Best of your X follows: June 22

Best of your X follows: June 22

Five high-signal posts made the cut today: OpenAI's health-answering improvements, beneficial-behavior training, Codex demonstration learning, GLM 5.2 inference availability, and enterprise spend controls.

Daily Best of Who I Follow on X
June 20, 2026 · 2:05 AM
1 subscriptions · 27 items
This scan was thin but usable: five posts had enough signal to keep. The strongest theme is practical deployment work, not frontier-model hype: health safety, alignment transfer, agent training, inference, and enterprise controls.

Health and alignment

GPT-5.5 Instant moves into health answers

Author: @OpenAI, the AI lab behind ChatGPT; Greg Brockman, OpenAI president and co-founder, added deployment details.
  • What happened: OpenAI said GPT-5.5 Instant is now on par with its frontier Thinking models for health-related questions, and that more than 230 million people ask ChatGPT health and wellness questions each week 1.
  • Why it matters: The rollout affects free ChatGPT users, so the safety work is not limited to a small paid or research audience 1.
  • Useful detail: Brockman said the evaluation involved hundreds of physicians across 60 countries, 49 languages, and 26 specialties 2.
Read the original OpenAI post:
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Beneficial training as a transfer test

Author: @OpenAI; Ethan Mollick, Wharton professor studying AI and innovation, added a short interpretation.
  • What happened: OpenAI posted research on training models to be broadly and persistently beneficial across domains and under pressure 3.
  • Why it matters: Mollick linked it to the inverse of earlier work where "evil" training data produced broader misalignment, framing this as evidence that beneficial RL data may generalize too 4.
  • Implication: The alignment question here is not just whether a model behaves well on the training task, but whether the behavior survives a domain shift.
Read the research announcement:
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Developer tools and inference

Codex can be taught by demonstration

Author: Greg Brockman, OpenAI president and co-founder.
  • What happened: Brockman said users can now teach Codex by demonstration 5.
  • Why it matters: That points to a more practical agent interface: show the workflow once, then let the coding agent reuse the pattern instead of relying only on written prompts.
  • Implication: If the behavior is reliable, teams will need clearer examples, conventions, and review gates, because demos become part of the tool's instruction surface.
Read the Codex post:
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GLM 5.2 waits on fast inference providers

Author: Simon Willison, developer and AI tooling writer.
  • What happened: Willison said he is looking forward to custom-silicon inference providers such as Groq or Cerebras running GLM 5.2 6.
  • Why it matters: He noted that Cerebras has GLM-4.7 while Groq is still mostly running Llama 3.x and gpt-oss, which makes the post less about benchmark scores and more about availability 6.
  • Implication: For open models, the useful question is often not "how good is it?" but "where can I run it fast enough to matter?"
Read the inference post:
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Enterprise controls

OpenAI adds usage analytics and spend controls

Author: Greg Brockman, OpenAI president and co-founder.
  • What happened: Brockman said OpenAI is launching credit usage analytics and updated spend controls in its global admin console 7.
  • Why it matters: This is the less flashy part of enterprise AI adoption: finance and platform teams need visibility before they let usage spread across a company.
  • Implication: Expect more AI tooling announcements to look like cloud-admin features, not model demos.
Read the enterprise controls post:
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Cut from the digest

Pure retweets from @paulg were excluded even when engagement was high. Several short posts from @gdb and @emollick were also left out because the visible payload did not expose enough of the quoted source to summarize safely.

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