
AI chatbots are suck-ups, and that may be affecting your relationships
A new study of AI sycophancy shows how asking agreeable chatbots for advice can change your behavior

AI chatbots are suck-ups, and that may be affecting your relationships
A new study of AI sycophancy shows how asking agreeable chatbots for advice can change your behavior

The hacked cameras behind the wave of assassinations in Iran
Security feeds and traffic cameras have helped guide some of the most audacious targeted killings in modern history. Security researchers say the underlying vulnerabilities cover the planet and are easy to exploit


Why the LaGuardia plane crash was so destructive
Engineers explain how a collision between an Air Canada plane and a fire truck at one of New York’s busiest airports turned deadly

Open-source software has an invisible vulnerability. Hackers have found it
A cybercrime campaign called GlassWorm is hiding malware in invisible characters and spreading it through software that millions of developers rely on

The AI boom is dangerously dependent on helium
The closure of the Strait of Hormuz has trapped a third of the world’s commercial helium, threatening the irreplaceable coolant that makes MRI scanners and advanced microchips possible

SpaceX now has more than 10,000 Starlink satellites in orbit
Once unfathomable, the milestone of a single company having 10,000 satellites operating overhead signals that the era of mega constellations is here to stay

The Pentagon is looking to nuclear waste for power
A Rhode Island start-up is working to recycle spent nuclear fuel into long-lasting power systems for the military

Identical twins on trial: can DNA testing tell them apart?
In a French criminal trial, conventional DNA analysis couldn’t distinguish between twin brothers, but emerging scientific methods could help in such cases

Why did the public forget Katharine Burr Blodgett’s brilliant legacy?
We trace the final chapter of Katharine Burr Blodgett’s career, her retirement from GE and her disappearance from public memory

AI-designed experiments run by robots hint at a new approach to biology
Researchers at OpenAI and Ginkgo Bioworks showed that an AI model working with an autonomous lab can design and iterate real biology experiments at unprecedented speed

Why ships in the Strait of Hormuz can’t trust their navigation screens
GPS spoofing is distorting vessel positions and deepening the risk in one of the world’s most important shipping lanes

Humans ‘catch’ fear from robots that breathe like they’re scared
Fuzzy, fast-breathing robots can make humans more afraid