
早上好。曾几何时,机器人假扮人类还只是故事里的情节。最臭名昭著的案例当属婚外情网站Ashley Madison的争议。后来人们发现,网站上的男性用户是真人,而女性用户几乎清一色都是机器人。
仅仅十多年后,形势已经逆转:如今人类反而成了意料之外的“闯入者”。例如,在类社交网络平台Moltbook上,据称多达150万个AI智能体能“自主”互动,就技术问题或其他任务相互求助。正如《财富》杂志记者伊娃·罗伊特伯格的报道,网络安全公司Wiz的一项最新调查发现,Moltbook上绝大多数AI智能体其实并非真正自主。幕后实际上有约1.7万名人类在操控这些智能体,平均每88个智能体背后就有1个真人。
SpaceX吞并xAI
埃隆·马斯克旗下的火箭公司SpaceX,已收购由他三年前创立的AI公司xAI。这笔规模巨大且不同寻常的交易,将两家私营企业合并为一家据报估值高达1.25万亿美元的庞然大物,并计划在今年进行历史性的首次公开募股(IPO)。
马斯克同时担任SpaceX和xAI的首席执行官,他指出,天基数据中心是此次合并最重要的优势之一,尽管这一概念尚未得到验证,且在很大程度上仍停留在理论层面。马斯克在SpaceX博客中写道:“即便在短期内,全球AI的用电需求也无法仅靠地面解决方案来满足。这些卫星可直接利用几乎取之不竭的太阳能,且运营和维护成本极低,将彻底改变我们扩展算力的能力。”
在此次收购公告中对xAI的旗舰产品Grok只字未提。这款聊天机器人因生成带有性化特征的女性深度伪造图像,而在一些国家遭到封禁。
尽管1月底就已经出现了有关潜在交易的报道,但这笔交易的天文数字估值以及迅速完成的节奏,仍令许多业内观察人士震惊,凸显了市场对AI的巨大预期,也折射出对市场可能过热、终将迎来清算的担忧。
据彭博社报道,SpaceX与xAI合并后将形成一家估值1.25万亿美元的企业,其中xAI的每股估值为526.59美元。据称,马斯克一直在讨论SpaceX今年推进IPO的潜在条款,目标估值为8,000亿美元,这有望成为有史以来规模最大的IPO。(财富中文网)
译者:刘进龙
审校:汪皓
早上好。曾几何时,机器人假扮人类还只是故事里的情节。最臭名昭著的案例当属婚外情网站Ashley Madison的争议。后来人们发现,网站上的男性用户是真人,而女性用户几乎清一色都是机器人。
仅仅十多年后,形势已经逆转:如今人类反而成了意料之外的“闯入者”。例如,在类社交网络平台Moltbook上,据称多达150万个AI智能体能“自主”互动,就技术问题或其他任务相互求助。正如《财富》杂志记者伊娃·罗伊特伯格的报道,网络安全公司Wiz的一项最新调查发现,Moltbook上绝大多数AI智能体其实并非真正自主。幕后实际上有约1.7万名人类在操控这些智能体,平均每88个智能体背后就有1个真人。
SpaceX吞并xAI
埃隆·马斯克旗下的火箭公司SpaceX,已收购由他三年前创立的AI公司xAI。这笔规模巨大且不同寻常的交易,将两家私营企业合并为一家据报估值高达1.25万亿美元的庞然大物,并计划在今年进行历史性的首次公开募股(IPO)。
马斯克同时担任SpaceX和xAI的首席执行官,他指出,天基数据中心是此次合并最重要的优势之一,尽管这一概念尚未得到验证,且在很大程度上仍停留在理论层面。马斯克在SpaceX博客中写道:“即便在短期内,全球AI的用电需求也无法仅靠地面解决方案来满足。这些卫星可直接利用几乎取之不竭的太阳能,且运营和维护成本极低,将彻底改变我们扩展算力的能力。”
在此次收购公告中对xAI的旗舰产品Grok只字未提。这款聊天机器人因生成带有性化特征的女性深度伪造图像,而在一些国家遭到封禁。
尽管1月底就已经出现了有关潜在交易的报道,但这笔交易的天文数字估值以及迅速完成的节奏,仍令许多业内观察人士震惊,凸显了市场对AI的巨大预期,也折射出对市场可能过热、终将迎来清算的担忧。
据彭博社报道,SpaceX与xAI合并后将形成一家估值1.25万亿美元的企业,其中xAI的每股估值为526.59美元。据称,马斯克一直在讨论SpaceX今年推进IPO的潜在条款,目标估值为8,000亿美元,这有望成为有史以来规模最大的IPO。(财富中文网)
译者:刘进龙
审校:汪皓
Good morning. Once upon a time, bots pretending to be human was a story. The most infamous example was the controversy over Ashley Madison, an online site designed for those seeking extra-marital affairs. It turned out that the men on the site were real, but the women were overwhelmingly bots.
