OpenAI on the defensive after multiple PR setbacks in one week

Sexy voices, departing employees, and NDA rumors have challenged the AI company.

The OpenAI logo under a raincloud.

Enlarge (credit: Benj Edwards | Getty Images)

Since the launch of its latest AI language model, GPT-4o, OpenAI has found itself on the defensive over the past week due to a string of bad news, rumors, and ridicule circulating on traditional and social media. The negative attention is potentially a sign that OpenAI has entered a new level of public visibility—and is more prominently receiving pushback to its AI approach beyond tech pundits and government regulators.

OpenAI's rough week started last Monday when the company previewed a flirty AI assistant with a voice seemingly inspired by Scarlett Johansson from the 2013 film Her. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman alluded to the film himself on X just before the event, and we had previously made that comparison with an earlier voice interface for ChatGPT that launched in September 2023.

While that September update included a voice called "Sky" that some have said sounds like Johansson, it was GPT-4o's seemingly lifelike new conversational interface, complete with laughing and emotionally charged tonal shifts, that led to a widely circulated Daily Show segment ridiculing the demo for its perceived flirty nature. Next, a Saturday Night Live joke reinforced an implied connection to Johansson's voice.

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iOS and iPadOS 17.5.1 fix a nasty bug that resurfaced old photos

Bug was discovered by Redditors and forum users a few days ago.

iPadOS 17.5.1 ready to install on an iPad Pro.

Enlarge / iPadOS 17.5.1 ready to install on an iPad Pro. (credit: Samuel Axon)

Apple has released its first bug fix update for iOS and iPadOS. The 17.5.1 release claims to fix a bug that saw some users' deleted photos resurface long after deletion.

The release notes list just one bullet point:

This update provides important bug fixes and addresses a rare issue where photos that experienced database corruption could reappear in the Photos library even if they were deleted.

Users started reporting the issue after iOS 17.5 and iPadOS 17.5 were released on May 13. The optics certainly weren't great for Apple, as some users assumed that the company was keeping their long-lost deleted photos (sometimes nude photos, as some reported seeing those pop up again) in the cloud without telling them.

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Judge: Craig Wright forged documents on “grand scale” to support bitcoin lie

Wright “lied repeatedly and extensively” in response to forgery allegations.

Craig Wright walking on the street outside a London courthouse

Enlarge / Craig Wright arrives at a courthouse in London, England, on February 23, 2024. (credit: Getty Images | Lucy North-PA Images )

A British judge found that Craig Wright "lied repeatedly and extensively" in a case related to Wright's claim that he is bitcoin inventor Satoshi Nakamoto. "Dr. Wright's attempts to prove he was/is Satoshi Nakamoto represent a most serious abuse of this Court's process," Justice James Mellor of England's High Court of Justice wrote in a ruling published today.

Wright's evidence for being Nakamoto "is at best questionable or of very dubious relevance or entirely circumstantial and at worst, it is fabricated and/or based on documents I am satisfied have been forged on a grand scale by Dr. Wright," Mellor's ruling said.

Today's written ruling came two months after Mellor delivered an oral verdict in which he said the evidence shows Wright is not the person who created bitcoin. The written ruling said, "it is clear that Dr. Wright engaged in the deliberate production of false documents to support false claims and use the Courts as a vehicle for fraud. Despite acknowledging in this Trial that a few documents were inauthentic (generally blamed on others), he steadfastly refused to acknowledge any of the forged documents. Instead, he lied repeatedly and extensively in his attempts to deflect the allegations of forgery."

