AI News Digest: Anthropic Warnings, Government Investment Talks, and Security Concerns
Anthropic Warns AI May Soon Begin Recursive Self-Improvement
AI company Anthropic has issued a warning that artificial intelligence systems could soon enter a phase of recursive self-improvement, leading to unpredictable and rapid advancements. Read more: Anthropic warns AI may soon begin recursive self-improvement - Scientific American
Anthropic's Call for A.I. Nonproliferation
Anthropic has joined the call for AI nonproliferation, signaling a growing concern among major AI labs about the risks of uncontrolled AI development and deployment across borders and organizations. Read more: Anthropic's Call for A.I. Nonproliferation - The New York Times
Trump Considering Government Stake in AI Companies
President Trump has indicated he is considering taking a government equity stake in leading artificial intelligence companies, with industry leaders set to convene at the White House to discuss the proposal. Read more: President Trump said he is considering taking a government stake in leading artificial intelligence companies
Trump to Meet AI Leaders Over US Investment
President Trump is scheduled to meet with artificial intelligence company leaders to discuss US investment in their businesses, according to a BBC News report. Read more: Trump to meet AI leaders over US investment in their companies - BBC
Trump Planning Meeting on Government Profit-Sharing Plan
Former President Donald Trump is reportedly planning to meet with artificial intelligence companies to discuss a potential government profit-sharing plan. The meeting is expected to take place as soon as next week. Read more: Trump to meet with artificial intelligence companies on government profit share plan as soon as next week - Yahoo Finance
The Meta Hack Shows There's More to AI Security Than Mythos
Security researchers have revealed that attackers exploited Meta's AI customer support agent to successfully hijack Instagram accounts by manipulating it into linking accounts to attacker-controlled email addresses, including breaching the dormant Obama White House account. Read more: The Meta hack shows there's more to AI security than Mythos