A new study found that AI writing assistants are changing the substantive meaning of user-written drafts on sensitive issues including abortion and climate change. The research highlights concerns that AI tools may be subtly shifting users' intended messages without their awareness, potentially affecting how people communicate on controversial topics.
Meta is confronting mounting government scrutiny in India following reports of child abuse-related advertisements appearing on Instagram, threatening its operations in the country where it has its largest user base across Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp. The regulatory crackdown represents a significant escalation in tensions between the tech giant and Indian authorities.
A Guardian investigation has found that an £8.2bn AI datacentre complex in Lanarkshire, Scotland—jointly developed by US firm CoreWeave and DataVita—has misrepresented its renewable energy capabilities, with government and developers privately acknowledging power provision issues. The project, announced in January with promises of on-site renewable power and completion by 2030, would require the equivalent of a nuclear reactor's energy output but cannot deliver the green credentials publicly pledged.
Nvidia's upcoming AI rack system will not arrive until 2028, according to SemiAnalysis, as the chipmaker faces manufacturing bottlenecks that are slowing its typically aggressive product cadence. The delay underscores mounting tensions between Nvidia's annual release schedule and the physical production capacity required to meet demand for its data center infrastructure.
Author Anna Funder and other Australian creatives are fighting to protect their intellectual property as US AI companies ingest books, music, and artwork into training datasets without compensation or permission. Funder argues that copyright protections—comparable to property law—are essential to sustaining creative work, warning that without legal enforcement, creators lose the economic incentive to produce new content.
Residents of Newarthill in Lanarkshire, Scotland report being misled about benefits of a major AI datacentre and solar farm development, with company representatives offering incentives like free solar panels and cash for properties. Local people now fear forced property sales and loss of protected green belt land, while promised jobs and investments fail to materialize and the project cannot meet renewable energy commitments.
The United Nations is pushing for coordinated international governance of artificial intelligence, with officials warning that unregulated AI development could cause catastrophic harm. The effort reflects growing consensus among world leaders and experts that AI's rapid advancement requires binding oversight mechanisms and safety standards.
Elbit Systems revealed that Israel's Tzayad digital command and control system identified approximately 850,000 targets in real time across Gaza and Lebanon between October 2024 and end of 2025, averaging around 1,000 potential targets daily. The system, supplied by Israel's largest arms manufacturer, mapped people, vehicles, and other objects across multiple military theaters of operation.
Chinese companies are making significant advances in developing dextrous robotic hands capable of performing complex manual tasks, potentially transforming humanoid robots from novelties into practical tools. The breakthrough centers on embodied AI that can replicate the neurological complexity and precise motor control required for human-like hand movements, from tying shoelaces to buttoning shirts.
Major AI companies are increasingly hiring philosophers to help navigate ethical challenges, safety concerns, and societal impacts of their products. The trend reflects growing recognition that technical expertise alone is insufficient for responsible AI development, as companies grapple with questions around bias, fairness, transparency, and long-term implications of advanced AI systems.
UK Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper has warned that artificial intelligence represents an existential threat comparable to nuclear weapons if governments fail to establish international rules for its development. Cooper is calling on major powers including the US and China to agree on coordinated AI governance, predicting the issue will dominate global foreign policy discussions over the next two years.