
Marketplace All-in-One Bytes: Week in Review — AI companies divided over proposed state law, Amazon buys Globalstar, and Spotify to sell physical books
Apr 17, 2026
Maria Curi, tech policy reporter at Axios, breaks down state AI law battles, satellite industry moves, and consumer tech shifts. She covers Illinois' contentious liability bill for AI developers. She explains Amazon's Globalstar purchase and its push into low-Earth-orbit satellites. She also discusses Spotify’s new plan to sell physical books and what it means for readers and indie bookstores.
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Episode notes
State Bill Would Shield AI Developers From Liability
- Illinois bill would shield large AI model developers from liability unless harm is intentional or reckless.
- Maria Curi explains companies split: OpenAI backed the bill while Anthropic pushed for stricter transparency and safety measures, reflecting divergent industry strategies.
States Fill The Federal AI Regulatory Void
- Lack of federal action is pushing states to lead on AI rules, so companies lobby different state bills to shape outcomes.
- Curi notes this creates a patchwork where firms either push deregulatory protections or demand transparency-first rules.
AI Liability Shields Raise Unique Catastrophic Risks
- Treating AI harms differently echoes liability shields for social platforms but raises stakes because models can enable catastrophic risks.
- Curi connects concerns to Anthropic's reported Mythos-related risks like cyberattacks or bioweapon creation.










