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Welcome to The Prompt by Kuro House, your daily AI update. Today, we’re diving into some major moves and launches shaping the AI landscape. From new superapps to privacy breakthroughs, we’ve got you covered.

First up, OpenAI is cooking up a desktop “superapp” that merges ChatGPT, Codex, and the Atlas browser into a single experience. This news comes from The Wall Street Journal, which shared insights from OpenAI’s CEO of Applications, Fidji Simo. The goal is to simplify their product lineup and focus on what’s working best, like Codex, while avoiding distractions from side projects. OpenAI believes this consolidation will help them hit higher quality standards and move faster in a competitive AI market. Interestingly, the mobile ChatGPT app isn’t changing, so this superapp is focused on desktop users.

Jeff Bezos is reportedly seeking a staggering $100 billion fund to acquire and transform old manufacturing firms using AI. The Wall Street Journal reports this ambitious plan is tied to his AI startup, Project Prometheus, which already launched with $6.2 billion in funding. Bezos aims to modernize industries like aerospace, chipmaking, and defense by integrating advanced AI models into these companies. He’s been traveling to Singapore and the Middle East to drum up support for this massive industrial overhaul. If successful, this could reshape major sectors by automating and optimizing manufacturing with AI at the core.

Cloudflare’s CEO Matthew Prince predicts that by 2027, online bot traffic will surpass human web traffic. He shared this at SXSW, highlighting how AI-powered bots crawl thousands of sites to answer user queries, far outpacing human browsing. Before generative AI, bots made up about 20% of internet traffic, mostly from search engine crawlers and malicious actors. Now, with AI’s insatiable data hunger, bot traffic is skyrocketing, creating new infrastructure challenges for servers and data centers worldwide. Prince envisions new technologies like on-demand “sandboxes” to run AI agents efficiently, spinning up and tearing down as needed.

Over at Meta, privacy pioneer Moxie Marlinspike, creator of Signal, is collaborating to integrate his encrypted AI chatbot technology into Meta AI. This was detailed in an article by WIRED, explaining how Confer, his privacy-focused AI platform, will underpin Meta’s AI systems. The goal is to bring end-to-end encryption to AI conversations, protecting users from unwanted data access by companies or governments. This marks a significant step toward privacy in AI, as most chatbots today don’t offer this level of protection. Marlinspike’s work promises to combine powerful AI models with strong privacy safeguards, which experts say could set a new standard.

Finally, Nvidia just wrapped up its annual developer conference, often dubbed the “Super Bowl of AI.” WIRED’s coverage highlights CEO Jensen Huang’s announcement of a new licensing deal with Groq, aiming to boost AI chip efficiency. This partnership will speed up AI inference—the process of running AI queries in real time—making it cheaper and faster for customers. Huang also introduced NemoClaw, an enterprise platform for AI agents, signaling Nvidia’s push to maintain leadership as specialized AI chips emerge. Despite growing competition, Nvidia continues to innovate with plans even for space-based data centers, though that remains a futuristic concept.

That’s a wrap on today’s top AI stories. From superapps and massive industrial AI investments to privacy breakthroughs and chip innovations, the AI world is evolving fast. Stay tuned to The Prompt by Kuro House for your daily dose of AI insights.