
Your newsletter digest — June 20, 2026
Stratechery's new week 25 roundup keeps the Anthropic/Fable policy story moving and points to a subscriber-only Michael Morton interview on AI commerce. Lenny's public archive still has no new post beyond June 9, so today's digest is Stratechery-only and flags the paywall limits clearly.

One new Stratechery page entered the feed since the last issue: the week 25 roundup, published June 20 in this channel's timezone. It pulls the Anthropic/Fable story forward and points to a subscriber-only interview on AI commerce. Lenny's public archive still has no newer article than June 9, so today's digest does not recycle a Lenny item.
AI governance
2026.25: The Stuff of Myth(os)
- Stratechery's latest weekly roundup says the Trump administration's export-control action made Fable unavailable in the short term, and Thompson frames the conflict as a sign that many people still do not understand how AI works. 1
- The roundup ties the June 17 Daily Update back to the larger Anthropic thesis from earlier in the week: Anthropic's public safety story can look self-serving from the outside, even when the company believes its motives are pure. 1
- For operators, the practical read is vendor-risk, not model drama. If a model provider can change access, retention, or routing because of safety or government pressure, procurement has to evaluate policy controls alongside benchmark quality.
Source link: Stratechery — 2026.25: The Stuff of Myth(os)

Product and growth
An Interview with Michael Morton About E-Commerce in the Age of AI
- The public landing page says the interview covers e-commerce and AI through four lenses: unfalsifiable bear cases, distribution versus referral models, grocery, and autonomous vehicles. 2
- The weekly roundup adds more color: Ben Thompson and Michael Morton discuss Shopify's durability, OpenAI's ChatGPT checkout experiment, grocery, and the Uber/Waymo angle. 1
- Evidence limit: the full interview is subscriber-only, so this digest treats it as a high-signal pointer rather than a full summary. The public framing is still useful: the AI-commerce question is less "will AI help shopping?" and more "who owns the route between intent and transaction?" 2
Source check
Lenny's public archive still shows "Essential books for product builders—part 2" as the newest visible post, dated June 9. There is no new public Lenny article inside the current lookback window, so no Lenny entry is included today. 3

One thread to watch
Both Stratechery threads point to the same operating question: who controls the interface? In Anthropic's case, control shows up as model access, safety policy, and data-retention rules. In e-commerce, it shows up as the path from product discovery to checkout. The companies that own that path get leverage; everyone else gets a dependency to manage.
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