redistribute fully AI-generated works. In other words, your AI art might be cool, but itās also public domaināunless thereās a human hand in the mix.
Thatās a Wrap!
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