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The Decoder

Google files first joint lawsuit with FBI over Chinese AI scam network, OpenAI blocks PRC influence clusters The AI industry's platform trap is starting to look a lot like Microsoft's OpenAI buys Ona to push Codex toward long-running, autonomous coding tasks Jeff Bezos' AI startup Prometheus closes $12 billion round at a $41 billion valuation Free Deezer tool lets users on any streaming service check their playlists for AI music OpenAI vs. Anthropic: A price war over API tokens is brewing Dario Amodei's new essay reads like a Cold War playbook for the AI age Claude Fable 5: Anthropic admits "wrong tradeoff" after invisibly throttling rival AI researchers Google's new open model DiffusionGemma generates text from noise instead of word by word OpenAI's IPO slips as Altman tells staff to expect a public offering "within the next year" Anthropic study shows AI needs hours, not weeks, to build exploits from security patches OpenAI wants its biggest data center yet, and Nvidia would back the bill Claude Fable 5: The first Mythos model is powerful, expensive, and heavily filtered Germany's National Security Council greenights an AI Safety Institute modeled after the UK's AISI Google's NotebookLM now runs its own cloud computer with code execution and agent-based research Anthropic releases Claude Fable 5 and Mythos 5 with major gains in coding and science Google's Gemini 3.5 Live Translate delivers real-time voice translation across 70+ languages SpaceX wants to put data centers in orbit, and Musk says it's no big deal Landmark German ruling declares Google's AI Overviews are Google's own words and makes it liable for false answers Beijing's $295 billion AI buildout would require 80 percent domestic chips, locking out US suppliers Apple Intelligence gets a second shot with help from Google and Nvidia OpenAI now says "entirely automating everything is not the future we want" OpenAI says going public is "a complicated set of tradeoffs" and is unsure about the timing Microsoft Research's Lens proves detailed captions matter more than raw scale for training efficient image generators Intel gets a second life as Google and Nvidia explore it as a TSMC backup for AI chips Most companies are flying blind on AI spending Frontier Radar #3: How agentic AI is turning tokens into a business metric Instagram AI chatbot breach may have affected over to 20,000 accounts, Meta discloses Microsoft tightens rules for conflict zones after investigation into Israel's military use of Azure Moonshot AI targets a $30 billion valuation, more than six times its late-2025 worth Deepseek topped Ramp's trending software vendors in June 2026 as US companies chase cheaper AI OpenAI says "chat is dead" and plans to rebuild ChatGPT as a full-blown agent app Perplexity's "Search as Code" lets AI models write their own search pipelines instead of calling fixed APIs ChatGPT's new Lockdown Mode lets you disable web access and more to protect sensitive data from prompt injection Anthropic poaches OpenAI's second-ever chip engineer as both companies race toward IPOs Researchers pinpoint why larger language models pick up skills that small ones miss Sakana AI bets AI that improves itself can break the compute arms race of frontier labs Meta's Hatch AI agent could cost up to $200 a month and marks its first paid AI product Elon Musk's xAI reportedly trained its coding models on Claude outputs for months before getting cut off New open-source voice model listens nonstop and decides every 0.4 seconds whether to speak or stay silent SpaceX signs $920 million per month deal with Google for 110,000 Nvidia AI chips ahead of IPO OpenAI and the Trump administration are negotiating a government stake in the AI startup Qwen3.7-Plus is Alibaba's bid to turn multimodal AI into a full-blown autonomous agent Florida's lawsuit against OpenAI and CEO Altman treats ChatGPT as a defective product and public nuisance Satya Nadella publicly torches a VP's plan to make Microsoft's AI agent deliberately addictive Microsoft trained its MAI models on unlicensed web data despite promising "enterprise grade, clean and commercially licensed data" Anthropic's Mythos model is reportedly powering NSA offensive cyber ops against China and Iran Anthropic says Claude now writes over 90% of its code and wants the world to have an AI pause button Cloudflare CEO says the web's future is "pay to crawl" as bots overtake human traffic ChatGPT now saves narrative dossiers about you sorted by work, hobbies, and travel preferences Bain study finds companies miss AI