Labor and nonprofit coalition calls on California AG to stop OpenAI from going for-profit

A group of organizations, including nonprofits like LatinoProsperity and labor groups like the California Teamsters, are petitioning California Attorney General Rob Bonta to stop OpenAI from becoming a for-profit entity, The Los Angeles Times reports. OpenAI announced plans to transition to a public-benefit corporation in 2024, and reportedly has two years to pull it off or risk a large portion of the money its raised become debt.

The group’s primary concerns are that OpenAI “failed to protect its charitable assets” and is actively “subverting its charitable mission to advance safe artificial intelligence.” OpenAI started as a nonprofit research organization studying AI, but transitioned to a for-profit company that’s overseen and run by a nonprofit in 2019

That structure is legally allowed in the state of California, but the group’s petition claims that OpenAI’s decision to pursue a new structure is driven by a desire not to further its mission, but to provide “AI’s benefits — the potential for untold profits and control over what may become powerful world-altering technologies — to a handful of corporate investors and high-level employees.”

Engadget has reached to OpenAI and AG Bonta for comment on the petition and will update this article if we hear back.

OpenAI’s primary justification for going for-profit is to raise more money. Currently, there’s nothing stopping OpenAI from convincing more people to invest, but as Engadget reported in February, it is limited in the returns it can offer investors. It wouldn’t have those limitations as a for-profit company, nor would it have to heed the demands of a nonprofit board focused on the risks of the company’s breakthroughs, rather than their utility as consumer products.

OpenAI’s board has attempted to reign in the for-profit side over the years, like pushing out Sam Altman in 2023, before he was rehired and the board was filled with new members more friendly to OpenAI’s for-profit goals. The organizations behind the petition believe that moves like that are enough justification for the AG to step in to protect the public’s interest.

The petition joins other attempts to stop OpenAI’s conversion, like Meta’s letter to Bonta claiming that OpenAI’s transition to a for-profit would “flout the law,” and Elon Musk’s attempt to buy the company.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/labor-and-nonprofit-coalition-calls-on-california-ag-to-stop-openai-from-going-for-profit-212548103.html?src=rss 

Google used AI to ‘reconceptualize’ The Wizard of Oz for the Las Vegas Sphere

Google has used AI to revamp one of the most beloved films of all time for a 360-degree Sin City screen with the highest resolution in the world. The rerolled version of The Wizard of Oz will debut this August at The Sphere, the Las Vegas entertainment venue with a famously globular LED screen. Whether a technical marvel, dystopian nightmare fuel or some combination, the project will surely continue The Sphere’s penchant for extravagant spectacles that persuade tourists to plunk down hundreds of dollars to sit for a few hours in one of its 17,600 seats.

Sphere Entertainment, the company behind the venue, worked on the project with Google, Magnopus and Warner Bros. Discovery, which owns The Wizard of Oz rights. Google describes it as an “epic undertaking of creativity and technology,” humbly likening it to the cinematic boundaries broken by the acclaimed Technicolor original. “We’re taking a beloved movie, but we are re-creating it,” Google Cloud CEO Thomas Kurian told The Wall Street Journal. “The only other way you could do it is to go back [in time] and film it with the cameras that the Sphere uses.”

The 1939 original.

Warner Bros. Discovery

Google used generative AI models from its Gemini family on the project, most notably Veo 2 and Imagen 3. The company not only had to magnify the original 35mm film for a 160,000-square-foot screen composed of 16,000 LEDs but also had to account for camera cuts that removed characters from the frame. For example, in a Kansas scene between Dorothy, Auntie Em and Miss Gulch, Uncle Henry (who was also in the room but off-camera) will be visible on the much wider screen.

It did so primarily through an AI super-resolution tool (generating new pixels to fit the much higher-res screen), AI outpainting (generating new parts of a scene stretching beyond the original celluloid) and performance generation (incorporating composites of the actors into these expanded environments).

To help fine-tune the AI models, Google didn’t limit the models’ training to the original footage. It also fed them supplementary material like the shooting script, production illustrations, photographs, set plans and scores — teaching them about characters’ and environmental details and production elements like camera focal lengths. The company also consulted with professional filmmakers for character actions, expressions and performance.

“Now, Dorothy’s freckles snap into focus, and Toto can scamper more seamlessly through more scenes,” Google claimed.

The companies behind the project (perhaps contradictorily) claim that, despite AI touching “over 90 percent of the movie,” it “respects the original in every way.” Google says no new dialogue lines were added, and there isn’t a note of new music sung.

If the glimpse shown in the preview below (via tabGeeks) is any indication, Dorothy has all the overly smoothed-out hallmarks we’ve come to expect from AI-upscaled faces. But we’ll leave final judgment for the sun-drenched Sin City tourists who spend their hard-earned (or hard-won) cash on following the Gemini-infused road beginning on August 28.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/google-used-ai-to-reconceptualize-the-wizard-of-oz-for-the-las-vegas-sphere-194504769.html?src=rss 

Trump announces 90-day pause on tariffs, excluding China

President Donald Trump has announced a 90-day pause on the sweeping tariff plan that went into effect on Wednesday, April 9, and an increase to 125 percent on the tariff on imports from China. Even with the 90-day pause, there’s still also a 10 percent tariff on all other imports to the US.

“Based on the lack of respect that China has shown to the World’s Markets, I am hereby raising the Tariff charged to China by the United States of America to 125 percent, effective immediately, ” Trump posted on Truth Social. For not retaliating, and attempting to “negotiate a solution,” the president says he also “authorized a 90 day PAUSE, and a substantially lowered Reciprocal Tariff during this period, of 10 percent” on trade with countries other than China.

