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HigherEd AI Daily
June 2 – AI Policy, Workforce Shifts, and Research Intelligence
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Tuesday, June 2, 2026
Today’s edition covers the first state-level lawsuit against OpenAI, a federal bill that would give the public a stake in AI companies, new data on what is actually holding back recent college graduates, and a $50 million bet on AI that helps researchers identify which questions are worth asking.
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The Rundown AI — GOVERNANCE
Florida Files the First State Lawsuit Against OpenAI Over Student Safety
Florida’s attorney general has filed the first state-level lawsuit against OpenAI and CEO Sam Altman, alleging that ChatGPT played a direct role in incidents involving mass shooting planning and self-harm. The complaint names specific cases in which users’ interactions with the chatbot are alleged to have contributed to real-world harm.
The filing marks a significant escalation in how state governments are approaching AI liability. While prior regulatory actions have focused on data privacy and copyright, this lawsuit makes a direct claim about harm to individuals — a legal theory that, if it gains traction, could reshape how AI providers design their safety systems and what disclosures they are required to make to consumers.
Other states are watching closely. Whether or not this particular complaint succeeds, it signals that state attorneys general are willing to move beyond federal gridlock and pursue AI companies directly under existing tort and consumer protection frameworks.
Why it matters for campuses
Colleges and universities that have deployed or recommended ChatGPT to students face growing pressure to document their duty-of-care policies around AI use. Student wellness offices, counseling centers, and academic integrity committees should be aware of this litigation as they develop or revise AI guidelines; the claim that an AI tool contributed to self-harm sets a precedent that institutional endorsement of such tools could carry legal risk.
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The Rundown AI — POLICY
Sanders Introduces Bill to Give the Public a Stake in AI Companies
Senator Bernie Sanders has previewed the American A.I. Sovereign Wealth Fund Act, a proposal that would route 50 percent of stock from the largest AI companies into a publicly held fund, distributing financial gains broadly to Americans. The legislation would also give the federal government voting power and board seats at companies including OpenAI, Anthropic, and xAI.
Sanders cites Norway’s $2 trillion sovereign wealth fund and Alaska’s Permanent Fund dividend program as models. The proposal is early-stage, but it introduces a policy framework that reframes AI development as a public resource rather than a private asset; similar arguments have been made about land-grant universities and the public internet.
The bill arrives as Anthropic has filed confidentially for an IPO and OpenAI continues its transition to a for-profit structure. Both developments are accelerating public debate about who benefits from AI investment and who bears the societal costs.
Why it matters for campuses
Higher education has a direct stake in this policy conversation. Public universities are often the largest employers in their regions and serve as engines of social mobility; the equity arguments driving this bill mirror debates already active in faculty senates and accreditation discussions about whose interests AI on campus actually serves. Policy and social science faculty may also find this legislation useful as a teaching case on technology governance and democratic accountability.
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TLDR AI — ACCESS
Remote Work – Not AI – Is the Primary Obstacle for New College Graduates
New research reported by NPR challenges a prevailing assumption in higher education: that AI-driven automation is the main reason recent college graduates struggle to enter the workforce. The data suggest a different culprit. Companies are significantly less likely to hire new graduates into roles that can be performed remotely, preferring to reserve those positions for experienced workers or to leave them open longer.
The implication is that the entry-level pipeline has been disrupted not primarily by AI replacing tasks, but by remote work norms that disadvantage candidates who cannot yet demonstrate in-office relationship-building, contextual judgment, and informal mentorship absorption. New graduates lack the professional track record that justifies employer investment in remote onboarding.
This finding does not absolve AI from longer-term workforce transformation; it simply clarifies where the near-term pressure is coming from. Career counselors and faculty who have been framing student anxiety around AI displacement may need to broaden their advising lens.
Why it matters for campuses
Career services offices and academic advisors should revisit how they frame workforce preparation conversations with students. Emphasizing in-person networking, internship programs that develop observable professional skills, and relationships with local and regional employers may be more immediately valuable than pivoting every program toward AI literacy alone. Accreditation bodies and program reviewers may also want to track this data as evidence for or against remote-first experiential learning models.
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TLDR AI — RESEARCH
Ex-DeepMind Team Raises $50 Million to Build AI That Identifies Which Scientific Questions Are Worth Asking
London-based startup Inherent has raised $50 million in seed funding to build Faraday, an AI platform designed to help researchers identify which scientific questions are most likely to yield meaningful progress. Founded by former DeepMind researchers, the company is addressing a problem distinct from AI’s better-known research applications: not synthesizing what is already known, but surfacing what is not yet known and worth investigating.
Most current AI research tools excel at literature review, data analysis, and manuscript drafting. Faraday is targeting the earlier, harder problem of research agenda formation – the judgment-intensive work of deciding where to focus scarce time and grant resources. The company has not yet published benchmarks, and the platform is in early development, but the concept addresses a genuine bottleneck in academic science.
The funding round is notable both for its size at the seed stage and for the pedigree of its founders; it reflects growing investor conviction that the next wave of AI value in research lies upstream of content generation.
Why it matters for campuses
Research universities and doctoral programs should track Faraday closely. If the platform delivers on its premise, it could become a resource for graduate students learning to develop original research agendas and for faculty navigating competitive grant environments. Provosts and research offices evaluating AI tool investments should pay attention to this category; research-question framing is a faculty skill that AI has, until now, left largely untouched.
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Tool of the Day
MiniMax M3
MiniMax M3 is a powerful open-weight AI model that supports up to 1 million tokens of context, accepts image and video input, and can operate a desktop computer autonomously. Released this week, it performs competitively with leading frontier models on coding and reasoning benchmarks while being fully open for download and local deployment. For educators and instructional designers, M3’s 1-million-token context window is the defining feature: it can process an entire course’s worth of readings, syllabi, and student materials in a single session.
Try it: Upload a full semester of course readings (or a book-length dissertation chapter set) and ask M3 to identify gaps in the literature, recurring themes across sources, or conceptual connections between assigned texts – a task that typically requires hours of synthesis work.
Visit MiniMax M3
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Dr. Ali Green
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Sources for This Edition
The Rundown AI (daily.therundown.ai)
TLDR AI (tldrnewsletter.com)
Florida Office of the Attorney General (myfloridalegal.com)
The New York Times (nytimes.com)
NPR (npr.org)
The Next Web (thenextweb.com)
MiniMax (minimax.io)
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askthephd.com
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askthephd.substack.com
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HigherEd AI Daily; Curated by Dr. Ali Green
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