OpenAI lands multiyear deals with consulting giants in enterprise push
OpenAI announced multiyear partnerships with Accenture, Boston Consulting Group, Capgemini, and McKinsey & Co. to deploy its enterprise platform Frontier. The consulting firms will help enterprise customers define AI strategy and integrate AI agents into production workflows. OpenAI's enterprise business already accounts for roughly 40% of revenue and is expected to reach 50% by year-end.
CNBC • Feb 24
CORPORATE AUTOMATION TECH
The Big One: The cyberattack scenarios that keep officials up at night
Seven former national security officials and industry leaders detailed their gravest cybersecurity concerns. Paul Nakasone, former NSA and Cyber Command head, warned that nation-state actors who have breached food and water infrastructure could accidentally trigger catastrophic outages if they lose control of AI agents. Former CISA director Jen Easterly noted AI is scaling existing weaknesses in insecure software and over-trusted automation.
Axios • Feb 24
CYBERCRIME CYBERWAR AI
Building the backbone for Europe's biodiversity monitoring
Researchers from University of Amsterdam and German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) have published a roadmap in Nature Reviews Biodiversity proposing a European Biodiversity Observation Network (BON) to unify fragmented national monitoring systems. The plan combines environmental DNA sampling, satellite remote sensing, and citizen science data through a proposed European Biodiversity Observation Coordination Centre (EBOCC). The initiative aims to standardize data workflows around Essential Biodiversity Variables to support the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework and European Green Deal commitments.
Nature Reviews Biodiversity • Feb 23
SURVEILLANCE REGULATION TECH
Voters know what the next big issue is. They don't know how they feel about it.
New polling by POLITICO reveals data centers are emerging as a potent but undefined political issue ahead of 2026 elections, with Democrats seeing traction from candidates who campaigned on regulating data center energy consumption and water usage. Republican Oklahoma City Mayor David Holt noted data centers shifted from unknown to omnipresent in political discourse within months. The survey found only 25% of Americans believe data centers won't play a role in their local elections, while bipartisan momentum builds to accelerate permitting and energy infrastructure to support AI growth despite environmentalist warnings of conflict with net-zero goals.
POLITICO • Feb 23
CORPORATE REGULATION INFRASTRUCTURE
AI tools can design genomes. Will they upend how life evolves?
Researchers are now using AI-powered generative biology to design biological components, artificial genes, and even entire synthetic viruses from scratch. Last year, scientists produced AI-designed artificial genes expressible in mammalian cells and created the first fully AI-generated synthetic virus. This "generative biology" approach turbocharges synthetic biology by enabling the creation of novel organisms without natural templates.
Nature • Feb 23
TECH AI SYNTHETIC
AI threatens enterprise software companies, says Franklin Templeton CEO
Financial Times • Feb 23
CORPORATE FINANCE INEQUALITY
The algorithmic feed on X could be shifting political views toward conservatism
A randomized field experiment published in Nature involving 4,965 X users found that using the platform's algorithmic "For You" feed shifted political attitudes toward conservatism compared to a chronological timeline. The effect persisted even after users returned to chronological feeds, suggesting lasting attitude changes from algorithmic exposure. Content analysis revealed the algorithm amplified conservative and activist posts while reducing visibility of traditional news outlets, demonstrating that social media algorithms can measurably reshape political attitudes at scale.
Phys.org • Feb 23
INEQUALITY SURVEILLANCE SOCIAL
Is Age Verification a Trap?
Age verification mandates force platforms to store biometric data, ID images, and verification logs for regulatory defense, creating persistent privacy risks. Facial age estimation systems produce false positives that lock accounts for days while platforms must retain sensitive data long enough to prove compliance decisions to regulators, transforming child safety infrastructure into permanent identity surveillance architecture.
IEEE Spectrum • Feb 23
SURVEILLANCE PRIVACY BIOMETRICS
Live facial recognition to be used ahead of Everton v Man Utd
BBC News • Feb 23
SURVEILLANCE PRIVACY BIOMETRICS
If AI makes human labor obsolete, who decides who gets to eat?
The Guardian examines the overlooked question of resource distribution amid AI-driven labor displacement, exploring how societies will feed populations if traditional employment becomes obsolete. The article discusses proposals including universal basic income, AI dividend portfolios, and tax policies to steer technology toward augmenting rather than replacing workers.
