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Cloudflare problems hit websites around the world

Ominously, 31 minutes before Cloudflare acknowledged the problems with its global network, it had also reported problems with its support portal. “Our support portal provider is currently experiencing issues, and as such customers might encounter errors viewing or responding to support cases. Responses on customer inquiries are not affected, and customers can still reach us via live chat (Business and Enterprise) through the Cloudflare Dashboard, or via the emergency telephone line (Enterprise). We are working alongside our 3rd party provider to understand the full impact and mitigate this problem,” it reported at 11.17 a.m. UTC. While there’s no evidence to suggest that Cloudflare’s support portal problems were linked to the subsequent content delivery service outage, support portals have proven a weak link in several attacks on IT vendors in recent months. Discord saw customer data leaked after a breach at a third-party customer service provider. Salesforce has denied responsibility for security problems that saw a number of its customers compromised — and in several instances the finger is pointing to Salesloft Drift, a third-party AI chat tool service often integrated with it. And in September Verizon reported that 71% of CISOs had been hit by a third-party security incident in the past year. Third-party risk management has become a key concern for enterprises, according to IDC. It’s barely a month since another third-party service used by many IT departments caused widespread disruption: On October 20, a glitch in Amazon Web Services’ DynamoDB service triggered cascading outages in other AWS services and for the company’s customers.

Read More »

The Download: AI-powered warfare, and how embryo care is changing

This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology. The State of AI: How war will be changed forever —Helen Warrell & James O’Donnell It is July 2027, and China is on the brink of invading Taiwan. Autonomous drones with AI targeting capabilities are primed to overpower the island’s air defenses as a series of crippling AI-generated cyberattacks cut off energy supplies and key communications. In the meantime, a vast disinformation campaign enacted by an AI-powered pro-Chinese meme farm spreads across global social media, deadening the outcry at Beijing’s act of aggression.Scenarios such as this have brought dystopian horror to the debate about the use of AI in warfare. Military commanders hope for a digitally enhanced force that is faster and more accurate than human-directed combat. 
But there are fears that as AI assumes an increasingly central role, these same commanders will lose control of a conflict that escalates too quickly and lacks ethical or legal oversight. Read the full story. This is the third edition of The State of AI, our subscriber-only collaboration between the Financial Times & MIT Technology Review examining the ways in which AI is reshaping global power.Every Monday, writers from both publications will debate one aspect of the generative AI revolution reshaping global power. While subscribers to The Algorithm, our weekly AI newsletter, get access to an extended excerpt, subscribers to the MIT Technology Review are able to read the whole thing. Sign up here to receive future editions every Monday.
Job titles of the future: AI embryologist Embryologists are the scientists behind the scenes of in vitro fertilization who oversee the development and selection of embryos, prepare them for transfer, and maintain the lab environment. They’ve been a critical part of IVF for decades, but their job has gotten a whole lot busier in recent years as demand for the fertility treatment skyrockets and clinics struggle to keep up.Klaus Wiemer, a veteran embryologist and IVF lab director, believes artificial intelligence might help by predicting embryo health in real time and unlocking new avenues for productivity in the lab. Read the full story. —Amanda Smith The must-reads I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology. 1 Big Tech’s job cuts are a warning signThey’re a canary down the mine for other industries. (WP $)+ Americans appear to feel increasingly unsettled by AI. (WSJ $)+ Global fund managers worry companies are overinvesting in the technology. (FT $)

2 Iran is attempting to stimulate rain to end its deadly droughtBut critics warn that cloud seeding is a challenging process. (New Scientist $)+ Parts of western Iran are now experiencing flooding. (Reuters)+ Why it’s so hard to bust the weather control conspiracy theory. (MIT Technology Review) 3 Air taxi startups may produce new aircraft for war zonesThe US Army has announced its intentions to acquire most of its weapons from startups, not major contractors. (The Information $)+ US firm Joby Aviation is launching flying taxis in Dubai. (NBC News)+ This giant microwave may change the future of war. (MIT Technology Review)4 Weight-loss drug make Eli Lilly is likely to cross a trillion-dollar valuationAs it prepares to launch a pill alternative to its injections. (WSJ $)+ Arch rival Novo Nordisk A/S is undercutting the company to compete. (Bloomberg $)+ We’re learning more about what weight-loss drugs do to the body. (MIT Technology Review) 5 What’s going on with the US TikTok ban?Even the lawmakers in charge don’t seem to know. (The Verge) 6 It’s getting harder to grow cocoaMass tree felling and lower rainfall in the Congo Basin is to blame. (FT $)+ Industrial agriculture activists are everywhere at COP30. (The Guardian)+ Africa fights rising hunger by looking to foods of the past. (MIT Technology Review) 7 Russia is cracking down on its critical military bloggersArmchair critics are facing jail time if they refuse to apologize. (Economist $) 8 Why the auto industry is so obsessed with humanoid robotsIt’s not just Tesla—plenty of others want to get in on the act. (The Atlantic $)+ China’s EV giants are betting big on humanoid robots. (MIT Technology Review) 9 Indian startups are challenging ChatGPT’s AI dominanceThey support a far wider range of languages than the large AI firms’ models. (Rest of World)+ OpenAI is huge in India. Its models are steeped in caste bias. (MIT Technology Review) 10 These tiny sensors track butterflies on their journey to Mexico 🦋Scientists hope it’ll shed some light on their mysterious life cycles. (NYT $)
Quote of the day
“I think no company is going to be immune, including us.”  —Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google, warns the BBC about the precarious nature of the AI bubble. One more thing How a 1980s toy robot arm inspired modern robotics—Jon KeeganAs a child of an electronic engineer, I spent a lot of time in our local Radio Shack as a kid. While my dad was locating capacitors and resistors, I was in the toy section. It was there, in 1984, that I discovered the best toy of my childhood: the Armatron robotic arm.Described as a “robot-like arm to aid young masterminds in scientific and laboratory experiments,” it was a legit robotic arm. And the bold look and function of Armatron made quite an impression on many young kids who would one day have a career in robotics. Read the full story.
We can still have nice things A place for comfort, fun and distraction to brighten up your day. (Got any ideas? Drop me a line or skeet ’em at me.) + The US Library of Congress has attained some handwritten drafts of iconic songs from The Wizard of Oz.+ This interesting dashboard tracks the world’s top 500 musical artists in the world right now—some of the listings may surprise you (or just make you feel really old.)+ Cult author Chris Kraus shares what’s floating her boat right now.+ The first images of the forthcoming Legend of Zelda film are here!

Read More »

TotalEnergies Buys Into Kretinsky Power Assets for $6B

TotalEnergies SE agreed to buy a 50 percent stake in a portfolio of European power assets for about EUR 5.1 billion ($5.9 billion), expanding in the sector even as some major oil and gas peers retreat. Total will acquire the assets from Czech tycoon Daniel Kretinsky’s holding company EPH, paying in new shares, it said in a statement Monday. That will give the Czech firm a stake of just over 4 percent in Total, making it one of the company’s largest shareholders. The French oil major is bulking up in the power sector as it pursues a diversification drive that targets 20 percent of energy sales from electricity by 2030. It has been acquiring solar, wind and battery projects in Europe and North America, but also gas-fueled plants, betting on soaring electricity demand from the electrification of industry and the artificial-intelligence boom. The latest deal will give Total gas and biomass power stations and battery projects in Italy, the UK, Ireland, the Netherlands and France. The company now expects its Integrated Power business to generate free cash flow as early as 2027, bringing its forecast forward by a year. “The deal will give TotalEnergies a critical size in Europe’s power market, make its generation mix more resilient and improve predictability” of cash flows from the electricity segment, Frederic Lorec, an analyst at AlphaValue, said by phone. “The price of the deal makes sense.” Total rose as much as 0.7 percent in Paris trading, and was up 0.6 percent as of 12:50 p.m. local time. Power Bet While electricity demand weakened in parts of Europe in the wake of the 2022 energy crisis, Total is betting on a revival as data centers proliferate, absorbing vast quantities of power. Home heating, transportation and industry are also gradually electrifying across the continent, helping to spur investments in clean energy

Read More »

Enterprises may have over-bought vSAN hardware for years based on VMware’s flawed guidance

Dai agreed. “Amid backlash over Broadcom licensing and rising interest in Nutanix and OpenStack, VMware needs to signal cost optimisation. While this improves TCO, enterprises should view it as both a technical adjustment and a competitive retention play.” However, Gogia cautioned that reduced hardware costs do not address the core concerns driving customer unease. “Trimming back hardware requirements may ease the cost burden, but it doesn’t resolve the deeper unease around how VMware’s licensing is structured, how prices might evolve, or what the long-term product direction truly looks like. It’s a welcome course correction, not a reset button.” What should CIOs do now Given these complexities, what should enterprises currently running or planning vSAN deployments actually do with this information? “This update should prompt every CIO running — or planning — a vSAN deployment to take a fresh look at their infrastructure strategy,” said Gogia. “CIOs should prioritise forward-looking application of the new sizing model, use it to influence upcoming contracts, and avoid the temptation to reengineer stable clusters mid-cycle unless there’s a compelling case.” Dai recommended a similar approach. “For existing deployments, CIOs should evaluate whether hardware can be repurposed or scaled down in refresh cycles. For new projects, apply revised specs to avoid overprovisioning. More broadly, they should embed telemetry-driven sizing into virtualization strategy to prevent similar inefficiencies across platforms.” Both analysts emphasised that the lessons extend beyond VMware. “This is also a wake-up call for CIOs and architects: vendor guidance cannot be followed blindly,” said Gogia. “Internal telemetry, context-specific modelling, and continuous validation must now take centre stage in infrastructure planning.”

Read More »

Azure blocks record 15 Tbps DDoS attack as IoT botnets gain new firepower

Varkey added that modern DDoS attacks increasingly resemble hit-and-run incidents, striking suddenly, lasting only minutes, and disappearing before defenses fully engage. He said their speed and intensity require always-on protection and preemptive resilience rather than reactive mitigation. The attack shows how millions of consumer devices have effectively become strategic weapons capable of straining even hyperscale cloud platforms. “DDoS is no longer a containable nuisance, but a genuine infrastructure-level risk with potential economic impact,” said Chandrasekhar Bilugu, CTO of SureShield. “Enterprises must treat DDoS protection as Tier-0 infrastructure, using multi-provider, always-on setups with capacity headroom measured in tens of terabits per second, rather than treating it as an afterthought.” High-bandwidth home internet and stronger IoT devices increase per-device attack capacity, enabling large DDoS attacks with fewer nodes, according to Keith Prabhu, founder and CEO of Confidis. “Modern IoT botnets can now perform smarter layer-7 attacks, not just volumetric attacks,” Prabhu said. “Low security awareness among home end users often leads to compromise of endpoints, which can then be used for such attacks.” Enterprises often assume cloud providers fully protect against DDoS, but providers secure the platform rather than individual workloads or APIs, analysts added.

