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Why ‘Nvidia Inside’ Can Work in the PC Market - WSJ

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LLM (google/gemini-3.1-flash-lite-20260507) summary:

  • Strategic Pivot: nvidia extends its market dominance by launching central-processing units for personal computers to displace established x86 providers.
  • Market Speculation: financial markets reacted with predictable frenzy as shares of nvidia and affiliated hardware manufacturers rose on artificial intelligence hype.
  • Competitive Displacement: the plan targets the weakening grip of intel and amd, who currently struggle to manufacture excitement for their existing hardware products.
  • Industry Stagnation: despite corporate narratives of a revolutionary artificial intelligence boom, global personal computer sales remain tepid and below historical peaks.
  • Forced Adoption: recent sales of hardware with artificial intelligence features occur mostly because consumers lack viable alternatives at preferred performance levels.
  • Substantial Revenue: while pc-related business grows, it remains merely a secondary enterprise compared to the vast sums extracted from data center hardware sales.
  • Technical Obstacles: transition to arm-based architectures faces significant friction due to entrenched software dependence on legacy x86 instruction sets.
  • Brand Cultism: the strategy relies heavily on the hope that the current artificial intelligence cachet will replicate the historical success of marketing slogans like intel inside.

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang holding two laptops displaying video games.Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang introduced the RTX Spark laptop during his keynote speech at Computex 2026 in Taipei. I-Hwa Cheng/AFP/Getty Images

The “Intel Inside” marketing campaign made Intel a household name and a ubiquitous personal-computer chip supplier in the 1990s.

These days, “Nvidia Inside” has a lot more selling power.

That is what Nvidia NVDA 6.26%increase; green up pointing triangle is betting with its new line of PC chips, set to be in Windows-based computers launching later this year. With its artificial-intelligence cachet, it is very likely that Nvidia will succeed, potentially upending an order in the PC world that has prevailed for pretty much the past five decades.

Investors are optimistic. Nvidia’s shares jumped more than 6% on Monday, while Windows-maker Microsoft MSFT 2.28%increase; green up pointing triangle rose more than 2%. Shares of PC makers Dell Technologies DELL 10.70%increase; green up pointing triangle and HP HPQ 8.51%increase; green up pointing triangle both surged more than 8%. Arm Holdings ARM 15.73%increase; green up pointing triangle, which licenses the basic blueprints that Nvidia uses in its PC chips, jumped more than 15%.

The direct impact of Nvidia’s PC play on its finances will likely be limited, given the enormous size of the company’s business selling AI chips for data centers. But the move does put Nvidia in a position to supercharge the market for AI-enabled computers and disrupt incumbents in the process. 

Nvidia isn’t exactly a new entrant to the market. It has been a big player in PCs for decades through its graphics chips, which produce sharper and smoother images on computer monitors—a capability videogamers prize. But before detailing its latest chips at a trade show in Taiwan, it hadn’t made the central-processing units at the computational hearts of PCs. Intel INTC -4.67%decrease; red down pointing triangle and Advanced Micro Devices AMD -1.16%decrease; red down pointing triangle dominate that market.

Nvidia’s new chips, which combine a CPU with the company’s wildly popular AI-computing hardware, come at a time of weakness for Intel. Intel remains the biggest supplier of CPUs for traditional Windows PCs, with a market share of about 64% in the final quarter of last year, according to Mercury Research. But Intel and other players in the PC market haven’t been able to convince huge numbers of consumers or companies to buy new computers because of the AI capabilities of their chips.

Around 270 million PCs were sold last year, according to Gartner, up by around 9% from 2024. That isn’t a stellar increase amid an AI boom that is supposed to transform how people work and live. The total is still below its Covid-era peak of about 340 million in 2021.

So far, most sales of AI-enabled PCs to date have been by default. Computer makers are adding neural-processing chips that enable some on-device AI functions to all of their higher-performing product lines. 

“The buyers choosing AI PCs today aren’t necessarily doing so for the AI,” said Jitesh Ubrani of market research firm IDC, which tracks PC sales. “They’re doing so because, at a certain performance tier, there’s no alternative.” 

For Nvidia, PCs are a small part of its business now. But the company boasts a strong appeal in the segment, which bodes well for its latest effort. Nvidia’s PC-related revenue jumped 41% in the fiscal year ended January to a little over $16 billion, thanks in part to the introduction of new videogaming chips under the company’s popular Blackwell brand. Total PC unit sales grew only 8% during the calendar year, according to IDC data. 

Created with Highcharts 9.0.1Global PC-unit shipments per yearSource: IDC
Created with Highcharts 9.0.12015'20'25050100150200250300350400 million

Whether Nvidia makes further inroads with its PC chips will be a test of the power of its brand and its close association with the AI boom. It will likely be much easier for Nvidia to sell people and companies on new AI-ready computers than it has been for Intel or AMD—or for that matter, Apple AAPL -1.84%decrease; red down pointing triangle, which also has a popular line of computers that use homegrown chips.

Nvidia’s rise won’t come without challenges—the largest of which may be the software stickiness that has built up around Intel’s and AMD’s processors. They use a basic chip architecture called x86. But software that works on x86 processors needs to be adapted to work well on Nvidia’s or Apple’s Arm-based chips.

There is now a version of Microsoft’s Windows operating system for Arm-based chips, and software engineers have been developing more programs for Arm as the number of Arm-based PCs grows. But Arm as a PC platform remains at a software-development disadvantage vis-à-vis x86, including in areas such as gaming, which remains an important end market for Nvidia.

