AI pioneer warns of mass job losses

Geoffrey Hinton, often called the godfather of AI, has warned that the technology could soon trigger mass unemployment, particularly in white-collar roles. In a recent podcast interview, he said AI will eventually replace most forms of intellectual labour.

According to Hinton, jobs requiring basic reasoning or clerical tasks will be the first to go, with AI performing the work of multiple people. He expressed concern that call centre workers may already be vulnerable, while roles requiring physical skills, like plumbing, remain safer for now.

Hinton challenged the common belief that AI will create more jobs than it eliminates. He argued that unless someone has highly specialised expertise, they may find themselves outpaced by machines capable of learning and performing cognitive tasks.

He also criticised OpenAI’s recent corporate restructuring, saying the shift towards a profit-driven model risks sidelining the public interest. Hinton, alongside other critics including Elon Musk, warned that the changes could divert AI development from its original mission of serving humanity.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!

New Meta smart glasses target sports enthusiasts

Meta is set to launch a new pair of AI-powered smart glasses under the Oakley brand, targeting sports users. Scheduled for release on 20 June, the glasses mark an expansion of Meta’s partnership with eyewear giant EssilorLuxottica.

Oakley’s sporty design and outdoor functionality make it ideal for active users, a market Meta aims to capture with this launch. The glasses will feature a central camera and likely retail for around $360.

This follows the success of Meta’s Ray-Ban smart glasses, which include AI assistant integration and hands-free visual capture. Over two million pairs have been sold since 2023, according to EssilorLuxottica’s CEO.

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg continues to push smart eyewear as a long-term replacement for smartphones. With high-fashion Prada smart glasses also in development, Meta is betting on wearable tech becoming the next frontier in computing.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!

Canva rolls out text-to-video tool for creators

Canva has launched a new tool powered by Google’s Veo 3 model, allowing users to generate short cinematic video clips using simple text prompts. Known as ‘Create a Video Clip’, the feature produces eight-second videos with sound directly inside the Canva platform.

This marks one of the first commercial uses of Veo 3, which debuted last month. The AI tool is available to Canva Pro, Teams, Enterprise and Nonprofit users, who can generate up to five clips per month initially.

Danny Wu, Canva’s head of AI products, said the feature simplifies video creation with synchronised dialogue, sound effects and editing options. Users can integrate the clips into presentations, social media designs or other formats via Canva’s built-in video editor.

Canva is also extending the tool to users of Leonardo.Ai, a related image generation service. The feature is protected by Canva Shield, a content moderation and indemnity framework aimed at enterprise-level security and trust.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!

AI helps Google curb scams and deepfakes in India

Google has introduced its Safety Charter for India to combat rising online fraud, deepfakes and cybersecurity threats. The charter outlines a collaborative plan focused on user safety, responsible AI development and protection of digital infrastructure.

AI-powered measures have already helped Google detect 20 times more scam-related pages, block over 500 million scam messages monthly, and issue 2.5 billion suspicious link warnings. Its ‘Digikavach’ programme has reached over 177 million Indians with fraud prevention tools and awareness campaigns.

Google Pay alone averted financial fraud worth ₹13,000 crore in 2024, while Google Play Protect stopped nearly 6 crore high-risk app installations. These achievements reflect the company’s ‘AI-first, secure-by-design’ strategy for early threat detection and response.

The tech giant is also collaborating with IIT-Madras on post-quantum cryptography and privacy-first technologies. Through language models like Gemini and watermarking initiatives such as SynthID, Google aims to build trust and inclusion across India’s digital ecosystem.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!

Bitget Wallet enables crypto QR payments in Vietnam

Bitget Wallet has made a significant step by becoming the first self-custody wallet to integrate directly with Vietnam’s national QR payment system, VietQR. The move lets users in Vietnam pay with crypto at over two million merchants, from restaurants to supermarkets and street vendors.

The integration allows seamless crypto transactions via a single scan of the VietQR code. Payments can be made using stablecoins such as USDT and USDC, supported on multiple blockchain networks including Ethereum, Tron, Solana, Base, TON, and BNB Chain.

The wallet’s developers plan to expand support to additional chains in the near future.

The rollout is part of Bitget Wallet’s broader PayFi initiative, which aims to connect crypto payments with national QR systems across several global regions. Auto-swap features are also on the roadmap, enabling token payments without fiat conversion.

Bitget Wallet is promoting the launch with a 50% cashback for the first 50,000 new users, valid from 16 June to 30 July. The company’s CMO, Jamie Elkaleh, stated the goal is to shift crypto from an investment vehicle into an everyday currency, beginning in Southeast Asia.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot

Pasqal opens Canada factory, sells quantum computer to Distriq

French quantum computing firm Pasqal has deepened its North American presence by selling a 100-qubit quantum processor and opening a significant manufacturing facility in Sherbrooke, Québec.

The processor was sold to Distriq, a quantum innovation hub in Sherbrooke, which aims to strengthen Québec’s growing quantum technology ecosystem.

The deal was backed by a CA$9.6 million (US$7.1m) loan from the Québec Ministry of Economy, Innovation and Energy and Investissement Québec, alongside CA$2.4 million (US$1.8m) from the National Bank of Canada and CA$1.2 million (US$883,000) from Canada Economic Development for Québec Regions.

