Feed new-on-mit-technology-review MIT Technology Review

MIT Technology Review

Link https://www.technologyreview.com/
Feed https://www.technologyreview.com/stories.rss
Updated 2025-04-05 20:17
Build an AI strategy that survives first contact with reality
Whether you think next-generation AI heralds an exciting new world for humankind or sows the seeds for its destruction, few business leaders can afford to ignore it. But in this febrile environment, it can be hard to plot a course that neither falls foul of the hype nor misses the opportunity entirely. You need only...
Creative chemistry: Adapting to the 21st century
The chemicals industry helped build the 20th century, and is urgently adapting to the 21st. Almost all daily goods rely on output from the chemicals sector, from clothes and home insulation to fertilizer and medicine. But this energy-hungry industry needs innovation to find safer, more sustainable products. With tightening regulation and growing pressure from consumers...
The Download: cutting beer’s carbon emissions, and reclaiming lost wages
This is today's edition ofThe Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology. How electrifying steam could cut beer's carbon emissions What's happening? Next year, New Belgium Brewing will swap out one of the four natural-gas-powered boilers at its main brewing facility in Fort Collins, Colorado,...
Next-gen content farms are using AI-generated text to spin up junk websites
This article is from The Technocrat, MIT Technology Review's weekly tech policy newsletter about power, politics, and Silicon Valley. To receive it in your inbox every Friday, sign up here. We've heard a lot about AI risks in the era of large language models like ChatGPT (including from me!)-risks such as prolific mis- and disinformation...
How electrifying steam could cut beer’s carbon emissions
Next year, New Belgium Brewing will swap out one of the four natural-gas-powered boilers at its main brewing facility in Fort Collins, Colorado, for an electrified version designed to cut greenhouse-gas emissions. The modular, 650-kilowatt pilot boiler system was developed by AtmosZero, a startup also based in Fort Collins and coming out of stealth today....
This app is helping workers reclaim millions in lost wages
As Rodrigo Camarena sees it, you can hail a car and order food on your smartphone; why shouldn't it also help you exercise your rights? Reclamo, a new web app created by Justicia Lab, the nonprofit innovation incubator that Camarena directs, helps documented and undocumented immigrant workers who have experienced wage theft. By clicking through...
Achieving a sustainable future for AI
We are witnessing a historic, global paradigm shift driven by dramatic improvements in AI. As AI has evolved from predictive to generative, more businesses are taking notice, with enterprise adoption of AI more than doubling since 2017. According to McKinsey, 63% of respondents expect their organizations' investment in AI to increase over the next three...
The Download: advertising on junk AI websites, and forest bathing in VR
This is today's edition ofThe Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology. Junk websites filled with AI-generated text are pulling in money from programmatic ads The news: AI chatbots are filling junk websites with AI-generated text that attracts paying advertisers. More than 140 major brands...
“Forest bathing” might work in virtual reality too
The Japanese concept of forest bathing," or shinrin-yoku (), has long been acclaimed for its supposed health benefits. Hundreds of scientific studies suggest that it can improve mental health and cognitive performance, reduce blood pressure, and even treat depression and anxiety. Yet forests can be hard to reach or, for some, completely inaccessible in a...
Junk websites filled with AI-generated text are pulling in money from programmatic ads
People are using AI chatbots to fill junk websites with AI-generated text that attracts paying advertisers, according to a new report from the media research organization NewsGuard that was shared exclusively with MIT Technology Review. Over 140 major brands are paying for ads that end up on unreliable AI-written sites, likely without their knowledge. Ninety...
The Download: AI training AI, and the future of robotaxis
This is today's edition ofThe Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology. The people paid to train AI are outsourcing their work... to AI The news: Many people who are paid to train AI models may be themselves outsourcing that work to AI, a new...
The wild race to improve synthetic embryos
This article is from The Checkup, MIT Technology Review's weekly biotech newsletter. To receive it in your inbox every Thursday,sign up here. This week, Antonio Regalado, senior editor for biomedicine is filling in for Jess Hamzelou. Something journalists and scientists have in common is that they hate getting scooped. And it's especially annoying when the...
