• Labour’s AI plan could be good for Britain – except the creatives it will throw under the bus | Ed Newton-Rex

    Labour’s AI plan could be good for Britain – except the creatives it will throw under the bus | Ed Newton-Rex
    The proposed new law will hand over artists’ copyright so their competitors can be trained for free. The government must reconsiderOn Monday morning, a couple of hours after the UK government’s AI opportunities action plan was published, I started getting messages from artists. “We are not going to continue drawing so that the founders of [AI companies] can get rich. I am quitting this job now,” said one. Another told me: “I have given up at this point.” I&rsq
  • Escalating armed conflict is most urgent threat for world in 2025, say global leaders

    Escalating armed conflict is most urgent threat for world in 2025, say global leaders
    World Economic Forum says responses from experts in business, politics and academia also highlight climate crisisGlobal leaders have said that escalating armed conflict is the most urgent threat in 2025 but the climate emergency is expected to cause the greatest concern over the next decade, according to the World Economic Forum.Ahead of its yearly gathering in the Swiss ski resort of Davos next week, the WEF asked more than 900 leaders from business, politics and academia about the risks that m
  • ‘A viable business’: Rolls-Royce banking on success of small modular reactors

    ‘A viable business’: Rolls-Royce banking on success of small modular reactors
    UK firm in vanguard of companies arguing SMRs are quicker and cheaper option than large Hinkley-sized nuclear plantsThe Hinkley Point C power plant in Somerset is gargantuan. The 176-hectare (435-acre) plant will provide 3.2 gigawatts of power, enough for 6m homes. It is not just the project that is huge: the cost is as well. With a price tag that has ballooned to a reported £48bn, and delayed by at least five years, it has become a symbol of the pitfalls of nuclear power.But a clutch of c
  • Keir Starmer is right to gamble on an AI revolution, but it might not pay out in time | Rafael Behr

    Keir Starmer is right to gamble on an AI revolution, but it might not pay out in time | Rafael Behr
    The cash to match the prime minister’s ambition will have to come from other budgets long before any benefits are seenKeir Starmer made two predictions at the start of his week. He said that artificial intelligence will transform Britain’s economy in the coming years and that Rachel Reeves will continue to run the Treasury. Those were safe bets, but not guarantees. One is a forecast the prime minister makes eagerly, the other was bullied out of him. He would have preferred to talk ab
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