Medicine is receiving massive support in the fight against bureaucracy. OpenAI has announced the launch of “ChatGPT for Clinicians” – a specialized tool for US medics that impresses with its effectiveness in verifying data and generating documentation. While the vision of automating medical bureaucracy sounds promising, experts issue a reminder: the system is not an FDA-certified medical device, meaning that doctors still bear full responsibility for every decision made.

Microsoft and a powerful coalition of US tech firms have successfully pressured the European Commission into hiding the exact environmental impact of their server farms. The clause, introduced at their behest, blocks public access to data on massive energy and water consumption, sparking backlash from experts and allegations of legal violations.

Talk of robots is everywhere — the assumption is that they’re destined to be AI made flesh, and the next leap in machine evolution. Yet few people understand where exactly these robots will appear, or how they will specifically help us. Sure, there are plenty of presentations showing humanoid-like robots dancing and pouring champagne into glasses. But that looks more like expensive toys. What should we expect in reality?

Imagine a virtual assistant picking out and buying products for you, with the entire transaction happening directly within the AI interface. Visa has unveiled Intelligent Commerce Connect – a new platform that paves the way for AI agents to securely make payments on behalf of consumers, and surprisingly, the system will support more than just Visa cards.

In early March 2026, Careem ran into serious trouble. Amazon announced that its data centers in the UAE and Bahrain had been hit by drone strikes, with full recovery expected to take a long time — making it the first known case of a major American tech company’s infrastructure being knocked offline by military action. Careem’s engineers pulled off something remarkable: a cross-regional infrastructure migration, completed in a single night. By morning, the lights were back on.

GPS arrived, and at some point we stopped reading maps. There was no decision made — it just happened, almost imperceptibly, over a few months of simply not needing to. A similar shift is now underway in finance: AI is taking over tasks that until recently counted as skilled, hands-on work. According to Deloitte, 87% of CFOs say AI will be very or extremely important to the finance function in 2026. The age of paper maps, it seems, has passed here too.