AI Momentum

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In-depth analysis of the AI topics that resonated most: multi-source research and our take —with a long-term perspective.

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China wants AI to be its counterweight to U.S. military muscle: why the CNAS report matters (and why it isn't cause for panic)

June 30, 2026 · 7 sources

A new Center for a New American Security report warns that China's dual-use AI could already begin to counter the way Washington plans and executes operations. Our thesis: the alarm flags a real near-term risk, but it blurs aspiration with demonstrated capability—and the deeper fight, over who governs this technology, matters more than today's military scoreboard.

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The Bear Hug: Why Google and Microsoft's "Alliance" Against OpenAI and Anthropic Says More Than It Seems

June 30, 2026 · 8 sources

The Information argues that the two platform giants have joined forces to beat back the AI labs. Our read: it's not exactly an alliance, but a sign that the battlefield is shifting—from model quality to distribution and standards—and one of the most revealing contradictions of the year, because Google is pouring billions into the very rival it supposedly wants to contain.

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Agentic AI Is Industrializing Espionage and Fraud: Why the Real Danger Is Short-Term and the Opportunity Long-Term

June 30, 2026 · 7 sources

A report by QBE and Control Risks, alongside the first AI-orchestrated cyber-espionage campaign documented by Anthropic, confirms that autonomous agents now do the work of entire attack teams. Our thesis: this is not a new category of threat but a brutal multiplier of the speed and scale of old ones. The harm is immediate; so, crucially, is the defense.

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Mythos 6 and the day an AI model stopped being a product and became a strategic weapon

June 30, 2026 · 7 sources

The alleged leak of «Mythos 6», Anthropic's most powerful model, isn't really about who's ahead of whom. It's about something more uncomfortable: frontier capability —autonomously finding and exploiting software flaws, writing its own code— has crossed the line that separates a tool from a national-security asset. And that changes everything, for better and for worse.

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