Former Windows Head Sought Epstein's Help to Connect with Apple CEO, Emails Show
Emails released by the Justice Department revealed that Steven Sinofsky, the former head of Windows, sought the assistance of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein to arrange a meeting with Apple CEO Tim Cook, according to The Verge. The emails, which surfaced on Friday, indicated Sinofsky's reliance on Epstein for a connection to Apple's leadership.
The revelation comes amid other news in the tech world, including OpenAI's launch of a new desktop application for macOS called Codex. The tool is designed to allow developers to delegate multiple coding tasks simultaneously, automate repetitive work, and supervise AI systems, according to VentureBeat. Sam Altman, OpenAI's chief executive, described the app as a "command center for agents" and said it was the "most loved internal product we've ever had."
Meanwhile, concerns are growing over the use of AI in creating deepfakes. MIT Technology Review reported on a civilian online marketplace where users can buy custom instruction files for generating celebrity deepfakes, including pornographic images. Researchers at Stanford and Indiana University found that a significant portion of requests on the site, called bounties, were for content that violated the site's ban on pornographic images.
In other AI-related news, Fortune reported that top AI leaders are warning against the use of Moltbook, a social media platform for AI agents, calling it a "disaster waiting to happen." A security investigation by cloud security firm Wiz found that the vast majority of the platform's 1.5 million autonomous AI agents were not autonomous at all. According to Wiz's analysis, roughly 17,000 humans controlled the platform's agents, an average of 88 agents per person. Gal Nagli, head of threat exposure at Wiz, stated that the platform had no mechanism to verify whether an agent was actually AI or just a human with a script. "The revolutionary AI social network was largely humans operating," Nagli wrote in a blog post.
On the economic front, Fortune reported that Morgan Stanley's chief investment officer, Lisa Shalett, said that former President Trump's tariffs "woke the rest of the world up to the formula" of leveraging economic firepower against trade partners. Speaking at a global outlook roundtable last week, Shalett explained that America's healthy economy had been underpinned by monetary stimulus, fiscal stimulus, and imported disinflation from trade with China. She added that this combination was extraordinarily powerful for corporate earnings and growth over the past 15 years.
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