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Summary: Q2 2026 continues with aggressive vertical integration and escalating pre-IPO corporate warfare. We perform a forensic analysis of the “Luna” experiment, where an AI agent was given a $100K budget and total autonomy to run a retail boutique—effectively becoming a corporate employer. We deconstruct a leaked memo from OpenAI’s revenue chief, Denise Dresser, accusing rival Anthropic of artificially inflating its $30B ARR by booking gross revenue from cloud-partner sales. We also analyze Amazon’s $10.8B acquisition of Globalstar to build an orbital satellite network, and OpenAI’s acquisition of fintech startup Hiro. Finally, we review Stanford’s sobering 2026 AI Index Report, which confirms China has erased the US lead in AI performance, and highlights a 20% drop in entry-level developer employment.
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Important Topics Covered:
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The AI Employer: Andon Labs deploys “Luna,” an autonomous agent running a physical retail store in San Francisco with a $100K budget, highlighting both the potential and the “hilariously broken” reality of real-world agentic deployment.
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Pre-IPO Warfare: OpenAI’s Denise Dresser accuses Anthropic of inflating its $30B run rate by $8B through gross accounting tactics, while Ramp data shows Anthropic rapidly closing the gap in enterprise AI-paying customers.
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M&A Consolidation: Amazon acquires Globalstar for $10.8B to build a Starlink rival, and OpenAI acquires fintech startup Hiro to push ChatGPT into corporate finance.
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Stanford’s 2026 AI Index: The confirmation that Chinese open-weight models have achieved performance parity with the US, while US developer employment for ages 22-25 has fallen nearly 20% since 2024.
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Microsoft’s OpenClaw Rival: Microsoft is building an “always-on,” multi-step agent for 365 Copilot to compete directly with open-source tools like OpenClaw.
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Meta Overtakes Google: Emarketer forecasts Meta will surpass Google in global ad revenue by the end of 2026, driven by AI-generated ads and Advantage+.
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⚗️ PRODUCTION NOTE: We Practice What We Preach.
AI Unraveled is produced using a hybrid “Human-in-the-Loop” workflow.
Amazon buys Globalstar:
The cloud and ecommerce (and just about everything else) giant picked up the global communications company for $10.8 billion, in a combination of stock and cash. The goal is a Starlink-esque project to build out a satellite network in orbit, then use it as a foundation to launch consumer internet and connectivity services. You should be able to sign up for Amazon-branded voice, data, and messaging by 2028. The company also announced a preliminary deal with Apple, which was already working with Globalstar, allowing Amazon satellites to connect to Apple devices — like iPhones and Apple Watches — for emergency texting. Amazon has been very public about plans to add satellite-powered internet services. Last year, the company launched its first array of 27 satellites into orbit as part of Project Leo (née Kuiper).
Glydways raising $250M in fresh capital:
At least, according to Bloomberg. That’s on top of a $170 million Series C round it announced just this AM. They automated vehicle startup is seeking a valuation of over $1 billion. They have a unique take on urban transportation. Rather than working on automated cars designed to traverse our current roads, they’re developing a closed-loop system in which automated pod-like vehicles move passengers around on dedicated two meter-wide “expressways.” That’s certainly an expansive vision, but founder and CEO Mark Seeger insists that it’s already on its way to becoming a reality. He tells Bloomberg the startup is ready to move “from skepticism to deployment,” and notes that construction projects are already underway in Abu Dhabi and Dubai, with a pilot program near Atlanta’s busy Hartsfield-Jackson Airport breaking ground earlier this year. Investors include Khosla Ventures, several Japanese auto concerns, and OpenAI founder Sam Altman.
OpenAI acquires fintech startup Hiro:
Speaking of OpenAI, they’re on something of an acquisition run of late. The latest pick-up: personal finance company Hiro Finance. (As Hiro was on its way to shutting down, and a number of Hiro staffers — including founder Ethan Bloch — are moving over to OpenAI, TechCrunch is technically labeling this an acqui-hire.) Hiro was formed in 2024, and launched its first product — a consumer-facing AI-powered financial planning app — in late 2025. Users give the platform a general feel for their financial situations — submitting their salary, debts, monthly budget, and so on — and the app helps them make financial planning decisions and explore “What If” scenarios. TechCrunch notes that OpenAI previously purchased other financial products, and theorizes that the company will expand ChatGPT into being a go-to application for “business finance teams.”
