中文版
一、Elon ×
Anthropic:Colossus 1 算力大单
事件概述
2026 年 5 月 6 日,XAI(SpaceX 旗下 AI 公司)与 Anthropic
正式签署算力合作协议。XAI 将其位于田纳西州孟菲斯的 Colossus
1 数据中心的全部算力租赁给 Anthropic,规模为:
| 英伟达 GPU 数量 |
超过 220,000 块(含 H100、H200、GB200) |
| 供电规模 |
超过 300 兆瓦(MW) |
| 上线时间 |
协议签署后 一个月内 |
协议还包含一项长远合作意向:双方对共同开发数吉瓦(GW)级轨道
AI 算力(太空数据中心)表达了兴趣。
官方来源
背景:Anthropic 的算力矩阵
Colossus 1 只是 Anthropic 近一年来一系列算力扩张的最新一环。根据
Anthropic 官方公告,完整算力部署路线图如下:
| SpaceX (XAI) |
300 MW / 22 万+ GPU |
月内上线 |
官方 |
| Amazon AWS |
最高 5 GW(其中 2026 年底前 ~1 GW) |
含亚洲、欧洲推理节点 |
官方
· CNBC |
| Google + Broadcom |
5 GW 下一代 TPU |
2027 年起上线,价值约 $2000 亿 |
官方 |
| Microsoft + NVIDIA |
$300 亿 Azure 容量 |
战略合作 |
官方 |
| Fluidstack |
$500 亿美国 AI 基础设施投资 |
|
官方 |
综合来看,Anthropic 的算力承诺总量已超过 $2000
亿,是过去 12 个月内规模最大的 AI
基础设施扩张计划之一。参见:MindStudio
时间线梳理
播客评论
Chamath 此前一周在节目中预言"Elon 和 Dario 明天就应该谈合作"——5
天后成真。各嘉宾一致认为:
- 算力和电力(而非需求)始终是 Anthropic 营收增长的唯一瓶颈
- 马斯克点评 Dario:"No one set off my evil
detector(没有触发我的邪恶雷达)"
二、Claude Code
限速变化:具体数字
2026 年 5 月 6
日生效的三项更改
| Claude Code 5 小时速率上限(Pro/Max/Team/Enterprise) |
标准值 |
翻倍 |
| 峰值时段限速(Pro/Max) |
高峰期降速 |
取消 |
| Claude Opus API 输入 Token 速率(Tier 1) |
标准值 |
+1500% |
| Claude Opus API 输出 Token 速率(Tier 1) |
标准值 |
+900% |
| 每周总用量上限 |
标准值 |
不变 |
资料来源
三、Anthropic
的营收增长:数据核查
ARR 增长轨迹(经多方核实)
| 2024 年 1 月 |
~$8700 万 |
分析机构估算 |
| 2024 年 12 月 |
~$10 亿 |
分析机构估算 |
| 2025 年底 |
~$90 亿 |
多方报道 |
| 2026 年 2 月 |
~$140 亿 |
SemiAnalysis |
| 2026 年 3 月底 |
~$300 亿 |
VentureBeat(Dario
公开披露) |
| 2026 年 4 月 |
~$440 亿 |
SemiAnalysis
报告(非官方) |
⚠️ 注:300亿为DarioAmodei本人公开披露数字;440
亿为 SemiAnalysis 基于渠道信息的估算,Anthropic 官方未正式确认。
速度有多快?
