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🤯 MYSTERY AI LINK 🤯
This link leads to one of the most interesting things I’ve seen in AI recently.
🛠️ NEW AI TOOLS 🛠️
What’s new? OpenAI is expanding the way it marks AI-made images so people can better tell where a piece of content came from and whether it was created with OpenAI tools.
How?
OpenAI is now more closely following the C2PA standard, which helps platforms read and preserve information attached to an image about where it came from.
OpenAI is adding Google DeepMind’s SynthID, an invisible watermark built into images made through ChatGPT, Codex, and the OpenAI API.
OpenAI is previewing a public verification tool that lets people upload an image and check whether OpenAI’s signals are present.
Why does this matter? AI images are getting easier to make and share, which also makes it easier for people to be confused or misled. OpenAI’s approach will not solve everything, since metadata and watermarks can sometimes be removed or missed, but it gives people, platforms, and journalists more tools to judge what they are seeing online.
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What’s happening? Two major California courts are testing an AI tool that can help judges draft orders and research memos, and the public may not know when it is being used on cases.
How does this work? The tool, made by a company called Learned Hand, acts like an AI clerk for judges and court staff. It uses language models from Anthropic, OpenAI, and Google to summarize motions, do legal research, and help draft tentative rulings. Right now, officials say it is mainly being tested in civil cases in Los Angeles and by civil and probate attorneys in Riverside County. But contracts and internal discussions show it could eventually be considered for higher-stakes matters, including some criminal cases. Court leaders say they are being cautious, but they have shared few details about how they will judge whether the tool is accurate, fair, and safe.
Why does this matter? Court decisions can affect freedom, fairness, and public trust. If AI makes mistakes or reflects bias, the consequences could be serious and affect people’s lives in irreversible ways.
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✍️ Meet the Author:

Hi — I’m Hunter, a PhD candidate whose work has appeared in major academic journals and popular tech outlets. I founded FryAI to make staying ahead of AI clear, accessible, and fun.








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