Ultimately though, Nvidia’s entrance into CPUs for PCs is likely to further erode the remaining x86 advantage, especially in the world of Windows-based PCs, where it has been difficult for new Arm-based players to gain a foothold.

“Intel Inside” worked for many years. But in tech, even memorable marketing slogans have a shelf life.

Copyright ©2026 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Asa Fitch is a writer covering technology for The Wall Street Journal’s Heard on the Street column, based in New York. He also co-writes the Journal's weekly AI & Business newsletter. Asa previously reported on semiconductor companies from the Journal’s San Francisco and New York bureaus, where he covered Nvidia’s rise amid the AI boom and Intel’s struggles to turn itself around.

Prior to that, Asa spent a decade as a foreign correspondent in the Middle East. He joined the Journal in Dubai, where he initially covered business and finance before shifting to covering regional politics and conflicts. He covered the Gaza War in 2014, the military campaign against Islamic State in Iraq, the Yemeni civil war, and Iranian elections and politics, including the country’s nuclear deal in 2015.

Asa began his career as a general-news reporter in Connecticut and a personal finance reporter in New York. He is a graduate of Carleton College and Columbia University's journalism school.

Dan Gallagher is a columnist for The Wall Street Journal’s Heard on the Street, where he covers the technology and media industries. His work for the Heard column spans the businesses of artificial intelligence, semiconductors, internet, software, hardware, advertising, streaming TV and film. Dan also co-writes WSJ's AI & Business newsletter.

He joined the column in 2013 after nearly two decades covering tech as a news reporter—starting well before smartphones got smart. 

Dan previously spent 10 years at MarketWatch, where he built a data news team and served as technology editor. He is based in San Francisco.


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Trump’s Border Triumph // A recently revised estimate from the Congressional Budget Office finds 1.5 million fewer illegal immigrants in the country than would have been the case had Biden’s policies continued.

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  • Policy shift impact: Congressional Budget Office (CBO) data indicates a reversal in immigration trends, shifting from a projected increase of 1.1 million to a net decrease of 360,000 illegal aliens in 2025.
  • Administrative enforcement: The sharp decline is attributed to executive actions implemented in January 2025, specifically the reinstatement of Migrant Protection Protocols and the termination of categorical parole and CBP One app facilitation.
  • Border control effectiveness: Over 90 percent of the reduction in illegal immigration results from stricter border policies rather than interior deportations, with releases at ports of entry and between ports dropping by over 94 percent compared to 2024.
  • Deterrence of illegal crossings: Estimations show an 83 percent reduction in unauthorized entries—evasions of capture—following the end of policies perceived as incentives for migration.
  • Historical context: The swing in the illegal alien population between the final three years of the previous administration and the first three years of the current one is estimated at 6.7 million people, surpassing the combined populations of Phoenix and Los Angeles.
  • Legal mandate fulfillment: The observed reductions validate the efficacy of existing federal statutes, such as the Immigration and Nationality Act's mandate that asylum-seekers be detained during proceedings, contradicting assertions that legislative reform was a prerequisite for border security.

The establishment political consensus has long held that it’s impossible to rein in illegal immigration until Congress passes “comprehensive immigration reform.” The Congressional Budget Office has recently made clear that all it really takes is a president willing to enforce federal immigration laws, as he is constitutionally required to do.

The CBO recently revised its estimates concerning the number of illegal aliens entering or leaving the United States. More than a year ago, just before Inauguration Day, the CBO estimated that a net 1.1 million “other foreign nationals”—those lacking “a legal immigration status”—would be added to the U.S. population in 2025. Now the CBO has revised that estimate downward by a whopping 1.5 million illegal aliens—from an increase of 1.1 million to a decrease of 360,000. This downward revision of 1.5 million people is equivalent to the population of San Antonio.

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What caused this “significant reduction?” The congressional scorekeeper’s answer is clear. The decline was “driven largely by administrative actions taken since January 20, 2025.” The CBO particularly emphasizes an action that President Donald Trump took on his first day in office: “Executive Order 14165 reinstated the policy of Migrant Protection Protocols, which require people who want to apply for asylum in the United States to return to the territory from which they came.” The CBO adds, “That order also ended all categorical parole programs and ceased the use of the CBP One app as a method of paroling or facilitating the entry of people into the United States.”

Under President Joe Biden, illegal aliens who “arrived between official ports of entry”—that is, along the open (southwestern) border—“were generally released into the United States,” writes the CBO. It adds, “People could also use the CBP One app to schedule an appointment at a port of entry” and then “be released into the United States.”

The Trump administration almost immediately stopped the Biden administration’s lawless practice of releasing illegal aliens into the U.S. interior. This accounts for the CBO estimate that 1.5 million fewer illegal aliens were living in the U.S. at the end of 2025 than would have been the case with a continuation of Biden’s policies. The 46th president’s “equity”-based policies brought about a border crisis by design.

While the mainstream press emphasizes ICE raids and deportations, the Trump administration’s removal of aliens from the U.S. interior accounted for less than one-tenth of the CBO’s downward revision in net illegal immigration—it estimates that 120,000 people were removed from the U.S. interior in 2025. Far from being driven by deportations, more than 90 percent of the Trump administration’s success in reducing illegal immigration has come from limiting border crossings, per the CBO’s figures.

