Bloomberg’s Caroline Hyde discusses why Taiwan is weighing some of its toughest restrictions yet on AI chip sales to China, and OpenAI joining its AI rivals with plans for a potential public listing later this year. Plus, Apple lays the foundation for the AI era and hints at the company’s upcoming foldable iPhone.
Chapters:
00:00:00 – Bloomberg Tech Beginsw
00:01:34 – Peter Elstrom, Bloomberg News
00:05:11 – Lei Qiu, AllianceBernstein
00:10:29 – Shirin Ghaffary, Bloomberg News
00:13:04 – Harrison Rolfes, Pitchbook
00:18:32 – Mark Gurman, Bloomberg News
00:24:09 – Carmen Reinicke, Bloomberg News
00:27:20 – Songyee Yoon, Principal Venture Partners
00:33:55 – Evan Beard, Standard Bots
00:40:22 – Olivia Raimonde, Bloomberg News
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“Bloomberg Technology” is our daily news program focused exclusively on technology, innovation and the future of business hosted by Ed Ludlow from San Francisco and Caroline Hyde in New York.
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@blacksheepcat
June 9, 2026 at 6:14 pm
it’s funny that SpaceX now trying to sell themselves as an AI company. their market cap is built on the future revenue outlook that their AI business is supposed to bring on. They made zero traction with AI sector today. They just want to exit taking advantage of all passive buys coming from mutual funds, index funds, in other words, they exploit retail investors and their retirement funds