The AI Daily Brief: Artificial Intelligence News and Analysis - Work AGI is the Only AGI that Matters
Episode Date: March 25, 2026OpenAI is making its most dramatic strategic pivot yet — killing Sora, renaming its product team to "AGI Deployment," and narrowing Sam Altman's role — all to double down on coding a...nd knowledge work. The message from every major lab is clear: forget the abstract AGI debate, the only AGI worth chasing is the one that reinvents how work gets done. In the headlines: IPO fever takes hold as SpaceX eyes a record-breaking offering, a pre-IPO AI ETF completely detaches from reality, and a federal judge takes the Pentagon to task over its fight with Anthropic.Brought to you by:KPMG – Agentic AI is powering a potential $3 trillion productivity shift, and KPMG’s new paper, Agentic AI Untangled, gives leaders a clear framework to decide whether to build, buy, or borrow—download it at www.kpmg.us/NavigateMercury - Modern banking for business and now personal accounts. Learn more at https://mercury.com/personal-bankingRecall - The API for meeting recording. Get Get started today with $100 in free credits at https://www.recall.ai/aidbAIUC-1 - Get your agents certified to communicate trust to enterprise buyers - https://www.aiuc-1.com/Blitzy - Want to accelerate enterprise software development velocity by 5x? https://blitzy.com/AssemblyAI - The best way to build Voice AI apps - https://www.assemblyai.com/briefRobots & Pencils - Cloud-native AI solutions that power results https://robotsandpencils.com/The Agent Readiness Audit from Superintelligent - Go to https://besuper.ai/ to request your company's agent readiness score.The AI Daily Brief helps you understand the most important news and discussions in AI. Subscribe to the podcast version of The AI Daily Brief wherever you listen: https://pod.link/1680633614Our Newsletter is BACK: https://aidailybrief.beehiiv.com/Interested in sponsoring the show? sponsors@aidailybrief.ai
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Today on the AI Daily Brief, why work AGI is the only AGI that the big labs care about now.
And before that in the headlines, IPO, IPO fever starts to take hold.
The AI Daily Brief is a daily podcast and video about the most important news and discussions in AI.
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We kick off today with some fairly significant IPO fever.
CNBC recently got a hold of documents that they describe as resembling an OpenAI IPO
prospectus, with the documents warning of numerous risks to OpenAI like their close ties to Microsoft.
Potential investors were told that Microsoft is responsible for a substantial portion of our financing
and compute, and OpenAI also disclosed concentration risk saying, if Microsoft modifies or
terminates its commercial partnership with us, or if we are unable to successfully diversify our
business partners. Our business prospects operating results in financial condition could be
adversely affected. Now, this is particularly relevant given reports that Microsoft is considering a lawsuit
to block certain parts of OpenAI's partnership with Amazon. Additional risk disclosures include
OpenAI's significant capital expenditure, reliance on compute resources, ongoing litigation with
Elon Musk, and their unusual structure as a public benefit corporation. They even mentioned geopolitical
risk related to Taiwan. Now, while CNBC kind of sold this at first as a pre-IPO prospectus,
It appears that this document was shared with potential investors in OpenAI's recent fundraising round,
meaning that it doesn't actually seem to be prepared for the IPO, and yet the list of risks
will likely closely mirror disclosures once they actually go public.
Sources additionally said that OpenAI is seeking a further 10 billion from investors to
add to the 110 billion already raised from SoftBank, Nvidia, and Amazon.
And as we'll hear in the main episode, it sounds like Sam Altman is changing his focus to be
able to concentrate more closely on things like fundraising.
Now, an OpenAI spokesperson basically said that this is just Legal Nothingburger, commenting,
this is a standard legal risk factor disclosure unrelated to any potential IPO prospectus.
Similar language has been in place for years.
Microsoft is and will remain a critical long-term partner.
Now, much more tangibly in IPO news, SpaceX is aiming to file their IPO paperwork as soon as
this week.
