Morning Digest, June 8, 2026
17 newsletters, 8 overlapping stories
Top Stories
Anthropic says AI is starting to build itself
(4 newsletters)
Anthropic published a widely shared piece arguing that AI systems are beginning to design and train their own successors, a path it calls recursive self-improvement, and warned this raises real questions about humans keeping control. The claim landed alongside a hard number making the rounds all week: Claude now writes roughly 80 percent of Anthropic’s own production code, an eight-fold increase in code shipped per engineer, with Claude reportedly handling 95 percent of the company’s internal analytics queries. The story was picked up across AI, business, and general-interest newsletters, a sign it has broken out of the developer bubble.
Google will pay SpaceX about $920M a month for compute
(3 newsletters)
Google agreed to pay SpaceX roughly $920 million per month from October 2026 through June 2029 to rent data center capacity backed by around 110,000 Nvidia chips, a deal that mirrors Google’s late-May arrangement with Anthropic worth about $1.25 billion per month. The scale underscores how compute scarcity is reshaping the cloud market and turning unexpected players into infrastructure landlords. Separately, S&P Dow Jones declined to waive its index rules to fast-track SpaceX into the S&P 500 around its expected IPO, a decision that also closes the door on similar exceptions for OpenAI and Anthropic.
Apple’s secret AI meeting and the WWDC reckoning
(3 newsletters)
Bloomberg reported that top Apple executives held a closed-door meeting in early 2025, without Tim Cook present, over fears the company had fallen badly behind in AI, which pushed Cook to get personally involved in the overhaul. With WWDC underway, a long-delayed Siri rebuild is expected to headline, reportedly leaning on Nvidia Blackwell chips and Google Gemini for cloud queries. The conference doubles as a referendum on Cook’s AI legacy as he prepares to move toward executive chairman with John Ternus positioned as the next CEO.
OpenAI plots a ChatGPT “superapp” and Washington eyes a stake
(2 newsletters)
OpenAI is reportedly weeks away from its biggest ChatGPT overhaul yet, rebuilding the product into an agent-and-coding “superapp” centered on Codex, whose user base has grown sixfold to more than 5 million since February, as it pushes its roughly 1 billion users toward paid products ahead of an IPO. In parallel, the White House and OpenAI are said to be discussing the US government taking a 1 to 5 percent equity stake, with shares potentially routed into a public wealth fund so Americans share in the AI boom.
Anthropic’s unreleased “Mythos” model surfaces in the wild
(2 newsletters)
Anthropic’s still-unreleased Mythos model (and a red-team build referred to as Oceanus) began appearing in developer tools and on social media, fueling speculation of a public launch this week. Reports suggest the red-team program was paused after someone resold access through a Chinese API proxy. The leaks come as Anthropic also poached an early member of OpenAI’s chip design team, lending weight to rumors it may build its own silicon.
Google rolls out “Search profiles,” a Linktree for creators
(2 newsletters)
Google is giving eligible US creators and publishers claimable Search profiles that turn the top result for their name into a self-curated hub of links, videos, and posts, wired into Google Discover. The move arrives as AI Overviews continue to eat into traditional search traffic, giving creators a direct presence to defend.
Asana ships an agentic work platform and an AI “Chief of Staff”
(2 newsletters)
Asana launched a platform pitched at aligning humans and AI agents around shared plans, context, and governance, anchored by Dash, an AI chief-of-staff agent that monitors work across Asana, email, calendars, and messaging to flag risks and recommend next steps, with user approval required before it makes changes. It is one of several enterprise plays this week, including Meta’s new subscription AI agents for business, betting that the durable product is the orchestration layer rather than the model.
Also Worth Knowing
- Google pushes local AI agents onto laptops with Gemma 4 12B. A new efficient multimodal model runs agentic workflows on standard laptops, cutting cloud cost and latency, though endpoint security remains an open question. (2 newsletters)
- AI agent traffic has overtaken human traffic online. Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince says bots and AI agents now make up the majority of internet traffic, sharpening “dead internet” debates.
- Scientists edit human embryo DNA in a world first. Columbia researchers used base editing to correct embryo DNA without the chromosomal damage seen in earlier CRISPR attempts.
- First AI-designed vaccine tested in humans. A Cambridge “super-antigen” targeting multiple coronaviruses proved safe with broad immune responses in 39 volunteers.
- A daily pill nearly doubled pancreatic cancer survival. Daraxonrasib beat chemotherapy in a 500-patient phase 3 trial, a result one oncologist called unprecedented.
- Ramp raised $750M at a $44B valuation. The expense platform nearly tripled its value in a year on the strength of its AI agent story, including a corporate card built for agents.
- Supabase doubled to a $10B valuation in eight months. The open-source database raised a $500M Series F as database launches grew 600 percent year over year, most via an AI tool.
- Alphabet plans to raise $80B in stock for AI buildout. The raise includes a $10B Berkshire Hathaway investment to fund compute infrastructure.
- 23andMe returns from bankruptcy as a nonprofit moonshot. Founder Anne Wojcicki bought it back for about $305M and aims to grow its DNA database from 13M to 100M people for AI health research.
- OpenAI adds a “Lockdown Mode” to ChatGPT. The setting disables live browsing, agent mode, and deep research to harden against prompt-injection attacks.
- Wes McKinney: vibe coding is dangerous, agentic engineering is not. A thoughtful case that agents work only when humans stay deep in specs, architecture, testing, and review, treating AI as an accelerator rather than a replacement for judgment.
- PostgreSQL 19 Beta 1 is out for testing. Highlights include async I/O autoscaling, parallel autovacuum, SQL/PGQ graph queries, and LZ4 as the default TOAST compression.
Quick Hits
- Nvidia humanoid reference robot: Nvidia unveiled an open research-grade humanoid pairing a Unitree body with an onboard Blackwell GPU, as physical-AI startups raised $5.3B in April alone. Link
- Robotaxis don’t cut traffic: An MIT analysis of 86M Waymo miles found the cars ran empty 44 percent of the time, roughly matching Uber and Lyft deadhead rates. Link
- Pinterest commits $4B to AWS through 2031, its largest infrastructure deal ever, tapping Trainium chips for visual search. Link
- Block’s $25 “Wand”: Jack Dorsey’s Block launched a star-shaped NFC keychain charm for tap-to-pay with Cash App; the first drop sold out. Link
- A burglar used a Waymo as a getaway car to steal yoga clothes in San Francisco and got away with it. Link
- The Tableau exodus: Executives are cutting Tableau because BI feels too expensive, not because a rival is clearly better, prompting a rethink of BI’s value in an AI-first world. Link
- AI’s “serif renaissance”: AI companies are increasingly adopting serif typefaces to read as more human, a shift critics are calling “tasteslop.” Link
- Fastest business jet: Bombardier’s Global 8000 flew Montreal to Nice in just over six hours, topping out at Mach 0.95. Link
Shower Thoughts
- “If you put crushed up tortilla chips in a bowl of dip, does that make it cereal?” (via The Hustle, from r/Showerthoughts)