Tech
OpenAI releases new voice models for more natural live conversations
OpenAI today released new conversational models, called GPT-Live-1 and GPT-Live-1 mini, claiming that they sound more natural and can handle turn-taking better. These are full-duplex models, meaning they can speak and listen at the same time, allowing users to interrupt naturally and enabling features like live translation.
The company is also replacing its current Advanced Voice Mode in ChatGPT with GPT-Live-1 mini by default. Users of paid tiers will be able to access the larger GPT-Live-1 model. The previous model combined a speech-to-text model to transcribe speech, a large language model to generate responses, and a text-to-speech model to deliver the final answer.
The company said in a press briefing that the new models solve issues like interrupting users while they’re talking and not having enough intelligence to answer questions. OpenAI’s new models will send the query to its latest text models like GPT-5.5 for search, reasoning, or agentic capabilities while continuing the conversation.
OpenAI also showed that the model can stay silent for a long time and absorb the context of the conversation until it’s called upon. Plus, as the new voice mode has access to newer GPT models, it can also present some information in a visual format. Other startups like Monogram, which raised $40 million in seed funding from DST and Lux Capital, are also leaning into visual responses to make assistants more interactive.
The company said the new voice mode in ChatGPT is designed to have longer conversations. During the briefing, ChatGPT Voice’s product lead, Atty Eleti, said he has had 30- to 40-minute-long conversations with the voice feature during walks.
OpenAI thinks that voice could be the primary interface to computing for complex work. Reports have suggested that it could launch a pair of earbuds with AI capabilities this year. However, it didn’t provide any information on hardware products.
“Over time, we think this will also unlock the ability to use voice as a kind of primary interface to computing, and to manage increasingly complex long-running agentic work. The kind of amazing use cases that we see people using Codex and ChatGPT to accomplish, we think voice can be the future interface to all kinds of work,” Eleti said.
OpenAI has worked on bolstering voice-based features over the past few years to make ChatGPT’s voice mode sound more natural. The company said that more than 150 million people talk to ChatGPT using features like Voice and Dictation.
Rivals are also attempting to make assistants more expressive.
Both Apple and Amazon have updated their assistants to be more conversational with better context handling. Startups like Sesame, founded by Oculus co-founder Brendan Iribe and Ankit Kumar, also launched AI assistants with more natural conversation while completing tasks in the background.
OpenAI is moving in the same direction, aiming to let users talk to its assistant hands-free for a longer time. Despite its claim that the new voice mode sounds more natural, the company emphasized that it’s not aiming to make this an AI companion. It noted that the new models have safeguards built in to give age-appropriate responses to teens and provide resources if the conversation turns to topics like self-harm.
The new voice mode still needs work. During the demo, when the company showed its live translation feature in Hindi, the assistant had a heavy American accent and spoke in Hindi that was unnatural sounding and had slightly bookish tone. The company said the new mode is optimized for “most spoken languages” but didn’t specify which ones.
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Tech
Despite ‘misgivings,’ judge approves Elon Musk’s $1.5 million SEC settlement
A judge has approved a $1.5 million penalty levied against Elon Musk that will settle a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission lawsuit despite having “significant misgivings” about it.
U.S. District Judge Sparkle Sooknanan noted that her court would accept the settlement, Bloomberg reported Wednesday, which cited her court opinion.
Sooknanan’s approval settles a lawsuit filed by the SEC against Musk in early 2025 over how the billionaire handled his takeover of the social network platform formerly known as Twitter. The lawsuit, which was filed only days before Donald Trump took office, revolved around Musk’s failure to disclose to public investors, in a timely manner, his growing stake in the company in 2022.
The fact that Musk did not initially disclose his stake “ultimately saved him a whopping $150 million,” the SEC argued.
In May, Musk reached a settlement with the SEC that stipulated a trust in Musk’s name would be responsible for paying a $1.5 million penalty without admitting wrongdoing.
Sooknanan previously questioned whether Musk was receiving “special treatment” from the Trump administration. Musk previously helped to bankroll Trump’s campaign during the 2024 presidential race.
In her opinion, Sooknanan noted that her court was “limited to evaluating whether the proposed consent judgment meets minimum standards of fairness and reasonableness, or whether it instead “make[s] a mockery of judicial power.”
“Although the Court has significant misgivings about the settlement reached in this case, it cannot say that
the settlement meets that high threshold,” Sooknanan wrote.
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Tech
Lovable reportedly in talks to double its valuation to $13.2B
Lovable, a Swedish vibe-coding startup, is in talks to raise $300 million at a valuation of $13.2 billion — exactly double the$6.6 billion valuation the company achieved last December, Sifted reported. Menlo Ventures, a firm that announced its latest $3 billion fund last month, is expected to lead the round, according to the report.
The less-than-three-year-old startup hit $500 million in annualized revenue run rate in June.
Lovable’s users include founders, individual designers, and salespeople building websites and e-commerce storefronts. The company also sells its vibe-coding tool to large enterprises, including Workday, Asana, and Nvidia.
Vibe coding, which allows users to build software simply by describing it, is by far the most popular and lucrative use case for AI. Other high-profile vibe-coding startups include Replit, valued at $9 billion in March, and Factory, a startup that helps enterprises develop AI agents, which raised $150 million at a $1.5 billion valuation in April. Meanwhile, Cursor, which offers vibe coding for developers, was acquired by SpaceX for $60 billion last month.
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Tech
AI Boom Could Make Cheap Android Phones More Expensive
Rising DRAM and NAND prices are forcing Android phone makers to cut specs, raise prices, and rethink budget smartphones, according to Omdia.
The post AI Boom Could Make Cheap Android Phones More Expensive appeared first on TechRepublic.
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