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Microsoft launches 11th-gen Surface Pro for $1000 and up (Snapdragon X Copilot+ PCs with an OLED display option)

The new Microsoft Surface Pro is up for pre-order for $1000 and up, and it’s expected to be available beginning June 18, 2024. Microsoft is positioning the 11th-gen Surface Pro as the first to be a Copilot+ PC with an integrated NPU capable of d…

The new Microsoft Surface Pro is up for pre-order for $1000 and up, and it’s expected to be available beginning June 18, 2024. Microsoft is positioning the 11th-gen Surface Pro as the first to be a Copilot+ PC with an integrated NPU capable of delivering next-gen AI capabilities. But the new tablet also stands out as […]

The post Microsoft launches 11th-gen Surface Pro for $1000 and up (Snapdragon X Copilot+ PCs with an OLED display option) appeared first on Liliputing.

You can now buy a 4-foot-tall humanoid robot for $16K

No one is quite sure what you’re supposed to do with the robot, but you can buy one.

Does anyone want to buy a humanoid robot for $16,000? The latest product from Unitree hopes that you will: Meet the Unitree G1, a "Humanoid agent AI avatar," aka a robot. If you haven't heard of Unitree, it's sort of the go-to "budget Chinese option" in the robot space. You're going to have to deal with company promotional materials that are just barely written in English, but you get some impressive bang-for-your-buck robots. You may have seen the Spot-knockoff Unitree Go2, a $1,600 robot dog that various resellers have equipped with a flamethrower or just straight-up military rifles.

Unitree's promo video shows some impressive capabilities for such a cheap robot. It can stand up on its own from a flat-on-the-floor position. Just like the recent Boston Dynamics Atlas video, the G1 stands up in probably the strangest way possible. While lying face-up on the floor, the G1 brings its knees up, puts its feet flat on the floor, and then pushes up on the feet to form a tripod with the head still on the ground. From there, it uses a limbo-like move to lean its knees forward, bringing up its head and torso with all core strength.

The G1 is a budget robot, so the walk cycle is kind of primitive. It walks, stands, and "runs" in a permanent half-squat with its legs forward and knees bent all the time. The balance looks great though—at one point a person shows up and roughs up the robot a bit, kicking it in the back and punching it in the chest. In both cases, it absorbs the abuse with just a step back or two and keeps on trucking.

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HP resurrects ’90s OmniBook branding, kills Spectre, Dragonfly

Most new HP laptops will be an OmniBook, ProBook, or EliteBook.

Two HP OmniBook X laptops

Enlarge / HP's new OmniBook X laptop (left) and EliteBook Ultra G1q (right) will start at $1,200 and $1,700, respectively. (credit: HP )

HP is rebranding its consumer and commercial computers. The company will no longer use branding like Spectre and instead use Omni for all of its consumer-facing laptops, desktops, and all-in-ones (AIOs). Similarly, it will no longer refer to its commercial laptops as Dragonfly.

HP announced today that it will no longer release computers under consumer PC series names like Pavilion. Instead, every consumer computer from HP will be called either an OmniBook for laptops, an OmniDesk for desktops, or an OmniStudio for AIOs. The computers will also have a modifier, ranging from 3 up to 5, 7, X, or Ultra to denote computers that are entry-level all the way up to advanced. For instance, an HP OmniBook Ultra would represent HP's highest-grade consumer laptop.

"For example, an HP OmniBook 3 will appeal to customers who prioritize entertainment and personal use, while the OmniBook X will be designed for those with higher creative and technical demands," Stacy Wolff, SVP of design and sustainability at HP, said via a press announcement today.

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WOW Asks Court to Throw Out Filmmakers’ Expanded Piracy Liability Lawsuit

Internet provider WOW has asked a Colorado federal court to dismiss an expanded piracy liability complaint filed by several film companies earlier this year. The ISP says there is no evidence to show that it received any piracy notices for the 300 new works added to the lawsuit. In addition, it believes that recent court verdicts support a dismissal of at least some of the claims in the multimillion dollar lawsuit.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

pirate-flagIn 2021, Colorado-based Internet provider WOW was sued by a group of movie companies, including Millennium Media and Voltage Pictures.

The filmmakers accused the ISP of failing to terminate the accounts of subscribers who were repeatedly flagged for sharing copyrighted material.

