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by Antonio Regalado on (#6XADN)
Doctors say they constructed a bespoke gene-editing treatment in less than seven months and used it to treat a baby with a deadly metabolic condition. The rapid-fire attempt to rewrite the child's DNA marks the first time gene editing has been tailored to treat a single individual, according to a report published in the New...
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MIT Technology Review
Link | https://www.technologyreview.com/ |
Feed | https://www.technologyreview.com/stories.rss |
Updated | 2025-09-09 04:17 |
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by Rhiannon Williams on (#6XA3A)
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 first US hub for experimental medical treatments is coming The news: A bill that allows clinics to sell unproven treatments has been passed in Montana. Under the legislation, doctors can apply for...
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by Casey Crownhart on (#6X9ZA)
Over the last few months, and especially the last few weeks, there's been an explosion of news about proposed budget cuts to science in the US. One trend I've noticed: Researchers and civil servants are sounding the alarm that those cuts mean we might lose key data that helps us understand our world and how...
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by Will Douglas Heaven on (#6X9CN)
Google DeepMind has once again used large language models to discover new solutions to long-standing problems in math and computer science. This time the firm has shown that its approach can not only tackle unsolved theoretical puzzles, but improve a range of important real-world processes as well. Google DeepMind's new tool, called AlphaEvolve, uses the...
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by Jessica Hamzelou on (#6X96F)
A bill that allows medical clinics to sell unproven treatments has been passed in Montana. Under the legislation, doctors can apply for a license to open an experimental treatment clinic and recommend and sell therapies not approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to their patients. Once it's signed by the governor, the law...
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by Rhiannon Williams on (#6X96G)
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. Why climate researchers are taking the temperature of mountain snow The Sierra's frozen reservoir provides about a third of California's water and most of what comes out of the faucets, shower heads, and...
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by James Temple on (#6X93J)
On a crisp morning in early April, Dan McEvoy and Bjoern Bingham cut clean lines down a wide run at the Heavenly Ski Resort in South Lake Tahoe, then ducked under a rope line cordoning off a patch of untouched snow. They side-stepped up a small incline, poled past a row of Jeffrey pines, then...
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by Rhiannon Williams on (#6X89X)
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. A US court just put ownership of CRISPR back in play The CRISPR patents are back in play. Yesterday, the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit said scientists Jennifer Doudna and...
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by James O'Donnell on (#6X85X)
Six months ago I attended the largest gathering of chiefs of police in the US to see how they're using AI. I found some big developments, like officers getting AI to write their police reports. Today, I published a new story that shows just how far AI for police has developed since then. It's about...
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by Antonio Regalado on (#6X85Y)
The CRISPR patents are back in play. On Monday, the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit said scientists Jennifer Doudna and Emmanuelle Charpentier will get another chance to show they ought to own the key patents on what many consider the defining biotechnology invention of the 21st century. The pair shared a 2020...
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by Rhiannon Williams on (#6X7EN)
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 a new type of AI is helping police skirt facial recognition bans Police and federal agencies have found a controversial new way to skirt the growing patchwork of laws that curb how...
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by James O'Donnell on (#6X7D5)
Police and federal agencies have found a controversial new way to skirt the growing patchwork of laws that curb how they use facial recognition: an AI model that can track people using attributes like body size, gender, hair color and style, clothing, and accessories. The tool, called Track and built by the video analytics company...
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by MIT Technology Review Insights on (#6X62H)
As AI technologies become increasingly mainstream, there's mounting competitive pressure to transform traditional infrastructures and technology stacks. Traditional brick-and-mortar companies are finding cloud and data to be the foundational keys to unlocking their paths to digital transformation, and to competing in modern, AI-forward industry landscapes. In this exclusive webcast, experts discuss the building blocks for...
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by Rhiannon Williams on (#6X5WC)
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. A new AI translation system for headphones clones multiple voices simultaneously What's new: Imagine going for dinner with a group of friends who switch in and out of different languages you don't speak,...
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by Jessica Hamzelou on (#6X5RT)
A few years ago, a Belgian man in his 30s drove into a lamppost. Twice. Local authorities found that his blood alcohol level was four times the legal limit. Over the space of a few years, the man was apprehended for drunk driving three times. And on all three occasions, he insisted he hadn't been...
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by Rhiannon Williams on (#6X5RS)
Imagine going for dinner with a group of friends who switch in and out of different languages you don't speak, but still being able to understand what they're saying. This scenario is the inspiration for a new AI headphone system that translates the speech of multiple speakers simultaneously, in real time. The system, called Spatial...
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by Rhiannon Williams on (#6X51R)
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 to build a better AI benchmark It's not easy being one of Silicon Valley's favorite benchmarks. SWE-Bench (pronounced swee bench") launched in November 2024 as a way to evaluate an AI model's...
