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The study of how (and when) we choose to speak up—or self-censor
Tech/AI

The study of how (and when) we choose to speak up—or self-censor

by admin December 30, 2025
written by admin

The US has taken a more middle-of-the-road stance, largely leaving choices to private companies. Daymude and his co-authors set out to examine these strikingly different tactics. To do so they built a computational agent-based simulation that represented how people balance the desire to express dissent against the fear of punishment. The model also captures how an authority modifies its surveillance and policies to suppress dissent while keeping enforcement costs as low as possible.

“This isn’t some kind of learning-theory thing,” said Daymude. “And it isn’t grounded in empirical survey data. We didn’t go out and ask 1000 people, ‘What would you do if faced with this situation? Would you dissent or self-censor?’ and then feed those answers into the model. Our model lets us encode certain assumptions about how we think people generally behave, and then lets us vary parameters. What happens if people are more or less bold? What happens if punishments are harsher or milder? If an authority is more or less tolerant? From those basic assumptions we can make predictions about likely outcomes.”

Let a hundred flowers flourish

Their model indicates the most extreme scenario is an authoritarian regime that adopts a draconian punishment policy, effectively quashing dissent across the population. “At that point, everyone’s best strategic move is simply to stay silent,” said Daymude. “So why doesn’t every authoritarian government on earth just do that?” That question pushed them to probe the dynamics more deeply. “Maybe authoritarians begin somewhat moderate,” he said. “Maybe they only reach that extreme outcome through incremental changes over time.”

Daymude points to China’s Hundred Flowers Campaign in the 1950s as a telling example. There, Chairman Mao Zedong initially encouraged open criticism of his government before suddenly cracking down harshly when dissent escalated. The model showed that in such a situation, dissenters’ self-censorship increases gradually, ultimately producing near-total compliance.

But there’s a caveat. “The reverse of the Hundred Flowers is that if the population is bold enough, this approach fails,” said Daymude. “The authoritarian can’t find a route to become fully draconian. People stubbornly continue to dissent. So each time it tries to increase severity, it’s committed to that escalation because dissenters remain present and vocal. They’re essentially saying, ‘Catch us if you dare.’”

December 30, 2025 0 comments
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Lawsuit over Trump's rejection of medical research grants is resolved
Tech/AI

Lawsuit over Trump’s rejection of medical research grants is resolved

by admin December 30, 2025
written by admin

The litigation over the rescinded grants moved quickly. By June, a District Court judge concluded the federal policy “represents racial discrimination” and entered a preliminary injunction that would have reinstated all the cancelled awards. In his written opinion, Judge William Young observed that the government issued directives blocking DEI support without even attempting to define DEI, rendering the policy arbitrary and capricious and therefore in violation of the Administrative Procedure Act. He invalidated the policy and ordered the funding restored.

The ruling ultimately reached the Supreme Court, which handed down a decision in which a fractured majority agreed on only one point: Judge Young’s District Court was not the proper forum to decide disputes over federal funding. Accordingly, restoring the money from the cancelled grants would need to be pursued through a separate case in a different court.

Importantly, that left the rest of the decision in place. Young’s finding that the administration’s anti-DEI, anti-climate and similar policies were unlawful and therefore void was upheld.

Restoring reviews

That has significant implications for the second part of the original suit, which concerned applications that had not yet been funded and were blocked from consideration by the Trump Administration policy. With that policy voided, there was no lawful basis for the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to have failed to consider those submissions when they were filed. In the meantime, however, deadlines expired, funding pools were spent, and in some cases applicants no longer qualified as “new investigators” under the category they had applied in.

The proposed settlement effectively restarts the clock: the blocked applications will be evaluated for funding as if it were still early 2025. “Defendants stipulate and agree that the end of Federal Fiscal Year 2025 does not prevent Defendants from considering and/or awarding any of the Applications,” it states. Even if the Notice of Funding Opportunity has since been withdrawn, the grant applications will be sent for peer review.

