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France's Bardella slams 'hypocrisy' over return of brothels
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Ka Ying Rising hits sweet 16 as Romantic Warrior makes Hong Kong history
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Shooting at Australia's Bondi Beach kills nine
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Meillard leads after first run in Val d'Isere slalom
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Thailand confirms first civilian killed in week of Cambodia fighting
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England's Ashes hopes hang by a thread as 'Bazball' backfires
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Police hunt gunman who killed two at US university
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Wemby shines on comeback as Spurs stun Thunder, Knicks down Magic
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McCullum admits England have been 'nowhere near' their best
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Wembanyama stars as Spurs stun Thunder to reach NBA Cup final
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Cambodia-Thailand border clashes enter second week
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Gunman kills two, wounds nine at US university
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Green says no complacency as Australia aim to seal Ashes in Adelaide
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Islamabad puts drivers on notice as smog crisis worsens
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Higa becomes first Japanese golfer to win Asian Tour order of merit
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Tokyo-bound United plane returns to Washington after engine fails
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Deja vu? Trump accused of economic denial and physical decline
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Vietnam's 'Sorrow of War' sells out after viral controversy
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China's smaller manufacturers look to catch the automation wave
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For children of deported parents, lonely journeys to a new home
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Hungary winemakers fear disease may 'wipe out' industry
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Chile picks new president with far right candidate the front-runner
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German defence giants battle over military spending ramp-up
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Knicks reach NBA Cup final as Brunson sinks Magic
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Quarterback Mendoza wins Heisman as US top college football player
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Knicks reach NBA Cup final with 132-120 win over Magic
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Campaigning starts in Central African Republic quadruple election
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NBA Cavs center Mobley out 2-4 weeks with left calf strain
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Tokyo-bound United flight returns to Dulles airport after engine fails
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Hawks guard Young poised to resume practice after knee sprain
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Salah back in Liverpool fold as Arsenal grab last-gasp win
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Raphinha extends Barca's Liga lead, Atletico bounce back
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Glasgow comeback upends Toulouse on Dupont's first start since injury
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Two own goals save Arsenal blushes against Wolves
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'Quality' teens Ndjantou, Mbaye star as PSG beat Metz to go top
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Trump vows revenge after troops in Syria killed in alleged IS ambush
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Maresca bemoans 'worst 48 hours at Chelsea' after lack of support
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Drone strike in southern Sudan kills 6 UN peacekeepers
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Crime wave propels hard-right candidate toward Chilean presidency
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Terrific Terrier backheel helps lift Leverkusen back to fourth
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Teenage pair Ndjantou and Mbaye star as PSG beat Metz to go top
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Anglo-French star Jane Birkin gets name on bridge over Paris canal
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US troops in Syria killed in alleged IS ambush
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Jalibert masterclass guides Bordeaux-Begles past Scarlets
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M23 marches on in east DR Congo as US vows action against Rwanda
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Raphinha double stretches Barca's Liga lead in Osasuna win
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Terrific Terrier returns Leverkusen to fourth
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Colts activate 44-year-old Rivers for NFL game at Seattle
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US troops in Syria killed in IS ambush attack
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Liverpool's Slot says 'no issue to resolve' with Salah after outburst
The AI boom hits a crossroads in 2026
After three years of breakneck growth and soaring valuations, the AI industry enters 2026 with some of the euphoria giving way to tough questions.
Here is a look at what is at stake:
- Bubble goes pop? -
Money is pouring into artificial intelligence, with spending expected to reach more than $2 trillion worldwide in 2026, according to the consulting firm Gartner.
But concern is growing. Stock markets are closely monitoring tech giants Apple, Microsoft, Google, Amazon and Nvidia, and startups like OpenAI, amid fears of a speculative bubble.
Several major investors -- including Japan's SoftBank and Peter Thiel --divested Nvidia shares in mid-November.
"No company is going to be immune, including us," Google CEO Sundar Pichai warned.
Yet Nvidia reported "off the charts" demand for its chips, indicating the fever continues.
- Jobs under threat? -
The debate over whether AI will destroy jobs continues, with answers still elusive.
"The AI phenomenon is here and influencing how firms think about the labor force," US Fed Vice Chair Philip Jefferson said.
True AI believers think employment will be so transformed that a universal income will be needed.
Most forecasts see gradual change. McKinsey projects 30 percent of US jobs could be automated by 2030, with 60 percent significantly altered.
Gartner analysts suggest AI will create more jobs than it eliminates by 2027.
- Superintelligence now? -
AI innovation raises the specter of superintelligent machines like those in science fiction.
Anthropic founder Dario Amodei contends the next level of AI could debut in 2026 and become smarter than Nobel Prize winners.
This artificial general intelligence (AGI) will work at a higher standard than any person, he said.
OpenAI chief Sam Altman said by early 2028 that his ChatGPT-maker could create a "legitimate AI researcher" capable of discoveries.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg spent hundreds of millions of dollars in 2025 hiring researchers to achieve AGI.
But Meta's departing Chief AI Scientist Yann LeCun calls talk of manufacturing AI "geniuses" in a data center "complete BS."
- Media facing tidal wave -
Generative AI represents "the largest transformation in the information ecosystem since the printing press," consultant David Caswell told AFP.
Traditional media face threats from chatbots and Google's AI overviews, which regurgitate content without users visiting original sites, eroding traffic and revenue.
Survival options include becoming high-value products like The Economist; implementing blocking techniques; or winning compensation through lawsuits or partnerships, as the New York Times, Associated Press and AFP have done.
- Clean up the slop -
Despite promises of cancer cures and climate solutions, many see "AI slop -- low-grade AI-generated content -- as the technology's most visible impact for now.
Creating slop requires little effort but generates clicks and revenue by gaming platform algorithms.
These creations, often presented as real, saturate social feeds with content ranging from fake Spotify bands to TikTok videos claiming to show explosions on the frontlines in Ukraine.
The platforms have responded with labeling, moderation, and anti-spam measures, though no silver bullet has emerged to stop the tide.
P.Sousa--PC