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Mind-altering substances are (still) not meeting expectations in clinical trials
Tech/AI

Mind-altering substances are (still) not meeting expectations in clinical trials

by admin March 20, 2026
written by admin

This week, I aim to examine where we currently stand regarding psychedelics, the consciousness-altering substances that have made a significant transition from counterculture to a central subject of clinical investigation. Substances such as psilocybin—found in psychedelic mushrooms—are being researched for numerous health-related uses, including therapies for depression, PTSD, addiction, and even obesity.

In the past decade, scientific curiosity toward these substances has surged. However, many clinical trials involving psychedelics have been limited in scale and have faced numerous difficulties. Additionally, the outcomes of many trials have been disappointing or uncertain.

Two studies released earlier this week illustrate just how challenging it is to research these substances. In my opinion, they also indicate just how exaggerated the excitement surrounding these compounds has become.

Some experts in the field view the hype as not inherently negative. Allow me to clarify.

Both recent studies investigate the efficacy of psilocybin in addressing depression and aim to tackle a significant issue in psychedelic trials: what researchers refer to as “blinding.”

The most effective method to assess a new drug’s efficacy is through a randomized controlled trial. In these studies, some participants receive the actual drug, while others get a placebo. For a valid comparison, the participants shouldn’t know whether they are receiving the drug or the placebo.

This is virtually unattainable with psychedelics. Almost anyone can discern whether they have ingested psilocybin or a placebo. The visual distortions are unmistakable. Nevertheless, the researchers behind the two new studies have endeavored to mitigate this issue.

In one study, a team from Germany administered either a high or low dose of psilocybin, or an “active” placebo—which has its own physiological (but not hallucinogenic) effects—alongside psychotherapy to 144 participants with treatment-resistant depression. In their trial, neither the participants nor the researchers were aware of who received the drug.

Participants who received psilocybin experienced some improvement—but it wasn’t significantly superior to the enhancement seen in those who took the placebo. While those on psilocybin exhibited a greater reduction in their symptoms after six weeks, “the divergence between [the two results] renders the findings inconclusive,” the authors state.

Not the greatest news thus far.

The authors of the second study adopted an alternative method. Balázs Szigeti at UCSF and his associates examined what are termed “open label” studies concerning both psychedelics and conventional antidepressants. In these studies, participants were aware when they received a psychedelic—but also knew when they were on an antidepressant.

The team evaluated 24 such trials and found that … psychedelics proved no more effective than traditional antidepressants. Sad trombone.

“When I initiated the study, I aspired to be a really impressive psychedelic scientist to demonstrate that even considering the blinding issue, psychedelics outperform traditional antidepressants,” Szigeti states. “But regrettably, the data revealed the opposite.”

His study also underscores another concern.

In trials involving standard antidepressant medications, the placebo effect is notably potent. Symptoms of depression are frequently quantified using a scale, and in trials, antidepressants usually reduce symptoms by around 10 points on that scale. Placebos can lessen symptoms by approximately eight points.

When drug regulators examine these results, the conclusion is that the antidepressant medication alleviates symptoms by an extra two points on the scale compared to a placebo.

However, with psychedelics, the difference between the active substance and the placebo is significantly higher. This is partly because individuals receiving the psychedelic drug are aware they are receiving it and anticipate the improvement of their symptoms, according to David Owens, emeritus professor of clinical psychiatry at the University of Edinburgh, UK.

Moreover, it’s also in part due to the response of those who are aware they are not receiving it. It becomes quite apparent when one is on a placebo, Szigeti notes, leading to potential disappointment. The “nocebo” effect has long been identified by scientists as the “evil twin” of the placebo effect—essentially, if you expect to feel worse, you will.

The disillusionment stemming from receiving a placebo takes on a slightly different form, which Szigeti refers to as the “knowcebo effect.” “It resembles a negative psychedelic effect because you have realized that you are consuming the placebo,” he states.

This effect can skew the outcomes of psychedelic drug trials. While a placebo in a conventional antidepressant study alleviates symptoms by eight points, placebos in psychedelic trials only reduce symptoms by four points, according to Szigeti.

