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LeBron James praises Balogun after 'Silencer' celebration
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Pochettino says Balogun foul 'never' a red card as suspension looms
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Farrell names Leinster-heavy side to face Wallabies
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Campbell back after four years in Wallabies team to face Ireland
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Most Asia markets down as tech firms take fresh blow
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Kane saves England as USA, Belgium reach last 16
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South Korean school baseball team suspended over 'Tank Day' chants
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Ceuzany, Cape Verde's golden voice with volcanic emotion
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One stitch at a time: Artist's mission to recreate the Bayeux Tapestry
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Balogun scores and sees red as US beat Bosnia 2-0
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Deadly Russian barrage pounds Ukraine capital
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EU top court to rule on record 4.1 bn euro Google fine
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Belgium coach salutes Tielemans after World Cup rescue act
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'Job forever': trade schools are all the rage in the AI era
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Cracking open a can of cannabis -- America's new pastime (for now)
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Celtics reportedly trading Brown to Sixers in NBA blockbuster
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Russia strikes Ukraine capital with missiles and drones, wounds five
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Kane saves England after DR Congo scare; Belgium comeback stuns Senegal
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Belgium late show floors Senegal at World Cup
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Harry Kane: England's World Cup saviour
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Streamex is making digital gold accessible
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US actor Danny Glover says he has Alzheimer's
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Mixed US auto sales in Q2 amid high gas prices
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Trump sees progress as US, Iran hold Qatar talks
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Pistons forward Harris reportedly headed to Spurs
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Djokovic, Sinner into Wimbledon third round, Andreeva stunned
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Jovial Djokovic dismantles Tsitsipas to reach Wimbledon third round
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Spurs agree club record £100 mn move for Newcastle's Tonali - reports
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US stocks retreat to open Q3 ahead of June jobs data
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Rain has final say in 1st England-India T20 as Sooryavanshi still awaits debut
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'Gus' the T. rex presented in New York ahead of auction
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England refused to accept defeat in 'beautiful' DR Congo win, says Tuchel
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Kane saves England after DR Congo scare; US eye last 16
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Catholic society defies Vatican by consecrating new bishops
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Oppressive heat broils US during World Cup, July Fourth
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Pair climb to top of Empire State Building for apparent proposal
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Sinner, Sabalenka into Wimbledon third round, Andreeva stunned
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French Open champ Andreeva stunned by Krejcikova at Wimbledon
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England have 'hero moments', says Kane after double downs DR Congo
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Kane rescues England after DR Congo scare; US eye last 16
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努莎·奧貝爾:為市民實施時速10公里限速,波茨坦的「坑洞政策」——是漠不關心還是無能為力?
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Kane rescues England from DR Congo calamity to reach World Cup last 16
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US refuses to extend North America trade pact in current form
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'Iran, Iran!' Iranian World Cup squad serenaded on return home
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Mixed US auto sales in 2nd quarter amid high gas prices
OpenAI says new model adept at making AI better
OpenAI released a new model it touts as its best yet for handling research work like making improved versions of itself, as rapid-fire releases by AI rivals pick up pace.
GPT-5.5 was billed as a "new class of intelligence" and comes just months after the launch of its predecessor.
"What is really special about this model is how much more it can do with less guidance," OpenAI co-founder and president Greg Brockman said at a briefing with journalists.
"It can look at an unclear problem and figure out just what needs to happen next."
The model is particularly adept at "agentic" coding and computer use in which digital assistants independently tend to tasks as directed, according to the San Francisco-based startup behind ChatGPT.
"It feels like it's setting the foundation for how we're going to do computer work going forward," Brockman said.
In the short term, OpenAI is focused on letting humans act as "orchestrators" while AI models do the "heavy lifting," chief research officer Mark Chen said at the briefing.
OpenAI was adamant that it built its strongest safeguards to date into GPT-5.5 "to reduce misuse, especially for bio and cyber capabilities."
That means a ramped-up tendency for the latest model to refuse requests to attempt "cyber-related activities," OpenAI executives said.
Rival company Anthropic has held back a new Claude Mythos AI model deemed so adept at finding vulnerabilities in software it could be a boon for hackers.
Anthropic restricted the release of Mythos to select major tech firms to give them a head start in fixing cybersecurity vulnerabilities and is looking into reports of unauthorized use of the model.
"There are enough model releases that it's probably going to be hard to distinguish one from another," Brockman mused during the briefing.
"This model is a real step forward towards the kind of computing that we expect in the future, but it is one step, and we expect to see many."
According to OpenAI, artificial general intelligence in which computers think as well or better than people is no longer theoretical, and AI models that research how to essentially improve themselves take the world further in that direction.
The executives described GPT-5.5 "as one of the clearest steps yet toward models that can accelerate AI research itself."
O.Lorenz--BTB