Enterprise AI hit a landmark this week as Infosys, TCS, and Wipro collectively activated 330,000 Microsoft 365 Copilot seats — and the control frameworks are still catching up. Plus: OpenAI retires o3 and GPT-4.5, ChatGPT launches live job listings, xAI's recruiter crisis, and a €600B EU copyright warning.
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Three hundred and thirty thousand seats. That's how many Microsoft three-sixty-five Copilot licenses Infosys, TCS, and Wipro collectively activated by June third.
Microsoft has already flagged the risk directly. Unpredictable interactions between thousands of agents acting at the same time are a real concern, and the orchestration framework designed to manage that won't be available until the fourth quarter of twenty twenty-six.
While enterprise deployments expand, OpenAI is compressing its model portfolio. The company announced June third retirement dates for both the o-three model, sunset August twenty-sixth, and GPT-four-point-five, which exits June twenty-seventh.
ChatGPT added live job listings on June third, pulling from Indeed, Upwork, and Appcast, with resume creation and export built in. That's a direct move into territory currently owned by LinkedIn and Indeed.
Elon Musk's xAI paused recruitment for a specialized category of Grok trainers, including accountants, scientists, and comedians hired as AI tutors, due to what the company described as an overwhelmed HR department. The timing matters. xAI merged with SpaceX four months ago, conducted tutor layoffs in fall twenty twenty-five and again in early March twenty twenty-six, and has seen multiple data team leaders depart in recent months.
In Europe, a new economic study puts a figure on the regulatory stakes. Restricting the EU's text-and-data-mining framework could cost six hundred billion euros annually.
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