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Tech Industry Wants to Lock Up Nuclear Power for AI
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The Wall Street Journal - Business
Tech Industry Wants to Lock Up Nuclear Power for AI
The largest tech companies are looking to buy nuclear power directly from plants, which could meet their huge needs but sap the grid of critical resources. -
The Wall Street Journal - World
Tech companies are closing or negotiating deals to buy nuclear power directly from plants to meet AI needs, potentially removing stable electricity generation from grids that serve other users.
Tech companies are closing or negotiating deals to buy nuclear power directly from plants to meet AI needs, potentially removing stable electricity generation from grids that serve other users. -
Wired - Tech
OpenAI Wants AI to Help Humans Train AI
Having humans rate a language model’s outputs produced clever chatbots. OpenAI says adding AI to the loop could help make them even smarter and more reliable.Artificial Intelligence -
The Hill - Politics
China won't rule out AI-controlled nuclear weapons
China has rejected American proposals to limit the use of artificial intelligence for controlling the launch of nuclear weapons, raising concerns about the potential for AI-controlled nuclear weapons to lead to a nightmare scenario.China -
CNBC - Business
U.S. needs major nuclear power expansion to meet rising electricity demand, Southern Company CEO says
The U.S. needs to install more than 10 gigawatts of new nuclear power, said Chris Womack. -
BBC News - Top stories
Levelling up: Can the next government help the UK games industry?
Despite it bringing an estimated £6bn to the UK economy, politicians don't tend to talk about gaming.United Kingdom -
ESPN - Sports
Paddock diary: How new AI tech will set track limits
AI tech will address some of the concerns about track limits. Plus, should motor racing be an Olympic sport? -
Inc. - Business
California Ponders Safety Regulations for AIs as Tech Firms Push Back
State lawmakers want curbs on AI models to prevent them from worst-case scenarios, like shutting off the electric grid or helping make chemical weapons, but face opposition from Meta, Google, and other tech giants.California -
Wired - Tech
The US Wants to Integrate the Commercial Space Industry With Its Military to Prevent Cyber Attacks
As more and more infrastructure is deployed in space, the risk of cyber attacks increases. The US military wants to team up with the private sector to protect assets everyone relies on.
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The Wall Street Journal - World
India's Sensex Hits 80000, Led by Consumer, Financial Stocks
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The Wall Street Journal - World
Chinese Imports Are Rising Again. Here's What It Means for U.S. Jobs
Cheap Chinese goods helped keep inflation low in the early 2000s, but at the cost of U.S. manufacturing. As those imports surge again, here’s what’s changed and what it means for American jobs. -
The Wall Street Journal - World
USD/SGD Edges Higher Ahead of U.S. Economic Data
USD/SGD edged higher on possible position adjustments ahead of U.S. economic data. -
The Wall Street Journal - World
World's 'Most Successful' Political Party Stares at Sweeping Defeat in U.K. Election
After 14 years in power, Britain’s Conservative Party looks like it’s headed into the electoral wilderness. -
The Wall Street Journal - World
The Making of the 28-Year-Old Star of France's Far Right
National Rally’s Jordan Bardella, playing up a childhood in the projects, pulls in young people and others with nationalist message, TikTok savvy; calling Le Pen “my queen.”