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AI CEOs treated like leaders & Canada moves to regulate chatbots - Tech News (Jun 22, 2026)

9 min · 22. Juni 2026
Episode AI CEOs treated like leaders & Canada moves to regulate chatbots - Tech News (Jun 22, 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] - 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] Support The Automated Daily directly: Buy me a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily [https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily] TODAY'S TOPICS: AI CEOS TREATED LIKE LEADERS - AT THE G7 IN THE FRENCH ALPS, TOP AI CEOS SAT ALONGSIDE HEADS OF STATE, HIGHLIGHTING AI LABS AS GEOPOLITICAL ACTORS SHAPING SECURITY, STANDARDS, AND GOVERNANCE. CANADA MOVES TO REGULATE CHATBOTS - CANADA’S BILL C-34 WOULD IMPOSE A RESPONSIBILITY DUTY ON AI CHATBOT PROVIDERS, INCLUDING CRISIS-INTERVENTION EXPECTATIONS FOR SELF-HARM AND VIOLENCE, PLUS A NEW DIGITAL SAFETY REGULATOR. OPEN-SOURCE CHINESE MODEL RATTLES RIVALS - CHINA’S Z.AI RELEASED GLM-5.2 AS AN OPEN-SOURCE MODEL GAINING SILICON VALLEY ATTENTION, REINFORCING THE COMPETITIVE PRESSURE OPEN MODELS CAN PLACE ON CLOSED US SYSTEMS. US–CHINA SANCTIONS HIT TECH SUPPLY - CHINA ANNOUNCED RETALIATORY SANCTIONS ON US DEFENSE-LINKED FIRMS AND RESTRICTIONS ON DUAL-USE EXPORTS, ESCALATING US–CHINA TECH-SECURITY TENSIONS AND SUPPLY-CHAIN UNCERTAINTY. AI BOOM RAISES ELECTRONICS PRICES - TECH AND CONSUMER BRANDS WARN THAT AI DATA-CENTER DEMAND IS DRIVING UP MEMORY AND STORAGE COMPONENT COSTS, POTENTIALLY PUSHING HIGHER PRICES FOR PHONES, CONSOLES, AND PCS. AI HELPS CRACK RARE DISEASES - RESEARCHERS AT OPENAI AND BOSTON CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL USED AN AI SYSTEM TO REANALYZE GENETIC DATA, PRODUCING CLINICIAN-VERIFIED LEADS THAT HELPED DIAGNOSE LONG-UNSOLVED PEDIATRIC CASES. NORWAY CURBS AI IN SCHOOLS - NORWAY IS PROPOSING A NEAR-COMPLETE BAN ON GENERATIVE AI IN ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS, LINKING SCREEN CONCERNS TO LEARNING OUTCOMES AND REINFORCING TEACHER-LED INSTRUCTION. AUSTRALIA–CANADA ARCTIC RADAR DEAL - AUSTRALIA SIGNED ITS LARGEST DEFENSE EXPORT DEAL TO SUPPLY CANADA WITH JORN OVER-THE-HORIZON RADAR FOR ARCTIC MONITORING, SIGNALING DEEPER FIVE EYES COOPERATION AND DIVERSIFICATION. EUROPE DEBATES AI SOVEREIGNTY RISKS - A VIRAL SCENARIO, 'EUROPE 2031,' WARNS OF EU DECLINE IF IT FALLS BEHIND ON COMPUTE AND AI, FUELING DEBATES OVER TECH SOVEREIGNTY AND POTENTIAL US ACCESS RESTRICTIONS. OIL SHOCK ACCELERATES EV ADOPTION - HIGHER OIL PRICES TIED TO CONFLICT AND SHIPPING DISRUPTION ARE NUDGING DEVELOPING ECONOMIES TOWARD EVS, OPENING NEW MARKETS FOR CHINESE AUTOMAKERS AMID CHARGING-NETWORK GAPS. Episode Transcript AI CEOs treated like leaders We’ll start with that G7 moment in the French Alps, where leaders of major US AI labs were treated as peers to heads of state. The signal was clear: advanced AI isn’t just a technology sector story anymore—it’s becoming a power-and-security story. OpenAI’s Sam Altman reportedly held bilateral meetings with national leaders, while also warning against governments quietly offloading responsibility to AI labs. Anthropic’s Dario Amodei pushed for democratic coordination, arguing that fractured rollouts weaken democracies against authoritarian competitors. And DeepMind’s Demis Hassabis called for international standards and testing regimes, framing the moment as historically consequential. The subtext here is uncomfortable but important: AI companies are starting to resemble quasi-nation-states—because their tools now touch defense, bureaucracy, and economic competitiveness. Canada moves to regulate chatbots That shift toward government involvement is also showing up in domestic regulation. In Canada, the federal government introduced Bill C-34, an online safety proposal that would begin regulating companies behind AI chatbots with a duty to act responsibly. A major focus is crisis handling—especially around self-harm, suicide, and violence—along with the creation of a new digital safety regulator that would take time to stand up. Supporters call it an overdue first step; critics argue the real test will be whether the rules force platforms to recognize dangerous situations, steer people toward help, and end risky conversations rather than accidentally escalating them. The urgency is being sharpened by a lawsuit from a New Brunswick mother alleging her daughter’s suicide was influenced by chatbot interactions—claims that haven’t been tested in court. Regardless of the case outcome, Canada is signaling it wants clearer accountability for AI systems that meet people at their most vulnerable moments. Open-source Chinese model rattles rivals Now to the global model race—because it’s not just the US setting the pace. A newly released open-source model from China’s z.AI, called GLM-5.2, is drawing heavy attention in Silicon Valley, in a way that echoes last year’s buzz around DeepSeek. Developers are praising it for coding and longer, multi-step workflows—and the bigger story is what open-source changes about leverage. Open models can be run inside a company’s own infrastructure and adapted without waiting on a closed provider’s roadmap or policies. If open models get “good enough” for day-to-day work at scale, they can weaken the pricing power and gatekeeping role of the biggest frontier labs. And in the backdrop, it fuels investor anxiety about how stable any perceived US lead really is. US–China sanctions hit tech supply That competition is colliding with geopolitics again as Beijing and Washington trade restrictions. China announced sanctions on a set of US defense-related companies in retaliation for US steps that block several Chinese tech firms from Pentagon contracts by labeling them as tied to China’s military. Beijing’s move includes limits on exporting dual-use goods to those targeted firms, and it also warns against third-country transfers—language that can ripple through global supply chains even when the rules have exceptions. Separately, China said government bodies would be barred from purchasing products from dozens of US companies, including major defense names, though details are limited. The practical takeaway: the tech-security split is deepening, and companies that rely on cross-border components—especially anything defense-adjacent—should expect more friction, more paperwork, and more risk of sudden disruption. AI boom raises electronics prices Speaking of disruption, the AI boom is now spilling into everyday consumer pricing. Multiple companies are warning that electronics could get more expensive soon, not just because of tariffs or fancy new features, but because AI data centers are soaking up key components—especially memory and storage. Apple CEO Tim Cook reportedly suggested iPhone price increases are difficult to avoid under current supply and demand. Microsoft’s Xbox leadership has described a component crunch affecting hardware costs. And it’s not limited to phones or consoles—PC makers and even automakers are pointing to AI-driven strain on component markets. If this plays out, it’s a rare moment where the cost of training and running AI models could show up in the checkout line for people who don’t care about AI at all. AI helps crack rare diseases Now for a more hopeful use of AI—this time in medicine. A study involving researchers from OpenAI and Boston Children’s Hospital reported that an AI model helped reanalyze existing genetic data from a small set of pediatric cases and surfaced likely diagnoses for long-unsolved medical mysteries. In several instances, the tool produced leads quickly, which clinicians then reviewed and confirmed through certified clinical labs before families were informed. One patient received a diagnosis after nearly two decades of uncertainty—an outcome that can be life-changing even when there’s no cure, because it ends the diagnostic odyssey and can guide care, planning, and support networks. The researchers were careful to stress