agent-economy

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China’s OpenClaw-Tied Stocks Rise on Policy Support, Adoption
agent-economy

China’s OpenClaw-Tied Stocks Rise on Policy Support, Adoption

China just told its companies: build on OpenClaw or get left behind. The Signal Shenzhen, China's tech manufacturing heart, rolled out formal policy support for companies building on OpenClaw, the open-source AI agent framework that's been quietly gaining ground as an alternative to Western closed models. Stocks for Chinese firms with OpenClaw integration jumped on the news, but the real story isn't the

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China’s ‘Smart Economy’ Push Spurs Hunt for New Stock Winners
agent-economy

China’s ‘Smart Economy’ Push Spurs Hunt for New Stock Winners

Beijing just handed Chinese tech investors a roadmap, and it looks a lot like the agent economy playbook Silicon Valley is still debating. The Signal China's "smart economy" directive is state-backed venture capital at national scale. The government is funneling capital into AI, semiconductors, and automation infrastructure with the kind of coordination that makes U.S. industrial policy look like a suggestion box. Investors are

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Why the AI Boom Will Make Phones, Cars and Electronics More Expensive
agent-economy

Why the AI Boom Will Make Phones, Cars and Electronics More Expensive

The AI boom just hit its first hard constraint: memory chips, and the ripple effects are about to reshape consumer electronics pricing for years. The Signal We're watching a fundamental supply-demand collision in semiconductor memory markets. High-bandwidth memory (HBM) production, the specialized chips that AI accelerators need, is maxing out global manufacturing capacity. Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron are running their fabs hot, but they can'

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Agent Safehouse Locks Down Self-Writing AI Code on Your Mac
agent-economy

Agent Safehouse Locks Down Self-Writing AI Code on Your Mac

Someone just built the thing that should have existed the day we started running AI agents on our laptops. The Signal Agent Safehouse is macOS-native sandboxing specifically designed for local AI agents. Think of it as a containment field for code that writes itself. The project hit 413 points on Hacker News because it solves a problem everyone running local agents has been pretending isn't real: you&

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Developers create OSINT command centers monitoring global conflicts from one browser tab
agent-economy

Developers create OSINT command centers monitoring global conflicts from one browser tab

A hacker got tired of tab-surfing during global crises, so he built a real-time OSINT dashboard that tracks 25,000 ships, every commercial flight, military satellites, and conflict zones in a single browser window. The Signal This is what the agent economy looks like when it's not being built by Enterprise SaaS companies. Shadowbroker aggregates live data from ADS-B (aircraft transponders), AIS (ship tracking), N2YO (satellite telemetry)

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The changing goalposts of AGI and timelines
agent-economy

The changing goalposts of AGI and timelines

OpenAI keeps moving the AGI finish line, and the market is starting to notice. The Signal The original OpenAI Charter defined AGI as "highly autonomous systems that outperform humans at most economically valuable work." Clean definition. Measurable. But watch what's happened since. As models got better at specific tasks, the company quietly shifted focus from capability benchmarks to something mushier: "systems that can reason

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Anthropic vs. the Pentagon, the SaaSpocalypse, and why competitions is good, actually
agent-economy

Anthropic vs. the Pentagon, the SaaSpocalypse, and why competitions is good, actually

Anthropic just walked away from $200 million because the Pentagon wanted the keys to the kingdom. The Signal The Department of Defense didn't just lose a vendor. It got told no by an AI lab that decided principles were worth more than a nine-figure contract. The sticking points were specific: the Pentagon wanted control over model deployment, including use in autonomous weapons systems and domestic surveillance infrastructure.

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LLMs work best when the user defines their acceptance criteria first
agent-economy

LLMs work best when the user defines their acceptance criteria first

Your AI coding assistant isn't broken, you're just using it backwards. The Signal The Katana Quant piece that hit 435 points on HN makes a deceptively simple argument: LLMs generate better code when you write the tests first. Not groundbreaking on its face, but the implications cut deeper than TDD evangelism. The author's data shows that when developers define acceptance criteria before prompting,

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Tell HN: I'm 60 years old. Claude Code has re-ignited a passion
agent-economy

Tell HN: I'm 60 years old. Claude Code has re-ignited a passion

A 60-year-old developer just compared Claude Code to Active Server Pages in 1998, and that comparison tells you everything about where we are in the agent economy cycle. The Signal This isn't a product review. It's a marker. When someone who lived through the last genuine platform shift, someone ready to retire, gets the same midnight coding energy from AI-assisted development that they got from

