Google's new anything-to-anything AI model is wildGoogle's new multimodal AI can generate convincing deepfakes of objects.
- What it does: The new Gemini model can transform any input into any output format - text, images, video, audio.
- Real-world test: A journalist successfully deepfaked their kid's stuffed animal to look like it was on vacation, recreating a Google ad.
- The implications: Raises questions about the line between harmless fun and potential misuse of generative AI technology.
For product
Consider how your team will handle user-generated deepfakes in products - authentication and content policies need updating before this becomes mainstream.
Google's AI search is so broken it can 'disregard' what you're looking forGoogle's AI Overviews mistakenly responds like a chatbot instead of summarizing.
- The bug: Searching for 'disregard' triggered AI Overview to respond like a chatbot saying 'Got it' instead of providing search results.
- Quick fix: Google appears to have patched the issue by Friday afternoon after it was spotted on social media.
- Bigger picture: Shows how AI search features can break basic search functionality when they misinterpret user intent.
For product
Build robust fallback mechanisms for AI features - when they fail, they should degrade gracefully to core functionality rather than breaking the entire experience.
The literary world isn't prepared for AIAI-generated story appears to have won a prestigious Commonwealth literary prize.
- The discovery: Jamir Nazir's winning story shows telltale signs of LLM writing - mixed metaphors, repetitive structures, and formulaic patterns.
- Detection challenge: Literary contests lack robust AI detection systems, making it easy for generated content to slip through.
- Industry impact: Raises questions about authenticity verification in creative competitions and publishing more broadly.
For ethics
If your company runs any user-generated content contests or creative submissions, implement AI detection tools now - the literary world's oversight could be yours too.
Even If You Hate AI, You Will Use Google AI SearchGoogle's AI search answers are too convenient to resist despite harming creators.
- Convenience trap: AI-generated search summaries save time but reduce clicks to original sources, hurting content creators.
- Network effects: Users will adopt AI search despite philosophical objections because the convenience is too compelling.
- Creator impact: Artists, writers, and thinkers lose traffic and revenue when their work is summarized instead of visited.
For product
Consider how your AI features might cannibalize partner content - build attribution and revenue-sharing mechanisms before launching summarization features.
AI is being used to resurrect the voices of dead pilotsPeople used AI to reconstruct cockpit recordings, forcing NTSB security changes.
- The technique: Hackers used AI on spectrogram images of cockpit recordings to reconstruct audio from crash investigations.
- Immediate impact: NTSB temporarily blocked access to its entire docket system to prevent further voice reconstruction.
- Privacy breach: Demonstrates how AI can extract sensitive audio from visual representations of sound waves.
For ethics
Audit what data your team publishes in visual formats - spectrograms, waveforms, or other signal representations might be reverse-engineerable with AI.
We tried Google's AI glasses and they're almost thereGoogle's prototype AR glasses show promise with Gemini-powered real-time features.
- Core features: The Android XR glasses overlay Gemini-powered translation, navigation, and contextual information directly in your vision.
- Almost ready: Prototype demonstrates functional AR but still needs refinement before consumer release.
- AI integration: Gemini powers the real-time processing for translation and contextual assistance features.
For design
Start thinking about spatial design patterns now - AR interfaces will need completely different interaction models than mobile apps.