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AI NewsBuzzFeed debuts AI slop apps in bid for new revenue

BuzzFeed debuts AI slop apps in bid for new revenue

1:10 AM IST · March 18, 2026

BuzzFeed debuts AI slop apps in bid for new revenue

BuzzFeed, the U.S.-based media company known best for its quizzes, listicles, and, for a time,a Pulitzer Prize-winningjournalism division, isreinventingitself for the AI era. At least, that’s the pitch. At the SXSW conference in Austin, BuzzFeed co-founder and CEO Jonah Perettiintroducedthe company’s next media foray: a spin-off called Branch Office, which will explore artificial intelligence in consumer-facing apps designed for creativity and connection. The new company is an extension of the experiments BuzzFeed has run for years using AI technology, Peretti explained, in a halting presentation that began with slideshow glitches, before moving on to app demos met with silence or a polite tittering. “We’ve been working on this secretly for over a year, and we’ve learned a lot from the BuzzFeed platform about what is coming with new kinds of AI formats,” Peretti said. “Using AI is the way of connecting people, building community around these pillars of culture, and taste, and community.” Bill Shouldis, a director of product at BuzzFeed and the founder of Branch Office, presented two of the company’s new apps: BF Island and Conjure. The first product,BF Island, is a group chat platform offering features for changing and editing photos using AI. This is not exactly groundbreaking tech in and of itself, but that’s not the point. The key feature here is not the AI toolset but the in-app library of online trends and memes, created by an editorial team, which could inspire users to create AI photos referencing blink-and-you-miss-it trends like the McDonald’s CEOtaste-testing a burgeror the “frame-mogging” drama. (If you don’t know what these are, you’re probably not the “very online” audience that’s being targeted.) The other app, Conjure, is similar to BeReal — the once-a-day temporary photo app — except that it instead appears to guide users to take daily photos of things besides themselves. (As a reminder, BeReal didn’t stick, ultimatelyexiting to Voodooafterlosing traction.) In the demo, for instance, the photo prompt was “What lies between the trees and the moon?,” leading the users to snap a photo of the night sky. A series of spooky images flashed on the screen, followed by a whispered, “What will you conjure?” We don’t get it, and clearly the audience didn’t either. After the demo, a lone cough could be heard among the silence, followed by uncomfortable laughter. Shouldis then noted that AI is involved in Conjure, too, as the app has an “AI spirit for a CEO.” (Again, what?) Peretti also introduced Quiz Party, a social app that lets you take BuzzFeed quizzes with friends and share your results. BuzzFeed’s underwhelming presentation comes only days after the media company shared that it has “substantial doubt”about its ability to continue as a businessand was engaging in strategic conversations focused on fixing its liquidity challenges. The company, which had a net loss of $57.3 million last year, said it would focus this year on its Studio IP and new AI apps, like these. But even the tech-forward audience at SXSW was not convinced. As one person pointed out during the Q&A session after the presentation, BeReal had struggled to get people to come back after the novelty wore off. What would an app like Conjure do to combat the same sort of retention problem? Shouldis said that the app would evolve “and have different types of things happening and not just be exactly what it is today.” He referenced the potential to integrate things like video, audio, and prototyping with Claude Code to build community. The premise behind the new apps is not unreasonable: AI can lead to faster software development, which makes it possible for companies to more quickly iterate and keep people engaged. “In a way, software is the new content,” Peretti noted. Of course, before you can iterate, you have to attract users. With its new apps, BuzzFeed seems to have thought more about what AI can do than what people want to do with AI, which is not a recipe for success.

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Amazon launches new $1 billion FDE org, following OpenAI and Anthropic