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Apple's 512GB Mac Studio vanishes, a quiet acknowledgment of the RAM shortage
agent-economy

Apple's 512GB Mac Studio vanishes, a quiet acknowledgment of the RAM shortage

Apple just discontinued its 512GB Mac Studio without saying a word, and the silence tells you everything about the AI hardware crunch. The Signal The high-end Mac Studio configuration vanished from Apple's store this week. No press release. No explanation. Just gone. This isn't a product refresh cycle. Apple typically telegraphs those months in advance. This is a supply constraint so severe that even Apple,

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US economy sheds 92,000 jobs in February in sharp slide
agent-economy

US economy sheds 92,000 jobs in February in sharp slide

The US just shed 92,000 jobs in February, the sharpest monthly drop since the pandemic, and nobody's talking about what's actually doing the cutting. The Signal This isn't your standard recession story. The February jobs report shows losses concentrated in sectors that have been piloting AI workforce automation for the past 18 months: customer service, data entry, basic financial analysis, and entry-level

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OpenAI delays ChatGPT’s ‘adult mode’ again
agent-economy

OpenAI delays ChatGPT’s ‘adult mode’ again

OpenAI just pushed back its adult content mode for ChatGPT again, and the real story isn't about erotica, it's about the economics of general-purpose AI. The Signal This is the second delay for a feature OpenAI announced would let verified adults generate sexual content through ChatGPT. The December launch became March, March became "later this year." On the surface, it looks like another

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A roadmap for AI, if anyone will listen
agent-economy

A roadmap for AI, if anyone will listen

A group of AI researchers just published principles for keeping humans in the loop, and the Pentagon immediately proved why we need them. The Signal The Pro-Human Declaration dropped right as the Pentagon and Anthropic locked horns over military AI applications. The timing wasn't planned, but it crystallized something important: we're building systems faster than we're building frameworks for using them responsibly. The

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Military AI Policy Needs Democratic Oversight
agent-economy

Military AI Policy Needs Democratic Oversight

The Pentagon just tried to blacklist Anthropic for refusing to build autonomous kill switches, and nobody seems to realize this is the beta test for how AI governance actually works. The Signal Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth gave Anthropic a deadline: allow unrestricted military use of Claude or face designation as a supply chain risk. Anthropic held two red lines, domestic surveillance of U.S. citizens and fully autonomous targeting,

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Uploading Pirated Books via BitTorrent Qualifies as Fair Use, Meta Argues
agent-economy

Uploading Pirated Books via BitTorrent Qualifies as Fair Use, Meta Argues

Meta just told a federal court that scraping pirated books to train AI models is fair use, and the legal logic might actually hold. The Signal Meta is defending its LLaMA training data in a lawsuit from book publishers, and their argument cuts straight to what counts as transformative use. They're not claiming they didn't use pirated books from LibGen and Bibliotik. They're

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Why Is Alexa+ So Bad?
agent-economy

Why Is Alexa+ So Bad?

Amazon's $10/month Alexa+ upgrade has been live for months, and it's still embarrassingly bad. The Signal WIRED spent a month with Alexa+ on an Echo Show 15, and the results tell you everything about why the agent economy won't be led by companies retrofitting old products with new AI labels. Amazon launched Alexa+ as their ChatGPT moment, a premium tier that was

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How to run Qwen 3.5 locally
agent-economy

How to run Qwen 3.5 locally

Qwen 3.5 is now trivial to run locally, and that's the sound of another wall coming down between enterprise AI and everyone else. The Signal Alibaba's Qwen 3.5 models are now documented for local deployment via Unsloth, a toolkit that's become the de facto standard for running open-weight models without burning through cloud credits. This matters because Qwen 3.5 competes

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Files are the interface humans and agents interact with
agent-economy

Files are the interface humans and agents interact with

The file system isn't dying. It's becoming the shared language between you and the machines that work for you. The Signal While everyone's been obsessing over chat interfaces and natural language prompts, something quieter has been happening. Files are emerging as the universal protocol between humans and AI agents. Not because they're sexy or new, but because they're durable,

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Iran War Imperils $300 Billion in Gulf AI Spending
agent-economy

Iran War Imperils $300 Billion in Gulf AI Spending

Three hundred billion dollars in AI infrastructure just hit a geopolitical wall, and Silicon Valley's Plan B for compute just became Plan Maybe. The Signal The Gulf states have positioned themselves as the alternative power center for AI development, literally. While U.S. data centers wrestle with grid constraints and NIMBYism, the UAE and Saudi Arabia offered something Silicon Valley desperately needs: cheap energy at scale and

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