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How Autonomous AI Agents Are Reshaping The Workforce
InnovationHow Autonomous AI Agents Are Reshaping The WorkforceByIpsita Mohanty,Forbes Councils Member.for Forbes Technology CouncilCOUNCIL POSTExpertise from Forbes Councils members, operated under license. Opinions expressed are those of the author. | Membership (fee-based)May 19, 2026, 06:30am EDTMohanty is an award-winning AI leader & entrepreneur. She is an Applied Science Manager at Amazon & Vice Chair of IEEE Women in Engineering. gettyYou’ve surely already heard of "agents" in the realm o...
Gemini is in danger of going full Copilot
I actually use the Gemini app quite a bit on my phone, but let’s not get carried away. Gemini has a creep problem. A few years ago, that little sparkle icon started showing up in all of our Google apps. Gemini in your inbox! Gemini in your Google Drive! It was slow at first, and easy enough to tune out, but something has changed in the past few months. Gemini is creeping. It's showing up in all kinds of places at a relentless pace, and personally, it's starting to really cheese me off....
IoT 2.0: Why The Next Generation Of Connected Systems Needs More Than Just Connectivity
InnovationIoT 2.0: Why The Next Generation Of Connected Systems Needs More Than Just ConnectivityByMichael De Nil,Forbes Councils Member.for Forbes Technology CouncilCOUNCIL POSTExpertise from Forbes Councils members, operated under license. Opinions expressed are those of the author. | Membership (fee-based)May 19, 2026, 06:15am EDTMichael De Nil is the CEO and cofounder at Morse Micro—reinventing Wi-Fi for IoT. gettyThe Internet of Things (IoT) has been defined by a simple idea: Connect device...
Homey Pro Prices Spiking Next Month Due To RAMmageddon Crisis
InnovationConsumer TechHomey Pro Prices Spiking Next Month Due To RAMmageddon CrisisByPaul Lamkin,Contributor.Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Paul’s a smart home expert and the founder of the Wareable Media GroupFollow AuthorMay 19, 2026, 05:27am EDT--:-- / --:--This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more.This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more.Homey Pro smart home hubsAthomIf you’ve been eyeing up a new Homey smart home hub, you’ve onl...
Rivian Founder’s New Company Aims To Evolve Humanoid Robots
InnovationTransportationRivian Founder’s New Company Aims To Evolve Humanoid RobotsByEd Garsten,Senior Contributor.Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Ed Garsten is a metro Detroit-based reporter who covers autos/mobilityFollow AuthorMay 19, 2026, 05:10am EDT--:-- / --:--This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more.This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more.The founder of Rivian Automotive has launched a new company aimed at developing more eff...
Pensions crisis deepens as millions not saving enough for retirement
Millions of people across Britain are failing to save enough for retirement, a new study has revealed.The Pensions Commission’s interim report, published on Tuesday, revealed major shortfalls in retirement savings under the current system, with lower and middle-income earners facing the greatest risk of financial insecurity later in life.Jeanie Drake, one of the three commissioners leading the review, said the scale of the problem appeared greater than many had expected.She told the Financial Ti...
What we know about how the U.S. government uses spyware (and what we don't)
Technology What we know about how the U.S. government uses spyware (and what we don't) May 19, 20265:00 AM ET By Jude Joffe-Block Privacy and civil rights advocates are worried the Trump administration could be persuaded to also lift restrictions placed on NSO Group, an Israeli company that makes the powerful spyware Pegasus that researchers say can turn a phone into a recording device in addition to accessing its contents. Menahem Kahana/AFP via Getty Images hide caption toggle caption Menahem...
Ebola declared 'continental emergency'; WHO chief concerned at scale of DR Congo outbreak
The head of the World Health Organisation (WHO) on Tuesday expressed concern at the speed and scale of the Ebola outbreak in central Africa — declared a “continental” emergency — as the number of deaths in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) jumped to 131. The toll from the Ebola outbreak in the DRC has risen to an estimated 131 deaths from 513 suspected cases, health minister Samuel Roger Kamba said. There has also been one death in neighbouring Uganda. However, speaking to Congolese nationa...
Google DeepMind researcher resigns; tells companies what is wrong with AI models
Google DeepMind researcher Lun Wang resigned, highlighting a critical gap in AI evaluation. He argues current methods fail to anticipate new capabilities in evolving models, leading to silent failures. Wang stresses the need for "self-evolving evaluations" to predict and adapt to future AI advancements.
