From blockbuster acquisitions to shifting market dynamics and a stunning talent heist, the AI landscape saw another whirlwind week. Here are the five biggest stories shaping artificial intelligence as of June 22, 2026.
1. SpaceX Acquires Cursor in Landmark $60 Billion Deal
In what is shaping up to be one of the largest AI acquisitions in history, SpaceX agreed to acquire the AI coding platform Cursor for $60 billion in an all-stock transaction. The deal, expected to close in the third quarter of 2026, will see Cursor absorb a 3.4% dilution of SpaceX’s Class A common stock. Cursor, an AI-powered coding assistant that has rapidly become a developer favorite, will bring its autonomous coding capabilities into SpaceX’s engineering ecosystem — a move that analysts say could dramatically accelerate the aerospace company’s already ambitious software development timelines. The transaction comes just days after Cursor’s blockbuster IPO, underscoring the extraordinary valuations being assigned to AI-native development tools.
2. ChatGPT’s Market Share Falls Below 50% for the First Time
OpenAI’s ChatGPT has crossed a symbolic threshold — its share of the global AI assistant market dipped below 50% for the first time. According to data from Sensor Tower, ChatGPT commanded 46.4% of users by the end of May 2026, down from comfortably over 50% as recently as January. The decline reflects intensifying competition from Google’s Gemini, which has surged to 27.7% market share, and Anthropic’s Claude, which continues to carve out a growing niche. Analysts point to Google’s deep integration of Gemini across its product ecosystem — Search, Workspace, Android — and Anthropic’s reputation for safety and enterprise-grade reliability as key drivers of the shift. The milestone marks a maturing market, one in which users are increasingly treating AI assistants as interchangeable utilities and choosing based on ecosystem fit rather than brand loyalty.
3. Nobel Laureate John Jumper Leaves DeepMind for Anthropic
In one of the most significant talent moves in recent AI history, Nobel Prize-winning chemist and computer scientist John Jumper announced he is leaving Google DeepMind after nearly nine years to join rival Anthropic. Jumper shared the 2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work on AlphaFold, the protein-folding breakthrough that transformed computational biology and opened new frontiers in drug discovery. At DeepMind, Jumper had also been a key contributor to Google’s AI coding efforts. His departure represents a major loss for Google’s AI research division and a major coup for Anthropic, which has been aggressively recruiting top-tier research talent amid the U.S. government’s ongoing scrutiny of the company’s model releases. The move signals Anthropic’s ambitions to expand beyond its core large language model work into scientific AI — a domain DeepMind has long dominated.
4. Amazon Moves to Sell Its Own AI Chips, Directly Challenging Nvidia
Amazon Web Services is preparing its most direct challenge yet to Nvidia’s near-monopoly on AI compute. Amazon’s AI chief Peter DeSantis confirmed that AWS is in early talks with potential customers about selling its custom Trainium AI chips for use in other companies’ data centers. Until now, Trainium processors were used exclusively within Amazon’s own infrastructure to power AWS AI services. By selling the chips directly, Amazon would position itself as a merchant silicon supplier — much as Nvidia does today — giving enterprises an alternative to the H100 and B200 GPUs that currently dominate the market. The move could reshape the economics of AI infrastructure, offering cloud customers a path to reduce their reliance on Nvidia while keeping more of their compute spend within the Amazon ecosystem.
5. FERC Mandates Fast Lane for AI Data Center Grid Connections
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) issued a series of orders directing U.S. grid operators to create an interconnection fast lane specifically for AI data centers. The ruling aims to address the growing bottleneck in connecting compute facilities to the power grid — a problem that has delayed the buildout of new AI infrastructure across the country. While the fast lane expedites regulatory paperwork and queue jumping for interconnection requests, critics note that the order does not address the underlying electricity supply shortages that threaten to constrain AI expansion. The ruling comes alongside a broader push by the Trump administration to accelerate permitting for data center infrastructure, reflecting Washington’s recognition that AI compute capacity has become a matter of national strategic importance.
Together, these five stories paint a picture of an industry in rapid, sometimes chaotic, transformation — where talent, capital, compute, and regulatory power are all being reshuffled at once. The only certainty is that the pace of change shows no signs of slowing down.












