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Want to get a data center online quickly? Give it some flex. Why do South Koreans love AI so much? This man with ALS is “the first power user” of a brain implant that lets him speak The Download: cutting AC emissions, and nature’s drug designer These new solid-state ACs promise a cool future. Scientists aren’t so sure. The Download: “reprogramming” aging, and the hidden sense of interoception You do your own time Why “reprogramming” is the buzziest approach to reversing aging right now Inside interoception: The hidden sense of how you feel inside The Download: soccer’s data renaissance and China’s big nuclear plans Google DeepMind is worried about what happens when millions of agents start to interact Job titles of the future: Nature’s drug designer Inside soccer’s data renaissance Why China is betting on big nuclear reactors The “steroid olympics” were a circus—and a window into our culture The Download: whole-body rejuvenation drugs and five things to know about AI Learning to lead in a hybrid human-AI enterprise David Sinclair plans to test whole-body rejuvenation drugs in the XPrize competition Five things you need to know about AI The Download: how the World Cup ball will fly and OpenAI’s “super app” Why this year’s World Cup ball may not fly as far The Download: AI hacking beyond Mythos, and chatbots’ impact on our brains Are AI chatbots making us lose control of our brains? The Meta hack shows there’s more to AI security than Mythos The Download: AI-generated lawsuits and virtual power plants for data centers How courts are coping with a flood of AI-generated lawsuits How virtual power plants could provide energy for data centers The Download: Trump’s new AI order, and smart glasses for warfare The Download: AI can run your admin department now Rehumanizing global health care with agentic AI How small businesses can leverage AI The Download: China’s brain implant ambitions China has approved the world’s first invasive brain-computer chip—here’s what’s next The Download: unlocking lithium and controlling Ebola The deadly Ebola outbreak is proving difficult to control How the Pope’s Magnifica Humanitas offers a template for individuals to meet the AI moment How a new extraction process could unlock the world’s lithium The Download: climate tech goes public and the AI Hype Index returns Climate tech companies are going public. What’s next? The AI Hype Index: AI gets booed in graduation season The Download: keeping up with AI, and the future of IVF Green steel startup Boston Metal is doubling down on critical metals How Chinese short dramas became AI content machines The shock of seeing your body used in deepfake porn Three things in AI to watch, according to a Nobel-winning economist The Download: seafloor science and military chatbots The Download: inside the Musk v. Altman trial, and AI for democracy A blueprint for using AI to strengthen democracy Week one of the Musk v. Altman trial: What it was like in the room Trump’s mass firing just dealt another blow to American science A new US phone network for Christians aims to block porn and gender-related content This startup’s new mechanistic interpretability tool lets you debug LLMs Rebuilding the data stack for AI The Download: DeepSeek’s latest AI breakthrough, and the race to build world models The Download: introducing the 10 Things That Matter in AI Right Now Roundtables: Unveiling The 10 Things That Matter in AI Right Now The new word in home construction could be “plastics” A natural protein may protect the GI tract from infection This tool could show how consciousness works Early life may have breathed oxygen earlier than believed Analog computing from waste heat Get ready for hotter, muggier, stormier summers Recent books from the MIT community AI at MIT Inventor recalls eye imaging breakthrough Pie Day 2026 The Download: bad news for inner Neanderthals, and AI warfare’s human illusion The case for fixing everything How robots learn: A brief, contemporary history Making AI operational in constrained public sector environments Treating enterprise AI as an operating layer The Download: cyberscammers’ banking bypasses, and carbon removal troubles Why having “humans in the loop” in an AI war is an illusion The noise we make is hurting animals. Can we learn to shut up? The quest to measure our relationship with nature Is carbon removal in trouble? The Download: NASA’s nuclear spacecraft and unveiling our AI 10 Cyberscammers are bypassing banks’ security with illicit tools sold on Telegram No one’s sure if synthetic mirror life will kill us all Building trust in the AI era with privacy-led UX Redefining the future of software engineering The Download: the state of AI, and protecting bears with drones NASA is building the first nuclear reactor-powered interplanetary spacecraft. How will it work? Coming soon: 10 Things That Matter in AI Right Now The problem with thinking you’re part Neanderthal Why opinion on AI is so divided Want to understand the current state of AI? Check out these charts. The Download: how humans make decisions, and Moderna’s “vaccine” word games Job titles of the future: Wildlife first responder You have no choice in reading this article—maybe What’s in a name? Moderna’s “vaccine” vs. “therapy” dilemma The Download: an exclusive Jeff VanderMeer story and AI models too scary to release Constellations The Download: AstroTurf wars and exponential AI growth Desalination technology, by the numbers Is fake grass a bad idea? The AstroTurf wars are far from over. Mustafa Suleyman: AI development won’t hit a wall anytime soon—here’s why The Download: water threats in Iran and AI’s impact on what entrepreneurs make Desalination plants in the Middle East are increasingly vulnerable Enabling agent-first process redesign
The Download: the “steroid olympics” and a safer Mythos
Thomas Macaulay · 2026-06-10 · via MIT Technology Review

Plus: Anthropic has released a "safe" version of Mythos.