Sources speaking with the information said that SpaceX and by extension XAI are finalizing the
details of their prospectus and could file documents with the SEC this.
week. The stock is expected to begin trading in June if all goes to plan. That would make
XAI the first out of the gate as the three large AI startups head towards IPO. SpaceX is said to be
aiming to raise $75 billion in the public offering, which would make it the largest IPO in history
by a wide margin. They were originally aiming for $50 billion, so this would be a substantial
upsize. In fact, if it works, that single IPO would surpass all the money raised in IPOs last year
combined. SpaceX last raised money at $1.25 trillion, suggesting that it would debut as around
the 12th largest company in the world.
When the prospectus does come out, we'll get our first look at XAI's books.
Analysts expect that SpaceX as a whole is losing money and XAI is deep in the red.
Now, this IPO is also expected to have a few unconventional features.
Elon Musk has said that he wants to make IPO shares available to retail investors in larger quantities than usual.
Typically, companies offer around 10% of IPO shares available to retail prior to the listing,
but SpaceX is expected to bump that number to 20%.
In addition, the SpaceX IPO won't feature the standard six-month lockup for existing shareholders.
The safeguard is usually put in place to stop insiders dumping their stock and crashing the price
right out of the gate.
Sources said that a custom arrangement is still being sorted out, although it's unclear
if this means a shorter lockup or it actually means a longer lockup.
The information finally reports that Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Bank of America,
J.P. Morgan and City have all been preparing IPO plans even though none of them has officially
been hired.
Continuing the theme of bucking convention, SpaceX is said to be considering an approach
where each investment bank is assigned a different task as part of this largest IPO in history.
Now, when it comes to XAI's role in all of this, there is plenty of skepticism to go around.
Contrary and curse on Twitter writes,
the obvious reason to merge XAI in SpaceX is because XAI is a fourth-rate lab
that Elon knows is screwed unless they get oodles of compute for free,
so they'll raise the 75 to 100 and jam it into GPUs.
SpaceX barely needs the money.
And yet, I don't think that there's going to be any shortage of retail excitement.
A new ETF is sending pre-IPO AI stocks to the moon,
although that's not necessarily a good thing.
Last week, Fundrise listed their innovation fund, which holds shares in SpaceX, Anthropic, and
Open AI. While some have praised these pre-IPO wrappers for giving retail investors early access
to startup equity, this isn't necessarily what most had in mind. Shares in the ETF are up 1,500
since launch, most recently seeing a 64% jump on Tuesday while being halted twice for volatility.
By the end of the day, the fund was valued at more than 16 times the value of the shares it
holds. There's obviously some wiggle room on how Anthropic stock is valued, but the current
ETF's price implies almost a $5 trillion valuation, and since they last raised in February at a
$380 billion valuation, it is unlikely that in that subsequent time, no matter how good we think
Claude Code is, that they have jumped to become worth more than Microsoft. Now, of course,
this is actually just a market structure issue. It's not possible to create more shares to satisfy
the demand, so the ETF can completely detach from its underlying value. To some, it's an early
indication that AI startups will have screaming hot IPOs with a ton of retail demand, while others
think it's just a sign that meme stock trading never went away. Jack Shannon of Morningstar said,
with the implied valuations when you have this premium, your upside is gone. Clearly, it's going
to attract some meme crowd and get some high-octane trading, but if someone is in this for the long
term, frankly, it's a horrible investment at the current price. Matt Malone of Opto Investments
also pointed out how this demonstrates why staying private for a really long time is really
rough on retail investors. Malone said that these numbers are great for investors who want to get out,
but if you're coming in, you're paying a huge, huge premium. This shows the dynamic from private
markets to public markets when public markets are often held out as the preferred pricing
mechanism, but in this case, the public market price doesn't really make sense.
Staying in market themes, SoftBank is apparently pushing the limits as they scrounge up funding for
their Open AI bet. The Financial Times reports that SoftBank is testing their self-imposed
borrowing limits after committing another $30 billion to OpenAI. SoftBank had previously held
themselves to a 25% loan-to-value ratio, meaning they won't borrow against more than 25% of
their stock holdings. Last year's $22.5 billion in funding already stretched them pretty thin,
with SoftBank selling all of their Nvidia holdings and taking out billions of dollars in
margin loans against their armstock. Responding to the FT's reporting,
SoftBank's CEO Yoshimitsigoto said,
I don't deny the possibility in the future that we may temporarily go beyond 25%.