- ARR 从 $90 亿涨至 $440 亿,约用时 6 周——根据 MindStudio
分析,这一速度超过了疫情期间的 Zoom 和 2003 年的谷歌
- 估算日增 ARR 约 $9600 万(参见:MindStudio)
- 按此速度,Anthropic 的增速超越了 OpenAI(同期 3–4 倍增速):SaaStr
分析
David Sacks 的预测
四、Anthropic 的估值与 IPO
路径
最新估值区间
| 2026 年 2 月 |
$3800 亿(post-money) |
Series G 融资 $300 亿 |
TECHi |
| 2026 年 4 月 |
~$8000 亿 |
二级市场投资者报价 |
NextWeb
· Euronews |
| 2026 年 5 月(最新) |
$1.4 万亿(隐含估值) |
新一轮融资报价(Bloomberg) |
CoinPaper |
IPO 展望
播客中提到
Jason 提议:Anthropic 等 AI 公司 IPO
时,应将一部分份额通过"投资美国"账户分配给每位公民,以缓解 AI
财富集中问题。
五、Anthropic Mythos
模型:能力、风险与监管风波
模型能力
Anthropic 于 2026 年初开始测试 Mythos
模型,定性为"迄今为止最强大的模型",在网络安全领域尤为突出:
- 完全自主地识别并利用了 FreeBSD 中一个存在 17
年的远程代码执行漏洞(可获得 NFS 服务器 root
权限),全程无需人工介入
- Anthropic
内部评估认为该模型在网络攻击能力上"目前远超其他所有 AI
模型",并预示"一波能够以远超防御者能力的速度利用漏洞的模型即将到来"
资料来源
中国黑客组织利用 Claude
的真实事件
CNBC 报道,Anthropic
发现一个中国国家支持的黑客组织曾协调利用 Claude Code
渗透约 30 个组织,这直接加剧了白宫对 Mythos
发布的担忧。
白宫的反应与"AI 版 FDA"讨论
事件经过:
- 在 Mythos 发布前,副总统 JD Vance 和财政部长 Scott Bessent
已向各大科技公司 CEO 问询 AI 安全问题(CNBC)
- 《纽约时报》报道白宫正在考虑发布行政令,建立 AI
模型预发布审查机制(类似 FDA 药物审批)
- 国家经济委员会主任 Kevin Hassett 在 Fox Business
上证实相关研究,但措辞模糊
- 白宫幕僚长 Susie Wiles 随即发表声明,基本推翻了"FDA
式审批"的说法
相关报道:
播客嘉宾的共同立场
Sacks、Brad、Chamath 一致认为:
- Anthropic 和 OpenAI 在 Mythos
问题上表现负责,均未打算直接公开发布
- 应警惕有人借此将合理的网络安全问题转化为永久性华盛顿监管机构的借口
- 应支持 KYC(实名认证)机制,让前沿模型只进入已知"好人"的手中
六、OpenClaw 封禁事件
事件始末
| 2026 年 2 月 14 日 |
OpenClaw 创始人 Peter Steinberger 宣布加入 OpenAI |
| 2026 年 4 月 |
Anthropic 封禁 OpenClaw 创始人对 Claude
的访问权限,并限制第三方工具通过订阅计划使用 Claude |
| 争议持续 |
外界争论:Anthropic 是经济自保还是竞争打压? |
背景细节
Anthropic 的理由是:OpenClaw
等第三方代理工具对订阅计划的基础设施造成了"不成比例的压力"——订阅用户付
$200/月,但实际消耗了价值 1000–5000 的
API 算力。
Steinberger 则指控 Anthropic 先将 OpenClaw 的热门功能整合进其自有产品
Cowork,再封杀开源竞争对手。此说法存在争议。
资料来源
与垄断争议的关联
David Sacks 在播客中将此事作为 Anthropic
反竞争行为的具体证据之一。在他的"安全石油"叙事框架下,此事件构成"垄断者排挤竞争者"的例证。
七、"垄断论"与 David
Sacks 的"安全石油"类比
核心论点
David Sacks 在本期节目的核心争议性发言(已被多家媒体引用):
"除非当前轨迹发生改变,Anthropic
将成为人类历史上最强大的垄断体。Dario 称之为
AGI,我称之为人类历史上最大的垄断。"
相关原声剪辑:
标准石油的历史:四步垄断法 [01:19]
要听懂 Sacks 的安全石油类比,必须先了解约翰·D·洛克菲勒(John D. Rockefeller)的标准石油(Standard Oil)是如何建立垄断的。1870年,洛克菲勒创办标准石油,做炼油生意。当时美国发现石油不到十年,每个州都有独立的炼油厂,大大小小几百家。洛克菲勒的打法不是把炼油效率做到最强,而是把整个产业链都买下来:
- 第一步:铁路折扣 [01:48]——跟铁路公司谈判,所有运石油到标准石油的列车给他打折,别家不打。从源头就比所有人的成本低。
- 第二步:价格战收购——用成本优势把附近所有独立炼油厂油价压到亏损,然后挨家挨户收购。
- 第三步:控制管道——掌握运输命脉。
- 第四步:建立零售网——直达终端消费者。
结果 [02:14] 用这四步,到1880年——仅仅10年——标准石油控制了美国90%的炼油能力。相当于谷歌控制了90%搜索市场 + Amazon控制了90%电商市场 + Microsoft控制了90%操作系统,全部由同一家公司完成。
- 洛克菲勒的外号:"美国最被恨的人",媒体常年骂他 [02:40]
- 1890年,国会通过谢尔曼反托拉斯法——美国历史上第一个反垄断法,基本就是为洛克菲勒这一个人写的 [02:55]
- 1911年,美国最高法院判决标准石油违反反垄断法,必须拆分为34家公司 [02:55]
- 拆分后,埃克森(Exxon)、美孚(Mobil)、雪佛龙(Chevron)等巨头均从中诞生。今天美国前三大石油公司仍是标准石油拆出来的 [03:13]
- 反讽:拆完34家到今天加起来,仍是世界最大的石油巨头集合——反垄断没有真正杀掉标准石油,只是把尸体切成几块,每块又独自幸福地活着 [03:13]
"安全石油"思想实验(完整逻辑)[03:33]
Sacks 从这段历史出发,构建了一个精妙的思想实验。他说洛克菲勒的 PR 做得太差了——"标准石油"(Standard Oil)这个名字本身就是在告诉大家"我要让标准只有一个",等于在邀请反垄断诉讼。如果洛克菲勒懂 PR,他不会叫这个名字 [03:37]。
Sacks 的假设:如果洛克菲勒将公司命名为"安全石油"(Safe Oil),会发生什么?
