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AI Weekly News: Week of March 9–13, 2026

Weekly AI News (Mar 9–13 2026): OpenAI launches GPT-5.4 with computer-use capabilities, Nvidia invests in Mira Murati’s Thinking Machines Lab, UK AI firm Nscale raises $2B, Canal+ adopts generative AI production tools, and Meta delays its Avocado model.

13 March 20263 min read

Introduction

The second week of March 2026 was marked by new frontier AI models, rising geopolitical tensions around AI development, major infrastructure investments, and rapid enterprise adoption of generative AI technologies. At the same time, debates about AI safety and ethics intensified as companies navigate defence contracts and responsible deployment.

Here are the most important developments shaping the AI ecosystem this week.

1. OpenAI Introduces GPT-5.4 With Native Computer-Use Capabilities

OpenAI launched GPT-5.4, a new generation foundation model designed specifically for complex professional workflows such as spreadsheets, presentations and document analysis. The model introduces native computer-use capabilities, allowing AI agents to interact directly with operating systems and software tools to execute tasks autonomously.

This represents another step toward agentic AI systems capable of performing multi-step tasks across applications, rather than simply responding to prompts.

2. Nvidia Invests in Mira Murati’s Thinking Machines Lab

Nvidia announced a strategic investment in Thinking Machines Lab, the AI startup founded by former OpenAI CTO Mira Murati. The partnership includes access to large-scale compute resources — potentially up to one gigawatt of Nvidia GPU infrastructure — to train and deploy next-generation frontier models.

The move highlights Nvidia’s strategy of backing promising AI startups while strengthening its position as the dominant provider of AI computing infrastructure.

3. UK AI Firm Nscale Raises $2 Billion to Expand AI Infrastructure

British AI company Nscale raised $2 billion in a new funding round, bringing its valuation to approximately $14.6 billion. The funding round included investors such as Nvidia, Dell, Citadel and Jane Street.

The company focuses on building large-scale GPU infrastructure and AI compute capacity — reinforcing the idea that AI infrastructure is becoming one of the most important strategic layers of the industry.

4. Media Industry Adopts Generative AI for Production and Streaming

French media group Canal+ announced a multi-year partnership with Google Cloud and OpenAI to integrate generative AI across its production and streaming platforms.

The collaboration will allow production teams to use AI tools such as Google’s Veo video generation model for scene pre-visualisation, while OpenAI’s technology will power natural-language search and recommendation systems across Canal+’s content library.

5. Meta Delays New “Avocado” AI Model Amid Performance Concerns

Meta reportedly postponed the launch of its new large AI model “Avocado”, originally expected in early 2026. Internal testing showed the model had not yet reached the performance benchmarks necessary to compete with leading systems from OpenAI and Google.

The delay highlights the increasing pressure on AI labs to deliver models that match rapidly advancing competitors while maintaining reliability and efficiency.

6. Ethical Debate Intensifies Around AI and Defence Contracts

AI governance debates intensified this week after reports surfaced that OpenAI’s robotics and hardware leader resigned over concerns related to a Pentagon partnership.

The situation underscores a broader tension across the industry: as governments increasingly adopt AI for defence and national security, technology companies must balance commercial opportunity, ethical concerns, and public trust.

Conclusion

The week of March 9–13, 2026 reflects how artificial intelligence is evolving from a research frontier into a strategic global industry shaped by infrastructure, geopolitics, and enterprise adoption.

Major model launches, startup funding rounds, and partnerships between AI labs and large corporations demonstrate accelerating momentum — while ethical debates and competitive pressures remind us that the governance of AI remains just as important as the technology itself.

As the year progresses, expect agentic systems, infrastructure investment, and AI-driven media production to remain key themes across the industry.

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