Read More »

Venture Global Files Applications for Plaquemines LNG Expansion

Venture Global Inc said Monday it had applied for a construction permit before the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and export authorization before the Department of Energy (DOE) for a project to add over 30 million metric tons per annum (MTPA) of capacity to the Plaquemines LNG complex in Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana. The Arlington, Virginia-based producer said in a statement on its website it has increased the project’s capacity by nearly 40 percent from the initial announcement earlier this year “due to the continued optimization of our liquefaction trains and strong market demand”. “This bolt-on expansion will be built incrementally in three phases and consist of 32 modular liquefaction trains… This will bring the total peak production capacity across the entire Plaquemines complex to over 58 MTPA”, Venture Global said. Chief executive Greg Sabel said, “This strategic step provides Venture Global with the optionality to develop a scalable project that can efficiently meet market needs as they evolve”. When it announced the brownfield expansion March 6, initially comprising 24 trains, Venture Global estimated the investment to be around $18 billion. Venture Global shipped the first LNG cargo from Plaquemines LNG late 2024. The shipment to Germany was for Energie Baden-Wuerttemberg AG. “Plaquemines LNG is one of the two fastest greenfield projects of its size to reach first production and, now, first cargo delivery, along with Venture Global’s first project, Calcasieu Pass”, Venture Global said in a statement December 26, 2024. Sabel said then, “In just five years, Venture Global has built, produced and launched exports from two large-scale LNG projects which has never been done before in the history of the industry”. Venture Global said at the time, “Like Venture Global’s Calcasieu Pass project, Plaquemines has exported its first cargo far in advance of the U.S. Department of Energy’s requirement to

Read More »

Cloudflare problems hit websites around the world

Ominously, 31 minutes before Cloudflare acknowledged the problems with its global network, it had also reported problems with its support portal. “Our support portal provider is currently experiencing issues, and as such customers might encounter errors viewing or responding to support cases. Responses on customer inquiries are not affected, and customers can still reach us via live chat (Business and Enterprise) through the Cloudflare Dashboard, or via the emergency telephone line (Enterprise). We are working alongside our 3rd party provider to understand the full impact and mitigate this problem,” it reported at 11.17 a.m. UTC. While there’s no evidence to suggest that Cloudflare’s support portal problems were linked to the subsequent content delivery service outage, support portals have proven a weak link in several attacks on IT vendors in recent months. Discord saw customer data leaked after a breach at a third-party customer service provider. Salesforce has denied responsibility for security problems that saw a number of its customers compromised — and in several instances the finger is pointing to Salesloft Drift, a third-party AI chat tool service often integrated with it. And in September Verizon reported that 71% of CISOs had been hit by a third-party security incident in the past year. Third-party risk management has become a key concern for enterprises, according to IDC. It’s barely a month since another third-party service used by many IT departments caused widespread disruption: On October 20, a glitch in Amazon Web Services’ DynamoDB service triggered cascading outages in other AWS services and for the company’s customers.

Read More »

The Download: AI-powered warfare, and how embryo care is changing

This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology. The State of AI: How war will be changed forever —Helen Warrell & James O’Donnell It is July 2027, and China is on the brink of invading Taiwan. Autonomous drones with AI targeting capabilities are primed to overpower the island’s air defenses as a series of crippling AI-generated cyberattacks cut off energy supplies and key communications. In the meantime, a vast disinformation campaign enacted by an AI-powered pro-Chinese meme farm spreads across global social media, deadening the outcry at Beijing’s act of aggression.Scenarios such as this have brought dystopian horror to the debate about the use of AI in warfare. Military commanders hope for a digitally enhanced force that is faster and more accurate than human-directed combat. 
But there are fears that as AI assumes an increasingly central role, these same commanders will lose control of a conflict that escalates too quickly and lacks ethical or legal oversight. Read the full story. This is the third edition of The State of AI, our subscriber-only collaboration between the Financial Times & MIT Technology Review examining the ways in which AI is reshaping global power.Every Monday, writers from both publications will debate one aspect of the generative AI revolution reshaping global power. While subscribers to The Algorithm, our weekly AI newsletter, get access to an extended excerpt, subscribers to the MIT Technology Review are able to read the whole thing. Sign up here to receive future editions every Monday.
Job titles of the future: AI embryologist Embryologists are the scientists behind the scenes of in vitro fertilization who oversee the development and selection of embryos, prepare them for transfer, and maintain the lab environment. They’ve been a critical part of IVF for decades, but their job has gotten a whole lot busier in recent years as demand for the fertility treatment skyrockets and clinics struggle to keep up.Klaus Wiemer, a veteran embryologist and IVF lab director, believes artificial intelligence might help by predicting embryo health in real time and unlocking new avenues for productivity in the lab. Read the full story. —Amanda Smith The must-reads I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology. 1 Big Tech’s job cuts are a warning signThey’re a canary down the mine for other industries. (WP $)+ Americans appear to feel increasingly unsettled by AI. (WSJ $)+ Global fund managers worry companies are overinvesting in the technology. (FT $)

2 Iran is attempting to stimulate rain to end its deadly droughtBut critics warn that cloud seeding is a challenging process. (New Scientist $)+ Parts of western Iran are now experiencing flooding. (Reuters)+ Why it’s so hard to bust the weather control conspiracy theory. (MIT Technology Review) 3 Air taxi startups may produce new aircraft for war zonesThe US Army has announced its intentions to acquire most of its weapons from startups, not major contractors. (The Information $)+ US firm Joby Aviation is launching flying taxis in Dubai. (NBC News)+ This giant microwave may change the future of war. (MIT Technology Review)4 Weight-loss drug make Eli Lilly is likely to cross a trillion-dollar valuationAs it prepares to launch a pill alternative to its injections. (WSJ $)+ Arch rival Novo Nordisk A/S is undercutting the company to compete. (Bloomberg $)+ We’re learning more about what weight-loss drugs do to the body. (MIT Technology Review) 5 What’s going on with the US TikTok ban?Even the lawmakers in charge don’t seem to know. (The Verge) 6 It’s getting harder to grow cocoaMass tree felling and lower rainfall in the Congo Basin is to blame. (FT $)+ Industrial agriculture activists are everywhere at COP30. (The Guardian)+ Africa fights rising hunger by looking to foods of the past. (MIT Technology Review) 7 Russia is cracking down on its critical military bloggersArmchair critics are facing jail time if they refuse to apologize. (Economist $) 8 Why the auto industry is so obsessed with humanoid robotsIt’s not just Tesla—plenty of others want to get in on the act. (The Atlantic $)+ China’s EV giants are betting big on humanoid robots. (MIT Technology Review) 9 Indian startups are challenging ChatGPT’s AI dominanceThey support a far wider range of languages than the large AI firms’ models. (Rest of World)+ OpenAI is huge in India. Its models are steeped in caste bias. (MIT Technology Review) 10 These tiny sensors track butterflies on their journey to Mexico 🦋Scientists hope it’ll shed some light on their mysterious life cycles. (NYT $)
Quote of the day
“I think no company is going to be immune, including us.”  —Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google, warns the BBC about the precarious nature of the AI bubble. One more thing How a 1980s toy robot arm inspired modern robotics—Jon KeeganAs a child of an electronic engineer, I spent a lot of time in our local Radio Shack as a kid. While my dad was locating capacitors and resistors, I was in the toy section. It was there, in 1984, that I discovered the best toy of my childhood: the Armatron robotic arm.Described as a “robot-like arm to aid young masterminds in scientific and laboratory experiments,” it was a legit robotic arm. And the bold look and function of Armatron made quite an impression on many young kids who would one day have a career in robotics. Read the full story.
We can still have nice things A place for comfort, fun and distraction to brighten up your day. (Got any ideas? Drop me a line or skeet ’em at me.) + The US Library of Congress has attained some handwritten drafts of iconic songs from The Wizard of Oz.+ This interesting dashboard tracks the world’s top 500 musical artists in the world right now—some of the listings may surprise you (or just make you feel really old.)+ Cult author Chris Kraus shares what’s floating her boat right now.+ The first images of the forthcoming Legend of Zelda film are here!

Read More »

TotalEnergies Buys Into Kretinsky Power Assets for $6B

TotalEnergies SE agreed to buy a 50 percent stake in a portfolio of European power assets for about EUR 5.1 billion ($5.9 billion), expanding in the sector even as some major oil and gas peers retreat. Total will acquire the assets from Czech tycoon Daniel Kretinsky’s holding company EPH, paying in new shares, it said in a statement Monday. That will give the Czech firm a stake of just over 4 percent in Total, making it one of the company’s largest shareholders. The French oil major is bulking up in the power sector as it pursues a diversification drive that targets 20 percent of energy sales from electricity by 2030. It has been acquiring solar, wind and battery projects in Europe and North America, but also gas-fueled plants, betting on soaring electricity demand from the electrification of industry and the artificial-intelligence boom. The latest deal will give Total gas and biomass power stations and battery projects in Italy, the UK, Ireland, the Netherlands and France. The company now expects its Integrated Power business to generate free cash flow as early as 2027, bringing its forecast forward by a year. “The deal will give TotalEnergies a critical size in Europe’s power market, make its generation mix more resilient and improve predictability” of cash flows from the electricity segment, Frederic Lorec, an analyst at AlphaValue, said by phone. “The price of the deal makes sense.” Total rose as much as 0.7 percent in Paris trading, and was up 0.6 percent as of 12:50 p.m. local time. Power Bet While electricity demand weakened in parts of Europe in the wake of the 2022 energy crisis, Total is betting on a revival as data centers proliferate, absorbing vast quantities of power. Home heating, transportation and industry are also gradually electrifying across the continent, helping to spur investments in clean energy

Read More »

Enterprises may have over-bought vSAN hardware for years based on VMware’s flawed guidance

Dai agreed. “Amid backlash over Broadcom licensing and rising interest in Nutanix and OpenStack, VMware needs to signal cost optimisation. While this improves TCO, enterprises should view it as both a technical adjustment and a competitive retention play.” However, Gogia cautioned that reduced hardware costs do not address the core concerns driving customer unease. “Trimming back hardware requirements may ease the cost burden, but it doesn’t resolve the deeper unease around how VMware’s licensing is structured, how prices might evolve, or what the long-term product direction truly looks like. It’s a welcome course correction, not a reset button.” What should CIOs do now Given these complexities, what should enterprises currently running or planning vSAN deployments actually do with this information? “This update should prompt every CIO running — or planning — a vSAN deployment to take a fresh look at their infrastructure strategy,” said Gogia. “CIOs should prioritise forward-looking application of the new sizing model, use it to influence upcoming contracts, and avoid the temptation to reengineer stable clusters mid-cycle unless there’s a compelling case.” Dai recommended a similar approach. “For existing deployments, CIOs should evaluate whether hardware can be repurposed or scaled down in refresh cycles. For new projects, apply revised specs to avoid overprovisioning. More broadly, they should embed telemetry-driven sizing into virtualization strategy to prevent similar inefficiencies across platforms.” Both analysts emphasised that the lessons extend beyond VMware. “This is also a wake-up call for CIOs and architects: vendor guidance cannot be followed blindly,” said Gogia. “Internal telemetry, context-specific modelling, and continuous validation must now take centre stage in infrastructure planning.”

