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Anthropic export controls on Claude & Custom AI chips heat up - Tech News (Jun 25, 2026)

11 min · 25. Juni 2026
Episode Anthropic export controls on Claude & Custom AI chips heat up - Tech News (Jun 25, 2026) Cover

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Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Effortless AI design for presentations, websites, and more with Gamma - https://try.gamma.app/tad [https://try.gamma.app/tad] - Discover the Future of AI Audio with ElevenLabs - https://try.elevenlabs.io/tad [https://try.elevenlabs.io/tad] - SurveyMonkey, Using AI to surface insights faster and reduce manual analysis time - https://get.surveymonkey.com/tad [https://get.surveymonkey.com/tad] Support The Automated Daily directly: Buy me a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily [https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily] TODAY'S TOPICS: ANTHROPIC EXPORT CONTROLS ON CLAUDE - ANTHROPIC IS IN TALKS WITH THE TRUMP WHITE HOUSE AFTER AN EXPORT-CONTROL DIRECTIVE FORCED IT TO PULL ITS CLAUDE FABLE 5 MODEL OFFLINE, RAISING BIG QUESTIONS ABOUT AI ACCESS RESTRICTIONS AND NATIONAL SECURITY. CUSTOM AI CHIPS HEAT UP - OPENAI REVEALED ITS FIRST CUSTOM INFERENCE CHIP WITH BROADCOM, WHILE QUALCOMM SIGNED META FOR A FUTURE DATA-CENTER CPU AND BOUGHT MODULAR—SIGNALS THAT AI COMPUTE IS PUSHING COMPANIES BEYOND NVIDIA DEPENDENCE. IBM’S SUB-1NM CHIP PROTOTYPE - IBM SAYS ITS NANOSTACK RESEARCH COULD REACH AN EFFECTIVE 0.7NM CLASS, POINTING TO A POSSIBLE PATH FOR DENSER, MORE EFFICIENT CHIPS AS DATA-CENTER POWER AND AI WORKLOADS KEEP CLIMBING. AGENTS, PROMPTS, AND REAL SOFTWARE - A NEW WAVE OF COMMENTARY ARGUES THE REAL SHIFT IS “LANGUAGE-NATIVE SOFTWARE,” WHERE NATURAL-LANGUAGE INTENT IS TRANSLATED INTO ACCOUNTABLE, DETERMINISTIC ACTIONS—REDUCING AMBIGUITY WITHOUT TURNING EVERYTHING INTO CHAT. AI CODING WORKFLOWS WITH PULL REQUESTS - DEVELOPERS ARE PUSHING AGENT DESIGNS THAT OUTPUT REVIEWABLE ARTIFACTS LIKE GITHUB PULL REQUESTS, USING CI GATES AND SCOPED PERMISSIONS TO REDUCE RISK, ERRORS, AND PROMPT-INJECTION DAMAGE. ENERGY BUILDOUT FOR AI DEMAND - U.S. ENERGY POLICY IS LEANING INTO NUCLEAR LOANS AND VIRTUAL POWER PLANTS AS AI DATA CENTERS DRIVE DEMAND FOR RELIABLE, LOW-CARBON ELECTRICITY AND FASTER-TO-DEPLOY CAPACITY OPTIONS. EUROPE WEIGHS UNDER-16 SOCIAL MEDIA LIMITS - EU LEADERS SAY THE COMMISSION IS PREPARING PROPOSALS TO RESTRICT SOCIAL MEDIA ACCESS FOR KIDS UNDER 16, POTENTIALLY MOVING EUROPE TOWARD BLOC-WIDE AGE VERIFICATION AND YOUTH SAFETY RULES. GLOBAL RULES FOR AUTONOMOUS DRIVING - THE UN’S UNECE APPROVED THE FIRST GLOBAL REGULATIONS FOR FULLY AUTONOMOUS DRIVING SYSTEMS, AIMING TO REPLACE FRAGMENTED NATIONAL RULES WITH SHARED SAFETY VALIDATION AND MONITORING REQUIREMENTS. HEALTH BETS: UNIVERSAL VACCINES AND ANTIVIRALS - TWO HEALTH INITIATIVES DREW ATTENTION: AN AI-ASSISTED APPROACH TO BROADER “UNIVERSAL” VACCINES, AND A NEW INTERCEPT FUND TARGETING BETTER PROPHYLACTICS AGAINST COMMON RESPIRATORY INFECTIONS LIKE FLU AND COLDS. AMAZON SELLER BRIBERY AND DATA LEAKS - A REPORTED BRIBERY APPROACH INVOLVING AN AMAZON SELLER SUGGESTS INTERNAL MARKETPLACE DATA CAN BE COMMODIFIED, SPOTLIGHTING ENFORCEMENT GAPS AND TRUST RISKS FOR MERCHANTS AND CUSTOMERS. CHINA’S EV EXPORT SURGE - CHINA’S EV EXPORTS HIT A NEW RECORD AS OVERSEAS DEMAND RISES, WHILE SHIFTS IN SOLAR AND BATTERY EXPORTS HIGHLIGHT HOW POLICY CHANGES AND GEOPOLITICAL ENERGY SHOCKS ARE RESHAPING CLEAN-TECH TRADE. HUBBLE SPOTS REIONIZATION-ERA ESCAPE - HUBBLE DETECTED ESCAPING IONISING UV LIGHT FROM AN UNUSUALLY EARLY, COMPACT GALAXY, STRENGTHENING THE CASE FOR HOW GALAXIES HELPED END THE UNIVERSE’S ‘COSMIC FOG’ DURING REIONIZATION. Episode Transcript Anthropic export controls on Claude We start with a story that sits right at the intersection of AI, national security, and who gets access to frontier models. Anthropic has reportedly been negotiating with the Trump White House for nearly two weeks to undo an export-control directive that effectively blocked broad access to its consumer-facing Claude Fable 5 model. According to reporting cited by Gizmodo, the company took Fable 5 offline on June 12 after being told it needed to prevent non‑U.S. nationals from using it—and officials were already worried about potential access by China-linked actors. What’s especially notable here is the political and operational signal: this isn’t just about one model. It’s about whether the U.S. is willing to treat advanced AI systems more like sensitive technology exports, with access gated by nationality and geography. And it’s also a reminder that “safety” arguments can quickly become “distribution” constraints—especially when jailbreakability enters the conversation. The report also claims the talks improved after Anthropic shifted the lead role from CEO Dario Amodei to co-founder Tom Brown, alongside its policy lead. If that’s accurate, it underlines a blunt reality: in 2026, AI capability is only half the battle—governance and negotiation are the other half. Custom AI chips heat up Staying with AI power, the silicon arms race keeps accelerating—and it’s no longer just chip companies making the running. OpenAI and Broadcom unveiled OpenAI’s first custom AI chip, called Jalapeño, aimed at inference—the work of serving models to users at scale. OpenAI says the design went from start to finish in nine months, and that its own AI tools helped speed development. The first physical sample is arriving now, with initial deployment targeted for late 2026. The big takeaway isn’t the name on the chip; it’s what it represents. When a model provider starts designing its own hardware, it’s a bet that demand will stay high and that controlling efficiency—cost, power, and supply—will be a competitive advantage. It’s also a pressure-release valve on the ongoing shortage and pricing power around top-end GPUs. IBM’s sub-1nm chip prototype Meanwhile, Qualcomm is making an unusually loud play for the data center. The company says Meta is the first named customer for its Dragonfly C1000 data-center CPU, slated for 2028. That’s far off, but the commitment matters because hyperscalers don’t put their name on a roadmap lightly. Qualcomm is also buying AI software firm Modular in a stock deal valued around $3.9 billion. Modular’s pitch is portability—helping developers run models across different chips without rewriting everything. If that vision holds, it challenges the idea that one vendor’s software ecosystem gets to be the default gravity well for AI. The caveat is simple: most proof points are still in the future. Between now and 2028, execution—and real-world performance—will decide whether this is a serious platform shift or just ambition with good branding. Agents, prompts, and real software On the far horizon of chip progress, IBM says it has a prototype approach that could push below the one-nanometre mark—claiming an effective process size of about 0.7 nanometres. IBM’s message is that traditional shrinking is getting brutally hard, so the next era may rely on stacking and more three-dimensional structures rather than just flattening transistors further. Even if this is years away from production, it speaks to a bigger constraint the whole industry feels: compute demand is rising faster than easy efficiency gains. And that’s why power, cooling, and data-center buildouts have become board-level problems. AI coding workflows with pull requests Let’s talk about how people are actually trying to use AI in software—because the best takes this week had a common theme: stop confusing language with logic. One essay argues the real breakthrough of systems like ChatGPT isn’t “conversational” software—it’s software that can accept natural-language instructions and turn them into predictable actions. The phrase to remember is “language-native software”: language becomes the main interface, while