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Texas AI Ban, OpenAI Mimics Google

Key Points

  • Texas Governor Greg Abbott issued an executive order banning Chinese AI apps like DeepSeek and Rednote on all public‑issued devices, extending the ban to public schools and universities and blocking classroom access to these tools.
  • The broad scope of the order raises security concerns for government workers but also hampers AI education, likely driving students to seek out the banned apps on personal devices out of curiosity.
  • The ban mirrors historical prohibition attempts, where restricting a popular product often makes it more desirable rather than eliminating its use.
  • OpenAI has revamped its homepage to mimic Google’s search‑bar layout, positioning ChatGPT as a direct search competitor that works without login, though it may still lack the consumer‑friendliness of established search engines.

Full Transcript

# Texas AI Ban, OpenAI Mimics Google **Source:** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k53_Vv1SRxc](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k53_Vv1SRxc) **Duration:** 00:04:49 ## Summary - Texas Governor Greg Abbott issued an executive order banning Chinese AI apps like DeepSeek and Rednote on all public‑issued devices, extending the ban to public schools and universities and blocking classroom access to these tools. - The broad scope of the order raises security concerns for government workers but also hampers AI education, likely driving students to seek out the banned apps on personal devices out of curiosity. - The ban mirrors historical prohibition attempts, where restricting a popular product often makes it more desirable rather than eliminating its use. - OpenAI has revamped its homepage to mimic Google’s search‑bar layout, positioning ChatGPT as a direct search competitor that works without login, though it may still lack the consumer‑friendliness of established search engines. ## Sections - [00:00:00](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k53_Vv1SRxc&t=0s) **Texas Governor Bans AI Apps in Schools** - Governor Greg Abbott’s executive order prohibits the use of AI platforms such as DeepSeek and Rednote on public‑issued devices, effectively blocking Texas public schools and universities from accessing these tools and limiting classroom AI education. ## Full Transcript
0:00two pieces of AI news to call out today 0:02number one Greg Abbott governor of Texas 0:05has decided to ban deep seek and ban 0:09rednote and ban a bunch of other Chinese 0:12apps from public issued devices in the 0:14state of Texas now you might think well 0:17that affects government workers and in 0:18your head you're thinking like they go 0:20to the governor's mansion they go to 0:21some sort of executive administration 0:23building with their government issued 0:25mobile devices and that's it that's not 0:27really it the the problem is that just 0:30an executive order not a law Governor 0:33Abbott has prevented public education 0:36institutions including schools and 0:38universities in the state of Texas from 0:42accessing or using an AI 0:46app and the the larger issue here is 0:50that if you are trying to teach students 0:53about AI models even if you think 0:56something like deep seek isn't the right 0:58way to go you don't want to be in a 1:00position where they don't have the 1:03chance to check it out understand what 1:05it is have an intelligent conversation 1:07in the classroom about it and that's 1:10what's happening you can't do that 1:12anymore in Texas and I guarantee you 1:15when those students go home on their 1:17personal devices they're absolutely more 1:20likely to check out deep seek because a 1:23lot of headlines got made on it being 1:25banned you want to make something 1:27popular ban it that's what this country 1:29that's what the United States learned in 1:31in 1:32prohibition we tried to ban alcohol via 1:34Constitutional Amendment and it became 1:36very very popular right away did not 1:40work and in this situation I think as 1:44much as it makes sense from 1:48a security perspective for certain 1:51government employees given the kinds of 1:54information collected by deeps and their 1:56mobile app the framing of the executive 2:00order is really Broad and going after 2:03and sort of wrapping in educational 2:05institutions is not 2:08helpful number two 2:11um this one is interesting I don't know 2:14if you remember I remember back in the 2:15early days it was hard to spell Google 2:18and you're like how is this related to 2:20AI news it was hard to spell Google two 2:22o's 3 O's how do you put it together 2:25where do you go to search Google had to 2:27overcome all of that now I don't even 2:29think about how Google is spelled I've 2:31typed it so many times in my life I 2:32could probably type it if like I had 2:35been you know hit in the head and had a 2:38concussion and open AI does not roll off 2:41the tongue that way and that matters 2:44because open AI is trying to directly 2:46come for that kind of muscle memory 2:49search Behavior open AI has changed 2:52their entire homepage and they have put 2:56a search bar on the homepage front and 2:59set C right exactly where Google puts 3:02theirs they've made it look like 3:04Google's they have taken away most of 3:06the visual content they used to have on 3:07that page it's just a search bar and the 3:09only difference is it's in dark mode but 3:11it's a search bar and you can use chat 3:14GPT for 3:15search you don't have to log in you 3:18don't have to have an account they're 3:20100% trying to displace Google and the 3:23problem is I don't think that they have 3:26a consumer friendly name to go and do 3:29that I don't think they do open AI 3:31people are not going to tell you so they 3:33use open AI for search I think what it 3:36will do if you're one of the thousands 3:38of people who is hearing about chat GPT 3:40for the first time and you end up on 3:42open AI 3:43site there you're going to learn a lot 3:45about what it does right away because 3:47you can just type right in you don't 3:48have to log in you can chat with Chad 3:49GPT you can search the web you can get a 3:51visceral product experience right there 3:54I think that is what they are going for 3:56or at least I think that is what they're 3:58going to get I think they are aiming for 4:00something bigger Sam Alman definitely 4:02tweeted and focused mostly on you can 4:05search from the homepage now so 100% I 4:08think they're coming for Google but I 4:11don't think that this particular 4:13iteration is going to be successful and 4:14I think it's at least at least as much a 4:18branding issue as it is anything else 4:21open AI is just not a search brand and 4:24they've put a lot of work into making it 4:26the brand that it is an AI brand and and 4:30consumers aren't yet putting together 4:32the idea that Ai and search go together 4:34and that is going to be a huge huge 4:37question mark in the search space for a 4:40while and Google is very nervous I 4:42guarantee you they are nervous about it 4:44even if they are protected by their 4:45brand so that's the news for today