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AI NewsIf you’re giving a commencement speech in 2026, maybe don’t mention AI

If you’re giving a commencement speech in 2026, maybe don’t mention AI

10:47 PM IST · May 17, 2026

If you’re giving a commencement speech in 2026, maybe don’t mention AI

Commencement season has come around again — and this year, at least a couple speakers have discovered that it’s tough to get graduating students excited about a future shaped by artificial intelligence. Last week, Gloria Caulfield, an executive at real estate firm Tavistock Development Company,gave a speech at the University of Central Floridaacknowledging that we’re living in a time of “profound change,” which can be both “exciting” and “daunting.” “The rise of artificial intelligence is the next industrial revolution,” Caulfield declared — prompting the students in the audience to begin booing, getting louder and louder until Caulfield chuckled, turned to the other speakers, and asked, “What happened?” “Okay, I struck a chord,” she said. Caulfield then tried to resume her speech, saying, “Only a few years ago, AI was not a factor in our lives” — only to be interrupted again by the audience, this time by their loud cheers and applause. Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt faced a similar response when he brought up AI at a University of Arizona speech on Friday. In Schmidt’s case, the pushback actually began before the speech itself, with some student groupscalling for him to be removed as commencement speakerdue toa lawsuit in which a former girlfriend and business partner accused Schmidt of sexual assault. (He has denied the allegations.) According toa local news report,the booing began even before Schmidt took the stage. But Schmidt alsogot loud booswhen he told students, “You will help shape artificial intelligence.” The booing was persistent enough that Schmidt tried to speak over it, insisting, “You can now assemble a team of AI agents to help you with the parts that you could never accomplish on your own. When someone offers you a seat on the rocket ship, you do not ask which seat, you just get on.” To be clear, AI isn't becoming the third rail ateverygraduation ceremony. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang recentlyspoke at Carnegie Mellon’s commencement, and he didn’t seem to get any audible pushback when he said that AI has “reinvented computing.” Still, it's not exactly surprising to find some students in a booing mood. Ina recent Gallup poll, only 43% of Americans aged 15 to 34 said it’s a good time to find a job locally, a steep drop from 75% in 2022. That pessimism isn’t just a response to the rise of AI (a shift thateven tech industry workers are worried about), but journalist and tech industry criticBrian Merchant suggestedthat for many students, AI has become “the cruel new face of hyper-scaling capitalism.” “I too would loudly boo at the prospect of this next industrial revolution if I was in my early twenties, unemployed, and had aspirations for my future greater than entering prompts into an LLM,” Merchant wrote. Even when the speeches didn’t mention AI explicitly, “resilience”was a recurring theme this year. Schmidt himselfacknowledgedthat there is “a fear in your generation that the future has already been written, that the machines are coming, that the jobs are evaporating, that the climate is breaking, that politics are fractured, and that you are inheriting a mess that you did not create." Caulfield, meanwhile, might also have misread her audience of arts and humanities graduates. One student said that before mentioning AI, Caulfield already started to lose them with her “generic” praise of corporate executives like Jeff Bezos. Another graduate, Alexander Rose Tyson,told The New York Times, “It wasn’t one person that really started the booing. It was just sort of like a collective, ‘This sucks.’”

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Anthropic scales Claude Mythos  to critical infrastructure in 15+ countries

Anthropic scales Claude Mythos to critical infrastructure in 15+ countries

Anthropic is expandingProject Glasswing, its joint industry initiative to find and fix critical software vulnerabilities using AI, to about 150 new organizations across more than 15 countries, the companysaidTuesday. The news comes a day after Anthropic said it hadfiled confidentiallyfor an initial public offering, following a$65 billion fundinground at a nearly $1 trillion valuation. Anthropic’s Claude Mythos is at the heart of Project Glasswing. The AI firm dubbed the model its most powerful yet, able to identify thousands of zero-day vulnerabilities over several weeks. In early April,Anthropic gave 50 initial partners, including the U.S. government, access to Claude Mythos Preview to scan their codebases for vulnerabilities and security flaws. The expanded list of organizations with access to Mythos as of today covers power, water, healthcare, communications, and hardware — industries that weren’t “well-represented” in Anthropic’s initial cohort, the company said. Many who will now have access are companies or nonprofits that maintain codebases which other organizations and governments rely upon, Anthropic noted in the blog post. “What each partner has in common is that a successful attack on their codebase could be catastrophic,” the company said. “For most partners, we estimate that a major attack could affect more than 100 million people, with important ramifications for both global and national security.” The expanded group includes organizations in countries friendly to the U.S., including Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Spain, Belgium, Sweden, India, Japan, New Zealand, and South Korea, according toFinancial Times, citing a person familiar with the matter. The FT also reported several organizations that have been given access to Mythos, including: U.S.-based identity and security management tool Okta; South Korean companies Samsung, SK Hynix, and SK Telecom; NATO, the U.S.-led military alliance headquartered in Brussels; and the EU’s cybersecurity agency ENISA. TechCrunch has reached out to Anthropic to confirm. Anthropic has said it expects other AI companies to soon develop models as capable as Mythos Preview, which is why the firm is racing to establish safeguards within Project Glasswing. Since releasing Mythos, rival OpenAI released its own cybersecurity-focused model GPT-5.5-Cyber, which it has rolled out to a large group of partners for testing.