The chip patterning machines that will shape computing’s next act
When we talk about computing these days, we tend to talk about software and the engineers who write it. But we wouldn't be anywhere without the hardware and the physical sciences that have enabled it to be created-disciplines like optics, materials science, and mechanical engineering. It's thanks to advances in these areas that we can...
Robotaxis are here. It’s time to decide what to do about them
In some San Francisco neighborhoods, at certain hours of the night, it seems as if one in 10 cars on the road has no driver behind the wheel. These are not experimental test vehicles, and this is not a drill. Many of San Francisco's ghostly driverless cars are commercial robotaxis, directly competing with taxis, Uber...
The people paid to train AI are outsourcing their work… to AI
A significant proportion of people paid to train AI models may be themselves outsourcing that work to AI, a new study has found. It takes an incredible amount of data to train AI systems to perform specific tasks accurately and reliably. Many companies pay gig workers on platforms like Mechanical Turk to complete tasks that...
The Download: lab-grown chicken, and rewilding the world
This is today's edition ofThe Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology. Two companies can now sell lab-grown chicken in the US The news: The first cultivated, or lab-grown, meat has been approved for sale in the US. Two companies, Upside Foods and Eat Just,...
The hope and hype of seaweed farming for carbon removal
This article is from The Spark, MIT Technology Review's weekly climate newsletter. To receive it in your inbox every Wednesday, sign up here. Say, theoretically, that a pipe in your bathroom springs a leak. Bad situation, right? The good news is that there are pretty much only two things you need to do: turn the...
What “rewilding” means—and what’s missing from this new movement
In Colombia, there's a national debate about what to do with Pablo Escobar's feral cocaine hippos." To many, the 160 hippos-descendants of four illegally imported African hippopotamuses that escaped from the drug kingpin's private zoo after his death in 1993-are agents of destruction. Each night, they collectively chomp through half a ton of vegetation, and...
The Catholic cartographer who wants to help the church fight climate change
When Molly Burhans first started trying to map the Catholic Church's global property holdings so the land could be put to work fighting climate change, the idea seemed so obvious to her that she was sure someone else must be doing it already. Burhans, a cartographer, was then an ecological-design grad student who had recently...
Two companies can now sell lab-grown chicken in the US
The first cultivated, or lab-grown, meat has been approved for sale in the US. Two California-based companies, Upside Foods and Eat Just, received grants of inspection from the United States Department of Agriculture today. It's the final approval needed for each company to begin commercial US production and sales. Animal agriculture makes up nearly 15%...
Making data matter in real time
As the world becomes increasingly networked and connected devices proliferate, organizations are producing a plethora of data. The potential to collect data is growing exponentially. From smart grids to mobile phones and from connected cars to the industrial internet of things, tens of billions of devices will act as sensors, delivering data to networks. Whether...
The Download: China’s counterfeit lawsuits, and Apple’s accessibility failure
This is today's edition ofThe Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology. The counterfeit lawsuits that scoop up hundreds of Chinese Amazon sellers at once Sun Qunming had no idea that the word airbag" could be trademarked. Sun, who owns an e-commerce company in Shenzhen,...
The US city that scares Chinese Amazon sellers
China Report is MIT Technology Review's newsletter about technology developments in China.Sign upto receive it in your inbox every Tuesday. Want to know how to make Chinese Amazon sellers anxious? Put Chicago in the delivery address when you order. Why? Because in the last few years, many sellers have been slapped with massive lawsuits for...
The iPad was meant to revolutionize accessibility. What happened?
In December 2022, a few months after learning that he'd won an Iowa Arts Fellowship to attend the MFA program at the University of Iowa, David James DJ" Savarese sat for a televised interview with a local news station. But in order to answer the anchorman's questions, Savarese, a 30-year-old poet with autism who uses...
Scaling MLOps for the enterprise with multi-tenant systems
Multi-tenant systems are invaluable for modern, fast-paced businesses. These systems allow multiple users and teams to access and use them at the same time. Machine learning operations (MLOps) teams, in particular, benefit greatly from using multi-tenant systems. MLOps teams that don't leverage multi-tenant systems can fall victim to inefficiency, inconsistency, duplicative work, and bumpy onboarding-adding...
