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meta muse spark ai
Meta has a new AI model and for the first time in years it is not called Llama. Muse Spark launched yesterday under Meta Superintelligence Labs, a new internal division Meta quietly formed by bringing together researchers from Google DeepMind and other frontier labs. It is natively multimodal, supports multi-agent reasoning, and is available right now at meta.ai. It is also not being released as open weights. That last part is worth sitting with for a second. Meta built one of the most trusted brands in open source AI through Llama. Developers built on it, researchers published with it. Muse Spark continues none of that. No weights, no HuggingFace release, private API preview only. What you get instead is a genuinely capable multimodal model with some benchmark numbers that are hard to ignore and a new reasoning mode called Contemplating that puts it in conversation with Gemini Deep Think and GPT Pro. Whether that trade is worth it depends entirely on what you were using Meta AI for in the first place.
A Critical Bug in a 325M-Download Package Put Millions of AI Agents at Risk
One character. That's what it took to bypass authentication on millions of servers running AI agents, MCP tools, and the infrastructure connecting them to user data, email accounts, databases, and in some cases industrial equipment. The vulnerability, now tracked as CVE-2026-48710 and nicknamed BadHost, was found in Starlette, an open-source framework downloaded around 325 million times every week. If you’re building AI infrastructure in Python, there’s a good chance something in your stack depends on it. Starlette is the foundation FastAPI is built on, and FastAPI is what a significant portion of the Python AI tooling ecosystem runs on. Researchers say the official severity score doesn’t fully capture how dangerous the bug actually is. A patch was released Friday in Starlette 1.0.1, but vulnerable versions are still running in production systems right now.
Your Car Knows More About You Than You Think. Insurance Companies Are Using That Data
According to BBC reporting, there's a man who got a copy of his driving data from a company called LexisNexis. It was 130 pages long. Six months of every trip he and his wife took, logged, packaged, and sold without them knowing. Shortly after, his insurance costs jumped 21%. An insurance agent confirmed the data was a factor. He hadn't signed anything that felt like permission. He'd just set up his car's infotainment system. That's where we are with car privacy in 2026. Modern vehicles are collecting your location, your speed, how hard you brake, who's sitting next to you, and in some cases your weight, age, facial expressions, and driving patterns. Mozilla examined 25 car brands and found every single one failed its privacy and security standards. Cars, Mozilla concluded, were the worst product category it had ever reviewed for privacy. And most people have no idea any of this is happening.
SubQ 12M context AI model
Every few years something shows up in AI that makes people stop and argue. Not argue about which model is better or whose benchmark is more honest. Argue about whether the rules just changed. SubQ is that argument right now. A Miami-based startup called Subquadratic came out of stealth last week with a single claim that's either the most important architectural shift since the 2017 transformer paper or the most sophisticated AI hype in recent memory. They say they've built the first LLM that doesn't rely on quadratic attention and that this lets them run a 12 million token context window at roughly one-fifth the cost of frontier models. The AI research community split within hours. Half are losing their minds. Half are explaining why this doesn't count. The truth is probably more interesting than either camp. Here's what we actually know.
Trinity-Large-Thinking AI Agent Model
Most open source models that claim agentic capability are really just instruction-tuned models with tool calling bolted on. They can call a function. They cannot think across ten steps, remember what they decided three tool calls ago, and course correct when something breaks mid-task. This is where Trinity-Large-Thinking comes into picture. Arcee AI released it this week. 398 billion total parameters, but only 13 billion active during inference. That MoE architecture means it runs closer to a 13B model in practice while carrying the knowledge of something nearly 30 times larger. And unlike most models where reasoning stops between steps, Trinity keeps its thinking tokens alive across the entire agent loop. Every decision it makes is informed by everything it reasoned through before it.
sensenova u1 multimodal opensource
Most multimodal models are text models with image handling bolted on. A vision encoder reads the image, converts it into tokens the language model understands, and the two systems communicate through that translation layer. It works. It's also where things break down when text and image content need to stay tightly in sync. SenseNova-U1 takes a different approach. Released by SenseTime under Apache 2.0, it removes the visual encoder and VAE entirely. No translation layer or separate systems. Pixel and word information modeled together from the start. The technical report isn't out yet and the A3B variant is still pending. But the 8B weights are available now.
Nvidia Is Building NemaaaoClaw, an Open Source AI Agent Platform That Runs on Any Chip
The company that sells the chips just built software that runs on everyone else's chips. Nvidia is reportedly preparing to launch an open source AI agent platform called NemoClaw at GTC 2026 next week in San Jose. People familiar with the plans say the platform will let enterprise companies deploy AI agents across their workforces regardless of whether they run on Nvidia hardware or not. Nvidia hasn't confirmed anything publicly yet. But the conversations with companies like Salesforce, Cisco, Google, Adobe and CrowdStrike are apparently already happening.

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Lore: Local AI Note Manager with Smart Recall & Private Second Memory

Lore is a lightweight, privacy-first desktop app that lives quietly in your system tray and gives you a pop-up chat interface to capture thoughts the moment they happen. Powered entirely by a local LLM through Ollama and a local vector database through LanceDB, it stores, understands, and retrieves your information without sending a single byte to the cloud. You can store anything like quick notes, decision summaries, URLs, code snippets, bug reproduction steps, todo items and retrieve it all later by simply describing what you need in plain language. Lore classifies your input automatically and uses a RAG pipeline to pull the most relevant context before generating an answer. If you're a developer, a knowledge worker, or someone who just wants a smarter way to remember things, Lore is worth a try.

Stability Matrix – Local AI Model Manager for Image, Video, TTS & Generative Workflows

Stability Matrix is a multi-platform package manager and unified launcher built for Stable Diffusion and related AI tools. Instead of manually installing different WebUI builds, setting up Python environments, and managing Git updates yourself, it brings everything into one organized interface. It supports popular environments like Automatic1111, ComfyUI, SD.Next, InvokeAI, Fooocus, and others including WAN GP and additional AI workflows depending on the selected package. You can install, update, and manage these tools from a single dashboard without jumping between folders and terminals. One of the biggest advantages is that Stability Matrix makes it easier to install AI models locally and use them directly on your system. With the built-in Model Browser, you can import models from sources like CivitAI and Hugging Face, automatically place them in the correct folders, and manage previews and metadata. This means you can run image generation, music generation, video generation & even TTS models on your own machine without complex manual setup.

Fooocus: The Best Open Source Offline Image Generation Software Based on Stable Diffusion XL

Fooocus reimagines offline image generation by allowing users to focus solely on prompts & images. It eliminates the complexity of manual adjustments, making it ideal for beginners & advanced users alike. Fooocus simplifies the generation process: from downloading to producing the first image, only less than three clicks are needed.

Parallel Code – Run Multiple AI Coding Agents with Git Worktree Isolation

Running multiple AI coding agents is powerful. It is also messy. Put them on the same branch and they overwrite each other. Split them across terminals and you forget which one is doing what. You can manually create feature branches and worktrees, but after the third task you start feeling like a part-time git administrator. Parallel Code handles that part for you. Create a task and the app: Creates a new branch from main Sets up a separate git worktree Symlinks node_modules and other ignored directories Launches the selected AI agent inside that worktree Each task lives in its own isolated environment. Five agents can work on five features in the same repo at the same

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