Original analysis and commentary on tech news trends, patterns, and the narratives shaping technology.
Microsoft paid $13 billion for exclusive access to OpenAI. Three years later, the flagship product runs on Anthropic's Claude. The model was never the moat.
In 2018, a dozen Google employees resigned over a Pentagon AI contract and killed it. In 2026, OpenAI's head of robotics resigned over a Pentagon AI contract and nothing changed. The employees didn't lose their conscience. They lost their leverage.
In eighteen months, Kalshi and Polymarket went from "better than the polls" to paying 15-year-olds to promote betting and hosting nuclear death pools. Both are now targeting $20 billion valuations. The election wasn't the business. It was the ad.
Oracle abandoned the Stargate Texas datacenter on the same day it announced thousands of layoffs from a "cash crunch." SoftBank needs its largest bridge loan ever. Fourteen months of borrowing tell the story the $500 billion headline never did.
In October 2024, Anthropic shipped a beta that let Claude click buttons on a screen. Seventeen months later, every major AI company, three cloud providers, and an open-source ecosystem all converged on the same capability. The chatbot era is over. The operator era has begun.
A leaked memo shows Dario Amodei called OpenAI's DOD deal "safety theater." The same day, some of Anthropic's own investors pushed the company to back down. Sixty billion dollars in outside capital just opened a second front.
In 2018, a dozen Google employees resigned over a Pentagon AI contract. Eight years later, Palmer Luckey's Anduril is raising $4 billion at a $30 billion valuation, and every company whose employees once protested military AI has signed a NATO pledge to build it. The red line didn't hold. It moved.
The Iran campaign is the first conflict fought simultaneously across five technology layers — AI, cyber, cloud infrastructure, prediction markets, and surveillance — and each layer produced a headline this weekend.
Hours after declaring Anthropic a supply chain risk, the Pentagon used Claude in its air attack on Iran. The government punished the company for restricting the tool it was already using in combat.
Block cut more than 4,000 employees — nearly half its workforce — and the stock surged 15%. Behind the AI framing: five years of bitcoin-inflated revenue, $295 million in fraud settlements, and a profit engine whose growth has always outrun its compliance.
On the day OpenAI closed $110 billion at a $730 billion valuation, Sam Altman told staff the company shares Anthropic's "red lines" on military AI — while pursuing the defense contract that Anthropic is facing the Defense Production Act for refusing.
Nvidia reported its best quarter ever — $68 billion in revenue — and the stock fell. Buried in the filing was the line item that explains why: $3.5 billion in guarantees to companies that lease GPU infrastructure. In three years, the chipmaker became the backstop of the financial system it created.
The day after the Pentagon demanded "unfettered" Claude access, researchers published what unfettered looks like: nuclear weapons deployed in 95% of simulations, 150GB of government data stolen by a single hacker, and Anthropic quietly loosening its own safety policy.
Defense Secretary Hegseth gave Anthropic until Friday to provide "unfettered" Claude access — or face the Defense Production Act. The company built to put limits on AI is being compelled to remove them.
IBM lost 13.15% of its market value because Anthropic published a blog post about COBOL. On the same day, Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan reported that AI contributed "basically zero" to GDP. The gap between narrative power and productive power is the story.
Five stories from five different domains tell the same story about what happens when shared digital spaces lose the friction that maintained them.
OpenAI staff flagged a mass shooting suspect. The company decided it "didn't meet the bar." On the same day, we learned half its users are under 24, it's building a smartphone, and it's targeting $600 billion.
Amazon's AI coding tool caused at least two AWS outages, including a 13-hour disruption. Amazon's response: "user error, not AI error." Its own engineers had warned them. Fifteen hundred of them pushed for a different tool.
Accenture is tracking executives' AI logins and tying them to promotions. The evidence says AI intensified work rather than reducing it. The poster child had to rehire the humans its AI replaced.
The same week a widely shared analysis argued LLMs are "dismantling the moats that made vertical SaaS defensible," Figma reported 40% revenue growth and partnered with Anthropic to let users generate designs from code. Canva hit $4 billion in annual revenue. The design tools aren't dying. They're becoming the interface to AI itself.
Meta offered OpenClaw's creator more money. OpenAI won anyway. The same week, Raspberry Pi stock surged 42% on demand for hardware to run OpenClaw locally. The most important AI hire of 2026 reveals where platform power actually lives — and it's not in the checkbook.
India has 100 million weekly ChatGPT users — the largest market outside the US. Anthropic just opened in Bengaluru. But India's last tech poster child just collapsed. The Summit sells a leader. The numbers show a customer.
ByteDance launched Seedance 2.0 on February 10. Within five days, Disney, Paramount, and the Motion Picture Association all sent cease-and-desist letters. By February 18, Warner Bros. Discovery joined. Four studios, one week, the same target. Hollywood figured out how to fight AI video faster than it figured out how to fight piracy.
Three surveillance stories on the same day. Two expanded quietly. One died publicly. The difference was visibility.
On the same day Anthropic raised $30 billion and reported $14 billion in run-rate revenue, the Pentagon published a document adding the company to a Chinese military list. Two days later, the Pentagon threatened to sever ties over Anthropic's refusal to build autonomous weapons. Five days later, Anthropic revealed it will owe $180 billion to cloud providers and training costs through 2029. The most principled AI company needs the most money.
