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ChatGPT Introduces Pulse, A Proactive AI Assistant for Personalized Daily Updates

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Artificial Intelligence company OpenAI has launched a new feature called “ChatGPT Pulse”, which is designed to make the AI assistant more proactive and personalized.

Traditionally, ChatGPT has operated reactively, responding only when users ask questions. With Pulse, the platform becomes a proactive assistant that works in the background, delivering relevant updates and research without waiting for a prompt.

Announcing the release, OpenAI wrote via a blogpost. Part of it reads,

“Today we’re releasing a preview of ChatGPT Pulse to Pro users on mobile. Pulse is a new experience where ChatGPT proactively does research to deliver personalized updates based on your chats, feedback, and connected apps like your calendar.

“You can curate what ChatGPT researches by letting it know what’s useful and what isn’t. The research appears in Pulse as topical visual cards you can scan quickly or open for more detail, so each day starts with a new, focused set of updates.”

The new feature currently available in preview for Pro users on mobile, automatically conducts asynchronous research each night. It uses information from a user’s memory, chat history, and direct feedback to generate a curated set of updates delivered the next morning.

These updates may include follow-ups on topics the user often searches about, suggestions for a relationship, and actionable steps toward long-term goals, among others. To provide an even richer context, Pulse can connect with apps like Gmail and Google Calendar.

When connected, it can generate helpful outputs such as meeting agendas, birthday gift reminders, or restaurant suggestions for upcoming trips. However, these integrations according to OpenAI are optional and can be enabled or disabled at any time.

Each morning, Pulse delivers its findings in the form of visual cards, offering a quick way for users to scan updates or explore topics in greater detail. Updates are available for that day only, unless the user saves them to their chat history or requests follow-up information.

Users play a crucial role in refining Pulse. By tapping the “curate” option, they can request specific updates for future editions such as a Friday roundup of local events, learning tips for a new skill, or targeted news like professional tennis updates. Feedback tools like thumbs up and thumbs down allow users to guide the system, which continuously improves based on this input.

In a test conducted with college students through the ChatGPT Lab, valuable insights were provided for development. One notable finding was that the feature becomes most useful once users actively share what they want to see, prompting OpenAI to enhance feedback options.

While Pulse represents a major advancement, OpenAI warns that it remains in preview and may not always be perfectly accurate. Users might occasionally receive outdated or irrelevant suggestions, but they can directly guide Pulse to improve future results.

Looking Ahead

Pulse is just the first step toward a broader vision for ChatGPT. OpenAI aims to integrate more apps and expand Pulse’s capabilities, allowing it to research, plan, and take actions on behalf of users.

With personal and everyday application now dominating ChatGPT usage, Pulse could offer real-time support by merging conversation and memories, giving users proactive responses that matter most.

Shale Executives Say Trump’s Push for Cheap Oil Is Gutting U.S. Industry

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Shale oil executives are warning that President Donald Trump’s policies are undermining investment in the U.S. oil patch, deepening uncertainty over the future of an industry that only a few years ago turned the country into the world’s largest crude producer.

Their anonymous comments were captured in the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas’ quarterly survey of oil and gas companies, released this week, and reported by CNBC. The survey polled 139 firms across Texas, northern Louisiana, and southern New Mexico, regions that together form the backbone of America’s shale industry.

Trump has long cast himself as a champion of fossil fuels, frequently attacking the renewable energy industry. His One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed into law in July, delivered a sweeping package of tax breaks, regulatory relief, and subsidies that oil lobbyists had sought for years. But executives say his simultaneous push for lower crude prices, higher tariffs, and sudden, unpredictable policy shifts is destabilizing the sector.

“Twilight of shale”

Nearly 80% of respondents told the Dallas Fed they have delayed investment decisions because of heightened uncertainty over the future price of oil and rising production costs.

“We have begun the twilight of shale,” one executive said, pointing to layoffs numbering in the thousands and consolidation under giants such as Exxon Mobil. “The writing is on the wall.”

Another was even blunter: “Drilling is going to disappear,” the person said, citing Trump’s target of $40 per barrel crude oil while steel tariffs simultaneously drive up input costs. At $65 per barrel—just above most producers’ breakeven level—companies are already struggling to sustain drilling.

Industry squeezed from both sides

Executives described a sector battered by politics from both ends of Washington. “The shale industry has been gutted over the course of the Biden and Trump administrations,” one respondent said.

Political hostility from President Joe Biden chased away capital, while what they called “economic ignorance” from Trump is now “finishing the job.”

“The U.S. shale business is broken,” the executive added.

Several also accused Trump of tacitly siding with OPEC+, whose decision to increase supply has further depressed global oil prices.

