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At Davos, tech CEOs laid out their vision for AI's world domination
A technician works at an Amazon Web Services AI datacenter in New Carlisle, Indiana, on 2 October 2025. A technician works at an Amazon Web Services AI datacenter in New Carlisle, Indiana, on 2 October 2025. At Davos, tech CEOs laid out their vision for AI's world domination Tech chiefs waxed poetic about AI to delegates at Davos. Plus, the'human' drama of AI startups and why Tesla is thriving in Texas This week's edition is a team effort: my colleague Heather Stewart reports on the plans for AI's world domination at Davos; I examine how huge investments have followed AI companies with little to their names but drama and dreams; and Nick Robins-Early spotlights how lax regulation of autonomous driving in Texas allowed Tesla to thrive. When they weren't discussing Donald Trump, delegates at the World Economic Forum last week were being dazzled by the prospects for artificial intelligence.
'Wake up to the risks of AI, they are almost here,' Anthropic boss warns
'Wake up to the risks of AI, they are almost here,' Anthropic boss warns Dario Amodei questions if human systems are ready to handle the'almost unimaginable power' that is'potentially imminent' Humanity is entering a phase of artificial intelligence development that will "test who we are as a species", the boss of the AI startup Anthropic has said, arguing that the world needs to "wake up" to the risks. Dario Amodei, a co-founder and the chief executive of the company behind the hit chatbot Claude, voiced his fears in a 19,000-word essay titled "The adolescence of technology". Describing the arrival of highly powerful AI systems as potentially imminent, he wrote: "I believe we are entering a rite of passage, both turbulent and inevitable, which will test who we are as a species." Amodei added: "Humanity is about to be handed almost unimaginable power, and it is deeply unclear whether our social, political, and technological systems possess the maturity to wield it." The tech entrepreneur, whose company is reportedly worth $350bn (£255bn), said his essay was an attempt to "jolt people awake" because the world needed to "wake up" to the need for action on AI safety.
'It's 2C in our flat': Inside Kyiv apartment as Russia targets power and heating
Russia has been exploiting Ukraine's harshest winter in years to pummel energy infrastructure across the country. Repeated strikes have crippled the power supply to major Ukrainian cities, leaving millions without heating or light as temperatures hover around -15C (5F) for the third week in a row. Electrical companies carry out round-the-clock repairs - only for their work to be undone at night, when Russian drone and missiles again damage power stations. In Kyiv, people were initially able to keep the cold at bay by using electric heaters or wrapping up warm. But the freezing temperatures have lasted weeks now, with no end in sight.
Boiling Britain: Number of 'uncomfortably hot' days in the UK is set to increase by 150% by 2050, study warns
Lawyer, 44, who died on flight to London after falling asleep on her mother's shoulder had undiagnosed cardiac condition, inquest hears Winter Storm Fern death toll climbs to 34 after brutal freeze batters the US... and meteorologists warn even colder weather is on the way Top lawyer, event planner and pilot identified as three of six killed in private jet crash while taking'girls' trip' to Paris Insidious secret life of promiscuous neurosurgeon found dead in his $2.5m mansion'He has no loyalty': The bitter secret fallout between One Direction star Harry Styles and his former bandmates - as insiders reveal for the first time what really happened at Liam Payne's funeral Ricky Gervais' long-term partner Jane Fallon says she has no regrets about not having children as she opens up about their relationship'Gunfight' as Chinese general is purged by President Xi: Rumours sweep Beijing that'coup-plotting' military chief was axed'for leaking nuclear secrets to US' Is Angelina Jolie quitting America? Private struggles emerge... as actress weighs major lifestyle that threatens to rupture her family Brandi Glanville debuts dramatic new look after facial disfigurement caused by'parasite'... see RHOBH alum now Matthew Stafford's wife Kelly shares emotional moment NFL star returned home after heartbreaking playoff defeat Swiss inferno bar owners place blame on tragic'waitress in the helmet' and say fire was result of her'show' climbing on to colleague's shoulders with lit sparklers Coco Gauff's behind-the-scenes meltdown at the Australian Open: World No 3 smashes racket in a rage after losing in just 59 minutes - and it was all caught on camera Insiders reveal the REAL misstep that got Kristi Noem humiliatingly ditched by Trump... and the weak excuse she's peddling to try and save herself Boiling Britain: Number of'uncomfortably hot' days in the UK is set to increase by 150% by 2050, study warns READ MORE: 2025 was Britain's hottest year on RECORD, Met Office confirms The number of'uncomfortably hot' days in the UK is set to increase by a whopping 150 per cent by 2050, a new study has warned. Researchers from the University of Oxford modelled what the weather will look like if the world warms by 2 C. While this sounds like a lot, they warn this scenario is becoming'increasingly likely'. The results revealed that under these conditions, the number of uncomfortably hot days will increase by 150 per cent in the UK, and by staggering 230 per cent in Ireland. Given these countries are largely designed to cope with cold conditions, this temperature increase could have'disproportionately severe impacts', the experts warn.