- 品牌重塑 [03:53]:"标准石油"透露的是控制感、掌控感;"安全石油"透露的是关爱感。一个让你想到垄断,另一个让你想到母亲。同一家公司,叫法不同,观感完全反转。
- 建立安全叙事 [04:14]:煤油灯是危险的——100年前煤油是最重要的家用能源(取暖、照明、做饭),但也会着火、爆炸。安全石油可以从此出发,讲一个"保护消费者"的故事。
- 主动呼吁监管 [04:31]:洛克菲勒应该主动给政府写信,呼吁创立煤油安全监督局——主动呼吁政府成立一个监督机构来管自己。听起来反直觉,但内有玄机。
- 转移公众注意力 [04:59]:监督机构成立后,所有人陷入漫长辩论——什么叫煤油安全?灯芯应该多粗?纯度标准是什么?哪些小炼油厂不够安全?公众注意力被锁死在安全标准辩论上。
- 监管清理对手 [06:06]:小炼油厂做不了繁琐的安全测试、买不起昂贵的许可证、完不成复杂的合规文档——不是被洛克菲勒淘汰,而是被监管淘汰。但监管是洛克菲勒自己呼吁来的。
Sacks 最后加了四分钟里最难忘的一句 [06:35]:如果洛克菲勒真的这么做了,人们今天可能会把他叫做"有效利他主义者"(Effective Altruist)。——一个真正的垄断者,如果懂得包装,可以被时代误读为利他主义者。
Sacks 的暗示:今天 Anthropic 的"安全"叙事扮演了完全相同的角色——以安全之名推动监管,同时为自己的垄断地位构筑护城河。在这四分钟里,Sacks 没有一次提到 Anthropic 的名字,但所有人都在想同一件事 [07:05]。
Anthropic 三年七件事:证据链
以下按时间线列出 Anthropic 过去三年的关键行动,每件事提供 Sacks 视角和反方视角。其中前四件是叙事层面(建立安全品牌、推动监管框架),后三件是行为层面(合同封禁、资本控制、选择性发布)。
| 1 |
宪法 AI(Constitutional AI) 2022年12月 [07:45] |
用"宪法"这个有道德分量的词抢占负责任 AI 叙事——安全石油品牌的第一步 |
真正的技术突破,名字只是名字,不要过度解读 |
| 2 |
负责任扩展政策(RSP) 2023年9月 [08:42] |
主动呼吁行业监管,但标准按 Anthropic 能力线画。2026年2月更新3.0版承认暂停承诺失效("集体行动困境"),承诺变成弹性的 |
负责任的公司应公开承诺安全实践;暂停失效是务实的集体行动博弈结果 |
| 3 |
CEO 多次国会作证 2023–2026 [10:05] |
典型的安全石油手法——主动出击呼吁监管,把自己塑造成配合的好公民。Dario 被普遍认为最真诚,区别于 Sam Altman 的"投机"形象 |
Dario 是温和内向、真正关心安全的科学家,不是表演 |
| 4 |
公开支持 SB1047 2024年8月 [10:56] |
安全石油剧本最干净的落地——所有 AI 公司都反对,只有 Anthropic 支持。法案主要影响训练成本 >1 亿美元的模型,Anthropic 的合规体系最完整,受影响最小 |
Dario 给的是"有条件支持";大公司应承担更多安全义务是合理的 |
| 5 |
用合同条款封对手 2025年6月起 [12:29] |
典型的"立规则的人也是用规则的人"。6月写条款,8月就用条款封 OpenAI。11个月内4次封禁(Windsurf/OpenClaude/Xi/Cursor渠道),每次理由都是自己写的服务条款 |
保护知识产权和平台资源的正当行为;服务条款是行业标准做法 |
| 6 |
股权无效声明 2026年5月11日 [14:40] |
所有未经董事会批准的股权转让一律 void(不是 voidable)。点名8家平台,包括最合规的 Forge Global(隐含估值1万亿)。Pre-Stock 代币暴跌36%。现代翻译——"为了保护你,我废除你的交易" |
防止欺诈和保护投资者的正当措施;私募股权流通需要合规管控 |
| 7 |
Mythos 选择性发布 2026年初 [16:50] |
选择性披露等于控制能力分发——只给指定合作伙伴看,不公开 |
高风险模型需要谨慎发布,这是负责任的行为 |
证据链总结 四件叙事 + 三件行为。叙事层面用安全品牌和监管呼吁建立舆论阵地;行为层面用合同封禁、资本控制和选择性发布巩固市场地位。行为里最关键的是11个月内四次封禁加上股权无效声明。
反驳意见(来自同场嘉宾)
Brad 的三层反驳(Anthropic 投资人)
第一层:共识翻盘的教训 [17:20]
五个月前(2025年底),行业共识还是 OpenAI 赢——GPT5 即将发布,Sam Altman 人脉最广,Microsoft 投了1000多亿。2026年初,五个月共识就翻盘了。潜台词:五个月能从 OpenAI 变成 Anthropic 赢,那"Anthropic 永远赢"的判断,是不是也可能五个月内翻盘?
