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Social networks, online video outweigh traditional media in 2026
News consumers around the world are now turning more to social media and video platforms than traditional outlets for information, a report has found. News consumers around the world are now turning more to social media and video platforms than traditional outlets for information, a report said Tuesday, warning that old-style business models are under threat. The year 2026 marks "a significant milestone: for the first time, social media and video network consumption is now ahead of other news sources as the most widely used source of news globally," at 54%, wrote Jim Egan, lead author of the report from the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism. The annual report from the institute, attached to the University of Oxford, is a closely-watched tracker of trends reshaping the news media. Researchers based their findings on online surveys of almost 100,000 people in 48 countries, run earlier this year by pollster YouGov. This year's edition found 54% of respondents said they got news from social media or video platforms in the week before the survey -- rising to 56% if AI chatbots like ChatGPT were included.
Macron's G7 legacy hangs on fickle AI funding and data centers
Macron's G7 legacy hangs on fickle AI funding and data centers With less than a year left in office, Emmanuel Macron wants to be remembered as the French president who put Europe back in the technology race. His decade-old ambition to turn France into a "startup nation" never fully delivered. Now Macron sees a second chance by positioning France as Europe's artificial intelligence powerhouse, leveraging the nation's abundant supply of nuclear energy for data centers. He convinced SoftBank Group to invest as much as €75 billion ($87 billion) in French projects. His advisers have dubbed the AI effort "Project Marengo," a reference to Napoleon Bonaparte's victory over an Austrian army in 1800 at the battle of the same name, won through speed and decisive action. Marengo was also a political victory, securing Bonaparte's hold on power.
Crypto token's 50% wipeout shows magnitude of AI-hacking threat
Crypto token's 50% wipeout shows magnitude of AI-hacking threat The same artificial intelligence tools helping developers audit code in cryptocurrency are also lowering the barriers for attackers, creating an arms race across the industry, researchers say. When Eli Ben-Sasson helped create the Zcash cryptocurrency nearly a decade ago, the cryptographer worried about human adversaries. He didn't expect that machine intelligence would one day expose a flaw that had eluded years of expert human judgment. That reality rattled investors recently after a security researcher working with Zcash used Anthropic's Claude Opus 4.8 to uncover a critical vulnerability that had gone undetected for more than four years. After Zcash disclosed the flaw on June 4, the token -- which traded at far higher levels just weeks earlier -- tumbled about 50% as traders reassessed the security of one of crypto's most prominent privacy networks. The exploit struck at the heart of Zcash's value proposition.
Starmer to confirm social media ban for U.K. teens ahead of G7 meet
Starmer to confirm social media ban for U.K. teens ahead of G7 meet U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer is expected to confirm a social media ban on children under 16 on Monday morning. U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer will start a crucial week for his premiership by announcing a package of strong restrictions designed to protect British teenagers from online threats. Starmer is expected Monday morning to confirm a ban on children under 16 using major social media platforms, as well as other measures including curfews on older teenagers and tough regulations on chatbots. He will then depart for a Group of Seven summit at Evian-les-Bains, France, where he faces awkward questions following last week's resignation of his defense secretary and uncertainty around the U.K.'s military budget. A ban on young teenagers using social media is popular with the U.K. public despite concerns around how effectively it can be enforced. The Labour government's new range of restrictions -- including some against chatbots and online games -- will go further than laws in Australia, according to a person familiar with the situation, where a ban on social media for teens came into effect last year.