Minimalist News

Simply the latest news, updated on the hour.

Tech

AI Summary

  • Chai Discovery is gaining attention in the AI drug development space after securing a partnership with Eli Lilly and receiving significant backing from prominent Silicon Valley investors.
  • OpenAI plans to introduce targeted ads in ChatGPT, allowing users some control over what they see while integrating shopping links into the conversation.
  • The rise of AI in healthcare is accelerating, with companies like OpenAI acquiring health-focused startups, prompting concerns about the accuracy of AI-generated medical information.
  • China has slashed tariffs on electric vehicles, allowing for nearly 49,000 imports at a reduced rate, reflecting a shift that could have implications for the U.S. market as well.
  • The cybersecurity landscape continues to face challenges, with a recent incident involving a hacker posting stolen government data online and ongoing investigations into major companies for their security practices and monetization strategies.

Powered by OpenAI

TechCrunch

  • From OpenAI’s offices to a deal with Eli Lilly — how Chai Discovery became one of the flashiest names in AI drug development an hour ago by Lucas Ropek
    AI, Biotech & Health, biotech, Chai Discovery, Eli Lilly, General Catalyst, OpenAI, sam altman

    The startup has partnered with Eli Lilly and enjoys the backing of some of Silicon Valley's most influential VCs.

  • Supreme Court hacker posted stolen government data on Instagram an hour ago by Lorenzo Franceschi-Bicchierai
    Security, AmeriCorps, cybercrime, cybersecurity, Department of Veterans Affairs, hackers, hacking, infosec, U.S. Department of Justice, U.S. Supreme Court

    Nicholas Moore pleaded guilty to stealing victims’ information from the Supreme Court and other federal government agencies, and then posting it on his Instagram @ihackthegovernment.

  • ChatGPT users are about to get hit with targeted ads an hour ago by Lucas Ropek
    AI, advertising, ChatGPT, OpenAI

    OpenAI says that users impacted by the ads will have some control over what they see.

  • Trump administration wants tech companies to buy $15B of power plants they may not use an hour ago by Tim De Chant
    AI, Climate, Government & Policy, data centers, electrical grid, power plants, Trump Administration

    In an attempt to alleviate rising electricity prices, the White House wants grid operator PJM to hold an auction for new generating capacity, and it wants tech companies to bid.

  • The AI healthcare gold rush is here 2 hours ago by Theresa Loconsolo
    AI, Startups, acquihire, Anthropic, chatgpt health, claude for healthcare, MergeLabs, OpenAI, voice AI

    AI companies are clustering around healthcare and fast.  In just the past week, OpenAI bought health startup Torch, Anthropic launched Claude for healthcare, and Sam Altman-backed MergeLabs closed a $250 million seed round at an $850 million valuation. The money and products are pouring into health and voice AI, but so are concerns about hallucination risks, inaccurate medical information, and […]


Hacker News


Engadget

  • Get up to 78 percent off ExpressVPN two-year plans an hour ago by Andre Revilla
    Internet & Networking Technology, site|engadget, provider_name|Engadget, region|US, language|en-US, author_name|Andre Revilla

    If you're looking to up your privacy game on the internet in the new year, you can do so for a little less than usual thanks to ExpressVPN's latest deal. Its two-year plans are up to 78 percent off right now: the Advanced tier is on sale for $101 for two years, plus four additional free months. That works out to $3.59 per month during the promotional period. We’ve consistently liked ExpressVPN because it’s fast, easy to use and widely available across a large global server network. In fact, it's our current pick for best premium VPN. One of the biggest

  • CyberGhost VPN review: Despite its flaws, the value is hard to beat an hour ago by Sam Chapman
    Internet & Networking Technology, Technology & Electronics, site|engadget, provider_name|Engadget, region|US, language|en-US, author_name|Sam Chapman

    CyberGhost is the middle child of the Kape Technologies VPN portfolio, but in quality, it's much closer to ExpressVPN than Private Internet Access. I mainly put it on my best VPN list because it's so cheap, but I wouldn't have done that if it didn't earn its place in other ways — affordable crap is still crap, after all. My universal impression of CyberGhost is a VPN that's not perfect but is always genuinely working to make itself better. It makes decisions based on what will help its users, not to set itself apart in a crowded market. This makes it

  • Anthropic opens up its Claude Cowork feature to anyone with a $20 subscription an hour ago by Ian Carlos Campbell
    Software, Technology & Electronics, site|engadget, provider_name|Engadget, region|US, language|en-US, author_name|Ian Carlos Campbell

    Claude Cowork, Anthropic's AI assistant for taking care of simple tasks on your computer, is now available for anyone with a $20 per month Pro subscription to try. Anthropic launched Cowork as an exclusive feature for its Max subscribers, who pay a minimum of $100 per month for more uses of Claude's expensive reasoning models and early access to experimental features. Now Claude Cowork is available at a cheaper price, though Anthropic notes "Pro users may hit their usage limits earlier" than Max users do. Like other AI agents, the novelty of Claude Cowork is its ability to work on its

