Morning Digest, June 26, 2026

11 newsletters, 8 overlapping stories


Top Stories

Anthropic turns Claude into an always-on Slack coworker

(3 newsletters)

Anthropic is retiring its old Claude in Slack connector in favor of Claude Tag, an agentic teammate that joins a workspace as a shared, permissioned member. You can @-mention it in any channel and delegate work, and it pulls context from the conversation, accesses approved tools, data, and codebases, works asynchronously, follows up on stalled tasks, and can run scheduled jobs spanning hours or days. Anthropic says 65 percent of its own product team’s code is now generated by an internal version of the tool. Reactions were split: Andrej Karpathy called it a new paradigm, while others argued it is incremental.

OpenAI unveils Jalapeño, its first custom inference chip

(4 newsletters)

OpenAI and Broadcom revealed Jalapeño, the first in a planned family of LLM inference accelerators optimized for performance per watt. The companies say it was designed in nine months with AI-assisted development and is built for gigawatt-scale data center deployments starting in 2026. The strategic read is that OpenAI is moving down the stack to design the hardware under its models, reducing its dependence on Nvidia and competing on chips, networking, and serving systems, not just model quality.

Apple raises Mac and iPad prices, blaming memory costs

(3 newsletters)

Apple hiked prices across much of its lineup, with Macs up roughly 15 to 20 percent and iPads up 15 to 25 percent, adding hundreds of dollars to some configurations. iPhone prices were unchanged for now but increases are expected. The culprit is the cost of memory and storage chips, which has roughly quadrupled over the past year as AI hyperscalers soak up supply.

White House asks OpenAI to stagger the GPT-5.6 release

(2 newsletters)

The Trump administration has asked OpenAI to limit GPT-5.6 to a short list of government-approved partners before any wider launch, citing security concerns because the model is considered to reach a Mythos-level capability threshold. It will roll out first to about 20 partners through Amazon Bedrock, with access approved customer by customer and a general release expected a couple of weeks later. Following similar treatment of Fable 5 and Mythos, the pattern is becoming clear: government sign-off is emerging as a step before frontier models reach the public.

Google brings computer use to Gemini 3.5 Flash

(4 newsletters)

Google made computer use a built-in tool in its fast, lightweight Gemini 3.5 Flash model. The model reads continuous screenshots plus a goal and returns structured click, scroll, and type actions across browser, desktop, and mobile environments, enabling agents to handle tasks like continuous software testing. It includes optional guardrails that prompt for approval on sensitive actions and can halt a job if prompt injection is detected.

Google’s AI talent keeps defecting to Anthropic

(3 newsletters)

Bloomberg reports that Jonas Adler and Alexander Pritzel, both key contributors to Gemini, are preparing to join Anthropic, extending a steady exodus that already includes Nobel laureate John Jumper. Separately, Google is reportedly reorganizing its AI coding effort into a dedicated midtraining group to close the gap with Anthropic as researchers depart.

Anthropic accuses Alibaba of a record distillation attack

(2 newsletters)

Anthropic says Alibaba ran the largest known distillation attack it has seen, extracting 28.8 million Claude exchanges through nearly 25,000 fraudulent accounts over 45 days, targeting Claude’s agentic reasoning, coding, and long-horizon capabilities. Anthropic disclosed the claim in a letter to the Senate Banking Committee and is calling for antitrust clarity to share threat intel, tighter chip export controls, and sanctions on Chinese labs. (Note: TLDR AI framed the same event as a friendly joint Anthropic-Alibaba project, which conflicts with the Bloomberg reporting cited here.)

GLM-5.2 marks a step change for open agents

(2 newsletters)

Z.ai’s GLM-5.2 looked like an incremental update on benchmarks but unlocked a wide range of new agentic use cases and feels at home inside coding harnesses. It is nearly as capable as Anthropic’s top models, costs far less, faces no US restrictions, and is open source. It landed days after Anthropic was forced to shut down its most powerful systems on a US government demand, underscoring how fast Chinese models are closing the gap.


Also Worth Knowing

Quick Hits

Shower Thoughts

Gen Z might be the last generation to really remember the world without AI, just like millennials and Gen X were with accessible computers. Source