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Anthropic’s Cash Surge Fuels Global Claude Push and Enterprise Deals

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Anthropic’s Cash Surge Fuels Global Claude Push and Enterprise Deals

AI & Machine Learning

Anthropic announced a $65 billion Series H that values the company at $965 billion post‑money, a near‑trillion valuation that dramatically expands its war chest for compute, safety research, and commercial scale for Claude. The company said the funding will support expanded compute capacity and deepen partnerships with hyperscalers and hardware partners, naming commitments that include AWS, Google Cloud, Microsoft, SpaceX, Micron, Samsung and SK hynix. This-sized round will reshape competitive dynamics for frontier models by locking in large-scale infrastructure and accelerating product deployments to enterprise customers. The scale of the investment also raises fresh questions about governance, oversight and how Anthropic will balance growth with safety and interpretability research. Source: Anthropic Verified: True

Anthropic released Claude Opus 4.8, an incremental Opus‑class update the company says improves coding, agentic reasoning, multimodal inputs and long‑context handling while adding user “effort” controls and a faster, cheaper fast mode. The release also introduces dynamic workflows aimed at agentic tasks across large codebases and includes a system card plus an alignment assessment to explain safety behavior changes. For enterprise and developer customers the update promises better throughput and control for production agents and code-assistant workflows, while Anthropic’s transparency artifacts aim to preempt regulatory and customer scrutiny. The release underscores a continuing industry pattern of iterative model upgrades focused on developer ergonomics and safety auditing. Source: Anthropic Verified: True

Anthropic opened a Milan office to deepen ties with Italian enterprises, universities and designers, signaling broader European expansion and local support for Claude deployments in finance, energy and life sciences. The Milan presence is framed as a regional hub to run customer pilots, coordinate research partnerships and provide closer enterprise support for customers with data residency and regulatory needs. This move follows Anthropic’s recent funding and reflects a push to localize sales, safety engagement and developer programs across major European markets. Local offices also give Anthropic more leverage to shape procurement and compliance conversations with government and industry partners. Source: Anthropic Verified: True

Anthropic appointed KiYoung Choi as Representative Director for Korea to lead preparations for a Seoul office and build partnerships across finance, healthcare and government sectors. Choi will report to Anthropic’s Head of Asia and is charged with establishing local developer programs, coordinating research and safety efforts, and driving enterprise adoption across APAC. The hire indicates Anthropic’s intent to embed locally for sales, compliance and research collaboration as it scales Claude in Asia. Regional leadership appointments like this are a practical complement to large funding rounds, helping translate capital into market presence and customer traction. Source: Anthropic Verified: True

Consumer Hardware

Oura opened preorders for the slimmer Oura Ring 5, priced from $399, advertising a smaller form factor, up to nine days of battery life, a charging case and new software features such as Live Activity mode and a Health Radar for breathing and blood‑pressure signals. The company also highlighted partnerships for AI‑assisted medical guidance, positioning the Ring 5 as a sleep and wellness device moving closer to clinical signals while still remaining a consumer wearable. Shipping is scheduled to start June 4, and the product will test consumer appetite for health hardware that blends long battery life with richer physiological monitoring and algorithmic interpretation. If adoption follows, Oura could deepen its subscription services and integrations with health providers, but will also face scrutiny over medical claims and data privacy. Source: The Verge Verified: True

Cybersecurity

IBM and Red Hat unveiled “Project Lightwell,” a $5 billion, AI‑augmented program that combines a trusted clearinghouse model with a 20,000‑engineer force to detect, validate and remediate open‑source vulnerabilities at scale for enterprise customers. The initiative promises subscription services to push validated patches into production, coordinate upstream disclosure, and use automated tooling to prioritize and remediate critical issues in widely used OSS components. For enterprises this could reduce the operational burden of dependency management and accelerate fix deployment, but it also raises questions about centralization of trust and how upstream maintainers will be engaged and compensated. Project Lightwell represents a major corporate bet that the market will pay for curated, production‑ready OSS security services in the AI era. Source: IBM Newsroom Verified: True

Security reporting and researchers say a threat actor has posted what is claimed to be a “mega” OnlyFans data set — roughly 340 million records — for sale, a trove that could enable account takeover, phishing and doxxing campaigns against both creators and subscribers. The dataset’s size and alleged contents have prompted warnings about downstream fraud and identity theft; investigators are still validating the claims and advising heightened monitoring and credential resets where appropriate. If authenticated, the leak would rank among large consumer platform breaches and underscore persistent risks from aggregated third‑party data and credential reuse. Platforms and users alike face renewed pressure to harden authentication, user notification processes, and post‑breach remediation playbooks. Source: CyberNews Verified: True

Enterprise Infrastructure

AWS launched a Local Zone in Istanbul to provide low‑latency compute and data residency options in Türkiye and included the announcement in a weekly roundup that also highlighted new developer and AI tooling such as ExtendDB (an open‑source DynamoDB‑compatible adapter), SageMaker OpenAI‑compatible endpoints, and Kiro Web. The Istanbul Local Zone extends AWS’s regional footprint to better serve local enterprises, media, gaming and regulated industries that need proximity for latency or compliance reasons. The additional tooling mentioned in the roundup points to AWS’s dual focus on regional infrastructure and developer-facing services that ease cloud migration and model hosting. For enterprises, this combination lowers latency and regulatory friction while expanding options for deploying AI and database workloads closer to users. Source: AWS Blog Verified: True

Policy & Regulation

No major stories this sector today.