  • Anthropic launches Claude Cowork, a version of its coding AI for regular people an hour ago by Igor Bonifacic
    Technology & Electronics, site|engadget, provider_name|Engadget, region|US, language|en-US, author_name|Igor Bonifacic

    If you follow Anthropic, you're probably familiar with Claude Code. Since the fall of 2024, the company has been training its AI models to use and navigate computers like a human would, and the coding agent has been the most practical expression of that work, giving developers a way to automate rote programming tasks. Starting today, Anthropic is giving regular people a way to take advantage of those capabilities, with the release of a new preview feature called Claude Cowork. The company is billing Cowork as "a simpler way for anyone — not just developers — to work with Claude." After

  • OpenAI is bringing ads to ChatGPT 2 hours ago by Igor Bonifacic
    Social & Online Media, site|engadget, provider_name|Engadget, region|US, language|en-US, author_name|Igor Bonifacic

    OpenAI plans to start testing ads inside of ChatGPT "in the coming weeks." In a blog post published Friday, the company said adult users in the US of its free and Go tiers (more on the latter in a moment) would start seeing sponsored products and services appear below their conversations with its chatbot. "Ads will be clearly labeled and separated from the organic answer," OpenAI said, adding any sponsored spots would not influence the answers ChatGPT generates. "Answers are optimized based on what's most helpful to you."  OpenAI says people won't see ads appear when they're talking to ChatGPT about


The Verge

  • Fortnite blocks creators from selling prize wheel spins 39 minutes ago by Jay Peters
    Entertainment, Fortnite, Gaming, News

    A prize wheel in Steal The Brainrot. Epic Games is making a big change to the rules for Fortnite creators just days after allowing them to publish experiences with in-game transactions. Beginning January 20th, experiences - which Epic Games calls "islands" - will not be able to offer in-island transactions as "a 'spin' or 'increased luck' for a prize wheel," according to an Epic staffer on Reddit. Epic is adding the rule after Steal The Brainrot, one of the biggest non-Epic games available to play in Fortnite, implemented a prize wheel that let players pay V-Bucks (Fortnite's in-game currency) for spins and

  • Google brings its AI videomaker to Workspace users an hour ago by Emma Roth
    AI, Apps, Google, News, Tech

    An AI-generated scene created by Flow. Google is expanding access to its AI videomaking tool. Launched last May, Flow was initially only available to Google AI Pro and AI Ultra subscribers, but now, those with Business, Enterprise, and Education Workspace plans can access it, too. Flow uses Google's AI video generation model Veo 3.1 to generate eight-second clips based on a text prompt or images. You can stitch together the clips to create longer scenes, as well as access a bunch of other tools that allow you to change the lighting, adjust the "camera" angle, and insert or remove objects in scenes.

  • The two things AMD subtly revealed at CES that actually excite me 2 hours ago by Sean Hollister
    AMD, CES, Gaming, PC Gaming, Report, Tech

    As we predicted, the world's biggest consumer electronics show was a bit of a bust for gamers this year! CES 2026 brought us several neat gamepads, but barely any handhelds and no new desktop GPUs - not from Nvidia, not from Intel, and not from AMD. But if you dig deep, AMD said two things at this year's show that are worthy of attention. Did you catch that the company's about to make socketed mobile chips again? Or that its answer to Intel is to lower the price of its monster Strix Halo silicon? Publicly, AMD barely acknowledged consumers at the Consumer

  • Verizon-owned Visible is offering outage credits, too 2 hours ago by Stevie Bonifield
    Mobile, News, Tech, Verizon

    Customers of Visible Wireless, which is owned by Verizon, may be getting a $5 credit toward their next bill in response to a Verizon cell service outage earlier this week. Verizon customers were offered a $20 credit after the outage. As spotted by 9to5Google, a message sent to Visible customers explains: "Yesterday we let you down and for that we are sorry. We are giving you a $5 credit towards your next month of service that can be redeemed after Jan 16 when paying with a credit card online." The same message was shared by a user on the Visible subreddit on

  • Ted Sarandos says Netflix will commit to 45-day theatrical releases 3 hours ago by Charles Pulliam-Moore
    Entertainment, Film, Netflix, News, Streaming

    Though Netflix's plan to buy Warner Bros. Discovery has prompted concerns about how the deal might hurt the movie theater business, the streamer's co-CEO says that there is nothing to worry about. In a new interview with The New York Times, Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos said that, should the WBD acquisition go through, the streamer will commit to 45-day theatrical release windows for the legacy studio's upcoming releases. Sarandos insisted that Netflix has no intentions of disrupting "a theatrical distribution engine that is phenomenal and produces billions of dollars," and that he believes there is value in the movie theater experience. "I'


Wired


Looking for more? Search Google News