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Fox News AI Newsletter: ChatGPT to allow erotica

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Fox News AI Newsletter: ChatGPT to allow erotica

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Welcome to Fox News’ Artificial Intelligence newsletter with the latest AI technology advancements.

IN TODAY’S NEWSLETTER:

– ChatGPT to allow ‘erotica for verified adults,’ Altman says
– National program helps seniors spot scams as losses surge
– OPINION: The new arms race is for compute — and America can’t afford to fall behind

Sam Altman, chief executive officer of OpenAI Inc., during a media tour of the Stargate AI data center in Abilene, Texas, Tuesday, Sept. 23, 2025. (Kyle Grillot/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

‘AGE-GATING’: OpenAI will soon lower restrictions on the content ChatGPT can produce, allowing the service to create “erotica” if users wish, CEO Sam Altman announced Tuesday.

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PREDATORS PROWLING: Scams targeting older Americans are surging, and federal officials are warning that the tactics are becoming harder to detect.

TECH SUPREMACY: Power has always flowed from control of the world’s essential resources. Once it was steel, then oil, then data. Today, it is compute, and whoever controls it will shape the century ahead. Compute is fast becoming the foundation of global economic growth. In the United States, investment in AI infrastructure, from data centers to semiconductors and energy systems, is already moving the needle: J.P. Morgan estimates that data-center spending alone could boost U.S. GDP by up to 20 basis points over the next two years. According to The Economist (October 2025), investments tied to AI now account for 40% of America’s GDP growth over the past year, equal to the amount contributed by consumer spending growth. That statistic would be staggering regardless of how long AI has been part of the economy, but this is just the start.

Judge Terry Moorer speaking during his nomination hearing at the U.S. Senate

Judge Terry Moorer is seen speaking at a Senate Judiciary nomination hearing on Nov. 1, 2017. President Donald Trump had nominated Moorer. (Senate Judiciary)

‘JUST WRONG’: A federal judge in Alabama has fined and reprimanded a lawyer who used artificial intelligence to draft court filings that contained inaccurate case citations.

FRAUD ALERT: Artificial intelligence can do a lot for us. Need to draft an email? AI has you covered. Looking for a better job? AI can help with that, too. It can even boost our health and fitness. Some tools, like AI-powered exoskeletons, can lighten heavy loads and improve performance. 

‘DESTROY HUMANITY’: “The A.I. Prompt That Could End the World,” the New York Times warns ominously. Actually, that’s way too weak a word. It’s… pretty frightening.

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Black Friday shoppers walk out of Walmart with a full shopping cart on November 26, 2021, in Westminster, Colorado.

Black Friday shoppers walk out of Walmart with a full shopping cart on November 26, 2021, in Westminster, Colorado. (Michael Ciaglo/Getty Images)

TECH RETAIL MOVE: Walmart is deepening its relationship with OpenAI with a new partnership that will allow customers to purchase products through ChatGPT. 

SILENT KILLER: Artificial intelligence is making its mark on the future of cancer care. One of the newest applications for the technology is pinpointing hard-to-detect breast cancer.

SMART ROADS: Road crews may soon get a major assist from artificial intelligence. Researchers at Germany’s Fraunhofer Institute have developed a fabric embedded with sensors and AI algorithms that can monitor road conditions from beneath the surface. This smart material could make costly, disruptive road repairs far more efficient and sustainable.

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Facebook’s new button lets its AI look at photos you haven’t uploaded yet

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Facebook’s new button lets its AI look at photos you haven’t uploaded yet

Meta has rolled out an opt-in AI feature to its US and Canadian Facebook users that claims to make their photos and videos more “shareworthy.” The only catch is that the feature is designed for your phone’s camera roll — not the media you’ve already uploaded to Facebook. If you opt in, Meta’s AI will comb through your camera roll, upload your unpublished photos to Meta’s cloud, and surface “hidden gems” that are “lost among screenshots, receipts, and random snaps,” the company says. Users will be able to save or share the suggested edits and collages.

If Facebook wanting to look at your unpublished photos sounds familiar, it might be because we wrote about an early test in June. At that time, the company claimed unposted, private photos were not being used to train Meta’s AI, but it declined to rule out whether it would do so in the future.