Read More »

Azure blocks record 15 Tbps DDoS attack as IoT botnets gain new firepower

Varkey added that modern DDoS attacks increasingly resemble hit-and-run incidents, striking suddenly, lasting only minutes, and disappearing before defenses fully engage. He said their speed and intensity require always-on protection and preemptive resilience rather than reactive mitigation. The attack shows how millions of consumer devices have effectively become strategic weapons capable of straining even hyperscale cloud platforms. “DDoS is no longer a containable nuisance, but a genuine infrastructure-level risk with potential economic impact,” said Chandrasekhar Bilugu, CTO of SureShield. “Enterprises must treat DDoS protection as Tier-0 infrastructure, using multi-provider, always-on setups with capacity headroom measured in tens of terabits per second, rather than treating it as an afterthought.” High-bandwidth home internet and stronger IoT devices increase per-device attack capacity, enabling large DDoS attacks with fewer nodes, according to Keith Prabhu, founder and CEO of Confidis. “Modern IoT botnets can now perform smarter layer-7 attacks, not just volumetric attacks,” Prabhu said. “Low security awareness among home end users often leads to compromise of endpoints, which can then be used for such attacks.” Enterprises often assume cloud providers fully protect against DDoS, but providers secure the platform rather than individual workloads or APIs, analysts added.

Read More »

Venture Global Files Applications for Plaquemines LNG Expansion

Venture Global Inc said Monday it had applied for a construction permit before the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and export authorization before the Department of Energy (DOE) for a project to add over 30 million metric tons per annum (MTPA) of capacity to the Plaquemines LNG complex in Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana. The Arlington, Virginia-based producer said in a statement on its website it has increased the project’s capacity by nearly 40 percent from the initial announcement earlier this year “due to the continued optimization of our liquefaction trains and strong market demand”. “This bolt-on expansion will be built incrementally in three phases and consist of 32 modular liquefaction trains… This will bring the total peak production capacity across the entire Plaquemines complex to over 58 MTPA”, Venture Global said. Chief executive Greg Sabel said, “This strategic step provides Venture Global with the optionality to develop a scalable project that can efficiently meet market needs as they evolve”. When it announced the brownfield expansion March 6, initially comprising 24 trains, Venture Global estimated the investment to be around $18 billion. Venture Global shipped the first LNG cargo from Plaquemines LNG late 2024. The shipment to Germany was for Energie Baden-Wuerttemberg AG. “Plaquemines LNG is one of the two fastest greenfield projects of its size to reach first production and, now, first cargo delivery, along with Venture Global’s first project, Calcasieu Pass”, Venture Global said in a statement December 26, 2024. Sabel said then, “In just five years, Venture Global has built, produced and launched exports from two large-scale LNG projects which has never been done before in the history of the industry”. Venture Global said at the time, “Like Venture Global’s Calcasieu Pass project, Plaquemines has exported its first cargo far in advance of the U.S. Department of Energy’s requirement to

Read More »

TotalEnergies Buys Into Kretinsky Power Assets for $6B

TotalEnergies SE agreed to buy a 50 percent stake in a portfolio of European power assets for about EUR 5.1 billion ($5.9 billion), expanding in the sector even as some major oil and gas peers retreat. Total will acquire the assets from Czech tycoon Daniel Kretinsky’s holding company EPH, paying in new shares, it said in a statement Monday. That will give the Czech firm a stake of just over 4 percent in Total, making it one of the company’s largest shareholders. The French oil major is bulking up in the power sector as it pursues a diversification drive that targets 20 percent of energy sales from electricity by 2030. It has been acquiring solar, wind and battery projects in Europe and North America, but also gas-fueled plants, betting on soaring electricity demand from the electrification of industry and the artificial-intelligence boom. The latest deal will give Total gas and biomass power stations and battery projects in Italy, the UK, Ireland, the Netherlands and France. The company now expects its Integrated Power business to generate free cash flow as early as 2027, bringing its forecast forward by a year. “The deal will give TotalEnergies a critical size in Europe’s power market, make its generation mix more resilient and improve predictability” of cash flows from the electricity segment, Frederic Lorec, an analyst at AlphaValue, said by phone. “The price of the deal makes sense.” Total rose as much as 0.7 percent in Paris trading, and was up 0.6 percent as of 12:50 p.m. local time. Power Bet While electricity demand weakened in parts of Europe in the wake of the 2022 energy crisis, Total is betting on a revival as data centers proliferate, absorbing vast quantities of power. Home heating, transportation and industry are also gradually electrifying across the continent, helping to spur investments in clean energy

Read More »

Driller H&P Posts $57MM Quarterly Loss

Helmerich & Payne Inc (H&P) on Monday reported $57.36 million, or $0.58 per share, in net loss for the fiscal fourth quarter (July-September). That was an improvement from a net loss of $162.76 million for the prior three months, when the Tulsa, Oklahoma-based drilling rig operator logged $128 million in goodwill impairment from its acquisition of KCA Deutag International Ltd, completed early 2025. For fiscal Q4 Helmerich & Payne booked $18.93 million in asset impairment charges and $7.45 million in restructuring charges. Net loss adjusted for nonrecurring items was $1 million, or -$0.01 per share – beating the Zacks Consensus Estimate of -$0.26. Impact from nonrecurring charges totaled $56 million. Drilling services revenue totaled $1.01 billion, down from $1.04 billion for fiscal Q3. H&P recorded an operating loss of $1.46 million, improving from -$128.27 million for fiscal Q3. Its North America Solutions (NAS) segment registered $118.16 million in operating income, down from $157.65 million for fiscal Q3. “NAS realized direct margins of $242 million during the quarter, yielding an associated margin per day of $18,620 and profitability continuing to lead all North American land drillers”, the company said. The International Solutions Segment had an operating loss of $75.72 million, better than -$166.51 million for fiscal Q3. “International Solutions again exceeded guidance midpoint expectations with direct margins of approximately $30 million”, H&P said. Offshore Gulf of Mexico generated $20.29 million in operating income, up from $8.77 million for fiscal Q3. H&P paid $25 million in dividends in fiscal Q4. “Fiscal 2025 was a historic year for H&P, as we grew our global drilling footprint to over 200 operating rigs, surpassed over $1 billion of direct margins in our North American Solutions business, welcomed the talented team from KCA Deutag and established new relationships with a diverse set of global customers”, commented chief executive

Read More »

Venture Global Files Applications for Plaquemines LNG Expansion

Venture Global Inc said Monday it had applied for a construction permit before the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and export authorization before the Department of Energy (DOE) for a project to add over 30 million metric tons per annum (MTPA) of capacity to the Plaquemines LNG complex in Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana. The Arlington, Virginia-based producer said in a statement on its website it has increased the project’s capacity by nearly 40 percent from the initial announcement earlier this year “due to the continued optimization of our liquefaction trains and strong market demand”. “This bolt-on expansion will be built incrementally in three phases and consist of 32 modular liquefaction trains… This will bring the total peak production capacity across the entire Plaquemines complex to over 58 MTPA”, Venture Global said. Chief executive Greg Sabel said, “This strategic step provides Venture Global with the optionality to develop a scalable project that can efficiently meet market needs as they evolve”. When it announced the brownfield expansion March 6, initially comprising 24 trains, Venture Global estimated the investment to be around $18 billion. Venture Global shipped the first LNG cargo from Plaquemines LNG late 2024. The shipment to Germany was for Energie Baden-Wuerttemberg AG. “Plaquemines LNG is one of the two fastest greenfield projects of its size to reach first production and, now, first cargo delivery, along with Venture Global’s first project, Calcasieu Pass”, Venture Global said in a statement December 26, 2024. Sabel said then, “In just five years, Venture Global has built, produced and launched exports from two large-scale LNG projects which has never been done before in the history of the industry”. Venture Global said at the time, “Like Venture Global’s Calcasieu Pass project, Plaquemines has exported its first cargo far in advance of the U.S. Department of Energy’s requirement to

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ConocoPhillips Makes Offshore Gas Discovery in Australia’s Otway Basin

ConocoPhillips made a natural gas discovery offshore Victoria in the Otway Basin, though further work is needed to determine potential flow rates, the United States company’s Australian unit said Monday. “The Essington-1 well is the first discovery in the Otway since 2021 and is a promising start to ConocoPhillips’ exploration activities in the region”, ConocoPhillips Australia president Jan-Arne Johansen said in an online statement. “The initial results are encouraging, and we look forward to continuing drilling our second exploration well in December”. ConocoPhillips Australia said, “Preliminary estimates from logs and wireline results place the primary Waarre A target reservoir as a 62.6-meter gross hydrocarbon column. The secondary Waarre C target shows a further 33.2-meter gross hydrocarbon column as best estimates”. 3D Energi said separately, “Elevated gas readings were recorded in both the Waarre C (intersected at 2,265 meters MDRT) and Waarre A (intersected at 2,515 meters MDRT) reservoirs”. “In both reservoirs, gas peaks coincide with elevated resistivity readings observed on Logging While Drilling tools, consistent with probable hydrocarbon presence”, 3D Energi added. The discovery sits 12 kilometers (7.46 miles) from producing gas wells and about 53 kilometers (32.93 miles) from Port Campbell, Victoria, according to ConocoPhillips Australia. “Further work will be conducted to determine potential flow rates, the reservoir’s ultimate resource recovery and the commercial viability for potential development plans”, ConocoPhillips Australia said. The partners expect to complete operations at the well this month, after which the well will be plugged and abandoned. “A second well in VIC/P79 (Charlemont-1) expected to commence in December (weather and operational conditions permitting) and additional wells may be considered in the future under the accepted Environmental Plan”, ConocoPhillips Australia said. It announced the start of the Otway exploration campaign November 1, “in an effort to find new domestic natural gas supply and be part of

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Turkey Plans $4B Sukuk in Energy Production Push

