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Why the jury ruled against Elon Musk: The key takeaways from the landmark AI trial

The biggest trial over artificial intelligence of the century has ended quietly, with very little fanfare. Elon Musk lost, and OpenAI won easily. Above all, because the jury found Musk’s lawsuit had been filed too late. It was barred by the statute of limitations. Neither the jury nor the judge went on to assess Musk’s complaint. It’s as if the World Cup final never gets played because one team can’t show up: someone is declared the winner, but no one knows whether they actually deserved it. These are the key takeaways:

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© Vicki Behringer (REUTERS)

A juror reads the verdict to Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers in the Musk v. OpenAI case in a federal court in Oakland.
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Generational rejection of AI? Why are university students booing big tech at graduation ceremonies?

“The rise of AI is the next industrial revolution,” Gloria Caulfield, a real estate executive, told recent graduates of arts, humanities, and communication at the University of Central Florida. The response? A chorus of boos. Caulfield turned to the organizers: “What happened?” she asked. She looked back at the young people in the audience: “Ok, I’ve struck a chord, may I finish?” And she continued: “Only a few years ago, AI wasn’t a factor in our lives,” she added. And then they applauded, and Caulfield smiled with relief. The video of her bewilderment went viral.

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© SHAHAR AZRAN

Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt.
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TikTok helped Trump win the 2024 election as the platform’s future in the US hung in the balance

TikTok’s survival in the United States was at stake in 2024. Then-president Joe Biden had passed a law requiring TikTok to separate from its Chinese parent company, ByteDance, if it wanted to continue operating in the U.S. After Donald Trump won the election, the U.S. reached an agreement with TikTok. Today, the platform remains in the country, and Trump is capitalizing on it: “I like TikTok. It helped get me elected,” Trump said after winning the election.

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© Associated Press/LaPresse (APN)

Donald Trump holds a bag of pretzels while speaking with business leaders at the White House on Monday.
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Typos as a symbol of prestige: How to write so it doesn’t sound like AI

“I wrote to five CEOs and four replied,” says Ben Horwitz, a student at Harvard Business School. CEOs don’t usually respond to emails from strangers. He also asked them to get coffee or attend a meeting with students — nothing too important. But Horwitz had a trick: he had created an app that mimicked the writing style of these executives, with typos, no greetings, just a single line of six or eight words. And it worked.

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© Gema Garcia

A user consults the Sinceerly website, which adds deliberate typos to emails.
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What’s the best way to talk about health with chatbots?

In 2021, Miriam González, a 35-year-old from Murcia, Spain, went to the doctor because she was bleeding from her breast. She was told to relax: everything was normal. But in 2024, she was diagnosed with breast cancer. And, shortly afterward, she discovered it was metastatic, at stage four.

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Miriam González, an engineer who has used AI for medical consultations, in an image provided by her.
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