AI, Donald Trump and frontier model
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The Cool Down on MSN
After investing $13 billion in OpenAI, Microsoft unveils cheaper in-house AI models
"What you just saw is a pretty significant shift."
President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Tuesday that asks AI companies to give the federal government early access to their most capable models.
Critics say Trump plan to test AI models is short-sighted, performative.
MIT researchers used a Battleship-style test to show how smaller AI models can improve by asking sharper questions, potentially making cheaper AI agents more useful without relying on bigger systems.
Afrotech on MSN
Trump Wants AI Companies To Voluntarily Submit Models For Government Security Testing Prior To Release
As AI continues to evolve and expand across industries throughout the United States, President Donald Trump is taking steps to strengthen the security of advanced AI systems and address emerging threats.
President Trump signed an executive order Tuesday that asks AI companies to let the government review major new artificial intelligence models 30 days before releasing them to the public. It applies to models the government will classify as "frontier models" — in other words,
In addition to Google AI Edge Gallery, the company also released the Gemma 4 12B model and the Google AI Edge Eloquent dictation app for the Mac.
Microsoft expanded its MAI AI family with reasoning, coding, speech, and image models now rolling out through Foundry and GitHub Copilot.