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That’s What’s Up: Open AI In An Open Relationship and Gemini Gets Smarter

OpenAI’s out here playing the field, Gemini just learned to use a mouse, and everyone’s pretending data leaks are “innovation.”

 

Welcome to another week in the algorithmic circus, where every headline is a plot twist and every company’s secretly writing sci-fi.

 

OpenAI’s not monogamous anymore.

After a one night stand with Nvidia, they locked in a multi-gigawatt deal with AMD for 6 GW of GPUs, plus warrants to snatch nearly 10% of AMD shares.
Translation? Chips aren’t chips anymore. OpenAI’s playing 4D chess. 

Google’s Gemini learned how to click buttons.

Gemini 2.5’s “Computer Use” model can now fill forms, drag windows, and surf the web like it’s got opposable thumbs. Agents are getting just a wee bit better.

 

$375 B in AI infrastructure this year.

That’s up 67% from 2024. Servers, chips, and data centers are the new oil fields, and everyone’s staking digital land like prospectors with GPUs instead of gold pans.

 

 

OpenAI’s dev cycle = street fight mode.

Forget long sprints. OpenAI is in “ship or die” territory. One Asia-Pac lead said they built a product in 6 weeks with 80% AI-generated code.

Developers are no longer builders. They’re editors of what machines imagine.
 

Comet just crashed.

A nasty exploit — “CometJacking” in Perplexity’s shiny new browser lets attackers trick the AI into coughing up your personal data.

Freedom comes with leaks now. The new web frontier’s wild, and the sheriffs haven’t even arrived yet.
 

Shadow AI’s already looting the vault.

77% of sensitive data leaks from employees happen through copy-paste into AI tools — most from unmonitored, “just testing something” accounts.
Your biggest security threat is an intern pillow talking with ChatGPT

 

Governance tries to catch up.

The UN’s launching a global AI dialogue and recruiting its “Independent Panel on AI.”
Cute move. But let’s be honest — by the time they set the table, the machines will already be carving the turkey.

 

That’s been my AI wrap-up. 

 

And that’s what’s up.

 

The AI Reckoning II: Empire, Autonomy, and the Battle for Control

The machine’s not slowing down — it’s mutating. Every headline is another front in a quiet war over who gets to write the next chapter of human intelligence.

Europe Builds Its Digital Walls

Brussels is done playing catch-up. The EU is crafting a new “Apply AI Strategy” aimed at cutting dependence on U.S. and Chinese tech giants, a bold move toward digital sovereignty.

The message is clear. Europe wants to own and regulate its own AI. For decades, Silicon Valley wrote the code, Beijing scaled the data, and Brussels wrote the warnings. Now, the EU wants skin in the game even if it means building its own sandbox.

I’m starting to think they don’t want to play with the US anymore.

 

Perplexity Declares War on the Slop

Perplexity just made its next big swing, opening its premium AI browser Comet to everyone, free of charge. It’s a shot straight at the bloated, SEO-stuffed “slop” flooding the web.

The company’s betting on clarity in a world addicted to content pollution. Truth versus sludge. Signal versus noise.

Some call it noble. Others call it naïve. Either way, the fight just got interesting.

 

OpenAI’s Hardware Dreams Hit a Wall

Even the kings of the hill hit turbulence. OpenAI’s much-hyped hardware device, part AI companion, part wearable assistant, is stuck in development hell. Privacy concerns, software bugs, and infrastructure breakdowns are pushing the launch off track.

For a company built on perfectionism and PR polish, this stumble feels human. Which might be the most ironic part of all.

 

Healthcare’s High-Stakes Gamble

U.S. healthcare systems are throwing cash at AI faster than ever. From diagnostics to revenue optimization. But with speed comes spillover. Managed Healthcare Executive reports rising cases of over-fitting, bias, and outright diagnostic errors.

AI was supposed to heal the system. Instead, it’s exposing the rot underneath. The tech’s not the problem, the greed and shortcuts are. Are we healthy yet? Can AI help?

 

The New Power Grid: Real Estate Meets AI

While tech CEOs chase hype, Prologis is building the bones of the future. The logistics giant just dropped $8 billion into AI-powered data centers and green energy across its warehouse empire.

