Tuesday, 28 April 2026

Read Amazon's 6 internal tenets for AI adoption: 'Cutting edge, not bleeding edge'

Amazon CEO Andy Jassy
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy
  • Amazon's massive retail arm has formalized its AI approach in 6 internal engineering tenets.
  • The list emphasizes a pragmatic approach that balances speed, cost, and control.
  • The tenets are part of a broader AI push to improve coding speed and efficiency.

Amazon is stepping up its push to make AI central to its engineering culture.

As part of that effort, its massive retail business, known as "Stores," has formalized how teams build with AI, distilling its approach into a set of internal "AI-native engineering tenets," according to an internal document obtained by Business Insider.

The internal guidelines outline a pragmatic playbook. Rather than forcing AI into every use case or adopting every new model, Amazon emphasizes balancing speed, cost, and control, with clear expectations around transparency.

The tenets are central to Amazon's broader "AI-native" strategy, aimed at scaling usage across thousands of teams and closely tracking adoption, as Business Insider previously reported.

"Amazon's Stores engineering teams found that integrating AI across the full development lifecycle — not just bolting it on as an afterthought — delivers the most meaningful gains in what we're able to invent for customers and how quickly we can deliver it," Montana MacLachlan, an Amazon spokesperson, told Business Insider.

"We've also identified opportunities for improvement, and those results, along with our proven approach to AI adoption, informed the ambitious goals we've set for some Stores engineering teams in 2026," she added.

Here are the 6 tenets:

  • Delivery first, cost second: We prioritize working, effective solutions over cheap ones. This means we will build now, then optimize for compute cost later.
  • AI-native is not AI-exclusive: We will use the best approach to solve the problem we face. Sometimes that will require AI, and sometimes the AI will be an LLM, but not always.
  • Cutting edge, not bleeding edge: We will not try to keep pace with AI technology. We will evaluate and retain flexibility to switch if the benefits outweigh the costs; sometimes foregoing the newest improvements.
  • With you, not for you: We will rely on existing teams' expertise and will not become domain experts in your area. Participating in our pilots requires bringing your domain expertise and time investment.
  • Not all preferences are requirements: Although we will aim to delight our customers, we will not accommodate all their preferences. Instead, we will optimize for hundreds of teams, not just a few.
  • No black boxes: All the solutions we deploy must be auditable, understandable, and traceable. We will forego performance and cost improvements to maintain human understanding and traceability.

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America's biggest career hurdle: Being a daughter

Monday, 27 April 2026

Oil prices inch up as peace talks between the US and Iran fail to materialize

Oil jack in Texas
The Strait of Hormuz remains closed, keeping oil and energy costs high worldwide.
  • Oil prices crept up on Sunday as the US-Iran conflict nears two months.
  • Trump said Saturday he won't send a delegation to Pakistan for a new round of negotiations.
  • The Strait of Hormuz remains closed, and the US Navy continues to blockade Iran's ports.

The price of oil inched upward on Sunday as a second round of peace talks between the US and Iran never materialized.

Brent crude oil futures and West Texas Intermediate rose around 2% in overnight trade, to $107.60 a barrel and $96.27, respectively, at 2:30 a.m. ET.

An end to the conflict, which has lasted nearly two months, remained uncertain this weekend. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Special Envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner would travel to Islamabad for negotiations during a press briefing on Friday.

However, an X post by Iran's Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Friday said no meeting was scheduled between the US and Iran.

Then, on Saturday, an Iranian delegation left Pakistan, and President Donald Trump said he would cancel Witkoff's and Kushner's trip. In the end, no new round of talks was held.

"I just cancelled the trip of my representatives going to Islamabad, Pakistan, to meet with the Iranians. Too much time wasted on traveling, too much work!" Trump wrote in a Truth Social post on Saturday.

He added: "Also, we have all the cards, they have none! If they want to talk, all they have to do is call!!!"

Vice President JD Vance traveled to Pakistan on April 11 to negotiate with Iran, though those talks ultimately failed after 21 hours. On April 19, Trump said negotiations with Iran would resume that week, but hours later, Iran's official news agency said it would not participate.

Despite the failed talks, the US and Iran have so far held to a ceasefire. Trump said he extended the ceasefire in a Truth Social post on April 21.

As peace talks between the US and Iran remain elusive, the Strait of Hormuz — a waterway off Iran's coast through which a fifth of the globe's oil and liquefied natural gas passes — has remained closed. Iran initially closed the strait in late February following the US and Israel's attacks, but briefly reopened it in April as part of a ceasefire deal.

