A future without screens – from Techcrunch

If you are in the content business, starting forgeting about the screen. Instead, put your R&D peanuts in audio. Big tech is putting its billions in audio AI and lining up audio-first devices for launch later this year.

 

 

OpenAI is betting big on audio AI, and it’s not just about making ChatGPT sound better. According to new reporting from The Information, the company has unified several engineering, product, and research teams over the past two months to overhaul its audio models, all in preparation for an audio-first personal device expected to launch in about a year.

The move reflects where the entire tech industry is headed — toward a future where screens become background noise and audio takes center stage. Smart speakers have already made voice assistants a fixture in more than a third of U.S. homes. Meta just rolled out a feature for its Ray-Ban smart glasses that uses a five-microphone array to help you hear conversations in noisy rooms — essentially turning your face into a directional listening device. Google, meanwhile, began experimenting in June with “Audio Overviews” that transform search results into conversational summaries, and Tesla is integrating xAI’s chatbot Grok into its vehicles to create a conversational voice assistant that handles everything from navigation to climate control through natural dialogue.

It’s not just the tech giants placing this bet. A motley crew of startups has emerged with the same conviction, albeit with varying degrees of success. The makers of the Humane AI Pin burned through hundreds of millions before their screenless wearable became a cautionary tale. The Friend AI pendant, a necklace that claims it will record your life and offer companionship, has sparked privacy concerns and existential dread in equal measure. And now at least two companies, including Sandbar and one helmed by Pebble founder Eric Migicovsky, are building AI rings expected to debut in 2026, allowing wearers to literally talk to the hand.

The form factors may differ, but the thesis is the same: audio is the interface of the future. Every space — your home, your car, even your face — is becoming a control surface.

OpenAI’s new audio model, slated for early 2026, will reportedly sound more natural, handle interruptions like an actual conversation partner, and even speak while you’re talking, which is something today’s models can’t manage. The company is also said to envision a family of devices, possibly including glasses or screenless smart speakers, that act less like tools and more like companions.

None of this is hugely surprising. As The Information notes, former Apple design chief Jony Ive, who joined OpenAI’s hardware efforts through the company’s $6.5 billion acquisition in May of his firm io, has made reducing device addiction a priority, seeing audio-first design as a chance to “right the wrongs” of past consumer gadgets

 


Instagram Pushes Realness in the Age of AI

 

The tension: as AI-generated content floods feeds, Adam Mosseri argues it’s smarter to prove authenticity than chase fakes.
§  Fingerprinting real media could start inside cameras, cryptographically signing images at capture.

§  Platforms may struggle to keep up as AI gets better at mimicking reality.

§  Mosseri wants credibility signals surfaced so users know who to trust.

Instagram and other platforms are under pressure to help users distinguish authentic creator content from AI-made media, especially as synthetic posts become harder to spot.
 Why it matters: If platforms shift to labeling real content instead of fake, it could reshape trust online — giving creators proof of authenticity while forcing AI tools to adapt.
Quick insight: If you’re a creator, start thinking about how your work could carry a “verified at capture” tag. It might become the new blue check.
Can AI Ever Replace the Human Advocate?
The tension: legal tech is exploding, but the question isn’t whether AI can replace lawyers — it’s whether it should.
§  Startups like Harvey AI are raising hundreds of millions to automate corporate law, hitting billion‑dollar valuations.

§  Veteran lawyers insist judgment, empathy, and ethics are irreplaceable — even as AI speeds up research and document review.

§  Law schools are now teaching AI literacy and prompt engineering, reshaping what it means to train the next generation of attorneys.

From scanning thousands of cases to summarizing depositions, AI is transforming the grunt work of law. But when it comes to cross‑examinations or advising someone on bankruptcy, humans still carry the weight.
 Why it matters: Efficiency is great, but confusing speed for wisdom is dangerous. The future isn’t AI lawyers — it’s lawyers who know how to wield AI without losing trust or care.
Quick tip: If you’re in law or adjacent fields, start experimenting with AI tools now. The firms that blend human judgment with machine speed will set the new standard.

 

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