Should the active drug similarly relieve symptoms by about 10 points, it creates the impression that the psychedelic is diminishing symptoms by around six points in comparison to a placebo. It “creates the illusion” of a substantial effect, claims Szigeti.

So, why have those previous smaller trials garnered so much attention? Many have appeared in prestigious journals, accompanied by enthusiastic press releases and media coverage, even the inconclusive ones. I’ve often felt that those investigations might not have received such exposure if they were focused on any other substance.

“Yes, nobody would care,” agrees Szigeti.

This interest stems partially from the desperation among mental health professionals for new treatment options, according to Owens. There has been minimal innovation in the past 40 years or so, since the introduction of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors. “Psychiatry is constrained by outdated theories … and we don’t need another SSRI for depression,” he asserts. Furthermore, psychedelics are inherently intriguing, according to Szigeti. “Psychedelics are captivating,” he remarks. “Culturally, they are thrilling.”

I have often been concerned that psychedelics are being overrated—that people may get the false impression they are silver bullets for mental health conditions. I worry that vulnerable individuals might be harmed by self-experimenting.

Szigeti holds a different perspective. Considering how effective the placebo effect can be, he argues that maybe the hype isn’t entirely detrimental. “The placebo response represents the expectation of a benefit,” he notes. “The higher expectation patients have, the better their outcomes will likely be.” He suggests that downplaying the hype might ultimately decrease the effectiveness of these substances.

“Ultimately, the aim of medicine is to assist patients,” he states. “I believe most [mental health] patients are indifferent to whether their improvement stems from expectancy and placebo effects or from an actual drug effect.”

Regardless, we must understand precisely what these substances are accomplishing. They may aid some individuals with depression. They may not. Research that acknowledges the challenges associated with psychedelic drug trials is crucial.

“These are potentially thrilling times,” asserts Owens. “However, it is vital that we conduct this [research] thoroughly. And this must be done with full awareness.”

This article initially appeared in The Checkup,MIT Technology Review’s weekly biotech newsletter. To receive it in your inbox every Thursday, and read articles like this first, sign up here.

March 20, 2026 0 comments
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U.S. authorities accuse Super Micro Computer staff of trafficking Nvidia chips to China
Economy

U.S. authorities accuse Super Micro Computer staff of trafficking Nvidia chips to China

by admin March 19, 2026
written by admin

In this article

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The Super Micro Computer headquarters located in San Jose, California, on December 3, 2024.
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The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York has filed charges against associates of an undisclosed U.S. server manufacturer for the unlawful diversion of billions in Nvidia-powered servers to China.

The U.S. government has been investigating how high-performance chips have reached China without proper authorization, as American AI firms like Anthropic and OpenAI encounter competition from DeepSeek and other Chinese companies.

In a newly unsealed indictment, the U.S. government accused Yih-Shyan “Wally” Liaw, Ruei-Tsan “Steven” Chang, and Ting-Wei “Willy” Sun of collaborating to breach the Export Control Reform Act.

The products of the server company that contain Nvidia chips “are subject to strict U.S. export regulations prohibiting their sale to China without a license,” stated the claim in the indictment. “Such regulations are enforced to safeguard U.S. national security and foreign policy objectives, among other reasons.”

Liaw is a co-founder of server manufacturer Super Micro Computer and serves on its board of directors. He oversees $464 million worth of Super Micro shares, as per FactSet. He did not answer a request for comment.

Super Micro’s stock plummeted by 12% in after-hours trading following the indictment’s release by a federal court.

The company stated that while it is not named as a defendant, Liaw is a senior vice president of business development, Chang serves as a sales manager in Taiwan, and Sun is a contractor. The company has put these employees on leave and severed ties with the contractor.

“The actions of these individuals outlined in the indictment violate the Company’s policies and compliance protocols, including attempts to bypass relevant export control laws and regulations,” said a statement. “Supermicro upholds a strong compliance program and is dedicated to fully adhering to all relevant U.S. export and re-export laws and regulations.”