December 30, 2025 0 comments
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Bangladesh’s inaugural female prime minister Khaleda Zia passes away at the age of 80
Global

Bangladesh’s inaugural female prime minister Khaleda Zia passes away at the age of 80

by admin December 30, 2025
written by admin

Khaleda Zia, the first female prime minister of Bangladesh, has passed away at 80 following a lengthy illness.

Zia became the inaugural female head of government in Bangladesh in 1991 after steering her party to triumph in the country’s first democratic vote in two decades.

Doctors indicated on Monday that her state was “extremely critical”. She was placed on life support, yet delivering multiple treatments simultaneously was not feasible due to her age and overall fragile health, they noted.

In spite of her declining health, her party previously stated that Zia intended to run in the general elections anticipated in February, which would be the first since the uprising that resulted in the removal of her opponent, Sheikh Hasina.

Bangladeshi politics has long been characterized by the intense rivalry between these two women, who alternated roles between government and opposition.

“Our beloved leader has departed. She left us at 6 am this morning,” announced Zia’s Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) on Facebook on Tuesday.

Following the news of her death, crowds congregated outside Evercare Hospital in Dhaka, where Zia had been admitted. Images show police attempting to prevent them from entering the hospital grounds.

Zia first gained public attention as the spouse of former president Ziaur Rahman, often perceived as a quiet presence beside him. After his assassination during a military coup in 1981, Zia entered the political arena and subsequently rose to lead the BNP.

Regarded as an “unyielding leader” for sidelining herself from a contested election under military ruler General Hussain Muhammad Ershad in the 1980s, Zia navigated a male-dominated political scene and emerged as one of Bangladesh’s most formidable political figures.

Her initial term received widespread commendation for initiatives aimed at enhancing women’s education and social development, with her government reinstating parliamentary democracy by amending the constitution with cross-party backing.

Her subsequent term in 1996, albeit brief, faced backlash for conducting a biased election despite opposition demands for an impartial caretaker authority—a measure parliament had adopted before its dissolution.

Zia returned to the role of prime minister in 2001, stepping down in October 2006 in anticipation of a general election. Her administration was met with fierce criticism over corruption allegations.

In the past 16 years, under the Awami League rule, Zia emerged as a prominent emblem of opposition against a regime perceived to be increasingly authoritarian.

She boycotted the 2014 election after her opponent Hasina eliminated the caretaker government framework—a rule designed to ensure impartiality during national elections. Subsequently, Zia was convicted on corruption charges and imprisoned, denying any wrongdoing and asserting that the charges were politically driven.

She was released last year soon after widespread anti-government demonstrations in Bangladesh led to Hasina’s resignation and subsequent exile. The BNP indicated in November that Zia would participate in the forthcoming general elections.

The BNP is aiming for a return to power, and if successful, Zia’s son Tarique Rahman is anticipated to become the new leader of the country.

Rahman, aged 60, had only returned to Bangladesh the previous week after spending 17 years in self-imposed exile in London.

During the last month, Zia was hospitalized for treatment related to kidney damage, cardiovascular disease, pneumonia, and other ailments.

Despite being distanced from public life due to her health issues, Zia continued to be a figurehead for opposition movements.

In her final days, interim leader Muhammad Yunus called upon the nation to pray for Zia, labeling her a “source of profound inspiration for the country”.

In a Tuesday statement, Yunus expressed his condolences for Zia’s demise, referring to her as a “symbol of the democratic movement”.

“The nation has lost a formidable guardian… Her contributions to the struggle for democracy, a multi-party political system, and the rights of the people in Bangladesh will be eternally commemorated,” he stated.

India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi expressed his “deep sadness” at Zia’s passing and honored her contributions toward Bangladesh’s development and its relations with India.

“We hope that her vision and legacy will continue to influence our partnership,” he posted on X.

Zia’s family, including Rahman, his spouse, and his daughter, were with her during her final moments, according to the BNP.