The CBO estimates that 540,000 illegal aliens arrived along the open border in 2024, between the ports of entry, and were released into the U.S. by the Biden administration. In 2025, such releases dipped to 20,000—a 96 percent decrease. Similarly, 960,000 illegal aliens arrived at the ports of entry and were released into the U.S. in 2024, compared with only 60,000 in 2025—a 94 percent drop. (Many of those released under Trump were unaccompanied minors, required by law to be released to sponsor families.)

What’s more, only about half of the 2025 releases occurred from February through December. Most of the releases at the ports, and many of the releases along the open border, occurred in January, when Biden was still in office for most of the month. In fact, roughly the same number of illegal aliens were released into the country during three weeks of Biden as during 49 weeks of Trump.

In addition, the Trump administration dramatically cut the number of people who evaded capture and snuck across the border. The CBO estimates that about 300,000 people escaped across the border in this manner in 2024 but only about 50,000 did so in 2025—an 83 percent reduction. In a 2023 immigration case, U.S. District Court Judge T. Kent Wetherell said the Biden administration’s “actions were akin to posting a flashing ‘Come In, We’re Open’ sign on the southern border.” When the Trump administration effectively unplugged that sign, the number of people trying to sneak across the border dropped dramatically.

In all, the CBO estimates that about 80,000 people lacking “a legal immigration status” were released into the U.S. last year (roughly half of them during the 20 days of Biden), while 50,000 snuck across the border and 260,000 overstayed their visas. Meanwhile, 400,000 decided to leave voluntarily, 120,000 were removed from the interior of the U.S., and 225,000 attained permanent legal status. That amounts to a one-year reduction in the illegal alien population of about 360,000, whereas the CBO had previously projected an increase of about 1.1 million.

The CBO now projects that over the first three years of the Trump administration, the number of illegal aliens living in the U.S. will decrease by 1 million (with reductions of 360,000 in 2025, 330,000 in 2026, and 330,000 in 2027). Over the last three years of the Biden administration, the CBO estimates a 5.7 million increase (2 million in 2022, 2.4 million in 2023, and 1.3 million in 2024) in the number of illegal aliens living in the U.S. That 6.7 million swing—from 5.7 million to negative 1 million—exceeds the combined populations of Los Angeles and Phoenix. That’s the difference between three years of Biden’s policies versus three years of Trump’s, according to the CBO.

The success that the Trump administration has had in reversing the flow of illegal immigration—simply by enforcing existing laws—was broadly thought to be impossible. Less than a year before Trump took office, the Wall Street Journal editorial board wrote that “the President needs Congress to fix the underlying incentives at the border.” A few months later, the Biden White House issued a fact sheet that began, “Since his first day in office, President Biden has called on Congress to secure our border.” When asked about illegal immigration during a 60 Minutes interview in October 2024, Vice President Kamala Harris said that “we need Congress to be able to act to actually fix the problem.”

It turns out that fixing the problem required only executing the laws already on the books—specifically the law requiring that asylum-seekers be detained while their cases are heard, rather than being released into the interior of the country. The Immigration and Nationality Act declares that “if an alien asserts a credible fear of persecution, he or she shall be detained for further consideration of the application for asylum.” Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito writes that these detention “requirements, as we have held, are mandatory.”

The foreign-born portion of the U.S. population rose from 4.7 percent in 1970 to 16.2 percent in 2023, and probably reached about 16.8 percent in 2024—easily breaking the previous all-time record of 14.8 percent set in 1890, at the height of the great waves of nineteenth-century immigration. It will take many years of enforcing existing immigration laws to see that percentage dip back down to something approaching historical norms. But as the CBO now acknowledges, the Trump administration is making significant headway—even if the congressional scorekeeper didn’t see it coming.

Jeffrey H. Anderson is president of the American Main Street Initiative and served as director of the Bureau of Justice Statistics at the U.S. Department of Justice from 2017 to 2021.

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A Weak Justification for Dropping ShotSpotter

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LLM (google/gemini-3.1-flash-lite-20260507) summary:

  • Flawed Methodology: the cited analysis from the university of chicago justice project relies on inconsistent timeframes that fail to account for seasonal variations in crime and emergency call volumes.
  • Data Discrepancies: local reporting highlights that the underlying data used to justify shotspotter removal is unreliable and suffers from significant statistical oversights.
  • Subjective Comparisons: the research team cherry-picked a winter period for post-shotspotter response times, essentially comparing cold months with statistically lower call volumes to warmer, high-activity months.
  • Hidden Variables: the study conveniently excludes gunshot-related calls from its response time metrics without providing transparent justification for why these were omitted from broader analysis.
  • Contextual Distortion: chicago's recent fluctuations in crime align with national trends, making it impossible to attribute local improvements specifically to the administrative decision to axe public safety technology.
  • Questionable Impact: statistical evidence suggests the purported gains in response efficiency are drastically overstated, with the proposed improvements potentially losing half their significance if a proper control group were applied.
  • Implementation Challenges: while proponents frame the removal as a success, actual operational outcomes are obscured by the city's broader staffing deficits and inability to effectively leverage existing policing tools.
  • Ideological Bias: the current municipal rhetoric prioritizes political performance over rigorous evidence, settling for superficial metrics rather than addressing the core complexities of urban public safety.

Courtesy Scott Olson/Getty Images

“The data proves we’re doing what works: investing in communities, improving response times, and giving police officers tools that are effective,” Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson announced on X last week. “Not wasting taxpayer dollars for walkie talkies on poles that overpolice communities without improving safety.”

He was referring to a brief analysis from the University of Chicago Justice Project, which purported to show a 4.2-minute improvement in response time to “Priority 1” 911 calls—calls that require an immediate response—as well as a decline in violent crime after the city ended its use of ShotSpotter.