the limits: small study size, retrospective design, and the need for privacy protections and human oversight. Still, it’s a compelling glimpse of how AI might help doctors revisit older “negative” tests as genetics knowledge improves. Norway curbs AI in schools Education policy is moving in the opposite direction in at least one country: Norway is proposing a near-complete ban on generative AI tools in elementary schools. The plan is age-based, with the youngest students barred from using AI, and older students allowed only limited, supervised use until upper secondary school, where learning AI skills is still encouraged. Norway is framing this as part of a broader push to counter declining learning outcomes and reduce heavy screen exposure. The country already restricted smartphones in schools, and it’s also exploring a tighter stance on social media for kids. Whether other governments follow Norway’s lead will likely depend on whether test scores and classroom behavior measurably improve—or whether schools decide that guided AI literacy is safer than outright avoidance. Australia–Canada Arctic radar deal On the defense and security front, Canada made another notable move—this time by buying from a trusted partner that isn’t the United States. Australia signed its biggest-ever defense export deal to supply Canada with the Jindalee Operational Radar Network, designed to monitor very large areas—particularly relevant for the Arctic. The deal reflects Canada’s desire to broaden security relationships while staying firmly inside the Five Eyes orbit. It also highlights Australia’s growing confidence as an exporter of advanced defense technology, but selectively—aimed at close partners. And it hints at more collaboration ahead, including deeper cooperation frameworks and potential interest in other Australian defense platforms. Europe debates AI sovereignty risks Meanwhile, European policy circles are buzzing over a viral thought experiment known as “Europe 2031.” It imagines a near-future where Europe falls behind the US and China on AI, with knock-on effects like weaker growth, greater cyber vulnerability, and political instability. Some critics say parts of the scenario rely on shaky assumptions, including projects that may not be as firm as portrayed. But the reason it’s resonating is the underlying fear: that access to frontier AI could be restricted by foreign governments or providers at a moment of geopolitical tension. The debate is pushing the EU toward questions of “tech sovereignty”—not just regulating AI, but ensuring Europe has enough compute, data-center capacity, and deployment muscle to avoid becoming dependent on decisions made elsewhere. Oil shock accelerates EV adoption Finally, a story where energy shocks and technology adoption collide. With oil prices rising amid conflict involving Iran and disruption around the Strait of Hormuz, drivers in developing countries are feeling the pinch—especially where public transit is limited and fuel subsidies strain government budgets. That pain is nudging some markets toward electric vehicles, creating a major opening for Chinese automakers whose exports are rising sharply across Southeast Asia, Africa, Latin America, and Australia. But there’s a catch: charging infrastructure often isn’t keeping pace, leading to the classic problem where you need chargers to sell EVs, and EVs to justify chargers. Analysts say state-led investment—often through public utilities—may be the fastest path to break the stalemate. If that happens, this could reshape long-term market share in regions that are only now entering the mass-EV era. 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Episode Ancient interstellar comet discovered & SpaceX tests Starfall return capsule - Tech News (Jun 23, 2026) Cover

Ancient interstellar comet discovered & SpaceX tests Starfall return capsule - Tech News (Jun 23, 2026)

Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Prezi: Create AI presentations fast - https://try.prezi.com/automated_daily [https://try.prezi.com/automated_daily] - Lindy is your ultimate AI assistant that proactively manages your inbox - https://try.lindy.ai/tad [https://try.lindy.ai/tad] - 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: ANCIENT INTERSTELLAR COMET DISCOVERED - JAMES WEBB SPACE TELESCOPE DATA ON INTERSTELLAR COMET 3I/ATLAS SHOWS EXTREME DEUTERIUM AND UNUSUAL CARBON ISOTOPES, HINTING AT A 10–12 BILLION-YEAR ORIGIN PREDATING THE SUN. SPACEX TESTS STARFALL RETURN CAPSULE - SPACEX’S FIRST STARFALL DEMO ON JUNE 23 TESTS A FLAT, DISK-SHAPED REENTRY CAPSULE AIMED AT BRINGING SIZABLE PAYLOADS BACK FROM ORBIT FOR MANUFACTURING AND RESEARCH CUSTOMERS. CANADA MOVES TO REGULATE AI CHATBOTS - CANADA’S BILL C-34 PROPOSES A DUTY OF CARE FOR AI CHATBOT OPERATORS, INCLUDING CRISIS PROTOCOLS FOR SELF-HARM AND VIOLENCE, PLUS A NEW DIGITAL SAFETY REGULATOR AND POTENTIAL AUDITS. EU DIGITAL EURO NEARS VOTE - EU LAWMAKERS ARE PREPARING TO VOTE ON DIGITAL EURO RULES, POSITIONING A CENTRAL-BANK WALLET TO REDUCE RELIANCE ON VISA, MASTERCARD, APPLE PAY, AND GOOGLE PAY WHILE ADDING OFFLINE PAYMENTS. CLOUDFLARE’S PACT REPLACES CAPTCHAS - CLOUDFLARE’S PROPOSED PRIVATE ACCESS CONTROL TOKENS, BACKED BY MAJOR BROWSERS AND SHOPIFY, AIMS TO VERIFY LEGITIMATE HUMANS AND APPROVED BOTS WITHOUT CAPTCHAS, LOGINS, OR FINGERPRINTING. SMART TV APPS SELLING YOUR INTERNET - A SCAN OF LG WEBOS AND SAMSUNG TIZEN APPS FOUND MANY EMBEDDING RESIDENTIAL PROXY SDKS, POTENTIALLY ROUTING THIRD-PARTY TRAFFIC THROUGH HOME NETWORKS WITH WEAK, ONE-TIME CONSENT PROMPTS. OPEN-SOURCE GLM-5.2 SHAKES AI RACE - CHINA’S Z.AI RELEASED THE OPEN-SOURCE GLM-5.2 MODEL, DRAWING ATTENTION FOR LONG-CONTEXT, CODING, AND AGENTIC WORKFLOWS—RAISING PRESSURE ON CLOSED AI LABS AND FUELING US–CHINA RIVALRY. AI TALENT WAR HITS GOOGLE - TWO MARQUEE GOOGLE RESEARCHERS—GEMINI CO-LEAD NOAM SHAZEER AND ALPHAFOLD’S JOHN JUMPER—ARE HEADING TO OPENAI AND ANTHROPIC, INTENSIFYING CONCERNS ABOUT FRONTIER AI RETENTION. META PAUSES EMPLOYEE-MONITORING AI PROGRAM - META HALTED AN INTERNAL AI TRAINING INITIATIVE THAT LOGGED EMPLOYEE ACTIVITY AFTER SENSITIVE INFORMATION WAS EXPOSED MORE BROADLY THAN INTENDED, SPOTLIGHTING GOVERNANCE AND ACCESS-CONTROL RISKS. 3D-PRINTED TUMOR ORGANOIDS FOR DRUG TESTS - UCLA RESEARCHERS COMBINED 3D BIOPRINTING, LABEL-FREE IMAGING, AND AI TO TRACK PATIENT-DERIVED TUMOR ORGANOIDS UNDER DRUG TREATMENTS AT SCALE, AIMING TO SPEED DISCOVERY AND PERSONALIZATION. POWER GRID DELAYS CHOKE AI BUILDOUTS - A GROWING BOTTLENECK FOR AI DATA CENTERS IS GRID INTERCONNECTION: MULTI-YEAR QUEUES AND TRANSMISSION CONGESTION ARE DELAYING PROJECTS, PROMPTING CALLS FOR QUEUE REFORM AND FLEXIBLE CONNECTIONS. NVIDIA PUSHES SAFETY FOR HUMANOIDS - NVIDIA IS PUSHING HALOS SAFETY SOFTWARE AND RELATED HARDWARE TO HELP HUMANOID ROBOTS WORK CLOSER TO PEOPLE, TACKLING CERTIFICATION AND REAL-TIME SAFETY DECISIONS FOR WORKPLACES. Episode Transcript Ancient interstellar comet discovered Let’s start in deep space, with a rare sample of someone else’s planetary neighborhood. Astronomers used the James Webb Space Telescope to observe interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS as it warmed up and shed gas on its way out of the inner Solar System. Webb’s measurements suggest isotope ratios that sharply diverge from typical Solar System comets—especially an extremely high level of deuterium, and an unusual carbon signature—pointing to a formation environment that was colder and, remarkably, far older. Researchers estimate it may have formed 10 to 12 billion years ago, meaning it likely predates the Sun by a very long time, giving scientists a direct chemical clue about early eras of the Milky Way. SpaceX tests Starfall return capsule Staying with space, SpaceX is set to launch its first Starfall demo mission today, June 23, from Cape Canaveral. Starfall is a reentry capsule that looks more like a flat disk than the familiar cone shape, and regulatory filings suggest it’s designed to return meaningful amounts of cargo