Daily Signal · 2026-05-15
The Daily Signal — May 15, 2026
Jury deliberates in Musk v. Altman; H200 chips clear Washington but stall at Beijing's border; Google I/O three days out.
Three threads run through today's issue. In an Oakland courtroom, a jury is weighing whether Silicon Valley's most consequential organizational transformation was ever legitimate - and a $150 billion damages figure is the backdrop. In Washington and Beijing, the machinery of US-China tech decoupling is misfiring in both directions: export approvals that no one will act on, chip approvals that customs officials on the other end are refusing to honor. And across the industry's largest employers, the reallocation has a name now - AI infrastructure - and a body count measured in the tens of thousands. Google I/O on Tuesday will arrive into all of this, tasked, as ever, with making it look exciting.
Industry
Musk v. Altman jury begins deliberations as $150B in potential damages hangs over OpenAI
A nine-person jury in Oakland started deliberating today in the landmark Musk v. Altman trial, capping roughly two and a half weeks of testimony on whether OpenAI's conversion from nonprofit to for-profit violated its founding charter. The jury's verdict is advisory only - Judge Gonzalez Rogers will have the final word - but an adverse finding could pressure OpenAI's ongoing restructuring and expose it and Microsoft to damages Musk's team has pegged at $150 billion. No verdict has emerged on day one.
Compute
H200s cleared by Washington, blocked by Beijing - Nvidia's $50B China chip deal stays frozen
The US Commerce Department has formally approved Nvidia H200 exports to roughly 10 Chinese tech firms, including Alibaba, Tencent, ByteDance, and JD.com. The problem: Beijing is not reciprocating. Chinese customs authorities have told intermediaries the H200 remains a prohibited import, leaving an estimated $50 billion in potential orders in limbo despite Jensen Huang's high-profile appearance on Trump's Beijing trip last week. DeepSeek's previously reported H200 approval also remains stuck in final negotiations.
Frontier
Google I/O opens Tuesday with a new Gemini model, Veo update, and Android XR glasses on the agenda
Google I/O 2026 begins May 19 in Mountain View, with a new flagship Gemini model widely expected as the headline announcement. Pre-show leaks point to seven undisclosed Gemini Live voice variants in testing - one identified itself as "Gemini 3.1 Pro" - and a new video generation model called Gemini Omni capable of in-chat editing and remixing. Android XR smart glasses built with Samsung, Gentle Monster, and Warby Parker are also expected to appear, alongside a preview of Aluminium OS, Google's forthcoming Android-based laptop platform.
Compute
Cerebras falls 10% on its first full trading day after a debut that minted $95B market cap
One day after its 68% opening-day surge - the largest US tech IPO by amount raised since Uber's 2019 listing - Cerebras shares dropped 10% on Friday as early skepticism set in. Davidson analysts called the wafer-scale chip technology "niche-y" and warned the Wafer Scale Engine 3 is still in early maturity relative to Nvidia's more flexible GPU ecosystem. CEO Andrew Feldman and CTO Sean Lie nonetheless became billionaires on debut day, holding stakes worth $3.2B and $1.7B respectively.
Policy
CAISI will pre-screen frontier AI models before release under new agreements with Google, Microsoft, and xAI
The Center for AI Standards and Innovation, the Commerce Department body that replaced Biden's AI Safety Institute, has signed pre-deployment evaluation agreements with Google DeepMind, Microsoft, and xAI. The shift reverses Trump's earlier hands-off posture and was catalyzed by Anthropic's Mythos, whose ability to find zero-day software vulnerabilities at scale prompted NSA access and an interagency review. The White House is also separately discussing an executive order to formalize a tech-government working group for model review.
Labor
Meta's May 20 layoff wave is four days out - and a second round is already planned for H2
With Tuesday's first-wave notices arriving in four days, Meta's 8,000-person cut - 10% of its 78,865-person workforce - is now in its final countdown. The company has also halted hiring for 6,000 open roles. Reuters and Bloomberg have both confirmed a second, larger round is planned for the second half of 2026, though the scope is not yet finalized. The restructuring is framed internally as a reallocation toward AI infrastructure, mirroring a pattern seen across Microsoft, Salesforce, and Workday this year.