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How the AI Boom Sparked a Housing Crisis in One Texas City

TIME - Tech

One chilly day in November 2025, community worker Mike Prado drove through Abilene, Tex., handing out blankets, socks, and jackets to unhoused individuals across the city. People sat on curbs, alleyway after alleyway, their meager belongings soaked by the previous night's hard rain. Prado has worked in this community for a decade, and was once homeless in Abilene himself. Prado has witnessed difficult years--but the current situation was the worst he'd ever seen, he told TIME. One man with a walker approached Prado outside of the Hope Haven offices--an Abilene nonprofit where Prado works, which operates a shelter and helps people with vouchers find housing--and accepted a jacket from him.


DeSantis says Florida can regulate AI despite Trump's executive order: 'We have a right to do this'

FOX News

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MIKE DAVIS: Congress must stop Big Tech's AI amnesty scam before it's too late

FOX News

Senator Ted Cruz leads efforts to pass AI amnesty through the NDAA, giving Big Tech federal preemption without rules to protect conservatives and children.


'It's going much too fast': the inside story of the race to create the ultimate AI

The Guardian

'It's going much too fast': the inside story of the race to create the ultimate AI On the 8.49am train through Silicon Valley, the tables are packed with young people glued to laptops, earbuds in, rattling out code. As the northern California hills scroll past, instructions flash up on screens from bosses: fix this bug; add new script. There is no time to enjoy the view. These commuters are foot soldiers in the global race towards artificial general intelligence - when AI systems become as or more capable than highly qualified humans. Here in the Bay Area of San Francisco, some of the world's biggest companies are fighting it out to gain some kind of an advantage. And, in turn, they are competing with China. This race to seize control of a technology that could reshape the world is being fuelled by bets in the trillions of dollars by the US's most powerful capitalists. Passengers get off a train at Palo Alto station.


WIRED Roundup: DHS's Privacy Breach, AI Romantic Affairs, and Google Sues Text Scammers

WIRED

In this episode of Uncanny Valley, we discuss our scoop about how the Department of Homeland Security illegally collected Chicago residents' data for month, as well as the news of the week. In today's episode, host Zoë Schiffer is joined by executive editor Brian Barrett to discuss five stories you need to know about this week--from how AI affairs can now be grounds for divorce, to why Google is suing one of the largest networks of text scammers. Then, we dive into how the Department of Homeland Security illegally gathered the data of hundreds of Chicago residents. If the US Has to Build Data Centers, Here's Where They Should Go This Is the Platform Google Claims Is Behind a'Staggering' Scam Text Operation AI Relationships Are on the Rise. Please help us improve Uncanny Valley by filling out our listener survey. Write to us at uncannyvalley@wired.com. You can always listen to this week's podcast through the audio player on this page, but if you want to subscribe for free to get every episode, here's how: If you're on an iPhone or iPad, open the app called Podcasts, or just tap this link. Note: This is an automated transcript, which may contain errors. Today on the show, we're bringing you five stories that you need to know about this week, including our scoop about how the Department of Homeland Security, or DHS, collected Chicago residents' data for months in violation of domestic espionage rules. I'm joined today by WIRED's executive editor Brian Barrett.


Fox News AI Newsletter: Russian robot faceplants in humiliating debut

FOX News

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Texas's Water Wars

The New Yorker

As industrial operations move to the state, residents find that their drinking water has been promised to companies. In 2019, Corpus Christi, Texas's eighth-largest city, moved forward with plans to build a desalination plant. The facility, which was expected to be completed by 2023, at a cost of a hundred and forty million dollars, would convert seawater into fresh water to be used by the area's many refineries and chemical plants. The former mayor called it "a pretty significant day in the life of our city." In anticipation of the plant's opening, the city committed to provide tens of millions of gallons of water per day to new industrial operations, including a plastics plant co-owned by ExxonMobil and the Saudi Basic Industries Corporation, a lithium refinery for Tesla batteries, and a "specialty chemicals" plant operated by Chemours.


'A lot of this is speculative': faith and fear mix amid 3tn global datacentre boom

The Guardian

Several new sites such as this are in the pipeline in the UK. Several new sites such as this are in the pipeline in the UK. 'A lot of this is speculative': faith and fear mix amid $3tn global datacentre boom The global investment spree in artificial intelligence is producing some remarkable numbers and a projected $3tn (£2.3tn) spend on datacentres is one of them. These vast warehouses are the central nervous system of AI tools such as OpenAI's ChatGPT and Google's Veo 3, underpinning the training and operation of a technology into which investors have poured vast sums of money. Despite concerns that the AI boom could be a bubble waiting to burst, there are few signs of it at the moment.