AI climate benefits overstated says new civil society report

Environmental groups, including Beyond Fossil Fuels and Stand.earth, have published a report challenging claims that AI will meaningfully address climate change. The analysis argues that rapid data centre expansion is being justified by overstated promises of ‘AI for climate’ benefits.

Researchers found that many cited emissions reductions relate to older forms of machine learning rather than energy-intensive generative AI systems. At the same time, rising electricity demand from large-scale AI deployment is driving increased fossil fuel use.

The report also questions evidence presented by corporations and institutions such as the International Energy Agency, stating that projected climate gains are often weak or exaggerated. Companies are reported to be drifting away from climate targets even when renewable energy offsets are included.

Campaigners say framing AI as a climate solution risks distracting from corporate decisions that increase pollution and digital infrastructure growth. They call for stronger accountability and clearer scrutiny of environmental claims linked to emerging technologies.

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Ericsson launches AI integrated RAN radios and software to support next generation 5G networks

Telecoms giant Ericsson has launched a new range of AI-ready radios, antennas and RAN software designed to meet growing demand from AI-enabled and augmented reality devices. The portfolio will be showcased ahead of Mobile World Congress 2026 in Barcelona.

New Massive MIMO and remote radios integrate Ericsson Silicon with neural network accelerators, enabling real-time AI inference and improved uplink performance. Higher-power FDD and TDD configurations aim to support data-intensive AI applications while lowering the total cost of ownership.

Updated RAN software introduces AI-managed beamforming, AI-powered outdoor positioning and instant coverage prediction. Additional latency prioritisation tools are designed to deliver faster response times for AI and AR services.

Five new energy-efficient antennas complete the lineup, enhancing spectrum use and simplifying site design. Ericsson says deeper AI integration across hardware and software will help communications service providers monetise next-generation connectivity.

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Fake Gemini AI chatbot used in Google Coin crypto investment scam

Fraudsters are using a fake AI chatbot posing as Google’s Gemini to promote a bogus ‘Google Coin’ cryptocurrency presale. The automated assistant delivers convincing investment projections and directs victims to send irreversible crypto payments.

The scam site copies Google branding and claims the token will surge in value after launch, despite Google having no cryptocurrency project. Visitors are shown fabricated presale stages, countdowns and token sales figures to create urgency.

When questioned about regulatory or company details, the chatbot avoids providing verifiable information and instead repeats scripted claims about security and transparency. Tougher queries are redirected to a supposed ‘manager’, suggesting human operators step in to close larger payments.

Researchers warn that AI tools are making crypto scams more scalable and more challenging to detect. Consumers are urged to verify claims on official websites and to avoid sending digital assets in exchange for promised returns.

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Rwanda and Anthropic sign AI partnership

Anthropic and the Government of Rwanda have signed a three-year Memorandum of Understanding to expand AI deployment across health, education and public sector services in Rwanda. The agreement marks Anthropic’s first multi-sector government partnership in Africa.

In Rwanda’s health system, Anthropic will support national priorities, including efforts to eliminate cervical cancer and reduce malaria and maternal mortality. Rwanda’s Ministry of Health will work with Anthropic to integrate AI tools aligned with national objectives.

Public sector developer teams in Rwanda will gain access to Claude and Claude Code, alongside training, API credits and technical support. The partnership also formalises an education programme launched in 2025 that provided 2,000 Claude Pro licences to educators in Rwanda.

Officials in Rwanda have said the collaboration focuses on capacity development, responsible deployment and local autonomy. Anthropic stated that investment in skills and infrastructure in Rwanda aims to enable safe and independent use of AI by teachers, health workers and public servants.

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Wikipedia in the AI era highlights essential human oversight

Human-curated knowledge remains central in the AI era, according to the co-founder of Wikipedia. Speaking at the AI Impact Summit 2026, he stressed that editorial judgement, reliable sourcing, and community debate are essential to maintaining trust. AI tools may assist contributors, but oversight and accountability must remain human-led.

Wikipedia has become part of the digital infrastructure underpinning AI systems. Large language models are extensively trained on their openly licensed content, increasing the platform’s responsibility to safeguard accuracy. Wales emphasised that while AI is now embedded in global information systems, it still depends on human-verified knowledge foundations.

Concerns about reliability and misinformation featured prominently in the discussion. AI systems can fabricate convincing but inaccurate details, highlighting the continued importance of journalism and source verification. Wikipedia’s model, requiring citations and scrutinising source credibility, positions it as a safeguard against rapidly generated false content.

The conversation also addressed bias and language diversity. AI models trained predominantly on English-language data risk marginalising other linguistic communities. Wikipedia’s co-founder pointed to the importance of multilingual knowledge ecosystems and inclusive data practices to ensure global representation in both AI development and online information governance.

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The reality behind AI hype

As governments and tech leaders gather at global forums such as the AI Impact Summit in New Delhi, one assumption dominates discussion: the more computing power poured into AI, the better it will become. In his blog ‘‘The elephant in the AI room’: Does more computing power really bring more useful AI?’, Jovan Kurbalija questions whether that belief is as solid as it seems.

For years, the AI race has been driven by the idea that ever-larger models and vast GPU farms are the key to progress. That logic has justified enormous energy consumption and multi-billion-dollar investments in data centres. But Kurbalija argues that bigger is not always better, especially when everyday tasks often require far less computational firepower than frontier models provide.