savings targets because humans keep getting in the way OpenAI CEO Sam Altman sees "proactive AI" as the next big phase after chatbots and agents AI can now coach amateur virologists, and top tech leaders want Congress to act on DNA security xAI updates Grok Imagine to 1.5 with image-to-video generation at 720p resolution Google Deepmind's Gemma 4 12B squeezes multimodal AI onto a laptop with just 16 GB of RAM Google lets sites opt out of AI search results, knowing most have nowhere else to go Ideogram 4.0 drops as an open-weight model with native 2K resolution and improved text rendering Trump's new executive order wants AI companies to voluntarily submit models for government safety reviews Perplexity announces hybrid AI system that decides what runs locally or in the cloud AI music startup Suno doubles its valuation to $5.4 billion while fighting major record labels in court Nous Research releases Hermes Desktop, an open-source AI agent for every platform Build 2026: Microsoft tops Google in image generation while playing catch-up on reasoning OpenAI expands Codex with role-specific plugins to build a general-purpose app for non-developers Anthropic scales Project Glasswing to 150 partners across 15 countries to hunt critical software flaws Hackers hijacked high-profile Instagram accounts by simply asking Meta's AI chatbot to change the email OpenAI turns ChatGPT into a career platform with job search and CV editor Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway bets $10 billion on Alphabet's AI infrastructure buildout OpenAI models now available on Amazon Web Services Claude maker Anthropic files for IPO with the SEC MiniMax M3: Open-weight model with a million-token context challenges proprietary leaders Nvidia's Nemotron 3 Ultra becomes the smartest open US model, but China still leads Nvidia bets big on physical AI at GTC Taipei with a new world model, driving brain, and open humanoid robot Nvidia pitches RTX Spark as the chip that finally makes local AI agents practical on Windows devices OpenAI starts with infrastructure robots but aims for "everyone having a personal robot doing anything they need" Ask AI what goes with chicken and the answer depends on whether it learned from recipes or molecules Anthropic bans AI tools during job interviews to see how candidates actually think Anthropic study finds men use AI coding agents more than twice as often as women in social science research SoftBank plans 75 billion euro AI data center buildout in France AI search agents often confirm what they already know instead of actually researching the web Microsoft and Nvidia reportedly team up on AI PCs that run actual agents instead of Copilot Making AI chatbots helpful weakens their ability to simulate human behavior, large-scale study finds Terence Tao argues AI could bring division of labor to math for the first time in history Attackers abuse shared ChatGPT and Claude chats to spread malware OpenAI's Codex can now operate your Windows PC autonomously, hunting bugs and testing apps on its own Salesforce claims AI agents cut a 231-day migration to 13 days with fewer incidents Meta's leaked memo reveals AI pendant, supersensing glasses, and enterprise wearables strategy OpenAI gives GPT-5.5 Instant a readability upgrade while phasing out two older models Google fixes several bugs in Gemini usage limits that burned through quotas too fast One company reportedly spent $500 million on Claude in one month after failing to cap AI usage OpenAI is giving away its life sciences AI model to help governments prepare for the next pandemic New review paper argues code is how AI agents think and act, not just what they produce Amazon kills internal AI leaderboard after employees gamed it with pointless tasks Claude company Anthropic nears a trillion-dollar valuation after raising $65 billion in Series H Anthropic ships Claude Opus 4.8 as a "modest but tangible improvement" that tops GPT-5.5 in most benchmarks Google Cloud responds to AI-accelerated cyberattacks with a platform that aims to close security gaps in minutes Google launches a tiny board that runs Gemma 3 locally Mistral rebrands LeChat as Vibe, betting its chatbot's future is as a full-blown work agent Meta One: Zuckerberg finally puts a price tag on all that AI spending Amazon builds its own AI production platform and greenlights three AI animated series for Prime Video ElevenLabs Music v2 promises opera-to-metal transitions without losing musical coherence
Turing Award winner Richard Sutton says pure generative AI can't do real science
Matthias Bastian · 2026-06-02 · via The Decoder