A Southeast Asian entity, acting as an intermediary, fabricated documents to create the impression of legitimate server use and had a different logistics company repackage the servers for concealment before shipment to China, according to the indictment.

The accused allegedly misled the server manufacturer’s compliance team with “dummy” servers at the Southeast Asian company’s storage locations while the genuine servers had already been sent to China and pressured the compliance team into endorsing shipments, as detailed in the indictment. The defendants also purportedly utilized “dummy” servers during a visit from a U.S. export control official.

These activities reportedly resulted in about $2.5 billion in revenue for the server producer since 2024, with $510 million sold to the Southeast Asian company and subsequently to China between April and May of 2025, according to the claims. The plaintiff asserted that the manufacturer lacked a U.S. Commerce Department license to export servers equipped with Nvidia GPUs to China.

Chang worked on preventing auditors from examining sections of data centers where the Southeast Asian company supposedly stored the servers that had actually been sent to China, and arranged for an auditor deemed “friendly” to conduct the review, as stated in the indictment. In 2024, Super Micro announced that its auditor, Ernst & Young, had resigned, and subsequently appointed BDO as a new auditor.

Nvidia’s graphics cards have been highly sought worldwide for training generative AI systems.

Initially, U.S. President Donald Trump aimed to block China from obtaining these processors. However, in December, he mentioned informing China’s President Xi Jinping that the U.S. would allow Nvidia to ship H200 GPUs to China “under conditions that maintain substantial National Security.” Earlier this week, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang stated that the chipmaker is resuming production to meet H200 orders from China.

Last summer, Nvidia obtained licenses to ship the H20 chip to China, with Huang agreeing to allocate 15% of its sales in China to the U.S.

Prosecutors accused Liaw of advocating for the Southeast Asian firm to acquire a more advanced chip, the B200 based on Nvidia’s Blackwell architecture, in late 2024.

“Approximately how many can you receive by January? February? March? April?” Liaw communicated via text to an executive at the Southeast Asian company. “A simple forecast will suffice … . Then we can propose to [Nvidia] in a manner they can accept … . This remains the only way for [Nvidia] to guarantee the B200 allocation to the best of my knowledge.”

In 2025, Liaw provided the executive with a link to a White House announcement concerning an export rule for AI products that was to be implemented later in the year, indicating that the rate of shipments must ramp up prior to the effective date, according to the indictment.

When a broker, having purchased Nvidia-powered servers from the Southeast Asian firm, sent Liaw a text containing a link to a news piece about Chinese nationals being apprehended for smuggling AI chips into China, Liaw reportedly replied with crying emojis.

“Offenses involving sensitive technology necessitate prompt action,” Jay Clayton, the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York appointed by Trump and former chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, was quoted as stating in a statement. “Otherwise, the law becomes devoid of meaning.” Liaw and Sun were arrested on Thursday, while Chang remains at large, according to the attorney’s office.

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Valve's massive SteamOS 3.8 update introduces eagerly anticipated features — and is compatible with Steam Machine
Tech/AI

Valve’s massive SteamOS 3.8 update introduces eagerly anticipated features — and is compatible with Steam Machine

by admin March 19, 2026
written by admin

Steam Deck’s hibernation feature, Bluetooth headset mic support, and extensive backing for Xbox Ally, Legion Go 2, and more.

Steam Deck’s hibernation feature, Bluetooth headset mic support, and extensive backing for Xbox Ally, Legion Go 2, and more.

Mar 20, 2026, 12:34 AM UTC
Valve 2025 steam machine
Valve 2025 steam machine
Sean Hollister
Sean Hollister serves as a senior editor and one of the initial team members of The Verge, focusing on gadgets, gaming, and toys. He has spent 15 years at publications such as CNET, Gizmodo, and Engadget.

Valve has officially unveiled SteamOS 3.8.0 in preview, and it’s quite impressive.

This is the first version to facilitate support for the upcoming Steam Machine living room gaming PC, and it includes long-awaited functionalities for Valve’s handheld devices and further support for various third-party handhelds more extensively than ever before — covering Microsoft and Asus’ Xbox Ally series, the Lenovo Legion Go 2, the OneXPlayer X1, and additional compatibility with MSI, GPD, Anbernic, OrangePi, and Zotac.

