The Rundown: DIFFERENTIATION IN THE AI AGE

DIFFERENTIATION IN THE AI AGE
💯 Being ‘great’ when AI makes everyone good

Image credits: Kiki Wu / The Rundown

The Rundown: As AI-driven design makes creation accessible to anyone, Adams says there will always be room for “greats” to stand out with their judgment, empathy, and knowing what will strike a chord with the audience.

Cheung: Canva AI 2.0 can now generate and edit at the layer level — text, elements, colours. That means anyone with a vision can execute it without touching a tool. Does the gap between a great designer and an average one get smaller?

Adams: When it comes to creativity, there will always be room for “greats” to stand out from the “goods”, but the skills that you need to stand out are constantly evolving. When you think about other eras of creative change, democratisation always makes room for more expression but also enables the best in the field to push even further.

When anyone can produce something polished, what separates the work is the thinking behind it and the message it contains. Judgement and empathy become more important: the strength of the idea, the sensitivity to context, the instinct about what will resonate, and the fundamentals of creating connection with other people. These things only humans can bring, and that’s why we’ve built an agentic experience that keeps the user at the center.

This is powerful for designers, but even more so for those who need to create visual materials but aren’t designers: a marketer creating campaign materials, a wedding planner designing a seating chart, or a student’s school project.

Why it matters: For anyone in a creative role wondering what AI leaves for them and how to shine — this is the answer. AI handles the execution. What it can’t replicate is the harder stuff: knowing your audience, your instinct, and getting what actually will work. The better you are at that, the more successful you become in the age of AI.

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Axios: China wins by watching

China wins by watching
 
Photo illustration collage of Xi Jinping, a map of Iran, and various market trend lies and abstract elements.
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios. Photo: Getty Images
 
Chinese President Xi Jinping has spent the Iran war doing what he does best — patiently exploiting America’s distraction and discord, Axios’ Jim VandeHei writes in a “Behind the Curtain” column.

Why it matters: The conflict allowed China to bolster its diplomatic leverage, clean-energy muscle and intelligence on the U.S. military — all without firing a shot or spending a dollar.

The implications touch supply chains, energy procurement, geopolitical risk, and the race for superior AI and weaponry

.Even with progress toward a framework for peace between the U.S. and Iran, significant disruptions continue in the Strait of Hormuz. The strategic damage is done. 

The military impact is the part that should scare the hell out of Pentagon planners:The U.S. committed roughly 80% of its JASSM-ER stealth cruise missile inventory to the Iran fight, pulling stockpiles from the Pacific to feed it. The conflict significantly depleted U.S. supplies of Tomahawk and Patriot missiles, THAAD interceptors and drones.

Beijing got a free masterclass in modern American warfighting: how we use AI to target, how we rotate carrier groups, how cheap Iranian drones drain our most expensive interceptors. For Chinese war planners gaming out a Taiwan invasion, it’s better than any simulation. 

On energy, China emerges a huge winner of the ongoing Hormuz shockwaves:When oil and gas supplies get weaponized, import-dependent countries accelerate renewables. China owns over 70% of global solar, wind, battery and electric vehicle supply chains. The longer Hormuz stays disrupted, the deeper the world’s dependency gets.

The war was the stress test that Beijing’s energy strategy was designed for. 

The diplomatic optics couldn’t have been better for the Chinese:

While Trump was threatening to bomb Iran “back to the Stone Ages,” Beijing was quietly helping Pakistan bring both sides to the table in Islamabad — while capitals from Riyadh to Jakarta are weighing which superpower to align with.

As Ian Bremmer points out, America’s allies saw the U.S. pull missile defense assets from South Korea, leave allies in Asia without Patriot coverage, and shift naval power from the Pacific to the Gulf. The message received in Seoul, Tokyo, Canberra and Taipei: American security commitments have an asterisk. 

China’s AI push got a clear boost from the war’s financial consequences:The Gulf’s massive AI buildout — billions from Microsoft, Oracle, Nvidia and others — faces indefinite geopolitical risk after Iranian strikes on AI-related targets across the region. 

The rare earths piece, out of sight for most Americans, might be Beijing’s biggest asset right now:

There’s currently no heavy rare-earth separation capacity in the U.S. at meaningful scale. China controls roughly 70% of rare-earth mining and 90% of separation and magnet manufacturing. New Pentagon procurement rules banning Chinese-sourced rare earths take effect in 2027but domestic alternatives won’t be ready for years.

