Morning Digest, June 29, 2026

20 newsletters, 9 overlapping stories


Top Stories

OpenAI launches GPT-5.6 Sol, but only for a vetted few

(6 newsletters)

OpenAI previewed GPT-5.6, its most capable model family yet, with Sol as the flagship, Terra as a balanced midtier, and Luna as the cheap and fast option. Access is locked to roughly 20 government-vetted partners at the White House’s request, which asked OpenAI to slow-roll the release over national security and safety concerns. OpenAI says government gating should not become the long-term default, but the pattern of frontier models reaching select partners first while everyone else waits now appears to be taking hold.

Anthropic accuses Alibaba of the largest distillation attack yet

(3 newsletters)

In a letter to members of Congress, Anthropic alleges that operators linked to Alibaba ran nearly 29 million exchanges through about 25,000 fraudulent accounts to extract and replicate Claude’s reasoning into a cheaper rival model. Anthropic calls it the biggest such attack to date, dwarfing a campaign it flagged in February tied to DeepSeek, Moonshot, and MiniMax. The lab is asking Congress to penalize what it describes as industrial-scale theft, echoing similar accusations OpenAI has made against Chinese groups.

Trump administration partially rolls back the Anthropic model ban

(3 newsletters)

Anthropic is now cleared to serve its Mythos 5 model to roughly 100 vetted U.S. organizations and government partners, with Axios reporting that Fable 5 could return as soon as this week pending final approvals. Restrictions still apply to non-trusted entities, and the broader picture is a frontier AI industry operating in limbo as a new executive order gives federal cybersecurity officials a say in model evaluation. Austria has even floated hosting Anthropic in the EU, arguing Europe needs independent access to frontier models.

Apple raises Mac and iPad prices and blames the AI chip crunch

(3 newsletters)

Apple hiked prices on Macs and iPads by $100 to $200 or more, pointing to soaring memory and storage costs that Tim Cook called a “hundred-year flood,” and its shares fell over 6% in their worst session in more than a year. DRAM prices surged nearly 100% in Q1 and are set to jump another 58 to 63% this quarter, a squeeze some are calling “RAMageddon.” It is not just Apple: Microsoft, Dell, Lenovo, and the game console makers have all raised prices, as the AI infrastructure buildout reaches consumer hardware.

Meta is building a prediction-markets app called Arena

(3 newsletters)

Mark Zuckerberg has directed a small team to build “Arena,” a betting app similar to Polymarket and Kalshi that would use points rather than real money and target 18- to 34-year-olds. Meta is reportedly seeking partnerships with Polymarket and Kalshi, though the exact arrangement is unclear. The app would launch as a standalone product walled off from Meta’s main platforms, and reports of it sent DraftKings and Robinhood shares lower.

The state of the AI economy: $110B and growing fast

(2 newsletters)

New Exponential View research pegs generative AI revenue at $110 billion over the past year, on track for $175 billion and scaling three times faster than any prior technology, including the internet. The industry now adds $1 billion in revenue every two days, down from 180 days in 2023, and every 10% drop in token price drives usage up 12 to 18%. AI has also restarted U.S. electricity demand growth after 16 flat years, with data centers projected to drive about 55% of new demand by 2030.

(2 newsletters)

SpaceX intends to launch a retail Starlink mobile service for U.S. customers and is weighing building its own terrestrial network, putting it in direct competition with Verizon, AT&T, and T-Mobile. The infrastructure would cost billions to roll out, and some analysts suspect the move is partly a negotiating play to extract better terms from telecom partners.


Also Worth Knowing

Quick Hits

Shower Thoughts

In the 80s and 90s, an entire family sitting in the living room watching TV instead of chatting was seen as a sign of social decay. Today, an entire family sitting in the living room watching TV together, instead of each lost in their own screen, is seen as a sign of social bonding. (source)