Anthropic has developed an artificial intelligence model with unprecedented hacking capabilities. For security reasons, the technology won’t hit the open market – instead, access has been granted to a select group of US tech titans. This situation exposes a glaring flaw in European regulations: while the US builds a digital fortress, EU policymakers are trying to regulate a technology they cannot even access.
The government in Athens has announced plans to block access to platforms like TikTok and Instagram for anyone under 15. The Greek prime minister attributes the decision to rising sleep disorders and anxiety among teenagers. Similar steps have long been underway across various US states, where rolling out restrictions continues to face fierce legal pushback rooted in the Constitution.
H&M has partnered with a tech startup that converts captured carbon dioxide into materials used for clothing production. The initiative aims to cut emissions and rethink how textiles are made.
Orange Business has unveiled Orange Drone Guardian – Europe’s first end-to-end counter-drone solution for detecting, tracking and neutralizing drones. The system combines network infrastructure, sensors and AI to help protect critical infrastructure and more.
Startup SWARM Biotactics has developed programmable insect swarms equipped with bioelectronic interfaces which – according to the company’s founder – have already been field-tested and delivered to paying customers, including NATO member states. The statement was published on LinkedIn and points to rapid progress in a technology that combines biological organisms with artificial intelligence and communication systems.
Apple announced that the iPhone and iPad have become the first and only consumer devices in the world to meet NATO’s strict information security requirements and are now authorized to process data classified up to the NATO Restricted level without the need for additional software or configuration changes. The move marks a significant milestone in mobile information security and could open new possibilities for using these devices in government and military environments.
In recent years, GLP-1–based weight-loss drugs have decisively moved beyond a narrow medical topic and become a mainstream subject of discussion in the US, Europe, and Canada. Explosive demand growth, intensifying competition, and expectations of change driven by patent timelines have turned the search for Ozempic alternatives into a practical question: what should you choose if Ozempic is hard to obtain, too expensive, or poorly tolerated?
Microsoft has released a new set of security updates for Windows 10 that fixes 58 software vulnerabilities, including six critical zero-day flaws — meaning vulnerabilities that were actively exploited in attacks before the patches became available. The update is already available, and security specialists stress that installing it as soon as possible is essential to protect computers against system takeover, privilege escalation and other cyber threats.
Danish pharmaceutical company Novo Nordisk has filed a lawsuit against U.S.-based Hims & Hers Health for patent infringement, linked to the company’s attempt to bring to market a cheaper, compounded version of a semaglutide-based weight-loss pill — the key active ingredient in blockbuster products such as Wegovy and Ozempic.
A paperclip‑sized wireless sensor that tracks pressures inside the heart–lung circulation has been recommended by NICE for routine use across the NHS in England, in a move expected to shift heart‑failure management from hospital clinics to patients’ homes.
