The ChatGPT Library and Europe’s Expensive War on Practical Innovation
OpenAI's ChatGPT Library shows how small product features can become infrastructure, and why European regulation may again punish practical usefulness.
6 posts
OpenAI's ChatGPT Library shows how small product features can become infrastructure, and why European regulation may again punish practical usefulness.
Apple's unavailable AirPods translation feature becomes another example of European regulation turning consumers into collateral damage.
OpenAI for Germany is criticized as another sovereign-cloud spectacle that may ignore the boring needs of actual citizens.
Europe's Jupiter supercomputer is impressive, but the post asks whether regulation and dependency will blunt its strategic value.
Instead of exotic regulation, the post argues AI risk management should borrow from ordinary accountability for human employees.
European privacy law and AI innovation collide, raising the question of whether regulation protects users or slows useful tools.