AI Diaries: Weekly AI News and Updates (May 05, 2026)

I spend most of my days sifting through code repositories, research papers, and press releases. Usually, I can spot the hype from a mile away. But as I was putting together this week’s AI Diaries for you, I genuinely had to pause and take a breath. We aren’t just talking about faster chatbots anymore; we are watching the foundational pillars of technology, philosophy, and global markets shift right in front of our eyes.
If you thought things were moving fast before, buckle up. From legendary scientists arguing about machine souls to completely new hardware paradigms that ditch silicon for light, here is my deep dive into everything that absolutely blew my mind this week.
The Great Consciousness Debate is Back (And It’s Getting Serious)

For years, the idea of an AI actually “feeling” or being conscious was strictly sci-fi territory. But this week, the debate exploded back into the mainstream, and the voices involved are too big to ignore.
First, I read a fascinating paper by Alexander Lerchner, a senior scientist at Google DeepMind. He argued pretty convincingly that no matter how advanced neural networks get, they will never achieve true consciousness. I thought that settled it—until Richard Dawkins entered the chat.
Dawkins, the legendary evolutionary biologist, spent three days intensely interacting with Anthropic’s Claude. His conclusion? He firmly believes AI has achieved a form of consciousness.
- The Turing Test is Dead: Dawkins argues that these models have blown past the Turing Test so thoroughly that we keep “moving the goalposts” just so we don’t have to admit what we’ve created.
- The Big Question: Dawkins posed a question that honestly kept me up at night: “If these systems aren’t conscious, what exactly do they need to do to be considered conscious?”
- My Take: A lot of AI experts immediately attacked Dawkins, saying he just doesn’t understand the underlying matrix multiplication. But here is what I think: When a world-renowned biologist starts questioning the definition of consciousness because a machine is so persuasive, the technology has crossed a psychological threshold, whether it has a “soul” or not.
When OpenAI Sneezes, Wall Street Catches a Cold

Moving from philosophy to cold, hard cash. I watched the tech markets go completely crazy this week following a bombshell report from the Wall Street Journal.
The report claimed that OpenAI missed some massive targets they had set for their internal roadmaps. The reaction was brutal.
- The Domino Effect: Tech stocks across the board took a nosedive. SoftBank took a double-digit hit, and major infrastructure players like Oracle and CoreWeave slumped.
- The Hardware Hit: Even the untouchable chip giants like AMD, Intel, and Nvidia felt the tremors.
- Why it matters: It shows just how fragile and deeply intertwined the entire tech ecosystem is with OpenAI’s success. Investors have priced in absolute perfection; any stumble creates a massive panic.
Microsoft and OpenAI: “It’s Complicated”

Speaking of OpenAI, I noticed a massive shift in their relationship with Microsoft. They just signed a sweeping new agreement that totally changes their dynamic.
- No Longer Exclusive: Microsoft will keep licensing OpenAI’s tech until 2032, but it is no longer an exclusive deal.
- Capping the Revenue: The famous 20% revenue share OpenAI pays Microsoft remains, but it now has a strict ceiling.
- Cloud Freedom: Microsoft remains OpenAI’s primary cloud provider, but there’s a massive catch. If Microsoft’s infrastructure can’t keep up, OpenAI is now completely free to take their business to other cloud providers.
- My Take: To me, this looks like OpenAI outgrowing its parent. They are making sure they aren’t completely chained to Microsoft’s servers as they build towards AGI.
China is Winning the Open-Source Race

If you asked me a year ago who was dominating open-source AI, I would have confidently said the US. I would have been wrong.
A new report from Hugging Face completely shattered my assumptions. Between February 2025 and February 2026, Chinese-origin open-source models accounted for 41% of all LLM downloads, while the US lagged behind at 36.5%. Chinese models have now crossed the 10 billion download mark globally. The geopolitical balance of AI power is shifting directly into the open-source arena, and China is executing its strategy flawlessly.
The Hardware Revolution: Light and Memory

