Morning Digest, June 18, 2026

21 newsletters, 9 overlapping stories


Top Stories

The Anthropic model ban standoff drags into the open at the G7

(6 newsletters)

The U.S. government and Anthropic remain at an impasse over the export restrictions that took Mythos and Fable offline, and newly leaked letters are dragging the dispute into public view. Bloomberg published a letter from Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick warning Anthropic against distributing the models to “foreign persons,” while NYT-obtained internal messages show employees believe the lab is being unfairly targeted and “bullied based on bad vibes.” More than 150 cybersecurity experts signed an open letter calling the shutdown reckless, arguing defenders need these models to find and patch vulnerabilities, and the fight spilled into the G7 summit in France where world leaders voiced fears that American AI access could be revoked at any time.

SpaceX agrees to buy Cursor for $60 billion

(4 newsletters)

Days after its record-breaking IPO, SpaceX agreed to acquire Anysphere, the startup behind AI coding tool Cursor, in a $60 billion all-stock deal expected to close in Q3. The move strengthens SpaceX’s xAI-centered AI division and aims to narrow the gap with OpenAI and Anthropic in enterprise coding. The backstory is pointed: Cursor once drove nearly half of Anthropic’s revenue before Anthropic shipped Claude Code to compete, prompting Cursor to scramble to build its own model and, ultimately, to tie its future to Elon Musk.

Anthropic study finds expertise beats coding skill in Claude Code

(4 newsletters)

Anthropic analyzed roughly 400,000 Claude Code sessions and found that a user’s domain expertise matters more than their formal programming background. Humans made about 70% of planning decisions while Claude handled around 80% of execution, and experts pulled far more from each prompt (12 actions and 3,200 words versus a beginner’s five actions and 600 words). Notably, lawyers, managers, and scientists with no coding title finished within seven points of professional software engineers on coding tasks.

Vercel open-sources eve, a framework for production agents

(4 newsletters)

Vercel released eve, an open-source agent framework that treats an agent as a simple directory of files and bundles production concerns like durable execution, sandboxed compute, human-in-the-loop approvals, and evals. It works with any model and any MCP server, runs the same agent across Slack, Discord, and GitHub, and reportedly already powers more than a hundred agents in production. Vercel paired it with Connect, a public beta that swaps long-lived provider tokens for short-lived, task-scoped credentials, plus enterprise controls for agentic apps.

ChatGPT slips below 50% market share as AI sentiment sours

(3 newsletters)

ChatGPT’s share of the AI assistant market fell below 50% for the first time as users migrate toward Gemini, Claude, and Grok and grow comfortable switching between assistants. The shift lands alongside fresh Pew Research data showing about half of U.S. adults now use a chatbot (a quarter daily), yet only 16% expect AI to make society better over the next 20 years while nearly 40% expect it to get worse. The under-30 group uses AI hardest but trusts it least.

Apple warns prices will rise as the memory chip crunch bites

(2 newsletters)

Outgoing CEO Tim Cook told the WSJ that component costs have quadrupled since last year because AI’s appetite for memory chips is straining supply, calling eventual price hikes “unavoidable.” TechInsights estimates Apple needs to add about $270 to the next iPhone Pro to protect its margins, which would push the iPhone 18 Pro toward $1,299. Prices are expected to keep climbing into 2027.

Z.ai launches GLM-5.2, an open coding-first model with a 1M-token window

(3 newsletters)

Chinese lab Z.ai released GLM-5.2, a coding-focused flagship with a one-million-token context window, adjustable reasoning effort, and support for long-horizon agentic work across entire codebases. It integrates with Claude Code, ZCode, and OpenCode, and the company is releasing MIT-licensed open weights, positioning it as the strongest open-source coding model yet despite publishing no benchmarks at launch.


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Shower Thoughts

A century from now, people will have access to HD photos and videos of the elderly as babies. (source)