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Artificial intelligence

The AI Hype Index: DeepSeek mania, Israel’s spying tool, and cheating at chess

MIT Technology Review’s highly subjective take on the latest buzz about AI.

March 26, 2025
a cat with meme glasses vibe coding next to an orange palm tree
Stephanie Arnett / Technology Review | Adobe Stock

Separating AI reality from hyped-up fiction isn’t always easy. That’s why we’ve created the AI Hype Index—a simple, at-a-glance summary of everything you need to know about the state of the industry.

While AI models are certainly capable of creating interesting and sometimes entertaining material, their output isn’t necessarily useful. Google DeepMind is hoping that its new robotics model could make machines more receptive to verbal commands, paving the way for us to simply speak orders to them aloud. Elsewhere, the Chinese startup Monica has created Manus, which it claims is the very first general AI agent to complete truly useful tasks. And burnt-out coders are allowing AI to take the wheel entirely in a new practice dubbed “vibe coding.”

Deep Dive

Artificial intelligence

How a new type of AI is helping police skirt facial recognition bans

Adoption of the tech has civil liberties advocates alarmed, especially as the government vows to expand surveillance of protesters and students.

Inside Amsterdam’s high-stakes experiment to create fair welfare AI

The Dutch city thought it could break a decade-long trend of implementing discriminatory algorithms. Its failure raises the question: can these programs ever be fair?

Google DeepMind’s new AI agent cracks real-world problems better than humans can

AlphaEvolve uses large language models to find new algorithms that outperform the best human-made solutions for data center management, chip design, and more.

Inside the story that enraged OpenAI

In 2019, Karen Hao, a senior reporter with MIT Technology Review, pitched writing a story about a then little-known company, OpenAI. This is what happened next.

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