Pasqal confirmed that the system would be manufactured and installed in Sherbrooke and made available to Canadian researchers and industries.

The firm also inaugurated its first North American manufacturing site—its second globally—in Sherbrooke’s 50,000 sq ft Espace Quantique 1 building. The facility will focus on producing Pasqal’s next-generation quantum processors.

The factory was supported by a CA$15 million (US$11m) loan from Investissement Québec, positioning Pasqal among Canada’s most significant quantum players.

‘These achievements signal that quantum computing is no longer a future promise—it has become a reality today,’ said Wasiq Bokhari, Pasqal’s executive chairman.

Distriq VP Mehdi Bozzo-Rey called the acquisition a ‘major milestone’ in supplying Québec with industrial quantum capabilities.

Founded in 2019, Pasqal counts Nobel Laureate Alain Aspect among its co-founders. The company has installed systems in Saudi Arabia and Germany, and in early June 2025, it acquired Canadian photonics company Aeponyx to bolster its hardware capabilities.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!

BBVA advises wealthy clients to invest in crypto

BBVA, Spain’s second-largest bank, advises affluent clients to allocate between 3% and 7% of their portfolios to cryptocurrencies, including Bitcoin. The guidance comes just months after Spanish regulators approved the bank’s crypto trading services.

According to Philippe Meyer, head of digital and blockchain solutions at BBVA Switzerland, the bank has been advising wealthy clients on Bitcoin since September 2024. He noted that a modest crypto allocation can improve portfolio performance without taking on excessive risk.

Client response, he added, has been largely positive.

BBVA has executed crypto trades since 2021 and began active advisory services in late 2024. In March, Spain’s securities regulator authorised BBVA to offer trading in Bitcoin and Ether, with full mobile integration expected in the coming months.

The move aligns with the broader rollout of the EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA), which occurred at the end of 2024. Meanwhile, Santander is reportedly exploring the launch of euro and dollar-pegged stablecoins to expand its retail crypto services.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot

OKX launches regulated exchanges in Germany and Poland

OKX has expanded its European presence by launching fully compliant centralised exchanges in Germany and Poland. These new platforms offer access to over 270 cryptocurrencies, including more than 60 crypto-to-euro trading pairs.

Integrating the Single Euro Payments Area (SEPA) infrastructure allows seamless Euro deposits and withdrawals through bank transfers and local payment methods.

The expansion aligns with the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation, marking a significant step towards regulated crypto adoption in the region. OKX’s acquisition of the first full MiCA licence highlights its commitment to transparency and security, setting a standard for other crypto firms.

Germany is set to lead Europe in crypto growth by 2030, with Poland emerging as a key player thanks to pro-Bitcoin leader Karol Nawrocki. The compliant exchanges may attract increased institutional investment, challenging the view of crypto as an unregulated sector.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot

Crypto exchange WhiteBit signs with Juventus

Juventus have announced a new three-year sleeve sponsorship deal with cryptocurrency exchange WhiteBit, further strengthening their ties to the crypto sector. The agreement makes WhiteBit the official crypto exchange partner of the Serie A club, with its logo to appear on the men’s first team jerseys.

The deal, reportedly worth €5 million per season, includes exclusive digital content and joint initiatives designed to engage fans. WhiteBit takes over from asset management firm Azimut, which held the sleeve rights briefly following earlier crypto sponsors Bitget and Zondacrypto.

The partnership marks another strategic push by Juventus into the digital asset space. Earlier this year, crypto firm Tether increased its ownership stake in the club by over ten percent.

WhiteBit, meanwhile, has expanded its footprint in football through a partnership with Barcelona and was among the top ten crypto sponsors globally last season.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!

Orange, AFD, and Proparco unite for inclusive and sustainable digital growth

Orange, AFD Group, and Proparco have signed a three-year agreement to accelerate digital inclusion and promote sustainable development across 20 countries, primarily in Africa and the Middle East. The partnership will focus on deploying high-speed digital infrastructure, including network backbones and submarine cables, to address connectivity gaps in underserved and rural regions.

That initiative responds to stark disparities in internet access, with only 37% of Sub-Saharan Africa connected compared to over 91% in Europe. Beyond infrastructure, the partnership focuses on improving access to essential digital services in key sectors such as agriculture, healthcare, and education, while also promoting financial and energy inclusion to reduce inequalities and empower remote communities.

A major priority is supporting youth and fostering local innovation through programs that provide digital skills training and professional integration opportunities, enabling young people to participate actively in the digital economy. At the same time, the initiative aims to build vibrant entrepreneurship ecosystems so that communities can become creators, not just consumers, of technology.

Environmental sustainability and ethical responsibility are also at the heart of the collaboration, with strong commitments to reducing the digital sector’s ecological footprint and ensuring responsible practices in areas like data use, cybersecurity, and AI. The partnership seeks to embed inclusivity, innovation, and sustainability into the digital transformation process.

That partnership reflects a shared goal of using digital technology to promote equality and sustainable development, focusing on sovereign, innovative, and locally driven digital services.

Would you like to learn more about AI, tech and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our Diplo chatbot!