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.
Everything you need to know about AI and coding
AI has already transformed how code is written, but a new wave of autonomous systems promise to make the process even smoother and less prone to making mistakes.
Amazon Web Services has just revealed three new “frontier” AI agents, its term for a more sophisticated class of autonomous agents capable of working for days at a time without human intervention. One of them, called Kiro, is designed to work independently without the need for a human to constantly point it in the right direction. Another, AWS Security Agent, scans a project for common vulnerabilities: an interesting development given that many AI-enabled coding assistants can end up introducing errors.
To learn more about the exciting direction AI-enhanced coding is heading in, check out our team’s reporting:
+ A string of startups are racing to build models that can produce better and better software. Read the full story.
+ We’re starting to give AI agents real autonomy. Are we ready for what could happen next?
+ What is vibe coding, exactly?
+ Anthropic’s cofounder and chief scientist Jared Kaplan on 4 ways agents will improve. Read the full story.
+ How AI assistants are already changing the way code gets made. Read the full story.
The must-reads
I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology.
1 Amazon’s new agents can reportedly code for days at a time
They remember previous sessions and continuously learn from a company’s codebase. (VentureBeat)
+ AWS says it’s aware of the pitfalls of handing over control to AI. (The Register)
+ The company faces the challenge of building enough infrastructure to support its AI services. (WSJ $)
2 Waymo’s driverless cars are getting surprisingly aggressive
The company’s goal to make the vehicles “confidently assertive” is prompting them to bend the rules. (WSJ $)
+ That said, their cars still have a far lower crash rate than human drivers. (NYT $)
3 The FDA’s top drug regulator has stepped down
After only three weeks in the role. (Ars Technica)+ A leaked vaccine memo from the agency doesn’t inspire confidence. (Bloomberg $)
4 Maybe DOGE isn’t entirely dead after all
Many of its former workers are embedded in various federal agencies. (Wired $)
5 A Chinese startup’s reusable rocket crash-landed after launch
It suffered what it called an “abnormal burn,” scuppering hopes of a soft landing. (Bloomberg $)
6 Startups are building digital clones of major sites to train AI agents
From Amazon to Gmail, they’re creating virtual agent playgrounds. (NYT $)
7 Half of US states now require visitors to porn sites to upload their ID
Missouri has become the 25th state to enact age verification laws. (404 Media)
8 AGI truthers are trying to influence the Pope
They’re desperate for him to take their concerns seriously.(The Verge)
+ How AGI became the most consequential conspiracy theory of our time. (MIT Technology Review)
9 Marketers are leaning into ragebait ads
But does making customers annoyed really translate into sales? (WP $)
10 The surprising role plant pores could play in fighting drought
At night as well as daytime. (Knowable Magazine)
+ Africa fights rising hunger by looking to foods of the past. (MIT Technology Review)
Quote of the day
“Everyone is begging for supply.”
—An anonymous source tells Reuters about the desperate measures Chinese AI companies take to secure scarce chips.
One more thing

The case against humans in space
Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos are bitter rivals in the commercial space race, but they agree on one thing: Settling space is an existential imperative. Space is the place. The final frontier. It is our human destiny to transcend our home world and expand our civilization to extraterrestrial vistas.
This belief has been mainstream for decades, but its rise has been positively meteoric in this new gilded age of astropreneurs.
But as visions of giant orbital stations and Martian cities dance in our heads, a case against human space colonization has found its footing in a number of recent books, from doubts about the practical feasibility of off-Earth communities, to realism about the harsh environment of space and the enormous tax it would exact on the human body. Read the full story.
—Becky Ferreira
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.)
+ This compilation of 21st century floor fillers is guaranteed to make you feel old.
+ A fire-loving amoeba has been found chilling out in volcanic hot springs.
+ This old-school Terminator 2 game is pixel perfection.
+ How truthful an adaptation is your favorite based-on-a-true-story movie? Let’s take a look at the data.




















