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Saturday · June 27, 2026 · Issue No. 908
Daily Briefing

Signal/Noise

Signal/Noise

2024-11-20

While everyone fixates on AI bubble fears and earnings beats, the real story is a massive power consolidation happening in plain sight. Three separate but connected moves—Trump’s preemptive strike on state AI regulation, the infrastructure cartel’s tightening grip, and the quiet retreat from human creativity—are reshaping who controls the future of intelligence itself.

The Federal Takeover: Trump’s AI Regulation Preemption Isn’t About Innovation

Trump’s draft executive order directing the DOJ to sue states for AI regulations isn’t the deregulation play it appears to be—it’s a power grab disguised as innovation policy. The order specifically targets California and Colorado’s transparency requirements, which are mild by any standard but represent something Big Tech can’t tolerate: visibility into their training data and decision processes.

The real tell is in the details. The executive order doesn’t eliminate regulation—it centralizes it at the federal level, where tech giants have maximum lobbying influence and regulatory capture is easier to achieve. Chamber of Progress, backed by Andreessen Horowitz and OpenAI, has been pushing this ‘federal preemption’ strategy for months, framing state-level oversight as innovation-killing ‘patchwork regulation.’

But here’s what they’re really afraid of: discovery. State attorneys general have subpoena power. They can compel disclosure of training datasets, algorithmic decision trees, and internal communications. Federal agencies, particularly under a business-friendly administration, are far more likely to accept industry’s ‘trust us’ approach to self-regulation.

The venture capital money flowing into this effort—$110 million from FANUC America alone, plus Nvidia’s massive infrastructure investments—isn’t betting on deregulation. It’s betting on the right kind of regulation: federal rules written by and for the companies that will dominate the space. When you can’t innovate your way out of regulatory scrutiny, you innovate your way around it by changing who writes the rules.

The Infrastructure Cartel: How Nvidia and Microsoft Are Building Moats, Not Markets

Nvidia’s earnings beat was impressive, but the $500 billion in chip commitments through 2026 tells a different story: the infrastructure layer of AI is becoming a cartel. The Microsoft-Nvidia partnership with Anthropic isn’t just another cloud deal—it’s the vertical integration of AI’s entire supply chain, from chips to training to deployment.

Look at the pattern emerging. National labs are abandoning their traditional five-year procurement cycles for ‘Silicon Valley-style’ partnerships with tech giants. Oracle and Nvidia are funding Argonne’s AI systems while getting shared access to the hardware. This isn’t efficiency; it’s capture. Public research institutions are becoming testing grounds for private infrastructure.

Meanwhile, Nokia’s $1 billion Nvidia investment and subsequent business split reveals the endgame. Traditional hardware companies aren’t just pivoting to AI—they’re becoming vassals in Nvidia’s empire. Nokia’s mobile infrastructure division will essentially become a distribution channel for AI-first networks, with Nvidia controlling the foundational architecture.

The economics are brutal. Companies like Palantir can command $400 billion valuations on the promise of intelligence, but they’re entirely dependent on infrastructure they don’t control. The real power isn’t in the AI models—it’s in the chips, the data centers, and the cloud platforms that make everything possible. Nvidia isn’t just selling shovels in a gold rush; they’re becoming the company store in a mining town.

The Creativity Recession: When Machines Do the Imagining

The most disturbing trend isn’t AI replacing jobs—it’s AI replacing imagination itself. Universities using AI-generated lecture slides, advocacy groups warning against AI toys for toddlers, and Prime Video’s AI-generated recaps represent a quiet surrender of human creativity to computational convenience.

This isn’t about efficiency or cost savings. When a Staffordshire student confronts their lecturer about AI-generated course materials, they’re highlighting something profound: the outsourcing of thought itself. Educational institutions, supposedly bastions of human knowledge development, are now farming out the basic work of teaching to systems that pattern-match rather than understand.

The toy industry warnings are even more chilling. AI companions for children as young as two aren’t teaching creativity—they’re replacing the fundamental human process of imaginative play. When kids interact with traditional toys, they create both sides of the conversation, developing language, problem-solving, and emotional intelligence. AI toys collapse that process, providing instant, polished responses that eliminate the cognitive work that builds developing minds.

This creates a feedback loop of dependency. Children who grow up with AI handling their imaginative labor become adults who can’t conceive of problems AI can’t solve. When Target integrates ChatGPT for shopping and Prime Video uses AI for content summaries, we’re not just automating tasks—we’re automating the mental processes that make us human. The most insidious part? It feels like convenience, even progress. The diminishment of human agency disguised as technological advancement.

Questions

  • If AI infrastructure becomes a public utility, should Nvidia be regulated like a monopoly—or nationalized entirely?
  • What happens to human creativity when an entire generation grows up with AI handling their imaginative labor from toddlerhood?
  • Is federal preemption of AI regulation actually creating the conditions for a more dangerous form of regulatory capture than we’ve ever seen?
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