Well, the future is now, and it sure sounds like Meta wants to train its AI on your photos — under certain conditions. In the Friday announcement of the feature, Meta says, “We don’t use media from your camera roll to improve AI at Meta, unless you choose to edit this media with our AI tools, or share.”

The Verge asked Meta to confirm: Meta will use your camera roll to train its AI if you choose to use this feature, right? We also asked for clarification on when Meta begins using your unpublished photos to train its AI. Does it happen when you opt into the new feature? After you choose to edit something with the tool? Or only after you choose to share the resulting creation?

Meta spokesperson Mari Melguizo sent us the following clarification: “This means the camera roll media uploaded by this feature to make suggestions won’t be used to improve AI at Meta. Only if you edit the suggestions with our AI tools or publish those suggestions to Facebook, improvements to AI at Meta may be made.”

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So, Meta will collect and store your photos in the cloud and Meta’s AI will get to look at them, but the company won’t use them to train their AI unless you take an additional action — at least for now, according to Meta. Today, the feature says it will “select media from your camera roll and upload it to our cloud on an ongoing basis”; in June, Meta told us that it might hold onto some of that data for longer than 30 days. The company claims your media “won’t be used for ad targeting.”

Last year, Meta acknowledged that it had already quietly trained its AI models on all public photos and text posted to Facebook and Instagram by adult users since 2007.

Facebook’s blog today shows that users will be asked if they want to “allow cloud processing to get creative ideas made for you from your camera roll.” It’s not yet clear if that prompt will also warn users that the feature may train Meta’s AI on your photos. The company says the feature is meant to help users who enjoy snapping pics but want to improve their photos before posting, or who don’t have time to “create something special.” Facebook says it’ll roll out the feature in the coming months.

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Anthropic turns to ‘skills’ to make Claude more useful at work

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Anthropic turns to ‘skills’ to make Claude more useful at work

AI agents spent years as a concept and then as an experiment. Now, AI companies are devoting even more time and resources than before to make their agents actually useful for end users, whether they’re consumers or professionals.

Anthropic on Thursday announced its next step toward that goal: Skills for Claude. The tool is made up of “folders that include instructions, scripts, and resources that Claude can load when needed to make it smarter at specific work tasks — from working with Excel [to] following your organization’s brand guidelines,” per a release. People can also build their own Skills for Claude relative to their specific jobs and use them across Claude.ai, Claude Code, Anthropic’s API, and the Claude Agent SDK. Box, Rakuten, and Canva have already used the tool, according to the release.

Essentially, the feature is designed to improve Claude’s AI agent capabilities for your work specifically, so you don’t have to spend as much time writing the perfect prompt or referring to past context every time you’re trying to accomplish a task. It’s available to Pro, Max, Team, and Enterprise users.

Brad Abrams, a product lead at Anthropic, told The Verge that “the thing that’s interesting to me about Skills is basically about agents.” He said that Skills as a feature essentially provides organizations building agents a way to teach Claude to do a good job “in their specific context.” He emphasized that it’s not about meeting arbitrary benchmarks — it’s about being able to do the task you need at your own company.

Using an Anthropic layer on top of Claude’s PowerPoint Skill, “I had Claude create me a presentation about how Haiku 4.5 is doing in the market,” Abrams said, adding that Claude created “well-formatted slides that are easy to digest.”

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OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, Microsoft, and others have been working toward the goal of actually useful AI agents for years, with executives regularly bringing up agentic AI on earnings calls and redirecting internal resources toward building the tools. To date, though, progress has been largely incremental, with companies fighting to release new feature updates or iterations of agents. (Think: Anthropic’s Computer Use — or OpenAI’s Operator, then Deep Research, and then ChatGPT Agent, which essentially combined the two.)

Anthropic’s news also follows an OpenAI announcement in the same realm earlier this month at the company’s annual DevDay event.

At the event, OpenAI unveiled AgentKit, a group of tools executives said were “designed to help you take agents from prototype to production” and targeted both big companies and individual developers. The example use case OpenAI demonstrated was Albertsons, which runs more than 2,000 US grocery stores, using a custom agent with custom data to create a plan to improve ice cream sales if they were down more than 30 percent. Box, Canva, Evernote, and Ramp were also mentioned as having tried the tool. OpenAI also announced a consumer-facing tool that allows people to work with apps inside ChatGPT, like Zillow and Uber Eats.