What excites me the most: Valve is introducing genuine hibernation and “memory power down” options for the Steam Deck — initially just for the LCD version — which is expected to improve battery longevity when you press the power button or leave it unattended. At present, some Windows devices have superior battery performance during sleep, as they enter a self-hibernation mode to conserve energy, whereas the Steam Deck currently employs an immediate sleep mode.

Additionally, Valve has at last incorporated an option in its gaming interface to enable Bluetooth headset microphones — a feature I have been requesting since day one. (Valve previously added this feature to the Linux desktop mode last year.) Furthermore, the Steam Deck LCD will finally have Bluetooth Wake functionality reinstated, allowing you to power on your TV-connected Deck using a wireless controller from the comfort of your couch.

The update brings numerous enhancements for the Linux desktop modes that should prove beneficial for a Steam Machine connected to a TV or monitor, such as desktop HDR, VRR display capabilities, per-display scaling, “enhanced window behavior for games operating in Proton,” and an update to KDE Plasma 6.4.3 among other features.

For a Steam Machine or Steam handheld connected to a home entertainment system, they will now detect the number of audio channels available over HDMI to enable surround audio. (I think surround sound was already implemented, so this might simply be a different and improved automatic method.)

There’s also a new Arch system base and an updated graphics driver.

Surprisingly, the “Non-Deck” segment of the changelog is substantial. Valve states that long-pressing your power button should function “across a broad spectrum of devices” for powering off, restarting, or switching to desktop mode. You should now be able to modify power modes for the processor on the Xbox Ally, and night mode and display color options should be operational on AMD Z2 Extreme handhelds universally.

There’s also “Significantly improved video memory management with discrete GPU systems,” the ability to limit battery charging on any of the Lenovo Legion Go handhelds (in desktop mode), and a fix for “washed out visuals for Zotac and OneXPlayer handhelds featuring OLED screens.”

Last May, Valve started providing SteamOS for non-Valve handhelds, yet the company’s hardware team is cautious in making grand promises regarding support and currently doesn’t allow most competitors to ship handhelds pre-installed with SteamOS — Lenovo is the only partner known, and its second SteamOS handheld will be a variant of the Legion Go 2 in June. For installation on additional handhelds, sideloading is necessary and done at your own risk, despite Valve’s advancements.

There’s a lot included in this update, and it’s possible that I overlooked a feature of interest to you, so make sure to check the complete changelog here and further down.

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OpenAI is developing a desktop ‘superapp’
Tech/AI

OpenAI is developing a desktop ‘superapp’

by admin March 19, 2026
written by admin

The organization is engaged in combining ChatGPT, Codex, and the Atlas browser into a single application.

The organization is engaged in combining ChatGPT, Codex, and the Atlas browser into a single application.

Mar 20, 2026, 12:09 AM UTC
Vector illustration of the Chat GPT logo.
Vector illustration of the Chat GPT logo.
Jay Peters
Jay Peters is a senior journalist covering technology, gaming, and more. He joined The Verge in 2019 after nearly two years at Techmeme.

OpenAI is developing a desktop “superapp” that integrates its ChatGPT app, the Codex AI development tool, and its AI-driven Atlas browser into one unified application, The Wall Street Journal reports. The initiative is part of an endeavor to streamline its various product efforts, based on a memo referenced by the WSJ from Fidji Simo, OpenAI’s CEO of Applications. Fragmentation “has been slowing us down and making it harder to hit the quality bar we want,” Simo stated.

OpenAI created a buzz last year with bold announcements like the Sora video app and acquisition of Jony Ive’s AI hardware firm. However, it has encountered heightened competition from Anthropic recently, particularly in light of Claude Code’s rise in popularity. The WSJ disclosed on Monday that OpenAI executives have been assessing aspects to deprioritize, with Simo advising staff last week that they must sidestep being “distracted by side quests.”