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OpenAI launches new Codex tools for white-collar work

OpenAI launches new Codex tools for white-collar work

OpenAI is getting serious about courting enterprise users. On Tuesday, the AI labreleased a new set of capabilities for Codex, meant to expand the agentic tool’s uses in the workplace. Together with the new tools, the company releasedan internal reporton how Codex is being used for knowledge work, finding its uses go far beyond software engineering. “Codex now has more than 5 million weekly active users, up more than 6x since the launch of the desktop app in February,” readsa blog post introducing the report. “While developers remain the largest user group, knowledge workers now represent about 20 percent of users and are growing more than three times as fast.” To further court those users, OpenAI released a set of six plug-ins aimed at specific jobs: data analytics, creative production, sales, product design, equity investing, and investment banking. Available fromwithin the Codex app, each of the new tools bundles integrations, instructions, and context to allow Codex to approximate a specific job. Like any AI tool, the plug-ins will grow more effective with user customization, but they’re meant to be effective tools out of the box. The new tools come after a similar push for agentic plugins from Anthropic, whichlaunched its Enterprise Agents programin February. (A more specific set of finance-oriented agentslaunched in May.) With its traditional consumer focus, OpenAI has been slower to court enterprise customers, only introducing plugin support for Codexin March. Together with the plug-ins, OpenAI introduced a new Sites feature, which allows Codex to output its work product as a hosted interactive website, instead of just a local file. As part of that system, OpenAI is partnering with Wix, Base44, Replit, Lovable, Figma, and Emergent — although the company plans to develop a larger partner ecosystem to support the service. A new Annotations feature will also allow users to designate a specific part of a document or file within Codex, allowing for more specific commands and context operations. The new enterprise features come just three weeks after OpenAI launched a new joint venture for enterprise clients, dubbedthe OpenAI Deployment Company. The venture includes more than $4 billion in funding from global investment firms, with the aim of integrating OpenAI tools more deeply into businesses around the world. “AI is becoming capable of doing increasingly meaningful work inside organizations,” OpenAI Chief Revenue Officer Denise Dresser said in a statement at launch. “The challenge now is helping companies integrate these systems into the infrastructure and workflows that power their businesses.”

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Trump signs narrower executive order on AI oversight after industry objections

Trump signs narrower executive order on AI oversight after industry objections

President Donald Trump signedan executive orderon Tuesday designed to give the government a chance to review powerful AI models before they are released. The order asks certain AI companies to voluntarily submit their new models to the government for testing or evaluation 30 days before releasing the products to the public. A previous draft of the order had called for a voluntary review up to 90 days in advance, though AI industry insiders had pushed for something closer to a two-week window. Trump had been slated to sign the more demanding version of the order in late May, butdelayedafter industry pushback, including from venture capitalist and former White House AI czarDavid Sacks. The president said at the time that he didn’t want to do anything to get in AI firms’ way of leading against China. “Nothing in this section shall be construed to authorize the creation of a mandatory governmental licensing, preclearance, or permitting requirement for the development, publication, release, or distribution of new AI models, including frontier models,” reads the order, published Tuesday. Trump had planned to sign the EO with a bevy of Silicon Valley’s top CEOs in attendance, but ended up signing the current version privately. In addition to the voluntary governmental AI model review, the EO directs the Department of Justice to treat crimes like AI-assisted hacking and unauthorized access as a high-priority enforcement area. This isn’t the president’s first EO on AI. Last December,Trump signed an orderdirecting the development of “one rulebook,” or a national AI policy framework, intended to preempt state AI laws.

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Anthropic Expands Project Glasswing to 150 Organisations Across 15 Countries

Anthropic Expands Project Glasswing to 150 Organisations Across 15 Countries

The new group includes organisations from sectors such as power, water, healthcare, communications and hardware.

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