{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/68a43f4573bf5b62987006aa/69c8a7b9b99173277143ad55?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"Leadership Shake-Ups, Open Algorithms, and the Rising Governance Bar","description":"In today’s episode of AI in Flow, hosts Claire and Peter break down a wide-ranging set of stories shaping how AI is built, bought, and governed. They look at the resignation of xAI’s last original co-founder as Elon Musk restructures the company ahead of a potential IPO—what that signals for enterprises betting on Grok and why procurement flexibility matters. They also explore Bluesky’s new AI assistant “Attie,” which lets users create custom feeds with natural language on an open protocol, raising big questions about moderation, accountability, and brand safety.\n\nOn the infrastructure front, Samsung and SK Hynix ramp investment in China memory fabs to ease the AI memory crunch, while the hosts argue the bigger enterprise bottleneck may be data plumbing—pipelines, lineage, and AI-grade data platforms. The episode then turns to legal and governance developments in India: warnings about shadow AI use in courts without safeguards, and a landmark Delhi High Court injunction targeting AI deepfakes and mandating takedowns and traceability. Rounding out the briefing: viral AI parody content testing IP enforcement, India’s pragmatic ecosystem-first AI strategy, a low-cost AI badminton line-calling system, and Mark Cuban’s comments on robot taxes and disclosure risks tied to aggressive automation narratives.","author_name":"Six & Flow"}