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DX Today AI Daily Brief - Thursday, July 2, 2026

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DX Today AI Daily Brief - Thursday, July 2, 2026

Claude Fable 5 comes back online worldwide after the Commerce Department lifts export controls, and Anthropic launches Claude Sonnet 5 as the new default for Free and Pro users. Together AI closes an 800 million dollar Series C at an 8.3 billion dollar valuation led by Aramco Ventures. TwelveLabs raises 100 million dollars to build video superintelligence. Reflection AI activates its 6.3 billion dollar compute lease at Colossus 2 in Memphis. Applied Digital brings 75 more megawatts online at Polaris Forge 1, lifting the campus to 175 megawatts. The Wall Street Journal reports SpaceX showed investors a handset style AI device prototype, a claim Elon Musk flatly denies. Cloudflare gives AI companies until September 15 to separate search crawlers from AI training crawlers or face default blocking. Federal agencies face today as the 30 day deadline for interim frontier model review guidance as OpenAI targets mid July general availability for GPT 5.6. Microsoft makes its 365 Copilot business bundles permanent. Oxmiq Labs raises 35 million dollars to collapse GPU, CPU, and tensor functions into one chip architecture. Tennessee bans marketing AI as a qualified mental health professional. And global equity issuance hits 729.4 billion dollars in the first half, up 73 percent on the back of the AI boom.

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It's Thursday, July 2nd, 2026. You're listening to the DX Today AI Daily Brief. Today, Claude Fable 5 comes back online worldwide as Anthropic launches Sonnet 5. Together, AI lands an $800 million round at an $8.3 billion valuation. And Cloudflare gives AI companies a deadline to separate their crawlers or get blocked. Let's get into it.

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Anthropic's most capable consumer model is back. Claude Fable 5 access was restored globally on July 1st, one day after the United States Department of Commerce lifted the export controls that had kept the model offline since mid-June. Under the restoration terms, subscribers on Pro, Max, Team, and Select Enterprise plans get Fable 5 included for up to 50% of their weekly usage limits through July 7th, after which access shifts to a usage credit system. Cloud platform access through AWS, Google Cloud, and Microsoft Foundry is being restored in parallel. Alongside the restoration, Anthropic launched ClaudeSonnet 5, now the default model for all free and pro users, with introductory API pricing of $2 per million input tokens and $10 per million output tokens through August 31st.

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Now to a massive funding round.

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Together AI has closed an $800 million Series C at an $8.3 billion post-money valuation, more than doubling its value from early 2025. The round was led by Aramco Ventures, the venture arm of Saudi Aramco, with participation from Vista Equity, General Catalyst, Nvidia, Salesforce Ventures, and others. The company operates a cloud platform that lets enterprises train and run AI workloads on open source models at lower cost than proprietary offerings, and it reports over $1 billion in annual bookings, with customers including Cursor, Cognition, and Decagon. The lead position from Aramco signals that energy and infrastructure players want a direct stake in the enterprise AI platform layer, where open model workflows are becoming a multi-billion dollar business.

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Video AI drew big money too. 12 Labs announced a $100 million Series B on July 1st to build what it calls video superintelligence. The round was co-led by NEA and NAVER Ventures, with participation from Amazon, Radical Ventures, Korea Investment Partners, Index Ventures, Quadrill Capital, and Red Bull Ventures, bringing the company's total funding above $200 million. 12 Labs builds a video cognition system that ingests and indexes video content, so footage becomes searchable and actionable, spanning use cases from media archives to security monitoring. Investors are betting that just as search engines transform text, machine perception breakthroughs can unlock the enormous amount of information sitting inside the world's video, a data resource growing roughly 40% per year. Next, a colossal compute commitment begins.

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July 1st marked the start date of Reflection AI's $6.3 billion compute lease at the Colossus 2 facility in Memphis, Tennessee. The startup is paying $150 million per month for access to Nvidia GB300 chips, with the contract running through the end of 2029. Reflection was co-founded by former DeepMind researchers Misha Laskin and Ioannis Antonoglu, is valued at $25 billion and is backed by NVIDIA, Sequoia, and Lightspeed. The company has not yet released a public frontier model. It is positioning itself as an American, open weight, frontier scale alternative. A bet that recent export control disruptions proved there is demand for sovereign access to top-tier models. The compute is now secured. The model remains the open question.

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Speaking of data center build-outs, Applied Digital announced on July 1st that it achieved ready for service for phase one of building two at its Polaris Forge 1 campus in North Dakota. The milestone brings 75 megawatts of additional operational AI capacity online and increases total live capacity at the campus to 175 megawatts. The company said the delivery reflects a disciplined construction cadence as it races to meet demand from AI cloud providers and hyperscalers. Polaris Forge 1 is anchored by long-term leases, including capacity built for core weave, and the campus is designed to keep scaling through additional phases. The announcement lands in the middle of an industry-wide sprint as developers work to convert contracted megawatts into energized revenue generating capacity as quickly as utilities and supply chains allow.

