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Dave Allen 1970’s humour, satire and irony, highly recommended. Contextualise with 2025
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Futurism: Police Warn of Robot Crime Wave
Crimes of the Future
Police Warn of Robot Crime Wave
Autonomous vehicles, drones, and humanoid robots are coming for us all.
Published Dec 21, 2025 9:45 AM EST

The use of autonomous drones on the battlefield has already raised plenty of murky ethical questions. Many experts and human rights groups haveĀ decried the use of killer robots, particularly when you consider the possibilities of technological flaws resulting in the deaths of innocent people ā not to mention using the tech to commit atrocities with no direct human involvement.
But what would happen if such a technology were to land in the hands of terrorists and criminals, who arenāt beholden to the norms of modern warfare at all? In aĀ new report, pan-European police agency Europolās Innovation Lab has imagined a not-so-distant future in which criminals could hijack autonomous vehicles, drones, and humanoid robots to sow chaos ā and how law enforcement will have to step up as a result.
By the year 2035, the report warns that law enforcement departments will need to deal with ācrimes by robots, such as dronesā that are āused as tools in theft,ā not to mention āautomated vehicles causing pedestrian injuriesā ā an eventuality weāve already seen inĀ numerousĀ cases.
Humanoid robots could also complicate matters āas they could be designed to interact with humans in a more sophisticated way, potentially making it more difficult to distinguish between intentional and accidental behavior,ā the report notes.
Worse yet, robots designed to assist in healthcare settings could be hacked into, leaving patients vulnerable to attackers.
Rounding out the cyberpunk dystopia vibes, according to the report, is that all the folks who were put out of a job as a result of automation may be motivated to commit ācybercrime, vandalism, and organized theft, often targeted at robotic infrastructureā just to survive.
Law enforcement needs to evolve rapidly to keep up, Europol says. For instance, a police officer may need to determine whether a driverless car that was involved in an accident did so after receiving deliberate instruction as part of a cyberattack, or whether it was a simple malfunction.
They could also deploy fanciful gadgets in their fight against killer robots with āRoboFreezer gunsā and ānets with built-in grenadesā to take down drones, per the report.
While a Europol spokesperson told The Telegraph that the agency ācanāt predict the future,ā the warning signs are certainly already there. For one, the use of autonomous tech like drones has already become commonplace in active warzones such as on the frontlines of the Ukraine-Russia war.
Advanced weapons have already āspilled over into organised crime and terrorism, impacting law enforcement,ā the report reads. āThere has also been a reported increase in the use of drones around European infrastructure, and there are examples of drone pilots selling their services online, transforming this criminal process from crime-as-a-service to crime-at-a-distance.ā
In short, itās a troubling vision of the future of crime, facilitated by rapidly evolving technologies.
āThe integration of unmanned systems into crime is already here, and we have to ask ourselves how criminals and terrorists might use drones and robots some years from now,ā said Europolās executive director, Catherine De Bolle in aĀ statement. āJust as the internet and smartphones presented significant opportunities as well as challenges, so will this technology.ā
With the year 2035 a mere decade away, experts told The Verge that the rapidly changing technological landscape could very well result in the crime-ridden future Europol envisions in its report.
āOne way or another, criminals will use any kind of new technology,ā University of Kent roboticist and lecturer in computer science Giovanni Luca Masala told the publication, but conceded that āpredictions about the year 2035 are difficult,ā given how quickly the situation is evolving.
Some voiced concerns over privacy invasions as well, perpetrated not only by criminals, but by law enforcement as well, using sophisticated surveillance methods.
Others were far less convinced that either crime or law enforcement will get a major robot makeover any time soon.
āThere are not only technical barriers but regulatory barriers to some of those very extreme scenarios becoming a reality by 2035,ā Locus Robotics chief commercial officer Denis Niezgoda told The Telegraph. āI donāt see Robocop crossing our streets and policing, I simply donāt believe that robots will erase work.ā
More on AI and crime catching: AI Startup Says It Will End Crime by Blanketing the Entire United States in Ever-Watching Spy Cameras
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Tagged ai, artificial-intelligence, news, robotics, technology
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The Deep View: AI tool helps diagnose cancer 30% faster
| AI tool helps diagnose cancer 30% faster |
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| In radiology, a new AI tool is helping fill the gap left by a shortage of radiologists to read CT scans. It’s also helping to improve early detection and get diagnosis data to patients faster. It’s not by replacing skilled medical professionals, but assisting them. |
| TheĀ breakthroughĀ came at the University of Tartu in Estonia, where computer scientists, radiologists, and medical professionals collaborated on a study published in the journalĀ Nature. |
| The tool, calledĀ BMVision, uses deep learning to detect and assess kidney cancer. AI startupĀ Better MedicineĀ is commercializing the software.Ā |
| “Kidney cancer is one of the most common cancers of the urinary system. It is typically identified using ⦠[CT] scans, which are carefully reviewed by radiologists. However, there are not enough radiologists, and the demand for scans is growing. This makes it more challenging to provide patients with fast and accurate results,” said Dmytro Fishman, co-founder of Better Medicine, and one of the authors of the study. |
| Here’s how the study worked: |
| The AI software was tested by a team of six radiologists on a total of 2,400 scans. Each radiologist used BMVision to help interpret 200 CT scans. Each scan was measured twice: once with AI and once without. Accuracy, reporting times and inter-radiologist agreement were compared. Using the AI software reduced the time to identify, measure, and report malignant lesions by 30%. The time for radiologists to read scans was reduced by 33% on average, and as much as 52% in some cases. Auto-generated reports significantly reduced the time for typing and dictation. Use of the tool improved sensitivity by about 6%, leading to greater accuracy and agreement between radiologists. The study said AI wouldn’t replace radiologists but would become a valuable assistant |
| In theĀ journal article, the authors of the study concluded, “We found that BMVision enables radiologists to work more efficiently and consistently. Tools like BMVision can help patients by making cancer diagnosis faster, more reliable, and more widely available.” |
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| Completely separate from one another, I had two friends in 2025 who had a tumor that needed to be scanned. In both cases, they had the scan done but had to wait weeks before their medical team could read and interpret the results. They each downloaded the raw test data from their chart and fed it into ChatGPT. In both cases, the information the AI provided was nearly identical to what they eventually received from their medical provider. AI certainly can’t replace medical professionals, but if it can make them faster, more responsive, and more accurate, it would be a huge win. |
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Tagged ai, artificial-intelligence, health, healthcare, technology
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“Immigration does pose a severe risk to Britain” – Patrick Christy GB News
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Nostalgia. Many will never have heard of Dave Allen but he had such wit and a powerful use of satire back in the 1970’s
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X Listen to Historian Bill Federer Muslim and Europe by 2030?
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Personal note on X today: AI, the wonderful brain and medicine
35 yrs using computer to track TBI et al. Why? Nobody knew much then but bluffed. AI is here & if u look at the human brain in this clip u will see the wonderful connections that are possible when engineers meet doctors
https://x.com/i/status/1984969097751257156
Medicine will change so fast now thankfully
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