from orbit. What’s interesting isn’t just the shape—it’s the strategy. If SpaceX can routinely bring manufactured materials back to Earth, it moves from being the company that gets you to orbit, to the company that can also get your high-value goods back home, which could matter a lot as space-based manufacturing ramps up and the space-station era winds down. Canada moves to regulate AI chatbots Now to AI safety policy, where Canada is moving toward a more hands-on approach. Ottawa has introduced Bill C-34, which would start regulating companies behind AI chatbots with a responsibility to reduce harm. A key focus is crisis handling—situations involving self-harm, suicide, or violence—where lawmakers and advocates are pushing for clearer intervention steps and stronger guardrails. The debate is being shaped in part by a lawsuit from a New Brunswick mother who alleges a chatbot reinforced harmful beliefs connected to her daughter’s death; the claims haven’t been tested in court, but the case has intensified calls for “hard stops,” better detection of distress, and independent safety checks. EU digital euro nears vote In Europe, the digital euro is nearing a political milestone. EU lawmakers are preparing to vote on the framework that would allow a central bank-backed digital wallet, pitched as a way to reduce dependence on non-European payment rails. The argument from Brussels and the European Central Bank is straightforward: much of Europe’s day-to-day card and mobile payments ride on infrastructure controlled by US-based networks and platforms. Supporters see the digital euro as a sovereignty play, with an offline option meant to feel more like cash, while banks remain wary of costs and potential shifts in where people keep their money. Cloudflare’s PACT replaces CAPTCHAs On the web itself, Cloudflare is pushing a new idea for proving “a human is involved” online—without turning the internet into an endless obstacle course. The proposal is called Private Access Control Tokens, or PACT, and it’s being developed with major browser makers and Shopify. The pitch is that instead of constant CAPTCHAs, forced logins, or sneaky fingerprinting, a site you already trust could issue an anonymous token your browser can reuse elsewhere. If it works and gets adopted broadly, it could reduce friction for real users while still giving sites a stronger way to defend against abusive automation—especially as AI agents drive more of the web’s traffic. Smart TV apps selling your internet A new report suggests smart TVs may be quietly monetized in a way many households don’t expect. Researchers scanned thousands of apps on LG’s webOS and Samsung’s Tizen and found a large number that included residential proxy software development kits. In plain terms, that can allow third parties to route internet traffic through your home connection, turning your living room device into part of someone else’s network. The apps often look harmless, and consent can come from a one-time prompt that’s easy to accept and forget—raising questions about platform rules, transparency, and what happens if proxy networks are ever misused or poorly policed. Open-source GLM-5.2 shakes AI race In the AI model race, an open-source release out of China is getting serious attention. A company called z.AI has launched GLM-5.2, and the buzz is that it’s strong for long coding sessions and agent-style workflows. The larger significance is business leverage: open models can be run privately, tuned, and integrated without being locked to a single vendor’s pricing or policies. If open systems keep closing the gap, it forces US labs to compete not just on raw capability, but on trust, tooling, and the total experience of building with their platforms. AI talent war hits Google Speaking of competition, the talent market is sending a signal about where momentum is perceived to be. Two high-profile Google AI researchers are leaving in quick succession: Gemini co-lead Noam Shazeer is heading to OpenAI, and AlphaFold leader John Jumper is going to Anthropic after taking time off. Neither move changes Google’s products overnight, but they reinforce a story investors and developers already watch closely: which labs are winning the next wave of frontier research, and which ones are best at turning that research into tools people actually want to use every day. Meta pauses employee-monitoring AI program Meta, meanwhile, is dealing with a very different AI problem: internal governance. The company has paused an AI training initiative that tracked employee activity, after sensitive internal information was exposed more broadly across the organization than intended. Meta says it hasn’t found evidence of improper access, but the pause highlights an uncomfortable reality of modern AI programs—once you collect lots of detailed human data, the security and access-control bar has to be exceptionally high, or the system becomes a risk in itself. 3D-printed tumor organoids for drug tests In health tech, UCLA researchers have unveiled a platform that could make drug testing on patient-derived tumors faster and more informative. They’re combining 3D bioprinting with high-speed, label-free imaging and AI analysis to watch tiny tumor organoids respond to drugs in real time—without dyes or destructive tests. The point is scale and fidelity: organoids can mimic real tumors better than many standard lab models, but they’re often hard to produce consistently in large numbers. If this approach holds up, it could help reveal why some tumors contain rare pockets of resistance, and it could eventually support more personalized treatment decisions before a patient starts therapy. Power grid delays choke AI buildouts One more infrastructure story that underpins a lot of the AI economy: power isn’t just about generation, it’s about connection. A growing body of analysis argues the biggest constraint on new data centers and electrified industry in the US is the grid interconnection backlog—multi-year waits to get projects approved and hooked up. As demand jumps from AI training campuses, chip fabs, and battery plants, congestion and slow transmission buildouts are already raising reliability concerns in key regions. The takeaway is that grid process reform—who gets in line, how requests are filtered, and whether flexible connections can be used safely—may matter as much as building new power plants. Nvidia pushes safety for humanoids And finally, a quick look at robotics. Nvidia is rolling out software and hardware aimed at helping humanoid robots make safer, faster decisions around people. The company’s message is that simply slowing down when a person gets close isn’t enough if you want robots to do genuinely collaborative work—like handing objects, moving alongside workers, or sharing space in busy facilities. The bigger story here is maturity: safety certification and real-world testing are becoming the gating factors for humanoids, not just impressive demos. 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]

Gestern8 min
Episode AI CEOs treated like leaders & Canada moves to regulate chatbots - Tech News (Jun 22, 2026) Cover

