Iran's Crosshairs on Stargate: $500B AI Dream at Missile Risk
What if your next AI breakthrough gets vaporized by a missile? Iran's latest threat puts the $500 billion Stargate project squarely in the crossfire of Middle East chaos.
What if your next AI breakthrough gets vaporized by a missile? Iran's latest threat puts the $500 billion Stargate project squarely in the crossfire of Middle East chaos.
Everyone figured OpenAI would double down on models and apps after ditching side hustles. Instead, they're buying a livestream empire—TBPN—to rewrite their battered image.
One-word denial. Case over. The Supreme Court's latest summary smackdown leaves civil rights litigants locked out—again.
Elon Musk's SpaceX just filed for a million data centers in orbit, dodging AI's earthly power crunch. Sounds perfect—until you hit the physics roadblocks.
Ex-OpenAI brainiacs are slinging $100M at AI startups they actually get. But their skips? A warning shot on the frothy AI pitches flooding VCs.
January's Supreme Court slowdown had watchers twitching. Three months on, they've flipped the script — 18 opinions down, docket filling fast.
Picture this: your job vanishes overnight, courtesy of AI. Economists now demand massive data hunts to gauge the real damage — before it's too late.
Picture this: millions in the Gulf waking to dry taps because a single missile hit their water lifeline. Desalination plants in the Middle East aren't just tech marvels—they're fragile shields against thirst, now caught in geopolitical crossfire.
8,000 AI-generated child abuse images in six months — that's the grim stat OpenAI's new blueprint aims to counter. Yet lawsuits over chatbot-induced suicides raise doubts: can software tweaks outrun the tech's inherent risks?
Everyone figured 2026 conferences would be AI echo chambers — same old hype. But TechCrunch Disrupt flips the script, promising raw debates on regulation that could rewrite the rules. Act fast: $500 savings vanish April 10.
EU commissioners tout sustainable border AI. Then admit: no definitions, no standards, no measurements. Classic Brussels sleight of hand.
Picture this: your soul-crushing spreadsheet drudgery vanishes overnight. AI agents take over, but only if companies ditch old workflows for agent-first redesign.