Morning Digest, July 7, 2026

14 newsletters, 8 overlapping stories


Top Stories

Alibaba bans staff from using Claude Code

(3 newsletters)

Alibaba is reportedly barring employees from using Anthropic’s Claude Code starting July 10, classifying it as high-risk software after a viral claim that hidden code could detect whether a user was based in China or tied to a Chinese AI lab. Anthropic’s Thariq Shihipar said the feature came from a March anti-abuse experiment meant to stop resellers and model distillation, not surveillance. Staff are being redirected to Alibaba’s own coding tool, Qoder, and the episode lands right after a brief US export scare around Anthropic’s Fable 5.

Anthropic finds a hidden workspace inside Claude

(2 newsletters)

New Anthropic research describes a small internal area, dubbed “J-space,” where Claude holds active concepts and works through problems without writing them into its visible chain-of-thought. Researchers say the structure was not designed and emerged on its own during training, and that it resembles leading theories of how the human brain handles conscious access. Editing those unspoken thoughts changed answers, and deleting J-space left casual chat intact but collapsed multi-step problem solving, though the team is careful to say this reveals nothing about whether Claude is conscious.

Nvidia’s next-gen AI rack system delayed to 2028

(2 newsletters)

Nvidia’s Kyber rack architecture, a cabinet designed to fuse 144 Rubin Ultra chips into one giant computer, has reportedly slipped more than 12 months to 2028 due to trouble manufacturing a key circuit board. SemiAnalysis is the source, and Nvidia has denied the report. Either way it signals that Nvidia’s aggressive annual release cadence is running into hard manufacturing limits.

Microsoft cuts roughly 5,000 jobs

(2 newsletters)

Microsoft laid off about 4,800 people, roughly 2.1% of its global workforce, with Xbox and commercial sales hit hardest and around 1,600 cuts landing in Xbox alone. That represents about a fifth of the Xbox division’s headcount. Executives stressed the roles are not being replaced by AI, while stopping short of saying the reductions were not shaped by AI-driven changes.

OpenAI is preparing GPT-5.6, possibly next week

(2 newsletters)

OpenAI has moved GPT-5.6 into a narrow preview, splitting it into three tiers named Sol, Terra, and Luna, and adding a reasoning-effort slider plus an “ultra” mode for complex tasks. The Ultra variant is expected to be available in Codex. The release arrives amid Anthropic’s Fable 5 rollout, with broad access reportedly dependent on US government review.

Better Models, Worse Tools

(2 newsletters)

Armin Ronacher argues that newer Anthropic models such as Opus 4.8 and Sonnet 5 are getting worse at following strict, non-Claude-Code tool schemas, frequently appending extraneous fields that break the expected format even when they understand the task. He traces it to post-training on forgiving closed-source harnesses that tolerate aliases, ignored extra fields, and schema slop. The takeaway for anyone building a custom agent harness is that strict grammar-constrained tool invocation matters more than ever.

Meta explores selling excess AI compute

(2 newsletters)

Meta is reportedly weighing a cloud infrastructure business that would sell access to its AI compute and models, a move that would put it alongside AWS, Azure, Google Cloud, and CoreWeave. Analysts note that Meta and SpaceX both offering capacity could mean two of the largest buyers no longer need what they built, hinting at possible downward capex revisions for hyperscalers. The more likely read is that spare capacity finds buyers immediately rather than that AI demand is soft.


Also Worth Knowing

Quick Hits

Shower Thoughts

Our parents used to warn us not to get too much screen time “because it will rot your brain,” which is ironic because now they are the ones glued to a constant stream of algorithmic brainrot. Source