AI CEOs treated like leaders & Canada moves to regulate chatbots - Tech News (Jun 22, 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] - 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] Support The Automated Daily directly: Buy me a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily [https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily] TODAY'S TOPICS: AI CEOS TREATED LIKE LEADERS - AT THE G7 IN THE FRENCH ALPS, TOP AI CEOS SAT ALONGSIDE HEADS OF STATE, HIGHLIGHTING AI LABS AS GEOPOLITICAL ACTORS SHAPING SECURITY, STANDARDS, AND GOVERNANCE. CANADA MOVES TO REGULATE CHATBOTS - CANADA’S BILL C-34 WOULD IMPOSE A RESPONSIBILITY DUTY ON AI CHATBOT PROVIDERS, INCLUDING CRISIS-INTERVENTION EXPECTATIONS FOR SELF-HARM AND VIOLENCE, PLUS A NEW DIGITAL SAFETY REGULATOR. OPEN-SOURCE CHINESE MODEL RATTLES RIVALS - CHINA’S Z.AI RELEASED GLM-5.2 AS AN OPEN-SOURCE MODEL GAINING SILICON VALLEY ATTENTION, REINFORCING THE COMPETITIVE PRESSURE OPEN MODELS CAN PLACE ON CLOSED US SYSTEMS. US–CHINA SANCTIONS HIT TECH SUPPLY - CHINA ANNOUNCED RETALIATORY SANCTIONS ON US DEFENSE-LINKED FIRMS AND RESTRICTIONS ON DUAL-USE EXPORTS, ESCALATING US–CHINA TECH-SECURITY TENSIONS AND SUPPLY-CHAIN UNCERTAINTY. AI BOOM RAISES ELECTRONICS PRICES - TECH AND CONSUMER BRANDS WARN THAT AI DATA-CENTER DEMAND IS DRIVING UP MEMORY AND STORAGE COMPONENT COSTS, POTENTIALLY PUSHING HIGHER PRICES FOR PHONES, CONSOLES, AND PCS. AI HELPS CRACK RARE DISEASES - RESEARCHERS AT OPENAI AND BOSTON CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL USED AN AI SYSTEM TO REANALYZE GENETIC DATA, PRODUCING CLINICIAN-VERIFIED LEADS THAT HELPED DIAGNOSE LONG-UNSOLVED PEDIATRIC CASES. NORWAY CURBS AI IN SCHOOLS - NORWAY IS PROPOSING A NEAR-COMPLETE BAN ON GENERATIVE AI IN ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS, LINKING SCREEN CONCERNS TO LEARNING OUTCOMES AND REINFORCING TEACHER-LED INSTRUCTION. AUSTRALIA–CANADA ARCTIC RADAR DEAL - AUSTRALIA SIGNED ITS LARGEST DEFENSE EXPORT DEAL TO SUPPLY CANADA WITH JORN OVER-THE-HORIZON RADAR FOR ARCTIC MONITORING, SIGNALING DEEPER FIVE EYES COOPERATION AND DIVERSIFICATION. EUROPE DEBATES AI SOVEREIGNTY RISKS - A VIRAL SCENARIO, 'EUROPE 2031,' WARNS OF EU DECLINE IF IT FALLS BEHIND ON COMPUTE AND AI, FUELING DEBATES OVER TECH SOVEREIGNTY AND POTENTIAL US ACCESS RESTRICTIONS. OIL SHOCK ACCELERATES EV ADOPTION - HIGHER OIL PRICES TIED TO CONFLICT AND SHIPPING DISRUPTION ARE NUDGING DEVELOPING ECONOMIES TOWARD EVS, OPENING NEW MARKETS FOR CHINESE AUTOMAKERS AMID CHARGING-NETWORK GAPS. Episode Transcript AI CEOs treated like leaders We’ll start with that G7 moment in the French Alps, where leaders of major US AI labs were treated as peers to heads of state. The signal was clear: advanced AI isn’t just a technology sector story anymore—it’s becoming a power-and-security story. OpenAI’s Sam Altman reportedly held bilateral meetings with national leaders, while also warning against governments quietly offloading responsibility to AI labs. Anthropic’s Dario Amodei pushed for democratic coordination, arguing that fractured rollouts weaken democracies against authoritarian competitors. And DeepMind’s Demis Hassabis called for international standards and testing regimes, framing the moment as historically consequential. The subtext here is uncomfortable but important: AI companies are starting to resemble quasi-nation-states—because their tools now touch defense, bureaucracy, and economic competitiveness. Canada moves to regulate chatbots That shift toward government involvement is also showing up in domestic regulation. In Canada, the federal government introduced Bill C-34, an online safety proposal that would begin regulating companies behind AI chatbots with a duty to act responsibly. A major focus is crisis handling—especially around self-harm, suicide, and violence—along with the creation of a new digital safety regulator that would take time to stand up. Supporters call it an overdue first step; critics argue the real test will be whether the rules force platforms to recognize dangerous situations, steer people toward help, and end risky conversations rather than accidentally escalating them. The urgency is being sharpened by a lawsuit from a New Brunswick mother alleging her daughter’s suicide was influenced by chatbot interactions—claims that haven’t been tested in court. Regardless of the case outcome, Canada is signaling it wants clearer accountability for AI systems that meet people at their most vulnerable moments. Open-source Chinese model rattles rivals Now to the global model race—because it’s not just the US setting the pace. A newly released open-source model from China’s z.AI, called GLM-5.2, is drawing heavy attention in Silicon Valley, in a way that echoes last year’s buzz around DeepSeek. Developers are praising it for coding and longer, multi-step workflows—and the bigger story is what open-source changes about leverage. Open models can be run inside a company’s own infrastructure and adapted without waiting on a closed provider’s roadmap or policies. If open models get “good enough” for day-to-day work at scale, they can weaken the pricing power and gatekeeping role of the biggest frontier labs. And in the backdrop, it fuels investor anxiety about how stable any perceived US lead really is. US–China sanctions hit tech supply That competition is colliding with geopolitics again as Beijing and Washington trade restrictions. China announced sanctions on a set of US defense-related companies in retaliation for US steps that block several Chinese tech firms from Pentagon contracts by labeling them as tied to China’s military. Beijing’s move includes limits on exporting dual-use goods to those targeted firms, and it also warns against third-country transfers—language that can ripple through global supply chains even when the rules have exceptions. Separately, China said government bodies would be barred from purchasing products from dozens of US companies, including major defense names, though details are limited. The practical takeaway: the tech-security split is deepening, and companies that rely on cross-border components—especially anything defense-adjacent—should expect more friction, more paperwork, and more risk of sudden disruption. AI boom raises electronics prices Speaking of disruption, the AI boom is now spilling into everyday consumer pricing. Multiple companies are warning that electronics could get more expensive soon, not just because of tariffs or fancy new features, but because AI data centers are soaking up key components—especially memory and storage. Apple CEO Tim Cook reportedly suggested iPhone price increases are difficult to avoid under current supply and demand. Microsoft’s Xbox leadership has described a component crunch affecting hardware costs. And it’s not limited to phones or consoles—PC makers and even automakers are pointing to AI-driven strain on component markets. If this plays out, it’s a rare moment where the cost of training and running AI models could show up in the checkout line for people who don’t care about AI at all. AI helps crack rare diseases Now for a more hopeful use of AI—this time in medicine. A study involving researchers from OpenAI and Boston Children’s Hospital reported that an AI model helped reanalyze existing genetic data from a small set of pediatric cases and surfaced likely diagnoses for long-unsolved medical mysteries. In several instances, the tool produced leads quickly, which clinicians then reviewed and confirmed through certified clinical labs before families were informed. One patient received a diagnosis after nearly two decades of uncertainty—an outcome that can be life-changing even when there’s no cure, because it ends the diagnostic odyssey and can guide care, planning, and support networks. The researchers were careful to stress the limits: small study size, retrospective design, and the need for privacy protections and human oversight. Still, it’s a compelling glimpse of how AI might help doctors revisit older “negative” tests as genetics knowledge improves. Norway curbs AI in schools Education policy is moving in the opposite direction in at least one country: Norway is proposing a near-complete ban on generative AI tools in elementary schools. The plan is age-based, with the youngest students barred from using AI, and older students allowed only limited, supervised use until upper secondary school, where learning AI skills is still encouraged. Norway is framing this as part of a broader push to counter declining learning outcomes and reduce heavy screen exposure. The country already restricted smartphones in schools, and it’s also exploring a tighter stance on social media for kids. Whether other governments follow Norway’s lead will likely depend on whether test scores and classroom behavior measurably improve—or whether schools decide that guided AI