“Organizations undergo phases of exploration and phases of refocusing; both are vital,” Simo noted on X in a message referencing the WSJ’s Berber Jin, who authored Thursday’s article. “However, when new endeavors begin to thrive, as we are witnessing now with Codex, it’s crucial to amplify them and repel distractions. Truly pleased we’re seizing this opportunity.”

OpenAI representative Lindsey Held opted not to comment. The mobile version of ChatGPT remains unaffected, as per the WSJ.

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The worldwide victors and victims of the conflict in Iran
Global

The worldwide victors and victims of the conflict in Iran

by admin March 19, 2026
written by admin

To begin with, certain producers face significant exposure to interruptions in the Middle East. For example, ExxonMobil has activities at Qatar’s Ras Laffan industrial zone, where operations have been halted since the beginning of March, and which has now experienced Iranian missile strikes, resulting in “substantial destruction”.

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RFK Jr. has dismantled more than a quarter of the health department's expert panels.
Tech/AI

RFK Jr. has dismantled more than a quarter of the health department’s expert panels.

by admin March 19, 2026
written by admin

One of the disbanded advisory groups was the NIH Center for Scientific Review Advisory Council, created in 1988. That council did not evaluate grant proposals; instead it counseled NIH officials on how to distribute research funds.

“Be outraged”

Outside NIH, the CDC saw nine advisory panels dissolved, including ones like ACIP that were weakened. Four advisory committees were also ended at the FDA.

The report says the abolished or compromised panels covered areas such as childhood vaccines, inherited disorders in newborns and children, Alzheimer’s disease, health equity, infection control in healthcare settings, rural health, novel and exceptional technologies, long COVID, and the US Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF).

In January, HHS added 21 individuals to the Interagency Autism Coordinating Committee, a panel that tracks autism research and progress on causes, prevention, diagnosis, and treatment. At least eight of those appointees share Kennedy’s belief in the discredited claim that vaccines cause autism. Following the appointments, autism researchers and advocates formed an independent nongovernmental advisory committee to counter the expected misinformation from the federal panel.

At the FDA, the advisory panels that were ended dealt with arthritis, medical imaging drugs, pharmaceutical sciences, and patient engagement.

Overall, the report concludes that Kennedy’s assault on these expert advisory bodies is weakening the biomedical sector and the nation’s health—and that repairing the damage may be slow and difficult.

“All Americans—patients, lawmakers, and scientists alike—have every reason to be outraged by the harm Trump has inflicted on federal health advisory committees,” Michael Abrams, a senior health researcher at Public Citizen and author of the report, said. “Trump’s actions are eroding biomedical research, undermining long-standing processes for approving new drugs and medical devices, and weakening federal vaccine policy. Muzzling and skewing outside experts leaves HHS vulnerable to stagnation and corruption that harms the health of all Americans.”

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FedEx surpasses expectations for both revenue and earnings, increases forecast due to robust results
Economy

FedEx surpasses expectations for both revenue and earnings, increases forecast due to robust results

by admin March 19, 2026
written by admin

In this report

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Rear view of a FedEx delivery truck featuring the logo parked on a city street in Dogpatch Neighborhood, San Francisco, California, on February 25, 2026.
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FedEx announced on Thursday that it achieved solid fiscal third-quarter results surpassing Wall Street’s predictions.

The firm also updated its forecast for fiscal 2026, estimating revenue growth of 6% to 6.5%, exceeding analyst expectations of a 5.6% increase.

Shares of FedEx increased approximately 9% in after-hours trading.

Below is an overview of the company’s fiscal third quarter performance compared to analyst forecasts, as per LSEG:

  • Earnings per share: $5.25 adjusted vs. $4.09 anticipated
  • Revenue: $24 billion vs. $23.43 billion

For the quarter, FedEx recorded an adjusted operating income of $1.68 billion, surpassing the projected $1.39 billion. It reported a net income of $1.06 billion, or $4.41 per share, up from $909 million, or $3.76 per share, from the same period last year. Adjusted for spin-off costs and other unique items, FedEx reported EPS of $5.25.

The company also revised its fiscal 2026 adjusted EPS projections, now estimating earnings between $19.30 and $20.10 per share, compared to prior guidance of between $17.80 and $19 per share.

