Morning Digest, July 3, 2026

12 newsletters, 7 overlapping stories


Top Stories

Meta builds a cloud business to rent out its AI compute

(5 newsletters)

Meta is drafting plans for a new arm, internally called Meta Compute, that would sell access to its surplus AI compute and host models like Muse Spark, putting it in direct competition with AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud. The move is an attempt to turn Meta’s roughly $183B in AI infrastructure spending into a new revenue stream after weak external demand for its own models and services. The stock jumped more than 8% on the report.

Claude Fable 5 is redeployed globally

(4 newsletters)

Anthropic restored access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 after US export controls imposed in mid-June were lifted, marking the first time the government pulled and then reinstated a frontier model over national-security concerns. Fable 5 counts toward up to 50% of weekly usage limits until July 7, after which it moves to usage credits, and Anthropic has added new safeguards plus a HackerOne program for cyber-jailbreak reports. Early testing found the original safeguard-bypass concern was not unique to these models and involved a borderline defensive cybersecurity case.

Microsoft, Amazon, and rivals race to embed AI engineers inside customers

(4 newsletters)

Microsoft unveiled Frontier Company, a $2.5B effort to place about 6,000 in-house engineers and sector specialists at client sites to build and run enterprise AI systems. It follows Amazon’s new $1B forward-deployed engineering org and similar moves from OpenAI and Anthropic, signaling that major providers now treat hands-on deployment help as a core enterprise product rather than an afterthought.

OpenAI floats a 5% government stake and Altman pitches a US-led safety forum

(3 newsletters)

In an FT op-ed, Sam Altman called for a US-led forum with real authority to set AI safety standards and decide who can access the most advanced models, citing the IAEA and aviation and banking regulators as precedent. Separately, OpenAI reportedly proposed giving the US government a 5% equity stake through a sovereign wealth fund vehicle, and pushed for other leading US labs to contribute similar stakes. The discussions gained momentum in the wake of the Mythos export-control saga.

Anthropic is in talks with Samsung about a custom AI chip

(3 newsletters)

Anthropic has reportedly approached Samsung to explore manufacturing its own AI chip, following an earlier April report about the company weighing custom silicon to ease chip shortages. It has not decided what the chip would be used for or how powerful it would be, and publicly maintains that a diversified hardware stack spanning Google, Amazon, and Nvidia will remain central to its compute strategy.

A small custom model beats frontier models on Bridgewater’s financial tasks

(3 newsletters)

Mira Murati’s Thinking Machines Lab and Bridgewater tested top models on news-filtering investment tasks, where GPT, Claude, and Gemini variants averaged around 50% accuracy. Expert-written prompts lifted scores into the mid-70s, but fine-tuning the open Qwen3-235B model on expert-graded examples via TML’s Tinker platform hit 84.7% at roughly 14x lower cost. The takeaway: differentiated, specialized models can outperform the frontier on narrow, high-value work.

Z.ai ships ZCode, an agentic coding environment for GLM-5.2

(5 newsletters)

Chinese lab Z.ai released ZCode 3.0, a desktop app available on macOS, Windows, and Linux that turns GLM-5.2’s roughly 1M-token context into long-running planning, coding, review, and deploy sessions. Developers can monitor progress from mobile or chat apps while tasks keep running, and it works with existing API keys. It reportedly runs at close to a tenth the cost of comparable frontier models, and GLM Coding Plan subscribers get 1.5x usage quota.


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