
- America’s Largest Hospital System Ready to Start Replacing Radiologists With AI, Its CEO Says
Just weeks after the largest nurses strike in the New York City history, the CEO of NYC Health and Hospitals has a bold vision for a future where AI, not human radiologists, examines and diagnoses… Read more: America’s Largest Hospital System Ready to Start Replacing Radiologists With AI, Its CEO Says - AI Forces College Professor to Get Typewriters for Entire Class
Meme wisdom holds that modern problems require modern solutions, but what peddlers of this internet adage failed to consider is that an antiquated and possibly impractical approach could be loads more fun. We present Grit… Read more: AI Forces College Professor to Get Typewriters for Entire Class - Claude Leak Shows That Anthropic Is Tracking Users’ Vulgar Language and Deems Them “Negative”
AI company Anthropic suffered a massive leak of the source code to its Claude Code AI assistant earlier this week, triggering a panicked game of cat and mouse as company representatives sent out copyright takedown… Read more: Claude Leak Shows That Anthropic Is Tracking Users’ Vulgar Language and Deems Them “Negative” - The Real Reason OpenAI Shut Sora Down Is a Warning to Every AI Startup
OpenAI unceremoniously killed off its text-to-video AI app Sora last month, bringing an abrupt end to months of brain-melting AI slop. Even what was supposed to be a groundbreaking $1 billion deal with Disney was caught in… Read more: The Real Reason OpenAI Shut Sora Down Is a Warning to Every AI Startup - Saturn’s magnetic field is twisted and scientists just figured out why
Saturn’s magnetic field isn’t the smooth, symmetrical shield scientists see around Earth. Instead, it’s noticeably skewed, and researchers now think they understand why. By analyzing years of data from the Cassini spacecraft, scientists found that… Read more: Saturn’s magnetic field is twisted and scientists just figured out why - Meteor impacts may have sparked life on Earth, scientists say
Asteroid impacts may have helped kick-start life on Earth by creating hot, chemical-rich environments ideal for early biology. These impact-generated hydrothermal systems could have lasted thousands of years—long enough for life’s building blocks to form.… Read more: Meteor impacts may have sparked life on Earth, scientists say - Scientists reveal new blood pressure treatment that works when others fail
A new pill called baxdrostat is showing strong results in lowering dangerously high blood pressure in people who don’t respond to standard treatments. In a large global trial, patients saw their blood pressure drop by… Read more: Scientists reveal new blood pressure treatment that works when others fail - Students found a star from the dawn of the universe drifting into the Milky Way
A group of undergraduate students stumbled into a cosmic time capsule—one of the oldest stars ever discovered—while combing through massive astronomy datasets. What began as a class project quickly turned into a breakthrough when they… Read more: Students found a star from the dawn of the universe drifting into the Milky Way - Dying stars are devouring giant planets, astronomers discover
Dying stars may be wiping out nearby giant planets as they expand into red giants. Astronomers found that these close-in planets become increasingly rare around more evolved stars, suggesting many have already been swallowed. The… Read more: Dying stars are devouring giant planets, astronomers discover - MXene breakthrough boosts conductivity 160x with perfect atomic order
A new breakthrough is transforming MXenes—ultra-thin, high-tech materials—into something far more powerful and precise. Researchers have developed a cleaner, more controlled way to build these materials using molten salts and iodine, eliminating the messy chemical… Read more: MXene breakthrough boosts conductivity 160x with perfect atomic order - These overlooked brain cells may control fear and PTSD
Astrocytes, once thought to be mere brain “support cells,” are now revealed to be key players in fear memory. Researchers found they actively help form, recall, and weaken fear responses by interacting with neurons in… Read more: These overlooked brain cells may control fear and PTSD - William Shatner Says AI Is Spreading Horrific Rumors About Him