“Team FedEx achieved another quarter marked by strong financial outcomes and exceptional service for our customers, due to disciplined operational management, the strength of our global network, and the heightened effect of our innovative digital solutions,” stated CEO Raj Subramaniam in a statement.

Previously, the company had indicated it anticipated around $1 billion in cost savings from its “Network 2.0” initiative aimed at enhancing the efficiency of its package operations by utilizing automation and artificial intelligence. FedEx now expects these savings to surpass $1 billion.

FedEx stated that its freight division, FedEx Freight, is on track to be separated into an independent publicly traded entity by June 1.

Subramaniam mentioned during a call with analysts that the company foresees “modest” challenges from disruptions stemming from the Iran conflict and indicated that the Middle East constitutes a “relatively small portion” of overall revenue.

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A new tool discovered in the wild can hack millions of iPhones.
Tech/AI

A new tool discovered in the wild can hack millions of iPhones.

by admin March 19, 2026
written by admin

Google declined to offer any additional comment beyond the blog post it published on its DarkSword findings. WIRED also tried to contact PARS Defense via its X account but did not receive an immediate response.

Lookout says DarkSword is built to exfiltrate information from vulnerable iPhones, including passwords and photos; message logs from iMessage, WhatsApp, and Telegram; browser history; Calendar and Notes entries; and even data from Apple’s Health app. Although the campaign appears to be espionage-focused, DarkSword also harvests cryptocurrency wallet credentials, indicating the operators may have pursued a for-profit cybercrime angle as well.

Rather than installing persistent spyware on victims’ phones, DarkSword employs subtler methods more commonly associated with “fileless” malware on Windows, hijacking legitimate iOS system processes to extract data. “Instead of using a spyware payload to brute force your way through the file system—which leaves tons of artifacts of exploitation that are pretty easy to detect—this just uses system processes the way they’re meant to be used,” iVerify’s Cole says. “And it leaves far fewer traces.”

Cole adds that because of this fileless approach, a DarkSword compromise doesn’t survive a reboot. Instead it grabs data from the device within minutes of the intrusion—a “smash-and-grab” tactic, he says.

While the Coruna iOS hacking toolkit revealed earlier this month targets iOS versions 13 through 17, DarkSword is effective against most builds of iOS 18, the release that preceded last fall’s iOS 26. (DarkSword actually contains two separate exploit “chains” that leverage different vulnerabilities in early and late iOS 18 builds, depending on which one the target device is running.) That means far more phones are vulnerable to DarkSword than to Coruna, particularly given the relatively slow uptake and unpopularity of iOS 26, which has been criticized for new features such as a “liquid glass” interface some users say is overly animated and reduces legibility.

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Trump likens the assault on Iran to Pearl Harbor during a discussion with the Japanese Prime Minister.
Global

Trump likens the assault on Iran to Pearl Harbor during a discussion with the Japanese Prime Minister.

by admin March 19, 2026
written by admin

During a discussion with Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi in the Oval Office, US President Donald Trump was questioned on why he had not notified allies about his intentions to strike Iran.

Trump replied by referencing Japan’s assault on Pearl Harbor in World War II, stating, “Who knows more about ambush than Japan?”

Further updates on the situation in the Middle East can be found here.

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The Download: Quantum computing in healthcare, and the reasons behind the world's limited nuclear waste recycling efforts
Tech/AI

The Download: Quantum computing in healthcare, and the reasons behind the world’s limited nuclear waste recycling efforts

by admin March 19, 2026
written by admin

Additionally: The FBI has acknowledged that it is purchasing the location data of Americans.

This is the latest edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that delivers a daily infusion of what’s happening in the tech sphere.

A reward of $5 million is up for grabs for proof that quantum computers can tackle health care challenges 

In a lab situated on the outskirts of Oxford, a quantum computer composed of atoms and light awaits its chance. The apparatus is compact yet potent—and also highly valuable. Infleqtion, the firm that possesses it, is optimistic that its capabilities will earn a $5 million prize at an upcoming contest next week. 

