January 11th, 2026
Elon and Altman go to court
This newsletter was brought to you bySetappAnd OpenAI keeps launching
gm legends. Itās Sunday.
We hope everyone is back behind their laptops, because weāve got some new products for you to try. This week: when to turn your side hustle into a full-time project, how to position your product to benefit from agentic web surfing, the latest on the Elon-OpenAI grudge match, and five of our favorite launches.Ā
Important stuff is below. Stop skimming and start reading.
P.S. Launching soon? Weād love to hear about it ā editorial@producthunt.co š«¶
Why agents will unseat more incumbents than social ever did
By Dan Bulteel (founder, Meet-Ting)
ā15 years ago, I wrote an article about the rise of a more social web for Huff Post.
āAt the time, Facebook was updating its News Feed and bringing Spotify, Zynga, etc. into it. Google was also launching Google+. Obviously, one changed the internet. The other validated it, even if it didn't pay off.
āIf you think about that shift, we stopped going to the internet to browse our top 10 sites, and, instead, Facebook became the front door to the internet as things collapsed into a feed.
āIt changed how we consumed news, media, and entertainment, which meant it also disrupted the incumbent world order = great swell for startups.
āThese days, I'm obsessed with this same opportunity as we move into a more agentic internet. If you've been trying to build something but you're fighting against entrenched user behaviours with a competitor or feel it's just too hard to go up against a giantā¦well, maybe you have a secret advantage.ā
Side hustles

Alex Cloudstar asked: āAt what point does a side project stop being ājust a side projectā?ā
Bashiri says itās when he starts feeling a responsibility to take it forward, Tish says itās when she gets afraid of ignoring it, and Dickemar says itās when she wakes up and plans her day around it. Perhaps surprisingly, no one has mentioned the financial aspectāitās all passion, baby.Ā
When do you give in to your passion projects?
Grow your app with Setapp: revenue, users, & AI

You shipped the app. Now comes the part nobody warns you about.
Billing across dozens of countries. Licensing agreements. Tax compliance. Customer support for users you haven't met yet. And if your app does anything with AI, add provider management and infrastructure costs to the pile. None of that is why you started building ā but all of it is now your problem.
Setapp is trying to take it off your plate.
You probably know Setapp as the subscription marketplace ā one monthly price, hundreds of Mac apps. On May 21st, they turned toward developers. The pitch is simple: list your app, reach users who are already looking, and let Setapp handle the business layer.
Elon v. OpenAI
Circle your calendars!Ā
Elon Muskās lawsuit against ChatGPT creator OpenAI and cofounders Sam Altman and Greg Brockman goes before a jury in March.
Whatās the beef?
Well, Musk, who now runs xAI (and Teslaā¦and SpaceXā¦and Xā¦andā¦), co-founded OpenAI alongside Altman, Brockman, and others as a nonprofit research lab. When it spun off a for-profit company in 2019, Musk cried foul.Ā
Musk said promises were made and that he put in $38M of his own money based on assurances that OpenAI would stay not-for-profit. Heās seeking monetary damages, but itās pretty clear that the worldās richest person doesnāt need the money.
OpenAI argues, basically, that Musk, who tried to buy OpenAI last year for $97.4B, is frustrated because he wanted to run OpenAI and that now he has to compete; the lawsuits are fruitless attempts to slow down development.
But OpenAI just canāt stop releasing products. The latest: ChatGPT Health, a specialized space that integrates with health apps so people can understand whatās going on with their body, get individualized diet and exercise advice, and come to medical appointments armed with questions. It hit #2 on Thursday.
Leaderboard highlights






Every Sunday
Everything you missed this past week on Product Hunt: Top products, spicy community discourse, key trends on the site, and long-form pieces weāve recently published.