ShotSpotter is, basically, a system of microphones that monitor for the sound of gunshots in designated areas and, after human review of any gunfire-like bangs, turns the audio and estimated coordinates over to the cops.

The Justice Project’s analysis is weak sauce, despite the intense coverage it’s received in the Chicago media. The results have little bearing on the question of whether Chicago did the right thing by ending ShotSpotter in late 2024, or whether Johnson’s administration is doing the wrong thing by dragging its feet as it searches for a replacement.

To begin with, as the crime-watchers at CWBChicago promptly reported, the underlying data are less than perfect—the city doesn’t record response times as reliably as it should. Further, there are two significant sleights of hand in the analysis itself, key details the authors buried in fine print at the bottom of the web page where they presented their results.

First, the analysis uses two different time periods. When analyzing crime rates, the authors contrast the first nine months of 2024 and the first nine months of 2025—a sensible way of addressing the fact that crime is seasonal, rising in the summer and plummeting in the (frigid, if you’re in Chicago) winter. They explicitly note this time period not just in the fine print but also in the main text of the analysis.

By contrast, when they look at response times, the main text merely refers to an unspecified period “after ShotSpotter was removed.” Only by reading the fine print do we learn they are comparing “the six months right before the shutdown of ShotSpotter in 2024 and the first six months right after the shutdown.”

Which is to say that they are comparing, basically, a spring and summer with ShotSpotter to a fall and winter without it. This is a problem because, much like crime in general, Chicago’s Priority 1 calls have a strong seasonal pattern:

Chicago Priority 1 911 Calls

Source: Chicago Inspector General 911 call data, subset to Priority 1 calls.

There are simply fewer calls to respond to at colder times of the year. Further, this will have a bigger impact on the higher-crime areas where ShotSpotter was installed—which helps explain why, according to the analysis, ShotSpotter areas had twice the response-time improvement that non-covered areas did.

Incidentally, that same number implies that if the authors had used non-covered beats as a control group, rather than just comparing response times in ShotSpotter areas at two different parts of the year, their headline 4.2-minute result would have been cut in half.

The other issue CWBChicago flagged is that the researchers removed gunshot calls from the data. To be clear, there’s nothing inherently wrong with analyzing high-priority non-gunshot calls specifically. If, for example, ShotSpotter improved responses to gunshot calls but undermined responses to other calls, that would be worth knowing. But this is something readers should have been told up front, rather than being buried in fine print.

I’d like to add a few points to those raised by CWBChicago as well.

One is that Chicago’s recent crime decline has mirrored an improvement for the overall U.S.; over the past four years, murders have fallen by nearly half in both. This makes it difficult to tell what’s driving trends in the Windy City specifically, either citywide or in the higher-crime neighborhoods that had ShotSpotter—and it shows why accounting for the annual seasonality of crime trends, while necessary, does not isolate the impact of ShotSpotter itself.

If you thought ShotSpotter magically cut crime by 75 percent everywhere it’s installed, I suppose the similar crime declines in Chicago and the rest of the country should disabuse you of that notion. More realistically, though, the system might modestly reduce crime by getting cops to scenes a bit faster and producing extra evidence, and this analysis can’t distinguish such nuances from broader trends and noise in the data.

The balance of work between Priority 1 911 calls and ShotSpotter alerts is also worth pondering. As depicted in the chart above, Chicago police receive around 30,000 to 50,000 Priority 1 calls per month. Under ShotSpotter in 2024, the department was also getting about 2,000 to 3,000 monthly ShotSpotter alerts that weren’t accompanied by a 911 call about the same noises. The department’s work is divided amongst 11,500 officers.

What to make of such figures? The department has a lot on its plate, its current staffing is not sufficient for the challenges it faces, and responding to ShotSpotter calls certainly can have some impact on response times for other matters. Given that Priority 1 response times exceed ten or even 15 minutes on many beats even in the authors’ second period, these are clearly serious concerns. Nonetheless, the high ratio of top-priority 911 calls to ShotSpotter alerts should make us skeptical of a big role for the latter in overall response times.

ShotSpotter comes with real tradeoffs, which I laid out in considerable detail in a report last year. In general, it does seem to get cops to the scene of likely gunfire more quickly than 911 calls and boost evidence recovery, and it does sometimes alert cops to incidents they wouldn’t have heard about otherwise.

It also leads cops to scenes where they can’t find physical evidence of gunfire, though, and making the most of it requires manpower than some departments are lacking, with studies divided at best as to whether it leads to concrete improvements in crime and clearance rates. Eric Piza’s studies of Chicago have showed improved response to gunshots and increased firearm recoveries but no measurable improvement in crime or clearances.

I could buy that Chicago wasn’t making the most of the technology or simply didn’t have the staff to do so. And I’m eager to see more studies on the impact of shutting the system off. But hopefully future studies will feature more serious analysis than what the mayor is pushing.

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Feuding Communist Millionaires Reveal a Secret Network Powering America’s Radicals // A recent rant from Cox media heir “Fergie” Chambers shows where Congress should focus its next investigation.