chat is what you use to resolve ambiguity. Crucially, the author draws a hard boundary between probabilistic understanding—figuring out what you meant—and deterministic execution—doing the thing in a way you can audit and trust. That distinction is becoming a design principle for modern apps, especially in regulated environments where ‘the model said so’ is not an acceptable explanation. Energy buildout for AI demand A separate critique is even more direct: many companies are effectively “programming in Markdown”—stuffing simple business rules into long prompts and then acting surprised when the result is slower, pricier, and easier to exploit. The point isn’t that LLMs are useless; it’s that they’re the wrong tool for crisp policy logic. If your process is basically “if these conditions are true, do this,” traditional code is still the safest and cheapest way to run it. Use AI where the work is inherently fuzzy—like interpreting messy language, summarizing, or classifying—not where you need strict guarantees. Europe weighs under-16 social media limits And if you do want agents in the loop, one practical pattern keeps winning: make them produce reviewable artifacts. Instead of a chatbot that spits out paragraphs you have to copy and verify, the argument is that agents should generate things like GitHub pull requests. That moves the output into a workflow built for scrutiny—diffs, automated tests, approvals, and the ability to reject by default. Paired with guarded permissions—bot branches, scoped tokens, and “never merge automatically”—it’s a simple way to keep agents useful without giving them the keys to the kingdom. Global rules for autonomous driving Now, the energy side of the AI boom: the U.S. government is putting serious weight behind new nuclear—and companies are pitching ways to squeeze more out of the grid faster. The U.S. Energy Department says it will provide $17.5 billion in loans to accelerate projects that could build ten large nuclear reactor units, using Westinghouse’s AP1000 design. Sites aren’t final, but the intent is clear: bring construction forward, reduce financing friction, and meet the growing appetite for reliable, low-emissions electricity. And in a very different approach, Sunrun, Tesla, and Renew Home announced a plan to aggregate home batteries and smart devices into a virtual power plant they claim could scale dramatically over time. The near-term focus is Virginia’s data-center corridor, where they say meaningful capacity is available quickly—if customers enroll and regulators cooperate. Put these together and you get a pragmatic picture: some solutions are decade-scale infrastructure, others are faster “capacity now” tactics. Data centers are forcing both. Health bets: universal vaccines and antivirals Over in Europe, leaders say the European Commission is preparing proposals that could restrict social media access for children under 16. The important angle here is the shift from national experiments to a possible EU-wide approach. If Europe moves as a bloc, platforms may face a more uniform set of rules on age verification and youth protections—harder to route around, but also harder to implement without raising privacy and enforcement questions. The details will matter, but the direction is becoming unmistakable. Amazon seller bribery and data leaks On transportation policy, the UN’s vehicle standards body—UNECE—approved what it calls the first global regulations for fully autonomous driving systems. This is less about letting robotaxis roam tomorrow and more about reducing regulatory chaos. A shared framework for testing, lifecycle safety management, and post-deployment monitoring could make it easier for companies to ship across markets—while also making it easier for regulators to demand evidence and accountability when things go wrong. China’s EV export surge Two health-related stories also stood out—both driven by the idea of getting ahead of respiratory viruses rather than reacting late. A new $500 million fund called Intercept launched with the goal of reducing common respiratory infections like colds and flu, backed by a mix of donors including some tech names. The ambition is to push a couple of candidates through early clinical trials and then hand off to pharma for the expensive final stages. Separately, researchers at Cambridge say AI-assisted vaccine design could help create broader “universal” vaccines that protect against entire virus families. They reported early human trial results for a universal Sarbeco coronavirus candidate with no significant safety concerns in a small group, with larger studies next. If this approach scales, it could shorten the time between “new outbreak” and “meaningful protection”—which is exactly where the world has been slow in the past. Hubble spots reionization-era escape A quick, darker note on marketplace security: an Amazon seller says a middleman offered to bribe an Amazon employee to unfreeze funds after an account suspension, and appeared to have access to internal-looking account details. Amazon says the implicated employee had already been fired for unrelated misconduct and that cases like this are rare. Still, the broader pattern is worth watching: when support is hard to reach and enforcement is opaque, underground “fixer” markets pop up—eroding trust for legitimate sellers and creating incentives for insider abuse. Story 13 Internationally, China’s electric vehicle exports reportedly rose sharply in May to a new record, with the jump being linked to higher oil prices and supply disruptions tied to the Iran conflict. It’s another reminder that geopolitics can accelerate electrification in unpredictable ways. When oil feels fragile, EVs—and broader electricity tech—look like a stability play, not just a climate play. At the same time, China’s solar export slump after policy changes shows how quickly trade flows can pivot when incentives change. Story 14 Finally, a story from the deep universe that still connects back to modern science: astronomers using Hubble detected escaping ionising ultraviolet light from an early galaxy called MXDFz4.4, seen just 1.4 billion years after the Big Bang. Why it matters is simple: it’s direct evidence for a mechanism that may have cleared the Universe’s early ‘hydrogen fog’ during the era of reionisation. In plain terms, tightly packed bursts of star formation can punch holes through surrounding gas, letting high-energy light escape and change the state of the cosmos. This result is backed up with data from Webb and other instruments, strengthening the case that small, intense galaxies played an outsized role in making the Universe transparent. 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Episode Agentic ransomware reaches real world & Australia and UN push AI guardrails - Tech News (Jul 7, 2026) Cover

Agentic ransomware reaches real world & Australia and UN push AI guardrails - Tech News (Jul 7, 2026)

Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - SurveyMonkey, Using AI to surface insights faster and reduce manual analysis time - https://get.surveymonkey.com/tad [https://get.surveymonkey.com/tad] - Invest Like the Pros with StockMVP - https://www.stock-mvp.com/?via=ron [https://www.stock-mvp.com/?via=ron] - Effortless AI design for presentations, websites, and more with Gamma - https://try.gamma.app/tad [https://try.gamma.app/tad] Support The Automated Daily directly: Buy me a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily [https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily] TODAY'S TOPICS: AGENTIC RANSOMWARE REACHES REAL WORLD - SECURITY FIRM SYSDIG SAYS JADEPUFFER BECAME THE FIRST FULLY AGENTIC RANSOMWARE CASE, WITH AI PLANNING, ADAPTING, AND EXECUTING AN ATTACK AFTER EXPLOITING EXPOSED INFRASTRUCTURE. KEYWORDS: AGENTIC RANSOMWARE, JADEPUFFER, AI CYBERSECURITY, LANGFLOW, AUTONOMOUS ATTACK. AUSTRALIA AND UN PUSH AI GUARDRAILS - AUSTRALIA IS TESTING FRONTIER AI MODELS THROUGH ITS AI SAFETY INSTITUTE, WHILE A MAJOR UN SUMMIT IN GENEVA IS PUSHING FOR GLOBAL AI GOVERNANCE BEFORE RISKS OUTRUN REGULATION. KEYWORDS: AI SAFETY, AUSTRALIA, UN SUMMIT, AI REGULATION, FRONTIER MODELS. AI CODING CHANGES SOFTWARE ECONOMICS - A NEW AI-ASSISTED SOFTWARE WORKFLOW IS RESHAPING THE ENGINEER ROLE, WHILE ANALYSTS WARN THAT COMPARING MODELS BY TOKEN PRICE CAN HIDE TRUE COSTS. KEYWORDS: AI CODING, SOFTWARE ENGINEER, COST PER TASK, TOKEN PRICING, AI PRODUCTIVITY. NVIDIA AND MINERALS TEST SUPPLY CHAINS - REPORTS OF A POSSIBLE NVIDIA KYBER SYSTEM DELAY AND FRESH CHINESE MINERAL EXPORT PRESSURE ON JAPAN BOTH HIGHLIGHT THE PHYSICAL BOTTLENECKS BEHIND THE AI BOOM. KEYWORDS: NVIDIA, KYBER NVL144, RARE EARTHS, JAPAN, SUPPLY CHAIN. ROBOTICS RACE CENTERS ON MANUFACTURING - A CHINATALK INTERVIEW ARGUES ROBOTICS IS BECOMING A GENERAL-PURPOSE TECHNOLOGY, WITH CHINESE FIRMS GAINING FROM DENSE SUPPLY NETWORKS AND FAST HARDWARE ITERATION. KEYWORDS: ROBOTICS, UNITREE, MANUFACTURING, HUMANOIDS, INDUSTRIAL POLICY. YOUTH APP RULES FACE LEGAL FIGHTS - TEXAS CAN KEEP ENFORCING APP-STORE AGE CHECKS FOR NOW, WHILE FRANCE FACES EU RESISTANCE OVER ITS PLAN TO RESTRICT SOCIAL MEDIA FOR CHILDREN UNDER 15. KEYWORDS: APP STORES, AGE VERIFICATION, TEXAS, FRANCE, DIGITAL SERVICES ACT. EUCLID FINDS RECORD ANCIENT QUASARS - THE EUCLID TELESCOPE DISCOVERED 31 QUASARS, INCLUDING THE TWO OLDEST YET SEEN, OFFERING A NEW LOOK AT THE UNIVERSE JUST 670 MILLION YEARS AFTER THE BIG BANG. KEYWORDS: EUCLID, QUASARS, EARLY UNIVERSE, REIONIZATION, BLACK HOLES. FUSION FUNDING SURGES IN EUROPE - PROXIMA FUSION RAISED A MAJOR ROUND BACKED BY GOOGLE, SIGNALING STRONGER CONFIDENCE IN STELLARATOR FUSION AS A LONG-TERM SOURCE OF CLEAN, FIRM ENERGY. KEYWORDS: FUSION, PROXIMA FUSION, GOOGLE, STELLARATOR, CLEAN ENERGY. Episode Transcript Agentic ransomware reaches real world We start with cybersecurity, where the most striking story of the day comes from Sysdig. Researchers say they have documented what may be the first fully agentic ransomware attack, called JADEPUFFER. The claim is not that AI helped write malware, which is already familiar, but that the model planned steps, adjusted when something failed, and kept moving without a human steering it in real time. If that finding holds up, it marks a shift in cybercrime from AI as an assistant to AI as an operator. The bigger lesson is less exotic than it sounds: exposed admin tools, weak defaults, and unpatched systems are still what open the door. Australia and UN push AI guardrails That story lands just as governments are trying to get more serious about AI safety. At a UN summit in Geneva, policymakers, researchers, and civil society groups argued that AI governance is lagging behind the speed of development. In Australia, the government says its AI Safety Institute is already testing frontier models and working through existing regulators instead of waiting for one giant AI law. The common theme is that safety is slowly moving from theory to practice. Regulators do not want to look anti-innovation, but they also do not want to discover dangerous behavior only after these systems are widely deployed. AI coding changes software economics In the software world, two separate debates are starting to converge. One is the idea that a new kind of ultra-productive engineer is emerging, not because one person suddenly types faster, but because skilled developers can direct fleets of AI tools to draft, reason through, and organize code. The other debate is about how companies judge those tools. A growing argument says price per token is the wrong metric because different models count text differently and can burn through hidden reasoning costs. In plain terms, the cheapest-looking model is not always the cheapest one to get real work done. Nvidia and minerals test supply chains On the infrastructure side, the AI boom is running into the hard realities of hardware. SemiAnalysis reported that Nvidia's next Kyber AI rack may be delayed by manufacturing issues tied to a key circuit board, though Nvidia says its roadmap is still on track. Whether the report proves right or not, it underlines a broader point: the most advanced AI systems still depend on very physical, very fragile production chains. That point got sharper today with data showing China has sharply reduced exports of several critical minerals to Japan. Rare earths and related materials are not glamorous, but they sit underneath everything from defense systems to advanced electronics. Software may scale instantly; supply chains do not. Robotics race centers on manufacturing That same hardware reality is central to the growing robotics race. A ChinaTalk interview made the case that robots could become the next big general-purpose technology, especially if companies can make them good enough and cheap enough for real jobs. The comparison was to DJI's rise in drones, and the company in focus was Unitree, which has moved quickly from robot dogs toward humanoid machines. The interesting part is not the science-fiction version of robotics, but the practical one: logistics, data centers, construction, and entertainment are likely to adopt robots in uneven, task-by-task waves. The geopolitical angle is just as important. China appears to have an advantage in supplier density, vertical integration, and lower-cost components, while the United States is being reminded that it cannot software its way around missing manufacturing depth. Youth app rules face legal fights Meanwhile, the fight over how to protect children online is getting more serious on both sides of the Atlantic. In the United States, the Supreme Court is letting Texas enforce a law requiring app stores to verify ages and get parental consent before minors can download most apps, at least while the case continues. In Europe, the European Commission warned that France's proposed ban on social media for children under 15 may clash with EU law. Put together, these stories show the same tension: governments want stronger protections for minors, but the legal route is messy when free speech, platform rules, and national versus federal or EU authority all collide. Euclid finds record ancient quasars In space news, the Euclid telescope has found 31 quasars, including the two oldest ever observed. That pushes direct observations back to a time when the universe was only around 670 million years old. Quasars are powered by supermassive black holes, so spotting them this early helps scientists test ideas about how the first big structures formed after the cosmic dark ages. It is also another reminder that the early universe may have built galaxies and black holes faster than many models expected. Euclid's advantage is scale: it can scan huge stretches of sky efficiently, which is turning rare-object hunting into something much more systematic. Fusion funding surges in Europe And finally, a forward-looking energy story. Proxima Fusion has raised a major funding round with backing from Google and other investors, in a sign that fusion is still attracting serious money despite the long road to commercialization. Proxima is working on a stellarator design, which is one of the more technically ambitious routes to fusion power. The headline here is not that fusion is suddenly around the corner. It is that large investors are increasingly willing to fund the manufacturing, magnets, and engineering needed to move these projects out of the lab phase. In a week full of reminders about hardware constraints, that may be the quiet theme tying everything together. 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Gestern5 min
Episode AI governance turns urgent & Forecasting bots near human parity - Tech News (Jul 6, 2026) Cover

AI governance turns urgent & Forecasting bots near human parity - Tech News (Jul 6, 2026)

Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Discover the Future of AI Audio with ElevenLabs - https://try.elevenlabs.io/tad [https://try.elevenlabs.io/tad] - Prezi: Create AI presentations fast - https://try.prezi.com/automated_daily [https://try.prezi.com/automated_daily] - KrispCall: Agentic Cloud Telephony - https://try.krispcall.com/tad [https://try.krispcall.com/tad] Support The Automated Daily directly: Buy me a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily [https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily] TODAY'S TOPICS: AI GOVERNANCE TURNS URGENT - UK WARNINGS AND A UN SUMMIT IN GENEVA PUSHED AI SAFETY, INTERNATIONAL RULES, DISINFORMATION, AND CATASTROPHIC-RISK GOVERNANCE TO THE CENTER OF GLOBAL SECURITY TALKS. KEYWORDS: AI REGULATION, GLOBAL RULES, UN SUMMIT, UK, US-CHINA COOPERATION. FORECASTING BOTS NEAR HUMAN PARITY - AI FORECASTING SYSTEMS ARE GETTING CLOSE TO TOP HUMAN SUPERFORECASTERS, WITH GROWING IMPLICATIONS FOR FINANCE, POLICY, PREDICTION MARKETS, AND EVERYDAY DECISION-MAKING. KEYWORDS: AI FORECASTING, SUPERFORECASTERS, METACULUS, PREDICTION MARKETS, DECISION SUPPORT. AGENTIC ATTACKS AND SAFER WORKFLOWS - RESEARCHERS SAY THEY HAVE SEEN THE FIRST FULLY AGENTIC RANSOMWARE ATTACK, WHILE AI BUILDERS ARE RESPONDING WITH STRONGER TESTING, COMPARTMENTALIZED CREDENTIALS, AND TIGHTER TOOL CONTROLS. KEYWORDS: AGENTIC AI, RANSOMWARE, CYBERSECURITY, TESTING, AUTONOMOUS AGENTS. NHS APP ADDS AI TRIAGE - NHS ENGLAND IS ROLLING OUT AI TRIAGE IN THE NHS APP TO STEER PATIENTS TOWARD THE RIGHT CARE, WHILE CRITICS RAISE QUESTIONS ABOUT ACCURACY, PRIVACY, AND DIGITAL EXCLUSION. KEYWORDS: NHS APP, AI TRIAGE, HEALTHCARE AI, GP ACCESS, PATIENT PRIVACY. SATELLITES, GPUS, AND CHIP CAPACITY - AMAZON'S KUIPER REACHED AN INITIAL SERVICE MILESTONE, NVIDIA EXPANDED COMPUTE ACCESS FOR STARTUPS, AND MICRON BEGAN A MAJOR CHIP EXPANSION IN JAPAN. KEYWORDS: SATELLITE INTERNET, GPU SUPPLY, NVIDIA, MICRON, AI INFRASTRUCTURE. WEB PUBLISHING AND CODING JOBS SHIFT - WORDPRESS IS LOSING SHARE IN A SHIFTING WEB LANDSCAPE, AND LABOR DATA SUGGESTS AI IS SQUEEZING JUNIOR SOFTWARE ROLES EVEN AS SOFTWARE PRODUCTION KEEPS GROWING. KEYWORDS: WORDPRESS, CMS MARKET SHARE, JUNIOR DEVELOPERS, AI JOBS, SOFTWARE INDUSTRY. MOON RACE TIGHTENS WITH CHINA - NASA SAYS THE LUNAR CONTEST WITH CHINA MAY BE DECIDED BY MONTHS, NOT YEARS, UNDERSCORING HOW SPACE INFRASTRUCTURE IS BECOMING A STRATEGIC TECHNOLOGY PRIORITY. KEYWORDS: NASA, CHINA, MOON RACE, ARTEMIS, SPACE STRATEGY. Episode Transcript AI governance turns urgent We'll start with AI governance, because the political tone is clearly changing. In the UK, Yvette Cooper warned that unchecked AI could become a "Hiroshima"-scale threat if major powers fail to agree on international guardrails. At nearly the same time, a UN summit in Geneva brought together governments, researchers, and tech leaders around the same concern: AI is advancing faster than the rules around it. The shared message is that this is no longer just a tech policy debate. It's now being treated as a foreign policy, security, and democracy issue, especially if powerful systems are misused by states, criminals, or extremists. Forecasting bots near human parity On the more practical side of AI, forecasting bots are getting surprisingly close to elite human forecasters. New analysis suggests that with the right scaffolding, AI systems may already be matching top human "superforecasters" in some finance-related questions, and the gap appears to be shrinking fast. If that holds up, forecasting could become much cheaper and far more widely used in government, business, and research. That doesn't mean predictions suddenly solve politics or uncertainty, but it does mean more institutions may start leaning on machine-generated probabilities when they make decisions. Agentic attacks and safer workflows Now to the most eye-catching security story of the day. Researchers at Sysdig say they have documented what may be the first fully agentic ransomware attack, with an AI system reportedly planning, adapting, recovering from an error, and completing the attack path without a human operator stepping in live. That's a notable shift because it suggests cybercrime can move from tool-assisted to machine-speed execution. On the defensive side, builders of internal AI agents are reaching the opposite conclusion: autonomy only works when it's tightly fenced in. One engineering team described using short-lived credentials, isolated subagents, and direct agent-to-agent testing loops to reduce risk. Add in fresh reports that some newer models still stumble on basic tool-calling formats, and the takeaway is pretty clear: agentic AI is getting stronger, but it is not dependable enough to trust casually. NHS app adds AI triage In public services, NHS England is adding AI-powered triage to the NHS App, aiming to guide patients toward the right level of care, whether that's a GP, a pharmacy, or emergency treatment. Supporters say it could reduce pressure on phone lines and make it easier to get care without the usual rush for appointments. But the usual concerns are still there, and fairly so: privacy, accuracy, and the risk of making healthcare harder to access for people who are less comfortable with digital tools. So this is one to watch not just for rollout speed, but for whether it actually improves access in real-world use. Satellites, GPUs, and chip capacity The infrastructure race behind AI also keeps accelerating. Amazon says its Project Kuiper satellite network now has enough spacecraft in orbit to begin initial commercial internet service later this year, an important step toward competing with Starlink, even if coverage will start in a limited way. Nvidia, meanwhile, is moving beyond selling chips and further into brokering access to compute by linking startups with cloud partners that can supply GPU capacity. And in Japan, Micron has begun expansion work in Hiroshima Prefecture to prepare for more advanced memory-chip production aimed at AI demand. Different stories, same theme: the next phase of the AI economy depends on who can secure bandwidth, data-center power, and chip supply. Web publishing and coding jobs shift There are also signs that AI is reshaping how the web is built and who gets hired to build it. WordPress's measured market share has slipped, but the bigger point isn't a simple handoff to one rival platform. Some datasets suggest more sites are ending up in the category of having no obvious content management system at all, which fits with a web increasingly built through lighter tools, custom stacks, and AI-assisted workflows. At the same time, labor data points to a drop in junior software roles even as overall software output appears to keep rising. In plain English, more software is getting made, but the classic entry-level path into development is looking less secure. Moon race tightens with China And finally, in space, NASA says the moon race with China is real and uncomfortably close. Administrator Jared Isaacman said the difference between the two programs may come down to months rather than years, with the U.S. targeting a crewed lunar landing in 2028. The bigger significance is that the moon is no longer being framed as a prestige project alone. It's being treated as strategic infrastructure, a long-term foothold for science, national influence, and eventually Mars missions. 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6. Juli 20265 min
Episode AI deepfakes targeting children & Micron expands Japan memory fabs - Tech News (Jul 5, 2026) Cover

AI deepfakes targeting children & Micron expands Japan memory fabs - Tech News (Jul 5, 2026)

Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Discover the Future of AI Audio with ElevenLabs - https://try.elevenlabs.io/tad [https://try.elevenlabs.io/tad] - Prezi: Create AI presentations fast - https://try.prezi.com/automated_daily [https://try.prezi.com/automated_daily] - Consensus: AI for Research. Get a free month - https://get.consensus.app/automated_daily [https://get.consensus.app/automated_daily] Support The Automated Daily directly: Buy me a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily [https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily] TODAY'S TOPICS: AI DEEPFAKES TARGETING CHILDREN - UK CHILD-SAFETY AGENCIES WARN AI “NUDIFICATION” AND DEEPFAKE TOOLS ARE ENABLING SYNTHETIC CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE MATERIAL (CSAM), COMPLICATING DETECTION AND POLICING. MICRON EXPANDS JAPAN MEMORY FABS - MICRON BROKE GROUND ON A HIROSHIMA EXPANSION TO MAKE HIGH-BANDWIDTH MEMORY (HBM) FOR AI ACCELERATORS, BACKED BY MAJOR JAPANESE GOVERNMENT SUBSIDIES AND INDUSTRIAL POLICY GOALS. INDIA STARTS SHIPPING PACKAGED CHIPS - CG POWER’S SANAND OSAT SITE SHIPPED ITS FIRST PACKAGED SEMICONDUCTOR CHIPS TO RENESAS, SIGNALLING INDIA’S GROWING ROLE IN PACKAGING AND TESTING WITHIN GLOBAL SUPPLY CHAINS. NHS APP ADDS AI TRIAGE - NHS ENGLAND IS ROLLING OUT AI-DRIVEN SYMPTOM TRIAGE INSIDE THE NHS APP TO ROUTE PATIENTS TO GPS, PHARMACIES, OR A&E, RAISING BOTH ACCESS AND DATA-PRIVACY QUESTIONS. EUROPE FACES COVERT DRONE SURVEILLANCE - AN IISS REPORT LINKS SUSPICIOUS DRONE FLIGHTS OVER EUROPEAN BASES AND INFRASTRUCTURE TO RUSSIA’S ‘SHADOW FLEET,’ FRAMING THEM AS PROBES OF NATO RESPONSE PROCEDURES. GCAP FIGHTER JET MOVES AHEAD - THE UK, ITALY, AND JAPAN AWARDED A MAJOR GCAP CONTRACT TO EDGEWING, PUSHING THE SIXTH-GENERATION FIGHTER PROGRAMME FORWARD AS EUROPE’S DEFENCE PARTNERSHIPS SHIFT. Episode Transcript AI deepfakes targeting children Let’s start with semiconductors—and specifically the kind of memory that’s becoming a bottleneck for AI. Micron has broken ground on a major expansion of its Hiroshima site in western Japan, a project valued in the trillions of yen. The goal is to ramp up production of high-bandwidth memory, or HBM—one of the critical components used alongside AI accelerator chips in modern data centers. Micron says the new output should start shipping around the summer of 2028. What makes this more than a routine factory upgrade is the policy backdrop. Japan’s government is preparing to subsidize a large chunk of the build, and it has already committed substantial support for Micron through earlier funding and R&D incentives. For Japan, this is part of a broader push to rebuild strategic chip capacity and reduce supply-chain risk, leaning on its strengths in materials and equipment while trying to regain influence in advanced semiconductors. Micron expands Japan memory fabs Staying with chips, there’s also movement on the packaging side of the industry. CG Power and Industrial Solutions says it has dispatched its first semiconductor chips from its Sanand facility in Gujarat, with the initial shipment going to Japan’s Renesas. The key point here is that this isn’t about announcing a future plant—it’s about product leaving the line and entering an international supply chain. Packaging and testing—often called OSAT—doesn’t grab headlines like cutting-edge wafer fabs, but it’s essential. It’s where chips get prepared for real-world use, and it can be a stepping stone toward a broader domestic semiconductor ecosystem. The company is also talking about scaling up dramatically and chasing higher reliability qualifications, which matter if you want to supply industries like automotive where failure isn’t an option. India starts shipping packaged chips Now to a difficult, but important, AI story—one that’s forcing parents, platforms, and police to rethink basic online safety. Child-safety bodies in the UK are warning that AI “nudification” tools are being used to turn everyday photos of children into realistic sexual abuse images—and even explicit videos. The disturbing part is how indirect this can be: teenagers can become victims simply because a selfie or family photo was copied from a public account and manipulated, with no interaction between predator and child. The Internet Watch Foundation says it is seeing a rise in AI-generated child sexual abuse material, and experts warn that the technology is blurring the line between real and synthetic content in ways that make investigations harder. Law enforcement typically needs to identify victims who may be in immediate danger, and AI fakes can clog those channels while still causing real harm. The UK government says AI-generated CSAM is already illegal, but safety groups are pushing for stronger “safe by design” rules so these tools are harder to build, deploy, or misuse. NHS App adds AI triage Next, AI in healthcare—this time in a more constructive direction, but not without controversy. NHS England is adding an AI-powered triage feature to the NHS App. The idea is to guide people who are seeking help toward the most appropriate service—whether that’s self-care advice, a pharmacist, a GP appointment, or urgent care—based on symptoms and severity. The early rollout is limited, with a larger expansion planned over the next couple of years. Politically, this is tied to promises to reduce the early-morning rush for GP appointments and to take pressure off phone lines. A cited trial reported fewer people queueing to get through. But health leaders are also flagging the usual risks: whether the tool is consistently accurate, how patient data is handled, and what happens to people who struggle with digital services. In other words, it could improve access—or quietly widen gaps—depending on how it’s rolled out and monitored. Europe faces covert drone surveillance Shifting to security in Europe, there’s a new report suggesting an unsettling pattern behind recent drone incidents. The International Institute for Strategic Studies says Russia likely ran coordinated surveillance campaigns by launching drones from civilian ships linked to its so-called “shadow fleet.” The report reviews well over a hundred drone-related incidents across more than a dozen European countries, with many flights reported near military bases, airports, ports, and energy sites. Some of these sightings have even triggered temporary airport closures. The argument is that this isn’t random mischief—it may be a deliberate strategy to provoke NATO countries into showing how they respond: what gets detected, how fast authorities react, and what defensive coverage looks like. If that’s correct, it’s less about any single drone and more about mapping procedures, weak spots, and logistics routes. The report calls for tighter coordination across navies, coast guards, intelligence services, and air defenses—because low-flying drones and maritime cover can be a nasty combination. GCAP fighter jet moves ahead And finally, a big defence-industrial headline with major implications for technology, jobs, and alliances. Britain, Italy, and Japan have awarded a multibillion-pound contract to a new joint venture called Edgewing to move the Global Combat Air Programme—GCAP—into its next development phase. The UK also confirmed a significant multi-year funding commitment after months of delays tied to budget pressure. GCAP aims to deliver a sixth-generation stealth fighter by the mid-2030s, led by BAE Systems, Leonardo, and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries. This matters partly because it signals momentum in a period when other European fighter efforts have struggled—reshaping who partners with whom, and potentially who buys what in the next decade. Officials also hint that more countries could join to spread the enormous cost, which could turn GCAP into a wider club and a long-term industrial pipeline for advanced avionics, sensors, and manufacturing. Subscribe to edition specific feeds: - Space news * Apple Podcast English [https://apple.co/4cLLrdt] * Spotify English [https://spoti.fi/4jN8Dui] * RSS English [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_space] Spanish [https://theautomateddaily.com/space_es/feed.xml] French [https://theautomateddaily.com/space_fr/feed.xml] - Top news * Apple Podcast English [https://apple.co/3PTvdUF] Spanish [https://apple.co/3ECCMgk] French [https://apple.co/4hmcxbB] * Spotify English [https://spoti.fi/3ZYXAW2] Spanish [https://spoti.fi/414h4JD] French [https://spoti.fi/3Di0jDe] * RSS English [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_news] Spanish [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_news_es] French [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_news_fr] - Tech news * Apple Podcast English [https://apple.co/3RYWbg4] Spanish [https://apple.co/4i0WqRM] French [https://apple.co/4bEAXMm] * Spotify English [https://spoti.fi/3S089pG] Spanish [https://spoti.fi/3EE2Fwv] Spanish [https://spoti.fi/3DlObRE] * RSS English [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_tech] Spanish [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_tech_es] French [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_tech_fr] - Hacker news * Apple Podcast English [https://apple.co/48QWyzj] Spanish [https://apple.co/4ke9jtE] French [https://apple.co/41E1qFd] * Spotify English [https://spoti.fi/45zD1kf] Spanish [https://spoti.fi/4hF8h81] French [https://spoti.fi/3QY26Ak] * RSS English [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hacker_news] Spanish [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hacker_news_es] French [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hacker_news_fr] - AI news * Apple Podcast English [https://apple.co/3M6Tg1o] Spanish [https://apple.co/4315L7Y] French [https://apple.co/3DkZbPb] * Spotify English [https://spoti.fi/3tzOfrz] Spanish [https://spoti.fi/416m40q] French [https://spoti.fi/41HuJGW] * RSS English [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hackernews_ai] Spanish [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hackernews_es_ai] French [https://bit.ly/the_automated_daily_hackernews_fr_ai] Visit our website at https://theautomateddaily.com/ [ https://theautomateddaily.com/] Send feedback to feedback@theautomateddaily.com Youtube [https://www.youtube.com/@TheAutomatedDaily] LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/the-automated-daily/] X (Twitter) [https://x.com/automated_daily]

5. Juli 20267 min
Episode Governments seek stakes in AI & US export controls on AI - Tech News (Jul 4, 2026) Cover

Governments seek stakes in AI & US export controls on AI - Tech News (Jul 4, 2026)

Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Lindy is your ultimate AI assistant that proactively manages your inbox - https://try.lindy.ai/tad [https://try.lindy.ai/tad] - Invest Like the Pros with StockMVP - https://www.stock-mvp.com/?via=ron [https://www.stock-mvp.com/?via=ron] - Consensus: AI for Research. Get a free month - https://get.consensus.app/automated_daily [https://get.consensus.app/automated_daily] Support The Automated Daily directly: Buy me a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily [https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily] TODAY'S TOPICS: GOVERNMENTS SEEK STAKES IN AI - THE US AND INDIA ARE WEIGHING MINORITY OWNERSHIP IN FRONTIER AI LABS, HINTING AT A NEW GOVERNANCE MODEL WHERE THE STATE GAINS INFLUENCE, INFORMATION RIGHTS, AND A SHARE OF AI UPSIDE. US EXPORT CONTROLS ON AI - US RESTRICTIONS BRIEFLY FORCED ANTHROPIC TO DISABLE FRONTIER MODELS BEFORE A RAPID ROLLBACK, SPOTLIGHTING UNPREDICTABLE AI RELEASE RULES AND RENEWED CALLS FOR CLEARER CYBERSECURITY STANDARDS. CHINA’S GLM MODEL PRESSURE - BEIJING STARTUP Z.AI’S GLM-5.2 IS DRAWING ATTENTION FOR STRONG CODING AND AGENT-LIKE PERFORMANCE AT LOWER COST, INTENSIFYING GLOBAL COMPETITION AND PUTTING DOWNWARD PRESSURE ON AI PRICING. MICRON AND INFINEON FAB EXPANSIONS - MICRON IS EXPANDING MEMORY PRODUCTION IN JAPAN WHILE INFINEON OPENS A MAJOR POWER-CHIP FAB IN DRESDEN, UNDERSCORING HOW AI DEMAND IS RESHAPING INDUSTRIAL POLICY AND CHIP SUPPLY CHAINS. NASA FUNDS NEW LUNAR LANDERS - NASA IS FUNDING MULTIPLE COMMERCIAL LUNAR LANDER DELIVERIES THROUGH 2028 TO DEPLOY REPEATABLE INSTRUMENTS ACROSS SITES, IMPROVING SAFETY DATA AND ACCELERATING MOON BASE PLANNING. TRI-NATION SIXTH-GEN FIGHTER PUSH - THE UK, ITALY, AND JAPAN ADVANCED THE GCAP SIXTH-GENERATION FIGHTER PROGRAM WITH A MAJOR CONTRACT AND NEW FUNDING, POTENTIALLY RESHAPING DEFENSE PARTNERSHIPS AND FUTURE EXPORTS. ENTERPRISE AI SHIFTS TO SERVICES - MICROSOFT’S NEW FRONTIER COMPANY REFLECTS A BROADER MARKET SHIFT TOWARD HANDS-ON AI IMPLEMENTATION SERVICES AS ENTERPRISES STRUGGLE TO TURN MODELS INTO MEASURABLE WORKFLOW RESULTS. Episode Transcript Governments seek stakes in AI AI is starting to look less like a normal software market, and more like something governments want to partially “own” the way they think about energy grids or telecom networks. Reports say U.S. officials and OpenAI have at least discussed the idea of a small government stake, while India has explored a similar minority position in a domestic AI company tied to state-backed compute support. None of this is finalized, but the public conversation itself is the signal: policymakers are looking for ongoing leverage, not just rules on paper. Ownership can mean closer visibility into decisions, stronger alignment with national-security priorities, and—politically speaking—a way to argue the public shares in the upside if AI reshapes jobs and concentrates power. US export controls on AI That push for influence is happening while the U.S. is still figuring out how to control access to the most capable models—and doing it in ways that can feel abrupt. Anthropic had to disable two frontier models after new export controls landed, only for those restrictions to be rolled back shortly afterward. The immediate pressure is off, but the episode left a mark: it reinforced the perception that access to U.S. models can change quickly, with limited transparency. For companies and governments abroad, that unpredictability is a practical risk, especially if AI tools are being used in critical operations like security research. The result is more interest—particularly in Europe—in sovereign or open alternatives, even though that brings its own complications around safety and misuse. China’s GLM model pressure Meanwhile, competition in AI isn’t just U.S. labs trading punches. A Beijing-based startup called Z.ai has launched a large language model, GLM-5.2, that’s getting talked about outside China for surprisingly strong performance at a much lower cost. What’s catching attention is its ability to handle coding work and carry out multi-step tasks with less hand-holding—exactly the capabilities companies want when they’re trying to automate real workflows. After last year’s shockwave from DeepSeek, this is another reminder that Chinese AI teams are iterating fast and narrowing gaps that many assumed would hold. If models like this keep improving, the global impact is straightforward: more price pressure, more choice for developers, and faster adoption by organizations that couldn’t justify premium model bills. Micron and Infineon fab expansions All of this AI momentum is ultimately constrained by hardware, and today’s chip news reads like a map of national strategy. Micron has broken ground on a major expansion at its Hiroshima site in western Japan, aimed at advanced memory production—especially high-bandwidth memory, a crucial ingredient for AI accelerators. Shipments are expected around 2028, and Japan is backing the build with large subsidies as it tries to rebuild semiconductor capacity for economic and security reasons. This is also a story about supply chains: Micron’s Hiroshima footprint traces back to its Elpida acquisition, and the company says much of the site’s materials are already sourced inside Japan, which matters when countries are trying to reduce exposure to overseas choke points. NASA funds new lunar landers In Europe, Infineon has