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- Claude just launched buildable, shareable AI apps
Claude just launched buildable, shareable AI apps
Giveaway: Learn how to make smart AI agents that can help you automate all your work for free
Welcome, Prohumans.
Here’s what you’re going to explore in this post:
Meta’s AI copyright victory
Claude’s buildable AI apps
WhatsApp’s chat summaries
Rise of agentic AI in business
What’s happening?
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Now you can build and share AI apps right inside Claude
Anthropic just rolled out a major upgrade: Developers can now create interactive AI apps directly within the Claude interface no APIs, no deployment headaches.
You can now build apps that run on Claude’s API and share them instantly.
Users log in with their own Claude accounts, so you don’t foot the bill.
Claude writes real, modifiable code to power your apps — no hidden magic.
Early projects include adaptive tutors, game NPCs, data tools, and writers.
Apps are built in a visual flow — no deployment, no managing keys.
You can use React for UI, upload files, and fork others’ work.
Current limits: no API calls, no storage, and only completion-based AI (for now).
Claude’s new app builder feels like a big unlock not just for developers, but for anyone shaping tools around real-world workflows. It’s rare for a platform to lower friction without limiting power. This could be the first real ecosystem for personal AI apps that scale on your terms.
Why AI agents are about to run your company

Intelmatix CEO Anas Alfaris calls it “the beginning of the cognitive era.” The age where companies don’t just use AI they work with it.
Here’s everything you need to know:
Traditional tools automated tasks. Agentic AI helps enterprises think.
These agents don’t wait for prompts they observe, decide, and act.
A cognitive enterprise runs on this: AI that learns, adapts, and improves over time.
Like Uber to taxis, agentic AI transforms not by speed, but by intelligence.
Smart agents now forecast demand, plan strategy, and write marketing copy.
But without coordination, most companies end up with fragmented tools.
True transformation comes when agents act as a system, not just software.
We’ve spent the last decade giving AI more data. Now we’re giving it more responsibility. The shift isn’t just technical it’s philosophical. As we build enterprises that think, we’ll need to ask a harder question: what does it mean to lead when you’re no longer the smartest mind in the room
Meta’s newest WhatsApp feature wants to catch you up with AI

WhatsApp is rolling out AI-generated summaries for missed messages. It’s the latest move in Meta’s push to weave AI deeper into everyday chats.
Here’s what they did:
If you’ve missed messages, Meta AI will now bullet out what happened.
The feature is optional, off by default, and only in the US (for now).
Meta says messages stay private thanks to its “Private Processing” tech.
You can block AI in group chats using Advanced Privacy settings.
But accuracy is still a big question — Apple’s version had issues.
Meta’s AI is already everywhere in WhatsApp: chats, image generation, Q&A.
Many users aren’t thrilled especially since the AI button can’t be removed.
Summarizing missed messages sounds helpful until it isn’t. If users can’t trust the AI to get it right, or if it starts to feel intrusive, this feature could backfire. Meta’s challenge isn’t just building smart tools it’s convincing users they’re worth keeping around.
A US judge just ruled in favor of Meta in a major AI copyright case

Meta won a key legal battle this week, as a federal judge ruled that its use of books to train AI models qualifies as fair use. But the decision leaves plenty of room for future lawsuits.
Authors like Sarah Silverman accused Meta of training AI on their books without permission.
A US judge said they failed to show the AI harmed the market for their work.
The ruling backed Meta but made clear it’s not a blanket pass for AI companies.
The judge even called Meta’s “public interest” defense argument “nonsense.”
He warned that many other training practices could still be unlawful.
A similar case involving Anthropic had a conflicting ruling just days earlier.
Expect more lawsuits the creative industry isn’t done fighting this battle.
This case was less a win for AI than a loss of legal strategy. Courts are still figuring out where the line is between fair use and exploitation and tech companies should be cautious. This isn’t settled law; it’s just the opening rounds.

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