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Summary: The first week of April 2026 brought a violent collision between infinite software scaling and finite physical reality. We perform a forensic autopsy on OpenAI’s historic $122 billion raise and the internal executive reshuffle happening right before their IPO. We analyze Elon Musk’s unprecedented move to force SpaceX IPO underwriters to buy Grok AI subscriptions, and the chilling supply chain data revealing that 50% of US data centers are paralyzed by transformer shortages. Finally, we look at the human impact: how a solo founder used everyday AI tools to build a $1.8 billion company, while everyday adults retreat from the social internet in record numbers.
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Important Topics Covered:
OpenAI’s Trillion-Dollar Trajectory: The $122B raise ($852B valuation), leadership reshuffles (Lightcap, Simo), and the acquisition of the TBPN tech show.
The Secondary Market Pivot: Why investors are abandoning $600M in OpenAI stock to deploy $2B into Anthropic.
The SpaceX IPO Leverage: Elon Musk forces banks to subscribe to xAI’s Grok to participate in the historic $1.75T SpaceX public offering.
The Physical Compute Wall: Data shows 50% of US data centers are delayed. China still accounts for over 40% of U.S. battery imports and 30% of key switchgear components.
The $1.8B Solo Unicorn: Matthew Gallagher scales Medvi to $401 million in Year 1 (and a projected $1.8B this year) with just $20,000 and AI agents.
The Social Retreat: A new Ofcom report reveals UK adults posting on social media dropped from 61% to 49%, while ChatGPT usage surged from 31% to 54%.
Ecosystem Wars: Anthropic blocks OpenClaw, Apple preps an iOS 27 Siri App Store, and Microsoft injects Copilot ads into GitHub pull requests.
Keywords: OpenAI $122B funding round, SpaceX $1.75T IPO, Elon Musk Grok subscriptions, US data center delays, Chinese battery imports AI, Matthew Gallagher Medvi, Solo Unicorn startup, Anthropic Claude Code leak, Microsoft Copilot GitHub ads, Meta Mercor data breach, Google Gemma 4, DjamgaMind, AIRIA, AI Executive Toolkit, AI Unraveled.
⚗️ PRODUCTION NOTE: We Practice What We Preach.
AI Unraveled is produced using a hybrid “Human-in-the-Loop” workflow.
OpenAI reshuffles leadership as top executives step back
OpenAI is making several leadership changes at once, with its COO moving to a new role, its CEO of AGI development taking medical leave, and its marketing head stepping down.
COO Brad Lightcap will now lead “special projects” involving complex deals and investments, while former Slack CEO Denise Dresser, the new chief revenue officer, takes over his commercial duties.
Fidji Simo is taking medical leave for several weeks to deal with a neuroimmune condition, and co-founder Greg Brockman will manage product while she is away.
Musk requires SpaceX IPO banks to buy Grok subscriptions
Elon Musk is requiring banks, law firms, and other advisers working on the SpaceX IPO to buy subscriptions to Grok, his AI chatbot, according to a New York Times report.
Some banks have agreed to spend tens of millions on Grok and have already started integrating the chatbot into their IT systems as part of the deal.
The IPO filing came after SpaceX purchased xAI, which makes Grok and owns the X social network, while Grok faces investigations for generating harmful imagery.
NASA astronauts took iPhones on Artemis II mission
NASA astronauts on the Artemis II mission carried iPhone 17 Pro Max devices to the moon, marking the first time the agency gave each crew member a personal smartphone for photos and videos.
The iPhones can’t connect to the internet or use Bluetooth and are limited to capturing photos and videos, and NASA had to run a four-phase safety review covering hazards like shattering glass.
The crew also has four GoPro Hero 11 cameras and two Nikon D5 bodies onboard, and NASA discussed using Velcro to mount phones inside the Orion capsule in microgravity conditions.
Claude just shut the door on OpenClaw
Anthropic announced that starting April 4, 2026, Claude Pro and Max subscribers will no longer be able to connect their subscriptions to third-party agentic tools like OpenClaw, citing strain on compute and engineering resources.
Users can still power third-party agents with Claude models, but they must now switch to pay-as-you-go “extra usage” billing or Anthropic’s API, which charges per token instead of offering flat-rate access.
OpenClaw creator Peter Steinberger, now at OpenAI, accused Anthropic of copying popular open-source features into Claude Code and then locking out competing tools, while Anthropic offered credits and discounts to ease the transition.
Meta pauses Mercor partnership after AI data breach
Meta has paused its partnership with Mercor, the AI training data company, after a massive data breach exposed as much as 4TB of sensitive information including candidate profiles and personally identifiable information.
