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here's your afternoon TNB Tech Minute for Tuesday, April 7th. I'm Danny Lewis for the Wall Street Journal. Anthropic is working with some of the world's biggest tech companies to build a new artificial intelligence model that can find and patch hardware and software bugs. The company is making a preview of its new AI model called Mythos, available to about 50 companies and organizations that maintain critical infrastructure, including Amazon, Microsoft App, Apple, Google and the Linux Foundation. The model is designed to help protect against cybercriminals who may deploy their own AI to find security vulnerabilities and cause widespread online disruption. But the head of Anthropic's Frontier Red team, which evaluates its Claude Chatbot for risks, says Mythos is so capable at finding and exploiting software bugs that the company has no plans to release it to the general public. Elon Musk is partnering with intel on his ambitious Terrafab project, which aims to build specially designed chips for SpaceX and Xai as well as for Tesla. Intel said today it would work with the companies to design, fabricate and package ultra high performance chips at scale. The partnership is a win for intel, which has struggled in recent years, leading the company to cut its production capacity when demand was surging for data center chips and when competitors like Nvidia and AMD have thrived. Last year, the Trump administration acquired an equity stake in the company for around $9 billion to help secure the American chip maker's business. The U.S. government held 8.4% of Intel's shares outstanding as of March 20, according to securities filings, and Elon Musk has amended his lawsuit against OpenAI to ask that any damages he might win be awarded to the ChatGPT Makers charitable arm instead of himself, and for CEO Sam Altman to be removed from its non profit board. Musk, who alongside Altman was a co chair of the group that founded OpenAI and is seeking more than $150 billion in damages from the company and its partner and investor Microsoft, arguing that OpenAI strayed from its mission as a nonprofit and defrauded him as a donor in seeking to convert to a for profit company. A spokesperson for OpenAI did not immediately respond to a request for comment. A Microsoft spokesperson said he could not immediately comment. News Corp. Owner of the Wall Street Journal, has a content licensing partnership with OpenAI and that's your TNB Tech Minutes. Check back in the morning for another quick tech update.
