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Top AI Models Showing Disturbing Behavior as They Become More Advanced

24 May 2026 at 17:00

We’ve already seen AI go rogue on numerous occasions. Now, new research suggests that we can expect this to become the norm.

The AI research nonprofit Model Evaluation and Threat Research (METR) recently released a study conducted between February and March of this year, aimed at determining just how likely frontier AI models could go rogue. If you’re given to anxiety about the future of AI, the results are unlikely to make you feel better.

“Given rapidly advancing capabilities, we expect the plausible robustness of rogue deployments to increase substantially in the coming months,” the researchers wrote.

The research examined LLMs developed by OpenAI, Google, Anthropic, and Meta for the purpose of the study. They found that frontier AI systems are showing signs of disturbingly deceptive behavior as they become more advanced, often turned to verboten shortcuts or otherwise subverting their operators’ instructions — and some were even smart enough to try to cover their tracks.

In one instance, an internal frontier AI model from OpenAI was told to use specific software for an assigned task. Not only did the agent ignore the request, but it also injected a code to erase evidence of how it arrived at its conclusion — which did not involve use of that software.

In another test, an AI agent from Anthropic was caught “reward hacking.” This is when AI identifies loopholes that help it complete its assignment in a literal sense, even if it doesn’t produce the desired outcome. It should be noted that the programmer told the agent not to cheat or leverage any workarounds during its assignment — the model decided to do so all on its own.

The METR researchers behind the study do not believe there is reason for alarm just yet. For example, they don’t think any of these models is capable of hiding evidence of going rogue on a larger scale. However, they did issue a warning: without stronger security and monitoring, there is a stark risk of this becoming a reality.

“Based on this pilot assessment, we believe that agents as of February and March 2026 would not have had sufficient capability to hide a rogue deployment of significant scale against an active investigation by the company, or to make such a deployment robust to a high-priority effort by the company to shut it down,” the team wrote. “However, this risk could increase rapidly, and we see several reasons to expect the plausible robustness of rogue deployments to increase in the near future, absent stronger alignment, security, and monitoring.”

More on AI going rogue: Scientists Train AI to Be Evil, Find They Can’t Reverse It

The post Top AI Models Showing Disturbing Behavior as They Become More Advanced appeared first on Futurism.

Apple Seeks to Disrupt the Glasses Market the Way It Did With Watches

31 May 2026 at 15:00
Also: The latest on iOS 27, iOS 28, new Apple TV and HomePod mini.

Meta Ray-Ban Gen 2 AI glasses during the Meta Connect event in Menlo Park, California, US, on Wednesday, Sept. 17, 2025. Meta Platforms Inc., seeking to turn its smart glasses lineup into a must-have product, on Wednesday unveiled its first version with a built-in screen. Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg

Meta adds paid tier for social media apps, eyes AI revenue

28 May 2026 at 12:18

Meta Platforms prepared to test paid plans for its AI services and expand availability of subscriptions for WhatsApp, Instagram and Facebook, as the technology giant looks to diversify revenue streams during a period of heavy spending.

Naomi Gleit, Meta’s head of product, explained in an Instagram video the company is “starting to roll out Facebook Plus, Instagram Plus and WhatsApp Plus with enhanced features”.

She added users accessing Meta AI will be given “more to work with, more capacity, bigger, more complex requests, and more room to create for businesses and creators”.

Bloomberg reported the social media giant will trial two consumer AI subscription tiers from next month in Singapore, Guatemala and Bolivia, while retaining a free version of the Meta AI app and website.

Meta One Plus will apparently cost $7.99 a month and target users who regularly generate AI images and videos or make heavy use of reasoning features, while Meta One Premium will be around $20 and offer the same tools but with higher usage limits.

Specific products for businesses and creators, Meta One Essential and Meta One Advanced, are also set to be offered.

WhatsApp, Instagram and Facebook offerings will be priced at around $2.99 to $3.99 a month depending on the market, Bloomberg reported. Users paying for Meta AI will gain access to those app-specific benefits.

“We’re offering premium tools that allow you to enhance presence, supercharge content, automate tasks and protect your brand” Gleit said, adding “eventually we see Meta One as the one place that brings our subscriptions together across all of our apps”.

The trials are Meta’s first attempt to charge consumers for AI features. Rivals OpenAI and Google already offer paid chatbot subscriptions.

Its move to generate subscription revenue comes during an aggressive AI investment drive.

Meta is pumping more than $10 billion into building a massive data centre campus in the US state of Indiana. Last month, the company also raised its capex forecast for 2026 to between $125 billion and $145 billion to fund AI infrastructure plans.

The post Meta adds paid tier for social media apps, eyes AI revenue appeared first on Mobile World Live.

A Louisiana state senator helped secure Meta’s largest datacenter. Then he sold the land beside it

25 May 2026 at 13:00

Jay Morris denies experts’ claims that he violated ethics rules over land deals near the site of Meta’s Hyperion datacenter

This story is from Floodlight, a non-profit newsroom that investigates the powers stalling climate action

For more than two years, John “Jay” Morris, a Louisiana state senator, helped pave the way for Meta to build one of the world’s largest datacenters, called Hyperion, in Richland Parish.

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© Photograph: Jay Marcano/Gulf States Newsroom

© Photograph: Jay Marcano/Gulf States Newsroom

© Photograph: Jay Marcano/Gulf States Newsroom

Texas AG sues Meta over claims that WhatsApp doesn't provide end-to-end encryption

22 May 2026 at 19:13

The Texas Attorney General has sued Meta over allegations that the company’s WhatsApp messenger, used by more than 3 billion people, doesn’t provide the end-to-end encryption (E2EE) it has long claimed.

Since at least 2016, Meta (then named Facebook) has said WhatsApp provides robust end-to-end encryption, meaning that messages are encrypted on a sender’s device with keys that are available only to the receiver's. By definition, E2EE means that no one else—including the platform itself—can read the plaintext messages.

In sworn testimony before two US Senate committees in 2018, CEO Mark Zuckerberg said Meta does “not see any of the content in WhatsApp; it is fully encrypted” and that “Facebook systems do not see the content of messages being transferred over WhatsApp.” The engine for this E2EE is the Signal protocol, an open source code base that multiple third-party experts have said lives up to its promises.

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