TRUMP CALLS FOR BIPARTISAN VOTE TO AVOID GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN The president says Congress has come together on a deal to fund most of the government through September, with an extension for DHS and the Coast Guard. “The only thing that can slow our Country down is another long and damaging Government Shutdown.” He’s pushing both parties to deliver a “YES” vote without delay. Source: Truth Social

Mario Nawfal

@MarioNawfal

🚨🇺🇸 TRUMP CALLS FOR BIPARTISAN VOTE TO AVOID GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN The president says Congress has come together on a deal to fund most of the government through September, with an extension for DHS and the Coast Guard. “The only thing that can slow our Country down is another long and damaging Government Shutdown.” He’s pushing both parties to deliver a “YES” vote without delay. Source: Truth Social

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Elon wants AI in Space

ELON WANTS AI IN SPACE

Because Earth is too basic for what’s coming, Elon is pushing to put AI data centers in orbit. Why? Cooler temps = less energy, less risk from Earth’s natural disasters, and it’s way more futuristic. Basically, he wants to make sure AI keeps running even if things go sideways down here. Wild idea… but very on brand. Source: Reuters

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Neuralink: Hope and Progress. Imagine being paralysed from the neck down

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Futurism: AI will make us all rich… any day now

Sam Altman Says AI Will Cause Massive Deflation, Making Money Worth Vastly More

AI will make us all rich… any day now.

By Victor Tangermann

Published Jan 29, 2026 5:21 PM EST

When asked if AI can be used to "solve economic gaps," OpenAI CEO Sam Altman argued that it's "going to be massively deflationary."
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

OpenAI is betting in the biggest way possible on a future ruled by AI. It’s committing to spending well over $1 trillion to build out enormous data centers — despite business fundamentals lagging far behind, stoking fears over troubling days ahead.

During a town hall livestreamed on Monday, CEO Sam Altman admitted that the company was looking to pump the brakes, revealing that it’s looking to “dramatically slow down” hiring as the company continues to burn through billions of dollars each quarter.

At the same time, Altman remained characteristically bullish about what his company’s tech will soon offer to the world. When asked if AI can be used to “solve economic gaps that have existed for decades,” the executive argued that it’s “going to be massively deflationary.”

“Given, certainly, progress with work you can do in front of a computer, but also what looks like it will soon happen with robotics and a bunch of other things, we’re going to have massively deflationary pressure,” he predicted.

As a result of this deflationary pressure, Altman promised that things would get “radically cheaper” and the “empowerment of individual people” will go up as money becomes more valuable — which, it’s worth noting, would be an inversion of virtually every economic system in history, which have overwhelmingly been inflationary.

Altman reasoned that these economic changes would be the result of AI allowing individuals to be vastly more productive. He argued that by the end of this year, an individual spending $1,000 on inference — essentially the cost of running an AI — could complete a piece of software in a short period of time, a task that would have previously taken a whole team a much longer period.

It’s not the first time Altman has argued that AI could make money more valuable. In March, he claimed that AI will have a deflationary impact on the global economy during a closed-door Morgan Stanley conference.

The broader argument that AI could lead to an age of “abundance” in which the cost of living starts to decrease — and that we could even choose not to work if we didn’t want to — has long been deployed by tech leaders, including Altman and xAI CEO Elon Musk, to drive the AI hype cycle.

But given the current state of the economy, such a point remains little more than a daydream. The reality is that AI is still incredibly far from boosting efficiency enough to offset inflation. Just earlier today, the US Federal Reserve held interest rates steady, citing ongoing concerns over “elevated” inflation.

In fact, AI has more frequently been linked to mass layoffs that make it harder to survive. Long-term unemployment hit a four-year high earlier this year as jobseekers struggled to find new work. The cost of living has also continued to climb, particularly in larger US cities.

Whether AI will come to the rescue and dramatically bring down prices remains to be seen, as uncomfortable questions surrounding the tech’s viability linger.