This is the infrastructure nobody’s talking about. Think of it as the physical backbone of the AI age. You can’t train the gods without a temple, and Prologis is building cathedrals of computation.

 

Meta’s Redemption Tour

Meta’s still chasing ghosts. With Llama 4.x rumored for release before year’s end, the company’s trying to claw back relevance after being outpaced by OpenAI and Anthropic.

They call themselves “masters of disruption,” but right now, they’re the ones being disrupted. The empire that once reshaped the internet is now fighting just to matter in the next one.

 

Government Control Creeps In

The Trump administration’s next move? An AI system to approve or deny Medicare claims in six states. Moneywise reports it as a cost-cutting measure, but the implications run deeper.

Automation deciding who gets care is a moral line in the sand. Once the algorithm becomes the gatekeeper, compassion becomes optional.

 

The Bigger Picture

The AI revolution isn’t only about innovation, it’s about control. Every line of code, every model, every “smart” system is a statement about who gets power and who gets played.

Europe’s building walls. Startups are declaring war. Corporations are stumbling toward godhood. Governments are quietly seizing control.

The machine doesn’t care who wins. But history will.

Author Bio:
Justin Anderson is a Multipassionate Strategist and founder of Anderson Blackstar Enterprises. He builds brands, stories, and systems that blend truth, power, and strategy. His work explores the intersection of technology, identity, and ambition, and what it means to remain human in the age of machines.

AI Wrap-Up: October 3, 2025

  • Perplexity slashes the wall
    Its $200/month AI browser Comet is now free globally — challenging Chrome, fighting “slop,” and pushing a $5 media‑rich add‑on.

  • California writes the first law that bites back.
     SB 53 becomes law. Translation: Big AI labs must publish safety plans, report incidents fast, and own up to their bullshit.

  • U.S. export rules tighten the leash
    The Commerce Department rolls out a “50 % rule” expanding licensing constraints to AI subsidiaries tied to controlled entities.

  • Congress wants a safety stamp.
    New bipartisan push for independent AI safety panels to certify systems and grant legal shields for approved models.

  • Edge goes smart.
     Silicon Labs unveils “Simplicity AI” — pushing intelligence onto low‑power chips so everyday things (thermostats, bulbs) can think locally.

  • Seizure forecast, upgraded.
     A new “future‑guided” AI method improves prediction accuracy up to 44.8% by having one model teach another ahead of time.

  • Agent wars demand oversight.
     Experts warn AI agents interacting at scale could collude, miscommunicate, or shift objectives. New safeguards now more urgent than ever. Translation: Fix the current agents before pushing new shit out.

 

Author Bio:

Justin Anderson is a Multipassionate Strategist and founder of Anderson Blackstar Enterprises, the force behind Madly Multipassionate and Anderson Blackstar Media. He builds brands, stories, and systems that blend truth, power, and strategy.

AI Wrap-Up: October 2, 2025

  • Meta’s shoulder surfin your convos.
     Starting Dec 16, every time you chat with Meta’s AI, your words and tone will feed into its ad engine — no opt‑out if you use it.

  • OpenAI goes cinematic.
     Meet Sora 2, it wants to change the game. Video + sound + full control.

    DeepSeek slides in cheap.
    New “intermediate” model V3.2‑Exp drops with sparse attention tech and cuts its API cost by 50%. War over compute priced.

  • Meta racing to salvage Llama’s edge.
     Llama’s back! Now it’s go big with “4.X / 4.5” before year’s end under Meta Superintelligence Labs.

  • Zhipu dials back the hype.
    Superintelligence by 2030?  Nah, not yet, fam. CEO says don’t hold your breath. ASI still too vague an enemy to call.

  • AI plumbing gets heavy.
    The data center switches market for AI workloads is forecast to grow from $4B to $19B by 2030. The infrastructure wars quietly escalate while we sleep.

  • AI isn’t taking jobs like y’all thought.
     Yale study says AI hasn’t gutted the U.S. labor market yet. Disruption’s idle.

 

Author Bio:

Justin Anderson is a Multipassionate Strategist and founder of Anderson Blackstar Enterprises, the force behind Madly Multipassionate and Anderson Blackstar Media. He builds brands, stories, and systems that blend truth, power, and strategy.