Bryan Johnson Says AI Could Enable Human Immortality by 2039
Biohacker Bryan Johnson argues artificial intelligence and experimental medicine could enable functional human immortality within 15 years, despite major unresolved risks.
Access a continuous stream of concise, high-impact reporting on artificial intelligence across global markets and industries. This section aggregates short-form coverage of corporate announcements, funding activity, product launches, regulatory actions, executive moves, and strategic partnerships, delivering essential developments with speed and clarity. Designed for efficient consumption, it prioritizes material updates and market-moving information while complementing longer-form analysis and in-depth industry coverage.
Biohacker Bryan Johnson argues artificial intelligence and experimental medicine could enable functional human immortality within 15 years, despite major unresolved risks.
The House approved the SPEED Act to speed federal permits for AI infrastructure, tightening environmental review timelines as lawmakers debate energy, data centers, and competitiveness.
ChatGPT crossed $3 billion in lifetime mobile consumer spending, with most revenue generated in 2025, outpacing TikTok and major streaming apps.
Swedish vibe coding startup Lovable raised $330 million in Series B funding at a $6.6 billion valuation, reflecting rapid growth driven by AI-powered app development.
Luma unveiled Ray3 Modify, an AI video model that edits existing footage using character references and frame guidance while preserving motion and performance.
Amazon is rolling out AI-powered Greetings for Ring doorbells, allowing Alexa+ to manage deliveries, screen visitors, and take messages using video analysis.
Mozilla appointed Anthony Enzor-DeMeo as CEO as Firefox faces new AI-driven browser competition and plans optional AI features and diversified revenue streams.
Amazon appointed AWS veteran Peter DeSantis to head a new AI group managing Nova models, custom chips, and quantum computing as it deepens its AI strategy.
A proposed class-action lawsuit claims Adobe trained its SlimLM AI model on pirated books, adding to mounting legal pressure over copyrighted data used in AI systems.
A California administrative law judge ruled Tesla’s Autopilot and Full Self-Driving marketing deceptive, opening the door to possible license suspensions if claims are not corrected.