Researchers have shown that AI is largely failing to boost productivity, at least in its current form. Surveys have found that the number of people using AI at work is falling, a troubling trend that flies in the face of promises made by tech leaders. Many of these workers argue that AI is essentially useless to them, despite their employers’ insistence that it’s revolutionary, productivity-boosting tech.

To AI’s many critics, it’s a dead end. Some have argued that OpenAI itself could be a house of cards that’s one run on the banks away from collapsing in on itself.

In short, there are plenty of reasons to remain skeptical of Altman’s claims that AI will put more buying power into each of our pockets as productivity goes stratospheric. He’s also gone as far as to argue that AI could cure cancer, solve climate change, and alleviate our financial struggles with “universal extreme health.”

Musk has similarly prophesied that “there will be no poverty in the future, and so no need to save money.” Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei has also argued that we could one day work far less as a result of AI.

It’s an enormous bet — and Altman and his counterparts have plenty still to prove as reality continues to lag behind their lofty promises.

Even Altman himself isn’t entirely convinced that sudden abundance will actually be a good thing for the average person.

“Massively more abundance and access and massively decreased cost to be able to create new things, new companies, discover new science, whatever…” he said during this week’s town hall. “I think that should be an equalizing force in society and a way that people who have not gotten treated that fairly get a really good shot.”

“As long as we don’t screw up the policy around it in a big way,” he warned, “which could happen.”

More on Altman: Sam Altman Says OpenAI Is Slashing Its Hiring Pace as Financial Crunch Tightens

Victor Tangermann

Senior Editor

I’m a senior editor at Futurism, where I edit and write about NASA and the private space sector, as well as topics ranging from SETI and artificial intelligence to tech and medical policy.

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The Rundown AI: AI Revolutionary War series

Darren Aronofsky debuts AI Revolutionary War series
Image source: TIME
The Rundown: Filmmaker Darren Aronofsky’s AI venture Primordial Soup released “On This Day… 1776”, a new series recreating the American Revolution using Google DeepMind, with each episode dropping on the 250th anniversary of the event it depicts.
The details:
The short-form series combines AI-generated visuals with SAG-AFTRA voice actors, positioning itself as “artist-led” AI rather than being fully automated.The series drops episodes on TIME’s YouTube channel timed to the 250th anniversary of each depicted event.Aronofsky partnered with DeepMind in May to collaborate on AI storytelling, releasing the Veo-assisted film ANCESTRA in June at the Tribeca Film Festival.
Why it matters: AI video is creeping further into real production studio workflows, and moving from simple shorts and hidden tricks to hide faces to handling the entire visual process. While it still might not be fully accepted or mainstream, the sentiment is shifting — and Hollywood’s once-uneasy use of the tech is coming more into focus.
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US now exceeds Japan for the first time in 30 years in steel production (thanks to tarrifs)

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President Putin … Nordstream 2 – some advice to EU

Afshin Rattansi

@afshinrattansi

Vladimir Putin🇷🇺“There is one pipe left of Nord Stream 2, it’s not damaged and can deliver 27.5 trillion cubic meters of gas. It only takes a decision from the German government today and tomorrow we turn on the tap, but they aren’t making it because Washington says no.” Europe’s geniuses have now completely banned cheaper Russian gas so they can import more expensive LNG from the US, the country profiting from their deindustrialisation and the country that is actively seeking to annex the territory of a NATO country. A masterclass in economics and geopolitics by Europe!

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U.S. & EU DRAW RED LINES FOR IRAN – No more uranium enrichment, – Cut down your missile stash, – Drop support for Hamas, Hezbollah, Houthis, all of it. These are the 3 demands on the table if Iran wants to avoid a potential military response. The ball is in Tehran’s court now. Source:

Mario Nawfal

@MarioNawfal

🇺🇸🇪🇺 U.S. & EU DRAW RED LINES FOR IRAN – No more uranium enrichment, – Cut down your missile stash, – Drop support for Hamas, Hezbollah, Houthis, all of it. These are the 3 demands on the table if Iran wants to avoid a potential military response. The ball is in Tehran’s court now. Source:

@sentdefender

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Highly recommend people engage with Neuralink (Elon Musk). Changes beyond comprehension. Explore Blindsight

and more =========================

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Futurism: Google AI … what does it know about you?