These type of lawsuits have resulted in multi-million dollar judgments against Cox and Grande; a fate WOW hopes to avoid. The ISP challenged the claims and filed a motion to dismiss the case early on, arguing that the allegations fall short.

WOW vs. ‘Trolls’

The ISP described the film companies and their anti-piracy partner MaverickEye as “copyright trolls”. WOW mentioned that the companies previously tried to get quick settlements from John Doe subscribers based on little more than an IP-address. This lawsuit isn’t progressing quickly by any means, however.

Last year, a federal court in Colorado denied the ISP’s motion to dismiss the piracy liability allegations. At this stage, the infringement notices sent to IP-addresses of pirating subscribers are sufficient to show that the provider had knowledge of copyright-infringing activities.

“It is reasonable to infer that such notices and correspondence gave Defendant enough knowledge to have done something about the alleged direct infringement,” Judge Daniel Domenico wrote.

The order was a clear victory for the filmmakers, who were quick to push ahead. Rather than simply moving the case forward, the plaintiffs sought to expand it, by adding new rightsholders, new piracy tracking companies, and more than 300 additional film titles.

Piracy Lawsuit Expands

The second amended complaint (SAC) raised the stakes significantly. Instead of 57 works, good for maximum statutory damages of roughly $8 million, an expansion to roughly 375 works would increase the statutory maximum to $56 million.

The nature of the claims against WOW didn’t change, however. The movie companies continue to accuse the Internet provider of contributory and vicarious copyright infringement, as well as DMCA violations.

The updated complaint lists several examples of WOW subscribers who, according to the referenced piracy tracking data, repeatedly shared copyright-infringing content including the plaintiffs’ films.

New Motion to Dismiss

Last week, WOW responded to the amended complaint with a new motion to dismiss. The ISP argued that the lawsuit should be dismissed in its entirety, or at least in part, for various reasons.

One key argument is that the 300 new films added to the lawsuit are not backed up by proper evidence. The amended complaint relies on data from tracking company Facterra, which suggests that WOW subscriber IP-addresses shared the works though BitTorrent. That’s not enough, the ISP says.

WOW doesn’t dispute the tracking data itself, but notes that there’s no evidence that it was aware of these alleged infringements. Unlike the initial claims, there’s no evidence that Facterra or anyone else informed WOW about the added infringements.

“Plaintiffs do not allege that Facterra ever sent email ‘notices’ to WOW about those alleged infringements. Nor do Plaintiffs allege any other facts showing that WOW had knowledge of infringement of the New Works,” WOW writes.

screen media dismiss

This is a critical omission, the ISP notes. The court previously highlighted such notices as an important detail to show that WOW was aware of the piracy activities.

“The Court previously relied on Plaintiffs’ allegations regarding copyright notices to find that Plaintiffs had sufficiently alleged the knowledge element of their contributory infringement claims. This is because Plaintiffs do allege that other detection companies — namely, MEU and Irdeto — sent copyright notices to WOW.”

The apparent lack of notices is sufficient to dismiss the copyright infringement claims for the new works, WOW argues. In a similar vein, the associated DMCA violations should be dismissed as well, as it’s not clear when and where these happened.

“Plaintiffs do not allege any facts regarding when the New Works were infringed or when the DMCA was violated with respect to those works. See generally SAC. The SAC therefore fails to give WOW fair notice of Screen Media’s claims,” WOW writes.

New Precedents

In addition to the alleged factual shortcomings, WOW also cites new precedents that favor a dismissal of the complaint. This includes last year’s ‘Twitter vs. Taamneh‘ Supreme Court decision.

In that case, the U.S. Supreme Court held that social media platforms aren’t liable for ISIS terrorists who used their services to recruit and raise funds. In a similar vein, WOW believes that it shouldn’t be held liable for subscribers who pirate content.