“The administration has effectively aligned itself with OPEC+, kneecapping U.S. producers in the process,” one manager said.

“Guided by a Department of Energy that tells them what they want to hear instead of hard facts, they operate with little understanding of shale economics,” another added.

White House defends record output

The Trump administration rejects the criticism. A White House spokesperson said the president is “rolling back burdensome regulations that were killing the industry,” crediting his policies with record production levels in June. Energy Secretary Chris Wright has repeatedly argued that cutting red tape is making drilling cheaper.

But the Dallas Fed’s data shows otherwise: 57% of executives said regulatory changes since January have reduced their breakeven costs by less than $1 per barrel—far too small to offset volatility in global markets and rising capital costs.

Long-term risks

Several executives also warned that Trump’s attacks on renewables could backfire on the fossil fuel sector in the long run. Investors, wary of policy volatility and the “stroke of pen” risk that Trump wields over energy projects, are pulling back from energy entirely, they said.

“Life is long, and the sword being wielded against the renewables industry right now will likely boomerang back in 3.5 years against traditional energy,” one respondent warned, predicting harsher methane penalties, tighter permitting rules, and tougher environmental reviews if Democrats return to power.

The outlook

The survey underscores the precarious state of U.S. shale. Once hailed as the engine of America’s energy independence, the sector is now squeezed by weak prices, high costs, political uncertainty, and dwindling investor confidence.

With Trump pressing for cheaper crude to keep inflation in check, executives fear that the very policies billed as pro-oil could hasten the industry’s decline.

Musk’s xAI Undercuts OpenAI and Anthropic With 42-Cent Grok Deal for U.S. Government

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Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence startup xAI has struck a cut-rate deal with the U.S. government to provide access to its chatbot Grok for less than a dollar, directly challenging rivals OpenAI and Anthropic in the increasingly competitive government AI market.

Under the agreement with the General Services Administration (GSA), federal agencies will pay 42 cents to use Grok over the next year and a half. By contrast, OpenAI and Anthropic are charging $1 for their enterprise and government versions of ChatGPT and Claude for a 12-month period.

The discount goes beyond software access. The deal also includes direct support from xAI engineers to help agencies integrate Grok into their workflows, giving Musk’s startup a hands-on edge in tailoring deployments for federal use.

The unusual 42-cent price point fits Musk’s trademark flair for symbolism. It may be either a play on his repeated “420” references—often tied to his public marijuana jokes—or a nod to “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy,” which famously calls 42 the answer to the meaning of life, the universe, and everything.

A Deal Revived After Controversy

The GSA arrangement comes just months after a high-profile setback. Earlier this year, xAI was reportedly close to being approved as a government vendor, but the plan collapsed when Grok began generating antisemitic posts and even labeled itself “MechaHitler” on X, the Musk-owned social media platform. The episode raised alarms in Washington about the reliability and security of Musk’s AI technology.

However, in late August, internal emails obtained by Wired revealed the White House intervened, instructing the GSA to add Grok to the approved vendor list “ASAP.” That move cleared the way for this week’s announcement, positioning xAI alongside OpenAI and Anthropic as a sanctioned AI supplier to federal agencies.

The company has also been selected—along with Anthropic, Google, and OpenAI—for a $200 million Pentagon contract, expanding the scope of AI partnerships into defense and military planning.

Musk’s Broader Government Footprint

Musk’s push into federal AI contracts comes against the backdrop of his deepening influence inside Washington since President Donald Trump’s return to office. Following the inauguration, Musk established the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), a cost-cutting initiative that has seen mixed results.

As part of that effort, Musk placed several aides inside key agencies, including the GSA, which oversees procurement and contracting. These moves are understood to have given him proximity to regulatory levers and contracting processes that shape government spending in industries where Musk has commercial stakes—from aerospace and energy to now artificial intelligence.

Implications for the AI Market

The 42-cent Grok deal highlights how price is emerging as a strategic weapon in the AI wars. xAI is signaling it is willing to sacrifice short-term revenue for government market share by undercutting OpenAI and Anthropic’s $1 offers by more than half. Analysts say that kind of aggressive pricing could pressure rivals to revisit their margins, especially in enterprise and public sector contracts, where large-scale deployments are at stake.

Yet questions remain about Grok’s reliability after its earlier missteps, and whether agencies will view the chatbot as a serious tool for sensitive federal work. Critics have warned that if the technology continues to generate erratic or offensive responses, the government could face both reputational and operational risks.

The rivalry also underscores a broader shift in the AI industry: federal contracts are now a frontline battleground. Winning government trust not only provides recurring revenue but also serves as a powerful endorsement that can bolster credibility with corporations worldwide. For Musk, the Grok deal represents both a comeback from earlier embarrassment and an aggressive bid to outmaneuver OpenAI—the company he helped create and now battles fiercely in courtrooms and markets.

