Hennigan's Huddle

The Government Can Pull AI Offline Now — And No One's Talking About It

15 min · I går
episode The Government Can Pull AI Offline Now — And No One's Talking About It cover

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The U.S. just forced Anthropic's models offline with no court order and no real explanation. This is a power grab, and you need to understand it. • After resurrecting an iconic PC brand, Commodore is getting into flip phones Commodore — the iconic PC brand resurrected by retro gaming YouTuber Christian Simpson in 2025 — is launching a nostalgia-driven flip phone called the Callback 8020, priced starting at $499 and designed to pull users away from smartphone overload. • Inside the fight over Claude Mythos 5 The Trump administration ordered Anthropic to shut down its powerful new Claude Mythos 5 and Fable 5 AI models for all foreign nationals after a reported jailbreak, sending CEO Dario Amodei and a team of executives rushing to Washington over the weekend to fight the directive. • Facebook’s new AI Mode search gets its info from public posts Meta has launched 'AI Mode' in Facebook search, powered by its Muse Spark AI model, which generates answers drawn from publicly posted content across Meta's platforms rather than returning traditional links. • Malaysia’s AI agent-powered messaging app Respond.io raises $62.5M, eyes acquisitions Malaysian AI messaging startup Respond.io has raised a $62.5 million Series B to expand its customer conversation management platform, which processes 2 billion messages per quarter and is already profitable. • Sundar Pichai faces boos, walkout at Stanford graduation ceremony over Google’s Israel, ICE ties Google CEO Sundar Pichai was booed and faced a walkout of roughly 200 students during his commencement speech at Stanford University over Google's $1.2 billion Project Nimbus contract with the Israeli military and its ties to ICE. • The US government’s Anthropic models ban was never about an AI jailbreak The U.S. Commerce Department forced Anthropic to pull its top two AI models offline via an export control directive, and cybersecurity experts say the move was retaliatory rather than a legitimate national security response to an AI jailbreak. • Key mission for Europe's commercial space enterprise scrubbed again European rocket startup Isar Aerospace scrubbed yet another launch attempt of its Spectrum rocket Monday due to anomalies in the vehicle's fluid systems, marking the fourth failed launch attempt in five months. • Heart protection from COVID shots remains amid updates, study finds A study of over 1 million VA patients found the 2024-2025 COVID-19 vaccine reduces major cardiovascular events by 38%, with the strongest benefits for adults over 75 and those with underlying conditions. • UK to ban social media for kids under 16, may impose overnight curfews The UK government announced a full social media ban for children under 16, covering platforms like TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube, with rules expected to take effect in spring 2027 and financial penalties for non-compliant platforms. • Tutor Perini lands $652M Guam military base project Construction giant Tutor Perini has secured a

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30 episodes

episode Anthropic Beats OpenAI and Gets Punished For It artwork

Anthropic Beats OpenAI and Gets Punished For It

Anthropic just topped OpenAI in enterprise AI — then the Trump admin forced it to pull its best models. Plus Android 17 drops and SpaceX passes Amazon. • The Complete Calvin and Hobbes is a great last-minute Father’s Day gift With Father's Day approaching, The Complete Calvin and Hobbes three-volume hardcover set is on sale for $89.48 on Amazon — 60% off its original $225 price and the lowest it's ever been listed. • All the latest news on Android 17, Wear OS 7, and Android XR Google has officially rolled out Android 17 to Pixel phones, bringing floating app windows, foldable gaming controls, and a Handoff-like feature, while Wear OS 7 launches with Live Updates and 10% better battery life ahead of new Android XR smart glasses this fall. • Android 17 arrives on Pixel phones today Google has begun rolling out Android 17 to Pixel phones today as part of its June Pixel Drop, with other manufacturers expected to follow throughout 2026. The update's headline feature is Bubbles — floating app windows accessible via long press. • Anthropic’s latest feud with the Trump admin may actually help it, sales data suggests Anthropic just had its best-ever month for business adoption, surpassing OpenAI in market share for the first time — then immediately got pulled into a fresh White House fight that forced it to yank its most powerful AI models from the market. • Apple plans to change its Hide My Email privacy feature that could make it less effective Apple is moving its Hide My Email feature to a new '@private.icloud.com' domain, making anonymous email addresses easily identifiable and blockable by apps and websites. • SpaceX valuation balloons to $2.6T, briefly passes Amazon SpaceX briefly surpassed Amazon to become the fifth most valuable company in the world this week, with its valuation spiking to $2.9 trillion just days after its historic IPO, before settling back down. • Trump admin tries to block Clean Air Act lawsuit over xAI's gas turbines The Trump administration's DOJ is trying to dismiss an NAACP Clean Air Act lawsuit against Elon Musk's xAI, arguing that 57 unpermitted gas turbines powering the Grok AI system are exempt because they support national security and military operations. • Year of free HPE software a “step in the correct direction” in VMware rivalry HPE is offering its VM Essentials virtualization software free for up to one year, positioning it as a direct alternative to Broadcom's increasingly expensive VMware platform. • Cockroaches scurry around with thousands of pieces of bacterial genomes A new study found that cockroach genomes are riddled with hundreds to thousands of fragments of bacterial DNA, challenging the long-held assumption that horizontal gene transfer is rare in multicellular animals. • Backlog hit highest level since 2023, but confidence fell Construction backlog hit a nearly three-year high of 9.1 months in May, but contractor confidence still fell — and the data center building boom i