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by MIT Technology Review on (#6X4CD)
Wednesday, May 21, 2025 Big Tech's appetite for energy is growing rapidly as adoption of AI accelerates. But just how much energy does even a single AI query use? And what does it mean for the climate? Join editor in chief Mat Honan, senior climate reporter Casey Crownhart, and AI reporter James O'Donnell for a...
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by MIT Technology Review Insights on (#6X49M)
Manufacturing is in a state of flux. From supply chain disruptions to rising costs, tougher environmental regulations, and a changing consumer market, the sector faces a series of competing challenges. But a new way of operating offers a way to tackle complexities head-on: adaptive production hardwires flexibility and resilience into the enterprise, drawing on powerful...
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by Rhiannon Williams on (#6X471)
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. This patient's Neuralink brain implant gets a boost from generative AI Last November, Bradford G. Smith got a brain implant from Elon Musk's company Neuralink. The device, a set of thin wires attached...
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by Antonio Regalado on (#6X42Z)
Last November, Bradford G. Smith got a brain implant from Elon Musk's company Neuralink. The device, a set of thin wires attached to a computer about the thickness of a few quarters that sits in his skull, lets him use his thoughts to move a computer pointer on a screen. And by last week he...
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by Rhiannon Williams on (#6X3BK)
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. Bryan Johnson wants to start a new religion in which the body is God" Bryan Johnson is on a mission to not die. The 47-year-old multimillionaire has already applied his slogan Don't Die"...
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by James O'Donnell on (#6X37C)
On Thursday I watched Daniela Rus, one of the world's top experts on AI-powered robots, address a packed room at a Boston robotics expo. Rus spent a portion of her talk busting the notion that giant fleets of humanoids are already making themselves useful in manufacturing and warehouses around the world. That might come as...
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by Jessica Hamzelou on (#6X2GB)
Bryan Johnson is on a mission to not die. The 47-year-old multimillionaire has already applied his slogan Don't Die" to events, merchandise, and a Netflix documentary. Now he's founding a Don't Die religion. Johnson, who famously spends millions of dollars on scans, tests, supplements, and a lifestyle routine designed to slow or reverse the aging...
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by Rhiannon Williams on (#6X0XX)
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. A senior State Department official demanded records of communications with journalists, European officials, and Trump critics A previously unreported document distributed by senior US State Department official Darren Beattie reveals a sweeping effort...
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by Antonio Regalado on (#6X0TA)
Most pigs in the US are confined to factory farms where they can be afflicted by a nasty respiratory virus that kills piglets. The illness is called porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome, or PRRS. A few years ago, a British company called Genus set out to design pigs immune to this germ using CRISPR gene...
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by Eileen Guo on (#6X0DZ)
A previously unreported document distributed by senior US State Department official Darren Beattie reveals a sweeping effort to uncover all communications between the staff of a small government office focused on online disinformation and a lengthy list of public and private figures-many of whom are longtime targets of the political right. The document, originally shared...
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by Rhiannon Williams on (#6X02P)
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. A long-abandoned US nuclear technology is making a comeback in China China has once again beat everyone else to a clean energy milestone-its new nuclear reactor is reportedly one of the first to...
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by Casey Crownhart on (#6X01A)
China has once again beat everyone else to a clean energy milestone-its new nuclear reactor is reportedly one of the first to use thorium instead of uranium as a fuel and the first of its kind that can be refueled while it's running. It's an interesting (if decidedly experimental) development out of a country that's...
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by Rhiannon Williams on (#6WZA2)
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. This data set helps researchers spot harmful stereotypes in LLMs What's new? AI models are riddled with culturally specific biases. A new data set, called SHADES, is designed to help developers combat the...
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by Rhiannon Williams on (#6WZ6Y)
AI models are riddled with culturally specific biases. A new data set, called SHADES, is designed to help developers combat the problem by spotting harmful stereotypes and other kinds of discrimination that emerge in AI chatbot responses across a wide range of languages. Margaret Mitchell, chief ethics scientist at AI startup Hugging Face, led the...
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by Rhiannon Williams on (#6WYFC)
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 AI Hype Index: AI agent cyberattacks, racing robots, and musical models Separating AI reality from hyped-up fiction isn't always easy. That's why we've created the AI Hype Index-a simple, at-a-glance summary of...
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by The Editors on (#6WYBQ)
Separating AI reality from hyped-up fiction isn't always easy. That's why we've created the AI Hype Index-a simple, at-a-glance summary of everything you need to know about the state of the industry. AI agents are the AI industry's hypiest new product-intelligent assistants capable of completing tasks without human supervision. But while they can be theoretically...
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by James O'Donnell on (#6WYBR)
Right now, despite its ubiquity, AI is seen as anything but a normal technology. There is talk of AI systems that will soon merit the term superintelligence," and the former CEO of Google recently suggested we control AI models the way we control uranium and other nuclear weapons materials. Anthropic is dedicating time and money...