He points out that most people rely on a limited vocabulary and a small set of reasoning tools in their daily work. Smaller, specialised AI systems can already draft emails, summarise meetings, or classify documents effectively. The push for trillion-parameter models, he suggests, may reflect ambition more than necessity.

There are also technical limits to consider. Adding more computing power can lead to diminishing returns, and some prominent researchers doubt that simply scaling up large language models will lead to human-level intelligence. More hardware, Kurbalija notes, does not automatically solve deeper conceptual challenges in AI design.

The economic picture is equally complex. Training cutting-edge proprietary models can cost hundreds of millions of dollars, while newer open-source systems have been developed at a fraction of that price. If cheaper models can deliver similar performance, questions arise about the sustainability of current spending and whether investors are backing efficiency or hype.

Beyond cost and performance lies a broader ethical issue. Even if massive computing power could eventually produce superintelligent systems, the key question is whether society truly needs them. Kurbalija warns that technological possibilities should not be confused with social desirability, and that innovation without a clear purpose can create new risks.

Rather than escalating an arms race for ever-larger models, the blog calls for a shift toward needs-driven design. Right-sized tools, viable business models, and ethical clarity about AI’s role in society may prove more valuable than raw computing muscle.

In challenging the prevailing narrative, Kurbalija urges policymakers and industry leaders to rethink whether the future of AI depends on scale alone or on smarter priorities.

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Windows 11 gains enterprise 5G management through Ericsson partnership

Ericsson and Microsoft have integrated advanced 5G into Windows 11 to simplify secure enterprise laptop connectivity. The update embeds AI-driven 5G management, enabling IT teams to automate connections and enforce policy-based controls at scale.

The solution combines Microsoft Intune with Ericsson Enterprise 5G Connect, a cloud-based platform that monitors network quality and optimises performance. Enterprises can switch service providers and automatically apply internal connectivity policies.

IT departments can remotely provision eSIMs, prioritise 5G networks, and enforce secure profiles across laptop fleets. Automation reduces manual configuration and ensures consistent compliance across locations and service providers.

The companies say the integration addresses long-standing barriers to adopting cellular-connected PCs, including complexity and fragmented management. Multi-market pilots have preceded commercial availability in the United States, Sweden, Singapore, and Japan.

Additional launches are planned in 2026 across Spain, Germany, and Finland. Executives from both firms describe the collaboration as a step toward AI-ready enterprise devices with secure, always-on connectivity.

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Mistral AI expands European footprint with acquisition of Koyeb

Mistral AI has strengthened its position in Europe’s AI sector through the acquisition of Koyeb. The deal forms part of its strategy to build end-to-end capacity for deploying advanced AI systems across European infrastructure.

The company has been expanding beyond model development into large-scale computing. It is currently building new data centre facilities, including a primary site in France and a €1.2 billion facility in Sweden, both aimed at supporting high-performance AI workloads.

The acquisition follows a period of rapid growth for Mistral AI, which reached a valuation of €11.7 billion after investment from ASML. French public support has also played a role in accelerating its commercial and research progress.

Mistral AI now positions itself as a potential European technology champion, seeking to combine model development, compute infrastructure and deployment tools into a fully integrated AI ecosystem.

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WordPress.com integrates AI assistant into its editing workflow

Major updates to AI tooling are reshaping website creation as WordPress.com brings an integrated assistant directly into its editor.

The new system works within each site rather than relying on external chat windows, allowing users to adjust layouts, create content, and modify designs in real time. The tool is available to customers on Business and Commerce plans, although activation requires a manual opt-in.

The assistant appears across several core areas of the platform. Inside the editor, it can refine writing, modify styles, translate text and generate new sections with simple instructions.

In the Media Library, you can create new images or apply targeted edits through the platform’s in-house Nano Banana models, eliminating the need for separate subscriptions. Block notes provide an additional way to request suggestions, checks, or link-based context directly within each page.

The updates aim to make site building faster and more efficient by keeping all AI interactions within the existing workflow. Users who prefer a manual experience can ignore the feature entirely, since the assistant remains inactive unless deliberately enabled.

WordPress.com also notes that the system works best with block themes, although image tools are still available for classic themes.

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Rising DRAM prices push memory to the centre of AI strategy

The cost of running AI systems is shifting towards memory rather than compute, as the price of DRAM has risen sharply over the past year. Efficient memory orchestration is now becoming a critical factor in keeping inference costs under control, particularly for large-scale deployments.

Analysts such as Doug O’Laughlin and Val Bercovici of Weka note that prompt caching is turning into a complex field.

Anthropic has expanded its caching guidance for Claude, with detailed tiers that determine how long data remains hot and how much can be saved through careful planning. The structure enables significant efficiency gains, though each additional token can displace previously cached content.

The growing complexity reflects a broader shift in AI architecture. Memory is being treated as a valuable and scarce resource, with optimisation required at multiple layers of the stack.

Startups such as Tensormesh are already working on cache optimisation tools, while hyperscalers are examining how best to balance DRAM and high-bandwidth memory across their data centres.

Better orchestration should reduce the number of tokens required for queries, and models are becoming more efficient at processing those tokens. As costs fall, applications that are currently uneconomical may become commercially viable.

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