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  • Internal conflict: Major radical financiers Jim Chambers and Neville Roy Singham are experiencing a public rift, exposing deep ideological and tactical fractures within the far-left funding apparatus.
  • Organizational power struggle: Chambers alleges that Singham’s network, centered on the Party for Socialism and Liberation (PSL), actively suppresses "direct action" in favor of maintaining centralized institutional control.
  • Centralized influence: Details emerging from the dispute suggest that Singham’s network operates as a top-down, coordinated machine intended to funnel various activist projects into the PSL’s organizational structure.
  • Vanguard strategy: The Singham network prioritizes the development of an "educated vanguard"—a move Chambers characterizes as creating a party of elitist operatives rather than enabling genuine grassroots disruption.
  • Congressional scrutiny: Amidst this public infighting, House committees and lawmakers have intensified efforts to investigate the Singham network for potential violations, including the misuse of tax-exempt status and potential failures to comply with the Foreign Agents Registration Act.
  • Strategic recommendation: Observers suggest that effective policy responses should shift focus from peripheral activist groups to the central domestic infrastructure of the PSL, which identifies as the unifying hub for this coordinated influence operation.

Jim “Fergie” Chambers, the Communist millionaire and heir to the Cox media fortune, has long bankrolled one of the nation’s most militant protest networks. But in recent weeks, he has turned his fire on a putative ally: Shanghai-based tech billionaire Neville Roy Singham, who himself funds a transnational web of far-left groups.

What’s going on? In a series of X posts, Chambers alleged that Singham’s network of nonprofits and activist groups has tried to redirect insurgent organizing into tightly controlled institutions linked to the Party for Socialism and Liberation (PSL), a U.S.-based revolutionary Communist party. Chambers sees Singham’s operation as “turn[ing] their back on direct actionists”—implying that Singham prefers exercising control over the movement to enabling the sort of serious radicalism Chambers endorses.

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The conflict between the two is in part another example of the Left’s tendency to collapse into infighting. But more importantly, Chambers’s criticism offers a rare public window into the inner workings of the Singham network, one of the radical Left’s most effective and prolific organizing operations. And, in its surfacing of the importance of the PSL to that network, Chambers’s X commentary highlights a potent target for policymakers looking to dismantle Singham’s influence operation.

Chambers is one of the main funders of America’s radical Left. His money has flowed to a host of projects in the “anti-imperialism” organizing space. These include a recent $1 million Ramadan donation to Palestinian causes, including a group that advances terrorist-sympathetic messages in America’s schools.

Chambers claims that he and Singham are effectively the two primary financiers of the “US radical left.” Despite this, the two have apparently been at loggerheads—a conflict that has now gone public.

Chambers’ attack appears to have been triggered by the Singham-aligned People’s Forum’s choice to host an event with Kat Abughazaleh, the former Media Matters journalist turned congressional candidate. The event drew backlash from more militant-aligned factions of the radical Left. Radical activist Calla Walsh, a Chambers friend, has denounced Abughazaleh as a “neocon” over her support for arming Ukraine and Taiwan.

Whatever the trigger, the break was a long time coming. According to Chambers, the roots of the conflict go back to the October 7, 2023, Hamas terrorist attacks. Shortly afterward, Walsh—the 21-year-old DSA activist turned mouthpiece for America’s adversaries—launched Palestine Action US with Chambers’s support. The group is an offshoot of Palestine Action U.K., a designated terrorist organization in Great Britain.

Chambers claimed that senior Singham network figures responded to the launch by discouraging “direct actions”—a movement euphemism for illegal vandalism, destruction, and force—targeting the Israeli defense firm Elbit Systems. Those figures allegedly urged Chambers and Walsh to travel to New York City for meetings aimed at persuading them to reconsider the campaign, including warnings to “stop this direct action and go back to school.” The effort failed, and Palestine Action US continued its direct-action campaign and caused nearly $100,000 in damage to an Elbit facility.

According to Chambers, Singham quietly instructed affiliates to distance themselves from Palestine Action, eventually creating Shut It Down 4 Palestine as the network-approved vehicle for pro-Palestine direct action. Chambers described the PSL leadership as having “actively interfered, sought to control [Palestine Action US], snuff it out, hurt its reputation, and isolate its actionists.”

It’s not clear why Singham’s network, no stranger to radical action, tried to discourage attacking Elbit. But it is consistent with the network’s longstanding view that revolutionary mass movements will fail unless they are guided by an educated vanguard—a strategy Chambers criticized as resulting in “a vanguard party comprised of liberal arts theater kids.”

At the same time, the split between the far-Left’s two most serious backers suggests that Singham’s network was not looking to collaborate, but to exercise centralized control over the whole of the extreme anti-Israel movement.

The same tendency is apparent in Chambers’s claims that the Singham operation had previously courted him. In 2023, Chambers operated a commune-style activist compound in Massachusetts centered on political agitation, ideological training, and physical conditioning. He also financially supported a network of young militants that included figures such as Walsh.

According to Chambers, Singham network-aligned figures proposed to use his property for a People’s Forum training facility. Chambers said the proposal gave him insight into how the Singham network operates, especially after he reviewed a sketched organizational chart. That structure made it clear that, regardless of the project, the PSL is at the center of the network, with each initiative ultimately designed to build the party.

Neville Singham, too, appeared to exercise an iron grip on the network. While the network may rely on various public-facing figures and young-adult activists for social-media promotion, Chambers said Singham still advances a “firm agenda” and coordinates activity through private chats.

The allegations leveled across Chambers’s multiday airing of dirty laundry paint a picture of the Singham network as focused on unifying the often fractious and disorganized radical Left under the control of one man and one party. At the same time, they leave opponents of the Singham Network with lots of questions. If not Chambers, then who else might have capitulated to their proposals—and under what terms? If the Party for Socialism and Liberation sits at the fulcrum of the Singham network’s American arm, should lawmakers focus more closely on that organization?

