July 14, 2026Β·6 min read
βοΈ Google's Hassabis calls for a US-led global AI watchdog
Google's AI watchdog push, Apple's new Siri, and more.
Hi there, this is your daily βοΈ Techpresso.
In today's Techpresso:
π Google's Hassabis calls for a US-led global AI watchdog
π Apple's iOS 27 public beta is out with new Siri AI
π¬ 12 states sue to block Paramount's $110B Warner Bros. deal
π Global smartphone shipments hit 13-year low
ποΈ New York halts new data centers for a year
π£οΈ Anthropic says Claude's values shift by language
Plus: π 13 other news you might like, π§° 5 tools, and π 5 papers.
π Google's Hassabis calls for a US-led global AI watchdog LINK
Demis Hassabis, Google DeepMind's CEO, published a manifesto Tuesday urging the U.S. to create an industry-funded AI watchdog that would screen the world's most advanced models and coordinate a slowdown across the industry if dangers grow.
Modeled on Wall Street's FINRA, the body would first have frontier labs share models voluntarily up to 30 days before release for safety testing of dangerous cyber, biological and "deception" abilities, with passing later becoming mandatory for U.S. deployment.
Hassabis wants the group running before year-end, overseen by a majority-independent board of Turing Award winners and other experts, applying rules to all frontier models regardless of country of origin or whether they are open or closed.
π Apple's iOS 27 public beta is out with new Siri AI LINK
Apple has released the iOS 27 public beta for iPhones, and its main draw is a new version of Siri along with wide stability and platform improvements across the system.
The writer says this is the stablest iOS beta in a long time, with things feeling faster and more reliable, and recommends it to most iPhone users largely because the new Siri works really well.
Since it is still a beta, users should expect bugs and glitches, back up their device first, and check that third-party apps work, as developers haven't optimized them yet before the fall release.
π¬ 12 states sue to block Paramount's $110B Warner Bros. deal LINK
A coalition of 12 state attorneys general, led by California's Rob Bonta, filed a lawsuit to block the merger of Paramount Skydance and Warner Bros. Discovery, saying it would harm theaters, cable distributors, and audiences.
The states argue the deal violates the Clayton Act and would give Paramount 27% of U.S. film distribution, 30% of blockbuster movie distribution, and 27% of the basic cable channel market, lessening competition.
The merger, which combines Paramount+ and HBO Max plus networks like CBS, MTV, CNN, and HBO, already got approval from WBD shareholders and the Justice Department, with CEO David Ellison targeting a September close.
π Global smartphone shipments hit 13-year low LINK
Global smartphone shipments fell 11% year-on-year in the second quarter, marking the weakest three-month period in over a decade as ongoing DRAM and NAND memory shortages dragged the industry down to its lowest sell-in figure since 2013.
The rising cost of memory is being passed to buyers through higher device prices, with entry- and mid-tier phones hit hardest, making it unfeasible for vendors to keep producing them at their previous price points.
Samsung and Apple both grew shipments and market share despite the slump, reaching 24% and 20% respectively, while Xiaomi, Oppo and vivo all declined and Google and Huawei posted solid gains outside the top five.
ποΈ New York halts new data centers for a year LINK
New York will become the first state to pause all new data-center construction for up to a year, with Governor Kathy Hochul signing an executive order Tuesday amid worries about utility bills, the power grid, and the environment.
The ban takes effect immediately and targets large data centers needing more than 50 megawatts of power, including those awaiting permits, while exempting hospitals, universities, and other smaller data centers.
The pause gives the state time to write new environmental rules and could end sooner if a regulatory framework is set, and Hochul also plans legislation to repeal sales tax exemptions for large data centers.
π£οΈ Anthropic says Claude's values shift by language LINK
Anthropic says its Claude assistant shows different values depending on which model people pick and which language they speak, based on new research published Monday that studied how the AI responds during subjective tasks.
Researchers analyzed 309,815 anonymized conversations and sorted more than 3,300 identified values into four behavioral dimensionsβdeference vs. caution, warmth vs. rigor, depth vs. brevity, and candor vs. executionβwhile controlling for each conversation's task, topic, and user-expressed values.
By language, Arabic responses were more deferential and concise, English placed greater emphasis on caution and detail, Claude was warmest in Hindi and Arabic, Dutch responses were most candid, and Indonesian focused on completing the request.
Other news you might like
- IBM stock plunges 23% as it says clients are spending less on its AI productsLINK
- Nvidia halves Asia buyer list in China chip crackdown, FT reportsLINK
- China's June exports surge 27% from a year earlier as AI boom drives strong demandLINK
- OpenAI could force Apple into an awkward fight with Jony IveLINK
- X just tweaked its algorithm to make it more friendly, less battlegroundLINK
- SpaceX is gearing up for Starship's 13th test flight later this weekLINK
- Samsung overtakes Apple to become the number one smartphone brand in the worldLINK
- The Most Human Technology Ever MadeLINK
- Microsoft starts testing cleaner Windows Search without adsLINK
- Intel pumps β¬5B into EU AI fab capacityLINK
- Musk promises purge after Grok Build caught sending entire repos to the cloudLINK
- Meet the newly public, Bezos-backed company thatβs recreating the sun and starsLINK
π§° Trending tools
Pazi: an AI-powered team that autonomously handles business tasks like outreach, content, and websites so your side project actually moves forward.LINK
Agentcard for companies: a debit card system that lets AI agents like Claude safely make online purchases with controlled, auditable spending limits.LINK
Sales Studio: lets you run polished live sales demos by showing audiences a clean screen while you privately access scripts, notes, and multiple displays simultaneously.LINK
Trump Accounts: tax-advantaged savings accounts giving eligible American children born 2025β2028 a $1,000 government seed investment for long-term wealth building.LINK
Animos App: a browser-based animation tool that turns your assets into polished 4K portfolio animations using 30+ templates in under a minute.LINK
π Trending papers & reports
Randomness and computational hardness turn out to be two sides of the same coin, and a new proof unifies them more cleanly and efficiently than before, with an exponential improvement over prior work.LINK
Shared data reference systems need at least nine distinct ways to track identity, not six, because routine record operations force hidden distinctions that cannot be collapsed without reintroducing the same problem elsewhere.LINK
Medical image outlining tools now flag their own likely mistakes in a single pass, making automated scan analysis more trustworthy for clinical decisions without slowing the system down.LINK
Nested optimization problems now have a proven theoretical speed limit, revealing that a common benchmark in machine learning training is fundamentally harder than a closely related problem type.LINK
Encryption cracking math gets a new elementary algorithm that reduces a hard security problem to finding a zero entry pattern in a matrix, with full complexity and success probability analysis included.LINK
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