The advent of powerful generative AI tools has supercharged the proliferation of disinformation, with viral and fictional stories making the lives of public figures a living hell. Facebook, in particular, has been overrun with misleading… Read more: William Shatner Says AI Is Spreading Horrific Rumors About Him - Gambling Is Thousands of Years Older Than We Thought, Rewriting Human Evolution
Welcome back to the Abstract! Here are the studies this week that rolled with it, went out on a limb, gravitationally waved, and spotted relics in our midst. First, hundreds of prehistoric dice sets shed… Read more: Gambling Is Thousands of Years Older Than We Thought, Rewriting Human Evolution - Components of A Coding Agent
In this article, I want to cover the overall design of coding agents and agent harnesses: what they are, how they work, and how the different pieces fit together in practice. Readers of my Build… Read more: Components of A Coding Agent - AI Is Killing Microsoft
OpenAI made headlines this year after announcing it was giving up on what one exec categorized as distracting “side quests,” including its Sora text-to-video app, to double down on enterprise and coding, which are lucrative… Read more: AI Is Killing Microsoft - Components of A Coding AgentIn this article, I want to cover the overall design of coding agents and agent harnesses: what they are, how they work, and how the different pieces fit together in practice. Readers of my Build… Read more: Components of A Coding Agent
- Hackers Are Posting the Claude Code Leak With Bonus Malware
Plus: The FBI says a recent hack of its wiretap tools poses a national security risk, attackers stole Cisco source code as part of an ongoing supply chain hacking spree, and more. - ‘Occasionally a picture can change the course of history’: 33 scandalous photos that shocked the world
When it comes to scandal, seeing is believing – which is why these images caused such a stir Words can tell a story, but it’s pictures that will make you believe in it. Such is… Read more: ‘Occasionally a picture can change the course of history’: 33 scandalous photos that shocked the world - Say a Prayer for This Startup That’s Replacing Its Developers With OpenClaw
OpenClaw fever is still going strong in tech circles. The open source AI agent, much hyped for “actually doing things,” has been embraced by many programmers to automate parts of their workflow. But could they… Read more: Say a Prayer for This Startup That’s Replacing Its Developers With OpenClaw - Trump proposes steep cut to NASA budget as astronauts head for the Moon
President Donald Trump released a budget blueprint on Friday calling for a 23 percent cut to NASA’s budget, two days after the agency launched four astronauts on the first crewed lunar mission in more than… Read more: Trump proposes steep cut to NASA budget as astronauts head for the Moon - As Artemis II zooms to the Moon, everything seems to be going swimmingly
As the Artemis II lunar mission moved into its third day on Friday, and with the spacecraft’s big engine firing behind it, the four astronauts on board had a little more downtime. So the four… Read more: As Artemis II zooms to the Moon, everything seems to be going swimmingly - Ice Age dice show early Native Americans may have understood probability
Native Americans have been playing with dice in games of chance for more than 12,000 years, according to a new paper published in the journal American Antiquity. And the oldest examples of Native American dice… Read more: Ice Age dice show early Native Americans may have understood probability - Two OpenAI Execs, Including CEO of AGI, Going on Medical Leave
Something’s going on at OpenAI — and it isn’t just the pre-IPO jitters. According to Bloomberg, the company behind ChatGPT is sending not just one, but two top executives away on extended medical leave. The… Read more: Two OpenAI Execs, Including CEO of AGI, Going on Medical Leave - OpenClaw gives users yet another reason to be freaked out about security