Turkey’s state energy company Turkiye Petrolleri AO plans to sell as much as $4 billion in Islamic debt as part of its push to expand oil and gas production, marking the firm’s first such international debt offering. The company, also known by its Turkish initials TPAO, is preparing to issue the five-year sukuk to international investors by the end of the year, Energy Minister Alparslan Bayraktar told Bloomberg on Monday. The debut sukuk follows non-deal roadshow meetings in London, Abu Dhabi and Dubai, where officials briefed potential investors on TPAO’s financial outlook and projects, including Black Sea natural gas production and the Gabar oil field in Turkey’s southeast, he said. Owned by Turkey’s sovereign wealth fund, TPAO also has a growing portfolio of international projects including exploration plans in Libya, Oman and Pakistan alongside existing production in Azerbaijan, Iraq and Russia.  TPAO produced 33.7 million barrels of oil and 2.2 billion cubic meters of gas in Turkey in 2024, former CEO Ahmet Turkoglu told a parliamentary commission earlier this year. It also pumped 39.4 million barrels of oil equivalent from international projects.  He said that the company made a profit of 15.4 billion liras last year – equivalent to around $390 million at the time of the comments. Production is set to increase both at home and abroad. Turkey plans to increase output at the main Black Sea gas field, Sakarya, to 45 million cubic meters per day in 2028 from the current 9.5 mcm, Bayraktar said. TPAO is also planning to develop unconventional reserves in the southeast in partnership with US-based Continental Resources, Inc. and TransAtlantic Petroleum Ltd.  TPAO established a subsidiary, TPAO Varlik Kiralama, earlier this month to manage the sukuk issuance. The debt sale comes as Turkey’s borrowing costs decline due to an easing of political tensions at

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ADNOC Gas Achieves Record Q3

ADNOC Gas PLC has reported an eight percent year-on-year increase in net profit to $1.34 billion for the third quarter, the company’s highest for the July-September period. The increase was driven by a four percent rise in domestic gas sales volumes, according to an online statement by the company. Demand is supported by growth in the United Arab Emirates’ economy, while contract negotiations also improved underlying margins, said the gas processing and sales arm of Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. Earnings per share landed at $0.017. ADNOC Gas has extended its five percent annual dividend growth policy to 2030, aiming for $24.4 billion in total for 2025-30, according to a stock filing October 8. ADNOC Gas has introduced a policy to distribute dividends quarterly starting with Q3 2025. “The introduction of quarterly dividend distributions starting in Q3 2025 with $896 million to be paid by December 12 – alongside a five percent annual increase in dividend payout now extended until 2030 – offers greater transparency and even more regular income, allowing shareholders to plan and manage their finances with confidence”, it said in its quarterly statement. ADNOC Gas said, “Year-to-date net income reached $3.99 billion, exceeding market expectations, even as oil prices averaged $71/barrel in the first nine months of 2025 compared to $83/barrel in 2024”. “Q3 2025 saw ADNOC Gas’ domestic gas business deliver record results, with EBITDA rising to $914 million, up 26 percent year-on-year”. On lower prices, revenue fell from $4.87 billion for Q3 2024 to $4.86 billion for Q3 2025. Operating profit landed at $1.74 billion, up from $1.69 billion for Q3 2024. Profit before tax was $1.72 billion, up from $1.68 billion for Q3 2024. Net cash from operating activities before changes in working capital was $4.65 billion, up from $4.24 billion for Q3 2024. ADNOC Gas ended

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Microsoft will invest $80B in AI data centers in fiscal 2025

And Microsoft isn’t the only one that is ramping up its investments into AI-enabled data centers. Rival cloud service providers are all investing in either upgrading or opening new data centers to capture a larger chunk of business from developers and users of large language models (LLMs).  In a report published in October 2024, Bloomberg Intelligence estimated that demand for generative AI would push Microsoft, AWS, Google, Oracle, Meta, and Apple would between them devote $200 billion to capex in 2025, up from $110 billion in 2023. Microsoft is one of the biggest spenders, followed closely by Google and AWS, Bloomberg Intelligence said. Its estimate of Microsoft’s capital spending on AI, at $62.4 billion for calendar 2025, is lower than Smith’s claim that the company will invest $80 billion in the fiscal year to June 30, 2025. Both figures, though, are way higher than Microsoft’s 2020 capital expenditure of “just” $17.6 billion. The majority of the increased spending is tied to cloud services and the expansion of AI infrastructure needed to provide compute capacity for OpenAI workloads. Separately, last October Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said his company planned total capex spend of $75 billion in 2024 and even more in 2025, with much of it going to AWS, its cloud computing division.

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John Deere unveils more autonomous farm machines to address skill labor shortage

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More Self-driving tractors might be the path to self-driving cars. John Deere has revealed a new line of autonomous machines and tech across agriculture, construction and commercial landscaping. The Moline, Illinois-based John Deere has been in business for 187 years, yet it’s been a regular as a non-tech company showing off technology at the big tech trade show in Las Vegas and is back at CES 2025 with more autonomous tractors and other vehicles. This is not something we usually cover, but John Deere has a lot of data that is interesting in the big picture of tech. The message from the company is that there aren’t enough skilled farm laborers to do the work that its customers need. It’s been a challenge for most of the last two decades, said Jahmy Hindman, CTO at John Deere, in a briefing. Much of the tech will come this fall and after that. He noted that the average farmer in the U.S. is over 58 and works 12 to 18 hours a day to grow food for us. And he said the American Farm Bureau Federation estimates there are roughly 2.4 million farm jobs that need to be filled annually; and the agricultural work force continues to shrink. (This is my hint to the anti-immigration crowd). John Deere’s autonomous 9RX Tractor. Farmers can oversee it using an app. While each of these industries experiences their own set of challenges, a commonality across all is skilled labor availability. In construction, about 80% percent of contractors struggle to find skilled labor. And in commercial landscaping, 86% of landscaping business owners can’t find labor to fill open positions, he said. “They have to figure out how to do

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2025 playbook for enterprise AI success, from agents to evals

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More 2025 is poised to be a pivotal year for enterprise AI. The past year has seen rapid innovation, and this year will see the same. This has made it more critical than ever to revisit your AI strategy to stay competitive and create value for your customers. From scaling AI agents to optimizing costs, here are the five critical areas enterprises should prioritize for their AI strategy this year. 1. Agents: the next generation of automation AI agents are no longer theoretical. In 2025, they’re indispensable tools for enterprises looking to streamline operations and enhance customer interactions. Unlike traditional software, agents powered by large language models (LLMs) can make nuanced decisions, navigate complex multi-step tasks, and integrate seamlessly with tools and APIs. At the start of 2024, agents were not ready for prime time, making frustrating mistakes like hallucinating URLs. They started getting better as frontier large language models themselves improved. “Let me put it this way,” said Sam Witteveen, cofounder of Red Dragon, a company that develops agents for companies, and that recently reviewed the 48 agents it built last year. “Interestingly, the ones that we built at the start of the year, a lot of those worked way better at the end of the year just because the models got better.” Witteveen shared this in the video podcast we filmed to discuss these five big trends in detail. Models are getting better and hallucinating less, and they’re also being trained to do agentic tasks. Another feature that the model providers are researching is a way to use the LLM as a judge, and as models get cheaper (something we’ll cover below), companies can use three or more models to

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OpenAI’s red teaming innovations define new essentials for security leaders in the AI era

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More OpenAI has taken a more aggressive approach to red teaming than its AI competitors, demonstrating its security teams’ advanced capabilities in two areas: multi-step reinforcement and external red teaming. OpenAI recently released two papers that set a new competitive standard for improving the quality, reliability and safety of AI models in these two techniques and more. The first paper, “OpenAI’s Approach to External Red Teaming for AI Models and Systems,” reports that specialized teams outside the company have proven effective in uncovering vulnerabilities that might otherwise have made it into a released model because in-house testing techniques may have missed them. In the second paper, “Diverse and Effective Red Teaming with Auto-Generated Rewards and Multi-Step Reinforcement Learning,” OpenAI introduces an automated framework that relies on iterative reinforcement learning to generate a broad spectrum of novel, wide-ranging attacks. Going all-in on red teaming pays practical, competitive dividends It’s encouraging to see competitive intensity in red teaming growing among AI companies. When Anthropic released its AI red team guidelines in June of last year, it joined AI providers including Google, Microsoft, Nvidia, OpenAI, and even the U.S.’s National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), which all had released red teaming frameworks. Investing heavily in red teaming yields tangible benefits for security leaders in any organization. OpenAI’s paper on external red teaming provides a detailed analysis of how the company strives to create specialized external teams that include cybersecurity and subject matter experts. The goal is to see if knowledgeable external teams can defeat models’ security perimeters and find gaps in their security, biases and controls that prompt-based testing couldn’t find. What makes OpenAI’s recent papers noteworthy is how well they define using human-in-the-middle

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Three Aberdeen oil company headquarters sell for £45m

Three Aberdeen oil company headquarters have been sold in a deal worth £45 million. The CNOOC, Apache and Taqa buildings at the Prime Four business park in Kingswells have been acquired by EEH Ventures. The trio of buildings, totalling 275,000 sq ft, were previously owned by Canadian firm BMO. The financial services powerhouse first bought the buildings in 2014 but took the decision to sell the buildings as part of a “long-standing strategy to reduce their office exposure across the UK”. The deal was the largest to take place throughout Scotland during the last quarter of 2024. Trio of buildings snapped up London headquartered EEH Ventures was founded in 2013 and owns a number of residential, offices, shopping centres and hotels throughout the UK. All three Kingswells-based buildings were pre-let, designed and constructed by Aberdeen property developer Drum in 2012 on a 15-year lease. © Supplied by CBREThe Aberdeen headquarters of Taqa. Image: CBRE The North Sea headquarters of Middle-East oil firm Taqa has previously been described as “an amazing success story in the Granite City”. Taqa announced in 2023 that it intends to cease production from all of its UK North Sea platforms by the end of 2027. Meanwhile, Apache revealed at the end of last year it is planning to exit the North Sea by the end of 2029 blaming the windfall tax. The US firm first entered the North Sea in 2003 but will wrap up all of its UK operations by 2030. Aberdeen big deals The Prime Four acquisition wasn’t the biggest Granite City commercial property sale of 2024. American private equity firm Lone Star bought Union Square shopping centre from Hammerson for £111m. © ShutterstockAberdeen city centre. Hammerson, who also built the property, had originally been seeking £150m. BP’s North Sea headquarters in Stoneywood, Aberdeen, was also sold. Manchester-based

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2025 ransomware predictions, trends, and how to prepare

Zscaler ThreatLabz research team has revealed critical insights and predictions on ransomware trends for 2025. The latest Ransomware Report uncovered a surge in sophisticated tactics and extortion attacks. As ransomware remains a key concern for CISOs and CIOs, the report sheds light on actionable strategies to mitigate risks. Top Ransomware Predictions for 2025: ● AI-Powered Social Engineering: In 2025, GenAI will fuel voice phishing (vishing) attacks. With the proliferation of GenAI-based tooling, initial access broker groups will increasingly leverage AI-generated voices; which sound more and more realistic by adopting local accents and dialects to enhance credibility and success rates. ● The Trifecta of Social Engineering Attacks: Vishing, Ransomware and Data Exfiltration. Additionally, sophisticated ransomware groups, like the Dark Angels, will continue the trend of low-volume, high-impact attacks; preferring to focus on an individual company, stealing vast amounts of data without encrypting files, and evading media and law enforcement scrutiny. ● Targeted Industries Under Siege: Manufacturing, healthcare, education, energy will remain primary targets, with no slowdown in attacks expected. ● New SEC Regulations Drive Increased Transparency: 2025 will see an uptick in reported ransomware attacks and payouts due to new, tighter SEC requirements mandating that public companies report material incidents within four business days. ● Ransomware Payouts Are on the Rise: In 2025 ransom demands will most likely increase due to an evolving ecosystem of cybercrime groups, specializing in designated attack tactics, and collaboration by these groups that have entered a sophisticated profit sharing model using Ransomware-as-a-Service. To combat damaging ransomware attacks, Zscaler ThreatLabz recommends the following strategies. ● Fighting AI with AI: As threat actors use AI to identify vulnerabilities, organizations must counter with AI-powered zero trust security systems that detect and mitigate new threats. ● Advantages of adopting a Zero Trust architecture: A Zero Trust cloud security platform stops