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Space startup unveils 1-hour orbital delivery system

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Space startup unveils 1-hour orbital delivery system

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A Los Angeles-based aerospace startup called Inversion Space has unveiled Arc, its first flagship spacecraft designed to deliver supplies from orbit back to Earth in record time. The reusable reentry vehicle can transport up to 500 pounds of mission-critical cargo to nearly any point on the planet in less than an hour. Founders Justin Fiaschetti and Austin Briggs launched the company in 2021 with a bold vision: to build a space-based logistics network. During an event at the company’s factory, they described Arc as the next evolution of global delivery, one that starts in orbit, not on the ground.

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How the Arc spacecraft delivers cargo from orbit to Earth

Standing about 8 feet tall and 4 feet wide, Arc is roughly the size of a large tabletop. It’s a lifting-body vehicle, meaning it can steer as it reenters the atmosphere. Instead of needing a runway, Arc lands safely under parachutes, using non-toxic propellants that make it safe to handle immediately after landing. The spacecraft features a cross-range of approximately 621 miles, allowing it to target wide landing zones. It can stay in orbit for up to five years, ready to return to Earth when needed. That flexibility means the spacecraft could one day drop off medical supplies, drones or military equipment at hard-to-reach locations. 

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Inversion Space unveils its Arc reentry vehicle designed for rapid orbital delivery. (Inversion Space)

A computer shows orbital and navigational diagrams.

Inversion’s Ray mission tested key systems in orbit, paving the way for Arc’s full development. (Inversion Space)

Why Arc’s hypersonic speed could change aerospace testing

Beyond rapid delivery, Arc doubles as a hypersonic testing platform. It can reach speeds over Mach 20, endure extreme heat and survive massive g-forces. Those capabilities have caught the attention of U.S. defense agencies, which are eager to improve hypersonic flight testing. Inversion’s participation in the Kratos-led MACH-TB 2.0 program highlights the growing military interest in Arc’s reusable design. “Fully reusable and capable of precise landings for rapid recovery, Arc makes hypersonic testing faster, repeatable, and more affordable,” the company said.

A spacecraft floats above the Earth.

Arc could deliver mission-critical cargo anywhere on Earth in under an hour. (Inversion Space)

What Inversion learned from its first spacecraft, Ray

Before Arc, Inversion launched a smaller demo craft called Ray on SpaceX’s Transporter-12 mission. Ray weighed about 200 pounds and successfully tested propulsion, avionics and solar power systems in orbit. Though a short circuit prevented reentry, it provided valuable data that led to Arc’s development. Ray’s success convinced the company to push forward with full-scale testing. Inversion has already completed dozens of drop tests and built a full-scale Arc prototype. The startup also partnered with NASA to refine the vehicle’s thermal protection system for reentry.

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How Arc strengthens defense and emergency logistics

Inversion sees Arc as a bridge between space logistics and national defense. The spacecraft could deliver mission-critical cargo to remote, damaged or denied environments where traditional transport would take days. As Fiaschetti put it, the goal is simple: make a difference the moment it lands. By combining maneuverability, reusability and speed, Arc could reshape both emergency response and battlefield supply chains. It’s not just about moving packages, it’s about delivering readiness.

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Inversion Space's Arc reentry vehicle

Engineers at Inversion Space test Arc’s reentry systems as the spacecraft moves closer to flight readiness. (Inversion Space)

What this means for you

If Arc succeeds, it could redefine emergency logistics on Earth. Imagine doctors receiving vital medical kits from orbit after a natural disaster, or soldiers getting urgent supplies in minutes instead of hours. Arc could also accelerate scientific research, enabling faster delivery of experimental payloads or orbital materials. For everyday people, this technology represents the next step toward on-demand space infrastructure, where the line between space and Earth logistics begins to blur.

Inversion Space's Arc reentry vehicle

The reusable Arc spacecraft maneuvers through Earth’s atmosphere using parachutes for safe landing. (Inversion Space)

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Kurt’s key takeaways

Inversion Space’s Arc is more than a spacecraft; it’s a bold attempt to turn orbit into a delivery zone. With reusable systems, hypersonic capability and a focus on safety, it might just reshape how we think about time, distance and access.

Would you trust a spacecraft to deliver emergency supplies to your neighborhood in under an hour? Let us know by writing to us at CyberGuy.com.

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