Following a historic April for AI launches, the industry braces for Anthropic’s high-performance Claude Mythos and Meta’s delayed Avocado model while DeepSeek undercuts competitors with aggressive pricing.
The digital frontier is currently witnessing an unprecedented arms race as the world’s leading AI laboratories move from a spring of record-breaking releases into a May pipeline that threatens to upend the existing hierarchy of the Algorithmic State. Following a consequential April that saw the debut of OpenAI’s GPT-5.5 and xAI’s Grok 4.3, the focus has shifted to Anthropic’s Claude Mythos and Meta’s long-delayed Avocado model.
Anthropic’s Claude Mythos is currently the most anticipated release among the tech elite. Positioned in a new model class codenamed Capybara, Mythos is currently restricted to approximately 50 partner organizations under Project Glasswing. Internal documents suggest the model represents a significant leap in reasoning, allegedly scoring 93.9% on the SWE-bench Verified coding benchmark. Anthropic has prioritized cybersecurity organizations for early access, citing the model’s potent ability to identify software vulnerabilities—a capability that raises serious questions about the dual-use nature of such advanced surveillance and defense tools.
While Anthropic moves with calculated caution, Meta’s strategy appears hampered by internal friction. The model codenamed Avocado has suffered multiple delays and is now expected to land in May or June. Reports indicate that internal testing placed Avocado’s performance between Google’s Gemini 2.5 and 3.0, failing to achieve the leap necessary to challenge GPT-5.5. This performance gap is so pronounced that Meta leadership reportedly considered licensing Google’s Gemini technology as a stopgap, despite Meta’s projected $115 billion to $135 billion AI capital expenditure for 2026.
In the open-weight sector, China’s DeepSeek is aggressively challenging the economic foundations of data capitalism. The DeepSeek V4 Pro, a 1.6 trillion parameter mixture-of-experts model, is expected to see a full release this month. By pricing its output at $3.48 per million tokens—nearly nine times cheaper than OpenAI’s GPT-5.5—DeepSeek is positioning itself as the high-volume alternative for developers who prioritize cost-efficiency over multimodal capabilities. This move forces a reckoning for American firms whose high-margin API models now face extreme price pressure.
Simultaneously, the physical frontier of AI is expanding through hardware-centric initiatives. Panthalassa recently secured $140 million in Series B funding, led by Peter Thiel, to develop autonomous ocean-powered computing systems. This move toward sovereign AI infrastructure mirrors NVIDIA’s strategy with its Nemotron Coalition, which includes partners like Mistral AI and LangChain. While NVIDIA’s GR00T N2 humanoid robot model is not expected until late 2026, the company’s push for open frontier models through its DGX Cloud ecosystem ensures that the infrastructure of tomorrow remains tethered to its proprietary hardware.
As GPT-5.5-Cyber begins its rollout to critical infrastructure defenders, the consolidation of AI power into a few hands remains the primary concern for digital sovereignty. The rapid-fire release schedule suggests that the window for meaningful oversight is closing, as the technology evolves faster than the public’s ability to audit its impact on liberty and labor.
Lisa Grant( Senior Writer, Border Security & Immigration )
Lisa Grant serves as a Staff Writer for Just Right News, where she spearheads the publication’s coverage of Technology, Data Capitalism, and Surveillance. With a focus on the encroaching influence of Big Tech on the American way of life, Grant brings a critical, liberty-minded perspective to the most complex digital issues of the modern era. Her reporting is defined by a deep-seated skepticism of centralized power and a commitment to protecting the privacy and autonomy of the individual against the rising tide of what she calls the “Algorithmic State.”
Grant’s unique insight into the tech industry is rooted in her upbringing in Palo Alto, California. Growing up in the epicenter of Silicon Valley, she witnessed firsthand the transformation of the technology sector from a hub of scrappy, freedom-loving innovators into a landscape dominated by monolithic corporations. This proximity to the birth of the digital revolution provided her with an insider’s understanding of the culture and motivations driving the industry. For Grant, the shift toward data capitalism—where personal information is harvested as a primary commodity—is not just a market evolution, but a fundamental challenge to traditional American values of property rights and personal privacy. She saw the “garage startup” ethos replaced by a culture of data-mining and social engineering, a transition that informs her vigilant reporting today.
Now based in Seattle, Washington, Grant operates from another of the nation’s primary technological frontiers. Her location in the Pacific Northwest allows her to observe the real-world consequences of the tech industry’s expansion, from the implementation of invasive surveillance technologies in urban centers to the growing partnership between corporate entities and municipal governance. By reporting from the ground in Seattle, she bridges the gap between the abstract world of coding and the tangible impact it has on citizens’ daily lives, often highlighting how local policies serve as a testing ground for broader national surveillance initiatives.
At the heart of her work for Just Right News is her acclaimed feature series, “The Algorithmic State.” Through this series, Grant explores the ways in which automated systems and artificial intelligence are increasingly used to bypass traditional legislative processes and social norms. She argues that the reliance on opaque algorithms to manage society threatens to erode the transparency and accountability essential to a free republic. Her work meticulously documents how data-driven governance can lead to a “soft” surveillance state that penalizes traditional viewpoints and rewards digital conformity.
Grant’s reporting is a vital resource for readers who are wary of the “nanny state” and the unchecked power of digital gatekeepers. She views the defense of the digital frontier as the next great battle for constitutional conservatives. By exposing the mechanisms of data capitalism and the quiet expansion of surveillance networks, she empowers her audience to reclaim their digital sovereignty. In an era where information is often weaponized by those in power, Lisa Grant remains a steadfast advocate for the truth, ensuring that the principles of liberty and individual agency are not lost in the transition to an increasingly digital world.