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Read full article about: Nvidia reportedly set to invest $30 billion in OpenAI

Nvidia is close to investing $30 billion in OpenAI, Reuters reports, citing a person familiar with the matter. The investment is part of a funding round in which OpenAI aims to raise more than $100 billion total - a deal that would value the ChatGPT maker at roughly $830 billion, making it one of the largest private fundraises in history.

SoftBank and Amazon are also expected to participate in the round. OpenAI plans to spend a significant portion of the new capital on Nvidia chips needed to train and run its AI models.

According to the Financial Times, the investment replaces a deal announced in September, under which Nvidia was set to provide up to $100 billion to support OpenAI's chip usage in data centers. That original agreement took longer to finalize than expected.

Read full article about: Claude now available directly in PowerPoint for Pro users

Anthropic brings Claude's PowerPoint integration to Pro subscribers. Max, Team, and Enterprise customers get access too. The feature is currently in beta as a Research Preview.

Claude can create, edit, and generate full presentations from text descriptions directly inside PowerPoint. The model reads layouts, fonts, and colors from the slide master, so changes match the existing design. The add-in is available through the Microsoft Marketplace.

That said, users on the Marketplace are already reporting error messages and other issues. Anthropic itself notes that Claude can make mistakes and recommends reviewing all results.

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AWS AI coding tool decided to "delete and recreate" a customer-facing system, causing 13-hour outage, report says

Amazon’s cloud division AWS experienced at least two outages involving its own AI tools, according to a Financial Times report. Amazon denies the connection and blames user error.

Read full article about: New benchmark shows AI agents can exploit most smart contract vulnerabilities on their own

OpenAI and crypto investment firm Paradigm have built EVMbench, a benchmark that measures how well AI agents can find, fix, and exploit security vulnerabilities in Ethereum smart contracts. The dataset covers 120 vulnerabilities drawn from 40 real-world security audits.

In the most realistic test setup, AI agents interact with a local blockchain and have to carry out attacks entirely on their own.

The top-performing model, GPT-5.3-Codex, successfully exploited 72 percent of the vulnerabilities and fixed 41.5 percent. For detection, Claude Opus 4.6 came out ahead at 45.6 percent.

The biggest challenge for the AI agents isn't exploiting or fixing vulnerabilities - it's finding them in large codebases, the researchers say. When agents were given hints about where a vulnerability was located, exploit success rates jumped from 63 to 96 percent, and fix rates climbed from 39 to 94 percent.

With over $100 billion locked in smart contracts, the authors see both an opportunity for better security and a growing risk if these capabilities fall into the wrong hands.

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Read full article about: Meta pours $65 million into state elections to back AI-friendly politicians

Meta is investing $65 million to influence state-level elections across the US, backing politicians friendly to AI. It's the company's largest political spending push to date, the New York Times reports.

To do this, Meta has set up four Super PACs: two new groups - "Forge the Future Project" targeting Republicans and "Making Our Tomorrow" targeting Democrats - alongside two that already existed. Spending kicks off this week in Texas and Illinois. In Texas, where Meta is building three AI data centers, the money will go toward boosting Republican candidates. In Illinois, it's flowing into at least four races for seats in the state legislature.

The push appears driven by Meta's concern over a patchwork of state-level AI regulations. State races are relatively cheap to influence, which means $65 million can go a long way.

Comment Source: NYT

Deepmind veteran David Silver raises $1B seed round to build superintelligence without LLMs

Long-time DeepMind researcher David Silver is raising one billion dollars for his London-based AI start-up Ineffable Intelligence, the largest seed round in European start-up history. Instead of training on internet text like today’s LLMs, Silver is betting on reinforcement learning in simulated environments to build an “endlessly learning superintelligence.”

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