The Guardian • Feb 23
FINANCE POSTLABOR AUTOMATION
Gig workers in Africa had no idea they were helping the U.S. military
Rest of World • Feb 23
GEOPOLITICS LABOR INEQUALITY
Big Tech's AI bond binge shatters 'unspoken contract' with investors
Hyperscalers are abandoning their traditional "fortress balance sheet" approach to fund AI infrastructure buildouts through massive debt issuances, challenging decades of investor expectations. Oracle issued a record $18 billion bond in September 2025, while Alphabet, Amazon, Meta and Microsoft collectively project nearly $650 billion in 2026 capital expenditures. Credit markets are pricing higher default risk for tech borrowers as AI disruption threats and potential data center obsolescence create uncertainty. Investors warn that bringing speculative AI spending into debt markets fundamentally alters the risk profile of previously cash-rich tech giants.
CNBC • Feb 23
CORPORATE FINANCE INEQUALITY
Falcon 9 rocket sets new reuse record on SpaceX's 2nd Starlink launch of the day
SpaceX demonstrated its rocket reusability dominance with a Falcon 9 booster completing its record-breaking 33rd re-flight during a Starlink satellite launch from Florida. The achievement came during a double-launch day, with another Falcon 9 simultaneously launching from California. The milestone reflects the consolidation of reusable orbital infrastructure technology in private hands, with SpaceX having deployed over 650 Starlink satellites to build its satellite communications network.
Space.com • Feb 22
CORPORATE NEOCORP GEOPOLITICS
Apple's AI Wearables Push; What to Expect From March 4 Low-End MacBook Launch
Apple is accelerating development of three AI wearables including smart glasses, a pendant camera device, and AirPods equipped with cameras. CEO Tim Cook has positioned "Visual Intelligence" as the defining feature of Apple's push into wearable AI. The devices will integrate deeply with Siri and iPhone, extending Apple's ecosystem into always-on visual capture and contextual AI processing. All three products are planned for launch within the next year.
Bloomberg • Feb 22
NEOCORP SURVEILLANCE AI
Democrats and Republicans agree on one thing: regulating the use of AI
Bipartisan consensus has emerged across US state legislatures regarding the need for AI and data center regulation despite historical partisan gridlock on technology policy. Republican and Democratic lawmakers at state capitols nationwide are advancing regulatory frameworks addressing artificial intelligence deployment and data center infrastructure expansion. The rare bipartisan agreement signals growing institutional recognition that algorithmic systems have outpaced existing regulatory frameworks governing their deployment and social impact.
NPR • Feb 22
REGULATION AI INFRASTRUCTURE
Password Managers Share a Hidden Weakness
Researchers at ETH Zurich and USI Lugano have exposed fundamental flaws in password manager cryptographic implementations, challenging "zero knowledge" claims that companies claim prevent them from accessing user credentials. The study demonstrates that malicious insiders or sophisticated hackers can exploit these cryptographic weaknesses to compromise the supposedly secure vaults across multiple major platforms. The findings undermine years of privacy assurances that have positioned password managers as essential security infrastructure.
Wired • Feb 22
PRIVACY CYBERCRIME INFRASTRUCTURE
SerpApi asks court to dismiss Google web scraping lawsuit
A federal judge has allowed SerpApi's antitrust counterclaims against Google to proceed, finding the scraping company plausibly alleged that Google holds monopoly power in the search market and that its lawsuit against SerpApi could constitute exclusionary conduct. The ruling challenges the limits of how a monopolist can use Terms of Service to restrict access to information that has become essential internet infrastructure.
The Register • Feb 22
CORPORATE NEOCORP ANTITRUST
How A.I. Money Is Flooding Into the Midterm Elections
AI companies and allied groups have spent at least $83 million on federal elections and are positioned to deploy hundreds of millions more for the 2026 midterm elections in an extraordinary demonstration of political power from Silicon Valley. OpenAI, Anthropic, and affiliated executives are directing record political contributions as the industry moves to shape favorable regulatory frameworks and secure government contracts. The spending surge comes as AI companies face mounting regulatory scrutiny and competition for lucrative defense and infrastructure contracts. Some donors have broader political interests beyond AI policy, but the coordinated industry investment represents an unprecedented electoral mobilization by emerging technology firms.
The New York Times • Feb 22
CORPORATE NEOCORP GEOPOLITICS
Cloudflare outage on February 20, 2026
Cloudflare experienced a six-hour global service outage on February 20, 2026, causing major disruptions for customers utilizing its Bring Your Own IP (BYOIP) services. The incident began at 17:48 UTC when Border Gateway Protocol routes were withdrawn for BYOIP customers after an internal bug in Cloudflare's Addressing API was triggered during an automated cleanup sub-task. The root cause traced to deployment of new code with a flaw in prefix deletion logic. Some customers manually restored service through the Cloudflare dashboard, but full restoration required engineering intervention. The company has initiated a "Code Orange: Fail Small" program to prevent similar cascading failures.