Mercor has been approaching professionals across industries, including visual effects artists, offering payment in exchange for work materials from previous jobs like “4D physics scenes with camera data.”
Much of the material Mercor is seeking likely belongs to former employers and is protected by intellectual property laws and confidentiality agreements, even though the company says it “does not buy intellectual property.”
Half of planned US data center builds delayed or canceled
About half of all planned U.S. data center builds this year are expected to be delayed or canceled, mainly because key electrical equipment like transformers, switchgear, and batteries is in short supply.
Lead times for high-power transformers in the U.S. have stretched from around two years before 2020 to as long as five years today, far exceeding the under-18-month deployment cycles AI data centers need.
China still accounts for over 40% of U.S. battery imports and nearly 30% of certain transformer and switchgear categories, so ongoing trade-war tensions could further disrupt builds despite massive spending plans.
OpenAI acquires tech talk show TBPN
OpenAI has bought TBPN, a popular daily tech talk show on YouTube and X, marking the AI company’s first acquisition of a media property.
TBPN, hosted by John Coogan and Jordi Hays, will keep its own brand and editorial independence but report to OpenAI’s chief political operative, Chris Lehane.
The deal raises conflict-of-interest questions since OpenAI, a company approaching an IPO, now owns a show that regularly covers OpenAI itself and its competitors.
NASA sends astronauts toward the Moon for first time in 50 years
NASA launched four astronauts toward the Moon on Wednesday aboard the Space Launch System and Orion capsule, marking the first crewed flight beyond low Earth orbit in more than 50 years.
Pilot Victor Glover will manually fly Orion within about 30 feet of the spent upper stage in a rendezvous demonstration, testing all six degrees of freedom to build confidence for future lunar dockings.
NASA calls Artemis II a test flight with off-ramps, meaning controllers will check life-support performance after launch vibration and bring the crew home early if systems do not meet expectations.
Google rethinks the AI model race with Gemma 4
Google launched Gemma 4, its next generation of open models, positioning the smaller and more efficient family as a strong alternative as inference costs rise across the industry.
Gemma 4 comes in four sizes — from 2B-parameter models that run offline on phones and laptops to a 31B Dense model ranked #3 on the Arena AI text leaderboard.
The open-source models now feature an Apache 2.0 license, and Google says the Gemma family has been downloaded over 400 million times since its first launch in February 2024.
AI helped two brothers build a $1.8B company
Matthew Gallagher used more than a dozen A.I. tools and just $20,000 to build Medvi, a telehealth GLP-1 drug provider that hit $401 million in sales its first year with only one employee — his brother.
Gallagher relied on ChatGPT, Claude, Grok, Midjourney and Runway to write code, generate ads and handle customer service, while CareValidate and OpenLoop managed doctors, pharmacies and shipping.
Medvi is now on track for $1.8 billion in sales this year and has expanded into men’s health and meal delivery, with a 16.2 percent net profit margin — triple that of competitor Hims.
Investors flee OpenAI for rival Anthropic LINK
Investors on secondary markets are turning away from OpenAI shares and rushing to buy equity in rival Anthropic, with some large OpenAI stakes now nearly impossible to sell.
About $600 million in OpenAI shares from institutional investors found no buyers, while secondary platforms report over $2 billion in cash ready to deploy into Anthropic.
Investors see better risk-reward in Anthropic at its $380 billion valuation, betting it will close the gap with OpenAI’s $852 billion, especially given Anthropic’s stronger enterprise client growth.
Microsoft launches 3 new AI models to rival OpenAI
Microsoft released three in-house AI models — MAI-Transcribe-1, MAI-Voice-1, and MAI-Image-2 — covering speech-to-text, voice generation, and image creation, competing directly with OpenAI, Google, and ElevenLabs.
Mustafa Suleyman told VentureBeat that teams of fewer than 10 engineers built the audio and image models, and MAI-Transcribe-1 runs on half the GPUs of competitors while beating Whisper on all 25 benchmarked languages.
Suleyman confirmed Microsoft plans to build a frontier large language model and become “completely independent,” following a renegotiated OpenAI contract that now lets Microsoft pursue superintelligence on its own.
Cloudflare launches WordPress competitor
Cloudflare has launched EmDash, an open source CMS it calls the “spiritual successor” to WordPress, designed to be more secure and built on what the company describes as an “AI native” architecture.
EmDash runs each plugin in an isolated sandbox called Dynamic Workers, requiring plugins to declare permissions upfront, since Cloudflare says 96% of WordPress vulnerabilities come from plugins with unrestricted access.