However, after the first round of failed peace talks in Islamabad, Trump announced the US would implement a naval blockade of Iran's ports. In response, Iran again closed the Strait of Hormuz.

The closure, compounded by damage to major oil hubs across the Middle East, has sent oil and jet fuel prices skyrocketing worldwide. The price of oil surpassed $100 for the first time in nearly four years in March, prompting some countries to adopt energy-saving measures to address rising costs. The Philippines, for example, implemented a four-day workweek for federal employees and began seeking out alternative sources of petroleum products.

In the US, the national average price for a gallon of gas climbed to $4 in late March.

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Sunday, 26 April 2026

This startup wants to build an army of humanoid robot soldiers

Phantom robot
Phantom, a humanoid robot built by Foundation, was sent to Ukraine for a pilot demonstration of a supply pickup scenario.
  • Foundation is a startup building general-purpose humanoid robots.
  • Two of Foundation's robots were sent to Ukraine for a demo of a supply transport scenario.
  • CEO Sankaet Pathak said he sees humanoids becoming valuable for precision operations in warfare.

Humanoid robots rather than flesh-and-blood soldiers could one day take on some of the most dangerous jobs in war — and one startup is already testing that idea in Ukraine.

Sankaet Pathak, cofounder and CEO of Foundation, said there's a "moral imperative" to put humanoid robots on the front lines rather than in people's kitchens.

"I thought all of this stuff around home use was kind of stupid," Pathak told Business Insider. "I feel like people can make the coffee and fold their laundry. I was like, 'We need to do something else.'"

Advancements in drone technology and robotics are now central to the arsenal of modern warfare, enabling precision attacks at scale and at lower cost; however, that capability hasn't always translated into clean, risk-free operations.

In the age of smart weapons and AI-enabled, autonomous systems, modern warfare still carries a high risk of civilian casualties, especially in dense urban environments.

A robot packs boxes
Foundation wants to deploy its robots for reconnaissance and supply logistics.

Pathak said the current approach to war is often "brute force," either risking soldiers' lives or destroying a building to eliminate a single target.

He believes that in the future, humanoids could execute "surgical" operations, such as extracting a target. Near-term, they could support military operations such as reconnaissance and logistics.

Foundation said it recently conducted a test that could pave the way for those missions.

In February, the startup sent two of its Phantom robots to an undisclosed location in Ukraine for a closed pilot demonstration.

"You can hear bombs go off. You can hear electricity get cut. You're actively in a warzone," Pathak said of Foundation's visit to the country, which for years has been fighting off a Russian invasion. "Most of the places are a battlefield as soon as you start going out of Kyiv."

The CEO said the Phantom test solely focused on "supply pickup" to demonstrate that bipedal robots can effectively "carry supplies from outside to inside and avoid a soldier getting shot at."

There was "significant interest based on what has been communicated" to the company, Pathak said. A spokesperson for Foundation said the startup has also secured a $24 million contract with the Pentagon. Eric Trump, the president's son, was appointed chief strategy advisor in March.

Humanoid troops aren't ready for deployment

Pathak said he didn't want to "overstate" the Ukraine pilot. A large gap still exists between a humanoid that can slowly clean a test kitchen and one that can use an M4 carbine in a battlefield firefight.

Battery life and durability are among the constraints. Pathak said robot soldiers need longer battery life and must withstand water, dust, and shock.

Phantom, humanoid robot.
Pathak said the test demonstrated that bipedal robots can be used for certain applications.

Reliable manipulation — the ability for a robot to pick up an item and do something with it, like pulling the trigger on a rifle — also remains a major technological bottleneck.

"Right now, the big engineering hurdle is how do you build a highly-dextrous hand that is reliable, easier to manufacture, isn't too massive, and isn't too expensive," Pathak said.

The CEO offered ambitious predictions for overcoming these challenges, saying that key engineering hurdles could be solved within a few years and that humanoid robots could carry out complex missions, such as target extraction, within five to 10 years.

Beyond the technical questions, ethical dilemmas surrounding autonomous weaponry, including concerns of accountability when humans are no longer in the loop, are also a consideration.

Pathak said that while there isn't a simple line that can be drawn around autonomy, in ordinary circumstances, "you probably want a human in the loop before any kind of kill action is invoked." Many Western militaries have made that a priority amid rapid technological advances in artificial intelligence and autonomous systems, though the extent remains an active debate.