Still, apparently SoftBank won't permanently change their policy, just temporarily work around
it as they hit a cash crunch. Basically, more than ever,
Masayoshi's son is betting the company on OpenAI.
Speaking of OpenAI, a big new deal between that company and Helion Energy has Sam Altman
stepping down as chairman and board member of the Fusion Energy Company.
Sam Altman personally led Helion's $500 million Series E in 2021 at a $3 billion valuation.
At the time, it was the largest ever venture investment in a nuclear fusion startup.
Axios reported that the new deal with OpenAI would guarantee the company 12.5% of the energy
initially produced.
The goal would be to scale that to 5 gigawatts by 2030 and 50 gigawatts by 2035.
Lastly today, the Pentagon's battle with Anthropic as now officially landed in the courts
with a federal judge dragging the Pentagon for their conduct against Anthropic in the latest court hearing.
On Tuesday, Anthropics' application for an injunction was heard in Northern California,
and Judge Rita Lynn was very unimpressed.
She said the Pentagon's actions were troubling, her word, as it appeared to be punishing Anthropic
for speaking out.
Now, the genesis of all this is that Anthropics sued the Pentagon
two weeks ago, claiming that their designation as a supply chain risk was on lawful retaliation.
Anthropic is seeking for that designation to be overturned.
The case is currently in its earliest stages, with Anthropics seeking an injunction to suspend
the designation until there is a full trial.
Now, the Pentagon's lawyer suggested the impact of the designation could be narrower than
previously stated.
He said that his understanding was that the designation would not prevent a military contractor
from using Claude Code to write software for the military.
Instead, he told the court the designation only stopped Anthropics technology from being used
within Pentagon systems. For those following the story, that is obviously a complete 180 from
Secretary of War Pete Higgs has the tweet, where he said, quote, effective immediately,
no contractor, supplier, or partner that does business with the United States military may
conduct any commercial activity with Anthropic. The Pentagon is now arguing that this comment was
so obviously beyond the scope of the law that Anthropics shouldn't be allowed to raise it in court.
The judge was unconvinced, stating it looks like the Pentagon is punishing Anthropic for trying
to bring public scrutiny to this contract dispute, which of course would be a violation of the First
Amendment. What's more, in this case, the chilling effect of Hegg Seth's words are just as much
of an issue as the actual designation. Anthropic said this has already caused harm among their
customers. The judge acknowledged that point, commenting, everyone, including Anthropic, agrees that
the Department of War is free to stop using Claude and look for a more permissive AI vendor.
I don't see that as being what this case is about. I see the question in this case is being a
very different one, which is whether the government violated the law. Now, even little old
super-intelligent recently got our first letters from customers, asking us to send them plans on how we will
stop using Anthropic because of their relationships with the U.S. government. That it should be clear
is not something that we are going to do. Ultimately, the case comes down to this. The Pentagon lawyer argued,
what happens if Anthropic installs a kill switch or functionality that changes how it functions? That is an
unacceptable risk. The judge retorted, though, what I'm hearing from you, though, is that it's enough
if an IT vendor is stubborn and insists on certain terms and it asks annoying questions, then it can be
designated as a supply chain risk because they might not be trustworthy. That seems a pretty low bar.
Anyways, guys, there will be more on this, I'm sure.
For now, however, that is going to do it for today's headlines.
Next up, the main episode.