The new CMS is built on a scale-to-zero principle that only bills for CPU time during actual requests, and WordPress users can migrate by importing a WXR file or installing the EmDash Exporter plugin.
Amazon in talks to acquire Globalstar for $9 billion
Amazon is in talks to buy Globalstar, a satellite communications company valued at around $8.81 billion, as it tries to grow its early-stage Leo satellite internet service, the Financial Times reported.
Apple’s 20% stake in Globalstar, part of a $1.5 billion investment in 2024 to expand satellite and ground infrastructure, has complicated the deal and required separate negotiations between Amazon and Apple.
Amazon’s Leo program has about 200 satellites in orbit and plans for 7,700, but it still trails SpaceX’s Starlink, which operates over 9,600 satellites and serves more than nine million users.
Fewer adults are posting on social media
A new Ofcom report found that fewer adults in the UK are posting, sharing, or commenting on social media, dropping from 61% in 2024 to 49% as platforms shift toward video.
Nearly half of adults are now concerned about historic posts causing problems later in life, with worries about professional prospects and reputation driving people to stop posting permanently.
Meanwhile, active use of AI tools like ChatGPT has jumped from 31% to 54% among UK adults, and fewer social media users believe the apps are good for their mental health.
Alibaba launches 3 closed-source AI models in 3 days
Alibaba released three closed-source AI models in three days this week, ending with Qwen3.6-Plus, a coding and multimodal reasoning model sold through paid APIs to enterprise customers.
The shift follows the departure of Qwen’s technical lead Lin Junyang in early March, with one contributor suggesting the exit was not voluntary, and Alibaba replacing him with a Google DeepMind veteran.
Alibaba is targeting $100 billion in cloud revenue within five years, and Qwen3.6-Plus scores 78.8 on SWE-bench Verified, trailing only Claude Opus 4.5 among the models it compared against.
SpaceX confidentially files for biggest IPO in history
SpaceX has confidentially filed IPO paperwork with the SEC, reportedly seeking a $1.75 trillion valuation in what would be the largest initial public offering in history at $75 billion raised.
The company lined up 21 banks to manage the offering, internally codenamed “Project Apex,” dwarfing Saudi Aramco’s $29 billion listing in 2019, which was previously the biggest IPO ever.
SpaceX needs the money to build its Starship rocket, replenish Starlink satellites, and pay for compute powering xAI’s deep learning models after absorbing Musk’s AI lab in February.
Anthropic accidentally leaks Claude Code
Anthropic accidentally exposed over 512,000 lines of Claude Code source code when someone made a packaging error while pushing out version 2.1.88 of the software on Tuesday.
The leak revealed the full software scaffolding around Claude Code — instructions telling the model how to behave, what tools to use, and where its limits are — not the AI model itself.
This marks the second accidental exposure in a week, after Anthropic made nearly 3,000 internal files publicly available last Thursday, including a draft blog post describing an unannounced model.
Oracle cuts thousands of jobs to boost AI spending
Oracle laid off thousands of employees across multiple countries this week, with analysts estimating cuts could reach 30,000 positions to free up billions in cash flow for AI data center construction.
Workers received termination emails from “Oracle Leadership” at 6 a.m. with no prior warning, after being locked out of internal systems at three in the morning Pacific time.
The cuts come as Oracle spends $50 billion on capital expenditure this year and carries a $156 billion total buildout estimate, even as its stock has lost nearly half its value since September.
OpenAI raises record $122B at $852B valuation
OpenAI closed a $122 billion funding round at an $852 billion valuation, making it the largest private fundraising event in history, with Amazon leading at $35 billion and individual investors buying shares through ARK ETFs.
Amazon’s $35 billion tranche carries conditions tied to an IPO milestone, effectively making a public listing a requirement of OpenAI’s own financing rather than a voluntary strategic decision.
At $852 billion, OpenAI’s private valuation now exceeds every publicly listed tech company except Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, and Alphabet, setting up a tense gap between pre-IPO price and market reality.
Google prepares a screenless Fitbit band to rival Whoop
Google is working on a screenless Fitbit fitness band designed to compete with Whoop and Oura, combining simple hardware with AI-powered health coaching and a subscription-based model for extra features.
The band is described as a grey fabric design with an orange inner lining, and it will rely on a redesigned Fitbit app featuring an AI personal health coach covering mental wellbeing, cycle tracking, nutrition, and hydration.
Basketball player Stephen Curry shared a sponsored video teasing the device, and Google confirmed he has been collaborating with its team, with more details and a full launch expected later this year.
