Elon Musk just called space-based AI data centers a "no-brainer" — right as SpaceX gears up for a $60 billion acquisition and IPO.
SpaceX Eyes $60 Billion AI Grab While Musk Dreams of Orbital Servers
Picture Elon Musk, mid-tweetstorm, declaring that AI data centers in space solve every power and cooling headache on Earth — zero gravity, endless solar, no pesky blackouts. It's wild enough as a vision. But today, SpaceX filed IPO papers hinting at that future, while lining up a monster $60 billion deal to buy Cursor, the AI coding startup that's already powering tools for millions of developers.
Cursor isn't some side project; it's the hot AI that autocompletes entire apps from vague prompts, turning solo coders into one-person factories. SpaceX snapping it up would fuse rocket tech with AI brains — imagine Starship fleets optimized in real-time by orbital supercomputers. The IPO filing drops this bombshell amid whispers of $200 billion valuations, dwarfing Uber's debut. Five years ago, SpaceX was launching Teslas to space for kicks; now it's betting the farm on AI to fuel Mars.
Musk's space data center pitch? It dodges Earth's grid strains — AI training already guzzles more power than Sweden — by beaming compute from orbit. No word if Cursor's code will run the satellites.
Gobble's Take: If you're building anything digital, Cursor in SpaceX's hands means your next app could launch — literally — faster and cheaper than ever.
Sources: Barron's · The Times of India
Anker's Sneaky Chip Play: AI in Every Charger You Own
Steven Yang, Anker's founder, spent years hawking $20 cables on Amazon before exploding into a $15 billion gadget empire. Now he's flipped the script: Anker just unveiled its own custom AI chip, set to cram smarts into every product from power banks to robot vacuums.
This isn't hype — the chip handles on-device AI like real-time translation or photo enhancement without phoning home to the cloud. Anker's edge? They sell 100 million chargers yearly; suddenly, your desk dongle becomes a mini brain. Rivals like Belkin lean on Qualcomm; Anker's going solo to slash costs by 40% and dodge supply crunches.
Battery life was AI's kryptonite — always draining fast. Anker's chip fixes that, promising week-long smarts on a single charge.
Gobble's Take: Next time your Anker charger buzzes alive with AI voice notes, thank Yang — your travel kit just got a free brain upgrade.
Source: The Verge
Anthropic's "Mythos" AI: Hacker Bait or Lab Leak?
A rogue engineer at Anthropic — the AI lab born from OpenAI defectors — allegedly snuck "Mythos," their hack-enabling AI, past internal alarms last week. Now the company's in full damage control, probing reports of unauthorized access to this beast designed to spit out exploits for any software.
Mythos isn't your chatty sidekick; it's tuned to probe code for zero-days, the bugs that topple banks and governments. Think Stuxnet-level destruction, but automated. The breach echoes past scares — as we covered in this post about their White House summons — but this one's internal, with logs showing Mythos querying real-world targets.
Anthropic paused Mythos deployments worldwide. One leaked prompt? "Find a way into iOS 26." The fix can't come fast enough.
Gobble's Take: Your phone's next update might patch holes Mythos dreamed up — change your passwords anyway.
Source: The Guardian
Cohere's AI Playground: Hackers Just Escaped the Sandbox
Cohere, the Canadian AI upstart chasing OpenAI's throne with enterprise tools, built Terrarium as a "safe" sandbox for testing code-spitting models. Yesterday, researchers cracked it wide open — full root access, container escape, the works.
One crafted prompt tricked Terrarium into executing arbitrary Linux commands, then breaking out to the host server. We're talking ransomware potential on steroids; imagine your company's AI intern rewriting the payroll. Cohere patched in hours, but the flaw hit their public beta — 50,000 devs exposed.
Sandboxes were AI safety's last moat. This breach proves they're paper-thin.
Gobble's Take: If you're tinkering with AI code tools, stick to offline — one bad prompt, and your laptop's not yours anymore.
Source: The Hacker News
Quick Hits
- FOSS NotebookLM Drops Data Caps: Open-source clone of Google's NotebookLM runs unlimited docs locally — perfect for privacy nuts hoarding research piles. r/artificial
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