“We pray for her soul’s forgiveness and urge everyone to pray for her departed spirit,” the party stated in its announcement on Tuesday.

December 30, 2025 0 comments
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Meta purchases the smart agent company Manus, concluding a year of bold AI initiatives.
Economy

Meta purchases the smart agent company Manus, concluding a year of bold AI initiatives.

by admin December 30, 2025
written by admin

The Meta logo is displayed during the Viva Technology conference, focused on innovation and startups, at the Porte de Versailles exhibition center in Paris, France, on June 11, 2025.
Gonzalo Fuentes | Reuters

On Tuesday, Meta Platforms announced it has acquired Manus, a developer based in Singapore that specializes in general-purpose AI agents, as the technology giant continues to invest heavily in artificial intelligence.

Founded in China and later relocating to Singapore, Manus introduced its first general AI agent earlier this year, capable of performing complex tasks like market research, coding, and data evaluation.

The company reported it had achieved an annualized revenue of over $100 million just eight months post-launch, with its revenue run rate surpassing $125 million.

Meta stated in a press release that the acquisition is designed to hasten AI innovation for businesses and integrate sophisticated automation into its consumer and enterprise offerings, including the Meta AI assistant.

“Manus is currently meeting the daily demands of millions of users and businesses globally … We aim to expand this service to significantly more enterprises,” Meta expressed.

The companies reported that Manus will maintain its subscription service without interruption.

Although additional details of the acquisition were not made public, the Wall Street Journal cited sources familiar with the acquisition stating that the deal was concluded for over $2 billion.

The startup was looking to secure a new fundraising round at a $2 billion valuation when Meta approached them, according to the report.

Manus originated as a project of the Chinese startup Butterfly Effect, also known as Monica.Im, before evolving into an independent entity.

It gained recognition earlier this year for claiming that its chatbot surpassed OpenAI’s Deep Research agent in performance.

The firm secured $75 million in a Series B funding round led by U.S. venture capital firm Benchmark in April, and is backed by Tencent and private equity firm HongShan Capital Group (HSG), previously known as Sequoia, per data from market research firm Tracxn.

Reportedly, the startup dismissed the majority of its staff in Beijing in July before transferring its headquarters to Singapore in June as part of its global expansion strategy.

“Becoming part of Meta enables us to build on a more robust, sustainable foundation without altering how Manus operates or how decisions are made,” stated Xiao Hong, CEO of Manus, in a company statement.

The firm also declared a strategic alliance with Alibaba’s Qwen AI team in March, underscoring its existing connections to Chinese tech firms.

Intense AI Expansion

Meta’s acquisition of Manus aligns with its overall AI strategy to acquire specialized AI startups to capture talent and accelerate its broader AI business, which includes developing its open-source Llama large language models.

For instance, in June, Meta invested $14.3 billion in AI startup Scale AI, a deal that brought its founder and CEO, Alexandr Wang, into Meta’s AI leadership team.

Additionally, earlier this month, Meta acquired AI-wearables startup Limitless, further advancing its AI device strategy.

Regarding Manus, the company’s AI agent tools have attracted interest from several major tech firms. In October, Microsoft commenced testing Manus in Windows 11 PCs, enabling users to create websites from local files.

To date, Manus asserts to have processed over 147 trillion “tokens” of text and data, supporting more than 80 million virtual computers. It offers both free and premium subscription options.

Meta announced that Manus team members will join its teams as it continues to strategically recruit AI talent from startups and other significant competitors, including OpenAI and Google. 

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Ukraine refutes claims of drone strike on Putin's residence
Global

Ukraine refutes claims of drone strike on Putin’s residence

by admin December 29, 2025
written by admin

President Volodymyr Zelensky has refuted Russia’s accusations that Ukraine executed a drone strike on one of President Vladimir Putin’s residences, and accused Moscow of attempting to upset peace negotiations.

