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Escaping civilization has become simpler with this ‘off-grid utility core’
Tech/AI

Escaping civilization has become simpler with this ‘off-grid utility core’

by admin March 17, 2026
written by admin

  • Smart Home

Simply add cabin.

Simply add cabin.

Mar 17, 2026, 10:16 AM UTC
thumb-01
thumb-01
Thomas Ricker
Thomas Ricker is a co-founder of Verge and serves as a deputy editor. He has a keen interest in user-friendly urban environments, e-bikes, and leading a lifestyle as a digital nomad. With two decades of experience as a tech journalist,

Klumpen is not an cabin off the grid, but it offers all the necessary amenities to live independently from society in comfort. This seven-square-meter teepee serves as an “off-grid utility core,” supplying solar power, satellite internet, a shower, toilet, and compact kitchen. The anticipated price is approximately $35,000 with about $3,000 estimated for shipping within Europe.

The concept involves placing a pre-fabricated Klumpen adjacent to a small cabin and simply turning it on — no additional permits, plumbing, or electrical work required. Its electrical system features a 7.5kWh battery with inverter suited for standard 230V devices and outlets. Efforts are made to recycle water whenever possible to maximize the limited supply, and an all-in-one heat pump offers heating and cooling as required.

A prototype developed with EU funding has been successfully tested. Currently, Himmelsfahrtskommando, an architectural firm based in Stockholm, Sweden, will oversee the production of the initial batch of ten units. A deposit of €2,000 will secure a Klumpen, aimed for delivery in September 2026. For projects on glaciers or volcanoes, an “extreme-conditions” aluminum variant is set to be available for $198,000.

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  • Thomas Ricker
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Senators urge ByteDance to 'promptly terminate' Seedance AI video application
Economy

Senators urge ByteDance to ‘promptly terminate’ Seedance AI video application

by admin March 17, 2026
written by admin

Jonathan Raa | Nurphoto | Getty Images

Senators Marsha Blackburn and Peter Welch are urging a suspension of the revised edition of ByteDance’s AI app, Seedance, which creates videos featuring real individuals and licensed characters, raising issues concerning copyright and intellectual property.

Seedance 2.0 “stands out as the most blatant case of copyright violation from a ByteDance product so far, and it is imperative that you promptly shut down Seedance and establish effective measures to avert additional infringing content,” Blackburn, R-Tenn., and Welch, D-Vt., stated in a letter addressed to ByteDance CEO Liang Rubo that was initially acquired by CNBC.

Their communication signifies escalating worries on Capitol Hill regarding how AI firms are creating and deploying their models and whether adequate protections exist for those who provide the materials the models train on.

“Responsible global corporations adhere to the law and honor fundamental economic rights, including intellectual property and personal likeness protections,” Blackburn and Welch expressed. They referenced instances of Seedance 2.0 productions, generated after the platform’s launch on February 12, that featured celebrities Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt as well as the Netflix series “Stranger Things.”

A spokesperson for ByteDance indicated in a statement to CNBC that “ByteDance respects intellectual property rights and we are aware of the concerns surrounding Seedance 2.0. We are implementing measures to fortify existing safeguards as we strive to prevent unauthorized usage of intellectual property and likeness by users.”

Concerns extend beyond lawmakers. Hollywood organizations, including the Motion Picture Association, delivered a cease-and-desist notice to ByteDance. As reported by The Information, ByteDance has halted the global rollout of Seedance 2.0.

Up to now, Congress has predominantly adopted a hands-off stance regarding AI regulation. Legislators assert they do not wish to impose limitations that could hinder U.S. companies from innovating and capitalizing on technological advancements ahead of international competitors. Several lawmakers mentioned that due to the rapid pace of the industry, legislation they pondered a few years ago would quickly become outdated and insufficient to address developments like agentic AI.

Nevertheless, senators such as Blackburn and Welch have proposed focused legislation on AI. In August, the pair introduced a bill aimed at assisting artists in safeguarding their copyrighted creations from being exploited for AI training.