Independent studios scramble to stay afloat as film and TV production lags
Things to Do in L.A. Tap to enable a layout that focuses on the article. Stage 9, also known as the Seinfeld Stage, where the show was produced along Republic Avenue at Radford Studio Center in 2023 in Studio City. Owner Hackman Capital Partners is ceding the 55-acre property to Goldman Sachs. This is read by an automated voice. Please report any issues or inconsistencies here .
Revealed: Leaked Chats Expose the Daily Life of a Scam Compound's Enslaved Workforce
A whistleblower trapped inside a "pig butchering" scam compound gave WIRED a vast trove of its internal materials--including 4,200 pages of messages that lay out its operations in unprecedented detail. Just before 8am one day last April, an office manager who went by the name Amani sent out a motivational message to his colleagues and subordinates. "Every day brings a new opportunity--a chance to connect, to inspire, and to make a difference," he wrote in his 500-word post to an office-wide WhatsApp group. "Talk to that next customer like you're bringing them something valuable--because you are." He and his underlings worked inside a " pig butchering " compound, a criminal operation built to carry out scams --promising romance and riches from crypto investments--that often defraud victims out of hundreds of thousands or even millions of dollars at a time. The workers Amani was addressing were eight hours into their 15-hour night shift in a high-rise building in the Golden Triangle special economic zone in Northern Laos. Like their marks, most of them were victims, too: forced laborers trapped in the compound, held in debt bondage with no passports. They struggled to meet scam revenue quotas to avoid fines that deepened their debt.
He Leaked the Secrets of a Southeast Asian Scam Compound. Then He Had to Get Out Alive
A source trapped inside an industrial-scale scamming operation contacted me, determined to expose his captors' crimes--and then escape. It was a perfect June evening in New York when I received my first email from the source who would ask me to call him Red Bull. He was writing from hell, 8,000 miles away. A summer shower had left a rainbow over my Brooklyn neighborhood, and my two children were playing in a kiddie pool on the roof of our apartment building. Now the sun was setting, while I--in typical 21st-century parenting fashion, forgive me--compulsively scrolled through every app on my phone. The message had no subject line and came from an address on the encrypted email service Proton Mail: "vaultwhistle@proton.me." I'm currently working inside a major crypto romance scam operation based in the Golden Triangle," it began. "I am a computer engineer being forced to work here under a contract." "I've collected internal evidence of how the scam works--step by step," the message ...
How AI cops will be used to patrol Britain's streets: From live facial recognition to virtual chatbots - the Orwellian technologies that are set to tackle crime
Winter Storm Fern death toll climbs to 34 after brutal freeze batters the US... and meteorologists warn even colder weather is on the way Top lawyer, event planner and pilot identified as three of six killed in private jet crash while taking'girls' trip' to Paris Insidious secret life of promiscuous neurosurgeon found dead in his $2.5m mansion'He has no loyalty': The bitter secret fallout between One Direction star Harry Styles and his former bandmates - as insiders reveal for the first time what really happened at Liam Payne's funeral Nicola Peltz was raised by billionaire'bully' Nelson who became the most feared investor on Wall Street before starting his own dynasty with his 10 children Is Angelina Jolie quitting America? Private struggles emerge... as actress weighs major lifestyle that threatens to rupture her family Influencer shares haunting 911 call after crash that killed her son known for viral'Okay Baby' video Matthew Stafford's wife Kelly shares emotional moment NFL star returned home after heartbreaking playoff defeat Martha Stewart breaks political silence after being urged by teenage granddaughter: 'Things must change' Insiders reveal the REAL misstep that got Kristi Noem humiliatingly ditched by Trump... and the weak excuse she's peddling to try and save herself Defiant Trump dismisses Alzheimer's fears as he struggles to recall name of disease in interview How AI cops will be used to patrol Britain's streets: From live facial recognition to virtual chatbots - the Orwellian technologies that are set to tackle crime Britain's police forces are getting a high-tech upgrade, as artificial intelligence ( AI) tools are rolled out to tackle crime . As part of major police reforms, Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood has announced that over £140 million will be invested in new technology . Police will be given access to facial recognition vans, tools for rapid CCTV analysis, and a suite of digital forensics tools. How the public interacts with the police is also set to change, as 999 control rooms use'AI-assisted operator services' to filter'non-policing calls'.
Where Tech Leaders and Students Really Think AI Is Going
We asked tech CEOs, journalists, entertainers, students, and more about the promise and peril of artificial intelligence. The future never feels fully certain. But in this time of rapid, intense transformation--political, technological, cultural, scientific--it's as difficult as it ever has been to get a sense of what's around the next corner. Here at WIRED, we're obsessed with what comes next. Our pursuit of the future most often takes the form of vigorously reported stories, in-depth videos, and interviews with the people helping define it.