Avsnitt
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Four senior DeepMind researchers — all AlphaFold contributors — announced they're joining Anthropic this week, days after Noam Shazeer left for OpenAI. Alphabet's market cap dropped $270 billion. We cover what the exodus signals about where the frontier research community thinks the most important work is happening, Anthropic's Senate letter accusing Alibaba of 28.8 million distillation attack queries, and the ADP survey finding that daily AI users feel more engaged but less productive.
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OpenAI and Broadcom unveiled Jalapeño yesterday — OpenAI's first custom inference chip, built in nine months using OpenAI's own models to accelerate the design. Broadcom's CEO says it cuts compute costs by 50% versus current GPUs. We break down what it means for OpenAI's IPO economics, cover Meta's AI prediction market app where Llama generates the questions and decides the winners, and look at the WEF's warning that financial AI governance hasn't kept up with deployment pace.
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Oracle disclosed AI-driven workforce reductions in a formal SEC filing on June 22nd — one of the first times a major company has put AI causation for layoffs in a legally accountable document rather than an earnings call. We break down what it means for how companies document AI's workforce impact, cover Gemini 3.5 Pro arriving this week with a 2 million token context window, and look at the White House AI executive order's July 2nd clearinghouse deadline.
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As of midnight, Claude Fable 5 is no longer free for subscribers — it's $10/$50 per million tokens. The problem: six of the thirteen promised free days were offline due to the government shutdown, and Anthropic hasn't announced any extension. We cover the billing transition, developer frustration, and what comes next — plus OpenAI's direct Glasswing counter launching this morning, and Morgan Stanley's $570 billion AI debt projection.
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Noam Shazeer — co-inventor of the architecture underlying every AI model that exists — just left Google DeepMind for OpenAI after less than two years. We cover the talent war implications, Sensor Tower's confirmation that ChatGPT fell below 50% market share for the first time, China's $295 billion government AI plan as a Fable 5 response, and OpenAI's acquisition of Python's dominant developer tools.
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More than half of all internet traffic is now bots — a crossover that Cloudflare's own CEO didn't expect until 2027. We break down what that means for every publisher, advertiser, and business built on the assumption that web traffic equals human eyeballs, cover Google AI Mode hitting a billion users while killing publisher referral traffic, and explain why Chrome auto-browse landing this month accelerates everything.
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WIRED and Korean media revealed the missing piece: SK Telecom — a $100M Anthropic investor — was flagged by the White House as a Chinese security risk, and Amazon's vulnerability report landed at the same time. Together they convinced the administration it couldn't trust Anthropic's access controls. We cover what this means for every international AI partnership, Anthropic's "coming days" restoration signal with today's refund deadline, and DeepSeek-V4 dropping this morning to fill the vacuum.
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One week after Washington pulled Fable 5, the unintended consequences are landing: Cohere is swamped with government inquiries, DeepSeek just closed a $7.4 billion record round, and Chinese labs cut prices 99%. We break down how an export control designed to protect US AI leadership is doing the opposite, cover the direct contradiction with Trump's own June 2nd AI executive order, and close with JPMorgan's $19.8 billion AI infrastructure reclassification.
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UK PM Mark Carney and the EU both responded publicly to the Fable 5 shutdown by committing to AI diversification — calling out the risk of depending on US-controlled AI infrastructure. We cover the global sovereignty fallout, Anthropic's invisible competitive guardrails that drew fierce backlash before the shutdown, and what Harvey's immediate deployment tells enterprises about contingency planning in a world where your AI vendor's best model can vanish overnight.
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Anthropic publicly stated it believes the jailbreak that triggered the government's Fable 5 shutdown was produced by engineers at Amazon — its largest investor and a direct competitor through Bedrock. We break down the allegation, Dario Amodei's attack on OpenAI's military deal, and the extraordinary response: Claude shot to number one on the App Store as users staged a "cancel ChatGPT" trend. Plus: Anthropic quietly dropped its founding safety pledge weeks before the launch.
