Tech · Full coverage
White House Wants Early OpenAI Rollout Screened by U.S. Agencies
How 2 Israeli newsrooms covered this story — translated into English and compared side by side.
First reported by Now 14 · 5 hours ago
Right 1Unrated 1
What happened
The Trump administration asked OpenAI to slow the launch of GPT 5.6 so about 20 early users can be screened by U.S. agencies. The move reflects White House concerns about cyber risks, critical infrastructure disruption, and technology transfer to China. Separately, reports say OpenAI may delay its IPO until 2027.
- 01OpenAI may give about 20 companies early access to GPT 5.6.
- 02The Trump administration wants those firms screened before access.
- 03Officials fear cyberattacks, industrial disruption, and tech transfer to China.
- 04Trump opposes strict AI regulation, calling for companies to stay free to innovate.
- 05Anthropic also faced new U.S. export restrictions this month.
Summary translated & synthesized from the sources below by baba. Read each original for the full report.
Full coverage · 2 outlets
The same event, reported separately by each newsroom. Open a few to compare what each emphasizes — and what they leave out.
Related stories
OpenAI Faces Multistate U.S. Probe as IPO NearsJun 14, 2026Amazon Reportedly Alerted Trump White House to AI Security Flaw, Prompting Global ShutdownJun 14, 2026Amazon CEO Flagged Anthropic AI Security Risks Before White House Blocked ModelsJun 14, 2026OpenAI May Push IPO to 2027 to Protect Its Valuation8 hours agoHow hackers in China used ChatGPT to try to scare the public in the U.S.Jun 11, 2026Washington Alarmed After Anthropic AI Model Shows Advanced Hacking AbilitiesJun 17, 2026