For more than a month, security practitioners have been warning about the perils of using OpenClaw, the viral AI agentic tool that has taken the development community by storm. A recently fixed vulnerability provides an… Read more: OpenClaw gives users yet another reason to be freaked out about security - Trump ignores biggest reasons his AI data center buildout is failing
Donald Trump is facing significant hurdles after declaring, in a series of executive orders last year, that rapid construction of AI data centers was among his top priorities to ensure the US wins the AI… Read more: Trump ignores biggest reasons his AI data center buildout is failing - “Cognitive surrender” leads AI users to abandon logical thinking, research finds
When it comes to large language model-powered tools, there are generally two broad categories of users. On one side are those who treat AI as a powerful but sometimes faulty service that needs careful human… Read more: “Cognitive surrender” leads AI users to abandon logical thinking, research finds - Elon Musk insists banks working on SpaceX IPO must buy Grok subscriptions
Banks and other firms that want to work on SpaceX’s initial public offering (IPO) are being required to buy subscriptions to the Grok AI service, The New York Times reported today. Elon Musk “is requiring… Read more: Elon Musk insists banks working on SpaceX IPO must buy Grok subscriptions - Meta Pauses Work With Mercor After Data Breach Puts AI Industry Secrets at Risk
Major AI labs are investigating a security incident that impacted Mercor, a leading data vendor. The incident could have exposed key data about how they train AI models. - Sam Altman Opens Up About Telling CEO of Disney That It Had All Been Smoke and Mirrors
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has finally dished on Disney’s reaction to his decision to kill the company’s AI video generator app, Sora — scuttling a billion dollar deal the two giants had planned. Given the… Read more: Sam Altman Opens Up About Telling CEO of Disney That It Had All Been Smoke and Mirrors - Working to advance the nuclear renaissance
Today, there are 94 nuclear reactors operating in the United States, more than in any other country in the world, and these units collectively provide nearly 20 percent of the nation’s electricity. That is a… Read more: Working to advance the nuclear renaissance - Google Vids Just Got a Major AI Upgrade — Here’s What’s New
Google Vids adds AI avatar controls, custom music, and YouTube publishing, positioning itself as a powerful new competitor in AI video creation. The post Google Vids Just Got a Major AI Upgrade — Here’s What’s… Read more: Google Vids Just Got a Major AI Upgrade — Here’s What’s New - OpenAI’s Fidji Simo Is Taking Medical Leave Amid an Executive Shake-Up
The company is undergoing major leadership restructuring as its CEO of AGI deployment goes on leave for “several weeks.” - Netflix must refund customers for years of price hikes, Italian court rules
A Rome court has ruled that the price hikes Netflix imposed on subscribers in Italy in 2017, 2019, 2021, and 2024 were unlawful. The court ordered Netflix to refund affected customers by up to 500… Read more: Netflix must refund customers for years of price hikes, Italian court rules - AI Breakthroughs, Security Breaches, and Industry Shakeups Define the Week in Tech
See what you missed in Daily Tech Insider from March 30–April 3. The post AI Breakthroughs, Security Breaches, and Industry Shakeups Define the Week in Tech appeared first on TechRepublic. - Behind the Blog: Systems As Designed
This is Behind the Blog, where we share our behind-the-scenes thoughts about how a few of our top stories of the week came together. This week, we discuss crypto, journalists using AI, and a cool… Read more: Behind the Blog: Systems As Designed - d-Matrix Acquires GigaIO Data Center Business
Addition of Rack-Scale Technology, Systems Expertise and Key Engineering Talent to Accelerate Deployment of Low-Latency, Highly Efficient AI Inference at Scale d-Matrix, the pioneer in low-latency AI inference compute for data centers, today announced the acquisition… Read more: d-Matrix Acquires GigaIO Data Center Business - EV adoption in America: Who’s winning, who’s losing?
