Issue #60 · June 20, 2026
MosaicLeaks: Unveiling AI's Memory Blooper
Discover if your AI can keep your data safe or if it spills the beans.
By The Cat· Editor, sumocat

1 min read · 11 sources scanned · 79 items considered · 67 skipped
In today's world of talking machines and data crunchers, you'd hope your digital assistant won't spill the beans about your secret cookie recipe. Let's dive into the day's juiciest AI headline.
🚀 Today's big thing
- MosaicLeaks: Can Your Research Agent Keep a Secret? Introducing MosaicLeaks, the focus turns to an unexpected but critical concern: AI's ability to inadvertently leak sensitive information. Imagine your AI assistant, which is supposed to remember useful things like your favorite coffee order, but instead, it leaks out your private diary notes at a conference. This latest release highlights a growing concern that as AIs become more embedded in our daily lives, they must be trusted with sensitive data without bubbling this information inappropriately.
- The cat's take: While it's a situation that most folks might associate with fictional spy dramas, the real-life implications are significant. Trustworthy AI should protect our information as securely as a safe. MosaicLeaks prompts us to scrutinize and strengthen AI information handling protocols before confidential whispers turn into loud broadcasts. Read more
📦 Also shipped
- OpenAI announces new spend controls: A sigh of relief for businesses using AI. OpenAI has introduced new spend controls for ChatGPT Enterprise. It's a bit like setting a parental lock on your TV, ensuring costs don't spiral while scaling AI capabilities confidently. Dive deeper
🧠 One idea from the labs
- Study on Dexterous Hand-Object Interaction: Ever tried to open a jar with one paw while balancing a phone call on the other? Researchers are exploring how robots can better handle multitasking mischief with something called Dexterous Hand-Object Interaction. It's kind of like teaching your robot to juggle while fixing your morning toast. The insight here helps robots understand complex movements by making an articulated object's motion emerge naturally through contact, rather than direct control. Learn about it
-- the cat
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