Fast forward a decade or so, and the tables have turned: it’s the humans who are now the unexpected guests. Consider Moltbook, a social network-like platform where as many as 1.5 million AI agents are said to interact autonomously, asking each other for help on technical subjects and for assistance on other tasks. As Fortune’s Eva Roytburg writes, a new investigation by security firm Wiz found that the vast majority of the AI agents on Moltbook were not autonomous at all. Behind the proverbial curtain are about 17,000 humans controlling the agents—roughly one human for every 88 bots.
SpaceX swallows xAI
Elon Musk’s rocket company SpaceX has acquired xAI, the artificial company founded by Musk three years ago, in a massive, and unconventional, deal that combines the two privately held firms into a company with an astounding $1.25 trillion reported valuation and plans for a historic IPO this year.
Musk, who is the CEO of both companies, cited the potential for space-based data centers as one of the most important benefits of the combination, even though the concept is still unproven and largely theoretical. “Global electricity demand for AI simply cannot be met with terrestrial solutions, even in the near term,” Musk wrote in a SpaceX blog post. “By directly harnessing near-constant solar power with little operating or maintenance costs, these satellites will transform our ability to scale compute,” Musk wrote.
xAI's flagship product, Grok, a chat which has recently been blocked in some countries for producing sexualized deepfakes of women, went completely unmentioned in the announcement.
While reports of a potential deal emerged last week, the stratospheric value of the transaction and the swiftness with which it closed left many industry observers in awe, underscoring the massive expectations around AI as well as fears of an overheated market that could be due for a reckoning.
According to reporting in Bloomberg, the deal between SpaceX and xAI will lead to a combined enterprise value of $1.25 trillion, with shares of xAI valued at $526.59 apiece. Musk has reportedly been hashing out the potential terms of a SpaceX IPO this year that would value the company at $800 billion, setting the stage for what could be the largest initial public offering of all time.—Amanda Gerut
Palantir Q4 results wow Wall Street
Palantir Technologies has come under fire in some sectors for its role working with ICE, but on Wall Street, investors cheered Monday as the data analytics firm delivered a powerful combination of faster growth, fatter margins, and a revenue outlook “crushing consensus expectations.”
The Denver-based company reported fourth-quarter revenue of about $1.41 billion, topping analyst expectations and marking another record period for the company famously named after a magical object from The Lord of the Rings. Adjusted earnings per share came in at 25 cents, two cents above consensus, while net income climbed to about $609 million.
Palantir’s AI platform remained the main growth engine, particularly in the U.S. commercial market. The company’s “boot camp” go-to-market model—short, intensive workshops where Palantir teams build live applications on customer data in days—has compressed sales cycles from months to weeks in some cases, with several organizations signing seven-figure deals shortly after attending. Shares in Palantir were up nearly 8% in post market trading. As for the controversial ICE contracts? The topic never came up on the earnings call.—Nick Licthenberg
OpenAI fires back at Claude Cowork with Codex app
OpenAI is in an increasingly cutthroat fight with Anthropic and Google to be the platform on which software developers—and increasingly others, too—build new software applications.
On Monday, OpenAI launched its latest salvo in the battle, with the debut of a desktop app version of Codex coding assistant. In January, Anthropic launched a similar application for its popular Claude coding assistant, called Code Cowork.
OpenAI is betting that developers want centralized control over agent workflows: The new Codex app lets users run multiple AI agents at once across different projects, automate repetitive tasks, and monitor what the agents are doing. And it's designed to be more intuitive than earlier versions of Codex, potentially broadening Codex’s appeal beyond the software engineers who have been its primary users so far.—Beatrice Nolan