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March 17, 2026 0 comments
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Gas on the line: will the conflict in Iran put pressure on India's piped gas next?
Global

Gas on the line: will the conflict in Iran put pressure on India’s piped gas next?

by admin March 17, 2026
written by admin

“There is no anticipated disruption for households and vehicles [relying on piped gas]. The government has prioritized these two areas,” states Rahul Chopra, managing director of Haryana City Gas Distribution Limited, a nationwide gas provider with approximately 100,000 residential users and 195 CNG fueling stations.

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And the burger goes to... Michael B Jordan celebrates Oscars victory at In-N-Out
Global

And the burger goes to… Michael B Jordan celebrates Oscars victory at In-N-Out

by admin March 17, 2026
written by admin

Famous personalities frequently appear at the well-known American fast food establishment, possibly linked to its association with the Oscars – Vanity Fair, which organizes the now-iconic afterparty, has been offering In-N-Out burgers at the event since 1994, as reported by US media.

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The Live Nation trial resumes with a ‘velvet hammer’
Tech/AI

The Live Nation trial resumes with a ‘velvet hammer’

by admin March 16, 2026
written by admin

  • Entertainment

‘We are either allies or adversaries.’

‘We are either allies or adversaries.’

Mar 17, 2026, 12:08 AM UTC
257604_ticketmaster_antitrust_CVirginia_B
257604_ticketmaster_antitrust_CVirginia_B
Lauren Feiner
Lauren Feiner serves as a senior policy journalist at The Verge, focusing on the intersection of tech and government. She dedicated 5 years to reporting on tech legislation at CNBC, addressing topics like antitrust, privacy, and content governance reform.

Following a tumultuous week after the mid-trial settlement achieved by the Justice Department with Live Nation-Ticketmaster, the antitrust proceedings resumed rather smoothly on Monday — this time led by numerous states.

This outcome was not what the states had originally intended. Due to concerns regarding their ability to effectively take control over the case and the worry that the jury would be influenced by the ongoing changes, they pushed for a mistrial, which would have delayed proceedings to an uncertain date in the future. However, an irked Judge Arun Subramanian appeared ready to refuse the request, and once the states figured out how to enlist the DOJ’s expert witness and swiftly brought new hires on board, they retracted their mistrial appeal. After reintroducing the new participants, the trial continued from approximately where it had paused a week earlier, with testimonies concerning Live Nation’s use of its “velvet hammer” against competitors.

Subramanian welcomed the jurors back after their “spring break” and inquired if they had read or encountered any information about the case during their absence, which is against jury instructions. They either shook their heads or stayed silent. He reminded them that the US had settled its claims, as had a few states, but the remaining states were continuing their legal proceedings. Jurors were instructed not to draw any conclusions based on the fact that those entities were no longer part of the case, he emphasized.

With the DOJ no longer involved, the attorneys who initially questioned early witnesses were replaced by a new legal team co-led by Jonathan Hatch, an attorney from the New York AG’s office, and Jeffrey Kessler of Winston & Strawn, who had represented college athletes in the pivotal Supreme Court antitrust lawsuit against the NCAA regarding compensation.

The states’ lawyers resumed the questioning of Jay Marciano, the COO of AEG, a competitor to Live Nation across various aspects. While Hatch refreshed the jurors on segments of Marciano’s earlier testimony, the examination was otherwise fairly conventional. Marciano discussed ticketing models he favors in Europe, where multiple ticketing services often collaborate at a venue, in contrast to the typical situation in the US where venues often engage in exclusive agreements with Ticketmaster.

During cross-examination, Marciano addressed an incident previously mentioned to the jury: a call between the former CEO of the Barclays Center and Live Nation’s CEO Michael Rapino, who responded to a proposal to abandon Ticketmaster by stating that securing concerts for the arena would be more challenging with the nearby new UBS Arena. While Barclays perceived this as a threat to safeguard Ticketmaster, Marciano confirmed it is common for concert promoters to leverage competition among venues to negotiate more favorable terms, and that the UBS Arena likely would pull artists away from Barclays as the new local venue.