The Amount Google’s AI Knows About You Will Cause an Uncomfortable Prickling Sensation on Your Scalp

It “feels like Google has been quietly taking notes on my entire life and finally decided to hand me the notebook.”

By Frank Landymore

Published Jan 28, 2026 2:09 PM EST

Google has released a new "Personal Intelligence" feature that lets its AI go through an alarming amount of your data.
Illustration by Tag Hartman-Simkins / Futurism. Source: Getty Images

We all know that tech companies keep tabs on everything about our online habits. But it’s another thing to actually be confronted with just how much data they have on you.

This was the experience of tech journalist Pranav Dixit, who experimented with using Google’s new “Personal Intelligence” feature for Gemini and its search engine’s AI Mode. And boy, did things get personal. The AI was able to dig up everything from his license plate to his parents’ vacation history, sometimes without it being directly requested.

“Personal Intelligence feels like Google has been quietly taking notes on my entire life and finally decided to hand me the notebook,” Dixit wrote in a piece for Business Insider.

Google rolled out Personal Intelligence to subscribers of Google AI Pro and AI Ultra last week. Once you opt in, the AI can scour your Gmail and Google Photos accounts, and a more powerful version released for the Gemini app earlier this month goes even deeper, raking your Search and YouTube history, too. In short, if you’ve ever used Google for anything, it can probably dig it up.

This represents one way Google intends to keep its edge in the AI race. Unlike competitors such as OpenAI, it has decades’ worth of user data on billions of people. It can infer plenty from your Google searches alone, and your Gmail account is probably littered with confirmations and reminders for all kinds of life events, ranging from doctor’s appointments to hotel bookings to online purchases.

If the idea of letting an AI prowl through all this sounds like a privacy nightmare to you, you’re probably not wrong. Google, for its part, maintains that it’s being careful with your personal secrets, with VP Josh Woodward insisting in a recent blog post that it only trains its AI on your prompts and the responses they generate — not stuff like your photos and emails.

“We don’t train our systems to learn your license plate number,” he summarized. “We train them to understand that when you ask for one, we can locate it.”

Whatever the ethics, Dixit’s estimation is that giving the AI access to your data at least makes for a genuinely useful — and “scary-good,” in his phrasing — personal assistant.

When asked to come up with some sightseeing ideas for his parents, Personal Intelligence correctly inferred that they’d already done plenty of hikes on previous trips to the Bay Area, and suggested some museums and gardens instead.

Gemini told Dixit that it had deduced this from “breadcrumbs” including emails, photos of a forest they trekked in, a parking reservation in Gmail, and a Google search for “easy hikes for seniors.” It also figured out his license plate number based on photos stored in his Google library and scanned his emails to correctly report when his car insurance was up for renewal.

Privacy isn’t the only concern that the feature raises. With the data, chatbots can sound more humanlike, giving the impression that they’re intimately familiar with users’ personal lives. This is a dangerous road to go down amid reports of many people falling down delusional mental health spirals as they come to believe the AIs are trustworthy companions; Dixit touches on this when he complains about how’d he’d “pour my soul into ChatGPT and get a smart answer,” only for it to “forget I existed like a genius goldfish.” Experts have focused on ChatGPT’s “memory” as allowing it to seem too lifelike by drawing on what you’ve said in previous conversations.

More on AI: AI Is Causing Cultural Stagnation, Researchers Find

Frank Landymore

Contributing Writer

I’m a tech and science correspondent for Futurism, where I’m particularly interested in astrophysics, the business and ethics of artificial intelligence and automation, and the environment.

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