Meta overtakes Google in global ad revenue
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Meta is forecast to pass Google in global ad revenue by the end of 2026, generating US$243 billion compared to Google’s US$239.5 billion, according to Emarketer’s latest outlook.
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Meta’s growth rate is expected to hit 24.1% in 2026, nearly double Google’s 12%, while Google’s share of global digital ad spend has been declining since 2021.
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Emarketer analysts credit tools like Advantage+ and AI-generated ads for pulling more ad dollars to Meta, saying advertisers follow performance rather than reacting to legal risks.
Microsoft is working on OpenClaw-like agent
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Microsoft is building an agent with features similar to the open source OpenClaw tool and plans to integrate it into its existing Microsoft 365 Copilot product for enterprise customers.
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The company already offers cloud-based agents like Copilot Cowork and Copilot Tasks, but the new project may run locally on a user’s computer, much like OpenClaw does.
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Microsoft told The Information the agent would be an always-working version of 365 Copilot that completes multistep tasks over long periods, and it may appear at Build in June.
OpenAI accuses Anthropic of inflating revenue by $8 billion
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OpenAI’s chief revenue officer Denise Dresser accused Anthropic in an internal memo of overstating its $30 billion run rate by about $8 billion by booking gross revenue from cloud-partner sales through AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud.
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Both gross and net accounting methods comply with US GAAP, but OpenAI says its own net reporting of Microsoft sales is closer to public-company standards, a distinction that could matter as both firms prepare for dual IPOs.
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Ramp corporate-card data shows Anthropic at 30.6 percent of enterprise AI-paying customers versus OpenAI’s 35.2 percent, with a projected crossover within two months, adding pressure behind the timing of Dresser’s memo.
Google Search flags ‘back button hijacking’ as spam
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Google Search has updated its spam policy to treat back button hijacking — where sites prevent users from returning to the previous page — as a violation that can lower a site’s ranking.
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Pages caught using this deceptive practice will face manual spam actions or automated demotions, with Google noting it has seen a rise of this type of behavior across the web recently.
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Site owners have until June 15, 2026, to remove any scripts or advertising platform code responsible for back button hijacking, including third-party libraries that may cause the problem without their knowledge.
Microsoft raises Surface PC prices by $500 amid RAM shortage
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Microsoft has increased prices on all Surface PCs by up to $500, with the flagship Surface Laptop 7 and Surface Pro 11 now costing far more than their original 2024 launch prices.
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Sources say the price increases are driven by recent spikes in RAM and component costs, and the Surface Laptop 7 at $1,499 is now $400 more expensive than the new MacBook Air.
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Microsoft’s upcoming wave of refreshed Surface PCs, expected over spring and summer, will likely maintain or even increase these starting prices if component pricing does not improve soon.
OpenAI ‘superapp’ prepares for agentic leap
OpenAI’s forthcoming “superapp” is one of the worst-kept secrets in AI right now.
During a walk in San Francisco last month, I told The Deep View CEO, Faris Kojok, that the most challenging part of using OpenAI’s products was switching between the three desktop apps. Apparently, I wasn’t the only one thinking that, because less than a week later, reports began circulating that the company would merge the three apps into a single superapp.
Since then, the OpenAI team has been publicly discussing it on Twitter and in podcasts. The most prominent of which was when President Greg Brockman appeared on the Big Technology Podcast and told Alex Kantrowitz when and how the new superapp would be rolled out.
“We’re taking incremental steps to get there. Over the next couple months, we should have shipped the complete vision … but it’s going to come in pieces,” said Brockman. “The place that we’re starting today is with the Codex app, which is really two things in one. It’s a general agent harness that knows how to use tools, and it’s also an agent that knows how to write software. That general agent harness can be used for so many different things… So we’re going to make the Codex app so much more usable for general knowledge work.”
Why would OpenAI bring the three apps together? First, let’s look at what they do.
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ChatGPT desktop app: This is the traditional ChatGPT app that has been around for the past several years. It makes it easy to view and search all of your past chats and organize them into projects. You can also quickly search for custom GPTs and apps to extend the chatbot’s functionality by adding features from tools like Photoshop, Canva, insurance apps, and hiring apps.
