Happy Thursday. Two big moves dominated the day: Meta's surprise plan to sell excess AI infrastructure capacity to third parties sent its stock up 9%, signaling that hyperscaler AI spend can now become a revenue line, not just a cost center. Meanwhile, the US lifted emergency export controls on Anthropic's Claude Fable 5, restoring global enterprise access to its most powerful model — but with strings attached. Together, the stories hint at a maturing AI stack where compute is a commodity and geopolitics shape who gets to use frontier models.
The US government's reversal on Claude Fable 5 export controls is the headline story in foundation models today — Anthropic's most capable model is back on the global market, but the episode underscores how frontier AI has become entangled with national security policy.
Meta's pivot to monetize its AI compute surplus is the infrastructure story of the day, while Together AI's $800M raise and a flurry of global data center commitments — from South Korea's $919B mega-project to a Valar-Nvidia nuclear data center partnership — underscore that the build-out race is far from over.
The funding circuit is active across the stack: Together AI's $800M Series C is the headline raise, while Raja Koduri's Oxmiq Labs (custom AI silicon) and Venice.ai (private uncensored AI) reflect continued investor appetite from infrastructure to application layer.
Cloudflare is forcing a reckoning on AI web crawlers — giving companies until September to separate search from training bots or face publisher blocks — while AWS upgrades its OpenSearch log analytics engine at no extra cost, reflecting the quiet but important battle over data rights and platform economics.
AI is moving deeper into physical and transactional workflows: Verkada integrates Nvidia AI across 2.4 million security devices, Square enables ChatGPT and Claude to place restaurant orders directly, and Palantir's CEO publicly attacks the token-cost economics of OpenAI and Anthropic as unsustainable for enterprise buyers.
Two US government actions dominated policy today: the FTC warned that AI bias safeguards could paradoxically violate consumer protection law, while the Commerce Department lifted export controls on Anthropic's Claude Fable 5 — but only after Anthropic added new security measures to appease the Trump administration.
India's AI story today spans surveillance and infrastructure: Telangana police are deploying AI facial-recognition drones for routine Hyderabad street patrols — a live production rollout with significant civil liberties implications — while Tata Communications announces India-Singapore subsea cable investments that will underpin the country's growing data economy.
The Control Gap: Enterprise AI organizations have an ownership problem, not a technology problem — and most are governing it by hand — While the industry debates foundation model capabilities and infrastructure scale, this piece exposes the unglamorous reality inside enterprise AI programs: contested platform ownership, manual governance, and no reliable drift detection. For strategists evaluating where the next wave of B2B AI software value will be created, this governance gap is the clearest unmet need in the stack. Read →