The weapons the U.S. fired in Iran — Tomahawks, JDAMs, Predator drones — all require rare earths for their precision guidance systems.

The bottom line: The country that may have gained the most from the Iran war never fired a shot. Share this column … Axios’ Dave Lawler and Shane Savitsky contributed.Smart deeper dive: Ian Bremmer, “How the Iran war made China stronger.”📈 If you’re a CEO or on a CEO’s team: Ask to join Jim’s new weekly Axios C-Suite newsletter.
    
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The Deep View: Where humans still matter in the age of AI agents


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Where humans still matter in the age of AI agents

A lot of forward-thinking leaders are running around right now telling people that if they don’t have AI agents working for them, then they’re falling behind. But what’s getting lost in the shuffle when it comes to agents is the phenomenon that Peter Steinberger, the founder of OpenClaw—the movement that jump-started the 2026 agent boom—has clearly talked about: the ways agents need humans. “They are spiky smart, and they’re really good at things, but if you don’t navigate them well, if you don’t have a vision of what you’re going to build, it’s still going to be slop,” said Steinberger, in an interview with Peter Yang. “If you don’t ask the right questions, it’s still going to be slop.

“I’ve been thinking about Steinberger’s words a lot lately in the midst of all the current agent-mania. recent study found that white-collar workers are facing an explosion of AI-generated “workslop” from chatbots spitting out documents with poor direction from humans—the same issue Steinberger highlighted. This is inundating workers with piles of these docs to sort out and clean up. As a result, 92% of executives say AI is making workers more productive, while 40% of workers claim it saves them no time at all.

Meanwhile, the buzz phrase that’s been running rampant in the AI industry lately is “AI psychosis.” This isn’t the chatbot psychosis that refers to people who fall in love with chatbots or suffer a break from reality because of chatbot hallucinations. No, this type of AI psychosis was coined from a recent comment by AI pioneer Andrej Karpathy, and it’s being referred to in the AI industry in near-heroic terms. It’s a type of token-maxing mania that AI coders experience when managing a swarm of agents, which they claim hugely boosts their productivity and causes them to work 18 hours a day, as they get hooked on constantly providing feedback to their agents and on how much they believe they can accomplish

As I mentioned in my roundup from the HumanX conference, the people I spoke with in the AI industry at the event said the number of people running around claiming they are experiencing that kind of AI psychosis is greatly exaggerated, since it’s being paraded as a badge of honor. Still, token-maxxing is being rewarded with little regard for the quality of the output.In his April 16 TED Talk about how he created OpenClaw, Steinberger said that before OpenClaw he had been burned out and demotivated about creating software. But when he first tried coding agents in early 2025, he quickly discovered they automated “all the boring parts” of software development. “The bottleneck is no longer typing,” he said. “It’s thinking.” Despite Steinberger’s repeated emphasis on the importance of thinking and human direction of agents, the current agent mania has largely ignored this and blown through all wisdom and restraint. It would be smart for AI enthusiasts and enterprises to take note.
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The Beast: I Know Why ‘Mad King’ Act is Spiraling “God Level Deranged”

Premiered 17 hours ago The Daily Beast Podcast

Joanna Coles welcomes back Kurt Andersen to dissect what he argues may be Donald Trump’s most unhinged week yet, from surreal AI depictions casting himself as Jesus to a deepening spiral of contradictions, conspiracies, and political theater that even longtime observers find startling. Drawing on decades of watching Trump up close, Andersen revives his now-infamous “Venn diagram” of lies, ignorance, and instability—warning that the overlap is expanding in real time—while unpacking the bizarre collision of religion, ego, and power now shaping the MAGA movement. The conversation covers the Pope’s unexpectedly deft pushback to the growing discomfort inside Trump’s own coalition, before zeroing in on RFK Jr.’s chaotic tenure, public health fallout, and a trail of denials that mirror Trump’s own reality-warping playbook. As cabinet figures maneuver, allies hedge, and whispers of exits and fractures grow louder, Andersen paints a picture of a political universe edging toward something far more volatile than spectacle. 00:00 – Trump “Mad King” & Venn diagram of chaos 04:32 – Trump as AI Jesus 09:05 – Pope Leo emerges as unexpected Trump foe 13:40 – RFK Jr. hearings, vaccines, and measles resurgence 18:20 – Anti-government rhetoric vs being the government 23:00 – RFK Jr lies confronted with receipts in Congress 27:40 – Politicians falling: Swalwell, Gonzalez, and accountability 32:20 – Culture of denial, scandal, and escaping consequences 36:55 – Collapse of norms and what still forces resignations #trump#news#podcast

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Fortune: Teen boys are choosing AI girlfriends and there are good reasons why.