With the war in the Persian Gulf now more than a month old, the effect on fuel prices is plain to see: On average, they’re up almost a dollar per gallon, or 25 percent, according… Read more: EV adoption in America: Who’s winning, who’s losing? - AI-Powered Tractor Startup Burns Through a Quarter Billion Dollars, Fires All Employees in Epic Implosion
The world simply wasn’t ready for AI powered tractors. Or perhaps it was Monarch Tractor, the much-hyped company that promised to revolutionize agriculture when it launched these electric-powered autonomous farm machines in 2023, that wasn’t… Read more: AI-Powered Tractor Startup Burns Through a Quarter Billion Dollars, Fires All Employees in Epic Implosion - OpenAI takes on another “side quest,” buys tech-focused talk show TBPN
OpenAI has struck a deal to acquire TBPN, a technology-focused talk show popular in Silicon Valley, making an unexpected move into broadcasting after pledging to abandon “side quests” and focus on its core business. The… Read more: OpenAI takes on another “side quest,” buys tech-focused talk show TBPN - UK’s leading AI research institute told to make ‘significant’ changes
Body that funds Alan Turing Institute says it should offer better strategy and more value for money The UK’s leading AI research institute has been told to make “significant” changes by its main source of… Read more: UK’s leading AI research institute told to make ‘significant’ changes - Anthropic Suddenly Cares Intensely About Intellectual Property After Realizing With Horror That It Accidentally Leaked Claude’s Source Code
The AI industry largely acts as if it’s above lowly copyright laws — unless, of course, those laws happen to be protecting its own interests. As the Wall Street Journal reports, Anthropic is scrambling to… Read more: Anthropic Suddenly Cares Intensely About Intellectual Property After Realizing With Horror That It Accidentally Leaked Claude’s Source Code - Alloy Partners with Plaid to Expand AI Risk Solutions Access
Alloy’s platform will now directly integrate Plaid solutions to improve risk management in onboarding and underwriting, making it fast and easy to test and implement new tools to stay ahead of fraud Alloy, a leading identity… Read more: Alloy Partners with Plaid to Expand AI Risk Solutions Access - The 3 Best Portable Jump Starters in 2026: Get Charged Up
The new crop of portable jump starters means you’ll never be stuck waiting on a tow. Here are the devices we’d trust. - KX Delivers GPU-Accelerated Advantage for Real-Time AI in Capital Markets
Integrated time-series, vector, and GPU compute enables production-scale AI by eliminating handoffs across research, backtesting, and live trading workflows KX, a global leader in real-time, time-series, and AI-driven analytics, today announced the general availability of KDB-X,… Read more: KX Delivers GPU-Accelerated Advantage for Real-Time AI in Capital Markets - Algolia Announced the Appointment of Stephen Lynch as CEO
Algolia, the AI Search and Retrieval platform trusted by more than 18,000 businesses and millions of developers worldwide, today announced the appointment of Stephen Lynch as Chief Executive Officer. Lynch succeeds Bernadette Nixon, who transitioned… Read more: Algolia Announced the Appointment of Stephen Lynch as CEO - Scientists discover why flu and COVID hit older adults so hard
A new study reveals that aging lungs may play a major role in why flu and COVID can become so dangerous for older adults. Researchers found that certain lung cells can trigger an exaggerated immune… Read more: Scientists discover why flu and COVID hit older adults so hard - Strange “elephant skin” rocks reveal ancient life in the dark ocean
A puzzling wrinkled rock formation in Morocco has led scientists to rethink where ancient microbes could live. Instead of shallow, sunlit waters, these microbes may have thrived deep in the ocean, fueled by chemicals delivered… Read more: Strange “elephant skin” rocks reveal ancient life in the dark ocean - A gene mutation may trap the brain in the wrong reality in schizophrenia patients
A newly identified gene mutation may help explain why schizophrenia patients struggle to update their understanding of reality. The mutation disrupts a brain circuit involved in flexible decision-making, causing mice to stick with outdated choices… Read more: A gene mutation may trap the brain in the wrong reality in schizophrenia patients - Ancient bees found nesting inside fossil bones in rare cave discovery