Sergei Lavrov, Russia’s Foreign Minister, asserted that Kyiv carried out an offensive overnight with 91 long-range unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) targeting Putin’s official residence in the northwestern Novgorod region of Russia.

Russia stated it would reassess its stance in peace talks. It remains unclear where Putin was during the purported strike.

Zelensky dismissed the assertion as “typical Russian fabrications”, aimed at providing the Kremlin with a pretext to persist with its assaults on Ukraine.

He noted that Russia had earlier attacked government structures in Kyiv.

Zelensky remarked on X: “It is essential for the world to speak out now. We must not let Russia obstruct the efforts towards lasting peace.”

In a statement released on Telegram on Monday, Lavrov mentioned all 91 drones he alleged were directed at Putin’s residence were intercepted and neutralized by Russian air defense systems.

He added that there were no reports of injuries or destruction as a result of the alleged assault.

“In light of the complete degeneration of the criminal Kyiv regime, which has adopted a policy of state terrorism, Russia’s negotiating stance will be amended,” he stated.

However, he indicated that Russia did not plan to withdraw from discussions with the US, according to reports from Russian news agency Tass.

This assertion from Moscow follows discussions between the US and Ukraine in Florida on Sunday, where Presidents Trump and Zelensky talked about a revised peace initiative to conclude the conflict.

After the meeting, Zelensky informed Fox News on Monday that there was a “chance to end this war” by 2026.

Nevertheless, he stated Ukraine could not achieve victory in the war without assistance from the US.

“My impression of President Trump’s sanctions and economic measures indicates that he’s prepared for very robust actions,” Zelensky noted. “In this situation, the United States can accelerate the path to peace.”

The Ukrainian leader told Fox News that there were no signs that Putin desired peace and he expressed distrust towards Putin.

“I don’t trust Putin, and he does not wish for Ukraine’s success,” Zelensky asserted.

Zelensky mentioned that the US had extended security assurances to Ukraine for 15 years, and Trump stated that an agreement on this matter was “nearly 95%” finalized.

The Ukrainian leader identified territorial disputes and the Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear facility as the remaining unresolved issues, with little indication of advancement concerning the future of Ukraine’s disputed Donbas region – which Russia seeks to fully control.

At present, Moscow governs approximately 75% of the Donetsk region, and nearly 99% of the adjacent Luhansk. Both regions are referred to collectively as Donbas.

Russia has previously dismissed essential components of the plan currently being discussed.

On Monday, the White House announced that President Trump had “concluded a constructive call” with Putin after the US-Ukraine discussions.

Yuri Ushakov, a foreign policy aide to the Kremlin, informed reporters on Monday that during the call, Putin had highlighted that the alleged attack on his residence occurred “almost immediately after what the US deemed a fruitful round of talks.”

Ushakov stated: “The US president was taken aback by this information, he was upset and remarked he couldn’t fathom such irrational actions. It was indicated that this would undoubtedly influence the US strategy in collaborating with Zelensky.”

During a subsequent press conference, Trump initially seemed unaware of the alleged incident, but later informed reporters that Putin had briefed him on it and he was “very upset” regarding the matter.

When asked if the US had observed any proof supporting Russia’s assertion, he replied: “Well, we’ll see. You’re suggesting it’s possible the assault didn’t occur – that’s conceivable too, I suppose. But President Putin told me this morning it did.”

December 29, 2025 0 comments
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LG is introducing its own Frame-like television at CES
Tech/AI

LG is introducing its own Frame-like television at CES

by admin December 29, 2025
written by admin

LG broadens its lifestyle segment by introducing the Gallery TV, designed to showcase artwork in your living space.

LG broadens its lifestyle segment by introducing the Gallery TV, designed to showcase artwork in your living space.

Dec 30, 2025, 1:00 AM UTC
lg-gallery-tv-lifestyle
lg-gallery-tv-lifestyle
John Higgins
John Higgins serves as a senior reviewer focused on TVs and audio. He boasts over 20 years of expertise in AV, having previously worked with Digital Trends and Reviewed.