Live Nation’s president of US concerts, Robert Roux, addressed another allegation: that Live Nation utilizes its significant control over US amphitheaters to uphold its monopoly power, providing no real alternatives for artists aiming to book large outdoor venues. Plaintiff attorney Josh Hafenbrack illustrated through Live Nation’s own business presentations that the firm made substantial advancements to secure dominance over four of the top five amphitheaters in the US based on ticket sales from 2016 to the present. A presentation from 2018 displayed a significantly highlighted list of the top 100 amphitheaters globally, with the green highlights indicating the 62 venues that were owned, operated, or exclusively booked by Live Nation at the time. Since then, Roux affirmed, the company has incorporated several more venues into that total.

Live Nation refutes claims of anticompetitive behavior, asserting that the states overlook other types of venues that compete for the same events. However, Roux mentioned in a 2015 email that numerous non-superstar performers express a desire to play amphitheaters — many of which, evidence presented in court suggests, are either controlled or exclusively booked by Live Nation. He also noted that in these scenarios, there was “room for tighter negotiations and deals.”

Other email exchanges illustrated how Live Nation considers its competition when evaluating potentially profitable deals. In a correspondence from 2018, Rapino questioned why Live Nation should allocate shows to a promoter in the South, Red Mountain Entertainment, which they were considering acquiring, before they had actually finalized the purchase. Roux indicated at that time that the message to Red Mountain should be, “We are either allies or adversaries.” He characterized this tactic as a “velvet hammer.” On the witness stand, Roux clarified that the message was not intended to “antagonize” the promoter, but to be forthright and convey a definite message. In another exchange referencing Red Mountain, Roux articulated that Live Nation must avoid being “complacent” and “allowing smaller players to encroach from the edges.” Roux stated that this comment was intended as a general observation, not specifically aimed at that promoter. Live Nation acquired Red Mountain in 2018.

In 2020, Rapino counseled Roux against permitting Radio Disney and concert promoter Superfly into a Live Nation venue, even after they proposed a contract that would guarantee at least $400,000 in profit for Live Nation for renting out the amp. One executive expressed concerns about allowing a third-party promoter into the amphitheater, despite the attractive financial offer.

At last, Roux testified that Live Nation’s profits per fan have increased significantly in recent years, with profitability in large amphitheaters, a crucial market in this case, outpacing other venue categories from 2019 to 2024. Before factoring in certain costs, the firm reported a profit of $386 million from large amphitheater operations in 2024, nearly three times what they earned in that segment in 2019.

Apart from the delays experienced during the case while the states’ team arranged its next steps without the DOJ, there was little noticeable difference in the trial’s progression or how the new lawyers conducted their work, compared to the initial week of proceedings. The trial is still projected to last several more weeks, although both sides indicated they have worked to streamline their witness lists to make up for lost time. Toward the conclusion of this week, one of the trial’s most prominent witnesses is anticipated to testify: Live Nation’s CEO.

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  • Lauren Feiner
  • Entertainment
Lauren FeinerMar 13
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March 16, 2026 0 comments
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Judge blocks RFK Jr.'s anti-vaccine changes to CDC vaccine guidance
Tech/AI

Judge blocks RFK Jr.’s anti-vaccine changes to CDC vaccine guidance

by admin March 16, 2026
written by admin

“In short, these decisions have historically followed a method—a scientific approach enshrined in law through procedural requirements,” Judge Murphy wrote.

“Regrettably, the Government ignored those processes and in doing so compromised the integrity of its actions,” he wrote. “To begin with, the Government circumvented ACIP when altering the immunization schedules — a technical and procedural lapse in itself and a clear sign of a deeper problem: a rejection of the committee’s technical expertise. Next, the Government removed every properly appointed ACIP member and promptly installed replacements without conducting the thorough vetting that had characterized ACIP appointments for decades. This procedural lapse, once more, underscores why such procedures exist and creates a substantial likelihood that the reconstituted ACIP does not comply with governing law.”

