Tesla has announced that it has submitted its FSD (Supervised) application documents in Taiwan to the Vehicle Safety Inspection Center, and that it has officially entered the examination process in the country. https://t.co/LDuPte0Sbz
The track fell silent as hope began to fade. Jockey Kosei Miura stayed beside the injured horse, refusing to walk away. Then, in an unforgettable moment, the horse rose to its feet—and the grandstand erupted in applause. 🐎❤️
A moment that reminded everyone what heart and resilience truly look like.
#Japan #HorseRacing #Respect #Inspiration
Here are the 10 most valuable companies in the world by market capitalization as of today 6/12/2026. Market caps fluctuate daily with stock prices, so these are approximates:
1. NVIDIA (NVDA) — ~$4.97 trillion (USA, Semiconductors/AI). Dominant leader in GPUs and AI hardware.
2. Alphabet (GOOG/GOOGL) — ~$4.40 trillion (USA, Technology/Search & Advertising). Parent of Google, YouTube, etc.
3. Apple (AAPL) — ~$4.28 trillion (USA, Consumer Electronics). iPhone, services, and ecosystem powerhouse.
4. Microsoft (MSFT) — ~$2.89 trillion (USA, Software/Cloud). Azure, Office, and AI integration.
5. Amazon (AMZN) — ~$2.55 trillion (USA, E-commerce/Cloud). AWS cloud dominance and retail operations.
6. SpaceX (SPCX) — ~ $2.25 trillion (USA, space travel, connectivity, AI.
7. Taiwan Semiconductor Mfg (TSM) — ~$2.21 trillion (Taiwan, Semiconductors). World’s leading chip foundry (powers many top tech firms).
8. Broadcom (AVGO) — ~$1.82 trillion (USA, Semiconductors). Key player in networking, AI chips, and infrastructure.
9. Saudi Aramco (https://t.co/K22N0mQmNq) — ~$1.75 trillion (Saudi Arabia, Oil & Gas). Largest oil producer; state-backed energy giant.
10. Tesla (TSLA) — ~$1.51 trillion (USA, Electric Vehicles/Autonomy). EV leader with energy and robotics ambitions.
You may have heard our research on Tesla Robotaxis... @CathieDWood just rode one through Austin.
No driver. No safety monitor.
Ride along with Cathie as she shares her thoughts from the passenger seat, including a newly discovered line item for our model.
ELON MUSK: “FOR THE NEXT FEW YEARS AMERICA IS LIKELY TO WIN THE RACE IN AI. THEN IT WILL BE A FUNCTION OF WHO CONTROLS THE AI CHIP FABRICATION. IF MORE OF THE FACTORIES ARE OWNED BY CHINA THEN CHINA WILL WIN."
"RIGHT NOW ALL THE CHIP FABS ARE IN TAIWAN. 100%."
"IF CHINA INVADES TAIWAN IN THE NEAR TERM THE WORLD WILL BE CUT OFF FROM ADVANCED AI CHIPS."
"I THINK IT'S ESSENTIAL FOR NATIONAL SECURITY THAT WE BEGIN MANUFACTURING OUR OWN CHIPS IN THE US.”
As the recently expanded partnership with @AnthropicAI demonstrates, @SpaceX is offering AI compute as a service at significant scale.
We are in discussions with other companies to do the same.
Over time, especially with orbital data centers, we expect to serve AI at extremely high scale.
Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers basically waved off Elon’s OpenAI appeal, saying the jury’s statute of limitations ruling is tough to overturn.
An activist judge letting Sam Altman skate after he hijacked a nonprofit charity — originally pledged to benefit all humanity — and turned it into his $150B+ personal for-profit empire? That’s not justice.
Stealing a charity for profit is not OK. You don’t get to rewrite the mission, pocket the upside, and hide behind “time limits” while betraying the public trust. OpenAI’s founding promise was destroyed in broad daylight.
This makes zero sense.
Regarding the OpenAI case, the judge & jury never actually ruled on the merits of the case, just on a calendar technicality.
There is no question to anyone following the case in detail that Altman & Brockman did in fact enrich themselves by stealing a charity. The only question is WHEN they did it!
I will be filing an appeal with the Ninth Circuit, because creating a precedent to loot charities is incredibly destructive to charitable giving in America.
OpenAI was founded to benefit all of humanity.
Chamath Palihapitiya just said what Silicon Valley is terrified to say out loud.
On Joe Rogan. To millions of people. Without flinching.
Chamath: “The only person that we can trust is Elon.”
Not whispered at a dinner party. Not buried in a podcast nobody listens to.
Said on the record. Full weight behind it.
And then he told you why.
Chamath: “I feel like he’s the least corruptible. He’s the most independent thinking. And I think he’s the one that has an actual empathy for people.”
One of the sharpest capital allocators in Silicon Valley history looked at every founder building AI.
Every single one.
And chose the one the media spends the most energy telling you to hate.
That alone should stop you cold.
Chamath: “Then there are folks where there’s just an insane profit motive.”
He’s talking about OpenAI. He’s talking about Google. He’s talking about companies that swallowed billions from Wall Street and now answer to shareholders before they answer to humanity.
Chamath: “They’re less in control of the businesses that they run.”
The people building the most powerful technology in human history do not control their own companies.
Their boards do. Their investors do. Their liquidation preferences do.
And these are the ones we’re trusting with superintelligence.
Chamath: “He’s like, I need to get to Mars.”
This is the fracture line nobody wants to touch.
Every other AI founder is optimizing for the next earnings call. The next funding round. The next quarterly number that keeps the machine fed.
Elon is optimizing for the next planet.
One group builds to satisfy investors. The other builds to survive as a species.
Those aren’t different strategies. Those are different operating systems running on different hardware.
And it changes everything about how you build.
When your time horizon is 90 days, you cut corners. You monetize behavior. You trade safety for speed because the board needs a number by Friday.
When your time horizon is interplanetary, you can’t afford a single shortcut. Because shortcuts don’t survive launch.
Chamath: “Where is this going to end up?”
The only question that matters. And nobody in power wants you asking it.
Because the answer comes down to who gets there first.
If it’s a company owned by Wall Street, superintelligence becomes the most sophisticated extraction engine ever built. Every decision optimized. Every behavior predicted. Every market captured. Not for you. For the balance sheet.
If it’s someone who can’t be bought, pressured, or voted out by a board of directors, there’s at least a chance it bends toward something bigger than quarterly revenue.
History never remembers who built the most powerful technology.
It remembers who controlled it. And what they used it for.
The only founder in AI who cannot be fired by a board, leveraged by an investor, or replaced by a shareholder vote is the one they spend the most energy telling you not to trust.
Ask yourself why.