The award will be granted to the quantum computer that can address authentic health care issues that traditional “classical” computers struggle to manage. However, only one major victor can emerge—if a victor exists at all. Read the complete story. 

—Michael Brooks 

The reasons behind the world’s lack of nuclear waste recycling 

When spent nuclear fuel is extracted from reactors, there remains a significant amount of usable uranium. Recycling could diminish both waste and the requirement for fresh material, yet the process is expensive, complex, and not entirely effective. 

Discover why this poses such a challenge. —Casey Crownhart 

This article is featured in The Spark, MIT Technology Review’s weekly newsletter dedicated to climate issues. Subscribe to receive it in your inbox every Wednesday. 

Essential reads 

I’ve scoured the web to bring you today’s most entertaining/essential/worrying/captivating technology stories. 

1 The FBI has verified its acquisition of Americans’ location data  
Director Kash Patel stated it’s resulted in “valuable intelligence.” (Politico) 
+ What AI “recalls” about you represents the next frontier of privacy. (MIT Technology Review) 
 
2 The initial draft of a federal AI bill has been released 
It seeks to safeguard “children, creators, conservatives, and communities.” (Engadget) 
+ A conflict is emerging over AI regulation in the US. (MIT Technology Review)   

3 Google is positioning itself to the Pentagon as the ideal defense partner 
It’s depicting its AI as a secure alternative to OpenAI and Anthropic. (NYT $) 
+ Here’s how OpenAI’s technology might manifest in Iran. (MIT Technology Review) 

4 A rogue AI agent at Meta compromised confidential data for employees 
The breach lasted several hours before it was addressed. (The Information $) 
+ Avoid letting AI agent hype exceed realistic expectations. (MIT Technology Review $) 

5 Sony has eliminated 135,000 ‘deepfakes’ of its music 
Con artists were imitating the label’s artists on streaming platforms. (BBC) 
+ AI often excels as a collaborator rather than as an originator. (MIT Technology Review) 

6 The EU has endorsed a prohibition on nonconsensual sexualized deepfakes 
It has responded to Elon Musk’s Grok chatbot “nudifying” minors. (Bloomberg $) 

7 Two pioneers of quantum cryptography have been awarded the Turing Award 
Their encryption technique can (theoretically) never be compromised. (Quanta) 

8 Gamers are outraged by Nvidia’s new rendering technology 
They’ve branded it an “AI slop filter.” (The Verge) 

9 The White House has secured the aliens.gov domain name 
This has ignited speculation that the long-anticipated UFO disclosure from Trump is close at hand. (404 Media) 
+ Discover the new biologists treating LLMs as if they are extraterrestrials. (MIT Technology Review) 

10 Silicon Valley has adopted a fresh buzzword: “taste” 
This is intended as a unique selling proposition amidst a flood of AI-generated recommendations. (The New Yorker $) 

Quote of the day 

“Large technology and China prevail. The rest of us suffer.” 

—Elizabeth Warren shares her opinion regarding the Trump administration permitting Nvidia to sell cutting-edge chips to China. 

One More Item 

an arm hovering over a wafer during a test

PSIQUANTUM

Pragmatic quantum computing is unavoidable—and drawing closer 

Last year, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang shocked the stock market by asserting that useful quantum computing was still 15 to 30 years distant. He also indicated that such computers would require Nvidia GPUs to operate. However, Huang’s forecasts are off—the timeline and the significance of his company’s technology have been misaligned.  

Quantum computing is swiftly approaching practical relevance. This is promising, as the expectation is that they will accomplish calculations beyond the reach of any AI or classical computing methods. Read the entire story. 

—Peter Barrett 

We can still enjoy pleasurable experiences 

A space for comfort, amusement, and diversion to enhance your day. (Have any suggestions? Send me a message.) 

+ A self-identified “mad scientist” has powered a vehicle with vape batteries. 
+ Someone embedded an Apple Mac Mini inside a classic LEGO computer. 
+ Observe thousands of satellites circling the Earth in real-time through this fascinating interactive map. 
+ This grilled wall cheese art appears too appealing to resist.  

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The worldwide victors and victims of the conflict in Iran
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