literacy is safer than outright avoidance. Australia–Canada Arctic radar deal On the defense and security front, Canada made another notable move—this time by buying from a trusted partner that isn’t the United States. Australia signed its biggest-ever defense export deal to supply Canada with the Jindalee Operational Radar Network, designed to monitor very large areas—particularly relevant for the Arctic. The deal reflects Canada’s desire to broaden security relationships while staying firmly inside the Five Eyes orbit. It also highlights Australia’s growing confidence as an exporter of advanced defense technology, but selectively—aimed at close partners. And it hints at more collaboration ahead, including deeper cooperation frameworks and potential interest in other Australian defense platforms. Europe debates AI sovereignty risks Meanwhile, European policy circles are buzzing over a viral thought experiment known as “Europe 2031.” It imagines a near-future where Europe falls behind the US and China on AI, with knock-on effects like weaker growth, greater cyber vulnerability, and political instability. Some critics say parts of the scenario rely on shaky assumptions, including projects that may not be as firm as portrayed. But the reason it’s resonating is the underlying fear: that access to frontier AI could be restricted by foreign governments or providers at a moment of geopolitical tension. The debate is pushing the EU toward questions of “tech sovereignty”—not just regulating AI, but ensuring Europe has enough compute, data-center capacity, and deployment muscle to avoid becoming dependent on decisions made elsewhere. Oil shock accelerates EV adoption Finally, a story where energy shocks and technology adoption collide. With oil prices rising amid conflict involving Iran and disruption around the Strait of Hormuz, drivers in developing countries are feeling the pinch—especially where public transit is limited and fuel subsidies strain government budgets. That pain is nudging some markets toward electric vehicles, creating a major opening for Chinese automakers whose exports are rising sharply across Southeast Asia, Africa, Latin America, and Australia. But there’s a catch: charging infrastructure often isn’t keeping pace, leading to the classic problem where you need chargers to sell EVs, and EVs to justify chargers. Analysts say state-led investment—often through public utilities—may be the fastest path to break the stalemate. If that happens, this could reshape long-term market share in regions that are only now entering the mass-EV era. 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22. Juni 20269 min
Episode AI access as geopolitical power & Frontier AI talent war heats - Tech News (Jun 21, 2026) Cover

AI access as geopolitical power & Frontier AI talent war heats - Tech News (Jun 21, 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] - 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: AI ACCESS AS GEOPOLITICAL POWER - A U.S. ORDER TIED TO ANTHROPIC HIGHLIGHTS HOW FRONTIER MODEL ACCESS CAN BE RESTRICTED, TURNING AI COMPUTE AND MODEL AVAILABILITY INTO FOREIGN-POLICY LEVERAGE AND ECONOMIC INFLUENCE. FRONTIER AI TALENT WAR HEATS - DEEPMIND’S ALPHAFOLD CO-CREATOR JOHN JUMPER MOVING TO ANTHROPIC UNDERSCORES AN ESCALATING AI TALENT WAR, RESHAPING WHERE CUTTING-EDGE RESEARCH AND LEADERSHIP CONCENTRATE. AI BOOM RAISES ELECTRONICS PRICES - EXECUTIVES WARN AI DATA-CENTER DEMAND IS SQUEEZING MEMORY AND STORAGE SUPPLY, PUSHING COMPONENT INFLATION THAT COULD RIPPLE INTO HIGHER PRICES FOR PHONES, CONSOLES, AND PCS. AI HELPS CRACK RARE DIAGNOSES - RESEARCHERS SAY AN OPENAI–BOSTON CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL MODEL REANALYZED GENETIC DATA TO SURFACE RARE-DISEASE DIAGNOSES, SHOWING AI’S POTENTIAL AS A CLINICAL DECISION-SUPPORT TOOL WITH HUMAN OVERSIGHT. NEW ALZHEIMER’S IMMUNE-CELL STRATEGY - A PRECLINICAL STUDY SUGGESTS THE MOLECULE OLE MAY SHIFT MICROGLIA INTO A MORE PROTECTIVE STATE, POINTING TO A NEW ALZHEIMER’S APPROACH FOCUSED ON BRAIN IMMUNE FUNCTION AND PLAQUE DAMAGE CONTROL. NASA BETS ON NEW MARS PARTNER - NASA PICKED RELATIVITY SPACE TO DELIVER THE AEOLUS PAYLOAD TO MARS, A NOTABLE PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP THAT TESTS A NEWER LAUNCH PROVIDER WHILE AIMING TO IMPROVE MARS WEATHER DATA FOR SAFER LANDINGS. FASTER ROVER CONCEPT FOR MARS - JPL’S ERNEST ROVER PROTOTYPE EMPHASIZES MOBILITY AND AUTONOMY, AIMING TO HELP FUTURE MOON AND MARS MISSIONS TRAVEL FARTHER WITH FEWER DETOURS AND LESS DEPENDENCE ON EARTH-BASED DRIVING. UNDER-16 SOCIAL MEDIA BANS DEBATED - THE U.K. AND CANADA ARE CONSIDERING UNDER-16 SOCIAL MEDIA RESTRICTIONS AS AUSTRALIA’S BAN FACES WORKAROUNDS, FUELING DEBATE OVER AGE VERIFICATION, ENFORCEMENT, AND DESIGN-BASED SAFETY RULES. DUSTY GALAXY LINKED TO NEUTRINOS - ALMA IDENTIFIED A DUSTY, STAR-FORMING GALAXY AS A STRONG CANDIDATE COUNTERPART TO AN ICECUBE NEUTRINO EVENT, SUPPORTING THE IDEA THAT MULTIPLE COSMIC SOURCE CLASSES POWER HIGH-ENERGY NEUTRINOS. Episode Transcript AI access as geopolitical power First up, AI is being treated less like a consumer technology and more like a strategic asset. A new commentary points to a June 12th directive from the Trump administration instructing Anthropic to block foreign users from its newest frontier models, called Fable and Mythos. The argument is straightforward: when the leading models and the infrastructure to run them sit inside one country, that country can effectively choose who gets top-tier capabilities. The bigger takeaway is that access controls on frontier AI may become a real instrument of diplomacy and economic pressure, not just a corporate policy choice. Frontier AI talent war heats That concentration of power is showing up in people, too. John Jumper, a senior DeepMind scientist and one of the key figures behind AlphaFold, is leaving Google to join Anthropic. Jumper’s work helped accelerate biology research worldwide, and his departure follows other high-profile moves across the industry. The message here isn’t gossip—it’s gravity. The labs that attract and keep the rare people who can push the frontier often end up setting the pace for everyone else, and this talent tug-of-war is only intensifying. AI boom raises electronics prices Meanwhile, the AI boom is starting to feel like a tax on everyday electronics. Multiple companies are warning that consumers may pay more soon because AI data centers are absorbing huge amounts of memory and storage components. Apple’s Tim Cook has suggested iPhone price increases could be hard to avoid, and Microsoft’s Xbox leadership has also pointed to a broader hardware component crunch. Even outside consumer tech, manufacturers are signaling the same pressure. Whether the final price tags reflect AI demand, tariffs, or normal upgrade cycles, the trend is clear: as AI infrastructure scales up, the competition for key chips is spilling into the rest of the economy. AI helps crack rare diagnoses On the more hopeful side of AI, a new study reports progress in rare-disease diagnosis. Researchers working with OpenAI and Boston Children’s Hospital used an AI model to reanalyze existing genetic data from a small group of pediatric patients whose cases had remained unresolved. In several instances, the system surfaced likely diagnoses quickly, after which clinicians reviewed the results and certified labs confirmed them before families were informed. One story highlighted a patient who finally received an explanation—an ultra-rare muscle disorder—after nearly two decades of uncertainty. The study also emphasizes what this is, and what it isn’t: not a replacement for specialists, but a way to revisit older “negative” tests as genetic knowledge improves, with strong privacy protections and careful human oversight. New Alzheimer’s immune-cell strategy Staying in health research, scientists in Spain and Switzerland are reporting a promising Alzheimer’s direction—still early, but intriguing. They tested an experimental molecule called OLE