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Equity

Space: the final frontier of AI infrastructure

Equity

TechCrunch

Business, News, Technology, Business News, Entrepreneurship

4.2 • 372 Ratings

🗓️ 3 April 2026

⏱️ 33 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Tech companies are racing to build data centers in space, pitching orbital compute as the next frontier for AI infrastructure, even as the technical and economic realities remain far from clear. Add in OpenAI’s massive $122 billion round and Bluesky’s latest AI backlash, and the message is clear: The future of AI is being shaped as much by ambition and hype as it is by real-world constraints.  On this episode of TechCrunch’s Equity podcast, Kirsten Korosec, Anthony Ha, and Sean O’Kane unpack these massive capital bets, user backlash, and off-world compute plans along with Whoop’s major valuation and the literal downfall of robot Olaf.   Listen to the full episode to hear about:  OpenAI’s $122 billion fundraise and what its near-trillion-dollar valuation says about expectations for AI.   Whoop’s $575 million raise and the shift toward “wearables 2.0” (and what happens to all that data).   Bluesky’s AI-powered feed builder and why it triggered a major user backlash.   The rise of data centers in space and whether they are financially or physically feasible.   Subscribe to Equity on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, Overcast, Spotify, and all the casts. You also can follow Equity on X and Threads, at @EquityPod.  Chapters: 00:00 Intro 00:20 A humanoid Olaf robot collapses at Disneyland Paris 03:30 OpenAI raises $122B at an $852B valuation 11:30 Whoop lands $575M and bets big on wearable data  18:50 The risks (and value) of personal health data 23:00 Bluesky’s AI feed builder sparks backlash 30:00 Can Bluesky keep growing — and compete with X? 36:30 The race to build data centers in space 44:30 SpaceX, Starlink, and the business of orbital compute 49:30 Outro  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Presented by Dot Tech Domains, where tech founders find sharp, memorable names for their tech startups.

0:05.9

Hello and welcome back to Equity TechCrunch's podcast about the business of startups.

0:11.1

Today is Friday, April 3rd.

0:13.3

I'm Kirsten Koresak, transportation editor here at TechCrunch, and I'm joined, as always, by our weekend editor Anthony Haugh and senior reporter Sean O'Kane.

0:23.7

And Sean, I think maybe I'll let you open the show by taking a bit of a victory lap around Olaf.

0:31.6

Olaf is dead, baby.

0:33.3

I mean, not exactly.

0:35.1

But Olaf, the robot, yes, we talked about this last week.

0:38.2

Disney and Nvidia had worked together on making this sort of new generation of a robot for Disney Parks based on everybody's favorite snowman from Frozen, Olaf.

0:49.2

And it was a really impressive robot.

0:51.6

And I said, yeah, but what happens if it gets kicked over?

0:53.6

I will say, I won't take a victory lap on that because it did not get kicked over.

0:57.6

You could see in this viral video we're about to talk about briefly that the people at Disneyland Paris clearly knew that that was a risk.

1:05.3

Maybe they listened to equity.

1:07.5

And so they had it roped off, so you couldn't get close to this thing. And yet, the first day

1:13.1

that it was deployed into the park, this thing gave us like probably one of the best viral

1:17.8

moments we'll have this year, but maybe not the best thing for Disney and Vida where it froze

1:22.9

and just tipped backwards and, I mean, passed out, died.

1:27.9

I don't know exactly what you want to said fainted.

1:30.3

Maybe he finally came to grips with his sort of sentience and that just threw him out.

1:37.3

And so, yeah, I mean, this is the problem with robotics.

1:39.3

There's a social element to it that I feel like we were talking about this last week.

...

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