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67 articles
The lawsuit against 23andMe’s new owners turns the 2023 DNA data breach into a test of consumer privacy limits.
India’s solar market is no longer being judged only by megawatts on paper, but by whether a project can deliver power when the grid actually needs it.
Revel and Voltera are not just announcing more chargers; they are trying to give the US robotaxi economy its own energy layer.
Europe’s datacenter wave is entering a phase where cooling is no longer a technical footnote, but a question of local water, grid capacity and political permission to grow.
AI data centers are no longer only a question of chips, power and water; they are becoming a question of how public opposition gets policed.
An Italian local council is imposing a 200% tax on data-center development in agricultural zones, sending a blunt message: compute infrastructure should not take the easiest route through rural land.
The issue is not only that health systems want patient data, but that the right to refuse can become an interface maze designed to stop patients from using it.
In August 2025, the Sun produced a radio burst that did not fade after the first flash, but persisted for 19 full days.
Human Archive is turning India’s gig economy into a field system for collecting real-world human movement data.
Researchers in China propose turning existing urban heating pipelines into a pressurized battery for surplus solar and wind power.
Ucell and ZTE have completed a large-scale rollout of an AI-powered green network solution in Uzbekistan, reporting a 10.6 percent cut in energy use without compromising user experience.
Community solar in Illinois is not held back by a lack of sun or land, but by the grid-connection queue that can turn a project into a waiting game.
Inlyte Energy is not selling an overnight miracle, but testing a stubborn energy thesis: data centers need longer-duration, cheaper and more materially grounded batteries than today’s default package.
Europe cannot speed up the energy transition if developers only learn after months of waiting that the local grid has no room for a connection.
NASA’s new Black Marble view of Earth at night does not show a planet simply switching on; it shows human activity from orbit as a shifting record of urbanization, energy use and economic change.
Orbital data centers sound like the next logical layer of space infrastructure, but Redwire’s point is more physical: without serious power and thermal architecture, scalable computing in orbit does not happen.
America’s battery race is no longer just a clean-energy story; it is about who can deliver firm power to a grid increasingly stressed by AI data centers.
The Stratos Project in Hansel Valley is not just another data center; it is a test of how far local governments will go when AI infrastructure collides with water, power and public resistance.
The IEA expects 23 million EVs to be sold in 2026, turning market growth from a niche story into an industrial stress test.
NIST’s lunar navigation proposal uses ultrastable lasers in craters that can drop to about minus 223 degrees Celsius.
BYD wants to prove EV range and charging on the road, so it is sending the Song Ultra EV on a journey of more than 4,395 km across China.
Starlink, Kuiper and other megaconstellations are pushing satellite internet toward a scale where launches and satellite burn-ups become a climate question, not just space logistics.
In Gaza, rubble is no longer only the evidence of destruction; it is becoming the only locally available input for emergency shelter.
A machine-learning model using cloud type and cloud cover suggests some sudden solar drops can be predicted earlier, but not with equal confidence in every climate.
Nevada told 49,000 Lake Tahoe residents that 75% of their electricity supply is being redirected to data centers, forcing some households to look for their own power source.
Star Catcher Industries raised $65 million to validate an orbital grid that would send power to satellites by laser.
Ilya Sutskever defended OpenAI's mission and his own role in Sam Altman's brief 2023 ouster during the Musk v. OpenAI case.
A Fayette County data center used about 30 million gallons of water before the metering problem became visible.
Cowboy Space raised $275 million for rockets whose upper stages would serve as orbital data centers.
A Wired writer describes Hollywood writers taking short AI-training contracts for platforms after the strike.
Cloudflare says AI made 1,100 jobs obsolete even as the company reported record revenue.
Cloudflare says AI made 1,100 jobs obsolete even as the company reported record revenue.
Washington and Beijing are considering formal talks on AI risks ahead of a possible Beijing summit.
Fortum has started large heat pumps that will recover excess heat from Microsoft's data centers in Finland.
Meta is rolling out AI age checks that analyze images, video and context to detect users under 13.
Space-based solar power is being studied again for remote military bases, where fuel logistics and grid resilience have direct operational value.
Panthalassa is trying to solve AI's energy problem by sending compute nodes offshore.
California's Nexus pilot shows canal-top solar can cut evaporation by 70 percent and algae growth by 85 percent.
China Datang’s 500 MW solar farm in Ningxia is now supplying power directly to data centers, marking a milestone in renewable energy integration.
Tim Cain says influencers now shape both how games are made and how players judge them.
Deezer says 28% of uploaded tracks in September 2025 were fully AI-generated, and the numbers have kept rising since then.
Waymo is running 500,000 paid rides a week while first responders report blocked responses and behavioral backsliding.
China’s Pingdingshan project uses a salt cavern 1,418 meters underground to demonstrate large-scale geological hydrogen storage.
Nankai University reported a silver-free heterojunction solar cell reaching 25.2% efficiency after Ar/H2 plasma treatment of the ITO interface.
Over 50 data centers are under construction or planned in the Nordic region to feed AI's compute hunger.
A new California Senate bill would let home battery owners earn cash by selling spare power.
Dozens of university subdomains were redirected to pornographic or malicious content after old DNS links were left dangling.
Retractions from guest-edited journal issues show how academic publishing can lose trust through procedures that look legitimate but fail to protect quality.
AI’s infrastructure buildout is moving fast enough that climate commitments increasingly look detached from the physical power stack underneath it.
South Australia is increasingly paying users to consume surplus electricity rather than trying to suppress it out of the grid.
Researchers tracing 2.8 million Telegram messages didn’t find isolated predators—they found an assembly line.
The CFTC has sued Illinois, Arizona, and Connecticut to block state-level regulation of prediction markets like Kalshi and Polymarket.
Amazon’s AWS US East campus now consumes more power than a mid-sized city, forcing Dominion Energy to halt new residential hookups to keep servers running.
A 40% increase in weekend work has pushed Saturday start times to 7:11 AM, with AI tools fragmenting focus and extending work hours.
The UK government just turned new homes in England into mini power plants.
Terabase Energy says Terafab V2 has finished field testing and is ready for commercial delivery.
A 7-ton meteorite, racing at 46,000 mph, exploded over Ohio this week—offering scientists a rare chance to study primordial solar system relics.
Australia's CSIRO has demonstrated a working quantum battery prototype, an important proof of concept for a new class of energy storage.
With Gravitas, K2 Space is trying to prove that orbital compute first has to answer a blunt question: whether there is enough power for serious work.
CyberSentry leverages deep learning to achieve a 99.5% detection accuracy rate for attacks on critical infrastructure networks.
The Strait of Hormuz is exposing how much the AI economy still depends on tankers, industrial gases, metals and power plants, not just models and GPUs.
PowerRange targets a problem the energy sector has kept too long in slide decks: how to rehearse a cyberattack on the grid without endangering real generation and distribution.
PETRUSHKA is the first mental-health AI to prove itself in a randomized clinical trial: patients were 40 percent less likely to drop their antidepressant regimen within eight weeks.
True Anomaly closed a $650 million Series D round at a $2.2 billion valuation and simultaneously became one of 12 contractors in the Space Force SBI program under Golden Dome.
Independent tests confirm Donut Lab’s battery operates at 100°C—a temperature that cripples conventional lithium cells, even as its pouch membrane fails under stress.
The Infinix Note 60 Ultra packs a 7,000mAh battery and two-way satellite calling—features even flagship brands haven’t combined yet.