Congressional scrutiny of the Singham network has recently intensified. Several House committees have sought documentation from affiliated organizations. Lawmakers have also referred The People’s Forum to the IRS, urging review and possible revocation of its tax-exempt status, and asked then-Attorney General Pam Bondi to investigate Singham under the Foreign Agents Registration Act.

The congressional inquiries now underway may help establish a public record concerning this influence network, but Singham’s cooperation is unlikely. Since he lives in China, he can refuse cooperation indefinitely or simply wait out the current administration. More effective scrutiny would likely focus on the PSL’s domestic infrastructure, especially insofar as it is involved in coordinating large-scale unrest.

The PSL does not publicly disclose official membership figures, but it claims to operate in “over 50 cities.” The party’s financial structure is similarly opaque. Donations to the PSL are processed through Liberation News, the organization’s official newspaper.

The organization also invests heavily in long-term physical infrastructure. Over the past several years, the PSL has established more than a dozen Liberation Centers in multiple American cities, including a soon-to-be-opened facility in Washington, D.C. These centers function as hubs for protest coordination, coalition-building, political education, and cadre development.

Taken together, Chambers’s allegations, the congressional inquiries, and the Singham network’s footprint raise a pointed question about the entire ecosystem: Is this a loose collection of allied organizations and projects, or a coordinated influence operation shaped by a small circle of confidants around Neville Roy Singham together building a “vanguard” party? The evidence increasingly points toward the latter.

In the course of the public feuding, Chambers has also inadvertently drawn attention to the network’s core organizing hub, the PSL, which he says ultimately anchors the broader system. If that is the case, government scrutiny should not be applied piecemeal across the broad array of peripheral organizations. It must reach the structure at the center of the system, where influence and coordination converge, and where critics, both left and right, argue real control ultimately lies.

Stu Smith is an investigative analyst with City Journal. Follow him on X @TheStuStuStudio.

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The Trillion-Dollar Stakes of the OpenAI vs. Anthropic IPO Race - WSJ

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LLM (google/gemini-3.1-flash-lite-20260507) summary:

  • Ipo Urgency: the artificial race between openai and anthropic seeks to capture investor capital before market sentiment for inflated tech valuations sours
  • Market Saturation: limited pools of available cash mean that companies trailing in the public offering timeline risk being starved of necessary funding
  • First Mover Advantage: listing status provides early access to liquidity which can settle internal pressures and satisfy employee compensation demands regardless of share performance
  • Clustered Listings: historical data suggests that industry groupings of initial public offerings lead to diminishing returns for those that hesitate
  • Capital Competition: inevitable liquidity drain from massive planned offerings like spacex will likely force greedy ai firms to accelerate their timelines
  • Valuation Inflation: absurdly high target valuations in the trillions reveal a speculative fever that thrives on unchecked optimism regardless of fundamental worth
  • Precedent Risks: using the lift and uber collapse as a cautionary tale demonstrates how early failures can poison the well for subsequent market entrants
  • Transformation Doubt: the outcome of these listings will likely expose whether the ai industry provides genuine value or represents another classic bubble in the making

June 1, 2026 5:30 am ET

Collage of OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei.OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, left, and Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei. Florian Gaertner/Photothek/Getty Images; Chance Yeh/Getty Images

In the bitter rivalry between AI heavyweights OpenAI and Anthropic, it will mostly be who has the best technology that determines the ultimate victor. But which one of them gets to its public offering first matters a great deal, too.

The window for initial public offerings is decidedly open, with a receptive market. Cerebras, an AI-chip company, rose 68% on its first day of trading last month. Only digital-design platform Figma’s absurd 250% rise last year was bigger for a company valued at more than $10 billion at listing in the past five years, according to FactSet data.

Elon Musk’s SpaceX plans to follow up this summer in what may well be the largest IPO in history—with a targeted valuation of $1.5 trillion. That will add more heat to the IPO cauldron.

Created with Highcharts 9.0.1Hot MarketLargest first-day price rise, IPOs of firms worth over $10 billion since June​2021Source: FactSet
Created with Highcharts 9.0.1FigmaCerebras SystemsToastFermiOn HoldingMedlineArxisMobileye GlobalGitLabFreshworks0%50100150200250300

This is all the more reason for OpenAI and Anthropic to try to be the first big artificial-intelligence-model developer to go public.

There are some clear advantages to being first out of the gate. Just as importantly, there are major disadvantages in being second.

Academic research has shown that IPOs tend to come in industry clusters, and that companies listing later in a cycle don’t tend to perform as well. That stands to reason, given that higher-quality companies with deeper moats tend to go public early, triggering a barrage of followers that might not be as strong.

And even in a hot market, there isn’t an infinite amount of money to go around. Investors may rotate out of other stocks to pile into SpaceX, then do more reshuffling to make bets on OpenAI and Anthropic later this year or next. The one that goes first is likely to gobble up more of the increasingly scarce capital.

And both OpenAI and Anthropic are looking for sky-high valuations. Anthropic raised money recently at a valuation approaching $1 trillion. OpenAI was last valued in March at $852 billion.

“There’s only so much oxygen in the room,” said Patrick Healy, founder of Issuer Network, which advises companies going public on leading U.S. exchanges. “SpaceX is going to consume an absolute ton of capital, and the guy that goes second is going to have a better position than the guy that goes third.”

For the better-run company—in this case Anthropic, headed by Dario Amodei—the cost of waiting may be especially large. A lukewarm market reception for an early OpenAI listing, which seems plausible given the steady drumbeat of dysfunction at the Sam Altman-led company, could force Anthropic to delay or scale back.