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by Rhiannon Williams on (#6WXMY)
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. Why Chinese manufacturers are going viral on TikTok Since the video was posted earlier this month, millions of TikTok users have watched as a young Chinese man in a blue T-shirt sits beside...
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by Caiwei Chen on (#6WXFS)
Since the video was posted earlier this month, millions of TikTok users have watched as a young Chinese man in a blue T-shirt sits beside a traditional tea set and speaks directly to the camera in accented English: Let's expose luxury's biggest secret." He stands and lifts what looks like an Hermes Birkin bag, one...
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by Rhiannon Williams on (#6WVZ3)
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. Sweeping tariffs could threaten the US manufacturing rebound Despite the geopolitical chaos and market collapses triggered by President Trump's announcement of broad tariffs on international goods, some supporters still hope the strategy will...
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by David Rotman on (#6WVVH)
Despite the geopolitical chaos and market collapses triggered by President Trump's announcement of broad tariffs on international goods, some supporters still hope the strategy will produce a golden age" of American industry. Trump himself insists, Jobs and factories will come roaring back into our country." While it's possible that very targeted tariffs could help protect...
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by MIT Technology Review Insights on (#6WV6J)
Organizations are deepening their cloud investments at an unprecedented pace, recognizing its fundamental role in driving business agility and innovation. Synergy Research Group reports that companies spent $84 billion worldwide on cloud infrastructure services in the third quarter of 2024, a 23% rise over the third quarter of 2023 and the fourth consecutive quarter in...
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by Rhiannon Williams on (#6WV4K)
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. Inside the controversial tree farms powering Apple's carbon neutral goal We were losing the light, and still about 20 kilometers from the main road, when the car shuddered and died at the edge...
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by Casey Crownhart on (#6WV2S)
The past few years have been an almost nonstop parade of good news for climate tech in the US. Headlines about billion-dollar grants from the government, massive private funding rounds, and labs churning out advance after advance have been routine. Now, though, things are starting to shift. About $8 billion worth of US climate tech...
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by Gregory Barber on (#6WV0N)
We were losing the light, and still about 20 kilometers from the main road, when the car shuddered and died at the edge of a strange forest. The grove grew as if indifferent to certain unspoken rules of botany. There was no understory, no foreground or background, only the trees themselves, which grew as a...
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by MIT Technology Review on (#6WTM1)
Recorded onApril 23, 2025 Brain-Computer Interfaces: From Promise to Product Speakers: David Rotman, editor at large, and Antonio Regalado, senior editor for biomedicine. Brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) have been crowned the 11th Breakthrough Technology of 2025 byMIT Technology Reviews readers. BCIs are electrodes implanted into the brain to send neural commands to computers, primarily to assist...
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by Rhiannon Williams on (#6WT7W)
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. Introducing: the Creativity issue The university computer lab may seem like an unlikely center for creativity. We tend to think of creativity as happening more in the artist's studio or writers' workshop. But...
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by Caiwei Chen on (#6WT5T)
A new play about OpenAI I recently saw Doomers, a new play by Matthew Gasda about the aborted 2023 coup at OpenAI, here represented by a fictional company called MindMesh. The action is set almost entirely in a meeting room; the first act follows executives immediately after the firing of company CEO Seth (a stand-in...
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by Ariel Aberg-Riger on (#6WT5S)
Ariel Aberg-Riger is the author of America Redux: Visual Stories from Our Dynamic History.
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by Mat Honan on (#6WT5R)
The reason you are reading this letter from me today is that I was bored 30 years ago. I was bored and curious about the world and so I wound up spending a lot of time in the university computer lab, screwing around on Usenet and the early World Wide Web, looking for interesting things...
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by June Kim on (#6WSWH)
It all began with a simple origami model. As an undergrad at Harvard, Danna Freedman went to a professor's office hours for her general chemistry class and came across an elegant paper model that depicted the fullerene molecule. The intricately folded representation of chemical bonds and atomic arrangements sparked her interest, igniting a profound curiosity...
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by Sally Kornbluth on (#6WSWG)
After decades of working as a biologist at a Southern school with a Division1 football team, coming to MIT was a bit of a culture shock-in the best possible way. I've heard from MIT alumni all about late-night psetting, when to catch MITHenge, and the best way to celebrate Pi Day (with pie, of course)....
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by Adam Zewe on (#6WSWF)
Tiny flying robots could perform such useful tasks as pollinating crops inside multilevel warehouses, boosting yields while mitigating some of agriculture's harmful impacts on the environment. The latest robo-bug from an MIT lab, inspired by the anatomy of the bee, comes closer to matching nature's performance than ever before. Led by Kevin Chen, an associate...
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