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.

The “steroid olympics” were a circus—and a window into our culture

—Amit Katwala

A couple of weeks ago, at a $50 million arena built in a casino parking lot in Las Vegas, I witnessed a libertarian thought experiment come to life. The inaugural Enhanced Games were the first sporting competition where participants were encouraged to take performance-enhancing drugs.

For supporters of the event, the Enhanced Games offered a glimpse of a future in which medical advances push the human race to new heights—and they never have to get old. As I watched the games unfold, two questions bounced around my head: were they right? And what does that mean for the rest of us?

Read the full story to understand the answers.

MIT Technology Review Narrated: a reality check on the AI jobs hysteria

Despite the growing hysteria over AI’s threat to white-collar jobs, there’s still scant evidence that the technology has had a large-scale impact on the labor market.

Analysis of US labor data shows that unemployment in occupations most exposed to AI is actually lower than in less-exposed jobs. There are also no signs that large numbers of workers are shifting from AI-threatened professions into supposedly safer manual-labor jobs.

It’s true that things aren’t great in the job market. But the reason isn’t simply the rise of AI.


—David Rotman

This is our latest story to be turned into an MIT Technology Review Narrated podcast, which we publish each week on Spotify and Apple Podcasts. Just navigate to MIT Technology Review Narrated on either platform, and follow us to get all our new content as it’s released.

The must-reads

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

1 Anthropic has released a "safe" version of Mythos
It promises it has enough guardrails and user limitations to be safe. (BBC)
+ It has a price tag twice as high as the previous flagship system. (NYT $)
+ Anthropic previously claimed Mythos was too dangerous to release. (CNBC)
+ But critics suspect that was a marketing play. (Guardian)
+ Selective access has become a key strategy for AI labs. (Axios)

2 Seattle has banned new data centers for a year
It’s the largest US city to have passed such a moratorium.(Guardian)
+ Its biggest tech firm, Amazon, has tried to stop the ban. (The Verge)
+ The movement to stop data centers is growing. (NYT $)

3 Democratic senators are pushing for a military AI restriction law
They want a human commander to have the final say. (Gizmodo)
+ But humans in the loop in an AI war is an illusion. (MIT Technology Review)

4 SpaceX plans to launch space data center tests by late 2027
Orbital compute is central to the company’s growth pitch. (Reuters $)
+ It’s also shared new designs for its space data centers. (BI)
+ We’d need these four things to put them in orbit. (MIT Technology Review)

5 China has been accused of escalating AI espionage
A report claims Beijing is hacking tech firms to catch up with the US. (CNBC)
+ There are no winners in a US-China AI arms race. (MIT Technology Review)

6 The Trump family has made about $2.3 billion from crypto
While investors lost about the same amount. (Gizmodo)
+ The Trumps risked next-to-nothing on their crypto ventures. (Reuters $)

7 Apple isn’t launching Siri AI in the European Union
It’s blaming EU interoperability requirements. (The Verge)
+Brussels says Apple didn’t try to find a compliance solution. (Reuters $) 

8 China’s new drone rules have spooked its thriving industry 
Drone firms face new commercial barriers. (Financial Times $)
+ China’s drone sector leads the world. (NYT $)

9 A judge has cancelled a trial after finding both legal teams used AI
The case descended into GenAI tools arguing against each other. (404 Media)
+ Courts have been flooded with AI-generated lawsuits. (MIT Technology Review)

10 The dinosaur-killing asteroid created a thriving new ecosystem
Microscopic life flourished in the extended heat. (New Scientist $)

Quote of the day

“AI technologies today are designed by and for WEIRD societies—Western, educated, industrialized, rich, and democratic.” 

—Aditya Vashistha, an assistant professor at Cornell University, tells Rest of World why AI systems don’t serve global needs.

One More Thing

""

LAUREN SIMKIN BERKE


Why the definition of design might need a change

The word “design” once carried a far wider set of meanings than it does today. They ranged from the literal and material (like tracing) through the tactical (to contrive and achieve a goal) to the organizational and institutional—the “designation” of people and objects.

Over centuries, as designing became increasingly separated from making, that broader understanding faded. But now there is a growing case for reclaiming the word’s original sense: not just the search for a more beautiful shape, but the shaping of a more beautiful and sustainable world. 

Deep Dive

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