opened a new major semiconductor plant in Dresden, positioning it as part of the EU’s push for “tech sovereignty.” This facility is focused on power-management chips—the less glamorous silicon that quietly determines how efficiently electric vehicles, renewable-energy systems, and data centers actually run. With AI data centers consuming more power and expanding rapidly, these components become strategically important in a different way than cutting-edge AI GPUs, but no less essential. The broader theme is scale: governments are helping fund big fabs because once production ramps, per-chip costs can fall sharply—making the region more competitive and less dependent on external suppliers. Tri-nation sixth-gen fighter push NASA also made a move designed to speed up learning through repetition. The agency awarded close to six hundred million dollars to three commercial companies for four lunar lander deliveries by late 2028. The idea is to send the same core set of instruments to multiple lunar locations, more like deploying a network of “weather stations” than running one-off stunts. By comparing similar measurements across sites—things like surface hazards, dust kicked up during landing, and radiation exposure—NASA says it can plan safer human activity and build confidence for sustained operations. This is the practical side of the Moon push: boring on purpose, because repeatable data is what turns exploration into infrastructure. Enterprise AI shifts to services On the defense and aerospace front, Britain, Italy, and Japan have awarded a multibillion-pound contract to a new joint venture, Edgewing, pushing the Global Combat Air Programme into its next development phase. The UK also confirmed a major multi-year funding commitment after delays tied to budget pressure. The goal is a sixth-generation stealth fighter by the mid-2030s, and the timing is notable: a rival Franco-German effort recently stumbled, which could reshape how Europe organizes its next wave of defense projects. There’s also the geopolitics of participation—other countries have shown interest in joining, largely because spreading the cost is appealing, and because these programs often define alliances and industrial capabilities for decades. Story 8 Finally, a quick note on the enterprise AI reality check: Microsoft has unveiled a new operating business called the Frontier Company, built around embedding teams to help large organizations adopt AI across workflows. The headline isn’t the branding—it’s the admission baked into the strategy: many companies aren’t struggling to buy AI tools; they’re struggling to make them deliver measurable results in messy, real environments. Expect more of this “hands-on implementation” model across the industry, whether it’s from cloud giants, AI labs, or consulting firms. The battleground is shifting from who has the smartest model to who can reliably turn AI into outcomes that survive audits, security reviews, and day-to-day operations. 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4. Juli 20267 min
Episode Synthetic cells inch toward life & Global AI rules tighten quickly - Tech News (Jul 3, 2026) Cover

Synthetic cells inch toward life & Global AI rules tighten quickly - Tech News (Jul 3, 2026)

Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Effortless AI design for presentations, websites, and more with Gamma - https://try.gamma.app/tad [https://try.gamma.app/tad] - Lindy is your ultimate AI assistant that proactively manages your inbox - https://try.lindy.ai/tad [https://try.lindy.ai/tad] - Prezi: Create AI presentations fast - https://try.prezi.com/automated_daily [https://try.prezi.com/automated_daily] Support The Automated Daily directly: Buy me a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily [https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily] TODAY'S TOPICS: SYNTHETIC CELLS INCH TOWARD LIFE - UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA RESEARCHERS DEBUTED “SPUDCELLS,” LIPOSOME-BASED SYNTHETIC CELLS THAT GROW, COPY DNA, AND DIVIDE—HINTING AT MINIMAL LIFE-LIKE CYCLES AND SYNTHETIC BIOLOGY BREAKTHROUGHS. GLOBAL AI RULES TIGHTEN QUICKLY - A UN AI PANEL AND THE US GOVERNMENT BOTH WARNED THE WINDOW FOR EFFECTIVE AI GOVERNANCE IS CLOSING, PUSHING STANDARDS FOR FRONTIER MODEL RELEASES, SAFETY EVALUATIONS, AND MISUSE PREVENTION. BIG TECH STRUGGLES WITH AGENTS - META’S LEADERSHIP SAYS AI AGENTS AREN’T IMPROVING AS FAST AS HOPED, WHILE THE COMPANY ALSO EXPLORES SELLING AI COMPUTE—HIGHLIGHTING HOW HARD IT IS TO TURN AGENTS INTO RELIABLE PRODUCTIVITY GAINS. AI COSTS SPARK MODEL ROUTING - COMPANIES ARE CAPPING AI TOOL SPEND AND ADOPTING “INTELLIGENT MODEL ROUTING” TO REDUCE TOKEN COSTS, BALANCING QUALITY, LATENCY, AND AVAILABILITY ACROSS MULTIPLE LLM PROVIDERS. CHINA’S NEW LOW-COST LLM - BEIJING STARTUP Z.AI’S GLM-5.2 IS GAINING ATTENTION FOR STRONG CODING AND AGENT PERFORMANCE AT LOW COST, FUELING GLOBAL COMPETITION AND PRESSURING PREMIUM PRICING. CHIP SOVEREIGNTY AND CUSTOM SILICON - ANTHROPIC’S REPORTED TALKS WITH SAMSUNG ON A CUSTOM AI CHIP, PLUS AN EU REPORT ON SEMICONDUCTOR DEPENDENCIES, UNDERLINE A SCRAMBLE FOR SUPPLY-CHAIN RESILIENCE BEYOND NVIDIA. MOON CARGO CADENCE AND SUPERSONIC SHIFT - NASA FUNDED MORE COMMERCIAL LUNAR LANDER DELIVERIES TO GATHER REPEATABLE SURFACE DATA, WHILE THE FAA MOVED TOWARD NOISE-BASED RULES THAT COULD REOPEN OVERLAND SUPERSONIC FLIGHT IN THE US. NEW CAR-T ANGLE FOR GLIOBLASTOMA - A NATURE STUDY SUGGESTS TARGETING BOTH GLIOBLASTOMA CELLS AND TUMOR-SUPPORTING IMMUNE CELLS VIA GPNMB-FOCUSED CAR-T COULD IMPROVE DURABILITY, THOUGH SAFE BRAIN DELIVERY REMAINS A HURDLE. HUMAN CONTROL IN AI CREATIVITY - FROM DESIGN “SKILL ENGINEERING” TO SECURE SLACK AGENTS AND BETTER CODE EXPLANATIONS, THE THEME IS KEEPING HUMANS IN CHARGE—USING AI TO REACH A STRONG FIRST DRAFT WITHOUT SURRENDERING TASTE AND CONTEXT. Episode Transcript Synthetic cells inch toward life Let’s start in the lab, because this one is genuinely wild. Researchers at the University of Minnesota say they’ve built tiny synthetic “cells” from non-living chemicals that can grow, replicate lab-made DNA, and divide—showing a full, cell-like cycle without modifying an existing organism. They call them SpudCells. This is still early work and it’s out as a preprint, so it hasn’t gone through peer review yet. And the team is clear about the limitations: these systems depend heavily on their environment, don’t manage waste well, and tend to fall apart after a few generations. But the bigger point is why it matters: if you can assemble life-like behaviors from defined parts, you can test what’s truly essential for biology—and potentially build purpose-made mini-factories for medicine, materials, or food ingredients one day. Global AI rules tighten quickly On AI governance, the tone is getting sharper. A new preliminary report from the UN’s independent scientific panel on AI warns that the opportunity to put effective global rules in place is narrowing fast—especially as more autonomous, “agentic” systems spread. The report flags familiar but intensifying risks: explicit deepfakes, the creation of sexual abuse material, more persuasive disinformation, and rising AI-enabled fraud and cybercrime. It also highlights less-discussed pressure points, like mental health risks for vulnerable users and the growing energy footprint of data centers. And it calls out a geopolitical imbalance: advanced AI capacity remains concentrated, particularly in the US and China, leaving many developing countries adopting systems they can’t easily audit or govern. That timing is not accidental. The panel’s work feeds into a UN Global Dialogue on AI Governance in Geneva starting July 6th. Big Tech struggles with agents Meanwhile in Washington, the US government is reportedly close to announcing voluntary standards with major AI companies for how powerful new models get released. The idea is to set