In recent years, the art TV segment dominated by Samsung’s The Frame has expanded, with entries from TCL and Hisense now included. LG has unveiled its own model, the LG Gallery TV. This TV will utilize the Gallery+ service LG launched earlier this year, featuring thousands of displays ranging from art pieces to cinematic scenes to gaming imagery. Similar to Samsung’s Art Store, Gallery+ offers a limited free version, although full access necessitates a subscription.

The new Gallery TV should not be mistaken for the G Series OLED TVs, such as the LG G5, even though the G Series was formerly known as the Gallery Series until a few years back. The Gallery TV features a mini-LED display with “a special screen that diminishes glare and minimizes reflections for a presentation akin to art” (suggesting a matte finish). LG has not revealed the backlight layout, but given that other art TVs typically use edge lighting, it’s reasonable to anticipate this one will follow suit. While OLED technology surpasses mini LED in picture quality, it struggles to hold a static image for extended periods due to the risk of image retention (or burn-in).

LG has drawn inspiration from Hisense and includes a frame with the Gallery TV. The standard frame is white, with an option to buy an additional wooden-colored frame. The TV will come in sizes of 55 and 65 inches, but pricing details have yet to be provided.

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GM's outstanding stock performance surpasses Tesla, Ford, and other automakers in 2025
Economy

GM’s outstanding stock performance surpasses Tesla, Ford, and other automakers in 2025

by admin December 29, 2025
written by admin


In this piece

  • GM
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Mary Barra, CEO of General Motors, participated in the annual Allen and Co. Sun Valley Media and Technology Conference at the Sun Valley Resort in Sun Valley, Idaho, on July 8, 2025.
David A. Grogan | CNBC

DETROIT — General Motors is set to be the leading automaker stock traded in the U.S. for 2025, with GM shares experiencing their most successful year since the Detroit firm’s rebirth from bankruptcy in 2009.

As of Friday’s closing, GM stock has increased over 55% to a high of more than $80 per share, surpassing the previous annual growth rate of 48.3% from last year. This includes an almost 13% rise thus far in December, contributing to five straight months of gains, as reported by FactSet.

Multiple factors have contributed to the increase in shares. However, GM CEO Mary Barra and other leaders have argued for years that the automaker’s stock has been heavily undervalued considering its stable earnings performance.

“Outstanding vehicles, pioneering technology, an enhanced customer experience, alongside robust financial performance, will keep GM distinguished in an ever more competitive arena,” Barra stated during the company’s last earnings conference in October.

During the surge in stock value, Barra has notably reduced her stake in the company. She has either exercised options or sold approximately 1.8 million shares this year, valued at over $73 million, based on public disclosures verified by GM.

According to the latest public filing from September, Barra still held over 433,500 shares valued at more than $35 million, with a significant portion of her yearly awards allocated in options and stock.

GM’s stock performance stands in contrast to a 17% increase for Tesla as of Friday’s market close, a 34% increase for Ford Motor and a 15% decline for Chrysler’s parent Stellantis. Other U.S.-listed automakers such as Honda Motor and Toyota Motor have recorded more modest yearly increases.

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Automobile stocks

GM’s most recent earnings report triggered a wave of enthusiasm among Wall Street analysts, resulting in reratings and price target adjustments after the third quarter.

The company has consistently exceeded Wall Street’s adjusted earnings per share expectations every quarter except for the second quarter of 2022 over the past five years, based on average analyst forecasts compiled by FactSet.

Analysts have pointed to GM’s cash flow generation, earnings stability, and track record of returning value to shareholders, including stock buybacks, as key reasons for their positive outlook. The manufacturer is also anticipated to benefit significantly from regulatory shifts under the Trump administration, despite ongoing tariffs.

