Trump bans WSJ from press poolThe White House will
not allow a reporter for the paper to cover the president’s upcoming tour of Scotland. The move came after Trump said he would sue the WSJ for its report that said he wrote a lewd birthday note to Jeffrey Epstein. Context: The WSJ—and particularly its editorial board—has been on a campaign against Trump since the beginning of his administration.
Trump objected to Israel’s bombing of SyriaIn further evidence of a split between Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu, the
White House confirmed that Trump called the Israeli leader because he was “caught off guard by the bombing in Syria and the bombing of the Catholic church in Gaza” and wanted to rectify these situations," White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said. The statement follows
previous reports that some in the White House feel that Netanyahu is acting like a “madman.”
China approaches peak oil momentWithin two years, China may reach the point where
its use of oil goes into decline. Beijing has worked fiercely to build out its electric vehicle infrastructure and the result is that the country is no longer as dependent as it once was on oil from the U.S. or the Middle East.
JPMorgan’s Dimon softens tone on BitcoinJPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon used to describe Bitcoin as a “fraud” that would “eventually blow up” but
now his bank is looking at using clients’ crypto holdings as a collateral for loans. Dimon still isn’t a fan. In May he said, “I don’t think you should smoke, but I defend your right to smoke. I defend your right to buy bitcoin. Go at it.”
Bessent continues criticism of the FedTreasury Secretary Scott Bessent
questioned the effectiveness of the Federal Reserve during a Monday appearance on CNBC. “What we need to do is examine the entire Federal Reserve institution and whether they have been successful,” Bessent said.
Porsche CEO warns of more cutsPorsche CEO Oliver Blume
warned his employees last week that further job cuts are expected due to a decline in demand from China and to President Trump’s economic policies, among other factors. The cuts will be in addition to the 3,900 jobs in Germany that the company expects to eliminate by 2029.
Anthropic switches tune on AI in applicationsAI company Anthropic told
Fortune that it will now
allow job applicants to use AI to prep materials for their application—but not while in interviews or during most assessments. “At Anthropic, we use Claude every day, so we’re looking for candidates who excel at collaborating with AI,” the company’s guidelines read.
That $500 billion Stargate AI plan is mostly vaporware, so farStargate, the AI project announced by President Trump, billionaire investor Masayoshi Son, and OpenAI’s Sam Altman,
has yet to achieve anything. Building data centers is difficult—you need to gather a massive amount of space, power, and semiconductor chips all in one place—and the project is proceeding more slowly than its leaders want.
Why AI hallucinates—and what is being done to stop it.Excellent longread from the FT on one of the most difficult problems in AI:
How to stop it from making stuff up.
The HR chief at Astronomer has not yet lost her jobOne possibility: She is negotiating an exit package,
the NY Post theorizes.