Nvidia rolls out OpenAI’s Codex AI agent to all employees
Nvidia is rolling out OpenAI's Codex AI agent to all its employees after a successful early access program involving 10,000 staff.
Read on Economic Times Tech →OpenAI is offering $25,000 to security researchers who can find universal 'jailbreak' prompts to bypass the safety guardrails of its new AI model, GPT-5.5, through a 'bio bug bounty' program.
Why it matters
This initiative is crucial for advancing AI safety and security, especially as models become more powerful. By incentivizing external experts to proactively identify vulnerabilities and 'jailbreak' methods, OpenAI aims to strengthen its models against misuse and ensure more robust, trustworthy AI systems. It sets a precedent for how major AI developers approach adversarial testing, contributing to the broader responsible development of artificial intelligence.
OpenAI is paying $25,000 to expert hackers who can trick its new AI, GPT-5.5, into saying or doing things it shouldn't. This 'bug bounty' helps them find and fix weaknesses before the AI is widely used, making it safer for everyone.
Nvidia is rolling out OpenAI's Codex AI agent to all its employees after a successful early access program involving 10,000 staff.
Read on Economic Times Tech →Google is investing up to $40 billion in AI company Anthropic, a move driven by the race for AI compute capacity and the development of advanced AI models.
Read on TechCrunch →Nvidia has become the world's most valuable company, surpassing $5 trillion in market capitalization, driven by its critical role in supplying GPUs for artificial intelligence models.
Read on Economic Times Tech →