第二层:年化收入 ≠ 实际收入 [17:50]
Anthropic 第一季度从100亿涨到300亿——这个数字是年化收入(当前月收入 × 12),不是真实全年收入。按会计准则,Anthropic 和 OpenAI 在三月份实际月收入其实差不多。
第三层(关键):Elon Web Service 与五层蛋糕 [18:10]
Brad 提出了"Elon Web Service"(EWS)概念——SpaceX 把超级数据中心整合出租后,已经变成一个新的超级云厂商。红杉资本的 Sean 描述了 SpaceX 的"五层蛋糕":
- 第一层:火箭发射
- 第二层:Starlink 通信
- 第三层:算力(EWS)——单这一层今年就给 SpaceX 带来40–50亿增量收入
- 第四层:轨道数据中心
- 第五层:应用和模型
Brad 的核心论点:AI 产业版图不是标准石油那种一家垄断所有产业链的格局。AI 产业是分层的——模型层有 Anthropic/OpenAI/Google/Meta,基础设施层有 SpaceX 在崛起、AWS 主导,芯片层英伟达暂时垄断,太空算力层 SpaceX 一家独大。不是一个洛克菲勒,是五个洛克菲勒互相钳制 [19:30]。
软肋 [19:40] 这个反驳有一个软肋:5月11号的股权无效声明直接打到了它。五个洛克菲勒互相钳制的前提是有市场化的股权流通。5月11号后,Anthropic 把这种流通直接关掉了——不是模型层的垄断,是更深一层的垄断:资本层流通的垄断。
Chamath 的两个独立判断
Chamath 与 Anthropic 没有直接持仓关系,位置比 Brad 更中立。他抛出了两个独立判断:
判断一:营收跟需求无关,完全是供给限制 [20:00]
- Anthropic 看起来在指数增长,让所有人以为 AI 需求大爆炸——错了
- 不是卖得多好,是能交付多少——服务器有多少卡能跑,电够不够烧
- 客户队列比交付能力长很多
- AI 公司的收入本质上不是市场决定的,是发电厂决定的 [20:50]
- 美国今年应该上线的9个 GW 算力供应,约一半已被各地环保团体抗议。接下来12–24个月,电够不够烧决定 Anthropic 能不能继续增长
判断二:500天倒计时 [21:20]
AI 产业目前已经完成前两步:
- 基础设施投入——已投几千亿,完成
- 模型公司收入——已兑现,完成
- 企业回报(企业花钱买 AI 后是否真的看到经营效率提升)——还没完全兑现
美国标普500上市公司的整体经营利润率,三年时间从11.8%涨到13%(涨了两个百分点)。Chamath 不确定这是否是 AI 贡献的,可能是新冠后整个产业恢复的结果 [21:40]。
500天后必须有数据证明 AI 是真的提升了利润率。如果证明了,Anthropic 万亿之王的预期可能成立;如果证明不了,所有 AI 公司估值都要被重估 [22:00]。
八、Anthropic 在整体
AI 生态中的定位(综合数据)
竞争格局(2026 年 5 月)
| Anthropic |
$440 亿(SemiAnalysis 估算) |
~10x/年 |
Claude Code,代码生成 |
| OpenAI |
估算 $400 亿+ |
~3–4x/年 |
Codex/GPT-5.5(Spud 底座) |
| Google |
AI 营收含于 GCP $800 亿/年 |
63%/年(GCP) |
Gemini,基础设施 |
| XAI |
规模较小,快速增长 |
— |
Grok,Cursor 合作 |
参考:Big
AI Lab Revenues Projected 2026–2035
代码市场的战略意义
Brad 在播客中指出:全球软件开发相关支出约为 $1
万亿/年,是 Anthropic 当前核心赛道的市场上限参考值。Claude Code
在这一赛道上占据先发优势,是当前 ARR 爆发的直接驱动力。
参考资料汇总
官方公告
新闻报道
分析与评论
English Version
1. The Elon ×
Anthropic Compute Deal: Colossus 1
What Happened
On May 6, 2026, SpaceX (now merged with xAI) and Anthropic signed a
compute partnership agreement. SpaceX granted Anthropic full access to
the Colossus 1 data center in Memphis, Tennessee.
