Anthropic's dispute with the Pentagon is now rippling through Google and OpenAI. According to the New York Times, more than 100 Google AI employees sent a letter to chief scientist Jeff Dean—who had previously voiced support for Anthropic's position—demanding that Google draw the same red lines: no surveillance of American citizens and no autonomous weapons without human oversight through Gemini. Separately, nearly 50 OpenAI and 175 Google employees published an open letter criticizing the Pentagon's negotiating tactics.
We hope our leaders will put aside their differences and stand together to continue to refuse the Department of War's current demands for permission to use our models for domestic mass surveillance and autonomously killing people without human oversight.
According to the Wall Street Journal, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman told his employees that OpenAI is working on its own Pentagon contract that would include the same safety guidelines Anthropic is pushing for. Altman hopes to find a solution that works for other AI companies as well.
Meta has signed a multi-year, multi-billion dollar contract with Google to rent its AI chips—Tensor Processing Units (TPUs)—for developing new AI models. That's according to The Information. Meta is also looking into buying TPUs outright for its own data centers starting next year.
The deal takes direct aim at Nvidia, which dominates the AI chip market and has been Meta's go-to GPU supplier for AI training. Just days earlier, Meta had announced plans to buy millions of GPUs from Nvidia and AMD. Internally, Google Cloud executives have set a goal of capturing up to ten percent of Nvidia's annual revenue—roughly $200 billion—through TPU sales. Google has also launched a joint venture with an investment firm to lease TPUs to other customers.
Here's where it gets complicated: Google itself is one of Nvidia's biggest customers, since cloud customers still expect access to GPU servers. So Google has to keep buying Nvidia's latest chips to stay competitive in the cloud market, while simultaneously trying to eat into Nvidia's market share with its own silicon. OpenAI reportedly managed to negotiate 30 percent lower prices from Nvidia simply because TPUs exist as an alternative.
A new integration links Figma's design platform directly with OpenAI's Codex. Teams can automatically generate editable Figma designs from code and convert designs into working code. It runs on the open MCP standard, supports Figma Design, Figma Make, and FigJam, and is set up in the Codex desktop app for macOS.
Until now, moving between Figma and code was mostly a one-way street. Dev Mode offered basic HTML/CSS snippets, plugins exported designs as React or HTML, and Figma Make generated React components from text input. These tools worked in isolation without understanding the full project. The new integration creates an end-to-end connection where the AI accesses code, Figma files, and the design system simultaneously.
Figma was one of the first partners with its own ChatGPT app and uses ChatGPT Enterprise internally. According to OpenAI, over one million people access Codex weekly, with usage up more than 400 percent since the start of the year.
Claude Code now remembers what it learns across sessions - automatically tracking debugging patterns, project context, and preferred working methods without manual input. Previously, users had to log this information themselves or use /init to populate CLAUDE.md files. The new auto-memory function builds on that that: Claude creates a MEMORY.md file per project, stores its findings, and pulls them up automatically in later sessions. Work through a tricky debugging problem once, and you won't have to explain the fix again. Users can also explicitly ask Claude to save specific information. The feature is on by default and can be disabled via /memory, the settings file, or an environment variable.
Another recent update: locally running sessions can now be continued on the go via smartphone, tablet, or browser at claude.ai/code - without data migrating to the cloud.
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Anthropic's AI assistant Claude is picking up new features in its desktop app Cowork. Users can now set up scheduled tasks that Claude handles automatically at set times, things like a morning briefing, weekly spreadsheet updates, or Friday presentations for the team.
Anthropic has acquired AI startup Vercept to boost Claude's computer use capabilities. Vercept built AI that works directly on a user's machine, understands screen content, and executes tasks. Founders Kiana Ehsani, Luca Weihs, and Ross Girshick are joining Anthropic with their team. The acquisition price hasn't been disclosed.
Vercept solves perception and interaction problems central to AI-driven computer use, according to Anthropic. The technology lets an AI model read and operate human-designed interfaces from screenshots without needing a dedicated programming interface (API).
Claude already handles multi-step tasks in running applications. With the recently released Sonnet 4.6 model, Claude scores 72.5 percent on OSWorld—a benchmark that measures how well AI models complete real-world computer tasks—up from less than 15 percent at the end of 2024. The Vercept team could push that number even higher.
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