Baidu robotaxis freeze in Wuhan causing traffic chaos
More than 100 Baidu robotaxis stopped running in Wuhan due to a system malfunction, stranding passengers in fast-moving traffic on a ring road, according to police and Chinese media reports.
Some passengers were afraid to exit because their vehicle had stopped in the middle lane with other cars passing on both sides, while others pushed an SOS button and left on their own.
This is the first reported mass shutdown of robotaxis in China, and Baidu, which operates more than 1,000 driverless taxis mostly in China, did not have any immediate comment.
Meta tests paid subscriptions on Instagram
Meta is testing a paid subscription called Instagram Plus in a few countries, giving everyday users access to exclusive features for a small monthly fee.
Subscribers can view Stories without the poster knowing, see how many people rewatched their Stories, create unlimited audience lists, and extend or spotlight their Stories.
Pricing varies by country — roughly $1 to $2 per month in Mexico, Japan, and the Philippines — and the subscription is separate from Meta Verified, which targets creators and businesses.
Meta launches prescription AI glasses at $499
Meta and EssilorLuxottica launched two new Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses styles, the Blayzer Optics and Scriber Optics, starting at $499 and designed to work with prescription lenses including progressive and transition options.
Both frames feature slimmer designs, swappable nosepads, and adjustable temple tips for a better fit, and they are available for pre-order now with sales starting April 14 at retailers like LensCrafters.
Meta is also rolling out new software features for all Ray-Ban Meta glasses, including Japanese, Mandarin, and Arabic translation support, food and nutrition tracking, and AI-powered message thread summaries.
Google now lets US users change their Gmail address
Google is now rolling out a feature that lets users in the U.S. change their Gmail address without creating a new account or losing access to their existing data.
Users can only change their username once every 12 months, and their old email address will be preserved as an alternate address that still works for signing in.
The feature is rolling out gradually, so not everyone will see the “Change Google Account email” button in their Personal info settings right away, according to Google’s support page.
OpenAI’s Sora burned $1 million daily before shutdown
OpenAI’s video-generation tool Sora was losing roughly a million dollars per day before the company shut it down last week, just six months after its public launch.
Sora’s user count peaked at around one million but then dropped below 500,000, while video generation kept consuming expensive AI chips at a rate OpenAI could not justify.
Disney had committed $1 billion to a partnership with OpenAI around Sora but learned about the shutdown less than an hour before the public announcement, killing the deal.
Apple may launch a dedicated Siri AI app store
Apple is reportedly planning to let users install third-party AI chatbots inside Siri through a new feature called “Extensions,” with a dedicated section in the App Store acting as an AI marketplace.
Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman reports that the changes are coming in iOS 27, which should get its first developer beta in June around Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference starting June 8.
Apple already integrated OpenAI’s ChatGPT into Siri, but Extensions will offer a wider choice of AI agents that users can browse and install from the new App Store section.
Microsoft Copilot now shows ads in pull requests
Microsoft’s Copilot AI tool has started inserting promotional messages into pull requests on GitHub, advertising a Raycast extension for the Copilot coding agent on macOS and Windows machines.
A search on GitHub shows the exact same promotional text appearing in over 11,000 different pull requests across thousands of repos, and even merge requests on GitLab contain the injection.
Hidden HTML comments labeled “START COPILOT CODING AGENT TIPS” in the raw markdown suggest Microsoft is inserting these ads, likely to promote its own developer ecosystem or partner integrations.
ChatGPT app store struggles six months post-launch
OpenAI’s push to turn ChatGPT into an app platform with over 300 integrations from companies like Booking and StubHub is off to a sluggish start six months after launch.
Partner companies are hesitant to hand off customer relationships and payments to OpenAI, so most apps force users to leave ChatGPT to complete purchases or even view basic details.
Developers have complained about a tedious app-approval process, buggy development tools, and a lack of usage data, leaving them “running quite blind” on whether their apps are working properly.
Eli Lilly bets $2.75 billion on AI drug discovery
Eli Lilly announced a $2.75 billion deal with Hong Kong-based Insilico Medicine to use artificial intelligence for drug discovery and development, giving Lilly exclusive license to manufacture and market the resulting therapies.
Insilico CEO Alex Zhavoronkov told CNBC his company has used AI to develop at least 28 drugs, with close to half already at a clinical stage of testing.
Eli Lilly has also committed $1 billion over five years with Nvidia to finance talent, infrastructure and computing needed to address bottlenecks in AI-based drug discovery.