| Nvidia GPUs |
220,000+ (H100, H200, GB200) |
| Power capacity |
300+ megawatts |
| Timeline |
Online within one month of signing |
The agreement also includes a forward-looking intent to develop
multiple gigawatts of orbital AI compute capacity in
space.
Primary Sources
Context: Anthropic's
Full Compute Portfolio
Colossus 1 is the latest in a series of massive compute deals. Per
Anthropic's official announcements:
| SpaceX (xAI) |
300 MW / 220K+ GPUs |
Within 1 month |
Official |
| Amazon AWS |
Up to 5 GW (~1 GW by end 2026) |
Staged |
Official
· CNBC |
| Google + Broadcom |
5 GW next-gen TPUs (~$200B) |
Starting 2027 |
Official |
| Microsoft + NVIDIA |
$30B of Azure capacity |
Strategic |
Official |
| Fluidstack |
$50B US AI infrastructure |
Multi-year |
Official |
Anthropic's total compute commitments now exceed $200
billion. Full timeline: MindStudio
2. Claude
Code Rate Limit Changes: The Specific Numbers
Three Changes Effective May
6, 2026
| Claude Code 5-hour limit (Pro/Max/Team/Enterprise) |
Standard |
Doubled |
| Peak-hour throttling (Pro/Max) |
Active during peak windows |
Removed |
| Opus API input tokens/min (Tier 1) |
Standard |
+1,500% |
| Opus API output tokens/min (Tier 1) |
Standard |
+900% |
| Weekly usage cap |
Standard |
Unchanged |
Sources
3. Anthropic
Revenue Growth: Data and Sources
ARR Trajectory
(Multi-Source Verified)
| Jan 2024 |
~$87M |
Analyst estimates |
| Dec 2024 |
~$1B |
Multiple reports |
| End of 2025 |
~$9B |
Multiple reports |
| February 2026 |
~$14B |
SemiAnalysis |
| March 31, 2026 |
~$30B |
VentureBeat
(Dario disclosed publicly) |
| April 2026 |
~$44B |
SemiAnalysis
via OfficeChai (unconfirmed by Anthropic) |
⚠️ Note: The $30B figure was publicly disclosed by
Dario Amodei himself. The $44B figure is a SemiAnalysis estimate sourced
from industry channels — Anthropic has not officially confirmed it.
How Fast Is This, Really?
- $9B → $44B ARR in approximately 6 weeks — faster
than Zoom during COVID or Google in 2003: MindStudio
analysis
- Estimated $96M in new ARR added per day: MindStudio
- Anthropic's growth rate exceeds OpenAI's (3–4x): SaaStr
David Sacks' Forecasts
(from the podcast)
- End of 2026: ~$100B ARR (10x target — described as
"foregone conclusion")
- 2027: ~$1T ARR (speculative; debated by other
guests)
- Source: All-In Pod
on X · OfficeChai
4. Anthropic Valuation and
IPO Path
Valuation Milestones
| Feb 2026 |
$380B post-money |
Series G ($30B raised) |
TECHi |
| Apr 2026 |
~$800B |
Secondary market investor offers |
NextWeb
· Euronews |
| May 2026 |
~$1.4T (implied) |
New funding round at >$900B (Bloomberg) |
CoinPaper |
IPO Outlook
- Bankers estimate a potential IPO could raise more than $60
billion
- Expected timeline: Q4 2026 or later
- As of May 2026, Anthropic remains private with no prospectus
filed
- Full analysis: TechMarketBriefs
· Seeking
Alpha
5.