Thousands of years ago in a cave on Hispaniola, an unusual chain of events left behind a rare scientific treasure: bees nesting inside fossilized bones. After giant barn owls repeatedly brought prey like hutias into… Read more: Ancient bees found nesting inside fossil bones in rare cave discovery - Deafness reversed: One injection restores hearing in just weeks
A new gene therapy is giving people born deaf the chance to hear, often within just weeks. In a small but groundbreaking study, researchers delivered a working copy of a key hearing gene directly into… Read more: Deafness reversed: One injection restores hearing in just weeks - This 5-day diet helped Crohn’s patients feel better fast
A new clinical trial suggests that what people eat could finally offer real relief for Crohn’s disease, a condition that has long lacked clear dietary guidance. Researchers found that a “fasting-mimicking diet” — involving just… Read more: This 5-day diet helped Crohn’s patients feel better fast - This tiny claw in a 500-million-year-old fossil just rewrote the origin of spiders
What started as routine fossil cleaning turned into a major scientific surprise when researchers uncovered a tiny claw in a 500-million-year-old specimen where no claw should exist. That detail revealed Megachelicerax cousteaui, the oldest known… Read more: This tiny claw in a 500-million-year-old fossil just rewrote the origin of spiders - Study finds dangerous lead levels in children’s clothing
Fast fashion might come with a hidden danger: lead. Researchers testing children’s shirts from multiple retailers found every sample exceeded U.S. safety limits, raising concerns about toxic exposure—especially since young kids often chew on clothing.… Read more: Study finds dangerous lead levels in children’s clothing - Scientists say BMI gets it wrong for over one third of adults
A new study suggests that one of the most widely used health metrics, BMI, may be getting it wrong for a large portion of the population. By comparing BMI classifications with precise body fat measurements… Read more: Scientists say BMI gets it wrong for over one third of adults - SpaceX Starship could slash travel time to Uranus in half
A new concept suggests SpaceX’s Starship could revolutionize a future mission to Uranus, one of the solar system’s most overlooked planets. By refueling in orbit and helping slow the spacecraft on arrival, it could cut… Read more: SpaceX Starship could slash travel time to Uranus in half - Four astronauts are now inexorably bound for the Moon
The Orion spacecraft successfully fired its main engine for 5 minutes and 50 seconds on Thursday, sending four astronauts on a free-return trajectory around the Moon. For NASA and the Artemis II crew members, this… Read more: Four astronauts are now inexorably bound for the Moon - Perplexity’s “Incognito Mode” is a “sham,” lawsuit says
Perplexity’s AI search engine encourages users to go deeper with their prompts by engaging in chat sessions that a lawsuit has alleged are often shared in their entirety with Google and Meta without users’ knowledge… Read more: Perplexity’s “Incognito Mode” is a “sham,” lawsuit says - Laser-powered wireless hits 360 Gbps and uses half the energy of Wi-Fi
A new breakthrough in wireless technology could dramatically boost internet speeds while cutting energy use—by switching from radio waves to light. Researchers have developed a tiny chip packed with dozens of miniature lasers that can… Read more: Laser-powered wireless hits 360 Gbps and uses half the energy of Wi-Fi - New microwave frying technique could make french fries much healthier
Scientists have discovered a way to make French fries less greasy without ruining their taste. By combining regular frying with microwave heating, they reduce the amount of oil absorbed during cooking. The key lies in… Read more: New microwave frying technique could make french fries much healthier - Renewables dominate 2025’s newly installed generating capacity
On Wednesday, the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) released its numbers on what was built in 2025. And much as we saw in the US, solar power is the primary driver of change. The numbers… Read more: Renewables dominate 2025’s newly installed generating capacity - New Rowhammer attacks give complete control of machines running Nvidia GPUs
The cost of high-performance GPUs, typically $8,000 or more, means they are frequently shared among dozens of users in cloud environments. Two new attacks demonstrate how a malicious user can gain full root control of… Read more: New Rowhammer attacks give complete control of machines running Nvidia GPUs - New fossil deposits show complex animal groups predating the Cambrian
