Morning Digest, June 23, 2026
14 newsletters, 8 overlapping stories
Top Stories
Sakana AI launches Fugu, a model that orchestrates other models
(4 newsletters)
Japan’s Sakana AI released Fugu, a system that farms each request out to a pool of models behind a single API, choosing helpers, assigning work, checking results, and merging answers. It is pitched explicitly as a hedge against export controls, with Sakana claiming its Ultra tier rivals Anthropic’s restricted Fable 5 and Mythos preview on coding, reasoning, and science tests. Early reception is mixed, with several users reporting the experience does not match the benchmark scores and raising questions about cost and the lack of visibility into the underlying models.
Anthropic’s top models stay locked down as a successor is held back
(3 newsletters)
It has now been over a week since the White House used export controls to halt deployment of Claude Fable 5 and Mythos, reportedly citing a “jailbreak” that turned out to be a request to “fix this code.” Anthropic has reportedly trained an even more capable Mythos successor that it will also hold back from the public. The episode is fueling a broader argument that open models are more vital than ever and is the backdrop for much of this week’s orchestration and open-weight news.
Nobel laureate John Jumper leaves DeepMind for Anthropic
(2 newsletters)
Jumper, who co-led the AlphaFold team and shared the 2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for protein structure prediction, is departing DeepMind after nearly nine years. The move follows DeepMind’s struggles selling coding tools to businesses and lands just days after Gemini co-lead Noam Shazeer reportedly left for OpenAI, underscoring intensifying talent wars among the top labs.
SpaceX leases $6.3B of compute to Reflection AI
(2 newsletters)
SpaceX signed a deal to rent roughly $150 million a month of Nvidia GB300 capacity at its Colossus facility in Memphis to open-source startup Reflection AI through 2029, totaling about $6.3 billion. Colossus began as Grok’s training engine but has become a significant AI moneymaker, with tenants reportedly including Anthropic and Google. It positions SpaceX to profit from the compute crunch regardless of how its own models perform.
Getty Images strikes a display deal with OpenAI
(2 newsletters)
Getty’s licensed content libraries will appear across OpenAI search and discovery experiences inside ChatGPT, enriching its visual responses. Getty’s stock jumped roughly 200% on the announcement, a notable reversal for a company that had been positioned as an adversary of generative AI.
Meta names CRED’s Kunal Shah as new WhatsApp chief
(2 newsletters)
Indian fintech entrepreneur Kunal Shah will lead WhatsApp, succeeding Will Cathcart, who is stepping down after nearly seven years to take on a product-building role. The appointment comes alongside a Meta-led $900 million financing round for Shah’s company CRED, with Shah stepping down as its CEO.
Google backs A24 to build AI filmmaking tools
(2 newsletters)
Google is investing about $75 million in indie studio A24 and pairing it with DeepMind in a multiyear, nonexclusive research partnership aimed at filmmaker-shaped workflows rather than full AI movie generation. A24 keeps its film library and data, while its tech arm builds AI storyboards. The deal is notable given A24’s recent hit “Backrooms,” whose director has publicly called AI “genuinely harmful.”
Midjourney unveils a medical body scanner and a spa
(2 newsletters)
Midjourney announced Midjourney Medical, a full-body ultrasound scanner that lowers users into a shallow pool and reconstructs MRI-quality 3D images in under 60 seconds using roughly half a million sensor elements. The company plans a San Francisco spa next year and a fleet of 50,000 scanners by 2031. Medical professionals are skeptical, citing the known risks of full-body scans including false positives and unnecessary anxiety.
Also Worth Knowing
- Accenture to buy Dragos, runZero, and NetRise in a $4.2B cybersecurity deal. The push expands its operational-technology security capabilities for critical infrastructure, with Dragos kept independent.
- Accenture shares fell 18% as AI threatens consulting. New bookings dropped 3% and the firm cut its forecast, signaling that companies are bringing once-outsourced work in-house.
- ChatGPT Enterprise adds usage analytics and spend controls. Admins can now track ChatGPT and Codex consumption by team and set budgets, a move flagged across both IT and DevOps newsletters.
- Cloudflare ships an agent-ready One stack and temporary accounts for agents. Agents can deploy with a
--temporaryflag for 60 minutes without sign-up, and the One stack encodes Zero Trust migration as agent skills. - The minimum viable unit of saleable software. An argument that a “zone of viability” still makes buying software smarter than rebuilding it with an LLM, once maintenance and process costs are counted.
- Open-weight GLM-5.2 gains real developer traction. Z.ai’s MIT-licensed model with a 1M-token context sits just behind Opus 4.8 on FrontierSWE and is being wired into tools like Claude Code.
- How a16z built a media company inside a VC firm. A deep dive on owned distribution: five-times-a-week podcasts, a viral launch studio, and a “win the internet for the day” mandate that now drives deal flow.
- Adobe makes its biggest AI push yet. Five initiatives in three days, including a Firefly AI Assistant beta across its apps and a generative-model deal with Disney Imagineering.
- Pew finds public trust in AI collapsing. Only 16% of Americans expect AI to be net positive over 20 years, with under-30s the most skeptical, as leaders walk back earlier job-apocalypse warnings.
- Apple Music gets a redesign in iOS 27. Artist artwork now bleeds into the page and shapes its color scheme, with more prominent controls and a featured-content section.
- Meta pauses an employee-tracking AI program. The Model Capability Initiative logged keystrokes and mouse movements and exposed private data company-wide.
Quick Hits
- Sakana is not alone in racing the frontier: Inception Labs’ Mercury 2 diffusion model claims about 1,000 tokens per second for speed-sensitive work. Link
- AI infrastructure money keeps flowing: Micron signed a strategic deal with Anthropic, Baseten raised $1.5B at a $13B valuation, and Chevron struck a 20-year deal to power a 2.7-gigawatt Microsoft data center.
- Cyber agencies sound alarms: The Five Eyes warned AI is changing cyber risk “in months, not years,” while OpenAI expanded its Daybreak program with a Codex security plugin and a “Patch the Planet” effort.
- Instagram chases streaming: It is testing longer-form episodic Series for Reels and rolling its TV app out to Samsung TVs. Link
- Nvidia opens a humanoid-robot safety lab for pre-certification testing, and says its Rubin servers are the first with 100% liquid cooling. Link
- Shadow apps are polluting networks: More than 65% of Infoblox’s cloud customers queried residential-proxy domains, and nearly half of LG smart-TV apps were found laced with proxies. Link
- The build bottleneck is moving to specs and evals: Addy Osmani’s Google whitepaper argues AI sped up implementation but left requirements, design, and verification as the new constraints. Link
- Trump signed executive orders to accelerate quantum computing and address the security threats it poses. Link
- A starter home now costs $1M+ in 242 US cities, up from 80 cities in February 2020, per Zillow. Link
- ClickHouse marks ten years open source with more than 2,000 contributors. Link
Shower Thoughts
SMS signatures might come back with a vengeance, like the mullet or skinny jeans. Source