The Mythos Model: Capabilities, Risks, and the Regulatory Storm
Model Capabilities
Anthropic began testing Mythos in early 2026. Key findings from
Anthropic's own red-team blog and independent evaluators:
- Autonomously identified and exploited a 17-year-old remote
code execution vulnerability in FreeBSD (allowing anyone to
gain root on an NFS server) — with zero human involvement after the
initial request
- Anthropic's internal assessment: "currently far ahead of any other
AI model in cyber capabilities" and "presages an upcoming wave of models
that can exploit vulnerabilities in ways that far outpace
defenders"
Primary Sources
CNBC reported that Anthropic discovered a Chinese state-sponsored
group had been running a coordinated campaign using Claude Code to
infiltrate approximately 30 organizations — a
disclosure that directly fed White House anxieties about Mythos.
White House
Response and the "FDA for AI" Episode
- Before Mythos was released, VP JD Vance and Treasury Secretary
Bessent questioned tech CEOs about AI security: CNBC
- The New York Times reported the White House was considering
an executive order to create an "AI working group" that would review
models before public release
- NEC Director Kevin Hassett confirmed the discussions on Fox Business
— but later told Brad Gerstner he did not support a
true approval regime
- White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles issued a statement
effectively dismissing the "FDA for AI" framing
Key coverage:
6. The OpenClaw Ban
Timeline
| Feb 14, 2026 |
OpenClaw creator Peter Steinberger announces joining OpenAI |
| April 2026 |
Anthropic bans Steinberger from Claude access; blocks third-party
agents from subscription tiers |
| Ongoing |
Debate: legitimate economic decision vs. anti-competitive
conduct |
Anthropic's Justification
Third-party agent tools placed "outsized strain" on infrastructure.
Subscription users were paying ~$200/month while consuming 1, 000–5,000 in API value. Subscription plans
were designed for interactive use, not 24/7 autonomous agent loops.
Counterargument
Steinberger alleged Anthropic first copied OpenClaw's popular
features into its own Cowork product, then locked out the open-source
alternative. This claim is disputed.
Sources
7. The Monopoly
Debate: Sacks' "Safe Oil" Argument
The Core Claim
David Sacks' most-quoted line from the episode:
"Unless something about their current trajectory changes,
Anthropic will be the most powerful monopoly ever created in human
history. Dario calls it AGI. I call it the biggest monopoly in human
history."
— All-In Pod
on X · YouTube
Shorts clip · OfficeChai
The History of Standard Oil: Four Steps to Monopoly [01:19]
To understand Sacks' Safe Oil analogy, one must first understand how John D. Rockefeller built the Standard Oil monopoly. In 1870, Rockefeller founded Standard Oil in the refining business. American oil had been discovered less than a decade earlier; the industry was chaotic, with hundreds of independent refineries across every state. Rockefeller's strategy was not to be the most efficient refiner — it was to buy the entire supply chain:
- Step 1: Railroad rebates [01:48] — Negotiated with railroads for discounted shipping rates exclusively for Standard Oil. No one else got the discount. From the source, his costs were lower than everyone else's.
- Step 2: Price-war acquisitions — Used cost advantages to drive nearby independent refineries into losses, then acquired them one by one.
- Step 3: Control the pipelines — Seize the transportation arteries.
- Step 4: Build a retail network — Reach the end consumer directly.
Result [02:14] Using these four steps, by 1880 — just 10 years — Standard Oil controlled 90% of U.S. refining capacity. The equivalent today would be Google controlling 90% of search + Amazon controlling 90% of e-commerce + Microsoft controlling 90% of operating systems, all by the same company.
- Rockefeller's nickname: "The most hated man in America" — the media criticized him relentlessly [02:40]
- In 1890, Congress passed the Sherman Antitrust Act — the first U.S. antitrust law, essentially written for Rockefeller alone [02:55]
- In 1911, the U.S. Supreme Court ordered Standard Oil broken up into 34 companies [02:55]
- The breakup produced Exxon, Mobil, Chevron and other giants. Today's top three U.S. oil companies are all Standard Oil descendants [03:13]
- Irony: The 34 pieces, combined today, still form the world's largest oil conglomerate — antitrust didn't kill Standard Oil, it just cut the corpse into pieces, each of which went on to thrive independently [03:13]
The "Safe Oil" Thought Experiment (Full Logic) [03:33]
Sacks built a brilliant thought experiment from this history. He said Rockefeller's PR was terrible — "Standard Oil" as a name tells everyone "I want the standard to be the only one," which is an invitation for antitrust litigation. If Rockefeller understood PR, he would never have chosen that name [03:37].
Sacks' hypothesis: What if Rockefeller had named his company "Safe Oil"?
