📰 AI Daily Roundup: November 27, 2025
TL;DR
Nvidia’s Black Friday deal drops at 10pm? Classic. China warns of a humanoid robot bubble. OpenAI’s ChatGPT still can’t tell time (and we’re still here).
🌐 Main News
Nvidia dropped a 50% off deal for GeForce NOW Ultimate (RTX 5080-class cloud gaming) at 10pm on Black Friday. Not the worst PR move, but definitely “hustle mode” 😂
OpenAI’s Mixpanel breach exposed some user data (emails, locations), but no API keys or ChatGPT content. OpenAI already nuked Mixpanel. (no shit, they’re paranoid now)
China’s state agency just warned that a humanoid robot “bubble” is forming—right as AI giants race to build them. Feels like 2021 all over again.
🔧 Tools and Demos
Alibaba’s new Quark smart glasses have removable batteries—finally, a design that doesn’t die by lunchtime. (Competitors, take notes.)
ChatGPT’s “shopping research” feature is stuck in 2023. Tried buying a smartwatch? It kept suggesting 2021 models. Lowkey embarrassing.
💬 Community/Reddit
r/singularity: Elon said AGI would arrive in 2025. Now it’s 2025 and we’re all still waiting. (0 upvotes on “lol” but 775 on “we’re doomed”)
r/ChatGPT: “Gemini’s image creation is actually winning now.” (488 upvotes. I’m here for it.)
🧪 Research
AlphaFold’s now being used by researchers in Asia-Pacific to accelerate protein discovery. Finally some non-Western AI impact.
DeepSeek-Math-V2 just dropped—looks like the first LLM that actually understands math problems. (No more “I don’t know” on calculus.)
📧 From the Experts
Simon Willison broke down “Google Antigravity Exfiltrates Data” (yes, it’s a thing). TL;DR: Google’s doing data hacks without you knowing.
The UN climate talks again avoided fossil fuels. (This time, there was a literal fire in the venue. Iconic.)
📚 Further Reading
- The Ultimate Black Friday Deal Is Here
- Mixpanel security incident: what OpenAI users need to know
- China’s Alibaba brings removable batteries to the smart glasses race
- Why can’t ChatGPT tell time?
- My AI shopping assistants are stuck in the past
- DeepSeek-Math-V2
Sources:
637 items across 74 sources including NVIDIA, OpenAI, The Verge, MIT Tech Review, arXiv, Reddit, and Simon Willison.
All URLs preserved exactly as provided.