The counterfeit lawsuits that scoop up hundreds of Chinese Amazon sellers at once
Sun Qunming had no idea that the word airbag" could be trademarked. Sun, who owns an e-commerce company of 13 people in Shenzhen, China, has been selling phone cases to Amazon buyers in Europe and the US since 2016. But last year, her business ground to a halt. One of her products has air-filled bumper...
The Download: explaining the recent AI panic, and digital inequality in the US
This is today's edition ofThe Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology. How existential risk became the biggest meme in AI Who's afraid of the big bad bots? A lot of people, it seems. Hundreds of scientists, business leaders, and policymakers have recently made public...
How climate vulnerability and the digital divide are linked
The Wi-Fi signal is weak outside the Frederick Douglass National Historic Site in Anacostia, a historic African-American section of Washington, DC. The abolitionist leader's former home sits serenely atop a grassy hill in the otherwise bustling neighborhood. It is one of Monica Sanders's final stops on an overcast December afternoon. Facing the property, she holds...
Meta’s AI leaders want you to know fears over AI existential risk are “ridiculous”
It's a really weird time in AI. In just six months, the public discourse around the technology has gone from Chatbots generate funny sea shanties" to AI systems could cause human extinction." Who else is feeling whiplash? My colleague Will Douglas Heaven asked AI experts why exactly people are talking about existential risk, and why...
How existential risk became the biggest meme in AI
Who's afraid of the big bad bots? A lot of people, it seems. The number of high-profile names that have now made public pronouncements or signed open letters warning of the catastrophic dangers of artificial intelligence is striking. Hundreds of scientists, business leaders, and policymakers have spoken up, from deep learning pioneers Geoffrey Hinton and...
The Download: building anti-aging hype, and exploring the universe with sound
This is today's edition ofThe Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology. Police got called to an overcrowded presentation on rejuvenation" technology It's not every day that police storm through the doors of a scientific session and eject half the audience. But that's what happened...
Five big takeaways from Europe’s AI Act
This article is from The Technocrat, MIT Technology Review's weekly tech policy newsletter about power, politics, and Silicon Valley. To receive it in your inbox every Friday, sign up here. It was a big week in tech policy in Europe withthe European Parliament's vote to approve its draft rules for the AI Acton the same...
How sounds can turn us on to the wonders of the universe
In the cavernous grand ballroom of the Seattle Convention Center, Sarah Kane stood in front of an oversize computer monitor, methodically reconstructing the life history of the Milky Way. Waving her shock of long white hair as she talked (I'm easy to spot from a distance," she joked), she outlined the Hunt for Galactic Fossils,"...
Police got called to an overcrowded presentation on “rejuvenation” technology
It's not every day that police storm through the doors of a scientific session and eject half the audience. But that is what occurred on Friday at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center during a round of scientific presentations featuring Juan Carlos Izpisua Belmonte, a specialist in rejuvenation" technology at a secretive, wealthy anti-aging startup...
The Download: waiting at the US border, and seaweed’s carbon capture shortcomings
This is today's edition ofThe Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology. The new US border wall is an app Keisy Plaza, 39, left her home in Colombia seven months ago. She walked a 62-mile stretch of dense mountainous rainforest and swampland with her two...
The new US border wall is an app
A few minutes before 9 a.m. on a day in late March, Keisy Plaza, 39, leans against a wall on the corner of Juarez Avenue and Gardenias Street in Ciudad Juarez. It's the last intersection before Mexico turns into El Paso, Texas, and a stream of commuters drive past on their way to work and...
Seaweed farming for carbon dioxide capture would take up too much of the ocean
If we're going to prevent the gravest dangers of global warming, experts agree, removing significant amounts of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere is essential. That's why, over the past few years, projects focused on growing seaweed to suck CO2 from the air and lock it in the sea have attracted attention-and significant amounts of funding-from...