Amazon launches new $1 billion FDE org, following OpenAI and Anthropic

As companies struggle to integrate AI, they’re increasingly ready to bring in outside help — and service providers are launching new purpose-built groups to make sure they get it. On Tuesday, Amazon Web Services (AWS)launcheda new internal organization for AI-focused forward-deployed engineers. Engineers on the new team will embed within companies to deploy purpose-built agents, focusing on fast engagements and customer self-sufficiency. In a post announcing the new org, AWS VP of Frontier AI Francessca Vasquez emphasized that the org would do more than build and maintain requested systems. “Customers leave AWS FDE deployments with both new solutions and new engineering capabilities,” the announcement reads. “Along with agentic systems running in their own AWS environment, they gain lasting AI skills, workflows, and patterns they can use to innovate independently.” Amazon says $1 billion will be committed to the new org, although the figure represents internal Amazon resources rather than a joint venture or conventional investment. Pioneered by Palantir, the forward-deployed engineer (FDE) model has become increasingly popular as a way to manage AI deployments. In a typical FDE system, an engineer from the contracting company (in this case, AWS) works for the client temporarily while the system is being established, allowing them to respond directly as internal opportunities or challenges emerge. In the FDE model, much of the relevant technology can be reused between deployments, while still being tailored to the specifics of each company’s needs and workflows. It also gives the client company an influx of expertise and puts primary responsibility for the deployment in the hands of the contractor. The biggest downside is the labor involved, since it means maintaining a full corps of FDE engineers to install and maintain the company’s technology. Both OpenAI and Anthropichave launched their own FDE joint ventures in recent months, valued at $4 billion and $1.5 billion, respectively. In those two cases, the AI labs were paired with private equity firms, which provided both the capital to launch and connections with client corporations in their portfolios.

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Podcasting platform Riverside enters the newsletter publishing game

Podcasting platform Riverside enters the newsletter publishing game

Video and podcast recording tool makerRiversideis giving its users a new way to reach their audiences: newsletters. Riverside isn’t aiming to directly take on established newsletter platforms like Mailchimp, Substack, Beehiiv, or Ghost, however. Instead, recognizing that its userbase already generates a lot of content, the company is giving the users of its recording tools an AI tool to turn their existing videos and podcasts into newsletters, and send them directly from within its app. Users can also create and send newsletters from scratch without using the AI conversion feature. “Substack and Beehiiv start you at a blank page. But our creators and business customers are already producing rich, information-dense spoken content on Riverside. For most people, speaking is easier and more natural than writing from scratch, and the ideas are already there, in the conversation. So instead of asking them to start over in a separate tool, we help them turn a recording they’ve already made into newsletter-ready content with far less effort,” Riverside’s co-founder and CEO Nadav Keyson told TechCrunch. The company is also updating its recording suite to support multi-camera recording setups. It’s also giving users the ability to add remote guests to recordings. The update brings new AI features as well. Users can use AI to draft a first cut of a recording as soon as it’s finished, and the assistant can also create hooks and content for various social media platforms. The company is also adding an AI video enhancement feature, trained on conversational video podcasts, that it says can improve lighting, depth, and sharpness of recordings. Riverside,which has raised over $60 million in funding, joins a host of platforms that have been trying to enter alternative publishing avenues to either diversify or expand their revenue streams. For instance, Substack in March launcheda built-in recording studiothat competes directly with Riverside, and in April, newsletter platformBeehiiv ventured into podcastingas well. In June, social network Mastodon said that it will allow users topublish their posts as newsletters.

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X now offers an MCP server to make its platform easier for AI tools to use

X now offers an MCP server to make its platform easier for AI tools to use

X is making it easier for AI assistants like Claude, Cursor, Grok Build, and other MCP-compatible apps to connect directly to the platform through a new hosted MCP server. On Monday, the Elon Musk-owned social networkunveiledahosted Model Context Protocol (MCP) serverthat lets AI tools communicate with the X API using a user’s own account permissions. MCP, for context, is an open standard that defines a common way for AI models to connect to external tools and services. Previously, if developers wanted an AI assistant like Claude or Cursor to access X, they would have to build their own MCP server, host it, connect to the X API, and handle the authentication. Now, X hosts the MCP, and users authenticate with their own X account’s permissions. This allows developers to save the time spent on integration work to focus on whatever it is they’re actually building. Developers have long been able to search X, read posts, look up users, analyze conversations and trends, and do more using the platform’s API. The hosted MCP doesn’t add new capabilities on that front; it just makes them easier to expose to AI applications. By doing so, X can position itself as an information network filled with real-time data to retrieve and analyze, rather than just a social hangout. The move sees X joining a growing number of companies that now offer their own official MCP servers or endpoints, likeGitHub,Slack,Notion,Stripe, andSalesforce. Of course, there’s always concern that by removing an infrastructure hurdle, X is opening itself up to more automated posting or spam. However, X clarified to TechCrunch that the MCP tool is not compatible with X’s Write API endpoints, so it’s not possible to use it to post autonomously (or at all) on X. It’s also worth noting that the hosted MCP isn’t bypassing X’s API rules, whichcontinue to restrict its useif the company detects spammy behavior. X also updated itsAPI v2 earlier this yearto address the issue of AI-generated spam, particularly programmatic replies to conversations. Plus, it recently updated its API pricing,increasing the cost for publishing poststo $0.015, and posting linksto $0.20. The price increases were designed to “curb vectors of misuse,” X said at the time — meaning it’s at least getting more expensive to spam X. Updated after publication to include information that the MCP tool will not provide“Write” access, after confirmation from X.

