WASHINGTON — The U.S. government has lifted restrictions on Anthropic's most capable AI models, ending a standoff with the Trump administration that had curtailed the company's ability to deploy its most powerful technology. The de-escalation comes without a formal explanation of what changed, which is itself informative: it suggests the administration concluded the restrictions were costing American AI companies competitive ground rather than protecting national security interests.
The timing is notable. The AI industry is simultaneously navigating regulatory uncertainty, a wave of fresh capital, and an unusual amount of cultural scrutiny — including from the direction of cinema.
Neon, the distributor behind several awards-season acquisitions, purchased "Artificial," a film focused on OpenAI chief Sam Altman, after Amazon dropped it. Amazon's exit followed its investment in OpenAI, making the conflict-of-interest math straightforward. Neon's purchase means the film will reach audiences, adding to a growing body of popular culture interrogating how a handful of executives are reshaping the economy.
On the capital side, Nvidia has backed Israeli AI unicorn Decart in a $300 million funding round valuing the company at $4 billion. Nvidia's participation in funding rounds has become a reliable signal of which infrastructure bets the dominant chipmaker considers credible. Decart is the latest in a string of Israeli AI companies attracting outsized valuations relative to disclosed revenue.
Meanwhile, Bending Spoons — the Italian company that has systematically acquired aging internet brands including AOL and Vimeo — is going public this week at a potential valuation of $19 billion. The IPO tests whether public markets will pay a software-multiple for a business whose core competency is extracting value from brands most investors assumed were terminal.
Against all of this, the week's most quietly telling story may be the Yoto Music Box — a screenless audio player for children that is generating real revenue by offering parents an exit from engagement-maximizing platforms. When hardware with no algorithm and no feed becomes a market opportunity, it measures precisely how far the techlash has traveled.