The Download: brain implant removal, and Nvidia’s AI payoff
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. A brain implant changed her life. Then it was removed against her will. Sticking an electrode inside a person’s brain can do more than treat a disease. Take the case of Rita Leggett,…
How it feels to have a life-changing brain implant removed
This article is from The Checkup, MIT Technology Review’s weekly biotech newsletter. To receive it in your inbox every Thursday, sign up here. Ian Burkhart sustained a severe spinal cord injury while he was on vacation at 19 years old. “It left me as a quadriplegic,” he says. “I had a little bit of movement…
A brain implant changed her life. Then it was removed against her will.
Sticking an electrode inside a person’s brain can do more than treat a disease. Take the case of Rita Leggett, an Australian woman whose experimental brain implant changed her sense of agency and self. She told researchers that she “became one” with her device. She was devastated when, two years later, she was told she…
Innovation will fuel e-mobility adoption
The e-mobility revolution is in high gear. Automakers are promising to launch dozens of electric models over the next decade. In August 2021, U.S. President Joe Biden set a target for 50% of new car sales to be electric vehicles (EVs) by 2030. And electric car registrations in Europe increased from 3.5% in 2019 to…
Modernizing the automotive industry: Creating a seamless customer experience
The automotive industry is rapidly changing as connected and autonomous vehicles — enabled by AI and machine learning — are transforming transportation to create a seamless and personalized customer experience. The modernization of systems and software is steering vehicles to be more intelligent than ever, improving driving experiences and propelling operational efficiencies. From simulation testing…
The Download: IBM’s quantum ambitions, and tasting lab-grown burgers
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. IBM wants to build a 100,000-qubit quantum computer What’s happening: Last year, IBM took the record for the largest quantum computing system with a processor containing 433 quantum bits, or qubits, the fundamental…
Here’s what a lab-grown burger tastes like
This article is from The Spark, MIT Technology Review’s weekly climate newsletter. To receive it in your inbox every Wednesday, sign up here. Sitting in a booth in a hotel lobby in Brooklyn, I stared down the lineup of sliders, each on a separate bamboo plate. On the far left was a plant-based burger from Impossible…
IBM wants to build a 100,000-qubit quantum computer
Late last year, IBM took the record for the largest quantum computing system with a processor that contained 433 quantum bits, or qubits, the fundamental building blocks of quantum information processing. Now, the company has set its sights on a much bigger target: a 100,000-qubit machine that it aims to build within 10 years. IBM…
The Download: urban drone deliveries, and our guide to AI regulations
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. Food delivery by drone is just part of daily life in Shenzhen —Zeyi Yang In a buzzy urban area in Shenzhen, China, I watched as a drone descended onto a pickup kiosk to…
Suddenly, everyone wants to talk about how to regulate AI
This story originally appeared in The Algorithm, our weekly newsletter on AI. To get stories like this in your inbox first, sign up here. It feels as though a switch has turned on in AI policy. For years, US legislators and American tech companies were reluctant to introduce—if not outright against—strict technology regulation. Now both have…
Food delivery by drone is just part of daily life in Shenzhen
My iced tea arrived from the sky. In a buzzy urban area in Shenzhen, China, sandwiched between several skyscrapers, I watched as a yellow-and-black drone descended onto a pickup kiosk by the street. The top of the vending-machine-size kiosk opened up for the drone to land, and a white cardboard box containing my drink was…
Our quick guide to the 6 ways we can regulate AI
Tech Review Explains: Let our writers untangle the complex, messy world of technology to help you understand what’s coming next. You can read more here. AI regulation is hot. Ever since the success of OpenAI’s chatbot ChatGPT, the public’s attention has been grabbed by wonder and worry about what these powerful AI tools can do. Generative…
Meta’s new AI models can recognize and produce speech for more than 1,000 languages
Meta has built AI models that can recognize and produce speech for more than 1,000 languages—a tenfold increase on what’s currently available. It’s a significant step toward preserving languages that are at risk of disappearing, the company says. Meta is releasing its models to the public via the code hosting service GitHub. It claims that…
...31323334353637383940...