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Column A, member's FDIC. Welcome back to the AI Daily Brief. The hallmark of 20206 so far has been
big inflection point style change. Obviously, that's been the case for individuals, but it also
clearly is the case among companies who are competing in the AI space. Some of the dominant themes have been
the clawification of everything in the convergence of features, and nowhere has the AI race gotten
more focused than acute than in OpenAI strategic shifts as it watches an insurgent
and anthropic start to dominate the enterprise and coding conversation. Now, we are coming up on
six months now of a renewed focus on coding and knowledge work from OpenAI. Going all the way
back, frankly, to the release of GPT5, it was increasingly clear that Code AGI was going to be a big
part of their strategy as well. And yet for most of 2025, we were still in the OpenAI paradigm of
letting a thousand flowers bloom. While Anthropic kept their head down and focused on knowledge work,
Open AI was a bit more voracious in its appetite, competing strategically in some ways much more
closely to Google's approach. But then we got OpenAI's code read in December, and with it came
renewed focus. And what's more, the focus seemed to pay off. Codex is increasingly a real
choice alongside Claude Code for many AI builders, and over the last week, there's been lots
of reporting about the ways that OpenAI is going to consolidate its focus even more.
CEO of Applications Fiji Simo, in fact confirmed reports from last week that said exactly this.
She tweeted,
Companies go through phases of exploration and phases of refocus, both are critical.
But when new bets start to work like we're seeing now with Codex,
it's very important to double down on them and avoid distractions.
Today we got the latest story on that front.
And if anything, it shows that OpenAI is quite serious about the idea of putting away side quests.
Now, some of the news was managerial.
Sam Altman told staff on Tuesday that he would be changing,
and, in fact, in some ways, reducing his role.
Altman will no longer have direct oversight of OpenAI safety and security teams
and will narrow his focus to raising capital, supply chains, and the data center buildout.
The safety team will be folded into the research organization headed by chief research officer
Mark Chen, and the security team will move into the so-called scaling organization under President
Greg Brockman.
When it comes then to core commercial strategy, Altman's reduced role seems to put CEO of
applications Fiji Simo in the driver's seat.
Her core team, the product division, will be renamed AGI deployment.
clearly in line with the company's ambitions.
Last week, the reporting said that Simo had told engineers that the next big project would be combining
chat GPT, Codex, and the Atlas browser into a desktop super app.
Now, interestingly, and somewhat unexpectedly, the latest reporting also gave us some information
around OpenAI's next big model.
In a memo, Altman told staff that the company had finished pre-training the model that is
codenamed Spud.
He said things are moving faster than many of us expected, and told staff that they expect
to have a, quote, very strong model in a, quote, few weeks.
that the team believes can really accelerate the economy, his words.
Now, people jumped all over that phrase, accelerate the economy.
Shub Thorat writes,
Accelerate the economy is doing a lot of heavy lifting.
That's either AGI or a really confident marketing team.
Now, obviously, this is an internal communication,
and while at this point I think if you're open AI,
you kind of have to assume that anything big that you say is going to be leaked at some point,
it is an interesting choice to use that type of phrasing,
which of course run the risk of over-promising and under-delivering.
Ever since the challenges of the release of GPT5, which had misaligned expectations, OpenAI has
really shied away from that sort of big, bombastic, overpromising.
Of course, someone like Altman has multiple constituencies that he's got to deal with.
In addition to getting users excited, he's got to keep his team excited as well.
And so that communication and idea could be more squarely aimed at rallying the troops in a moment
of intense transition.
Maybe the most discussed new news, though, as it relates to OpenAI's new focus, is the fact
that the mandate to end side quest has claimed its first victim.
As part of his memo, Altman announced that SORA would be sunset and OpenAI would discontinue all products that use their video models.
Within hours of the report breaking, the official SORA app account on Twitter tweeted,
We're saying goodbye to the SORA app.
To everyone who created with SORA, shared it, and built community around it, thank you.
What you made with SORA mattered and we know this news is disappointing.
We'll share more soon, including timelines for the app and API and details on preserving your work.
The decision was apparently largely due to constraints and compute resources.
The Wall Street Journal reported that some OpenAI staff had been surprised on how compute-hungry
the SORA app was, given the comparative lack of demand relative to all their other products.
With SORA winding up, Altman said the substantial compute resources could be redeployed to run
that SPUD model once it's released.
Hater on Twitter wrote,
OpenAI has finished training a new model codename Spud, which they expect will greatly accelerate
the economy.
They're also renaming their products division to AGI deployment.
