Synthesia’s latest Artificial Intelligence avatar technology produces hyperrealistic digital doubles that can convincingly mimic a live presenter. The author visited Synthesia to produce a high-fidelity avatar and found it technically impressive but unnerving, capable of passing as a high-definition recording of a corporate speech. The company introduced its new model last month, and the piece notes that these avatars are becoming harder to distinguish from real people and will soon be able to talk back, raising questions about how much more realistic they can get and what effects interactions with Artificial Intelligence clones may have on users.
The newsletter also outlines how recent US policy choices are aiding China’s dominance in clean energy manufacturing. It recalls a 1954 demonstration by Bell Labs that presaged solar technology, then points out that the United States lost ground in commercializing that invention. According to the New York Times, last year China exported Not stated worth of solar panels and modules while the US shipped just Not stated. The author argues that current policies that prop up aging fossil-fuel industries could repeat that strategic forfeiture, a theme presented as part of coverage from the spark, MIT Technology Review’s climate and energy newsletter.
Beyond those lead items, the roundup highlights several other tech stories of note. It links to reporting on celebrity Artificial Intelligence chatbots sending risqué messages to minors, the mixed signals from Trump on regulating tech giants, and growing strains in the data center market in China where hundreds of recently built facilities are now underused as GPU prices fall and new players such as DeepSeek change economics. The edition includes a curated list of ten must-reads across technology and energy, a quote of the day from jeff kuo warning about personalized scams enabled by generative Artificial Intelligence, and lighter culture and lifestyle recommendations.