Image description

Screenshot via YouTube

Turing Award winner Richard Sutton argues that ordinary generative AI lacks a key ability for scientific discovery: it can't evaluate and develop its own results.

Large language models, image generators, and video models learn from massive amounts of examples and produce outputs that resemble them. According to Sutton, when these outputs are good, it's usually thanks to the source material: the texts, images, or data the model learned from. When the outputs are truly novel, they go beyond that material. For factual queries, that's called hallucination.

Sutton illustrates his critique with an old researcher's joke: "This work is both novel and good. Unfortunately, the parts that are good are not novel, and the parts that are novel are not good." That diagnosis fits large parts of today's generative AI, Sutton says. It can mimic useful things or randomly produce new things, but it can't tell on its own which new ideas are actually good.

Sutton doesn't deny that generative AI can be useful for summaries, research, assistants, or entertainment. Novelty often isn't even the goal: a summary shouldn't invent new facts, and research shouldn't sneak in extra claims. "Generative AI can be extremely useful, even when it just mimics, if it is faster, or cheaper, or smaller, or more customizable, or more copy-able, than the thing being mimicked," Sutton says.

Imitation falls short for science

In Sutton's view, this boundary matters most for science in general, where the point isn't to reproduce what's already known but to discover new things, test them, and turn them into lasting knowledge.

Sutton describes genuine discovery as a three-step process: variation, evaluation, and selective retention. A system has to generate different options, test them, and keep using the approaches that work. Sutton says this principle exists in evolution, in the scientific method, in planning, in search, and in reinforcement learning.

What pure generative AI lacks most is evaluation. Language and image models do generate different variants. But without testing, there's no selection of the best and no discovery. "The novelty flickers into existence, but if its value is unrecognized, it flickers away and is lost," Sutton says.

Evaluation can come from humans, for example, when users pick the best image from several AI-generated options.  But it can also come from a clear goal: a checkmate, a formally valid proof, a successful program run, or a high reward in a simulated environment. Only that kind of feedback turns mere generation into a search and discovery process.

AlphaGo, AlphaFold, and Claude Code show the difference

Sutton says some AI systems that go beyond pure generative AI are already "capable of true creativity and true discovery." He points to examples like AlphaGo with its famous move 37AlphaZero with its unique chess styleAlphaFold in protein structure prediction, AlphaProof in math, Claude Code in programming, and GT-Sophy in simulated racing.

What these systems share is an evaluation loop that goes beyond pure text or image generation. A Go move either raises the chance of winning or it doesn't. A math step can be formally checked, or it can't. Code passes tests, runs correctly, or fails. This makes it possible to select and pursue better solutions.

"All these systems have some additional features that make them capable of true creativity and true discovery," Sutton says.

Sutton's critique explicitly targets "ordinary" generative AI: models that don't evaluate their own output at runtime. Language models extended with search, verifiers, tools, reinforcement learning, or formal validators can become part of genuine discovery systems. But how far that structure can stretch beyond programming, games, and clearly testable tasks remains an open question.

Sutton sees another issue in how neural networks are trained. Standard networks start with random settings and then learn from data. That initial randomness is a source of variation, but it mostly happens at the beginning. Over time, models can lose their ability to learn as their internal structures get rigid.

A truly learning system shouldn't just be trained once, Sutton argues. It would need to renew its structure on an ongoing basis: try new possibilities, keep what works, and discard what doesn't. His goal is an AI that manages variation, evaluation, and selective retention on its own over long stretches of time. "Let's fully automate Creativity and Discovery!" he says.

Sutton has been critical of the AI industry's direction for a while

Sutton recently criticized the AI industry more broadly, saying it has "lost its way." The researcher is mainly pushing back against the heavy focus on ever-larger language models that absorb vast knowledge during training but don't learn from their own experience over time.

Instead, Sutton calls for AI agents that interact with their environment continuously, learn from it, build internal models of the world, and plan new strategies. Meta-learning also factors into his vision: systems should learn how to learn better instead of just mimicking individual tasks.

In his Oak architecture, Sutton lays out a possible path to powerful AI systems. The core idea is that agents start with no built-in specialist knowledge, act in an environment, get feedback, and form increasingly abstract concepts over time. Useful concepts become the foundation for the next stage of learning.

The big open prerequisite for this, Sutton says, is reliable continual learning. Today's neural networks often struggle to absorb new knowledge without overwriting old knowledge or losing the ability to adapt.

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