
Tuesday’s AI Report
• 1. 🧑⚖️ Apple sued over AI training
• 2. 🔏 Protect your online data with Incogni
• 3. 🌍 How AI improved recycling efficiency and safety
• 4. 📝 Train AI agents to uncover opportunities with Agentic Brain
• 5. 🇨🇳 China probes Qualcomm
• 6. 🦿 Qantas hit by massive data breach
Read Time: 5 minutes
OpenAI AgentKit Review
Partner Column exclusively available in this edition of The AI Report
By Joe Jepsen — UI UX Developer at Agentic Brain
“Agent Builder defines how it thinks, ChatKit defines how it interacts, and the Apps SDK defines where it runs.”


Apple sued over AI training
🚨 Our Report
Apple faces a class-action lawsuit for allegedly using many pirated books to train its Apple Intelligence AI, highlighting growing scrutiny over AI training datasets.
🔓 Key Points
Neuroscientists claim Apple used illegal “shadow libraries” of copyrighted books, including their own works, to train AI models integrated into iOS devices.
The lawsuit is part of a broader wave of high-stakes cases targeting tech firms like OpenAI, Microsoft, and Meta for unauthorized use of copyrighted content in AI training.
Apple faces potential reputational consequences if the courts rule against it, as the plaintiffs seek both monetary damages and an injunction to prevent further misuse of copyrighted works.
🔐 Relevance
This case shows the increasing compliance challenges in AI development, signaling that companies must carefully manage training datasets to prevent copyright infringement and potential multi-billion-dollar liabilities. It also sets a precedent that could influence how AI training data is sourced across the industry.
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How AI improved recycling efficiency and safety
Many recycling facilities struggle with inefficient material sorting, low recovery of recyclables, and safety hazards.
Penn Waste couldn’t keep up with growing waste volumes, leading to lower purity outcomes and more recyclables ending up in landfills.
The company deployed Glacier’s AI-powered sorting robots, capable of recognizing 70+ material types and analyzing real-time feedstock data.
Material recovery results increased, paper and fiber purity improved, and worker safety risks dropped.
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China’s regulator accused Qualcomm of finalizing its Autotalks acquisition without approval, a direct breach of filing requirements under the country’s strengthened 2022 Anti-Monopoly Law.
SAMR’s decision to “call in” a below-threshold semiconductor agreement highlights stricter oversight, especially in sensitive tech sectors like chips and EDA.
Cross-border dealmakers face stronger compliance pressures, needing early China merger screenings, sector risk flags, and coordination with provincial regulators to steer from gun-jumping penalties.

Qantas confirmed that 5.7M customer records were stolen in a July cyberattack, which targeted a third-party contact center platform used by the airline and several other global companies.
Most leaked data included names, emails, and frequent-flyer details, though some records also exposed personal information like location, mobile numbers, and dates of birth.
The airline secured a court injunction to block further data use, but cybersecurity experts warned such orders are largely ineffective, highlighting growing risks to Australia’s aviation and data security sectors.

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