# Сопутствующие статьи по теме Military

Новостной центр HTX предлагает последние статьи и углубленный анализ по "Military", охватывающие рыночные тренды, новости проектов, развитие технологий и политику регулирования в криптоиндустрии.

Arm Steps Into Chip Manufacturing Itself | Rewire Morning News

Arm, after 35 years of only licensing its architecture, has begun manufacturing its own data center CPU, the 136-core Neoverse V3, with Meta as its first major client. This strategic shift aims to capture a larger market share and achieve significant revenue growth. In a separate legal battle, Anthropic is challenging the Pentagon's decision to ban federal agencies from using its AI, a move the presiding judge called "disturbing." Conversely, Palantir's military AI platform received a massive $13.4 billion funding commitment from the Pentagon, highlighting a stark divergence in the U.S. government's approach to AI militarization. Four tech billionaires presented conflicting visions on AI's impact. Perplexity's CEO and Palantir's CEO suggested AI-induced job loss is beneficial, while an OpenAI investor predicted 80% of jobs could be replaced by 2030. In contrast, BlackRock's CEO warned the greater threat is AI exacerbating wealth concentration. Circle's stock plummeted 18% due to proposed legislation threatening its business model, while Tether announced its first full audit by a Big Four firm, signaling a push for legitimacy amidst tightening regulations. OpenAI shut down its Sora video app, leading Disney to withdraw a $1 billion investment. An investor filing also revealed OpenAI now lists its major shareholder, Microsoft, as a top risk factor, indicating a strategic cleanup ahead of a potential IPO. Other notable news includes SK Hynix's record $8 billion order for EUV machines from ASML, Huawei's launch of a new AI accelerator, and Broadcom's warning that TSMC's production capacity is a major bottleneck for AI chips.

marsbit03/25 04:31

Arm Steps Into Chip Manufacturing Itself | Rewire Morning News

marsbit03/25 04:31

US-Iran Negotiations Countdown: What Cards Does Trump Hold?

Summary: On March 23, Trump announced a 5-day suspension of planned strikes on Iran’s energy infrastructure, citing "productive dialogue" and "major consensus." However, Iran’s parliament speaker denied any direct talks. This marks the 7th time since 2018 that Trump has threatened Iran but only fully followed through twice—withdrawing from the JCPOA in 2018 and launching "Epic Fury" in February 2026. Brent crude fell 10.92% to around $100 after the delay announcement, reflecting market skepticism. Three scenarios post-deadline are possible: a temporary freeze agreement (oil at $80–90), extended talks (oil at $95–110), or resumed strikes with Hormuz blockade (oil up to $150+). Trump’s demands go far beyond the 2015 nuclear deal, including zero uranium enrichment and halting missile development. Current indirect mediation via Turkey, Egypt, and Pakistan lacks the structure of past multilateral talks. If talks fail, Trump’s options include strikes on power plants or Kharg Island (handling 90% of Iran’s exports), tariffs on nations trading with Iran, and cyber operations. Iran can counter by blocking the Strait of Hormuz (20% of global oil transit) for months and using its remaining missiles. Both sides face a credibility trap—military escalation risks oil price spikes, while repeated delays weaken threat credibility. The 5-day window is part of an ongoing high-stakes cycle.

比推03/24 12:49

US-Iran Negotiations Countdown: What Cards Does Trump Hold?

比推03/24 12:49

The Person Building Robots for OpenAI Sees a Terrifying Future

Caitlin Kalinowski, head of hardware and robotics engineering at OpenAI, resigned in March 2026 in protest against the company's contract with the U.S. Department of Defense, which she believed could enable domestic surveillance and autonomous weapon applications. Her departure came shortly after OpenAI signed a deal allowing the Pentagon to use its AI models in classified networks—a contract that rival Anthropic had previously refused on ethical grounds. The announcement triggered a #QuitGPT movement, causing a 295% surge in ChatGPT uninstalls and boosting Anthropic’s Claude to the top of app stores. Under public pressure, CEO Sam Altman revised the contract to include wording against "intentional" use in domestic surveillance, though experts noted legal loopholes remained. Kalinowski’s role involved developing physical AI systems, making her particularly concerned about the potential militarization of embodied AI. Her resignation reflects broader internal dissent at OpenAI, where ethics and safety teams have seen a 37% attrition rate due to disagreements over military use and company values. The situation highlights a growing tension in Silicon Valley between commercial expansion and ethical boundaries. While Anthropic chose principle over partnership—and gained user trust—OpenAI’s acceptance of the contract signals a strategic shift that risks alienating talent and compromising transparency. Kalinowski’s exit poses a fundamental question to the industry: How far are builders willing to go in taking responsibility for what they create?

marsbit03/09 08:45

The Person Building Robots for OpenAI Sees a Terrifying Future

marsbit03/09 08:45

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