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Teen boys are choosing AI girlfriends over real ones for ‘maximum control, zero rejection’—experts say it could make them unemployable

Orianna Rosa Royle

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Orianna Rosa Royle

Associate Editor, Success

April 17, 2026, 3:04 AM ET

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The appeal of an AI girlfriend, one professor says, is obvious: "maximum control, zero rejection." But it’s a shift that could kill their careers.

The appeal of an AI girlfriend, one professor says, is obvious: “maximum control, zero rejection.” But it’s a shift that could kill their careers. Getty Images

Gen Z dated strategically—dating people 25% more attractive and successful than them to climb the social ladder. Gen Alpha, it seems, has decided the whole thing is too much effort. Instead, teen boys are quietly swapping first dates, awkward silences, and emotional guesswork for an AI girlfriend who never cancels, never argues, and always texts back.

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In fact, research by Male Allies UK found that 20% of boys aged 12 to 16 know a peer who is “dating” an AI chatbot, while 85% have spoken to one, and over a quarter even prefer the attention and connection they get from a bot over the real thing. 

Most shockingly, 58% said an AI relationship is easier because they can “control the conversation.” 

The appeal is, as one professor told Fortune, obvious: “maximum control, zero rejection.” And it’s a shift that could reshape not just their love lives, but their future careers.

The toll of opting out of real relationships, in all their mess and glory, experts warn, could be a generation that arrives in the workforce unable to read a room, build trust over a coffee, or handle the one thing AI can never prepare you for—being told no.

Gen Alpha’s new ‘girlfriend’ comes with an off switch and no social risk—unlike real relationships

“The real issue is not that young people are talking to AI, but that some may start using it as a substitute for the messy, demanding work of human connection,” says Professor Pierluigi Casale, Head of AI at OPIT. “Real relationships teach negotiation, empathy, rejection, compromise, and social confidence. AI companionship can mimic intimacy whilst removing much of that friction.”

That convenience may come at a cost that stretches far beyond dating. Because the same soft skills needed to maintain a relationship are just as vital in the workplace. For example, to nail an interview, present in front of peers, or even just handle opposing opinions in the office. And it’s already lacking in younger generations who grew up with a smartphone in their hand. 

Fortune has already reported that Gen Z grads are being fired at record rates—with a lack of social skills frequently cited as a key reason; That struggling to hold conversations with coworkers is already holding young workers back from promotions; And some employers are even forcing their new young hires to take on basic soft skills training, including lessons in how to speak up in meetings.

If Gen Z is already struggling, Gen Alpha—with AI companions that never push back, never need tending, and always agree—could arrive in even worse shape.

Essentially, the workplace case against AI relationships is less about romance and more about what human relationships actually teach you. 

“Reading a room, picking up on social cues, building trust over coffee or a conference dinner—these are muscles you develop through practice, and practice requires real people,” Alessia Paccagnini, Associate Professor at UCD Michael Smurfit Graduate Business School, stresses.

Professor Raoul V. Kübler of ESSEC Business School puts it more bluntly: the risk is that boys dating AI are “unconsciously training themselves to expect relationships that never push back, never need tending, and never require genuine compromise. These are, however, exactly the skills that determine success in careers, friendships, and life.” And crucially, he adds, “this shift happens so gradually that most people don’t notice it’s happening at all.”

There’s one ironic upside: these boys will probably enter the workforce pretty fluent in AI—and Kübler says that knowing how to communicate with and interact with AI could give these teens a “genuine head start” over their peers when it comes to job hunting one day. “In that sense, dating an AI might be surprisingly good career preparation,” Kübler adds.

But he is clear that it’s a two-sided coin. “Real technical fluency on one side, stunted personal development on the other—and the job market will eventually demand both.”

The real price of an AI girlfriend: fewer connections and fewer opportunities

Teen boys might think an AI girlfriend solves their immediate problems—no awkward small talk, no rejection, no risking embarrassment. But there’s a quieter long‑term cost: with fewer real‑life relationships, they’re not just dodging discomfort, they’re forfeiting access.

