Trump goes to bat for Google with the EU
Trump goes to bat for Google with the EU
Trump threatens (trade) war over EU Google fine
Anthropic reaches landmark $1.5 billion settlement in AI copyright case
Burn baby, burn: OpenAI's Cash Inferno
Trump and Silicon Valley break bread
More tech
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Jeremy Kahn is the AI editor at Fortune, spearheading the publication's coverage of artificial intelligence. He also co-
Good morning. Itâs Jeremy here, filling in for Andrew who, along with many of my Fortune colleagues, is kicking off Fortune Brainstorm Tech in Deer Valley, Utah today. Check out fortune.com for coverage of the mainstage sessions.
Over the weekend, everyone was still talking about that White House dinner. Never has such an extraordinary collection of intellectual heft gathered in the White House since Thomas Jefferson dinedâoh never mind.
But the amount of market power gathered in the room on Thursday night was truly extraordinary. Dave Smith has a rundown of who was there below. If nothing else, it was the dinner that launched a thousand memes. (If you havenât checked out the deepfake parody someone created of Bill Gatesâ remarks at the dinner, itâs hilarious, but NSFW, so I wonât link to it here.)
Coming to âkiss the ringâ certainly seems to have paid off for at least one of the guests, Sundar Pichai. Fresh from having escaped lightly from the U.S. governmentâs antitrust suit against Alphabet, Pichaiâs dinner performance may have helped convince Trump to go to bat for Google with the EU. (Not that Trump needed too much persuading.)
More on that, as well as all the other tech newsâincluding Anthropicâs potentially precedent-setting settlement of an AI copyright caseâbelow.
âJeremy Kahn
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U.S. President Donald Trump has threatened the European Union with additional tariffs after the bloc fined Google âŹ2.9 billion ($3.4 billion) for violating competition laws with its search ad practices and ordered it to change its business practices.
Just hours after the EU announced the fine on Friday and a day after he met with Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai at the White House, Trump took to Truth Social to call the decision "very unfair."
âWe cannot let this happen to brilliant and unprecedented American Ingenuity,â Trump wrote. He also threatened a trade investigation that could result in additional tariffs on EU goods.
The fine is one of the largest Google-parent Alphabet has ever faced. It previously hit the tech giant with a âŹ4.2 billion fine in 2018 for anticompetitive behavior in the way it used Android. Google has 60 days to tell the EU how it will comply, with Brussels threatening to break up the company if it is not satisfied with the proposed solution.Â
"At this stage, it appears that the only way for Google to end its conflict of interest effectively is with a structural remedy, such as selling some part of its Adtech business,â EU competition chief Teresa Ribera said.
Alphabet has promised to appeal the decision, which it called "unjustified." Trump's threat of further tariffs comes as the EU is in the middle of tricky negotiations with Washington over a possible trade deal.
âJeremy Kahn
Anthropic just dodged a potentially existential legal blow to its business with a $1.5 billion settlement.
The suit was a class action brought
The settlement, which equates to roughly $3,000 per book across 500,000 works, is being billed as the largest copyright recovery in history.Â
It comes just days after the company raised $13 billion at a $183 billion valuation. While the settlement is steep, itâs manageable for a firm the size of Anthropic and amounts to less than a third of its projected $5 billion in annual revenue. More importantly, it spares the company from trial, where damages could have reached $1 trillion.
For now, the case sets a benchmark other AI giants may need to meet.
âBeatrice Nolan
OpenAI is telling investors to brace for a much bigger burn rate than previously expected.Â
The company now projects spending could hit $115 billion
It wasnât all bad news for shareholders, however, as OpenAI also reportedly raised its total revenue outlook to $200 billion
The higher burn rate could explain why the company is raising more capital than any private startup in history. Investors are buying shares at a $500 billion valuation, per the report, nearly double what they paid six months ago.Â
One of the key drivers behind the AI companyâs soaring expenses is its cloud use. OpenAI has become one of the worldâs largest renters of cloud servers. To counter some of these costs, the company is investing heavily in developing its own data center server chips and facilities (see the item in "More Tech" below).
âBeatrice Nolan
President Donald Trump hosted Big Tech heavyweights at a White House dinner in the newly renovated Rose Garden late last week. The lavish display marked a sharp contrast with Trumpâs first-term clashes with Big Tech.
The guest list was made up of 13 billionaires plus a roster of top VCs and executives, including Mark Zuckerberg, Sam Altman, Tim Cook, and Bill Gates, who each took turns praising the president.
Microsoftâs Satya Nadella lauded Trump and his policies for âhelping a lot,â AMDâs Lisa Su praised the âaccelerationâ under the administrationâs watch, and Oracleâs Safra Catz credited him with âunleashing American innovation and creativity.â Sam Altman thanked Trump for being âa pro-business and pro-innovation presidentâ and pledged to âinvest a ton in the United States.â
Trump, in turn, pressed executives on how much they plan to spend domestically, coaxing commitments in the hundreds of billions.Â
Former ally and âfirst buddyâ Elon Musk was notably absent following a very public spat with Trump over his âBig Beautiful Bill.â He later insisted on social media that he was invited but couldnât attend.
âDave Smith
OpenAI strikes a $10 billion custom AI chip deal with Broadcom. The move could help to ease the shortage of high-powered chips.
ASML becomes Mistral AIâs top shareholder. ASML invested $1.5 billion in Mistral's $2 billion Series C,
Cable cuts in the Red Sea briefly disrupted Microsoftâs Azure service. Microsoft said on Saturday it was no longer detecting issues.
âGodfather of AIâ Geoffrey Hinton says AI will spark a surge in unemployment and profits. But he says capitalism is to blame for this, not AI.Â
Palantirâs Alex Karp says AI wonât replace U.S. skilled labor. Karp argued the tech will actually enhance workersâ value.
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