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The Download: AI-powered warfare, and how embryo care is changing

This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology. The State of AI: How war will be changed forever —Helen Warrell & James O’Donnell It is July 2027, and China is on the brink of invading Taiwan. Autonomous drones with AI targeting capabilities are primed to overpower the island’s air defenses as a series of crippling AI-generated cyberattacks cut off energy supplies and key communications. In the meantime, a vast disinformation campaign enacted by an AI-powered pro-Chinese meme farm spreads across global social media, deadening the outcry at Beijing’s act of aggression.Scenarios such as this have brought dystopian horror to the debate about the use of AI in warfare. Military commanders hope for a digitally enhanced force that is faster and more accurate than human-directed combat. 
But there are fears that as AI assumes an increasingly central role, these same commanders will lose control of a conflict that escalates too quickly and lacks ethical or legal oversight. Read the full story. This is the third edition of The State of AI, our subscriber-only collaboration between the Financial Times & MIT Technology Review examining the ways in which AI is reshaping global power.Every Monday, writers from both publications will debate one aspect of the generative AI revolution reshaping global power. While subscribers to The Algorithm, our weekly AI newsletter, get access to an extended excerpt, subscribers to the MIT Technology Review are able to read the whole thing. Sign up here to receive future editions every Monday.
Job titles of the future: AI embryologist Embryologists are the scientists behind the scenes of in vitro fertilization who oversee the development and selection of embryos, prepare them for transfer, and maintain the lab environment. They’ve been a critical part of IVF for decades, but their job has gotten a whole lot busier in recent years as demand for the fertility treatment skyrockets and clinics struggle to keep up.Klaus Wiemer, a veteran embryologist and IVF lab director, believes artificial intelligence might help by predicting embryo health in real time and unlocking new avenues for productivity in the lab. Read the full story. —Amanda Smith The must-reads I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology. 1 Big Tech’s job cuts are a warning signThey’re a canary down the mine for other industries. (WP $)+ Americans appear to feel increasingly unsettled by AI. (WSJ $)+ Global fund managers worry companies are overinvesting in the technology. (FT $)

2 Iran is attempting to stimulate rain to end its deadly droughtBut critics warn that cloud seeding is a challenging process. (New Scientist $)+ Parts of western Iran are now experiencing flooding. (Reuters)+ Why it’s so hard to bust the weather control conspiracy theory. (MIT Technology Review) 3 Air taxi startups may produce new aircraft for war zonesThe US Army has announced its intentions to acquire most of its weapons from startups, not major contractors. (The Information $)+ US firm Joby Aviation is launching flying taxis in Dubai. (NBC News)+ This giant microwave may change the future of war. (MIT Technology Review)4 Weight-loss drug make Eli Lilly is likely to cross a trillion-dollar valuationAs it prepares to launch a pill alternative to its injections. (WSJ $)+ Arch rival Novo Nordisk A/S is undercutting the company to compete. (Bloomberg $)+ We’re learning more about what weight-loss drugs do to the body. (MIT Technology Review) 5 What’s going on with the US TikTok ban?Even the lawmakers in charge don’t seem to know. (The Verge) 6 It’s getting harder to grow cocoaMass tree felling and lower rainfall in the Congo Basin is to blame. (FT $)+ Industrial agriculture activists are everywhere at COP30. (The Guardian)+ Africa fights rising hunger by looking to foods of the past. (MIT Technology Review) 7 Russia is cracking down on its critical military bloggersArmchair critics are facing jail time if they refuse to apologize. (Economist $) 8 Why the auto industry is so obsessed with humanoid robotsIt’s not just Tesla—plenty of others want to get in on the act. (The Atlantic $)+ China’s EV giants are betting big on humanoid robots. (MIT Technology Review) 9 Indian startups are challenging ChatGPT’s AI dominanceThey support a far wider range of languages than the large AI firms’ models. (Rest of World)+ OpenAI is huge in India. Its models are steeped in caste bias. (MIT Technology Review) 10 These tiny sensors track butterflies on their journey to Mexico 🦋Scientists hope it’ll shed some light on their mysterious life cycles. (NYT $)
Quote of the day
“I think no company is going to be immune, including us.”  —Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google, warns the BBC about the precarious nature of the AI bubble. One more thing How a 1980s toy robot arm inspired modern robotics—Jon KeeganAs a child of an electronic engineer, I spent a lot of time in our local Radio Shack as a kid. While my dad was locating capacitors and resistors, I was in the toy section. It was there, in 1984, that I discovered the best toy of my childhood: the Armatron robotic arm.Described as a “robot-like arm to aid young masterminds in scientific and laboratory experiments,” it was a legit robotic arm. And the bold look and function of Armatron made quite an impression on many young kids who would one day have a career in robotics. Read the full story.
We can still have nice things A place for comfort, fun and distraction to brighten up your day. (Got any ideas? Drop me a line or skeet ’em at me.) + The US Library of Congress has attained some handwritten drafts of iconic songs from The Wizard of Oz.+ This interesting dashboard tracks the world’s top 500 musical artists in the world right now—some of the listings may surprise you (or just make you feel really old.)+ Cult author Chris Kraus shares what’s floating her boat right now.+ The first images of the forthcoming Legend of Zelda film are here!

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The State of AI: How war will be changed forever

Welcome back to The State of AI, a new collaboration between the Financial Times and MIT Technology Review. Every Monday, writers from both publications debate one aspect of the generative AI revolution reshaping global power. In this conversation, Helen Warrell, FT investigations reporter and former defense and security editor, and James O’Donnell, MIT Technology Review’s senior AI reporter, consider the ethical quandaries and financial incentives around AI’s use by the military. Helen Warrell, FT investigations reporter  It is July 2027, and China is on the brink of invading Taiwan. Autonomous drones with AI targeting capabilities are primed to overpower the island’s air defenses as a series of crippling AI-generated cyberattacks cut off energy supplies and key communications. In the meantime, a vast disinformation campaign enacted by an AI-powered pro-Chinese meme farm spreads across global social media, deadening the outcry at Beijing’s act of aggression.
Scenarios such as this have brought dystopian horror to the debate about the use of AI in warfare. Military commanders hope for a digitally enhanced force that is faster and more accurate than human-directed combat. But there are fears that as AI assumes an increasingly central role, these same commanders will lose control of a conflict that escalates too quickly and lacks ethical or legal oversight. Henry Kissinger, the former US secretary of state, spent his final years warning about the coming catastrophe of AI-driven warfare. Grasping and mitigating these risks is the military priority—some would say the “Oppenheimer moment”—of our age. One emerging consensus in the West is that decisions around the deployment of nuclear weapons should not be outsourced to AI. UN secretary-general António Guterres has gone further, calling for an outright ban on fully autonomous lethal weapons systems. It is essential that regulation keep pace with evolving technology. But in the sci-fi-fueled excitement, it is easy to lose track of what is actually possible. As researchers at Harvard’s Belfer Center point out, AI optimists often underestimate the challenges of fielding fully autonomous weapon systems. It is entirely possible that the capabilities of AI in combat are being overhyped.
Anthony King, Director of the Strategy and Security Institute at the University of Exeter and a key proponent of this argument, suggests that rather than replacing humans, AI will be used to improve military insight. Even if the character of war is changing and remote technology is refining weapon systems, he insists, “the complete automation of war itself is simply an illusion.” Of the three current military use cases of AI, none involves full autonomy. It is being developed for planning and logistics, cyber warfare (in sabotage, espionage, hacking, and information operations; and—most controversially—for weapons targeting, an application already in use on the battlefields of Ukraine and Gaza. Kyiv’s troops use AI software to direct drones able to evade Russian jammers as they close in on sensitive sites. The Israel Defense Forces have developed an AI-assisted decision support system known as Lavender, which has helped identify around 37,000 potential human targets within Gaza.  FT/MIT TECHNOLOGY REVIEW | ADOBE STOCK There is clearly a danger that the Lavender database replicates the biases of the data it is trained on. But military personnel carry biases too. One Israeli intelligence officer who used Lavender claimed to have more faith in the fairness of a “statistical mechanism” than that of a grieving soldier. Tech optimists designing AI weapons even deny that specific new controls are needed to control their capabilities. Keith Dear, a former UK military officer who now runs the strategic forecasting company Cassi AI, says existing laws are more than sufficient: “You make sure there’s nothing in the training data that might cause the system to go rogue … when you are confident you deploy it—and you, the human commander, are responsible for anything they might do that goes wrong.” It is an intriguing thought that some of the fear and shock about use of AI in war may come from those who are unfamiliar with brutal but realistic military norms. What do you think, James? Is some opposition to AI in warfare less about the use of autonomous systems and really an argument against war itself?  James O’Donnell replies: Hi Helen,  One thing I’ve noticed is that there’s been a drastic shift in attitudes of AI companies regarding military applications of their products. In the beginning of 2024, OpenAI unambiguously forbade the use of its tools for warfare, but by the end of the year, it had signed an agreement with Anduril to help it take down drones on the battlefield. 