- Brand reinvention [03:53]: "Standard Oil" signals control and dominance; "Safe Oil" signals care and protection. One makes you think of monopoly, the other makes you think of motherhood. Same company, different name, completely inverted perception.
- Build a safety narrative [04:14]: Kerosene lamps were genuinely dangerous — 100 years ago kerosene was the most critical household energy source (heating, lighting, cooking), but it could also catch fire and explode. Safe Oil could start from this real danger and tell a "protecting consumers" story.
- Proactively call for regulation [04:31]: Rockefeller should have written to the government, urging the creation of a Kerosene Safety Oversight Bureau — proactively asking government to create an agency to regulate himself. Sounds counterintuitive, but there's a hidden logic.
- Redirect public attention [04:59]: Once the oversight agency is created, everyone gets drawn into endless debates — what counts as kerosene safety? How thick should wicks be? What purity standards? Which small refineries are unsafe? Public attention gets locked into safety standards debates.
- Regulation eliminates competitors [06:06]: Small refineries can't afford complex safety testing, expensive permits, or burdensome compliance documentation — they're eliminated not by Rockefeller, but by regulation. Yet the regulation was something Rockefeller himself called for.
Sacks added the most memorable line of the four minutes [06:35]: "If Rockefeller had actually done this, people today might have called him an 'effective altruist.'" — A true monopolist, if skilled at packaging, could be misread by an era as a altruist.
Sacks' implication: Anthropic's "safety" narrative today plays the exact same role — using safety as a justification to push for regulation while building a moat for monopoly positioning. During those four minutes, Sacks never once mentioned Anthropic by name, but everyone was thinking the same thing [07:05].
The Seven Events: Anthropic's Three-Year Evidence Chain
Below is a timeline of Anthropic's key actions over the past three years, each presented with both Sacks' interpretation and the counterargument. The first four are at the narrative level (building the safety brand, pushing regulatory frameworks); the last three are at the behavioral level (contractual bans, capital control, selective release).
| 1 |
Constitutional AI Dec 2022 [07:45] |
Using "Constitution" — a word with moral weight — to seize the "responsible AI" narrative. First step of the Safe Oil brand. |
Genuine technical breakthrough; the name is just a name — don't overread it. |
| 2 |
Responsible Scaling Policy (RSP) Sep 2023 [08:42] |
Proactively calling for industry regulation, with standards drawn at Anthropic's capability line. Feb 2026 v3.0 update admitted the pause commitment failed ("collective action dilemma") — the promise became elastic. |
Responsible companies should publicly commit to safety practices; the pause failure is a pragmatic collective action outcome. |
| 3 |
CEO's repeated Congressional testimony 2023–2026 [10:05] |
Classic Safe Oil playbook — proactively calling for regulation, casting himself as the cooperative good citizen. Dario was perceived as the most sincere, contrasting with Sam Altman's "opportunistic" image. |
Dario is genuinely a mild, introverted scientist who cares about safety — not a performance. |
| 4 |
Public support for SB 1047 Aug 2024 [10:56] |
Cleanest execution of the Safe Oil script — every AI company opposed it; only Anthropic supported it. The bill primarily affected models with training costs >$100M — Anthropic had the most complete compliance system and would be least affected. |
Dario offered "conditional support"; larger companies bearing more safety obligations is reasonable. |
| 5 |
Using contract terms to block competitors From Jun 2025 [12:29] |
Classic "the rule-maker is also the rule-enforcer." Terms written in June, used to ban OpenAI in August. Four bans in 11 months (Windsurf/OpenClaude/Xi/Cursor channel), each citing self-authored terms of service. |
Legitimate protection of IP and platform resources; ToS changes are standard industry practice. |
| 6 |
Share voiding declaration May 11, 2026 [14:40] |
All unauthorized share transfers declared void (not voidable). Named 8 platforms including compliant Forge Global (implied $1T valuation). Pre-Stock tokens crashed 36%. Modern translation: "To protect you, I'm canceling your trades." |
Legitimate measure to prevent fraud and protect investors; private equity circulation requires compliance controls. |
| 7 |
Mythos selective release Early 2026 [16:50] |
Selective disclosure equals controlling capability distribution — shown only to designated partners, not publicly released. |
High-risk models require cautious release — this is responsible behavior. |
Evidence Chain Summary Four narrative actions + three behavioral actions. At the narrative level, safety branding and regulatory advocacy built public opinion ground; at the behavioral level, contractual bans, capital controls, and selective releases consolidated market position. The most critical behavioral evidence: four bans in 11 months plus the share voiding declaration.