That is just what happened in 2019, when ride-hailing rivals Lyft and Uber Technologies went public. Lyft, the smaller of the two, was first out of the gate with an IPO that didn’t live up to its hype.

A post-IPO decline in the stock directly affected Uber’s listing two months later. Uber cut its target valuation, but its shares still fell after its debut, even in a market where other tech listings had been doing well.

Going first isn’t risk-free either, of course. The first to list risks that the market takes time to reflect its value, given that it is in a nascent industry without much of a track record. 

That has happened with tech listings in the past. Facebook’s stock lost more than half its value in its first three months of trading in 2012 amid worry about whether it could adapt to a shift toward mobile-phone ads. It later went on a sustained upward run as the company showed its resilience and investors grew more comfortable with its business model. But other companies that had been itching to list—notably Twitter—ended up having to wait.

Importantly though, even when the market’s initial verdict is negative, Facebook and other early IPO movers got to reap the benefits of being public as they waited for their shares to recover. This includes whatever money is raised from the IPO, and keeping employees happy by allowing them to cash out.

Those factors add urgency to OpenAI and Anthropic’s IPOs, both of which could come this year. OpenAI has been working with bankers to file initial IPO paperwork and could do so shortly. Anthropic’s timeline is less clear.

Which gets there first—and how markets react to it—could help shape the future of the two companies and the next phase of the AI boom, either underlining the market’s confidence in AI’s transformative power or delivering a warning about its excesses. The stakes are high indeed.

Copyright ©2026 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Asa Fitch is a writer covering technology for The Wall Street Journal’s Heard on the Street column, based in New York. He also co-writes the Journal's weekly AI & Business newsletter. Asa previously reported on semiconductor companies from the Journal’s San Francisco and New York bureaus, where he covered Nvidia’s rise amid the AI boom and Intel’s struggles to turn itself around.

Prior to that, Asa spent a decade as a foreign correspondent in the Middle East. He joined the Journal in Dubai, where he initially covered business and finance before shifting to covering regional politics and conflicts. He covered the Gaza War in 2014, the military campaign against Islamic State in Iraq, the Yemeni civil war, and Iranian elections and politics, including the country’s nuclear deal in 2015.

Asa began his career as a general-news reporter in Connecticut and a personal finance reporter in New York. He is a graduate of Carleton College and Columbia University's journalism school.


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Robotaxis Are Spreading Across the U.S.—and So Is the Backlash - WSJ

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LLM (google/gemini-3.1-flash-lite-20260507) summary:

  • Technological Incompetence: autonomous vehicles consistently malfunction by stranding themselves in floods and obstructing critical emergency services.
  • Public Nuisance: suburban cul de sacs and urban intersections are suffering from robotic gridlock caused by flawed navigation patterns.
  • Safety Failures: despite corporate claims of superior statistics, the machines struggle to handle edge cases like construction zones and blackout conditions.
  • Regulatory Scrutiny: federal investigators and state authorities are probing multiple incidents involving collisions with children and standard mechanical failures.
  • Corporate Denial: market players rely on questionable data comparisons to brush off legitimate community concerns regarding reckless machine behavior.
  • Scaling Delays: aggressive expansion goals are hitting reality as software confusion leads to repetitive loops and necessary fleet recalls.
  • Growing Backlash: local governments and labor unions are actively resisting the deployment of these automated systems due to safety and displacement fears.
  • Fairy Tale Illusion: the promised innovation is currently functioning as an unreliable novelty that frequently collapses under basic environmental pressure.

A white Waymo driverless taxi driving over the First Street bridge in downtown Austin, Texas, with city buildings in the background.A driverless Waymo in downtown Austin, Texas. Bob Daemmrich/ZUMA Press