UBS recently raised its 12-month price target for GM stock by 14% to $97 per share, also designating the company as its top pick in the automotive sector heading into 2026. Morgan Stanley also upgraded GM this month to overweight, with a $90 per share target.

“In our perspective, General Motors leads the D3 in both the North American and Global markets with consistent unit sales growth, increases in [average transaction price], prudent incentives spending, and inventory control. This has led to superior [earnings before interest and taxes] margins and returns compared to its competitors,” Morgan Stanley analyst Andrew Percoco stated in a Dec. 7 note to investors.

Explore further

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GM predicts next year’s results will exceed 2025 earnings
GM stock leaps 15% as the automaker raises guidance and surpasses Q3 earnings

GM stock has remained in positive territory cumulatively on a weekly basis since June. The peak weekly increase of 19.3% occurred when the automaker announced its third-quarter earnings on Oct. 21. These results exceeded Wall Street’s forecasts and the company revised its annual guidance upward, stating that the next year’s earnings are projected to surpass those of 2025.

The rise in GM stock has also been assisted by external factors. The Trump administration has eased U.S. fuel economy and emissions regulations, eliminated related penalties set by the Biden administration, and renegotiated its trade agreement with South Korea, a key manufacturing location for GM. At the same time, the industry’s less profitable EV sales have been declining.

“GM operates primarily as a regional (North America) [automaker] and we believe they are well-positioned to capitalize on the relaxed U.S. regulatory landscape (emissions and fuel economy),” UBS analyst Joseph Spak noted in a Dec. 15 investor communication raising the share price target.

GM CFO Paul Jacobson recently stated that the company will keep pursuing stock buybacks.

“As long as the stock remains as undervalued as it currently is, our priority is to repurchase shares. And I believe you’ll continue to witness that from us moving forward,” he mentioned during a UBS investor conference.

Analyst averages compiled by FactSet indicate GM carries an overweight rating with a target price of $80.86.

— Contribution by CNBC’s Michael Bloom has been included in this report.

Correction: Lucid shares have decreased this year. A prior version inaccurately reported their movement.

December 29, 2025 0 comments
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Leonardo's method of charring wood predates the Japanese technique.
Tech/AI

Leonardo’s method of charring wood predates the Japanese technique.

by admin December 29, 2025
written by admin

Yakisugi is a Japanese architectural technique for charring wood surfaces. It has grown popular in bioarchitecture because the carbonized coating shields wood from moisture, flames, insects, and fungi, thereby extending its useful life. Yakisugi methods were first recorded in writing in the 17th and 18th centuries. However, Italian Renaissance polymath Leonardo da Vinci appears to have remarked on the protective effects of charring wood more than a century earlier, according to a paper published in Zenodo, an open repository for EU funded research.

Consult the notes

As previously reported, Leonardo filled more than 13,000 pages with observations and sketches (later compiled into codices), fewer than a third of which survive. The notebooks describe a wide range of inventions that anticipated later technologies: flying machines, bicycles, cranes, missiles, machine guns, an “unsinkable” double-hulled ship, dredges for clearing harbors and canals, and flotation devices similar to snowshoes to enable a person to walk on water. In his Codex Atlanticus (1490) Leonardo even speculated about making a telescope—he wrote of “making glasses to see the moon enlarged” roughly a century before the instrument was developed.

In 2003, Alessandro Vezzosi, director of Italy’s Museo Ideale, discovered some recipes for obscure mixtures while paging through Leonardo’s notes. Vezzosi tried the formulas and produced a compound that hardened into a material remarkably like Bakelite, the synthetic plastic widely used in the early 1900s. That raises the possibility that Leonardo effectively created the first manmade plastic.

The notebooks also include Leonardo’s meticulous observations from his anatomical studies. Most strikingly, his drawings and descriptions of the heart illustrated how valves regulate blood flow a century and a half before William Harvey described the fundamentals of the circulatory system. (In 2005, British heart surgeon Francis Wells developed a new operation to repair damaged hearts inspired by Leonardo’s valve sketches and later authored the book The Heart of Leonardo.)