Counterarguments (from fellow guests)
Brad's Three-Layer Rebuttal (Anthropic Investor)
Layer 1: The lesson of consensus flip-flops [17:20]
Five months ago (late 2025), the industry consensus was that OpenAI was winning — GPT-5 was about to launch, Sam Altman had the best connections, Microsoft had invested over $100B. By early 2026, the consensus flipped in just five months. The implication: if five months was enough to go from "OpenAI wins" to "Anthropic wins," couldn't the judgment that "Anthropic wins forever" also flip in five months?
Layer 2: Annualized revenue ≠ actual revenue [17:50]
Anthropic went from $10B to $30B in Q1 — but that's annualized revenue (current monthly revenue × 12), not actual annual revenue. Under standard accounting, Anthropic and OpenAI's actual monthly revenues in March were roughly the same.
Layer 3 (Key): Elon Web Service and the Five-Layer Cake [18:10]
Brad coined the term "Elon Web Service" (EWS) — with SpaceX integrating and leasing out super data centers, it has become a new super-cloud provider. Sequoia's Sean described SpaceX's "five-layer cake":
- Layer 1: Rocket launches
- Layer 2: Starlink communications
- Layer 3: Compute (EWS) — this layer alone adds $4–5B in incremental revenue this year
- Layer 4: Orbital data centers
- Layer 5: Applications and models
Brad's core argument: The AI industry landscape is not like Standard Oil's monopoly over an entire supply chain. AI is layered — the model layer has Anthropic/OpenAI/Google/Meta, the infrastructure layer has SpaceX rising and AWS dominant, the chip layer has Nvidia in a temporary monopoly, the space-compute layer has SpaceX alone. Not one Rockefeller, but five Rockefellers keeping each other in check [19:30].
Vulnerability [19:40] This rebuttal has a weakness: the May 11 share voiding declaration directly undermines it. Five Rockefellers keeping each other in check assumes market-based equity circulation. After May 11, Anthropic shut down that circulation entirely — not a monopoly at the model layer, but a deeper monopoly: monopoly over capital-layer liquidity.
Chamath's Two Independent Judgments
Chamath has no direct position in Anthropic, making him more neutral than Brad. He offered two independent judgments:
Judgment 1: Revenue has nothing to do with demand — it's entirely supply-constrained [20:00]
- Anthropic appears to be growing exponentially, making everyone think AI demand is exploding — wrong
- It's not about how well they sell, but how much they can deliver — how many GPUs are available, whether there's enough electricity
- The customer queue is much longer than delivery capacity
- AI company revenue is fundamentally determined not by the market, but by power plants [20:50]
- Of the 9 GW of compute power scheduled to come online in the U.S. this year, roughly half has been protested by local environmental groups. Over the next 12–24 months, whether there's enough electricity will determine if Anthropic can keep growing
Judgment 2: The 500-Day Countdown [21:20]
The AI industry has completed the first two of three steps:
- Infrastructure investment — hundreds of billions invested, complete
- Model company revenue — delivered, complete
- Enterprise ROI (whether companies buying AI actually see operational efficiency gains) — not yet fully delivered
Overall operating margins of S&P 500 companies rose from 11.8% to 13% over three years (a 2 percentage point increase). Chamath isn't sure this is AI-driven — it could be post-COVID industrial recovery [21:40].
Within 500 days, there must be data proving AI actually improved profit margins. If proven, Anthropic's trillion-dollar-king expectations could hold; if not, every AI company's valuation would need to be reassessed [22:00].
8. Competitive
Landscape Summary (May 2026)
| Anthropic |
~$44B (SemiAnalysis est.) |
~10x/yr |
Claude Code, coding agents |
| OpenAI |
~$40B+ (est.) |
~3–4x/yr |
Codex / GPT-5.5 (Spud base model) |
| Google |
AI within GCP ~$80B/yr |
63%/yr (GCP) |
Gemini, cloud infrastructure |
| xAI |
Smaller, growing |
— |
Grok, Cursor partnership |
Reference: Big
AI Lab Revenues Projected 2026–2035
The total software development market — Anthropic's core target — is
approximately $1 trillion/year globally, giving ample
room for further ARR expansion according to Brad Gerstner.
Source Index
Official Announcements
News Reports
本文档整理自 All-In Podcast E224
期(2026-05-08),结合经过核实的公开报道与官方声明。播客嘉宾观点不代表任何立场。数据引用来自各方来源,已在文中标注置信度。
This document synthesizes All-In Podcast E224 (May 8, 2026) with
verified public reporting and official statements. Guest opinions
reflect their own views. Data citations are sourced from multiple
outlets with confidence levels noted inline.