The details of how animal life began are a bit murky. Most of the groups familiar today are present in the Cambrian, a period when they rapidly diversified, with familiar features evolving alongside bizarre creatures… Read more: New fossil deposits show complex animal groups predating the Cambrian - Male octopuses guided through mating by female hormones
Octopuses are one of the most alien creatures on Earth. The lack of bones makes them amazing shapeshifters, most of them can change color like chameleons, and they pump blue copper-based blood through their bodies… Read more: Male octopuses guided through mating by female hormones - Google Vids gets AI upgrade with Veo and Lyria models, directable AI avatars
OpenAI might be pulling back on video generation, but Google is forging ahead with a major AI update to its Vids editing product. The company’s latest video and audio models are now integrated with the… Read more: Google Vids gets AI upgrade with Veo and Lyria models, directable AI avatars - SpaceX tries to convince FCC that Amazon put satellites into wrong altitude
Starlink operator SpaceX claims that Amazon violated orbital debris requirements by launching satellites into initial altitudes that are too high, increasing the risk of collision with other satellites and spacecraft. SpaceX, which recently reported two… Read more: SpaceX tries to convince FCC that Amazon put satellites into wrong altitude - ‘Uncanny Valley’: Iran’s Threats on US Tech, Trump’s Plans for Midterms, and Polymarket’s Pop-up Flop
In this episode, we discuss Iran’s threats to target US tech firms, gear up for the midterm elections, and get a scene report from the Polymarket pop-up bar in DC. - OpenAI buys tech talkshow TBPN in push to shape AI narrative
OpenAI’s chief of strategy says acquisition of show will help company engage with public about AI as it evolves OpenAI is wading into the media business by acquiring TBPN, a technology-focused talkshow closely watched by… Read more: OpenAI buys tech talkshow TBPN in push to shape AI narrative - OpenAI Buys Some Positive News
OpenAI is acquiring TBPN, a business talk show that’s popular among Silicon Valley elites, as it continues to battle its negative public image. - Google teams up with gas plant for AI datacenter in sharp turn from climate goals
Texas power plant would emit 4.5m tons of carbon dioxide per year, more than that of the entire city of San Francisco Google has struck a partnership for a natural gas power plant that could… Read more: Google teams up with gas plant for AI datacenter in sharp turn from climate goals - A New Google-Funded Data Center Will Be Powered by a Massive Gas Plant
Documents show that one of Google’s new data centers would be powered by a natural gas plant that emits millions of tons of emissions each year—an increasingly common trend in the industry. - Why is NASA bothering to go back to the Moon if we’ve already been there?
KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, Fla.—The first time NASA launched humans toward the Moon, in December 1968, the United States was a deeply fractured nation. The historic flight of three people into the unknown brought a measure… Read more: Why is NASA bothering to go back to the Moon if we’ve already been there? - Anthropic says its leak-focused DMCA effort unintentionally hit legit GitHub forks
An Anthropic-backed DMCA effort to remove its recently leaked Claude Code client source code from GitHub this week resulted in the accidental removal of many legitimate forks of its official public code repository. While that… Read more: Anthropic says its leak-focused DMCA effort unintentionally hit legit GitHub forks - This Ford is the quickest production car at the Nürburgring, ever
When it comes to automotive bragging rights, a good Nürburgring Nordschleife lap time is right up there with the best of them. And today, those bragging rights belong to Ford. The automaker revealed that its… Read more: This Ford is the quickest production car at the Nürburgring, ever - Google announces Gemma 4 open AI models, switches to Apache 2.0 license
Google’s Gemini AI models have improved by leaps and bounds over the past year, but you can only use Gemini on Google’s terms. The company’s Gemma open-weight models have provided more freedom, but Gemma 3,… Read more: Google announces Gemma 4 open AI models, switches to Apache 2.0 license - KiloClaw targets shadow AI with autonomous agent governance
With the launch of KiloClaw, enterprises now have a tool to enforce governance over autonomous agents and manage shadow AI. While businesses spent the last year securing large language models and formalising vendor agreements, developers… Read more: KiloClaw targets shadow AI with autonomous agent governance - Cursor Launches a New AI Agent Experience to Take on Claude Code and Codex
