Morning Digest, July 2, 2026

14 newsletters, 9 overlapping stories


Top Stories

Claude Fable 5 returns worldwide after US lifts export controls

(6 newsletters)

Anthropic has reopened access to Fable 5 after the Commerce Department lifted the export controls that pulled it offline roughly three weeks ago. The model returns across Claude tiers behind a tighter safety filter that now blocks the flagged cybersecurity issue over 99% of the time, falling back to Opus 4.8 when triggered, though Anthropic warns the filter may occasionally flag harmless coding and debugging requests. As part of the deal, Anthropic agreed to give the US government pre-release access to future Mythos and Fable models, a precedent that means frontier launches now route through Washington.

Anthropic launches Claude Sonnet 5

(5 newsletters)

Claude Sonnet 5 is Anthropic’s most agentic Sonnet yet, built to plan, browse, use tools, and run terminals autonomously for long stretches. The lab says it approaches Opus 4.8 on reasoning, tool use, and coding while costing significantly less than Opus (though more than Sonnet 4.6), and reports a lower rate of undesirable behaviors than Sonnet 4.6 in agentic settings. It is available now on all plans, through Claude Code, and via the API.

Google releases Nano Banana 2 Lite

(3 newsletters)

Google shipped Nano Banana 2 Lite (also called Gemini 3.1 Flash Lite Image), its fastest and cheapest Gemini image model, alongside Gemini Omni Flash for video and conversational editing. The models are available through AI Studio, the Gemini API, and Google’s consumer and enterprise products. Google also opened its opt-in personalized image generation feature, which draws on Gmail, Photos, and Search data, to all eligible US users.

SpaceX shows investors an AI device prototype

(2 newsletters)

SpaceX reportedly showed investors a handset-like AI device ahead of its IPO, described as sleeker and slimmer than an iPhone and designed to run a proprietary operating system on a Qualcomm Snapdragon chipset. The move fits Elon Musk’s long-standing frustration with Apple’s control over app distribution, though Musk has publicly called the reports “utterly false.”

Meta preps a cloud business to rent out spare AI compute

(2 newsletters)

Meta is reportedly building a cloud service to rent out spare capacity from the data centers behind its $182.9B infrastructure bet, a plan that pushed its stock up roughly 9%. Options range from selling raw compute (similar to CoreWeave) to charging developers to tap Meta-hosted models like Muse Spark (similar to AWS Bedrock). Zuckerberg has said outside companies ask weekly to buy Meta compute.

Lime starts trading in its $167M IPO

(2 newsletters)

The Uber-backed scooter and bike company began trading on the Nasdaq under “LIME,” with shares up around 9% early. Lime sold 6.68 million shares at $25 each to raise $167 million at roughly a $1.66 billion valuation, emerging as one of the few survivors of a micromobility sector that has burned an estimated $10B since 2015.

Meituan open-sources LongCat-2.0, trained on Chinese silicon

(2 newsletters)

Chinese food-delivery giant Meituan launched LongCat-2.0, a 1.6-trillion-parameter mixture-of-experts model tuned for agentic coding and long-context work, activating about 48B parameters with a 1M-token context. Meituan says it is the first trillion-parameter model trained and run entirely on Chinese chips, and that it beats Google’s older Gemini 3.1 Pro on SWE-Bench Pro while trailing GPT-5.5. It was the stealth “Owl Alpha” model on OpenRouter.


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