May 29, 2026 9:00 pm ET

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  • Robotaxi companies like Waymo and Tesla face mounting criticism and scrutiny from the public and local governments as problems appear in police report and viral social-media posts.
  • Waymo vehicles have been involved in incidents like getting stuck in flooded streets, impeding traffic and briefly blocking an ambulance responding to a mass shooting.
  • Waymo recalled 3,800 vehicles for a software update, and both the NTSB and NHTSA are investigating the company.
This summary was generated with AI and reviewed by an editor. Read more about how we use artificial intelligence in our journalism.
  • Robotaxi companies like Waymo and Tesla face mounting criticism and scrutiny from the public and local governments as problems appear in police report and viral social-media posts.
    View more
This was supposed to be the year that robotaxis hit Main Street across the U.S., as companies like Alphabet’s GOOGL -2.51%decrease; red down pointing triangle Waymo, Tesla and Amazon.com’s Zoox launch AI-powered autonomous rides in dozens of cities. 
But as hundreds of robot cars collide with humans, both literally and figuratively, tensions are rising. The problems cropping up in police reports and viral social-media posts range from the concerning to the comical.
Over Mother’s Day weekend, Andy Milheizler’s quiet Atlanta cul-de-sac was overrun with empty Waymo vehicles. 
Her neighbors put up a barricade to block the vehicles. The next day, the robotaxis stopped at the barrier one after another, boxing each other in for around two hours.
“We started realizing that there might be a problem here,” said Milheizler, a 48-year-old civil engineer and mother.  
Empty Waymo vehicles recently clogged an Atlanta cul-de-sac.
The passengers in two Waymo vehicles in Atlanta last week were in a less-humorous predicament. Their taxis drove into flooded streets during a storm and became stranded. 
Now, criticism is mounting from drivers, law enforcement and local governments from California to New York—and as the companies attempt to scale, robotaxis face more scrutiny than ever before.
Waymo and other robotaxi operators point to the safety records of autonomous vehicles, saying they are involved in far fewer accidents than a human-driven car. 
“Reducing serious car crashes is core to our mission, and we’re incredibly proud of our record that shows we can make roads safer,” a Waymo spokesperson said. “At the same time, we know trust is earned.”
Waymo said peer-reviewed research showed its vehicles had over 80% fewer injury-causing crashes compared to human drivers operating on the same streets. The company said it would soon begin offering rides in a new vehicle dubbed the Ojai, which it says offers superior safety.
Tesla’s TSLA -1.43%decrease; red down pointing triangle robotaxis use a version of its Full Self Driving software, which is also available to consumers. The company maintains that FSD is safer than a human, able to travel 1.6 million miles before a minor collision, compared with the national average of 220,000 miles.
“Robotaxi companies want safety to be the number of crashes per mile,” said Phil Koopman, an autonomous-driving safety expert and professor emeritus at Carnegie Mellon University. “As long as they get lucky and no one gets hurt, they don’t think that’s a safety problem, but humans see that as a safety problem.”
A police officer on a motorcycle follows a Waymo driverless car in downtown Los Angeles.A police officer on a motorcycle following a Waymo through downtown Los Angeles this month. Mike Blake/Reuters
Recent advancements in AI allow robotaxi companies to train their vehicles better and more quickly, leading to bold expansion goals. Waymo, the current market leader operating in 11 cities, including San Francisco and Orlando, said it aims to add 19 more cities.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk said earlier this year that he hoped to expand its robotaxi service to a dozen states this year as the company puts artificial intelligence at the core of its business. New players like Zoox, Hyundai-backed Motional and Nuro are seeking a piece of the pie as well.
The autonomous vehicle space is expected to account for around 30% of the U.S. rideshare industry by 2032, according to Morgan Stanley.
But delivering safer-than-human transit depends on solving what the industry calls edge cases: rare, unusual incidents beyond everyday driving. Those edge cases cause the biggest headaches. 
Waymo vehicles in December froze up during a San Francisco blackout, blocking traffic when they were unable to navigate traffic signals; in March, a Waymo vehicle in Austin, Texas, briefly blocked an ambulance responding to a mass shooting. The vehicles also faced a backlash in Austin for passing stopped school buses.
Waymo vehicles idling at an intersection without operating traffic lights due to a power outage.A blackout in December knocked out traffic lights in San Francisco, causing Waymo robotaxis to idle at intersections. Jeff Chiu/AP
In April, an unoccupied Waymo became stuck after it drove into a flooded street in San Antonio, Texas, leading the company to recall all 3,800 vehicles with a software update. In its recall report, Waymo said vehicles traveling at higher speeds might slow but not stop when confronted with “a potentially untraversable flooded lane.”
A month later, after the software update, two Waymo vehicles in Atlanta got stuck in flooded streets. Last week, the company also halted rides on freeways in some cities for a few days to tweak how the vehicles responded to construction zones.
Many of the robotaxi issues being reported involve Waymo, in part because the company accounts for the overwhelming majority of self-driving taxis on the road today. But it isn’t alone.
In August, a Zoox vehicle pulled partially into oncoming traffic while making a right turn, leading the company to issue a software update to correct the issue. 
Musk has said Tesla is exercising caution in its robotaxi rollout after finding issues with how the vehicles behave on the roads. 
He said during the company’s earnings call in April that Tesla robotaxis still get confused when faced with atypical traffic situations, stopping in traffic—or endlessly driving in circles.
“We have also had literal infinite loops where the car might want to make a turn into a road, but there’s construction and then it goes around the block,” Musk said.
The National Transportation Safety Board opened an ongoing investigation into Waymo after a robotaxi struck a child in Santa Monica, Calif., near an elementary school. The company said the vehicle had hit the brakes, reducing the car’s speed from 17 mph to 6 mph at the time of impact.
Waymo said in a blog post that the accident demonstrated the relative safety of a computer-driven vehicle, adding that a human in the same situation would have made contact at 14 mph.
A separate investigation by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is examining whether Waymo’s software behaves with the appropriate caution around schools during drop-off hours.
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul had been pushing to allow robotaxi companies to operate a commercial service this year. But in February, she reversed course, and Waymo’s testing permit wasn’t renewed.
The Boston City Council has debated putting restrictions on robotaxis, supported by labor unions fearful of losing driver jobs. In Seattle, home of some of the biggest technology companies, robotaxi operators have been hit by protests.
Musk last year promised Tesla’s robotaxis would soon be available to half the U.S. population. He is now striking a more cautious tone as the service rolls out more slowly than projected. 
Tesla registered 42 robotaxis that operate in portions of Austin, Dallas, and Houston, according to state filings. By comparison, Waymo has 577 vehicles registered in Texas.
“We haven’t had any injuries and certainly no fatalities to date with the unsupervised FSD and Robotaxi expansion,” Musk told analysts on a call in April. “We want to keep it that way.”
During a hearing in March about San Francisco’s blackouts, city Supervisor Bilal Mahmood said autonomous cars are “a technological miracle” that he likened to one of “Cinderella’s magical carriages.”
“But just like in the fairy tale,” Mahmood said, “We can now see that those carriages can turn into pumpkins at the drop of a hat.”

Copyright ©2026 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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