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Anthropic’s Claude Science bets on workflow, not a new model, to win over scientists

Anthropic’s Claude Science bets on workflow, not a new model, to win over scientists

Anthropic introduced Claude Science on Tuesday, an AI workbench that gives scientists one environment to do computational research, sparing them the hassle of bouncing between databases, pipelines, and tools. To be clear, Anthropic says Claude Science is “not a new AI model and not a more capable model for biology. It runs the same Claude models already available to everyone today (including Claude Opus 4.8), with no special access and no gating.” The workbench builds on Anthropic’s October 2025 launch ofClaude for Life Sciences, which essentially augmented the Claude chatbot by making it better at life sciences tasks. Claude Science is a dedicated place to do that work. The launch, announced Tuesday at an AI for Science briefing, fits into Anthropic’s broader push to be more than a model provider and to further own the operating layer for specific industries, the way Claude Code has become the operating layer for software development. Anthropic is increasingly betting its growth on vertical, workflow-level products rather than just raw model capability (which could shape how it competes, and prices, against rivals). Here’s how it works: One main AI assistant acts as a kind of project manager for scientists. It connects to more than 60 scientific databases and comes with prebuilt toolkits for specific fields, like genomics, protein structure, and chemistry. That assistant can then create sub-assistants to help split up the work, like a project lead delegating tasks to specialists, or hand work off to a custom “expert” assistant that the user has built for their own research. A separate fact-checker AI then double-checks the citations and calculations before anything goes to publication. That fact-check step matters, as more AI-assisted writing leads to fabricated citations and unverifiable stats slipping into papers. That said, it’s still the same underlying model checking itself, not an independent source of truth. Claude Science has other ways of ensuring reproducibility, Anthropic says. For example, the workbench can generate figures like 3D protein structures and chemistry drawers alongside the code that made them. Each figure includes the “exact code and environment that produced it, a plain-language description of how it was created, and the full message history,” according to the company. The process also saves scientists time by allowing them to edit figures in plain language, prompting the agent to edit its own underlying code. Another way Claude Science can save scientists time is by running on the lab’s own infrastructure setup rather than sending data off to Anthropic’s servers. Early users say they’re already putting this to work. Allen Institute neuroscientist Jérôme Lecoq used the tool to build a multi-agent computational review pipeline. Stephen Francis’s group at the UCSF Brain Tumor Center relied on Claude Science to speed up comprehensive germline analysis of glioma to a sliver of the time it previously required, with results independently validated. The Claude Science launch comes a couple of months after OpenAI approached the same problem from a different side. In April,OpenAI released GPT-Rosalind, a specialized model that is fine-tuned for biological reasoning. The difference between the two approaches isn’t only about whether a specialized model is necessary — it also comes down to who gets access, and how fast. Rosalind launched as a research preview limited to qualified enterprise customers in the U.S., gated behind a qualification and safety review. Partners like Amgen, Allen Institute, Moderna, Thermo Fisher, and Novo Nordisk got early access. And then there’s Google DeepMind, which is playing a different game entirely. DeepMind actually owns foundational science models like AlphaFold and AlphaGenome, which the other two can only call into as tools. Its Gemini for Science platform also bundles those plus more than 30 life science databases into one skill set. The net effect is that three very different distribution strategies are now competing for the same scientific research market: Anthropic is going wide with broad subscription access, OpenAI is going narrow and enterprise-gated, and Google is leaning on owned, proprietary models nobody else has. How that plays out could be an early signal for how AI vendors compete in other specialized verticals like law, finance, and engineering, down the line. Claude Science is available in beta to anyone on Pro, Max, Team, and Enterprise subscriptions. Anthropic also named Novo Nordisk and Allen Institute as customer case studies, suggesting pharma organizations are already working with multiple AI vendors. Anthropic will also support up to 50 Claude Science projects, providing up to $30,000 in credits: “We are looking for postdoctoral and graduate projects that span domains and explore the boundaries of science, with an early focus on fields across biomedical research. Applications are open through July 15, 2026, with award notifications sent out by July 31. Projects will run from September 1 to December 1, 2026.”

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