This step—not a fully autonomous weapon, to be sure, but very much a battlefield application of AI—marked a drastic change in how much tech companies could publicly link themselves with defense.  What happened along the way? For one thing, it’s the hype. We’re told AI will not just bring superintelligence and scientific discovery but also make warfare sharper, more accurate and calculated, less prone to human fallibility. I spoke with US Marines, for example, who tested a type of AI while patrolling the South Pacific that was advertised to analyze foreign intelligence faster than a human could.  Ask AIWhy it matters to you?BETAHere’s why this story might matter to you, according to AI. This is a beta feature and AI hallucinates—it might get weirdTell me why it matters Secondly, money talks. OpenAI and others need to start recouping some of the unimaginable amounts of cash they’re spending on training and running these models. And few have deeper pockets than the Pentagon. And Europe’s defense heads seem keen to splash the cash too. Meanwhile, the amount of venture capital funding for defense tech this year has already doubled the total for all of 2024, as VCs hope to cash in on militaries’ newfound willingness to buy from startups.  I do think the opposition to AI warfare falls into a few camps, one of which simply rejects the idea that more precise targeting (if it’s actually more precise at all) will mean fewer casualties rather than just more war. Consider the first era of drone warfare in Afghanistan. As drone strikes became cheaper to implement, can we really say it reduced carnage? Instead, did it merely enable more destruction per dollar? But the second camp of criticism (and now I’m finally getting to your question) comes from people who are well versed in the realities of war but have very specific complaints about the technology’s fundamental limitations. Missy Cummings, for example, is a former fighter pilot for the US Navy who is now a professor of engineering and computer science at George Mason University. She has been outspoken in her belief that large language models, specifically, are prone to make huge mistakes in military settings. The typical response to this complaint is that AI’s outputs are human-checked. But if an AI model relies on thousands of inputs for its conclusion, can that conclusion really be checked by one person? Tech companies are making extraordinarily big promises about what AI can do in these high-stakes applications, all while pressure to implement them is sky high. For me, this means it’s time for more skepticism, not less.  Helen responds:
Hi James,  We should definitely continue to question the safety of AI warfare systems and the oversight to which they’re subjected—and hold political leaders to account in this area. I am suggesting that we also apply some skepticism to what you rightly describe as the “extraordinarily big promises” made by some companies about what AI might be able to achieve on the battlefield. 
There will be both opportunities and hazards in what the military is being offered by a relatively nascent (though booming) defense tech scene. The danger is that in the speed and secrecy of an arms race in AI weapons, these emerging capabilities may not receive the scrutiny and debate they desperately need. Further reading:

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The Download: the risk of falling space debris, and how to debunk a conspiracy theory

This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology. What is the chance your plane will be hit by space debris? The risk of flights being hit by space junk is still small, but it’s growing. About three pieces of old space equipment—used rockets and defunct satellites—fall into Earth’s atmosphere every day, according to estimates by the European Space Agency. By the mid-2030s, there may be dozens thanks to the rise of megaconstellations in orbit. So far, space debris hasn’t injured anybody—in the air or on the ground. But multiple close calls have been reported in recent years.But some estimates have the risk of a single human death or injury caused by a space debris strike on the ground at around 10% per year by 2035. That would mean a better than even chance that someone on Earth would be hit by space junk about every decade. Find out more.
—Tereza Pultarova This story is part of MIT Technology Review Explains: our series untangling the complex, messy world of technology to help you understand what’s coming next. You can read the rest of the series here.
Chatbots are surprisingly effective at debunking conspiracy theories —Thomas Costello, Gordon Pennycook & David Rand Many people believe that you can’t talk conspiracists out of their beliefs.  But that’s not necessarily true. Our research shows that many conspiracy believers do respond to evidence and arguments—information that is now easy to deliver in the form of a tailored conversation with an AI chatbot. This is good news, given the outsize role that unfounded conspiracy theories play in today’s political landscape. So while there are widespread and legitimate concerns that generative AI is a potent tool for spreading disinformation, our work shows that it can also be part of the solution. Read the full story. This story is part of MIT Technology Review’s series “The New Conspiracy Age,” on how the present boom in conspiracy theories is reshaping science and technology. Check out the rest of the series here. 

The must-reads I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology. 1 China is quietly expanding its remote nuclear test siteIn the wake of Donald Trump announcing America’s intentions to revive similar tests. (WP $)+ A White House memo has accused Alibaba of supporting Chinese operations. (FT $) 2 Jeff Bezos is becoming co-CEO of a new AI startupProject Prometheus will focus on AI for building computers, aerospace and vehicles. (NYT $) 3 AI-powered toys are holding inappropriate conversations with children Including how to find dangerous objects including pills and knives. (The Register)+ Chatbots are unreliable and unpredictable, whether embedded in toys or not. (Futurism)+ AI toys are all the rage in China—and now they’re appearing on shelves in the US too. (MIT Technology Review)4 Big Tech is warming to the idea of data centers in spaceThey come with a lot less red tape than their Earth-bound counterparts. (WSJ $)+ There are a huge number of data centers mired in the planning stage. (WSJ $)+ Should we be moving data centers to space? (MIT Technology Review)5 The mafia is recruiting via TikTokSome bosses are even using the platform to control gangs from behind bars. (Economist $) 6 How to resist AI in your workplaceLike most things in life, there’s power in numbers. (Vox) 7 How China’s EV fleet could become a giant battery networkIf economic troubles don’t get in the way, that is. (Rest of World)+ EV sales are on the rise in South America. (Reuters)+ China’s energy dominance in three charts. (MIT Technology Review) 8 Inside the unstoppable rise of the domestic internetControl-hungry nations are following China’s lead in building closed platforms. (NY Mag $)+ Can we repair the internet? (MIT Technology Review)
9 Search traffic? What search traffic?These media startups have found a way to thrive without Google. (Insider $)+ AI means the end of internet search as we’ve known it. (MIT Technology Review) 10 Paul McCartney has released a silent track to protest AI’s creep into musicThat’ll show them! (The Guardian)+ AI is coming for music, too. (MIT Technology Review)
Quote of the day “All the parental controls in the world will not protect your kids from themselves.” —Samantha Broxton, a parenting coach and consultant, tells the Washington Post why educating children around the risks of using technology is the best way to help them protect themselves. One more thing
Inside the controversial tree farms powering Apple’s carbon neutral goalApple (and its peers) are planting vast forests of eucalyptus trees in Brazil to try to offset their climate emissions, striking some of the largest-ever deals for carbon credits in the process. The tech behemoth is betting that planting millions of eucalyptus trees in Brazil will be the path to a greener future. Some ecologists and local residents are far less sure.The big question is: Can Latin America’s eucalyptus be a scalable climate solution? Read the full story. —Gregory Barber

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What is the chance your plane will be hit by space debris?

MIT Technology Review Explains: Let our writers untangle the complex, messy world of technology to help you understand what’s coming next. You can read more from the series here. In mid-October, a mysterious object cracked the windshield of a packed Boeing 737 cruising at 36,000 feet above Utah, forcing the pilots into an emergency landing. The internet was suddenly buzzing with the prospect that the plane had been hit by a piece of space debris. We still don’t know exactly what hit the plane—likely a remnant of a weather balloon—but it turns out the speculation online wasn’t that far-fetched. That’s because while the risk of flights being hit by space junk is still small, it is, in fact, growing.  About three pieces of old space equipment—used rockets and defunct satellites—fall into Earth’s atmosphere every day, according to estimates by the European Space Agency. By the mid-2030s, there may be dozens. The increase is linked to the growth in the number of satellites in orbit. Currently, around 12,900 active satellites circle the planet. In a decade, there may be 100,000 of them, according to analyst estimates.
To minimize the risk of orbital collisions, operators guide old satellites to burn up in Earth’s atmosphere. But the physics of that reentry process are not well understood, and we don’t know how much material burns up and how much reaches the ground. “The number of such landfall events is increasing,” says Richard Ocaya, a professor of physics at the University of Free State in South Africa and a coauthor of a recent paper on space debris risk. “We expect it may be increasing exponentially in the next few years.”
So far, space debris hasn’t injured anybody—in the air or on the ground. But multiple close calls have been reported in recent years. In March last year, an 0.7-kilogram chunk of metal pierced the roof of a house in Florida. The object was later confirmed to be a remnant of a battery pallet tossed out from the International Space Station. When the strike occurred, the homeowner’s 19-year-old son was resting in a next-door room. And in February this year, a 1.5-meter-long fragment of SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket crashed down near a warehouse outside Poland’s fifth-largest city, Poznan. Another piece was found in a nearby forest. A month later, a 2.5-kilogram piece of a Starlink satellite dropped on a farm in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. Other incidents have been reported in Australia and Africa. And many more may be going completely unnoticed.  “If you were to find a bunch of burnt electronics in a forest somewhere, your first thought is not that it came from a spaceship,” says James Beck, the director of the UK-based space engineering research firm Belstead Research. He warns that we don’t fully understand the risk of space debris strikes and that it might be much higher than satellite operators want us to believe.  For example, SpaceX, the owner of the currently largest mega-constellation, Starlink, claims that its satellites are “designed for demise” and completely burn up when they spiral from orbit and fall through the atmosphere. But Beck, who has performed multiple wind tunnel tests using satellite mock-ups to mimic atmospheric forces, says the results of such experiments raise doubts. Some satellite components are made of durable materials such as titanium and special alloy composites that don’t melt even at the extremely high temperatures that arise during a hypersonic atmospheric descent.  “We have done some work for some small-satellite manufacturers and basically, their major problem is that the tanks get down,” Beck says. “For larger satellites, around 800 kilos, we would expect maybe two or three objects to land.”  It can be challenging to quantify how much of a danger space debris poses. The International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) told MIT Technology Review that “the rapid growth in satellite deployments presents a novel challenge” for aviation safety, one that “cannot be quantified with the same precision as more established hazards.”  But the Federal Aviation Administration has calculated some preliminary numbers on the risk to flights: In a 2023 analysis, the agency estimated that by 2035, the risk that one plane per year will experience a disastrous space debris strike will be around 7 in 10,000. Such a collision would either destroy the aircraft immediately or lead to a rapid loss of air pressure, threatening the lives of all on board.

The casualty risk to humans on the ground will be much higher. Aaron Boley, an associate professor in astronomy and a space debris researcher at the University of British Columbia, Canada, says that if megaconstellation satellites “don’t demise entirely,” the risk of a single human death or injury caused by a space debris strike on the ground could reach around 10% per year by 2035. That would mean a better than even chance that someone on Earth would be hit by space junk about every decade. In its report, the FAA put the chances even higher with similar assumptions, estimating that “one person on the planet would be expected to be injured or killed every two years.” Experts are starting to think about how they might incorporate space debris into their air safety processes. The German space situational awareness company Okapi Orbits, for example, in cooperation with the German Aerospace Center and the European Organization for the Safety of Air Navigation (Eurocontrol), is exploring ways to adapt air traffic control systems so that pilots and air traffic controllers can receive timely and accurate alerts about space debris threats. But predicting the path of space debris is challenging too. In recent years, advances in AI have helped improve predictions of space objects’ trajectories in the vacuum of space, potentially reducing the risk of orbital collisions. But so far, these algorithms can’t properly account for the effects of the gradually thickening atmosphere that space junk encounters during reentry. Radar and telescope observations can help, but the exact location of the impact becomes clear with only very short notice. “Even with high-fidelity models, there’s so many variables at play that having a very accurate reentry location is difficult,” says Njord Eggen, a data analyst at Okapi Orbits. Space debris goes around the planet every hour and a half when in low Earth orbit, he notes, “so even if you have uncertainties on the order of 10 minutes, that’s going to have drastic consequences when it comes to the location where it could impact.” For aviation companies, the problem is not just a potential strike, as catastrophic as that would be. To avoid accidents, authorities are likely to temporarily close the airspace in at-risk regions, which creates delays and costs money. Boley and his colleagues published a paper earlier this year estimating that busy aerospace regions such as northern Europe or the northeastern United States already have about a 26% yearly chance of experiencing at least one disruption due to the reentry of a major space debris item. By the time all planned constellations are fully deployed, aerospace closures due to space debris hazards may become nearly as common as those due to bad weather. Because current reentry predictions are unreliable, many of these closures may end up being unnecessary. For example, when a 21-metric-ton Chinese Long March mega-rocket was falling to Earth in 2022, predictions suggested its debris could scatter across Spain and parts of France. In the end, the rocket crashed into the Pacific Ocean. But the 30-minute closure of south European airspace delayed and diverted hundreds of flights.  In the meantime, international regulators are urging satellite operators and launch providers to deorbit large satellites and rocket bodies in a controlled way, when possible, by carefully guiding them into remote parts of the ocean using residual fuel. 
The European Space Agency estimates that only about half the rocket bodies reentering the atmosphere do so in a controlled way.  Moreover, around 2,300 old and no-longer-controllable rocket bodies still linger in orbit, slowly spiraling toward Earth with no mechanisms for operators to safely guide them into the ocean. “There’s enough material up there that even if we change our practices, we will still have all those rocket bodies eventually reenter,” Boley says. “Although the probability of space debris hitting an aircraft is small, the probability that the debris will spread and fall over busy airspace is not small. That’s actually quite likely.”