17. juni 202615 min
episode The Government Can Pull AI Offline Now — And No One's Talking About It artwork

The Government Can Pull AI Offline Now — And No One's Talking About It

The U.S. just forced Anthropic's models offline with no court order and no real explanation. This is a power grab, and you need to understand it. • After resurrecting an iconic PC brand, Commodore is getting into flip phones Commodore — the iconic PC brand resurrected by retro gaming YouTuber Christian Simpson in 2025 — is launching a nostalgia-driven flip phone called the Callback 8020, priced starting at $499 and designed to pull users away from smartphone overload. • Inside the fight over Claude Mythos 5 The Trump administration ordered Anthropic to shut down its powerful new Claude Mythos 5 and Fable 5 AI models for all foreign nationals after a reported jailbreak, sending CEO Dario Amodei and a team of executives rushing to Washington over the weekend to fight the directive. • Facebook’s new AI Mode search gets its info from public posts Meta has launched 'AI Mode' in Facebook search, powered by its Muse Spark AI model, which generates answers drawn from publicly posted content across Meta's platforms rather than returning traditional links. • Malaysia’s AI agent-powered messaging app Respond.io raises $62.5M, eyes acquisitions Malaysian AI messaging startup Respond.io has raised a $62.5 million Series B to expand its customer conversation management platform, which processes 2 billion messages per quarter and is already profitable. • Sundar Pichai faces boos, walkout at Stanford graduation ceremony over Google’s Israel, ICE ties Google CEO Sundar Pichai was booed and faced a walkout of roughly 200 students during his commencement speech at Stanford University over Google's $1.2 billion Project Nimbus contract with the Israeli military and its ties to ICE. • The US government’s Anthropic models ban was never about an AI jailbreak The U.S. Commerce Department forced Anthropic to pull its top two AI models offline via an export control directive, and cybersecurity experts say the move was retaliatory rather than a legitimate national security response to an AI jailbreak. • Key mission for Europe's commercial space enterprise scrubbed again European rocket startup Isar Aerospace scrubbed yet another launch attempt of its Spectrum rocket Monday due to anomalies in the vehicle's fluid systems, marking the fourth failed launch attempt in five months. • Heart protection from COVID shots remains amid updates, study finds A study of over 1 million VA patients found the 2024-2025 COVID-19 vaccine reduces major cardiovascular events by 38%, with the strongest benefits for adults over 75 and those with underlying conditions. • UK to ban social media for kids under 16, may impose overnight curfews The UK government announced a full social media ban for children under 16, covering platforms like TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube, with rules expected to take effect in spring 2027 and financial penalties for non-compliant platforms. • Tutor Perini lands $652M Guam military base project Construction giant Tutor Perini has secured a

Yesterday15 min
episode The Government Just Pulled the Plug — and Musk Owns Everything Else artwork

The Government Just Pulled the Plug — and Musk Owns Everything Else

Anthropic's AI models got killed by a Friday directive. SpaceX just went public at a trillion dollars. One entity holds the off switch — and it's not who you think. • Valve just imported 13 tons of VR headsets in one day Valve shipped roughly 13 tons of Steam Frame VR headsets — potentially fewer than 20,000 units — into Los Angeles on June 10th, while its total US stockpile of Steam Machine consoles has now reached an estimated 141 metric tons. • Nothing CEO says phone prices are going to keep going up Nothing CEO Carl Pei is warning consumers that smartphone prices will keep climbing into next year due to a global RAM shortage, and this holiday season's deals will be noticeably weaker than usual. • The world’s first trillionaire is a killer The Verge's TC Sottek argues that Elon Musk's SpaceX IPO — poised to make him the world's first trillionaire — is inseparable from his role leading DOGE's dismantling of USAID, which public health researchers link to hundreds of thousands of deaths globally. • Andrew Yang thinks the next big startup opportunity is lowering the cost of living Andrew Yang is betting the next big startup wave is companies that lower costs instead of extracting profit, launching Noble Mobile as his proof-of-concept after being inspired by Mark Cuban's Cost Plus Drugs. • Anthropic’s safety warnings may have just backfired — the government has pulled the plug on its most powerful AI The U.S. government ordered Anthropic to immediately shut down its two most powerful AI models — Claude Fable 5 and Claude Mythos 5 — citing national security concerns over a reported jailbreak, in a move Anthropic publicly disputes. • SpaceX IPO: Live updates on everything you need to know SpaceX made history with the largest IPO ever, raising $75 billion at $135 per share and closing its first trading day up 19% at $160.95, making Elon Musk the world's first trillionaire. • Anthropic shuts down Fable, Mythos models following Trump admin directive Anthropic was forced to shut down its newly launched Fable 5 and Mythos 5 AI models Friday night after a U.S. Commerce Department directive imposed export controls, citing a reported jailbreak vulnerability. Anthropic is complying but publicly pushing back, calling the action an overreach. • SpaceX is now a public company valued for its AI potential, so what comes next? SpaceX went public on Nasdaq at $135 per share, closing up 19% at $160.95 and valuing the company at nearly $1.8 trillion — but the big reveal is that SpaceX now considers itself primarily an AI company, not a space company. • PeopleSoft 0-day affecting hundreds of organizations steals gigabytes of data Ransomware group ShinyHunters exploited a critical Oracle PeopleSoft zero-day vulnerability for over two weeks, targeting roughly 100 organizations and stealing gigabytes of sensitive data, with universities hit hardest. • Google vows $50M for skilled trades training Google is committing $50 million to fund skille

13. juni 202616 min