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Claude Fable 5 launched June 10th, was jailbroken in 24 hours via a multi-agent attack, had its 120,000-character system prompt published on GitHub, and was pulled offline by a government export control order — all while Anthropic's IPO is in the pipeline and a Pentagon lawsuit is ongoing. We cover every layer of the story, OpenAI's newly public S-1 showing $2.22 spent per dollar earned, and Anthropic's global pause proposal that landed eight days before its own model was paused.
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Three stories to start the week: Colorado rewrote and delayed its AI law to January 2027 under industry pressure. The EU AI Act's chatbot transparency rules hit in 48 days and are not delayed — high-risk system rules are in legal limbo. And a leaked GPT-5.6 spec suggests OpenAI is preparing a major coding-benchmark-topping launch for the pre-IPO window.
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MiniMax released M2.7 with a product note that uses the exact phrase AI safety researchers have been warning about for years — "beginning the journey of recursive self-improvement." It's open-weight, at a sixth the cost of Claude Opus 4.8, and ahead of it on coding benchmarks. We unpack what the language means, cover the IMF's sharpest warning yet on AI and entry-level jobs, and close with what SPCX's first week tells us about the Anthropic and OpenAI IPOs.
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In the span of one week: Sanders introduced a 50% AI equity tax bill, Altman walked into his office to negotiate, and Trump said government AI stakes would be "a beautiful thing." Fortune called it the strangest political moment of 2026. We unpack what's real, what's political theater, and what governance rights nobody has asked about yet. Plus: SPCX's 19% first-day pop, MSCI buying starting today, and Anthropic's co-founder saying Claude writes 80% of company code.
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SpaceX begins trading on Nasdaq today — the largest IPO in US history at $1.75 trillion. But with only 4% float, today's price is volatile and thin. What actually matters is MSCI index inclusion starting tomorrow, which creates mechanical passive fund buying regardless of valuation. We break down what you actually need to know about SPCX, cover Project Glasswing's alarming 23,000 vulnerabilities with a 1% patch rate, and close with OpenAI's China-linked influence operation ban.
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SPCX prices tonight and trades tomorrow — the largest IPO in US history. But the bigger story is what comes 30 days later: SpaceX's expected $60 billion acquisition of Cursor would combine orbital compute, Grok AI, and the most developer-beloved coding tool in tech. We break down what that vertical stack means, cover the first confirmed autonomous AI cyberattack documented in the wild, and look at who's actually winning the AI market share race.
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SpaceX begins its first day of Nasdaq trading today — the largest US IPO in history at $1.75 trillion. Morningstar says it's worth $780 billion. ARK says $2.5 trillion by 2030. We break down both cases, explain the index inclusion wildcard, and cover two stories that got less attention than they deserved: Google's Gemini Omni Flash with mandatory SynthID watermarking, and Tempus AI's agentic oncology platform used by 19 of the top 20 pharma companies.
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Apple unveiled Siri AI at WWDC yesterday — a rebuilt standalone app with Gemini under the hood, system-wide personal context, on-screen awareness, and multi-step task execution. It's a genuinely new product, not an update. But it won't be available in the EU at launch, and it ships in fall, not today.
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WWDC is live today — Tim Cook's final keynote as CEO. The centerpiece is a rebuilt Gemini-powered Siri with personal context, on-screen awareness, and multi-step task execution — Apple's answer to two years of falling behind on AI. We set the full context: what's expected, what the device cuts mean for iPhone 11 owners, and why deploying to two billion iPhones makes this the largest AI rollout in history if it works.
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he Great American AI Act dropped Thursday — a bipartisan federal framework that would preempt California, Colorado, and every other state AI law for three years. Labor unions said hard no. Tech said yes. And the timing is deliberate: it lands 23 days before Colorado's AI law goes live. We break down what the bill actually requires, why it's controversial, and why Colorado's law applies June 30th regardless.
- Visa fler