Cloudflare • Feb 22
TECH INFRASTRUCTURE CYBERSECURITY
Why fake AI videos of UK urban decline are taking over social media
AI-generated deepfakes depicting fabricated scenes of urban decay in south London neighborhoods—particularly Croydon—have gone viral on social media platforms, showing crowds of young Black men in balaclavas at a dilapidated taxpayer-funded waterpark. The videos are created by accounts posing as British news sources and are algorithmically amplified alongside existing narratives linking immigration to urban decline. These deepfakes, marked with small "AI-generated" labels insufficient to prevent circulation, have drawn racist responses and convinced some commenters of their authenticity, demonstrating how synthetic media can fuel racialized disinformation campaigns by exploiting platform algorithmic distribution systems.
BBC • Feb 22
SURVEILLANCE SOCIAL MEMETIC
Top NATO allies believe cyberattacks on hospitals are an act of war. They're still struggling to fight back.
A major poll across the US and four NATO member states reveals that majorities in each country view cyberattacks on critical infrastructure, particularly hospitals and energy grids, as acts of war. Despite this consensus, the allied nations remain divided on appropriate responses, with less than half believing that hacking political leaders' private communications constitutes an act of war. State-linked attacks have escalated dramatically - the 2024 Change Healthcare breach exposed 190 million US medical records, while a Russian cyberattack on UK NHS systems contributed to a patient's death. Iranian government-backed hackers also targeted Boston Children's Hospital in 2022.
Politico • Feb 22
REGULATION CYBERCRIME CYBERWAR
Ethereum's Vitalik Buterin proposes AI 'stewards' to help reinvent DAO governance
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has proposed deploying AI "stewards" to manage decentralized autonomous organizations, using zero-knowledge proofs and secure computation environments to automate governance decisions while protecting sensitive data. The system would embed AI agents within multi-party computation or trusted execution environments, enabling them to process private information without exposing it on public blockchains. Buterin argues this architecture could overcome DAO governance failures caused by human attention limits, while privacy-preserving tools would prevent coercion and bribery in voting processes.
CoinDesk • Feb 22
NEOCORP CRYPTO FINANCE
Sam Altman Says Companies Are 'AI Washing' Layoffs
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman acknowledges that companies are attributing workforce reductions to AI automation when underlying economic factors drive the cuts. While Altman admits some genuine AI displacement is occurring, research shows only 4.5% of 2025 layoffs were AI-related, with Amazon publicly reversing its AI-blame narrative after initially citing automation for 14,000 job cuts. The dynamic reveals how AI serves as reputational cover for conventional downsizing while fueling public anxiety about technological unemployment.
Gizmodo • Feb 22
CORPORATE LABOR POSTLABOR
You have 18 months to figure out your office job, $1 billion CEO says. But it's not going away
Tanmai Gopal, CEO of Hasura, predicts a sector-specific AI disruption where coding and entry-level office jobs face near-term automation while knowledge workers in operations, sales, and marketing retain value through human context. Gopal argues the tech industry's self-automation via 'baby AGI' for coding creates a false perception of universal job displacement, when in reality AI struggles with tasks requiring fluid daily adaptation and interpersonal nuance. This bifurcation risks concentrating displacement among technical entry-level workers while middle-management knowledge work proves more resistant.
Fortune • Feb 22
LABOR AUTOMATION INEQUALITY
Amazon's cloud 'hit by two outages caused by AI tools last year'
Amazon Web Services experienced at least two outages linked to internal AI tools in 2025, including a December incident where the autonomous AI agent Kiro was granted permissions to fix a software issue but instead introduced a bug causing hours-long disruption. The incidents raise concerns about deploying autonomous AI agents in critical infrastructure management as AWS reportedly reduces engineering headcount while increasing AI automation.
The Guardian • Feb 21
CORPORATE AUTOMATION AI
Ukrainian gets 5 years for helping North Koreans infiltrate US firms
A Ukrainian national was sentenced to five years in prison for providing stolen American identities to North Korean IT workers, enabling them to secure remote jobs at over 300 U.S. companies. The scheme generated millions of dollars that were funneled back to North Korea's nuclear weapons program, bypassing international sanctions. The operation involved sophisticated identity theft and remote work infiltration targeting tech companies, defense contractors, and financial institutions.
BleepingComputer • Feb 21
CORPORATE GEOPOLITICS SURVEILLANCE