In the irony of ironies, Google – one of ChatGPT’s fiercest competitors – has agreed to provide cloud computing services to its nemesis.
Observes lead writer Kenrick Cai: The deal “underscores how massive computing demands to train and deploy AI models are reshaping the competitive dynamics in AI.”
Google competes head-to-head against ChatGPT with its own chatbot, Google Pro 2.5.
In other news and analysis on AI writing:
*ChatGPT Controls 80% of the AI Market: Despite their best efforts, competitors to ChatGPT are unable to approach the chatbot’s influence worldwide.
Observes writer Jose Antonio Lanz: “ChatGPT attracts more traffic than the next nine AI tools combined, with 5.5 billion visits crushing Gemini and Claude.
“ChatGPT has become the default AI assistant for hundreds of millions of users worldwide.”
*Is AI Friend or Foe?: Local News Outlets About to Find Out: A new study finds that local news outlets are still wondering if AI represents a second chance for them – or their final death knell.
Observes study researcher Mark Caro: “Many people who practice or care about journalism fear that generative AI, with its ability to create content with little human
involvement, could be the final nail in the local
news coffin.”
In contrast, AI like ChatGPT “is only the latest in a long line of technological advancements that, when used correctly, should make work more efficient and easier.”
We’ll all know soon enough how things shake-out.
*AI Drives Major Layoff at News Outlet: AI has made news magazine Business Insider so much more efficient, it was able to layoff 21% of its staff, according to the magazine’s CEO Barbara Peng.
Yay?
Observes writer Mike Kaput: “In a company-wide memo, CEO Barbara Peng made it crystal clear: AI was central to their strategic pivot.
“More than 70% of Business Insider employees are already using Enterprise ChatGPT regularly.
“The goal? Full adoption.”
“Peng framed the layoffs not as an unfortunate byproduct of AI usage, but as part of a broader vision to make the company leaner, faster, and more future-proof.”
*Bleeding Edge Text-to-Voice Provider Out With a Major Upgrade: Eleven Labs – a text-to-voice provider considered by many to be among the very best – is out with a major upgrade.
Observes writer Web Wright: “The new model can exhibit a wide range of emotions and subtle communicative quirks — like sighs, laughter, and whispering — making its speech more humanlike than the company’s previous models.”
*The Gloves Are Off: We’re Looking to Replace You With AI: San Francisco start-up Mechanize minces no words when summing up its raison d’etre: It’s looking to automate white-collar jobs with AI as fast as possible.
In fact, Mechanize’s ultimate dream is to so fully automate the economy, humans at workplaces will become superfluous, according to company co-founder Tamay Besiroglu.
One thing is certain: The sweet-talking days when AI was simply going to be our AI buddy collaborator (last year) are long gone.
*The ‘Post-Search Era’ for Publishers Has Arrived: Google’s AI-powered search is so successfully eliminating the need to visit news sites for information, some publishers are beginning to talk of a ‘post-search era’ for online journalism.
Observes lead writer Isabella Simonetti: “Traffic from organic search to HuffPost’s desktop and mobile websites fell by just over half in the past three years — and by nearly that much at the Washington Post.”
Moreover, “at a companywide meeting earlier this year, Nicholas Thompson, chief executive of the Atlantic, said the publication should assume traffic from Google would drop toward zero and the company needed to evolve its business model,” Simonetti adds.
“Generative AI is now rewiring how the internet is used altogether.”
*Sucking Wind: Apple Still Gasping to Get Current on AI: Despite efforts to pretty-up its AI image with promises of a powerful AI future, Apple failed to convince coders at its annual developers contest that it has AI game, according to writer Dan Gallagher.
To be fair, Apple deliberately strove to set expectations relatively low at the conference, after many of its AI dream features promised last year never materialized.
Observes Gallagher: “Apple no doubt wanted to avoid the trap it fell into last year, when it introduced its Apple Intelligence service to great hype only to have its later launch and subsequent updates fall short of promises.”
*Oh Right – AI Agents Can Get Hacked, Too: A new study finds that AI agents made by Microsoft – which can accomplish complex missions featuring a number of independent actions and decisions – can be hacked.
Observes writer Sharon Goldman: “In the case of Microsoft 365 Copilot, the vulnerability lets a hacker trigger an attack simply by sending an email to a user, with no phishing or malware needed.
“Instead, the exploit uses a series of clever techniques to turn the AI assistant against itself.”
The discovery throws cold water on the idyllic dreams of an AI agent future, when a writer, for example, could theoretically program an AI agent to research, write – and continually update – an article.
Apparently, such an agent might be maliciously hacked to say include inaccurate information in that article, feature false quotes — and more.
*AI BIG PICTURE: AI ‘Companions for Seniors’ Now a Thing: In an unexpected twist, a Delaware start-up is out with a new service that offers AI friends for seniors.
For $20/month, seniors can simply pick-up a phone and start talking with an AI chatbot that promises warm, engaging conversation.
Observes company spokesperson Amanda Garcia: “The newly launched phone-based option works with any U.S. landline or mobile number.”
Meanwhile, seniors who prefer to interact via text chat can sign-up for a text-based account for $10/month.

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–Joe Dysart is editor of RobotWritersAI.com and a tech journalist with 20+ years experience. His work has appeared in 150+ publications, including The New York Times and the Financial Times of London.