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OpenAI Cleared To Launch GPT-5.6 Publicly After Government Review

The Trump administration’s 30-day review lasted barely two weeks, and OpenAI says it doesn’t want the review process to become the default.

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openai cleared to launch gpt-5.6 publicly after government review

OpenAI will release all three GPT-5.6 variants — Sol, Terra, and Luna — to the public on Thursday, July 9, ending a staggered debut shaped by a new US government review process. “We’re expanding preview access globally now,” the company announced on X.

The model series launched in late June to a “small group of trusted partners,” a restriction stemming from President Trump’s AI cybersecurity order signed in early June, which asks companies to voluntarily submit their most powerful models for government review 30 days before public release. OpenAI complied, though not happily. “We don’t believe this kind of government access process should become the long-term default,” it said at the time, adding that cooperation was the fastest route to a public launch.

The review wrapped up well short of 30 days. According to Axios, the administration cleared the wider release after the Department of Commerce’s Center for AI Standards and Innovation ran additional tests, with OpenAI sending technical experts to Washington to field questions and concerns directly.

Also Read: WhatsApp Usernames Are Coming: Here’s How To Claim Yours

Of the three variants, Sol is the company’s strongest model to date, priced at $5 per million input tokens and $30 per million output. Terra, built for everyday use, promises performance comparable to GPT-5.5 at half the cost — $2.50 per million input and $15 for output — while Luna, the cheapest of the trio, runs $1 per million input and $6 for output.

OpenAI is not the only lab navigating the new regime. Anthropic was ordered to block foreign nationals from its Mythos and Fable models, and has since won permission to redeploy them.

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Meta’s New AI Tool Builds Images From Public Instagram Photos

Muse Image lets anyone generate AI visuals from your public posts, unless you find the opt-out that’s buried in your account settings.

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meta's new ai tool builds images from public instagram photos
Meta

Meta has a new AI image generator, and it comes with a feature that has privacy advocates alarmed. Muse Image, launched Tuesday by the company’s Superintelligence Labs division, lets users generate AI images by @ mentioning any public Instagram account — pulling that person’s photos into the creation without their knowledge.

The tool is available through the Meta AI app, WhatsApp, and Instagram Stories. Meta says it “uses advanced reasoning to understand complex prompts, seamlessly blending multiple photos into high-quality creations you can download and share anywhere”. The tagging is the flashpoint: “Tagging a username lets Meta AI use public photos to build a visual that’s ready to post,” the company says. Every public Instagram profile can be used unless its owner has explicitly opted out.

That default has drawn sharp criticism. Public Citizen, the consumer advocacy nonprofit, called the feature “an egregious invasion of user privacy”. “Meta has once again chosen the creepiest possible path,” said J.B. Branch, the group’s director of federal AI governance and technology policy. “People should not wake up to discover their face has become raw material for someone else’s AI experiment”. “Instead of asking for meaningful consent, Meta quietly defaults users into the system and buries the opt-out in account settings,” Branch added. “It’s a playbook we’ve come to expect from a company with a long history of putting its business interests ahead of the public”.

Also Read: WhatsApp Usernames Are Coming: Here’s How To Claim Yours

Despite the concerns, it’s worth noting that private accounts are already protected. Muse Image requires access to public photos, and anyone trying to tag a private profile will be told the account can’t be used. Public accounts, on the other hand, must opt out manually. To do that, users will need to go to their profile, tap the menu in the top-right corner, then Sharing and Reuse. Under “Allow people to reuse your content on Instagram and with AI features at Meta,” you’ll find separate toggles for Posts and Reels — switch both off to keep your images and videos out of other people’s AI creations.

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