Criticism of ACIP members

The judge also condemned the dismissal of former ACIP members, the seeming absence of vetting for replacements, and the apparent lack of relevant qualifications, even identifying individuals by name.

“To start, out of fifteen current ACIP members, at most six seem to possess substantive vaccine experience—the central purpose of ACIP,” he wrote (emphasis his).

“At least six members—Dr. Hillary Blackburn, Dr. Evelyn Griffin, Dr. Joseph Hibbeln, Dr. Kirk Milhoan, Dr. James Pagano, and Dr. Raymond Pollak—seem devoid of expertise or professional credentials in vaccines or immunization as ACIP’s Charter requires,” he wrote. “A further three of the current ACIP members—Dr. Retsef Levi, Dr. Robert Malone, and Dr. Catherine Stein—while possessing some arguably related experience, appear not to hold the qualifications or background to be considered experts in vaccines and immunization.”

Overall, Judge Murphy contended that Kennedy’s personally chosen advisors do not satisfy ACIP’s charter criteria, which demand members be conversant in pertinent disciplines. They likewise fall short of federal rules calling for advisory committees to be “fairly balanced” in reflecting perspectives within those fields.

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Trump claims he believes he will possess the 'privilege' of 'claiming Cuba'
Economy

Trump claims he believes he will possess the ‘privilege’ of ‘claiming Cuba’

by admin March 16, 2026
written by admin

A tricycle adorned with U.S. and Cuban flags in Havana on Feb. 26, 2026.
Yamil Lage | AFP | Getty Images

President Donald Trump remarked on Monday that he believes he will have the “honor” of “claiming Cuba,” while signing an executive order at the White House.

“Whether I liberate it, seize it, I think I can do anything I wish with it,” Trump informed reporters in the Oval Office with Vice President JD Vance positioned behind him. “They are currently a significantly weakened nation.”

The president’s remarks regarding claiming Cuba arise as he engages in a conflict in Iran that is extending into its third week. Trump has motivated the Iranian populace to overthrow their government amidst that conflict, which is one of a series of justifications he has provided for initiating the war.

Trump recently implied he will shift his focus to Cuba once the U.S. accomplishes its objectives in Iran. He has threatened a “friendly acquisition” of the Caribbean nation, long considered an opponent of the U.S., except for a short period of reconciliation during Barack Obama’s presidency.

The threats against Cuba exemplify Trump’s more assertive foreign policy during his second term in office. Besides the conflict in Iran, Trump authorized a military mission that apprehended Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro and has made recurrent efforts to acquire Greenland, the Arctic territory belonging to Denmark, which has consistently stated that Greenland is not on the market.

Explore more CNBC political coverage

  • Trump-Xi summit may face delays if Trump opts to remain in Washington for the Iran conflict: Bessent
  • Democrats criticize FCC Chair Carr’s broadcast license threats as anti-First Amendment, ‘totalitarian’
  • DOJ plans to appeal judge’s temporary block of subpoenas to Fed in Jerome Powell criminal investigation

The White House has effectively imposed a blockade on Havana regarding Venezuelan oil following Maduro’s capture. This action has resulted in an energy and economic crisis in the island nation.

Cuba confirmed that it was in discussions with the Trump administration about a potential resolution last week. Trump also affirmed the ongoing talks on Monday.

“I can assure you that they’re negotiating with us; it’s a failed nation, they possess no oil, they lack everything,” Trump stated. “They do have beautiful land.”

Select CNBC as your preferred source on Google and never miss out on updates from the most reliable name in business news.

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Elon Musk's xAI is being sued for turning three girls' real photos into AI-generated CSAM
Tech/AI

Elon Musk’s xAI is being sued for turning three girls’ real photos into AI-generated CSAM

by admin March 16, 2026
written by admin

She initially reached out to other victims she knew; ultimately, “local law enforcement was notified, and a criminal investigation was opened,” the complaint said.