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The Download: how AI really works, and phasing out animal testing

This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology. OpenAI’s new LLM exposes the secrets of how AI really works The news: ChatGPT maker OpenAI has built an experimental large language model that is far easier to understand than typical models. Why it matters: It’s a big deal, because today’s LLMs are black boxes: Nobody fully understands how they do what they do. Building a model that is more transparent sheds light on how LLMs work in general, helping researchers figure out why models hallucinate, why they go off the rails, and just how far we should trust them with critical tasks. Read the full story.
—Will Douglas Heaven
Google DeepMind is using Gemini to train agents inside Goat Simulator 3 Google DeepMind has built a new video-game-playing agent called SIMA 2 that can navigate and solve problems in 3D virtual worlds. The company claims it’s a big step toward more general-purpose agents and better real-world robots.    The company first demoed SIMA (which stands for “scalable instructable multiworld agent”) last year. But this new version has been built on top of Gemini, the firm’s flagship large language model, which gives the agent a huge boost in capability. Read the full story. —Will Douglas Heaven These technologies could help put a stop to animal testing Earlier this week, the UK’s science minister announced an ambitious plan: to phase out animal testing. Testing potential skin irritants on animals will be stopped by the end of next year. By 2027, researchers are “expected to end” tests of the strength of Botox on mice. And drug tests in dogs and nonhuman primates will be reduced by 2030.It’s good news for activists and scientists who don’t want to test on animals. And it’s timely too: In recent decades, we’ve seen dramatic advances in technologies that offer new ways to model the human body and test the effects of potential therapies, without experimenting on animals. Read the full story.

—Jessica Hamzelou This article first 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. The must-reads I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology. 1 Chinese hackers used Anthropic’s AI to conduct an espionage campaign   It automated a number of attacks on corporations and governments in September. (WSJ $)+ The AI was able to handle the majority of the hacking workload itself. (NYT $)+ Cyberattacks by AI agents are coming. (MIT Technology Review)2 Blue Origin successfully launched and landed its New Glenn rocketIt managed to deploy two NASA satellites into space without a hitch. (CNN)+ The New Glenn is the company’s largest reusable rocket. (FT $)+ The launch had been delayed twice before. (WP $)3 Brace yourself for flu seasonIt started five weeks earlier than usual in the UK, and the US is next. (Ars Technica)+ Here’s why we don’t have a cold vaccine. Yet. (MIT Technology Review) 4 Google is hosting a Border Protection facial recognition app    The app alerts officials whether to contact ICE about identified immigrants. (404 Media)+ Another effort to track ICE raids was just taken offline. (MIT Technology Review) 5 OpenAI is trialling group chats in ChatGPTIt’d essentially make AI a participant in a conversation of up to 20 people. (Engadget)
6 A TikTok stunt sparked debate over how charitable America’s churches really areContent creator Nikalie Monroe asked churches for help feeding her baby. Very few stepped up. (WP $) 7 Indian startups are attempting to tackle air pollutionBut their solutions are far beyond the means of the average Indian household. (NYT $)+ OpenAI is huge in India. Its models are steeped in caste bias. (MIT Technology Review)
8 An AI tool could help reduce wasted efforts to transplant organsIt predicts how likely the would-be recipient is to die during the brief transplantation window. (The Guardian)+ Putin says organ transplants could grant immortality. Not quite. (MIT Technology Review) 9 3D-printing isn’t making prosthetics more affordableIt turns out that plastic prostheses are often really uncomfortable. (IEEE Spectrum)+ These prosthetics break the mold with third thumbs, spikes, and superhero skins. (MIT Technology Review) 10 What happens when relationships with AI fall apartCan you really file for divorce from an LLM? (Wired $)+ It’s surprisingly easy to stumble into a relationship with an AI chatbot. (MIT Technology Review) Quote of the day “It’s a funky time.”
—Aileen Lee, founder and managing partner of Cowboy Ventures, tells TechCrunch the AI boom has torn up the traditional investment rulebook. One more thing Restoring an ancient lake from the rubble of an unfinished airport in Mexico CityWeeks after Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador took office in 2018, he controversially canceled ambitious plans to build an airport on the deserted site of the former Lake Texcoco—despite the fact it was already around a third complete.Instead, he tasked Iñaki Echeverria, a Mexican architect and landscape designer, with turning it into a vast urban park, an artificial wetland that aims to transform the future of the entire Valley region.But as López Obrador’s presidential team nears its end, the plans for Lake Texcoco’s rebirth could yet vanish. Read the full story.
—Matthew Ponsford We can still have nice things A place for comfort, fun and distraction to brighten up your day. (Got any ideas? Drop me a line or skeet ’em at me.) + Maybe Gen Z is onto something when it comes to vibe dating.+ Trust AC/DC to give the fans what they want, performing Jailbreak for the first time since 1991.+ Nieves González, the artist behind Lily Allen’s new album cover, has an eye for detail.+ Here’s what AI determines is a catchy tune.

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These technologies could help put a stop to animal testing

Earlier this week, the UK’s science minister announced an ambitious plan: to phase out animal testing. Testing potential skin irritants on animals will be stopped by the end of next year, according to a strategy released on Tuesday. By 2027, researchers are “expected to end” tests of the strength of Botox on mice. And drug tests in dogs and nonhuman primates will be reduced by 2030.  Animal welfare groups have been campaigning for commitments like these for decades. But a lack of alternatives has made it difficult to put a stop to animal testing. Advances in medical science and biotechnology are changing that.
Animals have been used in scientific research for thousands of years. Animal experimentation has led to many important discoveries about how the brains and bodies of animals work. And because regulators require drugs to be first tested in research animals, it has played an important role in the creation of medicines and devices for both humans and other animals. Today, countries like the UK and the US regulate animal research and require scientists to hold multiple licenses and adhere to rules on animal housing and care. Still, millions of animals are used annually in research. Plenty of scientists don’t want to take part in animal testing. And some question whether animal research is justifiable—especially considering that around 95% of treatments that look promising in animals don’t make it to market.
In recent decades, we’ve seen dramatic advances in technologies that offer new ways to model the human body and test the effects of potential therapies, without experimenting on humans or other animals. Take “organs on chips,” for example. Researchers have been creating miniature versions of human organs inside tiny plastic cases. These systems are designed to contain the same mix of cells you’d find in a full-grown organ and receive a supply of nutrients that keeps them alive. Today, multiple teams have created models of livers, intestines, hearts, kidneys and even the brain. And they are already being used in research. Heart chips have been sent into space to observe how they respond to low gravity. The FDA used lung chips to assess covid-19 vaccines. Gut chips are being used to study the effects of radiation. Some researchers are even working to connect multiple chips to create a “body on a chip”—although this has been in the works for over a decade and no one has quite managed it yet. In the same vein, others have been working on creating model versions of organs—and even embryos—in the lab. By growing groups of cells into tiny 3D structures, scientists can study how organs develop and work, and even test drugs on them. They can even be personalized—if you take cells from someone, you should be able to model that person’s specific organs. Some researchers have even been able to create organoids of developing fetuses. The UK government strategy mentions the promise of artificial intelligence, too. Many scientists have been quick to adopt AI as a tool to help them make sense of vast databases, and to find connections between genes, proteins and disease, for example. Others are using AI to design all-new drugs. Those new drugs could potentially be tested on virtual humans. Not flesh-and-blood people, but digital reconstructions that live in a computer. Biomedical engineers have already created digital twins of organs. In ongoing trials, digital hearts are being used to guide surgeons on how—and where—to operate on real hearts. When I spoke to Natalia Trayanova, the biomedical engineering professor behind this trial, she told me that her model could recommend regions of heart tissue to be burned off as part of treatment for atrial fibrillation. Her tool would normally suggest two or three regions but occasionally would recommend many more. “They just have to trust us,” she told me.

It is unlikely that we’ll completely phase out animal testing by 2030. The UK government acknowledges that animal testing is still required by lots of regulators, including the FDA, the European Medicines Agency, and the World Health Organization. And while alternatives to animal testing have come a long way, none of them perfectly capture how a living body will respond to a treatment. At least not yet. Given all the progress that has been made in recent years, it’s not too hard to imagine a future without animal testing. This article first 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.

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Cloudflare problems hit websites around the world

Ominously, 31 minutes before Cloudflare acknowledged the problems with its global network, it had also reported problems with its support portal. “Our support portal provider is currently experiencing issues, and as such customers might encounter errors viewing or responding to support cases. Responses on customer inquiries are not affected, and customers can still reach us via live chat (Business and Enterprise) through the Cloudflare Dashboard, or via the emergency telephone line (Enterprise). We are working alongside our 3rd party provider to understand the full impact and mitigate this problem,” it reported at 11.17 a.m. UTC. While there’s no evidence to suggest that Cloudflare’s support portal problems were linked to the subsequent content delivery service outage, support portals have proven a weak link in several attacks on IT vendors in recent months. Discord saw customer data leaked after a breach at a third-party customer service provider. Salesforce has denied responsibility for security problems that saw a number of its customers compromised — and in several instances the finger is pointing to Salesloft Drift, a third-party AI chat tool service often integrated with it. And in September Verizon reported that 71% of CISOs had been hit by a third-party security incident in the past year. Third-party risk management has become a key concern for enterprises, according to IDC. It’s barely a month since another third-party service used by many IT departments caused widespread disruption: On October 20, a glitch in Amazon Web Services’ DynamoDB service triggered cascading outages in other AWS services and for the company’s customers.