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Axios: UAE wants U.S. lifeline

UAE wants U.S. lifeline
 
Smoke blankets Dubai, UAE, last month after explosions rattled buildings. Photo: AFP via Getty Images

The United Arab Emirates has opened talks with the U.S. about a financial backstop if the war inflicts further economic damage on the booming global financial hub, The Wall Street Journal reports (gift link).

The UAE Central Bank raised the idea of a currency-swap line with Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Fed officials in Washington last week.If they can’t get dollars, the Emiratis said they may turn to the Chinese yuan instead.

Why it matters: The dollar’s global supremacy rests in part on the fact oil is bought and sold in dollars, the Journal writes. That allows the U.S. to borrow cheaply, fund its military and enforce sanctions worldwide.💡 Intel from Jim’s weekend CEO newsletter: The Gulf’s massive AI buildout — billions from Microsoft, Oracle, Nvidia and others — faces indefinite geopolitical risk after Iranian strikes on AI-related targets across the region.

China already has the world’s second-largest AI compute capacity. It doesn’t need Gulf cooperation to scale. Every dollar of Western investment that stalls in the Gulf is a dollar that doesn’t build an alternative to Chinese infrastructure.📈 

If you’re a CEO or on a CEO’s team: Ask to join Jim’s new weekly Axios C-Suite newsletter.
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Axios: U.S. seizes Iranian ship

U.S. seizes Iranian ship
 
The USS Spruance intercepts the Iranian-flagged cargo ship M/V Touska yesterday in the north Arabian Sea. Photo: U.S. Central CommandIntel from Barak Ravid:

Iran is coy about showing up for a new round of peace talks because officials fear the negotiations are a trap by the U.S.  cover for a sneak attack.Vice President JD Vance is expected to lead the U.S. delegation for meetings in Islamabad, the Pakistani capital. The ceasefire ends tomorrow night.

On Day 51 of the war, the president said on Truth Social that American forces seized an Iranian-flagged cargo ship after it tried to bypass a U.S. naval blockade in the Gulf of Oman.

It’s the first time the U.S. Navy fired upon and seized a ship, named the Touska, since the blockade went into effect a week ago, Axios’ Rebecca Falconer notes.Via Truth Social

Trump wrote: “The Iranian crew refused to listen, so our Navy ship stopped them right in their tracks by blowing a hole in the engineroom. Right now, U.S. Marines have custody of the vessel.

U.S. Central Command said the USS Spruance fired “several rounds from the destroyer’s 5-inch MK 45 Gun into Touska’s engine room.

Iran’s military accused the U.S. of violating the ceasefire agreement and of “maritime piracy” and vowed to “soon respond” to the incident.🎥 WATCH: Video from the Pentagon … Share this story.
    
 
 
3. 👀 Scoop: Cabi
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BRICS News: Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian calls for resolving conflict with the US through diplomacy

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@MarioNawfal viral AI Lego video after Iran closed the Strait of Hormuz again

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Epstein: grooming billionaires for business; but using same techniques of grooming of young people for sex. This is often referred to networking, convenors, connectors and other names

Mar 17, 2026 The Daily Beast PodcastGet 15% off OneSkin with the code beast at https://www.oneskin.co/beast#oneskinpod

Anand Giridharadas joins Joanna Coles to unpack what the Epstein files actually tell us, not just about one disgraced financier, but about the elite network that worked with him. The bestselling author explains why so many of what he calls the Epstein class stayed in his orbit even after Epstein’s crimes were widely known. Coles and Giridharadas dig into the strange rituals of this rarefied class and examine emails involving figures like Larry Summers and former Obama White House counsel Kathy Ruemmler. They also confront the darker question at the center of the scandal: How a network built on access, status, and mutual advantage created a culture where no one ever seemed to break ranks—even when they knew the crimes Jeffrey Epstein committed.

00:00:00 – Jeffrey Epstein’s “Elite Connector” Tactics & The Epstein Class 00:13:08 – Why Billionaires Have 4 Homes: The “Four Pack” & Tax Avoidance 00:28:43 – Kathy Ruemmler’s Emails: Contempt for the “Rest Stop” Class 00:41:09 – Grooming the Powerful: The Promise of “Interesting” and “Fun” 01:00:51 – How Institutions Failed: The Absence of Courage in the Elite 01:12:00 – “Never With Women”: Why Epstein Excluded Women from Conversations 01:28:09 – Jordan Neely & Daniel Penny: A Portrait of an Age of Division #epsteinfiles#podcast#news

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