As Cursor launches the next generation of its product, the AI coding startup has to compete with OpenAI and Anthropic more directly than ever. - There’s a Blinking Warning Sign for the Data Centers in Space Industry
It’s plain to see that Elon Musk’s ambition of putting data centers in space is a daring and risky undertaking. Further underscoring the challenges, experts tell Reuters that a previous failed attempt at taking data centers… Read more: There’s a Blinking Warning Sign for the Data Centers in Space Industry - Report: Apple Testing AI-Powered ‘Alternative Words’ Feature for iPhone Keyboard
Apple is reportedly testing a smarter iPhone keyboard for iOS 27, with AI-powered word suggestions and improved autocorrect to enhance typing. The post Report: Apple Testing AI-Powered ‘Alternative Words’ Feature for iPhone Keyboard appeared first… Read more: Report: Apple Testing AI-Powered ‘Alternative Words’ Feature for iPhone Keyboard - Anthropic Says That Claude Contains Its Own Kind of Emotions
Researchers at the company found representations inside of Claude that perform functions similar to human feelings. - Adversa AI Wins Award for Innovative Agentic AI Security Platform
Recognized among hundreds of vendors for advancing Continuous AI Red Teaming and Agentic AI security Adversa AI announced today that it has been named “Most Innovative Agentic AI Security” at the Global InfoSec Awards during RSA Conference 2026,… Read more: Adversa AI Wins Award for Innovative Agentic AI Security Platform - 5 best practices to secure AI systems
A decade ago, it would have been hard to believe that artificial intelligence could do what it can do now. However, it is this same power that introduces a new attack surface that traditional security… Read more: 5 best practices to secure AI systems - Artemis II Astronauts Have ‘Two Microsoft Outlooks’ and Neither Work
In 1969, the three astronauts of the Apollo 10 mission conducted a momentous “dress rehearsal” for putting humans on the lunar surface for the first time. It was a historic, inspiring moment for humanity; Astronaut… Read more: Artemis II Astronauts Have ‘Two Microsoft Outlooks’ and Neither Work - Journalist Sues FAA Over Drone No Fly Zone Designed to Prevent Filming ICE
Minnesota photojournalist Rob Levine and the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press are suing the Federal Aviation Administration over a recently issued restriction that prevents drones from flying within 3,000 feet of Department of… Read more: Journalist Sues FAA Over Drone No Fly Zone Designed to Prevent Filming ICE - Almost Half of US Data Centers That Were Supposed to Open This Year Slated to Be Canceled or Delayed
The data centers powering your favorite AI chatbot are running low on helium, cash, and neighbors who don’t hate them — and that’s not even the worst of it. According to new reporting by Bloomberg,… Read more: Almost Half of US Data Centers That Were Supposed to Open This Year Slated to Be Canceled or Delayed - Amazon is trying to buy Globalstar to compete with SpaceX’s Starlink
Amazon is in talks to acquire the satellite telecommunications group Globalstar, a deal that would bolster the e-commerce giant’s effort to build its own low-Earth orbit satellite business. The two sides were still negotiating over… Read more: Amazon is trying to buy Globalstar to compete with SpaceX’s Starlink - Tesla sales grew by 6% in Q1, but company has an overproduction problem
This morning, Tesla published its production and delivery results for the first three months of 2026. And for the first time in a while, the news has been largely positive. The automaker built a total… Read more: Tesla sales grew by 6% in Q1, but company has an overproduction problem - NASA launches Artemis II for first crewed Moon flyby in 50 years
A new era of lunar exploration has begun as NASA launches four astronauts on Artemis II—the first crewed mission to fly around the Moon in over 50 years. Riding aboard the powerful SLS rocket, the… Read more: NASA launches Artemis II for first crewed Moon flyby in 50 years - Physicists just solved a strange fusion mystery that stumped experts
Fusion scientists have solved a long-standing mystery inside tokamaks, the donut-shaped machines designed to harness fusion energy. For years, experiments showed that escaping plasma particles hit one side of the exhaust system far more than… Read more: Physicists just solved a strange fusion mystery that stumped experts - Mysterious Greek inscription may reveal lost temple beneath Syria’s Great Mosque