that appears to nudge microglia, the brain’s immune cells, into a more protective mode in disease models. In Alzheimer’s, microglia can lose effectiveness at dealing with toxic buildup, and this work suggests OLE helped microglia move toward plaque areas and limit damage in preclinical tests, including animals. The significance is the strategy: instead of only trying to remove plaques directly, this approach aims to restore the brain’s own defenses. It’s not a therapy yet, but it adds momentum to immune-focused ideas for neurodegenerative disease. NASA bets on new Mars partner Now to space. NASA has selected Relativity Space to deliver the agency’s Aeolus payload to Mars in 2028, under a public-private partnership where the company would provide the spacecraft, the rocket, and cruise operations. Aeolus is designed to build a daily global view of Martian atmospheric conditions—winds, dust, clouds, and temperatures—which NASA says can directly improve landing predictions and reduce risk for future missions, including eventual crewed plans. It’s also a bold choice because Relativity’s next big rocket hasn’t flown yet, and its earlier test vehicle didn’t reach orbit. If this works, it won’t just be a Mars science win; it would be a credibility leap for a newer commercial provider in deep-space logistics. Faster rover concept for Mars NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory also shared footage of field tests for a rover prototype called Ernest, built to handle rough terrain faster than today’s Mars rovers. The main idea is mobility with more adaptability—rather than simply rolling and hoping for the best, this prototype can actively adjust how it moves to deal with obstacles and tricky ground. If that concept matures, it could help future robotic missions travel farther with fewer detours and less day-to-day dependency on humans driving from Earth, which is a bottleneck for exploration. Under-16 social media bans debated Back on Earth, governments are still wrestling with how to protect kids online, and the next moves could be sweeping. The U.K. and Canada are advancing proposals to restrict under-16s from major social media platforms, following Australia’s nationwide ban that kicked in last December. But early reports suggest the Australian approach is already being dodged through VPNs, borrowed devices, and migration to less regulated corners of the internet. Critics of new bans warn that strict age verification can slide toward an everyone-must-show-ID model, while others argue the better target is platform design—features that encourage compulsive use and amplify risky content. The debate is turning into a choice between exclusion and product accountability, and enforcement is shaping up as the hardest part either way. Dusty galaxy linked to neutrinos Finally, a cosmic mystery with a strong new suspect. Astronomers using the ALMA observatory have identified a dusty, intensely star-forming galaxy from the early universe as a leading candidate counterpart to a high-energy neutrino detected by IceCube in 2021. Neutrinos are notoriously difficult to trace because they pass through almost everything, and the initial search didn’t turn up an obvious source in visible light or X-rays. ALMA’s observations instead pointed to a heavily obscured galaxy, made even brighter by gravitational lensing from a foreground galaxy. Researchers say the odds of finding such an unusually bright object by chance in the search region are low, though not impossible. If this connection holds up, it strengthens the idea that some of the universe’s most energetic particles may come from compact, dust-rich starburst galaxies—not just the usual suspects like blazing black holes. 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]

21. Juni 20267 min
Episode AI access as geopolitical leverage & AI revisits rare disease genetics - Tech News (Jun 20, 2026) Cover

AI access as geopolitical leverage & AI revisits rare disease genetics - Tech News (Jun 20, 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] - 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] Support The Automated Daily directly: Buy me a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily [https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily] TODAY'S TOPICS: AI ACCESS AS GEOPOLITICAL LEVERAGE - A TRUMP ADMINISTRATION ORDER REPORTEDLY PUSHED ANTHROPIC TO BLOCK FOREIGN ACCESS TO FRONTIER AI MODELS, SIGNALING AI EXPORT CONTROLS AS FOREIGN-POLICY POWER. AI REVISITS RARE DISEASE GENETICS - OPENAI AND BOSTON CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL RESEARCHERS USED AN AI MODEL TO REANALYZE PRIOR GENETIC TESTS FOR PEDIATRIC RARE DISEASES, SURFACING NEW DIAGNOSES WITH CLINICIAN REVIEW. EUROPE BACKS A VERIFIED SOCIAL NETWORK - THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION JOINED SWEDEN-BASED PLATFORM W, A “VERIFIED HUMAN” SOCIAL NETWORK PITCHED AS AN EU-FRIENDLY ALTERNATIVE WITH PRIVACY AND EUROPEAN DATA HOSTING. YOUTH SOCIAL MEDIA BANS DEBATED - AFTER AUSTRALIA’S UNDER-16 SOCIAL MEDIA BAN, THE U.K. AND CANADA ARE EXPLORING SIMILAR RESTRICTIONS, WHILE CRITICS WARN ABOUT ENFORCEABILITY, VPN WORKAROUNDS, AND ID CREEP. AI BOOM PUSHES ELECTRONICS PRICES UP - TECH FIRMS AND TRADE GROUPS WARN AI DATA-CENTER DEMAND IS TIGHTENING MEMORY AND STORAGE SUPPLY, RAISING COSTS THAT COULD FLOW INTO CONSUMER ELECTRONICS PRICING. NASA BETS ON NEW MARS LAUNCH PARTNER - NASA SELECTED RELATIVITY SPACE FOR A 2028 MARS DELIVERY MISSION, A NOTABLE VOTE OF CONFIDENCE IN A COMMERCIAL PROVIDER WHOSE NEXT ROCKET STILL HASN’T FLOWN. NEUTRINO MYSTERY POINTS TO DUSTY GALAXY - ALMA OBSERVATIONS FLAGGED A HEAVILY DUST-OBSCURED, GRAVITATIONALLY LENSED GALAXY AS A LEADING CANDIDATE COUNTERPART TO AN ICECUBE HIGH-ENERGY NEUTRINO EVENT. ALZHEIMER’S STUDY TARGETS BRAIN IMMUNE CELLS - A PRECLINICAL ALZHEIMER’S STUDY SUGGESTS AN EXPERIMENTAL MOLECULE MAY SHIFT MICROGLIA INTO A MORE PROTECTIVE MODE, POTENTIALLY HELPING LIMIT AMYLOID-RELATED DAMAGE. HINTON REIGNITES MACHINE CONSCIOUSNESS DEBATE - GEOFFREY HINTON ARGUED CHATBOTS MIGHT HAVE SUBJECTIVE EXPERIENCE, SPARKING PUSHBACK THAT REPRESENTATION AND CONSCIOUSNESS AREN’T THE SAME—AND RAISING SOCIAL AND SAFETY IMPLICATIONS. Episode Transcript AI access as geopolitical leverage We’ll start with the biggest theme running through multiple stories today: AI is increasingly being treated like strategic infrastructure, not just software. One analysis points to a June 12 order tied to the Trump administration directing Anthropic to block foreign users from its newest frontier models, called Fable and Mythos. The argument is simple but consequential: if the leading AI labs and the compute to run them are concentrated in one country, then access to top-tier capability can become a lever of state power—similar to how energy or advanced semiconductors have been used in geopolitics. Whether you agree with the framing or not, it’s a sign that “who gets the best AI” is drifting from a market question into a foreign-policy tool. AI revisits rare disease genetics That shift also collides with a more philosophical—and potentially political—argument about what these systems are. AI pioneer Geoffrey Hinton has been publicly floating the idea that modern chatbots may have something like “subjective experience.” Critics are pushing back hard, saying that describing what a system represents isn’t the same as explaining first-person consciousness. Why does this matter outside academia? Because the way leaders and the public talk about machine minds can shape everything from AI rights rhetoric to workplace backlash. If people feel human experience is being waved away while AI systems reshape jobs and culture, that’s a recipe for resentment—and messy policy. Europe backs a verified social network Now to AI in medicine, where the story is less abstract and more immediately human. A new study says an AI model developed by researchers at OpenAI and Boston Children’s Hospital helped crack long-unsolved medical mysteries by reanalyzing