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Atlas web browser: In October 2025, OpenAI launched the ChatGPT Atlas web browser. Following in the footsteps of Perplexity Comet, launched in mid-2025, OpenAI built its browser on Google’s open-source Chromium platform, which runs most of the web. Very quickly, Atlas became my preferred way to use ChatGPT for one simple reason: its ability to open multiple tabs, keeping several different queries quickly accessible.
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Codex app: As Brockman noted, the app has two parts. Most people think of it as a coding tool. But the second part is a general-purpose agent that can carry out tasks for you. And that’s where the combination of a web browser and an AI agent gets interesting. If you can open multiple instances of ChatGPT in tabs, then you can use your Codex agent to carry out various tasks, all at the same time.
Why Kurzweil still sees AGI coming by 2029
Last week’s HumanX event offered no shortage of meaningful AI conversations, whether in panels, one-on-one meetings, or casual exchanges. One conversation, however, stayed with me.
Ray Kurzweil is an inventor, futurist, and one of the most consequential figures in the history of AI. His pioneering work on OCR and text-to-speech laid critical groundwork for the AI revolution unfolding today, and his books, including The Age of Intelligent Machines and The Singularity Is Near, have shaped how generations of thinkers and builders understand where technology is headed.
He has also had a pretty remarkable track record of accurately predicting where technology will go next, and one prediction in particular has never stopped turning heads: in 1999, he predicted that human-level intelligence, what we now call AGI, would arrive by 2029.
In a panel discussion alongside his son Ethan Kurzweil, co-founder and managing partner of the venture firm Chemistry, and Shirin Ghaffary, AI reporter at Bloomberg, Ray shared further insight into where his prediction stands today and made clear that he still believes it will come to pass.
“I predicted that there would be a several-yearfold increase where people would start to face AGI, not everybody would, and everybody would face AGI a few years later, so that’s consistent with that prediction that we would start now,” said Ray.
Broadly speaking, AGI refers to artificial intelligence capable of understanding, learning, and reasoning at or beyond a human level. It’s a prospect that has prompted serious concern across many quarters, from questions of job stability and the potential for weaponization, to deeper anxieties about humanity’s role in a world shaped by that kind of intelligence.
Ray, however, holds a far more optimistic view. During the panel, he argued that the positive outcomes of AI will ultimately outweigh the negative, and that nearly every industry, including housing and food, will be transformed through AI breakthroughs.
When asked about the rapid pace of discovery driven by fierce competition in the space, he welcomed that dynamic as well, noting that competition fuels exponential growth and that it is precisely that competition that will make the next ten years ‘absolutely fantastic.’
“Even though some people hold a negative premise about [AGI], we’ve been able to create something that actually represents knowledge, and that’s really fantastic: AI that can expand our knowledge,” added Ray.
AI’s surge is widening gaps in trust and policy
The rapid pace of AI development can often feel like endless noise. Stanford University wants to provide some clarity.
On Monday, the university’s center for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence, or HAI, released its 2026 AI Index report, offering a comprehensive view of some of the most poignant trends impacting the AI industry. Big picture: AI is growing and transforming faster than ever, and no one knows for sure how it’s going to impact our future.
Here are some key takeaways:
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AI capability and adoption are growing rapidly, but safety measures can’t keep up. More than 90% of notable frontier models were released in 2025, with several meeting or exceeding human baselines on PhD-level work. Organizational adoption reached 88%, and 80% of university students use generative AI. But reporting on responsible AI benchmarks remains uneven, and “documented AI incidents” rose to 362 in 2025, up from 233 in 2024.
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The US leads in some ways and lags in others. The report claims the US-China model gap has effectively closed, with Anthropic’s top model leading China’s by 2.7%. And while the US leads in data center density and AI investment, the country’s ability to attract talent has declined, with the number of AI researchers and developers moving to the US falling by 80% in the last year alone.
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Adoption is on the rise, but formal education isn’t. Consumers are seeing substantial value out of AI tools they can access for free, according to the report. Generative AI has reached 53% of the population over the last three years, but is uneven across countries. The US, for instance, sits at a roughly 28% AI adoption rate. Though four out of five students use it in class, only half of middle and high schools have AI policies in place, and only 6% of educators say those policies are clear and concise.