December 29, 2025 0 comments
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Researchers develop "neuromorphic" artificial skin for robots
Tech/AI

Researchers develop “neuromorphic” artificial skin for robots

by admin December 29, 2025
written by admin

The nervous system is remarkably good at monitoring sensory inputs, yet it does so with signals that would bewilder many computer scientists: an irregular cascade of activity spikes that can be sent to hundreds of downstream neurons, where they are combined with other spike trains arriving from still more neurons.

Now, researchers have used spiking circuitry to create an artificial robotic skin, borrowing elements of how sensory-neuron signals are transmitted and integrated. While the design incorporates some clearly non-biological elements, it benefits from the fact that we have chips capable of running neural networks with spiking signals, allowing this approach to pair naturally with energy-efficient hardware that can run AI-based control software.

Locating inputs with spikes

The sensory network in our skin is highly intricate. It contains specialized receptors for different modalities—heat, cold, pressure, pain, and more. In most regions these signals feed into the spinal cord, where initial processing can trigger reflexes without involving the brain. Still, signals travel along specific neurons to the brain for deeper processing and potential conscious awareness.

The team behind this recent work, based in China, set out to replicate some of those functions for an artificial skin intended to cover a robotic hand. They focused sensing on pressure, but reproduced other nervous-system capabilities, such as determining the location of stimuli and damage, and implementing multiple layers of processing.

The project began by fabricating a flexible polymer skin embedded with pressure sensors, connected to the rest of the system via conductive polymers. A subsequent layer translated the pressure-sensor outputs into sequences of activity spikes—brief pulses of electrical current.

Spike trains can encode information in four ways: the waveform of each pulse, its amplitude, the pulse duration, and the spike frequency. Biological systems most often use firing rate to carry information, and the researchers employed that to represent the pressure detected by a sensor. The other encoding dimensions are used to form a barcode-like signature that identifies which sensor produced the reading.

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GOG’s PC game shop, an alternative to Steam, is parting ways with CD Projekt while remaining DRM-free.
Tech/AI

GOG’s PC game shop, an alternative to Steam, is parting ways with CD Projekt while remaining DRM-free.

by admin December 29, 2025
written by admin

The co-founder of GOG and CD Projekt has purchased the game marketplace that focuses on preservation.

The co-founder of GOG and CD Projekt has purchased the game marketplace that focuses on preservation.

Dec 29, 2025, 6:34 PM UTC
gog-logo
gog-logo
Emma Roth
Emma Roth is a news writer focusing on the streaming industry, consumer technology, cryptocurrency, social networking, and various other topics. Previously, she served as a writer and editor at MUO.

GOG is parting ways with CD Projekt, the gaming company that established the preservation-centric PC gaming marketplace in 2008. In a Monday update, GOG revealed that its co-founder, Michał Kiciński, has acquired the digital storefront and its online gaming platform GOG Galaxy from CD Projekt — which he also co-founded — for $25.2 million.

The acquisition will not alter GOG’s commitment to maintaining games free from DRM, as stated in the announcement that emphasizes it’s “more central to GOG than ever:”

GOG has consistently been founded on strong values and clear principles. When Marcin Iwiński and Michał Kiciński initially conceived GOG in 2007, the vision was straightforward: return classic games to players, and ensure that once you acquire a game, it genuinely belongs to you, forever. In a market increasingly characterized by obligatory clients and restricted ecosystems, that philosophy seems more pertinent than ever.

This new chapter is about reaffirming that vision. We aim to do more to protect the classics of the past, honor exceptional games of today, and contribute to creating the classics of tomorrow, including new games embodying real retro essence.

It will also not affect GOG’s connection with its previous parent company, CD Projekt, which will continue to offer existing games, such as The Witcher series and Cyberpunk 2077, alongside forthcoming titles, on the marketplace:

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