shared expectations around testing and access—especially when national-security risks are on the table. It’s still voluntary, but it’s a signal: even without a single sweeping law, governments are trying to shape the release process for frontier models, pushing for guardrails before the next jump in capability becomes a public incident. And if the US sets de facto norms through big providers, that can ripple globally—whether other countries like it or not. AI costs spark model routing Now, to the reality check at Big Tech scale. Mark Zuckerberg reportedly told Meta employees that the company’s AI agents are not progressing as quickly as leadership expected. That’s notable because Meta has already reorganized aggressively around AI, with major layoffs and reshuffling to staff agent-focused teams. In the same breath, Bloomberg reports Meta is exploring a cloud infrastructure business—selling hosted models and/or raw AI compute to external customers. Put those together and you get the picture: Meta is spending heavily on AI infrastructure, but the market wants clearer monetization, and agents alone aren’t delivering fast, dependable wins yet. Turning internal compute into a sellable service could help, but it also pulls Meta into a very crowded arena dominated by AWS, Azure, and Google—and it requires enterprise sales muscle Meta hasn’t historically been known for. China’s new low-cost LLM Microsoft, for its part, is leaning into the “we’ll help you actually deploy this” trend. It announced the Microsoft Frontier Company, a major push to embed Microsoft engineers and AI specialists inside customer organizations to design, deploy, and keep improving AI systems tied to measurable outcomes. The subtext here is simple: many businesses can get a demo working. Far fewer can make AI reliable, secure, and worth the money in day-to-day operations. So vendors are increasingly competing on hands-on implementation, not just model quality. Microsoft is also emphasizing customer choice among models and privacy assurances about not using customer data to train models for others—both of which are becoming major buying criteria, not nice-to-haves. Chip sovereignty and custom silicon Speaking of money: the AI token bill is becoming the new cloud bill—easy to start, hard to control. Tesla is reportedly introducing a weekly spending cap for employee use of AI tools, after internal leaderboards and encouragement led some engineers to rack up huge usage charges. What makes this more than a generic cost-control story is the carve-out: the cap reportedly doesn’t apply to beta versions of xAI products, nudging heavy internal users toward Elon Musk’s separate AI company. That raises a governance question—are employees being steered to a tool because it’s best, or because it’s strategically convenient? And Tesla isn’t alone. Across the industry, companies are moving from “use AI everywhere” to “use AI, but with guardrails.” Moon cargo cadence and supersonic shift One of the fastest-growing guardrails is something called model routing: automatically sending each AI request to the cheapest model that can do the job well enough. The Pragmatic Engineer reports this is becoming a real priority as enterprises see big cost gaps between premium models and more affordable options. The interesting shift is cultural as much as technical. Teams are starting to treat model choice like any other operational decision—balancing quality, speed, and price—and they’re building systems that can adapt as models change week to week. If you’ve ever watched cloud cost-optimization become a discipline, this is that same movie, now playing in AI. New CAR-T angle for glioblastoma On the global model race, there’s a new name popping up in Silicon Valley conversations: Z.ai, a Beijing-based startup, and its model GLM-5.2. It’s drawing attention for strong coding performance and agent-style capabilities at a comparatively low cost. This matters for two reasons. First, it puts pressure on the premium end of the market—because if “good enough” gets much cheaper, spending patterns change quickly. Second, it’s another sign that Chinese AI labs are closing gaps in areas where US leaders have been dominant, even as geopolitical restrictions complicate chips, data, and market access. Human control in AI creativity That competition flows straight into hardware. Anthropic is reportedly in discussions with Samsung about making a custom AI chip. Nothing is finalized, but the direction is clear: AI labs want more control over the supply chain and better efficiency than off-the-shelf hardware can always provide. And in Europe, an EU-funded report warns the region’s semiconductor outlook could be bleak unless it strengthens domestic supply chains and reduces strategic dependencies—on critical minerals, on Taiwan-linked manufacturing risk, and even on US technology access. Chips are no longer just an industrial input; they’re a geopolitical lever. And everyone is acting like it. Story 10 Let’s shift to space and aviation. NASA has awarded major funding to commercial providers to deliver new lunar landers by 2028, with a key idea: repeatable measurements from multiple sites, like placing standardized “weather stations” around the Moon. Why is that compelling? Because the Moon is not one uniform place. If you want sustained operations—more landings, more cargo, eventually more people—you need consistent data on hazards and conditions across different terrain. And back on Earth, the US FAA has proposed replacing its decades-old ban on commercial supersonic flights over land with a noise-based certification approach. The debate now is about what to measure and what counts as acceptable impact at ground level. Even if the rules change, it doesn’t guarantee a supersonic airline renaissance—but it does reopen a door that’s been closed since the 1970s. Story 11 Finally, a quick scan of two stories about keeping humans firmly in the loop—especially as AI gets more agent-like. First, open-source designer and developer Paul Bakaus argues that “skill engineering” can make AI design agents more steerable without turning creativity into a one-click slot machine. His Impeccable project tries to give agents a designer’s vocabulary—words like “bolder” or “quieter”—but anchors those words to concrete, domain-specific rules so outcomes are more predictable. The message is a middle path: let AI deliver the first strong draft, but keep human taste and context in charge of the finish. Second, on the software side, Sentry engineer Cory described building an open-source Slack-based assistant called Junior—designed to behave like an intern you supervise. The standout lesson isn’t the novelty; it’s the operational cost of doing agents responsibly: security, permissions, reliable task handoffs, and logs you can audit. And tying it together, researcher Geoffrey Litt argues the big bottleneck is shifting from writing code to understanding it. As AI outputs grow, teams risk building “cognitive debt”—systems nobody truly has a mental model for. His proposed fix is refreshingly human: better explanations, more structured reviews, and tools that help people explore and learn what the agent built, instead of just accepting it. Story 12 Before we wrap, one important medical research note. A new Nature study reports progress on an immunotherapy strategy for glioblastoma, an aggressive brain cancer that often returns quickly. The approach targets not just tumor cells, but also certain immune cells in the tumor environment that help protect and sustain the cancer. By aiming at a shared marker, researchers hope to knock out both the cancer and its local support system. It’s still early and there are major hurdles—especially delivering therapies safely in the brain—but it’s a promising angle in a field that badly needs better options. 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3. Juli 202610 min