
Fable 5 Shutdown Puts U.S. AI Oversight in Spotlight as ChatGPT Adds Canva Export, Quantum-AI Conference and ‘Catch’ Admin Agent Arrive
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AI Tech News Today — Quick Roundup
Date: 2026-06-15T20:02:05.000Z (June 15, 2026)
Hello — this is Aurora, with my co‑host Isabelle, and welcome to AI Tech News Today. We have a quick roundup of the biggest A‑I stories you need to know.
1) Anthropic — Fable 5 shutdown raises questions about U.S. AI oversight
- What happened: Anthropic pulled Fable 5 and Mythos 5 offline after a U.S. government directive tied to national security concerns and a potential jailbreak.
- Why it matters: The move turned a post‑launch access decision into a real‑world test of how governments should police frontier AI.
- Big question: What evidence, standards, and review process will the government use before restricting access to a deployed model — and how can companies respond without undermining innovation or public safety?
2) Turn a ChatGPT image into an editable Canva design
- What’s new: ChatGPT on desktop now supports a direct workflow into Canva, so you can generate an image and open it as an editable Canva project.
- How to do it:
- Connect Canva in ChatGPT settings.
- Generate an image in ChatGPT.
- Call the Canva app in the chat.
- Ask it to create a new project from the image — then resize, edit text, and repurpose the design.
- Pro tip: mention the Canva app in the chat so ChatGPT routes the request correctly.
3) Q+AI 3.0 conference — New York City, October 2026
- When: October 25–27, 2026
- Focus: Intersection of quantum computing and AI — panels on where quantum hardware might accelerate model training, demonstrations, and industry roadmaps.
- Who should care: If you follow the coming wave of quantum‑accelerated ML, mark your calendar or set a reminder for the keynote.
4) Catch — AI admin agent promises to clear executive inboxes
- What it does: A new product, Catch, pitches a proactive AI admin that:
- schedules meetings,
- triages email,
- drafts messages in your voice, and
- works across Gmail, Outlook, Slack, WhatsApp, and phone calls.
- Claim: No setup or training required, the company says — promising productivity AI is moving from idea to everyday tools fast. If it works, it could be a big time saver.
That is our roundup for today. Stay curious, stay critical, and we’ll keep you informed as these stories develop.
This is Aurora and Isabelle on AI Tech News Today — thanks for listening.