China originally announced its own 50 percent tariff on US imports on April 8, The New York Times reports, before raising the tariff to 84 percent when Trump’s plan went into effect. The European Union recently approved its own set of tariffs to go into effect on April 15.

Besides negatively impacting global trade, Trump’s tariffs have already had an immediate effect on companies offering consumer products partially or completely manufactured outside of the US. Many companies can no longer afford to pay the tariff to get their products to US customers, or are considering raising prices to account for their losses.

For example, Nintendo attributed the pause on Switch 2 pre-orders in the US and Canada to the tariffs. The new import restrictions have also temporarily limited the sales of some products: Both Razer and Framework are no longer selling certain laptops in the US. Framework also delayed pre-orders on its new 2-in-1 convertible laptop and announced that it would be raising prices by 10 percent on the devices that remain for sale.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/trump-announces-90-day-pause-on-tariffs-excluding-china-195630212.html?src=rss 

The Windows 95 start-up chime has been added to the Library of Congress

The National Recording Registry announced its 2025 inductees, and there are some geeky sounds that will be immortalized in the Library of Congress. The Microsoft Windows 95 reboot chime was selected to be a part of the registry, as was the Minecraft soundtrack.

“These are the sounds of America – our wide-ranging history and culture. The National Recording Registry is our evolving nation’s playlist,” Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden said. “The Library of Congress is proud and honored to select these audio treasures worthy of preservation, including iconic music across a variety of genres, field recordings, sports history and even the sounds of our daily lives with technology.”

The Windows 95 start-up audio was composed by ambient music pioneer Brian Eno. According to the blurb from the Library of Congress, the final sound clip was twice as long as Microsoft’s engineers had requested of the composer. But they went ahead with the chime because they felt it “conveyed the sense of welcome, hopefulness and progress that they envisioned” for this era of personal computing.

The Volume Alpha soundtrack to Minecraft is only the second piece of gaming music to be added to the registry. It joins the iconic theme for Super Mario Bros, which was inducted in 2023. The launch audio for the popular sandbox game (which just got its own movie) was composed and performed by Daniel Rosenfeld under stage name C418.

The 2025 inductees include music from across the genre spectrum. Some of the other selections include the original Broadway cast recording of Hamilton, Miles Davis album Bitches Brew, and Celine Dion’s single “My Heart Will Go On.”

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/music/the-windows-95-start-up-chime-has-been-added-to-the-library-of-congress-203909673.html?src=rss 

Samsung is not selling The Frame Pro for cheap

Samsung has finally detailed the prices of the new TVs it announced at CES 2025. The company is selling updated version of The Frame TV, multiple ranges of OLED TVs with faster processors and The Frame Pro, a high-end version of its popular TV / digital picture frame.

The major upgrade The Frame Pro offers over the original The Frame is a 4K Neo QLED display and the Wireless One Connect Box. Samsung’s Neo QLED displays use MiniLEDs to offer improved brightness and local dimming. To better sell the illusion that The Frame Pro is a picture frame, the Wireless One Connect Box lets you hide the cables you’d normally plug into your TV in a cabinet, and wirelessly transmit their inputs directly to your display. For those upgrades, plus the included NQ4 AI Gen3 Processor, The Frame Pro is $2,199 for a 65-inch model, $3,199 for a 75-inch model and $4,299 for the 85-inch model. Samsung says an 83-inch model will be available at a later date.

Samsung

The changes to The Frame are more modest. The TV now sports a refresh rate of up to 144Hz and also comes with the NQ4 AI Gen3 processor. The chip powers video upscaling on top of AI-powered features like “Click to Search,” the ability to look up an actor’s bio while watching something, and “Live Translate,” the ability to generate real-time captions of whatever you’re watching in another language. If you want The Frame, you’ll pay $899 for the 43-inch model, $1,099 for the 50-inch model, $1,299 for the 55-inch model and $1,799 for the 65-inch model.

The updates to Samsung’s more traditional OLED TVs vary depending on the series and size you purchase, but all of the new TVs support Samsung’s AI-powered features. The S95F comes with the NQ4 AI Gen3, a new glare-free display, Samsung’s “brightest-ever OLED screen” and the Motion Xcelerator 165Hz feature for smooth gameplay during demanding video games. The S90F gets the same chip and Motion Xcelerator 144Hz (for a slightly lower refresh rate) and the S85F uses the NQ4 AI Gen2 processor and Motion Xcelerator 120Hz. The S95F starts at $2,299, with sizes that range from 55 inches to 75 inches. The S90F starts at $1,299 for the 42-inch model and can go up to 83 inches. The S85F, meanwhile, starts at $1,499 for the 55-inch model and also goes up to 83 inches.

All of Samsung’s new TVs are available to order today, and the company is guaranteeing seven years of software updates to the TVs’ One UI Tizen operating system when you purchase.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/home/home-theater/samsung-is-not-selling-the-frame-pro-for-cheap-185607096.html?src=rss 

Piper Rockelle Documentary: How to Watch ‘Bad Influence,’ Release Date & More

Netflix released a docuseries exploring Piper Rockelle’s rise to child stardom and the controversy surrounding ‘The Squad’ and her mother, Tiffany Smith. Learn more about the documentary below.

Netflix released a docuseries exploring Piper Rockelle’s rise to child stardom and the controversy surrounding ‘The Squad’ and her mother, Tiffany Smith. Learn more about the documentary below. 

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