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    Home»Artificial Intelligence»The Download: spying on the spies, and promising climate tech
    Artificial Intelligence

    The Download: spying on the spies, and promising climate tech

    AdminBy AdminJanuary 16, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read0 Views
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    The Download: spying on the spies, and promising climate tech
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    This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology.

    Meet the man hunting the spies in your smartphone

    In April 2025, Ronald Deibert left all electronic devices at home in Toronto and boarded a plane. When he landed in Illinois, he bought a new laptop and iPhone. He wanted to reduce the risk of having his personal devices confiscated, because he knew his work made him a prime target for surveillance. “I’m traveling under the assumption that I am being watched, right down to exactly where I am at any moment,” Deibert says. 

    Deibert directs the Citizen Lab, a research center he founded in 2001 to serve as “counterintelligence for civil society.” Housed at the University of Toronto, it’s one of the few institutions that investigate cyberthreats exclusively in the public interest, and in doing so, it has exposed some of the most egregious digital abuses of the past two decades.

    For many years, Deibert and his colleagues have held up the US as the standard for liberal democracy. But that’s changing. Read the full story.

    —Finian Hazen

    This story is from the latest issue of our print magazine. If you subscribe now to receive future copies when they land you’ll benefit from some big discounts, and get a free tote bag! 

    Three climate technologies breaking through in 2026  

    —Casey Crownhart 

    Happy New Year! I know it’s a bit late to say, but it never quite feels like the year has started until the new edition of our 10 Breakthrough Technologies list comes out. 

    For 25 years, MIT Technology Review has put together this package, which highlights the technologies that we think are going to matter in the future. This year’s version has a bunch of climate and energy picks including sodium-ion batteries, next-generation nuclear, and hyperscale AI data centers. Let’s take a look at what ended up on the list, and what it says about this moment for climate tech. 

    This story ran in The Spark, our weekly newsletter all about the technologies we can use to combat climate change. Sign up to get it in your inbox first every Wednesday. 

    And, if you’re keen to learn more about why AI companies are betting big on next-gen nuclear, join us for an exclusive subscriber-only Roundtable event on Wednesday January 28 at 2pm ET. 

    The must-reads

    I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology.

    1 AI companies are now deeply entwined with the US military
    And it looks like they’re only set to get closer. (Wired $)
    + Three open questions about the Pentagon’s push for generative AI. (MIT Technology Review)
    2 Grok will comply with local laws, X has said
    A global backlash over users creating ‘undressing’ images of real people seems to have forced its hand. (BBC)
    + So far there’s no evidence it’s actually following through on that promise though. (The Verge)
    + Elon Musk could stop it all instantly if he                         wanted to. (Engadget)
    3 The risks of using AI in schools outweigh the benefits
    According to a sweeping new study by the Brookings Institution’s Center for Universal Education. (NPR)
    + AI’s giants are trying to take over the classroom. (MIT Technology Review)  

    4 Trump is imposing new tariffs on high-end chips
    They’re pretty narrow though, and leave plenty of room for exports to China. (WP $)
    + Zhipu AI says it’s trained its first major model entirely on Chinese chips. (South China Morning Post)

    5 A UK police force blamed Microsoft Copilot for an intelligence error 
    After spending weeks denying it was using AI tools at all. (Ars Technica)
    + Worried about police and lawyers using AI? Well, judges are at it too. (MIT Technology Review) 
    6 Inside the compounds where the fraud industry makes its billions
    The details are grim—for example the fact workers struck a gong every time they scammed someone out of $5,000. (NYT $)
    + Inside a romance scam compound—and how people get tricked into being there. (MIT Technology Review)
    7 Bandcamp has banned purely AI-generated music from its platform 
    It’s the first online music platform to take this step. (Billboard)
    + Can AI generate new ideas? (NYT $)
    8 Remember Havana Syndrome? The US may have found the device that causes it
    It was acquired for millions of dollars under the last administration, and it’s still being studied. (CNN)
    9 This study failed to prove social media time causes teens’ mental health issues
    It’s a common assumption, but there’s still remarkably little evidence to back it up. (The Guardian)

    10 The UK is planning to build a record-breaking number of wind farms
    Its government is pushing for the vast majority of the country’s electricity to come from clean sources by 2030. (BBC)

    Quote of the day

    “Women and girls are far more reluctant to use AI. This should be no surprise to any of us. Women don’t see this as exciting new technology, but as simply new ways to harass and abuse us and try and push us offline.”

    —Clare McGlynn, a law professor at Durham University, tells The Guardian she fears that the use of AI to harm women and girls is only going to grow. 

    One more thing

    Climate researchers at work in an office environment look out the window to see corporate lobbyists waving from their boardroom in the building next door

    DANIEL STOLLE

    Inside the little-known group setting the corporate climate agenda

    As thousands of companies trumpet their plans to cut carbon pollution, a small group of sustainability consultants has emerged as the go-to arbiter of corporate climate action.

    The Science Based Targets initiative, or SBTi, helps businesses develop a timetable for action to shrink their climate footprint through some combination of cutting greenhouse-gas pollution and removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. After years of small-scale sustainability work, SBTi is growing rapidly, and governments are paying attention. 

    But while the group has earned praise for reeling the private sector into constructive conversations about climate emissions, its rising influence has also attracted scrutiny and raised questions about why a single organization is setting the standards for many of the world’s largest companies. Read the full story.

    —Ian Morse

    We can still have nice things

    A place for comfort, fun and distraction to brighten up your day. (Got any ideas? Drop me a line or skeet ’em at me.)

    + The leaders of Japan and South Korea drummed up a viral moment with a jam session this week. 
    + Struggle during the cold, dark winter months? Here’s how to make things easier for yourself. 
    + If you like getting lost in the depths of Wikipedia, Freakpages is for you. 
    + From Pluribus to Stranger Things, we really can’t get enough of hive mindsin stories lately. ($)



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