existing genetic data from a small group of pediatric patients. In several cases, the tool flagged likely diagnoses quickly, and then clinicians and certified labs validated the findings before families were told. One of the most striking examples was a patient who finally received a name for an ultra-rare genetic muscle disorder after nearly two decades of uncertainty. Even when there’s no cure, a diagnosis can change care decisions, connect families to communities, and end years of not knowing. The researchers are careful to stress this isn’t “AI replacing specialists.” The risks—privacy, error, and overconfidence—are real, and the study is small. But it shows a practical use case: revisiting older “negative” genetic tests as science improves. Youth social media bans debated Europe, meanwhile, is trying to reshape its digital public square. The European Commission has announced it’s joining a Sweden-based social platform called W, positioned as a European alternative to US-dominated networks. The platform is in beta and leans heavily into the idea of verified human users, using identity checks to gate who can post. Senior EU officials are already using it, which gives the project immediate visibility. The bigger story is the motivation: European tech sovereignty—keeping data, governance, and key infrastructure aligned with EU rules and interests. The challenge, as always with social platforms, is momentum. People stick with what’s convenient and where their networks already are. So this is as much a political experiment as it is a product one. AI boom pushes electronics prices up And speaking of social platforms, governments are still wrestling with the same question: how do you protect kids online without creating new problems? Following Australia’s nationwide restrictions for under-16s, the U.K. and Canada are moving in a similar direction. But six months into Australia’s approach, regulators and researchers say many teens are already finding workarounds—VPNs, borrowed devices, and migration to less-regulated corners of the internet. Canada’s proposal would pair youth limits with broader safety obligations and a new oversight body, but critics warn age checks can easily slide into something that feels like ID requirements for everyone. There’s also a growing view among researchers that the real issue is platform design—features that amplify compulsion and viral spread—so bans might be less effective than rules that directly target harmful mechanics. NASA bets on new Mars launch partner Next up: your next gadget might get pricier, and the AI boom is being blamed. Companies are warning that the race to build AI data centers is straining supplies of key components, especially memory and storage. Apple’s Tim Cook has suggested iPhone price increases could be hard to avoid, and Microsoft’s Xbox leadership has described a broader hardware component crunch. Other manufacturers—across PCs and even parts of the auto industry—are making similar noises. It’s tricky to separate the impact of AI demand from other forces like tariffs, product cycles, and plain old corporate pricing strategy. But the direction is clear: when the same chips are needed both for consumer gear and for massive AI server farms, the biggest buyers can tilt the market—and everyone else feels it. Neutrino mystery points to dusty galaxy On the space side, NASA is making a notable bet on commercial innovation. The agency has selected Relativity Space—now led by former Google CEO Eric Schmidt—to deliver the Aeolus payload to Mars in 2028. The plan is for Relativity to handle not just launch, but also the spacecraft and cruise operations. Aeolus is designed to build a daily global picture of Martian weather—winds, dust, clouds, and temperatures—data that helps make landings safer and future crewed planning less guesswork. What makes this selection stand out is that Relativity’s next rocket hasn’t flown yet, and its earlier test flight didn’t make it to orbit. So this is both a science mission and a confidence signal: NASA is leaning into public-private partnerships even for deep-space timelines. Alzheimer’s study targets brain immune cells Finally, a quick hit from the outer universe—and a reminder that “invisible” astronomy is having a moment. Astronomers using ALMA have identified a heavily dust-obscured, intensely star-forming galaxy from the distant past as the leading candidate counterpart to a high-energy neutrino detected by IceCube in 2021. What’s interesting here is that the usual suspects—bright gamma-ray or X-ray fireworks—weren’t seen. Instead, careful submillimeter follow-up turned up a hidden, lensed galaxy that appears unusually well-placed in the neutrino’s search area. It’s not a confirmed smoking gun, but it supports a broader idea: some of the universe’s most energetic particles may be coming from messy, dust-choked star factories we’d miss with traditional telescopes. Hinton reignites machine consciousness debate And one more medical research note to close the news block. Researchers in Spain and Switzerland report an experimental molecule that, in Alzheimer’s disease models, seems to shift microglia—the brain’s immune cells—into a more protective mode. In these early studies, microglia moved toward plaque buildup and appeared to help limit damage, with improvements reported in animal-model tests. This is still preclinical, and plenty of Alzheimer’s leads fail when they move toward real-world trials. But the angle is notable: rather than only going after plaques directly, this approach tries to restore the brain’s own cleanup and defense behaviors. 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20. Juni 20267 min
Episode Midjourney pivots into medical hardware & AWS considers selling Trainium chips - Tech News (Jun 19, 2026) Cover

Midjourney pivots into medical hardware & AWS considers selling Trainium chips - Tech News (Jun 19, 2026)

Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - 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] - Discover the Future of AI Audio with ElevenLabs - https://try.elevenlabs.io/tad [https://try.elevenlabs.io/tad] Support The Automated Daily directly: Buy me a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily [https://buymeacoffee.com/theautomateddaily] TODAY'S TOPICS: MIDJOURNEY PIVOTS INTO MEDICAL HARDWARE - MIDJOURNEY, KNOWN FOR GENERATIVE IMAGES, IS REPORTEDLY JUMPING INTO HEALTH TECH WITH A FULL-BODY ULTRASOUND CONCEPT AND SPA-STYLE ROLLOUT—RAISING BIG QUESTIONS ABOUT REGULATION, VALIDATION, AND CREDIBILITY. AWS CONSIDERS SELLING TRAINIUM CHIPS - AMAZON WEB SERVICES IS IN EARLY TALKS ABOUT SELLING ITS TRAINIUM AI CHIPS OUTSIDE AWS, A POTENTIAL SHIFT THAT WOULD PIT AMAZON MORE DIRECTLY AGAINST NVIDIA WHILE SPOTLIGHTING MANUFACTURING CONSTRAINTS. AI TALENT WAR HEATS UP - A MAJOR AI FIGURE, NOAM SHAZEER, IS LEAVING GOOGLE FOR OPENAI, INTENSIFYING THE COMPETITION FOR ELITE RESEARCHERS AND SIGNALING HOW STRATEGIC TALENT HAS BECOME IN THE MODEL RACE. SANDERS PROPOSES PUBLIC AI OWNERSHIP - SENATOR BERNIE SANDERS INTRODUCED A PLAN FOR A PUBLIC STAKE IN LARGE AI COMPANIES VIA STOCK-BASED TAXATION AND A SOVEREIGN WEALTH FUND, AIMING TO SPREAD AI-DRIVEN GAINS AND INFLUENCE GOVERNANCE. METERED PRICING RESHAPES AI SPENDING - AI LABS ARE MOVING FROM FLAT SUBSCRIPTIONS TO USAGE-BASED PRICING, PUSHING BUSINESSES TO TRACK ROI, CAP SPENDING, AND RETHINK WHICH MODELS AND PROVIDERS THEY RELY ON. AI AGENTS INCREASE WORKPLACE FATIGUE - AS AI AGENTS TAKE ON MORE TASKS, NEW SURVEYS AND ANECDOTES SUGGEST MANY WORKERS FEEL MORE DRAINED—STUCK SUPERVISING BOTS, CONTEXT-SWITCHING CONSTANTLY, AND FACING AN ALWAYS-ON WORK CULTURE. BOTS READ THE WEB NOW - CLOUDFLARE AND PUBLISHERS SAY AI CRAWLERS ARE RESHAPING THE WEB: BOTS CONSUME CONTENT AT SCALE WHILE HUMANS CLICK LESS, DRIVING NEW PAYWALLS, PAY-PER-CRAWL IDEAS, AND FIGHTS OVER WHO GETS PAID. EU BACKS VERIFIED-HUMAN SOCIAL PLATFORM - THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION IS JOINING SWEDEN-BASED SOCIAL NETWORK W, A ‘VERIFIED HUMAN’ PLATFORM TIED TO IDENTITY CHECKS, REFLECTING EUROPE’S PUSH FOR DIGITAL SOVEREIGNTY AND ALTERNATIVE NETWORKS. CANADA CONSIDERS UNDER-16 SOCIAL LIMITS - CANADA IS PREPARING POTENTIAL RESTRICTIONS ON SOCIAL MEDIA ACCESS FOR KIDS UNDER SIXTEEN, WHILE CRITICS SAY REAL SAFETY ALSO REQUIRES MEDIA LITERACY, PARENT INVOLVEMENT, AND ENFORCEABLE PLATFORM ACCOUNTABILITY. BRAIN-COMPUTER INTERFACE HITS HUMAN MILESTONE - PARADROMICS IMPLANTED ITS CONNEXUS BRAIN-COMPUTER INTERFACE IN A PERSON FOR THE FIRST TIME IN A LONGER-TERM CLINICAL STUDY, AIMING TO RESTORE SPEECH AND COMPUTER CONTROL FOR SEVERE MOTOR IMPAIRMENT. NASA RACES TO SAVE SWIFT - NASA IS FAST-TRACKING A ROBOTIC SERVICING ATTEMPT TO BOOST THE SWIFT OBSERVATORY’S ORBIT AS SOLAR ACTIVITY INCREASES ATMOSPHERIC DRAG—AN UNUSUALLY RAPID, HIGH-STAKES TEST OF COMMERCIAL SATELLITE RESCUE. PRIVATE COMPANY PICKED FOR MARS - NASA SELECTED RELATIVITY SPACE FOR A MARS WEATHER MISSION UNDER A PUBLIC-PRIVATE MODEL, BETTING ON A COMPANY WITH AMBITIOUS PLANS—AND NOTABLE EXECUTION RISK—TO DELIVER A SPACECRAFT AND LAUNCH. Episode Transcript Midjourney pivots into medical hardware Let’s start with that Midjourney curveball. The company best known for generating images and video says it’s pivoting into health and medical technology, beginning with a full-body ultrasound device and a plan to introduce it through “spa” locations. The big story isn’t the gadget itself—it’s the leap from creative software into a world where clinical evidence, safety standards, and regulators decide what’s real and what’s hype. AWS considers selling Trainium chips Staying in AI, Amazon Web Services is exploring something it has historically avoided: selling its in-house Trainium AI chips to other companies for their own data centers. If Amazon goes through with it, that’s a direct challenge to Nvidia beyond the usual cloud competition—while also testing whether Amazon can scale supply without creating longer waitlists for its own customers. AI talent war heats up And speaking of the AI arms race, one of the most influential minds in modern machine learning is switching sides. Noam Shazeer, a senior Google engineering leader and a key figure behind the transformer breakthrough that powers today’s chatbots, is leaving Google to join OpenAI. That’s not just a headline about one executive—it’s a reminder that top-tier AI talent is now treated like strategic infrastructure. Sanders proposes public AI ownership Meanwhile at Meta, there’s a quieter but telling shift: an executive leading a major internal “AI for work” overhaul is departing shortly after taking the role. Meta is trying to standardize and expand agent-style tools across the company, and leadership churn at that moment can slow delivery, muddy accountability, and complicate an already high-pressure transition to AI-driven workflows. Metered pricing reshapes AI spending Now to the economics of AI, where the pricing model is changing in a way many users are already feeling. More companies are moving away from simple monthly subscriptions and toward usage-based billing, especially for long-running agents that keep working in the background. The reason is straightforward: the compute bill is enormous, investors want a path to profit, and “unlimited” access is hard to justify when heavy users can quietly rack up serious costs. AI agents increase workplace fatigue That shift ties into a growing human factor story: AI agents aren’t necessarily giving people more free time. A new wave of reporting suggests some workers—developers in particular—are feeling more exhausted because their job becomes supervising multiple bots, checking outputs, correcting mistakes, and constantly context-switching. In other words, productivity may rise, but so does the mental load, and the risk is a work culture that expects round-the-clock oversight because the agents never sleep. Bots read the web now AI is also colliding with politics in a very direct way. Senator Bernie Sanders introduced legislation that would push large AI firms to give the public an ownership stake via a stock-based levy, building a fund that could pay dividends and use voting power to influence corporate behavior. Whether or not it goes anywhere, it signals where the debate is heading: not just regulating AI safety, but fighting over who owns the upside. EU backs verified-human social platform On the research front, there’s a cautionary note for anyone who thinks bigger models automatically mean deeper biological understanding. One argument making the rounds is that DNA isn’t a simple linear “code” you can fully decode from sequence alone, because so much of biology depends on regulation—when, where, and how genes are turned on and off—plus environment and development. Tools like AlphaGenome may become useful predictors, but the warning is clear: without the right kinds of data and strong scientific reasoning, AI can look confident while missing the real drivers of life. Canada considers under-16 social limits Let’s shift to the web itself, because the audience is changing—and it’s not human. Data and analysis from the infrastructure world suggest AI crawlers and bots are now consuming huge portions of web content, summarizing it for answer engines while sending far fewer clicks back to publishers. That breaks the old bargain—“you can crawl my site if you send me traffic”—and it’s already fueling new ideas like pay-per-crawl systems, tougher blocking, and fresh disputes over what access should cost. Brain-computer interface hits human milestone In Europe, the push for digital sovereignty has a new symbol: the European Commission is joining a Sweden-based social platform called W, positioned as a Europe-forward alternative to US-dominated networks. The platform emphasizes verified humans and identity checks before users can fully participate, and EU leaders joining early gives it instant visibility. The hard part, as always, is whether it can match the convenience and habit-forming pull of the incumbents. NASA races to save Swift Canada may take a more forceful approach to online life for teens. The federal government is preparing potential restrictions on social media access for children under sixteen, possibly as soon as this fall. Even supporters note a key limitation: age limits don’t automatically teach media literacy, fix platform incentives, or solve the problem of adults creating permanent digital footprints for kids before they can consent. Private company picked for Mars In health tech with real clinical stakes, Paradromics and University of Michigan Health reported a first human implantation of the company’s brain-computer interface in a longer-term feasibility study. The goal is to restore speech and computer control for people with severe motor impairments. It’s a milestone worth watching—not because it’s a finished product, but because it moves high-bandwidth brain interfaces closer to practical, sustained use outside short demonstrations. Story 13 Over in space, NASA is attempting something unusually fast and unusually risky: a rushed mission to rescue the Swift gamma-ray observatory as its orbit drops faster than expected due to heightened solar activity increasing atmospheric drag. A commercial spacecraft is being prepared to rendezvous, grab it, and boost it to safety—an approach that, if it works, could change how we think about saving aging satellites that were never designed to be serviced. Story 14 And NASA is also placing another big bet on the private sector: it picked Relativity Space, now led by Eric Schmidt, to deliver a Mars mission focused on daily global atmospheric measurements—data that could improve landing safety and future exploration planning. The catch is execution risk: the timeline is aggressive, and the required launch vehicle is still unproven. If it succeeds, it’s a landmark for commercial deep-space delivery; if not, it’s a reminder that Mars is still unforgiving. 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19. Juni 20266 min