The Download: fully artificial chicken eggs and wh
2026年05月20日 20:106,882 次阅读AI Prism 智棱编辑团队
AI导读
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.
Colossal Biosciences is growing chickens in a 3D-printed artificial eggshell
The baby chicks were shifting and starting to pip—or trying to hatch. But not f...
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.
Colossal Biosciences is growing chickens in a 3D-printed artificial eggshell
The baby chicks were shifting and starting to pip—or trying to hatch. But not from an egg. Instead, these chickens were growing inside transparent 3D-printed plastic cups at the Dallas headquarters of Colossal Biosciences.
The biotech company yesterday claimed it has developed a “fully artificial egg” as part of its effort to resurrect extinct avian species, including birds like the dodo and the giant moa.
Some scientists think Colossal is overstating the breakthrough. But the technology may represent an early step toward artificial wombs.
Read the full story on the science and controversy behind the artificial eggshell.
—Antonio Regalado
Inside the Musk v. Altman Trial
Elon Musk has lost his landmark lawsuit against OpenAI, which centered on allegations that its cofounders Sam Altman and Greg Brockman misled him about the company’s nonprofit mission. But what really happened in the courtroom, and what does it mean for the AI race?
AI reporter and attorney Michelle Kim, who covered the trial for MIT Technology Review, joined our editor in chief Mat Honan to unpack it all in an exclusive Roundtables discussion yesterday.
Subscribers can watch the full recording now.
MIT Technology Review Narrated: this scientist rewarmed and studied pieces of his friend’s cryopreserved brain
L. Stephen Coles’s brain sits in a vat at a storage facility in Arizona. It has been held there at a temperature of around −146 degrees °C for over a decade, largely undisturbed. Before he died in 2014, Coles had the brain frozen with an ambitious goal in mind: reanimation.
His friend, cryobiologist Greg Fahy, believes it could be revived one day. But other experts are less optimistic.
Still, Fahy’s research could lead to new ways to study the brain. And using cryopreservation for organ transplantation is becoming a viable reality.
—Jessica Hamzelou
This is our latest story to be turned into an MIT Technology Review Narrated podcast, which we publish 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.
Can AI learn to understand the world?
The limitations of LLMs are pushing AI researchers towards new systems that understand the physical environment: world models. The likes of Google DeepMind, Fei-Fei Li’s World Labs, and Meta’s former Chief AI Scientist, AI Yann LeCun, have brought this technology to the forefront of AI.
To explore where this technology is heading next, MIT Technology Review is hosting an exclusive Roundtables discussion on Thursday, May 21, with editor in chief Mat Honan, senior AI editor Will Douglas Heaven, and AI reporter Grace Huckins. Register here to join the session at 19:30 GMT / 2:30 PM ET / 11:30 AM PT.
World models are also one of MIT Technology Review’s 10 Things That Matter in AI Right Now, our list of what’s really worth your attention in the busy, buzzy world of AI.
The must-reads
I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology.
1 Google is changing its search box for the first time in 25 yearsIts AI-powered overhaul centers on an “intelligent search box”. (Wired $)+ “Information agents” will gather information on a user’s behalf. (TechCrunch)+ Google, Gemini, and Gmail may one day be a single search box. (The Verge)+ AI means the end of search as we know it. (MIT Technology Review)2 Samsung workers plan to strike tomorrow over AI profit sharingThey say that their employer isn’t sharing the rewards of the AI boom. (WSJ $)+ And want 15% of the company’s annual operating profit. (CNBC)+ South Korea may invoke emergency powers to stop the strike. (Reuters $) 3 The White House is set to release a new executive order on AI safetyIt’s slated to launch this week. (Axios)+ The order seeks early government access to advanced models. (NYT $) 4 The FBI plans to buy nationwide access to license plate readersIt wants “data in near real time” from cameras across the US. (Ars Technica)+ The tech could let it track drivers nationwide. (Newsweek) 5 Google will launch a new line of smart glasses this fallThey’re the company’s first attempt since the Google Glass flop. (BBC)+ Google Gemini will power the interactions with the user. (Guardian)+ Meanwhile, Anduril and Meta are making smart glasses for warfare. (MIT Technology Review) 6 A new bill in Congress proposes a new annual fee for EVsIt could cost drivers an extra $130 a year. (NYT $)+ The fee will cover highway maintenance costs. (WSJ $) 7 OpenAI co-founder Andrej Karpathy has joined rival lab AnthropicKarpathy was also previously Tesla’s director of AI. (Fortune)+ He coined the term “vibe coding.” (MIT Technology Review)8 The fears over Anthropic’s Mythos AI model look overstatedCybersecurity experts say the hacking threat is exaggerated. (Reuters $) 9 Silicon Valley keeps misreading China’s role in techViewing Chinese firms as enemies could do more to hurt than help the US. (Rest of World) 10 A book about AI’s effects on truth contains false quotes created by AIIt’s among a spate of controversies involving AI-generated quotes. (NYT $)+ Yesterday, a lawyer apologised for including them in a court filing. (Reuters $)+ A senior journalist was recently suspended for using them. (Guardian)
Quote of the day
“It may be that the judges have now awarded a prize to an instance of AI plagiarism—we don’t yet know, and perhaps we never will know.”
—Sigrid Rausing, publisher of literary magazine Granta, casts doubts on the authenticity of the Commonwealth Short Story Prize winners, Wired reports.
One More Thing
SELMAN DESIGN
Who gets to decide who receives experimental medical treatments?
Max was only a toddler when his parents noticed there was “something different” about the way he moved. He was slower than other kids his age, and he struggled to jump. He couldn’t run. A genetic test confirmed their fears: Max had Duchenne muscular dystrophy.
Desperate to slow its progression, Max’s parents enrolled him in an experimental gene therapy trial. The FDA had approved the medicine on weak evidence—a move that has become increasingly common.
We urgently need to question how these decisions are made. Who should have access to experimental therapies? And who should get to decide?
Read the full story on the intense debate over experimental treatments.
—Jessica Hamzelou
We can still have nice things
A place for comfort, fun, and distraction to brighten up your day. (Got any ideas? Drop me a line.)
+ Trace the history of the world’s most famous plumber in this biography of Mario.+ Watch the Earth’s spin in action as a full Milk Moon slowly disappears behind a volcano.+ This handy tool for movie buffs lets you filter upcoming releases by territory and save them to a local watchlist.+ A missing cat was reunited with its owner after five years and 270 km apart—all thanks to an old Facebook post.
在备受关注的诉讼中,Elon Musk指控OpenAI及其CEO Sam Altman违背了2014年承诺的非营利原则,并试图控制OpenAI资源用于商业目的。Sam Altman则反驳称,OpenAI从未有过此类承诺,并暗示Musk滥用控制权。审判核心围绕2019年OpenAI将盈利子公司定义为'公共利益公司'的争议,双方律师通过关键对话记录和组织结构变化证据展开激烈辩论。Musk强调OpenAI的盈利转向威胁人类福祉,而Altman指出公司使命始终未变,并质疑Musk诉讼时机的正当性。此次审判不仅关乎OpenAI是否违反诺言,更反映了科技行业在AGI快速发展与安全监管间的张力。
Richard Socher创立一家估值6.5亿美元的AI新创公司,旨在开发能无限自我改进和研究的人工智能系统。这挑战了当前依赖人类监督的AI模式,并可能重塑软件开发和科技行业,类似于DeepMind等公司的进展。Socher强调这一AI将减少外部干预、加速迭代,但也面临技术稳定性和商业可行性挑战。尽管风险较高,该项目代表AI从辅助工具向自主创新转变的关键起点,值得业界关注。