A mysterious Greek inscription found beneath the Great Mosque of Homs could pinpoint the long-debated location of an ancient sun temple. Scholars now think the mosque sits atop a sacred site that transitioned from pagan… Read more: Mysterious Greek inscription may reveal lost temple beneath Syria’s Great Mosque - Ancient bone dice reveal 12,000-year history of gambling in America
More than 12,000 years ago, Native American hunter-gatherers were already making and using dice—thousands of years before similar tools appeared elsewhere. These bone “binary lots” acted like primitive coins, producing random outcomes for games of… Read more: Ancient bone dice reveal 12,000-year history of gambling in America - Earth’s magnetic field went wild 600 million years ago and scientists finally know why
Hundreds of millions of years ago, Earth’s magnetic field behaved in a way that has long baffled scientists, showing wild and seemingly chaotic shifts unlike anything seen before or since. A new study suggests this… Read more: Earth’s magnetic field went wild 600 million years ago and scientists finally know why - A Secure Chat App’s Encryption Is So Bad It Is ‘Meaningless’
TeleGuard, an app that markets itself as a secure, end-to-end encrypted messaging platform which has been downloaded more than a million times, implements its encryption so poorly that an attacker can trivially access a user’s… Read more: A Secure Chat App’s Encryption Is So Bad It Is ‘Meaningless’ - Eating more meat may lower Alzheimer’s risk for some people
A surprising new study suggests that genetics may change how diet affects brain health—especially when it comes to Alzheimer’s risk. Researchers found that older adults carrying high-risk APOE gene variants didn’t show the expected cognitive… Read more: Eating more meat may lower Alzheimer’s risk for some people - I have always seen myself as ‘progressive’ – but with AI it’s time to hit the brakes | Peter Lewis
At a time when the populist right is on the rise, progressives are shooting blanks while history rushes headlong into an automated future Canberra rolled out the red carpet this week to one of the… Read more: I have always seen myself as ‘progressive’ – but with AI it’s time to hit the brakes | Peter Lewis - Why wait until the end to realize your model’s code won’t actually run?
Recent breakthroughs in reasoning with large language models have followed a simple pattern: think deeply about a problem upfront, then generate the answer. This approach works remarkably well for math competitions, where the full puzzle… Read more: Why wait until the end to realize your model’s code won’t actually run? - China’s Five-Year Plan details the targets for AI deployment
China has approved its 15th Five-Year Plan [PDF] setting out the country’s economic, education, social, and industrial priorities through to 2030. As might be expected, there is a significant number of references to AI, with… Read more: China’s Five-Year Plan details the targets for AI deployment - Bypass the Strait of Hormuz with nuclear explosives? The US studied that in Panama and Colombia in the 1960s
A nuclear bomb explodes at Bikini Atoll in the Pacific Ocean in 1946, one of several U.S. test explosions. Photo12/Universal Images Group via Getty Images With the world struggling to get oil supplies moving from… Read more: Bypass the Strait of Hormuz with nuclear explosives? The US studied that in Panama and Colombia in the 1960s - AI’s fluency in other languages hides a Western worldview that can mislead users − a scholar of Indonesian society explains
AI models derive their assumptions from English-language sources based in the United States. Weiquan Lin/Moment via Getty Images A friend in Indonesia recently told me about a conversation he had with ChatGPT. He had typed… Read more: AI’s fluency in other languages hides a Western worldview that can mislead users − a scholar of Indonesian society explains - I wrote a novel using AI. Writers must accept artificial intelligence – but we are as valuable as ever | Stephen Marche
Mastery of banal style is losing its usefulness – but language is more powerful than ever. It’s up to the writer to do what machines can’t I recently heard an exchange at a playground that… Read more: I wrote a novel using AI. Writers must accept artificial intelligence – but we are as valuable as ever | Stephen Marche - AI laws overlook environmental damage – here’s what needs to change
Huge energy-intensive data centres are required to support growing AI demands. Make more Aerials/Shutterstock More than 200 laws have been developed to regulate AI in more than 100 countries. Many of them focus on issues… Read more: AI laws overlook environmental damage – here’s what needs to change