While examining the Discord evidence, investigators quickly determined the perpetrator had access to the first victim’s Instagram “because he had maintained a close and friendly relationship” with her. A search of his phone uncovered a third-party app that had licensed or otherwise purchased access to Grok, which they say the perpetrator used to manipulate the girls’ photos.

After that, the attacker uploaded the images to a file-sharing service called Mega and used them as a “bartering tool in Telegram group chats with hundreds of other users,” trading the AI-generated CSAM “for sexually explicit content of other minors.”

The lawsuit states the victims have suffered extensive harm, including acute emotional and mental distress. For those who know the perpetrator, there remains uncertainty about whether the Grok-created CSAM was shared with classmates or distributed to others at their school, the complaint noted. One girl fears the episode will affect her college admissions, while another is too frightened to attend her own graduation.

Perhaps more alarming than acquaintances encountering the AI CSAM is the concern that the girls could now be stalked because of Grok’s outputs. As the lawsuit explains, “it also appears the victims’ true first names and the name of their school was attached to their files online, meaning other online predators may also be able to identify them, creating a substantial risk for stalking.”

xAI accused of hosting Grok CSAM

Although earlier reports indicated Grok Imagine’s paying subscribers were producing more graphic material than the Grok outputs that prompted outrage on X, the lawsuit alleges xAI has taken further steps to obscure how it profits from explicit content that harms real people.

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Fostering self-directed AI beyond the early developmental phase
Tech/AI

Fostering self-directed AI beyond the early developmental phase

by admin March 16, 2026
written by admin

Presented byIntel

Caregivers of small children encounter various anxieties regarding developmental milestones, spanning from infancy to adulthood. The duration in months it takes for a baby to begin talking or walking is frequently utilized as a standard for wellness, or as a signal for additional assessments required to accurately identify a possible health issue. A parent celebrates the child’s initial steps and then comprehends the transformation when the child can swiftly walk outdoors rather than gradually crawling in a secure indoor environment. All of a sudden, safety, which includes childproofing, is viewed through a new lens and requires a different strategy.

Generative AI reached its early developmental stage between December 2025 and January 2026 with the rollout of no-code platforms from various providers and the launch of OpenClaw, an open-source personal assistant released on GitHub. No longer crawling on the floor—the generative AI infant surged forward, and very few governance frameworks were adequately prepared.

The accountability dilemma: It’s you, not them

Up to this point, governance has concentrated on the risks associated with model outputs with humans adequately involved before crucial decisions were undertaken—like with loan approvals or job applications. The focus was on model behavior, including drift, alignment, data extraction, and poisoning. The pace was dictated by a human interacting with a model in a chatbot style involving plenty of back-and-forth exchanges between the machine and the human.

Currently, with autonomous agents functioning within intricate workflows, the vision and advantages of applied AI necessitate significantly fewer humans in the mix. The objective is to manage a business at machine speed by automating routine tasks that have well-defined architecture and decision-making rules. From a liability perspective, there should be no reduction in enterprise or business risk between a machine handling a workflow and a human doing so. CX Today summarizes the circumstance succinctly: “AI performs the tasks, humans bear the risk,” and California state law (AB 316), which became enforceable on January 1, 2026, eliminates the “AI did it; I didn’t sanction it” defense. This mirrors parenting where an adult is held accountable for a child’s actions that adversely affect the wider community.

The challenge lies in the fact that without implementing code that enforces operational governance tailored to various levels of risk and liability throughout the workflow, the advantages of autonomous AI agents are mitigated. Historically, governance has been static and aligned with the interaction pace typical of chatbots. However, the nature of autonomous AI inherently removes humans from numerous decisions, influencing governance.

Evaluating permissions

Just as one would not hand a three-year-old a video game console that remotely operates a military tank or a combat drone, allowing a probabilistic system to function without real-time safeguards that can modify essential enterprise data holds substantial risks. For instance, agents that integrate and link actions across various corporate systems may exceed the permissions that a single human user would possess. To progress effectively, governance needs to evolve from policies determined by committees to operational code incorporated into workflows from the outset.