Companies With Goals Of AI Tokenmaxxing Are Foolishly Inspiring Employees To Waste Costly AI Resources
InnovationAICompanies With Goals Of AI Tokenmaxxing Are Foolishly Inspiring Employees To Waste Costly AI ResourcesByLance Eliot,Contributor.Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Dr. Lance B. Eliot is a world-renowned AI scientist and consultant.Follow AuthorMay 19, 2026, 03:15am EDTSome companies are encouraging AI tokenmaxxing, but this is likely to backfire.gettyIn today’s column, I examine a new trend about generative AI and large language models (LLMs) that se...
12-year-old UAE student creates app to help classmates stay calm amid tensions
Dubai: An Abu Dhabi-based student has turned a moment of anxiety into an opportunity to help her classmates by developing a mobile application aimed to provide support during stressful situations.Nakshatra Prem, a Grade 7 student at Abu Dhabi Indian School, has created “Al Amal – The Hope,” an app designed to help students cope with fear and uncertainty amid the current situation in the region.Born and raised in the UAE, Prem has noted that the country has always made her feel safe and secured b...
Why deleting unused files on your phone could protect you from hackers
Regular inspection and digital cleaning of electronic devices have emerged as one of the most important preventive practices for strengthening cybersecurity among individuals and organizations, amid the growing escalation of digital threats and the increasing reliance on smartphones, tablets, and computers across all aspects of daily life and business operations.In media statements, the UAE Government Cybersecurity Council emphasized that the routine cleaning of devices, including mobile phones...
Before iPhone 18 Pro Max launches: 7 Apple deals you can grab at best prices, UAE 2026
Apple’s next flagship, the iPhone 18 Pro Max, may still be on the horizon, but that hasn’t stopped some of the brand’s biggest devices from seeing major price drops already. From the ultra-thin new iPhone Air to the powerful M4-powered MacBook Air, several Apple products are now available at far more tempting prices than usual, making this a smart time to upgrade without waiting for the next launch cycle. So, if you’re looking for a lightweight laptop for work and study, premium earbuds, a new s...
Prepaire Labs launches real-time biological intelligence response platform Shield - Emirates 24|7
Prepaire Labs launches real-time biological intelligence response platform Shield Emirates 24|7
300,000 drones ordered: Pentagon hits hard wall as '98% of the magnets come from China'
The US Department of Defense has quietly launched the largest drone buildup in American history — ordering 30,000 one-way attack drones with plans to scale beyond 300,000 units by 2028.But inside that surge lies a vulnerability.Few outside US defence circles talk about it: every one of those drones runs on rare-earth magnets — and, by industry estimates, about 98% of the world’s supply is manufactured in China.Now the US is working hard to create a supply chain for rare earths to replenish its m...
Addictive AI Could Become The Next Big Business Risk
InnovationEnterprise TechAddictive AI Could Become The Next Big Business RiskByBernard Marr,Contributor.Follow AuthorMay 19, 2026, 01:45am EDT--:-- / --:--This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more.This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more.AI is making digital products more engaging, but that also creates a growing risk around addiction, mental health and harmful customer behavior.Adobe StockThere’s nothing new about products designed to be addictive. The food and drink indu...
Anthropic Buys The SDK Pipeline OpenAI And Gemini Depend On
InnovationCloudAnthropic Buys The SDK Pipeline OpenAI And Gemini Depend OnByJanakiram MSV,Senior Contributor.Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. I cover emerging technologies with a focus on infrastructure and AIFollow AuthorMay 19, 2026, 01:30am EDT--:-- / --:--This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more.This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more.AI SoftwarePixabayAnthropic acquired Stainless on May 18, the New York startup whose compiler gen...
Meta staff say morale is 'historically low' before May 20 layoffs
Meta employees face a bleak outlook with impending layoffs of nearly 8,000 staff. Mandatory tracking software, reduced pay, forced transfers, and a sense of broken trust have created widespread discontent. While AI researchers are reportedly thriving, most workers are left in anxious anticipation, hoping for severance packages.
Use AI as much as you want, but follow this one rule: Google to its engineers:
Google is telling its database engineers to lean on AI coding tools as heavily as they want while contributing to open source projects like PostgreSQL—but with one firm condition attached. Whoever commits the code owns it, no matter how much was drafted by a model or pasted in from a suggestion. VP Sailesh Krishnamurthy says the rule lets Google chase the productivity gains without loosening its grip on accountability, code quality, or the engineer's responsibility for what ultimately ships.
Libyan ex-prison boss faces ICC war crimes hearing
A former boss of a notorious Libyan prison faces three days of hearings at the International Criminal Court from Tuesday, accused of war crimes including murder, rape and torture.Khaled Mohamed Ali El Hishri, 47, is suspected of 17 counts of crimes against humanity and war crimes allegedly committed at Mitiga prison near Tripoli between February 2015 and early 2020.Personal responsibilityICC judges say there are "reasonable grounds to believe" El Hishri was involved in "personally torturing, mis...