OpenAI disbanded its second safety team in two years. The first time was a scandal. This time, the leader got a title change. What happened between 2024 and 2026 wasn't that OpenAI changed — it's that everyone else stopped expecting it not to.
Instagram's chief testified under oath that social media is not addictive. The same day, Meta launched a feature where users write letters to the algorithm, announced a $10B data center, and revealed it sold 7 million AI glasses. The trial judges the last product. The company is already building the next one.
Half of xAI's founding team has now left. The biggest corporate merger in US history didn't retain the people who built the company—it accelerated their departure.
OpenAI is charging $60 per thousand views for ChatGPT ads — the same rate as live NFL broadcasts — while offering advertisers "little conversion data." The price tells you what ChatGPT is becoming. The org chart told you years ago.
Three days after three companies committed half a trillion dollars to AI infrastructure, Apple reported its capital expenditure had declined 19% to $2.37 billion. It was the only Big Tech company spending less. Its strategy was already clear: buy intelligence, don't build it.
On February 5, the market sold off on half a trillion dollars in AI capex. On February 7, it rallied. What changed wasn't AI sentiment. It was the discovery that the spending doesn't need AI to justify itself — and that's the problem.
On February 6, the Wall Street Journal called investor fears of AI-driven software extinction "exaggerated." The same day, Anthropic released a model that found 500 security vulnerabilities humans missed and does financial research. OpenAI released an agent for "nearly anything professionals do on a computer." The denial and the evidence arrived together.
On February 5, Alphabet guided 2026 capex of $175-185 billion. Amazon guided $200 billion. A week earlier, Meta guided $115-135 billion. Three companies will spend $490-520 billion on AI infrastructure this year. The market sold off.
On February 4, Microsoft integrated Claude into GitHub. The same day, data showed Microsoft's Copilot losing market share after a $13 billion exclusive bet on OpenAI. Amazon, Anthropic's biggest backer, was courting OpenAI. The era of exclusive AI partnerships is over.
On February 3, Sam Altman told Forbes that OpenAI had "basically built AGI." Then he walked it back to "a spiritual statement, not a literal one." The same day, the Financial Times reported researchers were leaving because OpenAI prioritized product over research. The same day, market data showed ChatGPT's share fell from 69% to 45% in a year.
SpaceX acquired xAI for $250 billion on February 2. Twenty months earlier, xAI was valued at $18 billion. In between: losses that grew every quarter, a safety team of two or three people, and a product generating child sexual abuse material.
Three Western AI labs revealed their identity crises on the same day. Four Chinese companies showed they never had one. The luxury of introspection has a cost.
Documents show Sheikh Tahnoon backed $500M for 49% of Trump's World Liberty crypto project—months before UAE secured access to American AI chips. The timeline raises questions about what was exchanged for what.
On the same day, The Atlantic wrote that Anthropic is "at war with itself" while a16z published data showing it's the fastest-growing AI vendor in enterprise. Both are true. That's the point.
Nvidia walks away from $100B OpenAI bet. Apple runs on Anthropic while losing its AI team. SpaceX-xAI-Tesla merger talks begin. The partnerships that defined AI are dissolving, and new power structures are emerging.
SpaceX and xAI are in merger talks ahead of a planned IPO. Elon Musk is building something unprecedented: a vertically integrated empire spanning rockets, satellites, and artificial intelligence.
Meta guides $115-135B in capex and rises 7%. Microsoft spends $37.5B in a quarter and crashes 10%. The market is trying to price AI infrastructure—and failing.
From pandemic correction to AI restructuring—three years of tech industry job cuts, visualized.
Four days after the deal closed, TikTok US is blocking "Epstein" in DMs, experiencing convenient outages, and facing a censorship investigation. Everyone got what they wanted.
How a lobster-themed open-source project exposes the structural weakness of AI Aggregators
Apple partnering with Google for Siri isn't a pivot—it's a surrender that undermines the company's core strategic identity
Microsoft's admission that it hands encryption keys to the FBI isn't a scandal—it's the logical endpoint of design choices made a decade ago
ByteDance keeps 19.9% and the algorithm. America gets a security theater wrapper. Everyone declares victory.
Anthropic is building AI governance for a world where we don't know if we're creating moral patients. Their competitors think this is absurd.
Thinking Machines Lab raised $2B at a $12B valuation in July. By January, the co-founders were fleeing back to OpenAI.
The $82.7 billion all-cash bid isn't about content libraries. It's about the structural logic that was always going to win.
A week after Claude Cowork launched, SaaS stocks are down 15% in 2026. The market is betting that AI agents will commoditize the software that organizes work itself.
On a single day, four numbers told the story of AI's transformation: $500B, $134B, $25B, and -45%. The nonprofit that ate the world left price tags everywhere.
On January 17, Elon Musk filed for up to $134 billion in damages against OpenAI for abandoning its founding principles. The same day, the EPA ruled his AI company broke federal law to build data centers, and California's attorney general demanded it stop generating child sexual abuse material. One day. Three stories. The same company.
A Bloomberg filing on January 3 revealed OpenAI's president as the largest individual donor to Trump's super PAC. The timeline of OpenAI's political spending—from $260K to $25 million in three years—tracks its infrastructure ambitions at every stage.
Benedict Evans said Sam Altman is "desperately swapping paper for assets before the music stops." January 2 showed what that looks like—and how fast the conversion is happening.