A humorous meme regarding toddlers and toys begins with all the rationalizations for claiming that whatever toy you possess is theirs, concluding with a broken toy that is unequivocally yours. For instance, OpenClaw offered a user experience that felt more like collaborating with a human assistant; however, the enthusiasm waned as security experts realized that inexperienced users could be easily put at risk through its use.

For years, enterprise IT has contended with shadow IT, facing the fact that skilled technical teams must manage and rectify assets they did not design or install, similar to how a toddler returns a broken toy. With the advent of autonomous agents, the stakes amplify: persistent service account credentials, long-lasting API tokens, and authority over critical file systems. To address this issue, it is essential to designate appropriate IT budgets and resources upfront to ensure central discovery, monitoring, and rectification for the thousands of employee or department-generated agents.

Establishing a retirement strategy

Recently, an acquaintance shared that she assisted a client in saving hundreds of thousands of dollars by recognizing and terminating a “zombie project”—a forgotten or failed AI pilot languishing on a GPU cloud instance. There could be thousands of agents at risk of becoming a zombie army within a business. Today, numerous executives urge employees to leverage AI—or else—and employees are instructed to develop their own AI-first workflows or AI assistants. With the functionality of a tool like OpenClaw and directives coming from the top, it’s easy to predict that the number of self-created agents arriving at the office alongside their human counterparts will surge. As an AI agent is a program falling under the definition of company-owned intellectual property, as employees transition to different departments or organizations, those agents could become orphaned. Proactive policies and governance are necessary to deactivate and retire any agents associated with specific employee IDs and permissions.

Financial optimization is governance from the start

While some executives view autonomous AI as a means to enhance their operating margins by reducing human resources, many are discovering that seeking ROI for replacing human labor is a misguided approach. Incorporating AI capabilities into the enterprise does not entail merely acquiring a new software tool with predictable per-instance or per-seat costs. A December 2025 IDC survey sponsored by Data Robot revealed that 96% of organizations deploying generative AI and 92% implementing agentic AI reported that costs exceeded or were significantly higher than anticipated.

The survey distinguishes between governance and ROI, yet as AI systems proliferate across extensive enterprises, financial and liability governance must be embedded within the workflows from the outset. A part of enterprise-level governance stems from accurately forecasting and adhering to designated budgets. Unlike conventional software financial models based on per-seat pricing with associated support and maintenance fees, utilizing AI involves consumption and usage costs that escalate in line with the workflow across the enterprise: more users translate to additional tokens or increased compute time, leading to higher expenses. It’s akin to leaving a tab open or leaving an online retailer’s digital shopping cart accessible on a toddler’s electronic gaming apparatus.

Cloud FinOps operated in a deterministic manner, but generative AI and agentic AI systems built on generative AI are inherently probabilistic. Some AI-centric founders are beginning to realize that a single agent’s token expenses can soar to $100,000 for every session. Without pre-established safeguards, chaining intricate autonomous agents that operate unsupervised for extended durations can easily exceed the budget for hiring a junior developer.

Maintaining human involvement remains essential

The potential of autonomous agentic AI lies in the acceleration of business operations, product launches, customer interactions, and customer loyalty. Transitioning to machine-speed decision-making without human oversight for these critical functions fundamentally alters the governance landscape. Although many principles regarding proactive permissions, discovery, audits, remediation, and financial operations/optimizations remain consistent, their execution must adapt to keep up with autonomous agentic AI.

This content was produced by Intel. It was not written by MIT Technology Review’s editorial team.

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The Download: glass fragments and “AI-exempt” logos
Tech/AI

The Download: glass fragments and “AI-exempt” logos

by admin March 16, 2026
written by admin

Here is the latest edition of The Download, our newsletter for weekdays that delivers a daily update on the happenings in the tech world.

Next-gen AI chips may utilize glass 

Human-created glass dates back thousands of years. Yet, it is now ready to be integrated into the AI chips found in the globe’s newest and largest data centers.  