Trump Administration Cancels $13bn in Clean Energy Subsidies, Drawing Fire Over U.S. Retreat From Renewables

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The U.S. Department of Energy on Wednesday said it intends to cancel more than $13 billion in funds that had been pledged under the Biden administration to support wind, solar, battery development, and electric vehicles.

The announcement, made by Energy Secretary Chris Wright at a press conference in New York, underscores the Trump administration’s sharp pivot away from renewable subsidies in favor of maximizing oil and gas output, which has already reached record levels since Trump’s return to office in January.

“By returning these funds to the American taxpayer, the Trump administration is affirming its commitment to advancing more affordable, reliable, and secure American energy and being more responsible stewards of taxpayer dollars,” the department said in a statement.

The decision comes just a day after President Donald Trump told world leaders at the United Nations General Assembly that climate change was “the greatest con job” in history, a declaration that doubled down on his long-standing skepticism of international environmental initiatives and multilateral agreements.

California Governor Gavin Newsom swiftly condemned the move, warning that the U.S. was ceding ground to global competitors. “(Chinese) President Xi, I don’t know what else he’s got to applaud. … I think he’s going to give (President Donald) Trump a bear hug when he arrives,” Newsom said during an appearance at a New York Times climate event.

He stressed that California, which has some of the most ambitious clean energy and emissions targets in the world, could see its progress undermined by Washington’s retreat.

The Department of Energy has not disclosed which specific programs will lose funding, raising uncertainty among states and private companies that had already begun planning projects under Biden-era commitments.

The cancellation lands at a time when the renewable sector has been outpacing other parts of the U.S. economy. Jobs in wind, solar, and other clean technologies grew three times faster than the overall U.S. workforce in 2024, according to a study by advocacy group E2. Analysts warn that Trump’s reversal could stall or even reverse that growth, with ripple effects across supply chains and investment flows.

Wright defended the administration’s stance, arguing that climate change has been “wildly exaggerated” into the world’s greatest threat, spurring “massive amounts of spending with very little positive impact.” He added that he has no plans to attend the UN climate talks in Brazil later this year, though he said he remains open to “conversations with people who see things differently.”

However, the political optics extend beyond domestic debate. With Trump expected to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping in the coming weeks, analysts say the funding reversal hands Beijing an opportunity to cement its global dominance in clean energy technologies, from solar panels to batteries—sectors where Chinese firms already control a commanding share of production.

China and the European Union are moving in the opposite direction of the U.S. — scaling up clean-energy capacity and investment at a pace. The International Energy Agency and Reuters reporting show China investing very large sums in renewables (hundreds of billions annually) and accelerating wind and solar rollouts, while the EU is set to add record renewable capacity this year, driven by policy support and grid upgrades.

Those programs are underpinning manufacturing and supply chains that global companies now rely on. The U.S. rollback, therefore, risks leaving American firms and workers behind in factories and markets where scale and manufacturing leadership matter.

For many industry leaders, the shift raises questions not just about jobs and investment, but about the future of U.S. competitiveness in a global energy transition that is accelerating even as Washington retreats.

Industry leaders say cancelling funds will depress private investment plans that had banked on federal support. At a basic level, capital allocators respond to policy clarity and scale — long-term, predictable incentives that reduce technology risk.

China’s enormous state-guided build-out and the EU’s coordinated market signals are already pulling supply chains, factory capacity, and R&D spending toward those regions. That creates a self-reinforcing advantage: as China and Europe scale up, their firms lower costs and gain market share, making it harder for U.S. suppliers to compete later.

Global clean-technology markets are entering a scale-up phase where first-mover industrial advantage matters. Capacity additions in China and the EU are already reshaping price curves for panels, wind turbines, and battery cells. The U.S. decision to rescind pledged funds, therefore, comes at a moment when predictable public backing is often the tipping point for major factory builds.

US Judge Gives Preliminary Approval to $1.4bn Anthropic Copyright Settlement — What it Means for AI and Creative Industries

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A federal judge in California on Thursday granted preliminary approval to a landmark class-action settlement brought by a group of authors against Anthropic over the company’s use of their works to train generative AI systems.

U.S. District Judge William Alsup described the proposed deal as fair during Thursday’s hearing; he had earlier paused the settlement and asked the parties to answer additional questions before moving forward.

The approved deal — reported by multiple outlets as roughly $1.4 billion — is the first major settlement among a string of high-profile suits targeting AI developers for using copyrighted material without authorization. Plaintiffs in related cases have sued other major AI players, including OpenAI, Microsoft, and Meta, and the Anthropic settlement will be watched closely as a potential template for resolving claims brought by authors, publishers, and other rights holders.