Basically, they want more compute for codex, which is why they discontinued SORA.
Now, on the one hand, this makes obvious sense for SORA to be the primary casualty of the renewed focus,
because not only is it distracting from a consumer perspective, it also is extremely resource-intensive,
and as we know, there's just not enough compute to go around.
But I do think it marks a pretty significant moment,
in that this is maybe the first time that we've seen Open AI really have to choose,
at least in such a public way, to not do something that they had clear interest in and ambition in,
because of compute constraints and their need to compete in the market.
Yes, we have had Altman and other OpenAI executives at various points in the past,
say that one model or another was delayed because of compute constraints,
but shutting down an entire application that had been unveiled not that long ago with much fanfare
is a pretty compelling demonstration of just how big the stakes of these decisions are.
Speaking of which, one bit of fallout from the end of SORA is the end of the deal with Disney.
You might remember that after the SORA launched last October,
instead of suing Open AI, Disney chose to partner with them and plan to do more with the technology.
In the wake of Sora ending, Disney announced that they had canceled the partnership and will not be following through with their billion-dollar investment into OpenAI.
Still, the split seems amicable enough with Disney commenting in a statement, as the nascent AI field advances rapidly,
we respect Open AI's decision to exit the video generation business and to shift its priorities elsewhere.
We appreciate the constructive collaboration between our teams and what we learned from it, and we will continue to engage with AI platforms to find new ways to meet fans where they are,
while responsibly embracing new technologies that respect IP and the rights of creators.
Now, one part of the response to Sora ending from some parts of the community was dancing on the grave.
The Primea Jin writes,
Good. Sora accelerated one of the worst aspects of the new AI economy.
Absolutely horrible thing for Open AI to create.
This, of course, relates to the feeling that some had around the announcement of Sora that by creating AI TikTok,
whatever Open AI's intentions were, they were effectively behaving like just the latest tech
company to try to steal all of our attention for the sake of ads.
Ahmad Osman agreed, saying OpenAI just killed Sora and nothing of value was lost.
Put those GPUs to good work rather than making stupid videos.
Maybe even try to cure cancer like your original mission said.
Yet while some said that this was an indictment of the AI video space as a whole,
Mendo, who's about as deep in that space as anyone out there,
as the co-founder of Machine Cinema writes,
it's funny seeing people retweeting the demise of SORA
as evidence that AI video is doomed,
not realizing that there's a whole ecosystem now.
When SORO was first announced, it was just Mid-Journey and Runway in the game.
Now it's over 100 companies clamoring into the space
and marketing departments, agencies, and studios are all like.
locked in. OpenCodes DAX also made the point that even if you didn't like the SORA experiment,
this type of experimentation is just part and parcel of figuring out what actually is valuable.
He writes, it's lame to see all the people saying, ha, called it, I knew Sora wouldn't work.
Yeah, duh, everyone thought that, including the people who were working on it. They probably
learned a lot trying to make it work anyway. For every successful thing that exists, 100 efforts
like this had to fail. And those learnings are fed into making something that ultimately does work
and provides you with your steady paycheck. Now, on this idea that these resources could be
better spent elsewhere, not just in terms of compute but in terms of talent, it is worth noting that
the end of SORA is not coming with job cuts. OpenAI's head of SORA Bill Peebles basically said that
the SORA research team would be moving into the world model space, focusing on, quote,
systems that deeply understand the world by learning to simulate arbitrary environments at high fidelity,
with the prize, as he put it, being automating the physical economy.
Allman reaffirmed this in the memo, saying that the SORA research team will quote,
prioritize longer-term world simulation research, especially as it pertains to robotics.
Now, for some, the natural next question then, was with the end of SORA, would we also see the
end of OpenAI's ad push? The short answer is that nothing there has been canceled yet. In fact,
OpenAI has hired former meta-executive Dave Duggan is their new VP of Global Ad Solutions.
The pilot phase of ads is over and ads will be rolling out to all free and go subscribers in
the coming weeks. And yet, apparently there's still a lot of work to be done. Ad buyers have
complain that OpenAI doesn't have a modern ad sales platform and are providing very minimal metrics,
with multiple ad agency executives saying that they were unable to prove to their clients that
chat GPT ads were working. On shopping, OpenAI is dramatically pairing back the feature.
