MIT Technology Review´s latest Power issue focuses on the deep ties between energy production, authority, and the intangible rise of intelligence—particularly Artificial Intelligence—on the global stage. The publication seeks to dissect how both traditional energy, like electricity, and new sources of power, such as digital autonomy and billionaire influence, reshape societies and economies. Articles within the issue probe whether we are prepared to give autonomous Artificial Intelligence agents greater control and autonomy, highlight case studies like Nebraska´s public electricity grid as an indicator of future power distribution systems, and scrutinize the controversial ongoing operation of Puerto Rico´s only coal-fired power station amid escalating health concerns.
Urban development is another area impacted by Artificial Intelligence as it transforms city planning and infrastructure, proposing a shift to smarter, more efficient urban environments. The issue doesn´t ignore the human dimension, raising ethical questions about the concentration of power among influential tech billionaires, who promote the development of Artificial Intelligence with the aim—sometimes self-professed—of saving humanity, but may inadvertently direct civilization down perilous paths. Another feature addresses the growing discourse on financial surveillance in the U.S. and calls for a reassessment of the Bank Secrecy Act in the context of a rapidly digitizing financial system, emphasizing the urgent need to balance innovation and financial privacy as oversight and tracking have expanded significantly in recent years.
The newsletter complements these analyses with a curated selection of timely technology stories, illustrating the growing influence of copyright in Artificial Intelligence training, the inundation of recruiters with machine-generated résumés, and the dramatic impact of extreme heat in the U.S. Other highlights include the emergence of a bot as a top hacker, unionization among content moderators at TikTok, and how advances in Wi-Fi sensing technologies are making previously theoretical surveillance applications an invisible part of millions of homes. Interwoven throughout are lighter cultural notes and reflections on the personal impacts of technological change, reinforcing the Review´s multidisciplinary approach to covering technology´s evolving power dynamics.