"So if you actually need to shoot a gun, you need a human to really sign off, which is what happens with drones today as well," he said. "But then there are exceptions to those cases as well, like an anti-drone gun or the Iron Dome. Those, you cannot wait for human reaction times because the alternative is 100% certainty of fatality."

The defense industry at large pushes robotics and autonomous weapons as a matter of national security. Anduril cofounder Palmer Luckey has repeatedly said that the United States needs to be ahead of China on AI weapons. The top US admiral in the Pacific said this week that America's AI technology lead over China is only six months to a year at best.

Unlike many other companies, Foundation has been particularly outspoken on using humanoids on the battlefield.

"Courage comes in limited supply," Pathak said, while arguing that China is not having the same debate over military humanoids and that the US, Europe, and their allies need to be on alert. "If you build a utopia," he said, "you have to be able to defend it."

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Saturday, 25 April 2026

Now we know who paid $100,000 to unlock a Sam Altman podcast interview

Sam Altman, smiling and wearing a bowtie, gets his picture taken on a red carpet.
Both Sam Altman and Greg Brockman, OpenAI's CEO and president, sat down together for a rare interview. Someone paid $100,000 to release the podcast to the public.
  • A CEO spent $100,000 to make an interview with OpenAI executives free to the public.
  • Sam Altman and Greg Brockman appeared on Ashlee Vance's podcast.
  • The interview was behind a paywall, and Vance said he would unlock it for a fee.

He put his money where their mouths were.

A manufacturing entrepreneur paid $100,000 to unlock a paywalled interview with OpenAI's top executives.

The interview, featuring CEO Sam Altman and President Greg Brockman, was initially published behind a paywall by journalist Ashlee Vance as part of his "Core Memory" podcast. After some listeners complained on X that it wasn't free, Vance said he would consider making it public if someone forked over about $100,000.

Jim Belosic, the CEO of Nevada-based laser manufacturing company SendCutSend, reached out.

"He saw the tweet that I put up and reached out," Vance told Business Insider. The "real, American cash" payment came together quickly, he said, describing the interaction as "the magic of Twitter or X."

Vance said the funding was not pre-arranged and that he would have been cautious about accepting money from companies closely tied to OpenAI or its competitors.

The money will help "run the business" behind the "Core Memory" podcast and YouTube channel. SendCutSend is now a sponsor, Vance said, and Belosic is scheduled as an upcoming guest.

In the interview, Altman criticized what he called "doomerism" around AI and accused rival Anthropic of using "fear-based marketing" to promote its new model, Claude Mythos. The conversation also touched on OpenAI's ongoing legal battle with Elon Musk.

OpenAI and Belosic did not respond to requests for comment.

Vance said one of his biggest takeaways from the interview was the dynamic between Altman and Brockman, whom he described as having gone through "extraordinary ups and downs" together. He also pointed to Brockman's role at the company, saying he appears to be increasingly involved in shaping OpenAI's strategy.

"They are two people who've been through these extraordinary ups and downs," he told Business Insider. "I think people are kind of underestimating how much Greg has really come back to set OpenAI's strategy."

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Friday, 24 April 2026

Office AI leaderboards are here. Tell us if you think they're fun or fraught

An office worker sits working in an empty office
  • There's a new office rivalry brewing around who can rack up the most AI tokens.
  • JPMorgan, Disney, and others are tracking AI usage and ranking their employees on leaderboards.
  • We want to hear about your AI leaderboards and whether you're a "tokenmaxxer."

White-collar workers are jostling to climb rankings on AI leaderboards in a new kind of workplace competition known as "tokenmaxxing."

The trend is separating AI power users and laggards at large companies, including JPMorgan, Disney, and Meta.

At JPMorgan, dashboards categorize employees as "non," "light," or "heavy" users, Business Insider reported. A Disney "AI Adoption Dashboard" shows one employee invoking Claude 460,000 times in nine days — likely with the help of automated agents, BI found. At Meta, engineers can earn titles like "Token Legend" for their usage of tokens, a measurement of data used by AI models, The Information reported.

We want to understand how this is changing office dynamics. Tell us: Does your company track your AI usage? Do you think AI leaderboards brew healthy competition — or reward volume over value? Are you envious of the AI legends around your office? Or skeptical of what they're doing with all those tokens?

Fill out this quick survey.

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Read Amazon's 6 internal tenets for AI adoption: 'Cutting edge, not bleeding edge'

Amazon CEO Andy Jassy Bloomberg/Getty Images Amazon's massive retail arm has formalized its AI approach in 6 internal engineering t...