AI Daily Trends & Tools — 2026-05-05
Today’s briefing covers Google’s April AI recap, White House pre-screening talks, AMD’s Q1 earnings, and community backlash over Gemini. Also, check out FDM-1, a video-trained AI agent model from Standard Intelligence.
AI Daily Trends & Tools — 2026-05-05
1. AI Industry & Trends
① Google releases April 2026 AI update recap
Google has published a full summary of its April AI updates on its official blog. Continuing its tradition of monthly recaps, this latest edition was posted 14 hours ago (as of May 5, KST).

② White House considers executive order for AI pre-screening
According to Forbes, the White House is considering an executive order that would require government pre-screening for major AI models before they are released to the public. If implemented, this would significantly ramp up regulatory oversight of AI technology.
③ AMD Q1 2026 earnings today: Focus on AI chip growth
AMD, the AI chip manufacturer, is set to report its Q1 2026 earnings on May 5, 2026. With shares up over 59% since the start of the year, market expectations are high due to the surging demand for AI infrastructure.

④ AI-driven consumer shifts: From 30-minute shopping to 3 seconds
According to a Byline Network report, ChatGPT captured the search paths of 900 million consumers worldwide as of February this year. Furthermore, a survey by the Ministry of Science and ICT showed that the generative AI adoption rate rose by 11.2%p, from 33.3% in 2024 to 44.5% in 2025. Analysts suggest AI is fundamentally transforming how people shop and search for information.

2. Key AI Tool Updates
① Standard Intelligence FDM-1: Training AI agents with video
Standard Intelligence has secured $75 million in a round led by Sequoia and Spark Capital. The company developed FDM-1, a model that learns how to operate computers by watching 11 million hours of screen recordings rather than using screenshots. It presents a new paradigm for training AI agents based on video input.

② Anthropic, Blackstone, and Goldman Sachs form $1.5 billion AI consulting venture
Business Insider reports that major Wall Street investors including Blackstone, Anthropic, Hellman & Friedman, and Goldman Sachs are teaming up to launch a $1.5 billion consulting firm, aiming to become the "McKinsey" of the AI sector. This signals the formal emergence of a professional service market dedicated to helping enterprises adopt AI.
③ Singapore prioritizes AI growth, risk, and governance in 2026 budget
Singapore has signaled its commitment to becoming a trusted AI hub by allocating significant resources to the AI sector in its 2026 national budget. The focus is on supporting AI growth while simultaneously building risk management and governance frameworks.

3. Community Insights & Reactions
Developers leaving as Gemini errors persist and free tiers shrink
According to Namuwiki and related communities, developer frustration is mounting as the Google Gemini 429 error (overload error) has remained unaddressed for over three weeks. Taking advantage of Gemini’s reduced free service offerings, competitors like Codex CLI and Claude Code are running aggressive marketing campaigns with free plan support and higher limits, leading many in the developer community to consider switching services.
Palantir earnings: Tension between AI growth expectations and high bars
A Motley Fool analysis notes that Palantir reported its Q1 2026 earnings after the market closed on May 4. The main question was whether the results could meet expectations, given that the AI growth surge was already heavily priced into the market. The community is closely watching the performance of high-flying AI stocks.
4. Notable New Research/Announcements
① 2026 Stanford AI Index: Re-evaluating AI compute, emissions, and trust
As reported by IEEE Spectrum, the 2026 AI Index by Stanford University provides an in-depth look at how global AI trends are reshaped by compute resources, carbon emissions, and public trust. The core dilemma discussed is how increasingly powerful AI models lead to higher computational costs and environmental burdens. (Note: This report was released 3 weeks ago and is included for reference).
② AI-powered cyberattacks: Lowering the barrier to entry in 2026
According to a report by The Hacker News (19 hours ago), AI is lowering the barrier for cyberattacks, with large-scale threats—such as a 7-million-record data breach—now becoming reality. AI has become a powerful tool for attackers as well as defenders, exacerbating the difficulty of finding cybersecurity talent.

This content was collected, curated, and summarized entirely by AI — including how and what to gather. It may contain inaccuracies. Crew does not guarantee the accuracy of any information presented here. Always verify facts on your own before acting on them. Crew assumes no legal liability for any consequences arising from reliance on this content.