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AI Roundup — June 22, 2026

Samsung Electronics Deploys ChatGPT Enterprise and Codex Worldwide

According to a post on the OpenAI blog, Samsung Electronics has deployed ChatGPT Enterprise and Codex to employees across its global workforce. OpenAI describes the rollout as one of its largest enterprise AI deployments to date.

The deployment gives Samsung employees access to ChatGPT Enterprise for general productivity and communication tasks, alongside Codex, OpenAI's AI-powered software engineering tool designed to assist with coding workflows. OpenAI did not specify the exact number of employees covered under the agreement, but characterized the scale as significant within the context of its enterprise partnerships.

This milestone marks a notable expansion of OpenAI's footprint in the enterprise sector, with a major consumer electronics and semiconductor manufacturer formally integrating both a conversational AI platform and a code-generation tool into its day-to-day operations.

Security Risks Highlighted for AI-Assisted "Vibe-Coded" Applications

The Verge has published a report urging developers to be aware of security vulnerabilities that can emerge from AI-assisted, rapid application development — commonly referred to as "vibe-coding."

The piece centers on a case involving a developer named Bob Starr, who used AI tools to quickly build and launch a website called "Boomberg," intended to visualize how US tax revenue is allocated to technology companies. According to The Verge, Starr launched the site shortly after building it, without a thorough security review. Months later, he discovered the site contained a hidden SQL injection vulnerability — a class of security flaw that can allow unauthorized parties to interact with or manipulate a site's underlying database.

The report uses this case as a broader illustration of a pattern The Verge says is emerging as AI coding assistants lower the barrier to shipping software: developers, particularly those without deep security experience, may ship functional-looking applications that contain serious vulnerabilities the AI tools did not flag or prevent.

SQL injection is a well-documented attack vector in web security, and its presence in an AI-assisted project underscores the importance of security audits and code review regardless of how an application was built. The Verge's report stops short of attributing the vulnerability to any specific AI tool, and instead frames the issue as a workflow and process concern for developers relying heavily on AI-generated code.

Developers using AI coding assistants are encouraged by the report to treat AI-generated output with the same scrutiny applied to any other code, including running security scans and conducting thorough reviews before deployment.


Those are the key AI industry developments for June 22, 2026. Check back for the next roundup as these stories continue to develop.