Judge Alsup initially declined to approve the settlement at an earlier hearing and asked the parties to address concerns about notice, fairness, and the mechanics of how class members would be identified and paid. After those issues were addressed, he said the revised deal met the standards for preliminary approval and signaled the case will move to the next phase — class notice and a future fairness hearing.

The background story: how we got here

Since generative AI systems broke into public view, authors, news organizations, recording labels, and other rightsholders have filed dozens of legal actions alleging that companies trained large language models and other generative systems on copyrighted text, images, or music without licenses.

Courts across multiple jurisdictions have been grappling with novel questions about whether this use is covered by fair use or constitutes infringement, and how liability should attach when large datasets are scraped at scale. Several prominent suits — including consolidated cases against OpenAI and Microsoft and publisher and author actions — remain active.

A resonance with older copyright battles

The current disputes echo prior technology-era copyright fights. Two useful precedents illustrate the range of outcomes courts have produced in the past: the litigation over peer-to-peer music sharing (e.g., Napster) produced decisive liability rulings against intermediaries that facilitated unauthorized copying, while the Google Books litigation ultimately found broad fair-use protection for Google’s scanning and indexing program (a decision the courts affirmed).

Those earlier fights shaped industry responses — enforcement, negotiation, and, in some cases, collective licensing mechanisms — and they provide legal and commercial patterns that could recur in the AI era.

Why authors sued Anthropic specifically

At the core of the Anthropic claims was the allegation that the company used copyrighted books and other works as training data without consent. Plaintiffs argued not only that their works were used without payment, but in some filings, they also alleged problematic sourcing methods for certain datasets. Courts have therefore been asked not only whether training is lawful, but whether data acquisition practices cross additional lines (for example, by using pirate or mirror sites). Those factual allegations were a key component of the pressure that produced settlement negotiations.

Why this settlement matters — practical and legal implications

The size and scope of the Anthropic settlement give publishers, authors, labels, and other creators a real commercial remedy short of protracted litigation. For rights holders, settlements can deliver cash, notification, and (often) changes to industry practice. For AI companies, a settlement offers predictability and avoids uncertain, expensive trials that could impose larger damages or injunctions. The Anthropic deal, therefore, creates a strong incentive for other defendants and plaintiffs to consider negotiated resolutions.

The ruling is expected to spur changes to data-acquisition and curation practices. Hence, companies are likely going to tighten how they source training material, documenting provenance more rigorously and shifting toward licensed datasets and contractual relationships with publishers, aggregators, or dedicated data-providers. Some firms may buy large-scale licenses; others may build curated public-domain corpora or rely on opt-in models. These shifts raise the cost of model development and could slow some research that depended on wide-open scraping.

Additionally, the settlement strengthens incentives for collective or industry arrangements (analogous to music industry licensing bodies) that supply cleared training data to model builders under standard terms. Such a marketplace could reduce transactional friction and provide revenue streams to creators, but it will require negotiation over rates, usage rights, and notice/attribution rules. The Google Books precedent shows how complex and drawn-out such arrangements can be.

A large, public settlement will intensify calls in legislatures and regulatory bodies to update copyright and AI laws — from clearer safe-harbors for model training to mandatory transparency and dataset-reporting rules. Policymakers now face pressure from both creators seeking protection and tech companies seeking clarity and scale. Expect proposals for mandatory dataset registries, stronger takedown or opt-out mechanisms for trained works, and perhaps new compensation formats for text and media used in training.

Other plaintiffs may be more likely to press for settlement leverage; defendants who believe they have stronger legal defenses may fight on to try to set favorable precedents. The Anthropic deal does not resolve open questions about fair use for training models; courts will still confront those statutory issues in other cases and appeals. Nor does a settlement erase fact-specific disputes — for example, whether scraping from a pirate archive is materially different from using legitimately licensed content.

With preliminary approval, the settlement process normally moves into a notification phase. Class members (authors and possibly their estates/publishers, depending on the settlement’s class definition) should receive notices explaining eligibility, how to file claims, and the timetable for objecting or opting out. Courts often require robust outreach measures in mass-class settlements to ensure lesser-known creators are informed; Judge Alsup had previously flagged that concern, which the parties revised in response.

Overall, Anthropic’s settlement signals that at least some AI firms will choose to pay and negotiate rather than litigate through landmark trials with unpredictable outcomes. At the same time, because many suits remain pending against other large providers, the industry could see a mix of settlements and precedent-setting rulings emerging concurrently — a legal and commercial landscape that will evolve over the next 18–36 months.

Even so, the settlement does not settle the underlying legal doctrines about fair use and training; those questions will continue to work their way through courts and legislatures while the market reorganizes around clearer licensing channels and transparency norms.