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The Download: AI-powered warfare, and how embryo care is changing

This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology. The State of AI: How war will be changed forever —Helen Warrell & James O’Donnell It is July 2027, and China is on the brink of invading Taiwan. Autonomous drones with AI targeting capabilities are primed to overpower the island’s air defenses as a series of crippling AI-generated cyberattacks cut off energy supplies and key communications. In the meantime, a vast disinformation campaign enacted by an AI-powered pro-Chinese meme farm spreads across global social media, deadening the outcry at Beijing’s act of aggression.Scenarios such as this have brought dystopian horror to the debate about the use of AI in warfare. Military commanders hope for a digitally enhanced force that is faster and more accurate than human-directed combat. 
But there are fears that as AI assumes an increasingly central role, these same commanders will lose control of a conflict that escalates too quickly and lacks ethical or legal oversight. Read the full story. This is the third edition of The State of AI, our subscriber-only collaboration between the Financial Times & MIT Technology Review examining the ways in which AI is reshaping global power.Every Monday, writers from both publications will debate one aspect of the generative AI revolution reshaping global power. While subscribers to The Algorithm, our weekly AI newsletter, get access to an extended excerpt, subscribers to the MIT Technology Review are able to read the whole thing. Sign up here to receive future editions every Monday.
Job titles of the future: AI embryologist Embryologists are the scientists behind the scenes of in vitro fertilization who oversee the development and selection of embryos, prepare them for transfer, and maintain the lab environment. They’ve been a critical part of IVF for decades, but their job has gotten a whole lot busier in recent years as demand for the fertility treatment skyrockets and clinics struggle to keep up.Klaus Wiemer, a veteran embryologist and IVF lab director, believes artificial intelligence might help by predicting embryo health in real time and unlocking new avenues for productivity in the lab. Read the full story. —Amanda Smith The must-reads I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology. 1 Big Tech’s job cuts are a warning signThey’re a canary down the mine for other industries. (WP $)+ Americans appear to feel increasingly unsettled by AI. (WSJ $)+ Global fund managers worry companies are overinvesting in the technology. (FT $)

2 Iran is attempting to stimulate rain to end its deadly droughtBut critics warn that cloud seeding is a challenging process. (New Scientist $)+ Parts of western Iran are now experiencing flooding. (Reuters)+ Why it’s so hard to bust the weather control conspiracy theory. (MIT Technology Review) 3 Air taxi startups may produce new aircraft for war zonesThe US Army has announced its intentions to acquire most of its weapons from startups, not major contractors. (The Information $)+ US firm Joby Aviation is launching flying taxis in Dubai. (NBC News)+ This giant microwave may change the future of war. (MIT Technology Review)4 Weight-loss drug make Eli Lilly is likely to cross a trillion-dollar valuationAs it prepares to launch a pill alternative to its injections. (WSJ $)+ Arch rival Novo Nordisk A/S is undercutting the company to compete. (Bloomberg $)+ We’re learning more about what weight-loss drugs do to the body. (MIT Technology Review) 5 What’s going on with the US TikTok ban?Even the lawmakers in charge don’t seem to know. (The Verge) 6 It’s getting harder to grow cocoaMass tree felling and lower rainfall in the Congo Basin is to blame. (FT $)+ Industrial agriculture activists are everywhere at COP30. (The Guardian)+ Africa fights rising hunger by looking to foods of the past. (MIT Technology Review) 7 Russia is cracking down on its critical military bloggersArmchair critics are facing jail time if they refuse to apologize. (Economist $) 8 Why the auto industry is so obsessed with humanoid robotsIt’s not just Tesla—plenty of others want to get in on the act. (The Atlantic $)+ China’s EV giants are betting big on humanoid robots. (MIT Technology Review) 9 Indian startups are challenging ChatGPT’s AI dominanceThey support a far wider range of languages than the large AI firms’ models. (Rest of World)+ OpenAI is huge in India. Its models are steeped in caste bias. (MIT Technology Review) 10 These tiny sensors track butterflies on their journey to Mexico 🦋Scientists hope it’ll shed some light on their mysterious life cycles. (NYT $)
Quote of the day
“I think no company is going to be immune, including us.”  —Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google, warns the BBC about the precarious nature of the AI bubble. One more thing How a 1980s toy robot arm inspired modern robotics—Jon KeeganAs a child of an electronic engineer, I spent a lot of time in our local Radio Shack as a kid. While my dad was locating capacitors and resistors, I was in the toy section. It was there, in 1984, that I discovered the best toy of my childhood: the Armatron robotic arm.Described as a “robot-like arm to aid young masterminds in scientific and laboratory experiments,” it was a legit robotic arm. And the bold look and function of Armatron made quite an impression on many young kids who would one day have a career in robotics. Read the full story.
We can still have nice things A place for comfort, fun and distraction to brighten up your day. (Got any ideas? Drop me a line or skeet ’em at me.) + The US Library of Congress has attained some handwritten drafts of iconic songs from The Wizard of Oz.+ This interesting dashboard tracks the world’s top 500 musical artists in the world right now—some of the listings may surprise you (or just make you feel really old.)+ Cult author Chris Kraus shares what’s floating her boat right now.+ The first images of the forthcoming Legend of Zelda film are here!

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TotalEnergies Buys Into Kretinsky Power Assets for $6B

TotalEnergies SE agreed to buy a 50 percent stake in a portfolio of European power assets for about EUR 5.1 billion ($5.9 billion), expanding in the sector even as some major oil and gas peers retreat. Total will acquire the assets from Czech tycoon Daniel Kretinsky’s holding company EPH, paying in new shares, it said in a statement Monday. That will give the Czech firm a stake of just over 4 percent in Total, making it one of the company’s largest shareholders. The French oil major is bulking up in the power sector as it pursues a diversification drive that targets 20 percent of energy sales from electricity by 2030. It has been acquiring solar, wind and battery projects in Europe and North America, but also gas-fueled plants, betting on soaring electricity demand from the electrification of industry and the artificial-intelligence boom. The latest deal will give Total gas and biomass power stations and battery projects in Italy, the UK, Ireland, the Netherlands and France. The company now expects its Integrated Power business to generate free cash flow as early as 2027, bringing its forecast forward by a year. “The deal will give TotalEnergies a critical size in Europe’s power market, make its generation mix more resilient and improve predictability” of cash flows from the electricity segment, Frederic Lorec, an analyst at AlphaValue, said by phone. “The price of the deal makes sense.” Total rose as much as 0.7 percent in Paris trading, and was up 0.6 percent as of 12:50 p.m. local time. Power Bet While electricity demand weakened in parts of Europe in the wake of the 2022 energy crisis, Total is betting on a revival as data centers proliferate, absorbing vast quantities of power. Home heating, transportation and industry are also gradually electrifying across the continent, helping to spur investments in clean energy

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Enterprises may have over-bought vSAN hardware for years based on VMware’s flawed guidance

Dai agreed. “Amid backlash over Broadcom licensing and rising interest in Nutanix and OpenStack, VMware needs to signal cost optimisation. While this improves TCO, enterprises should view it as both a technical adjustment and a competitive retention play.” However, Gogia cautioned that reduced hardware costs do not address the core concerns driving customer unease. “Trimming back hardware requirements may ease the cost burden, but it doesn’t resolve the deeper unease around how VMware’s licensing is structured, how prices might evolve, or what the long-term product direction truly looks like. It’s a welcome course correction, not a reset button.” What should CIOs do now Given these complexities, what should enterprises currently running or planning vSAN deployments actually do with this information? “This update should prompt every CIO running — or planning — a vSAN deployment to take a fresh look at their infrastructure strategy,” said Gogia. “CIOs should prioritise forward-looking application of the new sizing model, use it to influence upcoming contracts, and avoid the temptation to reengineer stable clusters mid-cycle unless there’s a compelling case.” Dai recommended a similar approach. “For existing deployments, CIOs should evaluate whether hardware can be repurposed or scaled down in refresh cycles. For new projects, apply revised specs to avoid overprovisioning. More broadly, they should embed telemetry-driven sizing into virtualization strategy to prevent similar inefficiencies across platforms.” Both analysts emphasised that the lessons extend beyond VMware. “This is also a wake-up call for CIOs and architects: vendor guidance cannot be followed blindly,” said Gogia. “Internal telemetry, context-specific modelling, and continuous validation must now take centre stage in infrastructure planning.”

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Azure blocks record 15 Tbps DDoS attack as IoT botnets gain new firepower

Varkey added that modern DDoS attacks increasingly resemble hit-and-run incidents, striking suddenly, lasting only minutes, and disappearing before defenses fully engage. He said their speed and intensity require always-on protection and preemptive resilience rather than reactive mitigation. The attack shows how millions of consumer devices have effectively become strategic weapons capable of straining even hyperscale cloud platforms. “DDoS is no longer a containable nuisance, but a genuine infrastructure-level risk with potential economic impact,” said Chandrasekhar Bilugu, CTO of SureShield. “Enterprises must treat DDoS protection as Tier-0 infrastructure, using multi-provider, always-on setups with capacity headroom measured in tens of terabits per second, rather than treating it as an afterthought.” High-bandwidth home internet and stronger IoT devices increase per-device attack capacity, enabling large DDoS attacks with fewer nodes, according to Keith Prabhu, founder and CEO of Confidis. “Modern IoT botnets can now perform smarter layer-7 attacks, not just volumetric attacks,” Prabhu said. “Low security awareness among home end users often leads to compromise of endpoints, which can then be used for such attacks.” Enterprises often assume cloud providers fully protect against DDoS, but providers secure the platform rather than individual workloads or APIs, analysts added.

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Venture Global Files Applications for Plaquemines LNG Expansion

Venture Global Inc said Monday it had applied for a construction permit before the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and export authorization before the Department of Energy (DOE) for a project to add over 30 million metric tons per annum (MTPA) of capacity to the Plaquemines LNG complex in Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana. The Arlington, Virginia-based producer said in a statement on its website it has increased the project’s capacity by nearly 40 percent from the initial announcement earlier this year “due to the continued optimization of our liquefaction trains and strong market demand”. “This bolt-on expansion will be built incrementally in three phases and consist of 32 modular liquefaction trains… This will bring the total peak production capacity across the entire Plaquemines complex to over 58 MTPA”, Venture Global said. Chief executive Greg Sabel said, “This strategic step provides Venture Global with the optionality to develop a scalable project that can efficiently meet market needs as they evolve”. When it announced the brownfield expansion March 6, initially comprising 24 trains, Venture Global estimated the investment to be around $18 billion. Venture Global shipped the first LNG cargo from Plaquemines LNG late 2024. The shipment to Germany was for Energie Baden-Wuerttemberg AG. “Plaquemines LNG is one of the two fastest greenfield projects of its size to reach first production and, now, first cargo delivery, along with Venture Global’s first project, Calcasieu Pass”, Venture Global said in a statement December 26, 2024. Sabel said then, “In just five years, Venture Global has built, produced and launched exports from two large-scale LNG projects which has never been done before in the history of the industry”. Venture Global said at the time, “Like Venture Global’s Calcasieu Pass project, Plaquemines has exported its first cargo far in advance of the U.S. Department of Energy’s requirement to

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