The Verge interviews Microsoft AI CEO Mustafa Suleyman about the company’s approach to advanced AI, superintelligence, AGI, OpenAI, and automation. His message is that more powerful AI systems are arriving soon, but Microsoft wants them to remain human-controlled and human-serving. The piece is less a product announcement than a window into Microsoft’s strategic framing of AI progress and job disruption.
TechCrunch reports that recursive self-improvement, or RSI, is becoming a new AI industry fixation, much like AGI. Researchers and startups including Recursive Superintelligence, Auto-Research, AutoScientist, and Disarray are exploring ways for AI systems to automate parts of AI research. But experts caution that AI-assisted research is not the same as fully autonomous self-improvement, especially while models still struggle with long-term self-direction and verification.
Pope Leo XIV released Magnifica Humanitas, an encyclical warning that AI use is never purely technical when it affects people’s lives. The Verge frames the message as a rejection of AGI-centered tech optimism, focusing instead on rights, opportunity, status, and freedom. Anthropic’s cofounder appearing alongside him highlights the growing tension between AI industry leaders, ethics, and public accountability.