As the battle for AI agent platforms heats up, OpenAI has released a global AI regulatory framework, Microsoft has declared Windows as an agent operating system, and China is accelerating its semiconductor and infrastructure efforts to catch up with the United States.
OpenAI Unveils AI Safety Governance Framework
According to the IT industry on June 1, OpenAI unveiled its 'Frontier Governance Framework (FGF)' on May 29. This document outlines risk management strategies for cyberattacks, weapons of mass destruction (CBRN) risks, harmful manipulation, and loss of control, aligning with the EU AI Act's implementation guidelines and California's Frontier AI Transparency Act (TFAIA).
On the same day, OpenAI also announced a separate program called 'Trusted Access for Cyber,' utilizing its cyber-specialized reasoning model GPT-5.3-Codex. This model can automate and accelerate vulnerability detection and security defense, highlighting the dual-use nature of AI in both cyber offense and defense.Microsoft Build 2026 Kicks Off: 'Windows as an Agent Platform'
Microsoft Build 2026 will take place from June 2 for two days at the Fort Mason Center in San Francisco. The event will feature a keynote address by CEO Satya Nadella, focusing on AI agents, GitHub Copilot, WSL, and cloud-based AI workflows. Confirmed session topics include agentic AI workflows, enhancements to GitHub Copilot, updates to the Azure AI Foundry platform, on-device AI development for Windows, and responsible AI tooling.
The strategic message of this event is a declaration that the operating system is no longer just a container for applications but is being redefined as a native platform where agents, people, and applications work together.
ByteDance Bets $70 Billion on AI; CXMT IPO Approved in China
Bloomberg reports that ByteDance is considering investing up to $70 billion in building AI data centers by 2026, planning to fund this through an estimated $50 billion in net profit in 2025. This positions the company as a significant player capable of executing infrastructure investments at the individual enterprise level without external funding among U.S. hyperscalers.
In the same week, the Shanghai Stock Exchange approved the listing of Chinese memory semiconductor company CXMT (Changxin Memory Technologies) on the STAR Market. The target fundraising amount is approximately 29.5 billion yuan (about $4.5 billion), which could become the largest IPO in China since 2022.
* This article has been translated by AI.
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