The ChatGPT Library and Europe’s Expensive War on Practical Innovation
OpenAI's ChatGPT Library shows how small product features can become infrastructure, and why European regulation may again punish practical usefulness.
16 posts
OpenAI's ChatGPT Library shows how small product features can become infrastructure, and why European regulation may again punish practical usefulness.
A remarkable cancer-vaccine story shows how AI tools can help determined outsiders navigate science, even when the final breakthrough needs human nerve.
Amazon's block on ChatGPT Shopping exposes the coming fight over product data, agent-mediated commerce, and who owns the customer path.
Good teachers do not simply say yes; the post argues that AI assistants also need constructive friction to help users think better.
Grok-4's benchmark wins are examined with both excitement and caution as the frontier race tightens.
OpenAI's usage study shifts attention from benchmark scores to how ordinary people actually use ChatGPT in daily life.
Apple's checklist approach to alignment borrows from aviation and medicine, making safety look practical rather than mystical.
OpenAI's one-dollar federal deal looks generous, but it also plants ChatGPT deep inside public-sector workflows.
Deleted chats may not be as gone as users imagine, making AI privacy feel less like a setting and more like a legal fiction.
Google's Titans architecture tackles model amnesia, asking what useful long-term memory should look like in AI systems.
Local LLMs are presented as the privacy-friendly alternative for users who want AI help without sending everything to the cloud.
Text-to-image models still struggle with counting, making their visual brilliance look surprisingly fragile at the level of basic numeracy.
Two specialized GPTs, InfoSec Advisor and Track&Field Analyst, show how custom assistants can serve focused expert domains.
Two perspectives on LLM interaction reveal how user behavior and model dynamics shape each other in unexpected ways.
European privacy law and AI innovation collide, raising the question of whether regulation protects users or slows useful tools.
A ChatGPT-based assistant trained on BSI IT-Grundschutz suggests how AI can support structured security guidance.