Good morning, In a few minutes, here's what you'll learn today.

Today you'll see how Incogni cleans up your digital trail in just a few clicks, plus catch up on OpenAI's big shift to for-profit status, Eli Lilly teaming up with Nvidia to build the pharma industry's fastest supercomputer, Palantir and Nvidia joining forces to make AI work in real business systems, and Anthropic doubling down on Google's cloud chips to train smarter models.

In Today's Edition

Today’s AI Tool Breakdown: Incogni

Quick overview
Incogni scrubs your personal info from data broker sites without you lifting a finger. It sends removal requests on your behalf to over 420 data brokers and follows up every couple months so your data stays gone. Think of it like hiring a clean-up crew for your digital footprint.

How to use it

  1. Visit incogni.com and pick your plan (Standard, Family, or Unlimited).

  2. Create your account and confirm your email address.

  3. Fill out your profile with your name, address, phone, and date of birth so Incogni can find your records.

  4. Sign the digital authorization form giving Incogni permission to act on your behalf.

  5. Click "Start Data Removal" and head to your dashboard to watch progress.

  6. Check back anytime to see which brokers got contacted and which removals finished.

Copy/paste starter script
Go to incogni.com, sign up, fill in your details, sign the form, and let it run. Your dashboard updates automatically with removal progress.

Real-world use cases

  • Cut down spam calls and junk mail flooding your inbox and phone.

  • Protect yourself from scammers who buy contact info off broker sites.

  • Remove old addresses and outdated details from search results.

  • Keep your personal data off sites that sell to advertisers and recruiters.

Pro tips

  • Add multiple email addresses and old addresses so Incogni finds more records.

  • Go for the annual plan to save 50% versus paying monthly.

  • Check your dashboard once a month to see which brokers need follow-up.

Free vs paid

  • Free: No free plan, but you get a 30-day money-back guarantee to test it risk-free.

  • Paid: Standard costs $7.99/month (billed yearly at $95.88). Unlimited runs $14.99/month (billed yearly at $179.88) and adds custom removals from nearly any site. Family plans cover up to 5 people.

Alternatives

  • DeleteMe — deeper control and detailed reports, but costs more at $8.60+/month and only available in the US.

  • Optery — flexible pricing tiers starting at $3.25/month, great if you want granular control over people search sites.

  • Privacy Bee — automated removal like Incogni, with multiple plan options for different budgets.

Today In AI News, The Top 4 Stories (And Why They Matter)

This matters because: OpenAI's switch from nonprofit to public benefit company removes funding limits and lets it raise money like a normal business, which speeds up its AI development race with competitors.
Quick summary: OpenAI officially wrapped up its big restructure on Tuesday, creating a for-profit company with a nonprofit foundation still holding 26% ownership. Microsoft grabbed a 27% stake worth about $135 billion and gets to use OpenAI's tech through 2032. Think of it like a startup graduating from a community project to a full-blown business.

This matters because: Lilly's new supercomputer uses AI to test millions of drug experiments at once, cutting down the years it takes to find and test new medicines.
Quick summary: Eli Lilly teamed up with Nvidia on Tuesday to build the pharma world's fastest AI supercomputer, packing over 1,000 B300 GPUs to speed up drug discovery. The system trains models on decades of Lilly's research data and shares some of them with smaller biotech firms through a privacy-safe platform. It's like giving scientists a turbo-boost button for finding cures.

This matters because: This partnership puts AI directly into business workflows instead of leaving it stuck in labs, helping companies make real-time decisions and automate supply chains.
Quick summary: Palantir announced on Monday it's baking Nvidia's GPU power and AI models right into its core platform so businesses can run smart agents and optimize operations on the fly. Lowe's is already testing it to build a digital copy of its entire supply chain. Think of it like giving your company a brain that never sleeps.

This matters because: More computing power means Anthropic can build smarter Claude models faster, which helps its 300,000+ business customers get better AI tools for everyday work.
Quick summary: Anthropic revealed on Monday it's scaling up to one million of Google's TPU chips by 2026, giving it over a gigawatt of computing muscle to train next-gen Claude models. The expanded deal strengthens Anthropic's push for responsible AI while keeping up with rivals like OpenAI. Think of it like renting extra brainpower to stay competitive.

Thats All For Today!

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