

What’s New Today: TSMC is preparing to mass-produce 2nm chips by the end of 2025, which should make upcoming devices faster while using less power across both consumer and business products.
Fast-Track Insights: SoftBank has fully paid its $40 billion investment in OpenAI, making it one of the largest private technology funding deals to date and underlining the growing financial commitment to large-scale AI development.
Here’s a quick rundown of the biggest tech headlines making waves today, bringing together key updates on semiconductor progress and major capital moves that are shaping the next phase of the global tech industry.
TSMC is preparing to start making its very advanced 2-nanometer chips by the end of 2025. These chips will help phones, laptops, AI tools and cars run faster and use less energy. The new technology could also boost smart AI and data centers. Other big chip makers like Samsung and Intel are working to catch up in this chip race.
SoftBank Group has now fully paid its $40 billion investment in OpenAI, which makes ChatGPT and other AI tools. This big funding deal is one of the largest private tech investments ever. The money will help OpenAI grow its AI research and tools. SoftBank hopes this will make it a key part of the future of artificial intelligence.
Infosys will give up to Rs. 21 lakh a year to fresh 2025 engineering graduates with strong AI and tech skills as part of its new pay plan. The top pay is for Specialist Programmer L3 roles, while other levels get Rs. 16 lakh or Rs. 11 lakh. The company plans to hire about 20,000 freshers and this move may lead other IT firms to raise starter salaries too.
The article explains that using AI in schools can help teachers and learners but also causes problems. AI often repeats old unfair patterns from past data, making biased decisions about students. It can collect private information without clear permission and make choices that students and teachers cannot understand. To fix this, schools need clear rules, human checks, and fair data use.
South Korea has pushed back a new crypto bill that would allow local stablecoins until 2026 because people cannot agree on key rules. Lawmakers and regulators are still debating how stablecoin issuers should work and who should control them. The bill was meant to help the crypto market and let stablecoins tied to the Korean won be issued.