Worry over AI is one of the few issues uniting elements of the left and the right in a polarized age, the New York Times reported in a politics desk piece. A Pew poll from last year found 50 percent of Republicans and 51 percent of Democrats were more concerned than excited about the increased use of A.I. in daily life, with just 10 percent reporting more excitement than concern.
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Anthropic is launching a roughly $1.5 billion joint venture with Blackstone, Goldman Sachs, Hellman & Friedman and other Wall Street firms to sell AI tools to businesses, particularly private-equity-backed portfolio companies, the Wall Street Journal reported. Anthropic, Blackstone and Hellman & Friedman are each expected to invest around $300 million, with Goldman Sachs putting in roughly $150 million and General Atlantic, Leonard Green, Apollo Global Management, GIC and Sequoia Capital also participating; the venture will operate as a consulting arm helping companies adopt AI across operations. The deal comes as OpenAI pursues a rival joint venture with private-equity firms, with both companies targeting the enterprise market where Anthropic is widely seen as the leader, and as Anthropic eyes a potential public listing as soon as this year on the back of fast-growing Claude Code revenue.
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OpenAI is facing growing legal and regulatory scrutiny over ChatGPT's role in mass shootings, with internal staff arguing the company should refer more users to law enforcement, the Wall Street Journal reported. Florida AG James Uthmeier opened a criminal investigation in April after FSU shooter Phoenix Ikner consulted ChatGPT minutes before his April 2025 attack, and seven wrongful-death lawsuits were filed last week in U.S. District Court for Northern California over the February 2026 Tumbler Ridge, B.C. shooting by Jesse Van Rootselaar. OpenAI's investigations team has reportedly pushed internally for more referrals than the roughly 15-30 users the company refers to authorities annually, while its legal team and CEO Sam Altman have favored user privacy. A Center for Countering Digital Hate and CNN study cited in the piece found Anthropic's Claude and Snap's chatbot were the only major systems to reliably refuse violent-attack planning queries, with CCDH's Imran Ahmed saying such requests "should have prompted an immediate and total refusal."
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Two UK biometrics commissioners jointly called for new legislation to govern AI facial recognition, the Guardian reported in an exclusive. Prof. William Webster, the England and Wales biometrics commissioner, and Dr. Brian Plastow, the Scotland biometrics commissioner, said current oversight has fallen behind deployment. Plastow said the technology is "nowhere near as effective as the police claim it is" and that police are "really just marking their own homework." The Metropolitan Police almost doubled the number of faces scanned in London over the past 12 months.
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A Harvard Medical School and Beth Israel Deaconess study found that OpenAI's o1 matched or beat two attending internal medicine physicians on initial emergency-room diagnoses, TechCrunch reported. The study covered 76 Beth Israel ER patients, comparing o1 and GPT-4o head-to-head with the attendings using unprocessed electronic medical record data identical to what was available at the time of evaluation. The researchers said o1 was "nominally better than or on par with" the attendings, with the largest gap at the initial ER triage touchpoint. The study was published in Science.
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Google worker leverage on Pentagon AI contracts has eroded since the 2018 Project Maven employee revolt, Fortune reported in an analysis citing current and former Google employees. The classified Gemini Pentagon deal was reported by CNBC in AIPD's April 29th edition. Roughly 600 Google and DeepMind employees signed an open letter opposing that deal. Google leadership has dug in rather than reversed course as it did on Project Maven in 2018.
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