This is today’s edition of The Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology.

How generative AI could help make construction sites safer

More than 1,000 construction workers die on the job each year in the US, making it the most dangerous industry for fatal slips, trips, and falls.A new AI tool called Safety AI could help to change that. It analyzes the progress made on a construction site each day, and flags conditions that violate Occupational Safety and Health Administration rules, with what its creator Philip Lorenzo claims is 95% accuracy.

Lorenzo says Safety AI is the first one of multiple emerging AI construction safety tools to use generative AI to flag safety violations. But as the 95% success rate suggests, Safety AI is not a flawless and all-knowing intelligence. Read the full story.

—Andrew Rosenblum

Roundtables: Inside OpenAI’s Empire with Karen Hao

Earlier this week, we held a subscriber-only Roundtable discussion with author and former MIT Technology Review senior editor Karen Hao about her new book *Empire of AI: Dreams and Nightmares in Sam Altman’s OpenAI.*You can watch her conversation with our executive editor Niall Firth here—and if you aren’t already, you can subscribe to us here.

MIT Technology Review Narrated: The tech industry can’t agree on what open-source AI means. That’s a problem.

What counts as ‘open-source AI’? The answer could determine who gets to shape the future of the technology.

This is our latest story to be turned into a MIT Technology Review Narrated podcast, which we’re publishing each week on Spotify and Apple Podcasts. Just navigate to MIT Technology Review Narrated on either platform, and follow us to get all our new content as it’s released.

The must-reads

I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology.

1 China’s digital IDs are comingAnd they’re unlikely to stay voluntary for long. (Economist $)+ The country’s AI models are becoming increasingly popular worldwide. (WSJ $)

2 Donald Trump has mused about using DOGE to deport Elon MuskMusk’s comments about the President’s ‘Big Beautiful Bill’ have touched a nerve. (Axios)+ Turns out AI models are quite good at fact checking Trump. (WP $)+ DOGE’s tech takeover threatens the safety and stability of our critical data. (MIT Technology Review)

3 Google must pay California’s Android users $314.6mAfter a jury ruled it had misused their data. (Reuters)

4 Many AI detectors overpromise and underdeliverBut that hasn’t stopped Californian colleges from investing millions in them. (Undark)+ What’s next for college writing? Nothing good. (New Yorker $)+ Educators are working out how to integrate AI into computer science. (NYT $)+ AI-text detection tools are really easy to fool. (MIT Technology Review)

5 Google is making its first foray into fusionThe world’s first grid-scale fusion power plant is due to come online in the 2030s. (NBC News)+ Google will buy half its output. (TechCrunch)+ Inside a fusion energy facility. (MIT Technology Review)

6 China is banning certain portable batteries from flightsIn the wake of two major manufacturers recalling millions of power banks. (NYT $)+ The ban is catching travellers out. (SCMP)

7 The deepfake economy is spiralling out of controlSmall business owners are drowning in online scams. (Insider $)

8 Chipmaking companies are attractive prospects for investorsAnd they’re likely to be better bets. (WSJ $)+ OpenAI has denied that it plans to use Google’s in-house chip. (Reuters)

9 How cancer studies in dogs could help develop treatments for humansThe disease presents very similarly across both species. (Knowable Magazine)+ Cancer vaccines are having a renaissance. (MIT Technology Review)

10 X is planning to task AI agents with writing Community NotesThankfully, humans will still review them. (Bloomberg $)+ Why does AI hallucinate? (MIT Technology Review)

Quote of the day

“Missionaries will beat mercenaries.”

—OpenAI CEO Sam Altman takes aim at Meta’s recent spree of attempting to hire his staff, Wired reports.

One more thing

The world’s next big environmental problem could come from spaceIn September, a unique chase took place in the skies above Easter Island. From a rented jet, a team of researchers captured a satellite’s last moments as it fell out of space and blazed into ash across the sky, using cameras and scientific equipment. Their hope was to gather priceless insights into the physical and chemical processes that occur when satellites burn up as they fall to Earth at the end of their missions.

This kind of study is growing more urgent. The number of satellites in the sky is rapidly rising—with a tenfold increase forecast by the end of the decade. Letting these satellites burn up in the atmosphere at the end of their lives helps keep the quantity of space junk to a minimum. But doing so deposits satellite ash in the Earth’s atmosphere. This metallic ash could potentially alter the climate, and we don’t yet know how serious the problem is likely to be. Read the full story.

—Tereza Pultarova

We can still have nice things

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  • Death_Equity@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    The last thing a construction job needs is a system of cameras that nanny workers.

    The pictured example would need a larger ladder or even a scaffold. So a quick bit of work then takes a half hour or more because the next largest ladder is on the truck, which someone else took and now you need to hunt down a ladder off your truck that someone else “borrowed” or you need to transport and assemble a scaffold.

    There are scaffolds in the picture, but they are in use, so you would be waiting for them to be available and that could be a long wait or it belongs to another contractor and you can’t use it. Sometimes you need to move a bunch of shit just to be able to get the scaffold in place and that takes more time.

    Why am I talking about time being the justification of not doing things the safest way? Because job sites have an expectation that things get done fast enough for the successive steps and adding hours of time spent per week for just one person, compound that by however many workers, slows things down a lot and that means timelines aren’t met. Not finishing on time can have big consequences, so you are pushed to rush and save time to allow for unavoidable slowdowns cause by outside influences.

    As safe and fast as possible is the modus operandi of construction and an AI nanny would be hated by everyone under the lens.

    There are over 8 million people in the US construction industry, a 1,000 deaths a year is a pretty great statistic given the dangers of working around stuff that can kill you instantly even if you follow every rule and are cautious.