This year, a South Korean firm named Absolics will commence the production of specialized glass panels that enhance the power and efficiency of next-level computing hardware. Other companies, such as Intel, are also advancing in this field.  

If everything proceeds smoothly, this innovation might lessen the energy consumption of chips in AI data centers—and even in personal laptops and mobile devices. Read the complete story. 

—Jeremy Hsu

Essential reads 

I’ve scoured the web to discover the most entertaining/important/terrifying/intriguing stories about technology today. 

1 The rush is on to create a worldwide recognized “AI-free” label 
Organizations are hurrying to establish a universal tag for human-produced goods. (BBC) 
+ A “QuitGPT” initiative is encouraging individuals to abandon ChatGPT. (MIT Technology Review) 

2 Elizabeth Warren seeks clarity on xAI’s access to military information 
The Pentagon reportedly permitted it access to classified networks. (NBC News) 
+ Here’s how chatbots might be employed for targeting decisions. (MIT Technology Review) 
+ The DoD is facing challenges in upgrading software for fighter jets. (Bloomberg $) 

3 Models are applying to represent AI romance scams 
The “AI face models” are deceiving victims into losing their money. (Wired $) 
+ Survivors have disclosed how the “pig butchering” scams function. (MIT Technology Review) 

4 Meta is contemplating layoffs that could impact over 20% of its workforce 
The cuts could counterbalance its expensive investment in AI. (Reuters $) 
+ There’s a lengthy history of concerns regarding AI’s effect on employment. (MIT Technology Review) 

5 ByteDance postponed launching a video AI model due to copyright issues 
It famously generated footage featuring Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt in combat. (The Information $) 

6 Cybersecurity investigators have unveiled a significant North Korean scheme 
The fraudsters acquired remote jobs in the US and then embezzled money and confidential data. (NBC News) 

7 A Chinese AI startup is projected to reach an astounding $18 billion valuation 
That’s more than four times its valuation just three months back. (Bloomberg $) 
+ Chinese open models are rapidly advancing—here’s why this is significant. (MIT Technology Review)  

8 Peter Thiel has launched a lecture series on the antichrist in Rome 
His initiatives have garnered interest from the Catholic Church. (Reuters $) 

9 Norway is standing up against internet degradation 
It has joined an international movement opposing the decline of online spaces. (The Guardian) 
+ We may need to move past the major platforms.(MIT Technology Review) 

10 How a startup aims to bring back the dodo 
Humans eradicated them almost 400 years ago—can gene editing revive them today? (Guardian) 

Quote of the day 

“I would create fission weapons. I would create fusion weapons. Nuclear weapons have historically been one of the most stabilizing factors ever.” 

—Anduril founder Palmer Luckey expresses his admiration for nuclear arms with Axios. 

One More Thing 

We need an ambitious leap for computing 

grid of chips

TIM HERMAN/INTEL

The US government is positioning itself for the upcoming phase of computing. Ultimately, it faces a crucial decision: adopt a conservative approach that seeks to maintain its superiority for the next five years—or pivot towards authentic computing breakthroughs. 

The options are plentiful, including quantum computing, neuromorphic computing and reversible computing. There are also numerous innovative materials and devices. These prospects could even be combined to create hybrid computing solutions. 

The National Semiconductor Technology Center is capable of advancing these concepts. To achieve success, it would benefit from emulating DARPA’s approach by emphasizing moonshot initiatives. Read the complete story. 
 
—Brady Helwig & PJ Maykish 

We can still enjoy nice things 

A space for comfort, entertainment, and distraction to lift your spirits. (Have any suggestions? Reach out to me.) 
 
+ A UPS delivery driver heroically evaded two aggressive turkeys. 
+ Art’s connection with cats is adorably showcased in a new book. 
+ The unassuming pea and six other overlooked superfoods offer accessible nutritional benefits. 
+ MF DOOM: Long Island to Leeds tells the Transatlantic story of your favorite rapper’s favorite rapper. 

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