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From data centers to devices.

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The Wall Street Journal reported that SpaceX showed investors a prototype of a handset-like AI device before going public. Described by sources as slimmer than an iPhone, running a proprietary operating system on a Snapdragon chip with AI technology from XAI been built-in. The report suggested the company may be eyeing an expansion into wireless hardware on top of its Starlink connectivity business. Elon Musk pushed back within hours, calling the report utterly false. The exchange leaves investors with an unresolved question about whether the newly public company intends to compete in consumer devices. Neither SpaceX nor the journal has retracted or expanded on the claims, making this one of the more contested stories of the day.

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Cloudflare announced a policy change that pushes AI companies to pay for the content they consume. The company is giving AI firms until September 15th to separate the web crawlers they use for search indexing from those used for AI training and agentic browsing. Companies that fail to separate their crawlers risk being blocked by default across the large share of the web that sits behind Cloudflare's network. The move builds on Cloudflare's earlier pay-per-crawl efforts and effectively hands publishers a switch to distinguish between traffic that sends readers to their sites and crawling that extracts content for model training. For AI labs that depend on fresh web data, the September deadline creates real commercial pressure to strike licensing deals.

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Today, July 2nd, is the 30-day deadline for federal agencies to deliver interim guidance for the voluntary frontier model review process created by the June 2nd Executive Order. The outcome matters most immediately for OpenAI, whose GPT 5.6 family, the models SOL, Terra, and Luna, remains in a limited preview, available to roughly 20 government-approved partner organizations. General availability is expected in mid-July, with Chief Executive Sam Altman telling employees he hopes for broad access roughly two weeks after the June 26th preview began. If agencies deliver guidance on schedule, it could replace the current case-by-case approval process with a repeatable framework, clearing the path for wider access to the new models. Microsoft makes copilot bundles permanent.

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As of July 1st, Microsoft 365 Business Standard with Copilot and Business Premium with Copilot are permanent product offerings rather than limited time promotions. The change, announced through Microsoft's partner channels, gives small and medium-sized businesses a predictable, always-on-way to buy productivity software with AI assistance built in, instead of purchasing Copilot as a separate add-on license. For Microsoft, folding Copilot directly into standard business subscriptions is a signal that AI features are no longer an upsell experiment, but a core part of the commercial bundle. For the channel partners who resell these plans, permanent SKUs simplify renewals and give them a stable footing to migrate customers who have been hesitant to commit to AI licensing.

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Now to Silicon Economics.

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OxMic Labs, the chip startup founded by veteran graphics architect Roger Koduri, announced a $35 million Series A on July 1st, co-led by Samsung Catalyst Fund and Fudomo, with participation from MediaTech and Pegatron's VentureArm. OxMIC is designing a licensable architecture that collapses the functions of a GPU, a CPU, and a tensor accelerator into a single intellectual property block, aiming to dramatically cut the cost and time required to develop custom AI silicon. The investor list is telling. Samsung, MediaTech, and Pegatron all stand to benefit if cheaper custom chips expand the market beyond the handful of companies that can afford full custom designs today. The funding brings Oxmix total raised to $60 million.

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States keep writing AI rules.

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A new Tennessee law regulating artificial intelligence and mental health took effect on July 1st. Senate Bill 1580 prohibits marketing and AI system as a qualified mental health professional, drawing a legal line between wellness chatbots and licensed clinical care. Notably, the statute includes a private right of action, meaning individuals can sue companies directly over violations rather than waiting for a state regulator to act. The law arrives amid growing national scrutiny of AI chatbots in emotionally sensitive roles, and it adds to a patchwork of state-level AI statutes taking effect this year, even as Washington debates whether federal rules should preempt them. Companies offering companion or therapy adjacent AI products in Tennessee now face direct litigation exposure.

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Finally, the market scoreboard. First, half numbers are in, and AI is reshaping global capital markets. Global equity capital markets issuance reached $729.4 billion in the first half of 2026, up more than 73% from a year earlier, according to data published July 1st. Technology accounted for roughly a third of all issuance worldwide, powered by AI-related listings and capital raises, while convertible bond volumes hit a record first half high. The figures quantify what the deal headlines have suggested all year. The AI build out is not just consuming venture capital, it is now the dominant force in public equity issuance, with follow on raises and initial public offerings from AI exposed companies driving the strongest first half for equity issuance in years.

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For DX today, stay curious.