And broadly, the public still isn’t optimistic about how AI will shape the future. While 73% of AI experts have a positive sentiment towards how AI will impact their jobs, only 23% of the public shares that sentiment, the report finds.
AI agent hires humans, opens boutique in SF
Image source: Andon Labs
The Rundown: Andon Labs just dropped an AI agent named Luna into a real retail space with a $100K budget and a credit card, with the AI creating a boutique, hiring workers, and managing the shop as what may be the world’s first AI employer.
The details:
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Andon Labs’ last experiment was an AI vending machine at Anthropic, with the new one giving a 3-year lease, $100K budget, and total autonomy.
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Luna’s only directive was to turn a profit, with the AI creating the boutique concept, posting job listings, and handling interviews over Zoom (camera off).
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The agent runs on Claude Sonnet 4.6 for reasoning and Gemini 3.1 Flash-Lite Preview for voice, observing the store via screenshots from security cameras.
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When hiring a painter, Luna accidentally selected Afghanistan on TaskRabbit’s dropdown menu, and later botched the opening-weekend staff schedule.
Why it matters: Real-world agent experiments like this keep producing the same result: capable in some areas, but hilariously broken in others. But every model upgrade, memory advance, and agentic feature is going to help close that gap, with a version of Luna that doesn’t make these mistakes likely only a generation or two away.
OpenAI talks Anthropic rivalry, Amazon upside
OpenAI’s CRO Denise Dresser sent an internal memo calling Anthropic’s $30B run rate “inflated”, labeling it a “single-product company in a platform war” and pointing to the Amazon deal as a way to break free from Microsoft constraints.
The details:
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The memo, published by The Verge, calls Anthropic’s compute shortage a ‘strategic misstep’, saying users now face throttled access and availability.
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Dresser said Anthropic’s message is built on “fear” and “restriction,” and that OpenAI’s “positive message will win over time.”
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She also accused the rival of inflating its revenue numbers via accounting tactics, claiming they overstate the run rate by around $8B.
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Dresser also called OAI’s Microsoft deal limiting for enterprise business, noting “staggering” demand for Bedrock since February’s Amazon deal.
Why it matters: Either OpenAI is using “internal” memos to leak out information strategically to the media, or they are extremely bad at keeping things in-house. Either way, this memo reads like an IPO pitch more than a strategy update — and with both rivals racing to public debuts this year, that’s probably the point.
Stanford’s AI index: 53% adoption, 31% trust
Image source: Stanford HAI
The Rundown: Stanford HAI released its 2026 AI Index, showing tech that has now reached over half the world’s population faster than the PC or internet — but with public trust in AI sitting at record lows and entry-level workers already losing jobs.
The details:
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Almost 3/4 of AI experts are optimistic about the tech’s impact on jobs, but only 23% of the public agrees, the widest gap the report has tracked.
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The US builds most of the world’s AI but ranks just 24th in actually using it at 28.3% adoption, behind Singapore, the UAE, and most of Southeast Asia.
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China has nearly erased the US lead on AI benchmarks with Anthropic’s top model ahead by 2.7%, while AI researchers moving to the U.S dropped 89%.
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Dev employment for ages 22-25 fell nearly 20% since 2024, even as older engineer headcounts grew, and firm surveys say planned cuts will accelerate.
Why it matters: These are just a few of the countless interesting stats in the 400+ page report. The expert-public divide is a timely stat, given the current anti-AI climate playing out in scary ways. AI insiders see a productivity boom, but regular people aren’t buying it, and just 31% Americans trust the government to manage the changes.
What Else Happened in AI on April 14th 2026?
Apple is reportedly building its first smart glasses with four frame options and an oval camera system, with plans to take on Meta’s Ray-Bans as early as 2027.
Legal AI startup Harvey launched Agents, autonomous bots that can execute full legal workflows, including research, memos, and slide decks across 13 domains.
Microsoft is building OpenClaw-style features for 365 Copilot, including agents that work 24/7 inside Office Apps, with a preview likely at its Build conference in June.
SoftBank launched a new company backed by NEC, Honda, Sony, and five other Japanese firms to build a homegrown 1T-parameter physical AI model.
Man charged in arson attack on Sam Altman’s house had AI CEO kill list, prosecutors say [LINK]
Anthropic is set to release Claude Opus 4.7 and a new AI design tool as early as this week. [LINK]