Half Your Code Was Written by a Machine. Nobody Checked.
The AI coding market just consolidated around three tools. The data on what they're producing is worse than you think.
No hype, no PR — just what's real.
The AI coding market just consolidated around three tools. The data on what they're producing is worse than you think.
BCG's new model shows 50-55% of US jobs will be fundamentally different in 2-3 years. The methodology is honest. The implications aren't.
Google's Generative UI builds physics simulations instead of giving answers. That's either the future — or the fanciest dodge ever.
Visa just launched a platform that lets AI agents spend your money. Not recommend products — actually complete purchases, autonomously, using your real card.
AI is the excuse, not the cause — but the excuse is becoming the cause. And nobody in charge seems to think that's a problem.
How a war, a chip deal, and an earnings report collapsed into 48 hours — and what it reveals about who controls the AI supply chain.
MCP solved the integration problem. It also created an attack vector nobody controls.
The U.S. government classified an AI company as a supply chain risk — not because its products failed, but because it refused to remove its safety guardrails.
Defense-tech funding grew twelvefold in five years. Then an actual war started, and the money got weird.
Six C-suite changes in one week, a $122B raise still warm, an IPO on the horizon — and no clear answer to who owns the product.
Two source code leaks in five days from the company that markets itself as the most safety-conscious AI lab. What most coverage missed.
Cursor 3 launched on April 2, 2026, marking Anysphere's boldest bet yet: a full pivot from AI-assisted code editor to agent-first development workspace.