The instant checkout feature, which allows customers to buy directly from the chat GPT window,
hasn't been a success. OpenAI announced on Tuesday that they would be revamping the feature,
writing, we found that the initial version of instant checkout did not offer the level of flexibility
that we aspire to provide, so we're allowing merchants to use their own checkout experience,
while we focus our efforts on product discovery.
Basically, OpenAI will now support a variety of checkout paths,
encouraging merchants to deploy their own chatGBT apps,
as well as clicking away to external shopping platforms.
Still, one does have to wonder if there are bigger changes in the offing.
Click Health, Simon Smith writes,
Now, when does OpenAI kill its ad side quest,
since it's like a $680 billion market dominated by incumbents
versus the largely untapped roughly $40 trillion-plus market
of automatable knowledge work,
Simon's implicit argument here is, of course, that even if the path to get there is more vague,
the opportunity to reinvent how work happens in the world just feels quite a bit bigger
than the opportunity to reinvent how people buy stuff on the internet.
Now, with the renaming of the product team to the AGI deployment team,
we've had a renewed wave of conversations about what AGI actually means.
In an appearance on the Lex Friedman podcast, Jensen was asked a question where AGI came up.
Freeman basically asked when Jensen thought an AI would be able to start, grow, and run
a successful technology company worth more than a billion dollars. Jensen responded, I think it's now.
I think we've achieved AGI. It is not out of the question that a claw was able to create a web
service, some interesting little app that all of a sudden, you know, a few billion people used
for 50 cents, and then it went out of business again shortly after. Now, we saw a whole bunch of
those types of companies during the internet era, and most of those websites were not anything
more sophisticated than what OpenClaw could generate today. Now, when Friedman drilled down,
Jensen noted that his prediction only really applied to novelty software for the moment
rather than anything more complicated.
He said that he wouldn't be surprised
if some social thing happened
or somebody created a digital influencer
or some social application
that feeds your little Tomicacci
or something like that,
and it became out of the blue
an instant success.
A lot of people use it for a couple of months
and it kind of dies away.
However, he continued,
the odds of 100,000 of those agents
building Nvidia is 0%.
80,000 hours Benjamin Todd wrote an essay
Do We Already Have AGI?
With his short answer being no
and his longer answer being,
on the most prominent definitions,
current AI is superhuman in some cognitive tasks, but still worse than almost all humans at others.
That makes it impressive general, but not yet AGI.
Now, regular listeners will know that I don't think the AGI question is particularly useful
in practice. However, one thing that I have been thinking about recently, especially as we had
that discussion around what the atomic unit of AI disruption should be and why it should be
tasks rather than jobs, I think effectively what we have, and something that might kind
of explain the jagged frontier of AI capability, is it's almost like we have tasking.
AGI. Almost anything that you can ask AI to do that is specific and discreet, it can do really well.
The problem is that a lot of work is strings of tasks together where AI capability starts to
break down. And so to the extent that one's definition of AGI involves long strings of those
tasks working together effectively without a lot of human oversight or intervention, then sure,
it's more debatable if we're there or not. I kind of think Ethan Mollick has the right of it when he
tweeted, maybe we should retroactively, I'll just agree with Tyler Cowan that O3 was AGI so we can
stop arguing about it. Also, doing so will drive home the lesson that AGI alone is not enough
for transformation. As all the stories recently of OpenAI and Anthropic trying to partner with
consulting and private equity firms suggest, they are well aware that even if the models are
AGI capable, it's going to take a lot of work to actually get them to diffuse and fully work
and reinvent the systems inside big companies. Still, if you can take away anything from all these
moves from OpenAI and from the relentless pace of shipping at Claude, is that right now, more than ever,
AI companies, the only type of AGI that matters to them is work AGI.
For now, however, that is going to do it for today's AI Daily Brief.
Appreciate you listening or watching, as always.
And until next time, peace.