“In Twitter, issued shortly after the Court’s Order, the Supreme Court observed that it ‘would run roughshod over the typical limits on tort liability’ to ‘effectively hold any sort of communication provider liable for any sort of wrongdoing merely for knowing that the wrongdoers were using its services and failing to stop them’.

“That is precisely what Plaintiffs are attempting to do in this case, by alleging that WOW is secondarily liable because it did not terminate the accounts of accused copyright infringers and DMCA violators,” WOW adds.

Finally, WOW highlights a recent decision in a similar liability lawsuit between record labels and Cox Communication. There, the Fourth Circuit Appeals court held that advertisements for high download speeds, and the availability of infringing content, are not sufficient to be considered a ‘draw’ for potential subscribers.

In the Cox lawsuit, the court dismissed the vicarious liability claim because it failed to see a direct financial interest, and WOW hopes the court will reconsider its earlier views in the same light.

“Because a direct causal connection is required, an ISP’s indirect financial interest in any infringing activity — the periodic fees it receives from customers for internet access — is insufficient as a matter of law,” WOW writes.

All in all, WOW sees plenty of reasons for the Colorado court to reconsider its earlier position. The film companies are yet to reply, however, and they likely have an entirely different take on the matter.

A copy of WOW’s motion to dismiss the second amended complaint, filed at the U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado, is available here (pdf)

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

Microsoft’s 7th-gen Surface Laptop is a Copilot+ PC with “up to 22 hours” of battery life

Microsoft is taking pre-orders for its new 7th-gen Surface Laptop. Prices start at $1000 for a model with a 13.8 inch display or $1300 for models with a 15 inch screen. But it’s not just the bigger screen that drives up the price. The smaller mo…

Microsoft is taking pre-orders for its new 7th-gen Surface Laptop. Prices start at $1000 for a model with a 13.8 inch display or $1300 for models with a 15 inch screen. But it’s not just the bigger screen that drives up the price. The smaller model is available with a choice of Qualcomm Snapdragon X […]

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M4 iPad Pro teardown finds easier-to-access battery, glimpses of Tandem OLED design

Straightforward tablet teardown is followed by a comically difficult Pencil one.

iFixit's M4 iPad Pro teardown.

Right on schedule for past releases, iFixit has done a teardown of Apple's new, redesigned iPad Pro. It found that the iPad itself has one big improvement in repairability over its predecessor but that the Apple Pencil Pro is basically unserviceable.

The first step in the teardown video revealed arguably Apple's most interesting new tech: the "Tandem OLED" screen. It doesn't reveal anything we didn't already know and describe in our review last week, but it's neat to see what it all looks like up close.

The teardown also found that there are not one but two metal brackets all the way through the middle of the iPad to help with durability. Some worried that the new, thinner iPad Pro would be thinner than past models to snap in half, but durability tests have shown that's not the case. This could be part of why.

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It’s not “Windows 12”: Microsoft keeps Windows 11 branding despite major changes

24H2 update comes with new compiler, kernel, and scheduler, among other changes.

The new Arm-powered Surface Laptop. These Copilot+ PCs are all pictured with a refreshed version of Windows 11's "Bloom" wallpaper.

Enlarge / The new Arm-powered Surface Laptop. These Copilot+ PCs are all pictured with a refreshed version of Windows 11's "Bloom" wallpaper. (credit: Microsoft)

Microsoft is announcing some fairly major changes for Windows and the Surface lineup as part of its Build developer conference this week, but there’s one thing that’s definitely not coming, at least not right now: a Windows 12 update.

Speculation about the “Windows 12” update began propagating at some point last year in reports that suggested that Microsoft was shifting back to a three-year release cycle like the ones used for Windows Vista, 7, 8, and 10 in the late 2000s and early 2010s.

And Microsoft may have intended to call this fall’s release “Windows 12” at some point, and it does come with substantial changes both above and under the hood to better support Arm systems and to emphasize Microsoft’s AI focus.

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