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Tech-Reader AI Digest for Mon May 11 2026

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  Tech-Reader AI Digest Monday, May 11, 2026 #AI   #TechNews   #Digest Story 1: Nadella Takes the Stand — Week 3 Opens With a Billionaire Parade and the Sutskever Confession What happened:  Week 3 of the Musk v. Altman trial opened Monday with the courtroom filling up fast. By end of day, four billionaires had testified and a fifth — Sam Altman — is expected Tuesday. The trial is moving toward closing arguments, with jury deliberations now anticipated to begin as early as Thursday. Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella took the stand first. Nadella testified that Elon Musk never contacted him with concerns that Microsoft's investments in OpenAI were in violation of any special terms or commitments. His core defense: Microsoft considered its early investments in OpenAI a calculated risk, and OpenAI retained its independence even as the partnership deepened. "OpenAI had all the rights and resources they always had," Nadella said. On the financial record: a video deposition from ...

What the OpenAI Trial Actually Shows Us. Hint: It's Not the Verdict.

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  What the OpenAI Trial Actually Shows Us. Hint: It's Not the Verdict. A calm look at what the trial has revealed so far — and why the story behind it matters so much more #SamAltman   #ElonMusk   #OpenAI   #FrontierModel This is a Tech-Reader AI Digest Special Edition. I. A Moment When the Seams Show Every era has a moment when the polished surface cracks just enough for the inner workings to show. Not the PR version. Not the retrospective myth. The real thing — the improvisation, the tension, the half‑finished scaffolding that holds up the future. The OpenAI v. Musk trial is one of those moments. It's easy to treat it like a clash of personalities or a referendum on who's right. But if you step back — if you take the historian's view — the trial becomes something else entirely: a rare, unfiltered look at how a frontier AI lab was actually built. How its early choices hardened into structure. How its structure strained under ambition. How its founders navigated the ...

Your Phone Has Too Many Apps and AI Is About to Fix That Too

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  Your Phone Has Too Many Apps and AI Is About to Fix That Too Why the future of mobile isn't 90 apps — it's one AI layer that runs all of them for you #AI   #MobileTech   #Productivity The first article in this series made a simple argument. AI is about to fix the phone call. Spam calls, voicemail hell, missed texts buried in junk — all of it solvable by placing an intelligent layer between you and the outside world. Readers got it immediately. Because everyone has a phone. And everyone knows the phone is broken. But the call and text stack is only half the problem. The other half is what's sitting on your home screen right now. The Flea Market in Your Pocket Open your phone. Count the apps. The average smartphone user has somewhere between 60 and 90 apps installed. They actively use maybe a dozen. The rest sit there like stalls at a flea market — cluttering the space, demanding occasional attention, collecting dust between visits. There's an app for the coffee shop Wi...

Tech-Reader AI Digest: Weekly Recap for May 4-8, 2026

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  Tech-Reader AI Digest: Weekly Recap for May 4-8, 2026 Saturday, May 9, 2026 #AI   #TechNews   #Digest This was the week a federal courthouse in Oakland started rewriting the history of modern AI — and the industry kept moving anyway. Monday  Greg Brockman took the stand. His stake in OpenAI: nearly  $30 billion . His investment in OpenAI:  $0 . His own journal called the nonprofit commitment  "a lie."  Musk's attorney asked the same question twelve ways: "It takes $30 billion to get you out of bed in the morning, but $1 billion doesn't?" The answer "that's not what I'm saying" will be read back in closing arguments. Before the session started, Musk had texted Brockman two days prior to gauge settlement interest. Brockman counter-proposed dropping claims against individuals. Musk's reply: "By the end of this week, you and Sam will be the most hated men in America." The exchange was ruled inadmissible. OpenAI's lawyers fil...

How AI Is About to Fix Your Phone Forever

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  How AI Is About to Fix Your Phone Forever Why the future of mobile phones isn't a new app — it’s an AI layer that makes your carrier irrelevant #AI   #MobileTech   #Productivity This is a Tech-Reader AI Digest Special Edition. Sam Altman is not known for long announcements. The CEO of OpenAI posted three words on X this week in reply to a cryptic post from ChatGPT's own account — a dark cinematic image, a glowing light on what looked like a lunar surface, the kind of visual that says something big is coming without saying anything at all. Altman's reply:  call me maybe. Three words. A 2012 pop song reference. And buried inside it, quietly, one of the most universally significant product announcements in recent memory. Because what Altman was teasing wasn't another developer tool. It wasn't another enterprise feature. It wasn't something that requires a GitHub account or a cloud billing dashboard to care about. It was the phone call. And AI is about to fix it. ...