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Can India build a semiconductor industry? Why it starts with packaging, not fabs

Summary: India is already a global heavyweight in chip design, but it still depends on overseas manufacturing for most semiconductors. After Covid-era shortages exposed how fragile supply chains can be, India is trying to build a domestic semiconductor ecosystem—starting not with the most advanced chip “fabs,” but with packaging, assembly, and testing. The story is […]

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Are Chinese open-source AI models ‘winning’ by being cheap and deployable?

Summary: A growing number of US companies are experimenting with Chinese open-source AI models because they’re fast, cheap, and can be customised—especially after what some leaders call the “DeepSeek moment.” The shift isn’t about whether the US or China has the single best closed model. It’s about whether open-source ecosystems—where Chinese labs are increasingly prominent—are

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Caribbean cannabis industry: the regulation and export story behind the headlines

Summary: Several Caribbean nations have been building legal cannabis industries focused on regulated domestic sales, medicinal products, and eventual exports. Producers argue that over‑regulation keeps most demand in illicit markets, while policymakers and researchers point to potential benefits ranging from medical uses to agricultural research. This is primarily an industry and regulation story: how a

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AI-ready entrepreneurs: why AI makes startups faster—but not automatically durable

Summary: A growing number of young founders are launching AI-first startups with unusual speed—because modern AI tools compress the time it takes to build and test products. But the same forces that make it easier to start also make it easier to build fragile businesses: hype outruns fundamentals, and “growth” can hide weak margins, weak

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TikTok’s US deal: what changes for users (and what probably won’t)

Summary: TikTok has a new US ownership-and-governance structure designed to address Washington’s national security concerns — and that will likely change how the app is operated, secured, and updated for its roughly 200 million American users. The big promise is continuity (same app, same creators, broadly the same experience). The big question is whether a

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TikTok splits its US app from the global business: why the algorithm is the real battleground

Summary: TikTok’s deal to split its US app from its global business is a high-stakes compromise: it keeps TikTok running for 200 million Americans while trying to satisfy national security concerns about Chinese ownership. The technical heart of the deal is the algorithm — licensed to US owners and retrained on US data — and

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Blue Origin’s ‘TeraWave’ vs Starlink: the next battle for orbital internet infrastructure

Summary: Blue Origin says it will launch more than 5,400 satellites to build a new global communications network called TeraWave, positioned as a rival to Starlink. The company is framing it as an enterprise/government-grade network for moving huge amounts of data, rather than consumer broadband. The larger story is that low-Earth orbit is turning into

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Snap settles addiction lawsuit: why courts are shifting from ‘content’ to ‘product design’

Summary: Snap settled a social media addiction lawsuit just days before trial — a case that claims algorithmic product design contributed to addiction and mental health harms. Snap is out (in this case). Meta, TikTok and YouTube remain, with a trial still scheduled. The settlement matters because it shows these cases are moving from abstract

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UK under-16 social media ban: why the hard part is definitions and age checks

Summary: The UK government is consulting on a social media ban for under‑16s, alongside related measures aimed at making schools “phone-free by default” and forcing platforms to consider stronger age checks and limits on features that drive compulsive use. The policy pressure is real. But the evidence base is still developing, and the implementation details

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Google appeals search monopoly ruling: why remedy design matters more than the headline

Summary: Google has appealed a landmark US antitrust ruling that found it illegally held a monopoly in online search. On paper, appeals are routine. In practice, this one sits at the centre of two overlapping shifts: regulators trying to unwind “default” power in tech markets, and generative AI changing what “search” even is. The most

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