AI Developments: OpenAI and Anthropic Enhance Agent Capabilities, Meta Tests AI Video App, and Startups Offer Employee Liquidity
Artificial intelligence continued to advance on multiple fronts this week, with OpenAI and Anthropic releasing new tools for AI agent management and capabilities, Meta testing a standalone app for AI-generated videos, and several startups offering employees opportunities to sell shares.
OpenAI launched OpenAI Frontier, a platform designed for enterprises to build and manage AI agents, according to a TechCrunch report on Thursday. The platform allows users to program AI agents to connect to external data and applications, enabling them to execute tasks beyond the OpenAI platform. Users can also manage agent access and capabilities, with OpenAI stating Frontier was designed to work similarly to how companies manage human employees. The open platform allows users to manage agents built outside of OpenAI as well.
Anthropic also released an updated version of its most advanced model, Opus 4.6, featuring "agent teams," TechCrunch reported. This new feature allows users to split larger tasks into segmented jobs across multiple agents, enabling parallel processing and coordination. "Instead of one agent working through tasks sequentially, you can split the work across multiple agents each owning its piece and coordinating directly with the others," the company said. Scott White, Head of Product at Anthropic, likened the new feature to having a "talented team of humans working for you." Opus 4.5 was released in November.
Meta is testing a standalone app for its AI-generated "Vibes" videos, the company confirmed to TechCrunch on Thursday. Vibes, launched last September, allows users to create and share short-form AI-generated videos and access a dedicated feed of AI videos from others. "Following the strong early traction of Vibes within Meta AI, we are testing a standalone app to build on that momentum," Meta said in an emailed statement. "We’ve seen that users are increasingly leaning into the format to create and connect." The move positions Vibes as a more direct competitor to OpenAI's Sora, an AI-generated video and social app.
In other news, several fast-growing startups are allowing employees to sell some of their shares, a trend shifting from founder windfalls to employee-retention tools, according to TechCrunch. AI sales automation startup Clay allowed most of its employees to sell shares at a $1.5 billion valuation in May. Linear, an AI-powered Atlassian rival, completed a tender offer at the same valuation as its $1.25 billion Series C. ElevenLabs authorized a $100 million secondary sale for staff at a $6.6 billion valuation, double its previous value. Clay also authorized a secondary sale last week.
Meanwhile, The Verge reported that Anker's Laptop Power Bank is on sale for $87.99 (47% off) from Anker via Newegg.
Discussion
AI Experts & Community
Be the first to comment