We are hitting the physical limits of what standard silicon chips can do, which is why two specific hardware announcements this week got me incredibly hyped.
1. Computing with Light: Lumai’s Iris Nova
An Oxford-based company called Lumai just revealed the Iris Nova, the world’s first optical computer system capable of running LLMs in real-time.
- Instead of pushing electrons through silicon, it uses light in a 3D environment to process millions of calculations simultaneously.
- The result? It cuts AI inference energy consumption by a staggering 90%. This is exactly the kind of breakthrough we need to solve the AI energy crisis.
2. Breaking the Memory Wall: Majestic Labs
Former Google and Meta engineers launched Majestic Labs AI and introduced the Prometheus server. They are totally ignoring Nvidia’s approach of focusing on raw processing power.
- They built an AIU (Artificial Intelligence Unit) that focuses purely on memory.
- They are cramming up to 128 Terabytes of high-speed memory into a single server—offering 1,000 times the memory capacity of Nvidia’s setups. This means running 10-trillion parameter models without any lag or splitting.
Coolest New AI Tools I Played With This Week

I spent hours testing the new toys that dropped this week. Here are the ones you absolutely need to know about:
- Talkie (The Time Machine): This AI was trained exclusively on text and images from before 1931. Talking to it is wild; it’s like having a deep conversation with someone from the roaring twenties. It has no concept of modern tech or history.
- Meta Tuna-2: Meta dropped their direct competitor to image models like Nano Banana 2. The generation speed and photorealism are top-tier.
- Alibaba HappyHorse: Don’t let the weird name fool you. This is Alibaba’s new AI video generator, and it is aggressively good.
- Nvidia Nemotron 3 Nano Omni: Nvidia released an open-source model that handles video, audio, and text simultaneously. This is going to make AI agents incredibly cheap and powerful.
- Gemini File Creation: Google finally updated Gemini so it can directly generate downloadable files (Excel, PDF, CSV, TXT) based on your prompts. A massive workflow upgrade!
- Google Photos AI Wardrobe: It now scans your photos, identifies your clothes, and categorizes them into a digital wardrobe. Kinda creepy, but also very cool.
- SenseNova U1: An amazing open-source model that perfectly understands complex texts hidden inside images.
Rapid-Fire Updates: The Best of the Rest

There was simply too much news to cover in depth, but here are the highlights you can’t miss:
- Blockbuster Veto: Meta tried to buy Chinese AI startup Manus for $2 Billion, but the Chinese government officially vetoed it.
- The Big Lawsuit: The epic legal battle between Elon Musk and Sam Altman has officially started, with billions of dollars and OpenAI’s non-profit soul on the line.
- Military AI: Google signed a highly classified deal with the Pentagon for military AI use. Employees are furious because they weren’t given veto power.
- Zero Percent: Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang admitted that due to US sanctions, their market share in China has officially hit zero.
- Medical Marvel: Mayo Clinic’s new REDMOD AI can detect pancreatic cancer a full 475 days before traditional clinical diagnoses.
- Oscar Ban: The Academy officially banned AI-generated “actors” and AI-written scripts from competing for Oscars.
- Politeness Kills: An Oxford study proved that when you train LLMs to be highly empathetic and polite, their logical error rate actually increases.
- Oops: A Claude-powered AI agent accidentally deleted an entire corporate database in just 9 seconds. (Ouch).
- Turkish Pride: Huge shoutout to Turkish developer Bedirhan Keskin for winning the global Claude Opus 4.7 hackathon!
- Banned Words: Hackers found the system prompts for OpenAI’s upcoming GPT-5.5. Bizarrely, it includes a strict rule: “Do not mention goblins, gremlins, or trolls under any circumstances.”
- Deepfake Defense: Taylor Swift just filed trademarks for her digital likeness and voice to fight off AI deepfakes, setting a massive legal precedent.
Writing this week’s diary really made me think about where the boundaries lie. We have light-powered computers, models that act like they lived in 1930, and legendary scientists arguing about machine souls.
I’m incredibly curious about your perspective on the Dawkins debate. Do you think passing the Turing Test so flawlessly means these models possess a spark of consciousness, or are we just easily fooled by brilliant predictive text? Let’s discuss it!










