Top 5 AI News Stories — May 29, 2026
AI News Archive 1 week ago · 2 min read

Top 5 AI News Stories — May 29, 2026

Friday • 29 May 2026

Your Daily AI Intelligence Briefing

The 5 most important AI stories today — curated and summarised by AI, delivered every morning.

1

AI News
29 May 2026


Anthropic releases Claude Opus 4.8

Anthropic has launched Claude Opus 4.8, bringing notable improvements to coding, agent workflows, reasoning, and knowledge tasks. The release also emphasizes ‘honesty’ — the model is trained to flag uncertainty rather than confidently fabricate progress, addressing one of the most persistent criticisms of large language models.



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2

The Verge AI
28 May 2026


CNN sues Perplexity over ‘verbatim’ copycat articles

CNN has sued Perplexity, alleging the AI answer engine produces ‘verbatim’ copies of its articles and bypasses subscription paywalls. The case adds to mounting legal pressure on AI startups over content scraping and could set important precedents for how AI products handle publisher content.



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3

TechCrunch AI
28 May 2026


The internet is being rebuilt for machines

AWS, Cloudflare, and other cloud giants are quietly rebuilding internet infrastructure to handle a future dominated by AI agents rather than human users. As agentic workloads scale into production, the underlying architecture of the web — from authentication to traffic routing — is being redesigned for machines.



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4

AI News
28 May 2026


Google Pay preps for AI agents with Universal Commerce Protocol

Google Pay is rolling out a Universal Commerce Protocol and new server architecture designed specifically for AI agents that make purchases on behalf of users. The move positions Google as a central clearinghouse for autonomous transactions, a foundational piece of infrastructure for the agentic economy.



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5

TechCrunch AI
29 May 2026


After Nvidia’s $20B not-aqui-hire, AI chip startup Groq reportedly raising $650M

Groq is reportedly raising $650 million as it pivots from chip hardware toward AI inference services, coming on the heels of Nvidia’s massive $20 billion ‘not-acqui-hire’ deal. The shift underscores how inference — not training — is becoming the next major battleground in the AI infrastructure war.



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