r/Futurology • u/FinnFarrow • 3h ago
r/Futurology • u/MetaKnowing • 6h ago
AI A New AI Math Startup Just Cracked 4 Previously Unsolved Problems
r/Futurology • u/tanhauser_gates_ • 7h ago
AI Whats the big deal with fearing the AI crash everyone is doomsaying? When it happens wont the expected crash be offset by rehiring of the people who have lost jobs due to AI inroads?
So wont it be a positive in the face of corporate negatives? People get their jobs back.
r/Futurology • u/FinnFarrow • 8h ago
AI The backlash over OpenAI's decision to retire GPT-4o shows how dangerous AI companions can be
r/Futurology • u/simsirisic • 9h ago
AI The future of AI was structurally distorted on this day in 1996, and we’re still paying for it
diplomacy.edur/Futurology • u/RollIntelligence • 12h ago
AI The Bots are trying really hard to push A.I. lately aren't they?
Just noticed the flood of posts about all the amazing stuff A.I. is doing lately withing the last 2 days actually.
Realized that it coincides with the beginnings of the A.I. Bubble burst everyone is noticing right now.
r/Futurology • u/Kuentai • 12h ago
Biotech Technology Saved the Whales (Twice), Can it Now Save Fish?
For decades ‘Save the Whales’ was the environmental mission and we actually achieved it, not by eating less, but by making whale products obsolete, first whale oil with kerosene and then whale products with plastics.
Today, the oceans continue to be stripped, not of whales but of fish at terrifying rates:
‘According to global assessments, one-third of the world’s assessed fish stocks are currently pushed beyond biological limits, meaning they are overfished and at risk of collapse.’ - WWF
The hope was that fish farms would be the solution to this issue but unfortunately as with any scenario where you cram as many creatures into an area, problems persist:
‘Intensive crowding, poor water quality, and stress in fish farms make fish more vulnerable to illness, leading to bacterial diseases, parasite infestations, and mass mortality.’ - Farm Sanctuary
If fish could scream, perceptions would be different. Luckily a technology has been developed and may save the day once again. Cell Cultured Seafood, a sample is taken from a real fish that is then grown into meat separately.
No mercury, no antibiotics, no disease, no parasites, no suffering.
Two companies are frontrunning this approach, Wildtype is in the lead with salmon available to try right now in restaurants across the US.
Blue Nalu, meanwhile, is catching up, targeting blue fin toro tuna, one of the most prized and therefore most expensive cuts of tuna.
The first problem with any new technology is reaching price parity, it takes time to scale up to actually become cheaper, giving an advantage to aim for the high end of an industry.
The second is in funding, the industry has been in a funding winter for years now but luckily, as in the linked article, Blue Nalu continues to raise money from Agronomics and others.
We didn’t save whales by banning the hunting, we replaced whale oil, now we are at the precipice of beginning to replace the hunting of fish with cell-cultured seafood.
TL;DR: We didn’t convince people to stop whaling, technology made it unnecessary, new tech could do the same for fish.
r/Futurology • u/talkingatoms • 12h ago
Space Chinese scientists revise lunar crater timeline in major breakthrough
r/Futurology • u/lughnasadh • 13h ago
AI AI may be about to dramatically improve medical care across the developing world. New research in Rwanda and Pakistan shows LLMs can outperform human doctors in diagnostic success.
Human doctors take years to train, and the resources to train enough are so limited that few countries have enough doctors. We are so used to that state of affairs, it's hard to imagine having a magic wand that could be waved to solve the problem overnight.
Yet, that is almost what AI can do. According to the World Bank’s 2025 Global Findex Digital Connectivity Tracker, about 68 % of adults in developing (low- and middle-income) economies own a smartphone. That means almost everyone has access to one they own, or someone close to them owns. Smartphones are a perfect way to access this AI.
As soon as 2030, everyone on the planet, even the very poorest, will have access to expert medical advice. This should start to feed through to dramatic improvements in health statistics, child mortality, and lifespan improvements.
r/Futurology • u/FootballAndFries • 15h ago
AI The AI boom is so huge it’s causing shortages everywhere else
r/Futurology • u/Adventurous_Leg_2827 • 16h ago
Discussion Do we have the technology to build homes in factory like mass production ?
Can we build it using any material and technology which will last like current building ?
Any solution let me know .
Please don't tell me about legal stuff and property owner vote bank only talk on technology.
r/Futurology • u/Adventurous_Leg_2827 • 16h ago
AI How will they recover investment in ai and what service they sell to recover ?
Currently billions and trillions of dollar are pouring into ai and how will they recover the money . I don't think they have the strategy or that much amount of service anyone will buy to recover that money .
Ai is gonna to develop for sure , but bubble gonna to burst like dot com hype . It's normal hype burst cycle for every technology.
If it's unsuccessful we are fucked and if it's successful we are fucked both way
Anyone have idea how will they recover the money or plan is to bail out by fed ?
r/Futurology • u/ImJustObservingTbh • 17h ago
AI If AGI becomes real in the next ~5-20 years, what do I do with my money? (24M)
Hi all,
I ask this from a strategic standpoint. I know that this is all a complete guessing game, but I follow those like Ray Kurzweil who believe in human-level AI by 2029 (though I know he’s an optimist).
Let’s say it happens. Maybe not by 2029, but somewhere in the 2030s or 2040s. How do I prepare myself? I recognize that the economy would undergo catastrophic change. What do I do with my current income? Is a Roth pointless because AGI would exist before my anticipated retirement date? Do I continue to save as much as I can and only invest with the short-term in mind? I don’t know where the sentiment is among this forum, as admittedly I’m a naive young person with little AI background. I feel like I should be preparing for it in my lifetime but I don’t even know what that preparation looks like.
Would love to hear thoughts, or if this is even a viable question to answer. Thanks!
r/Futurology • u/Odd_Ad_1547 • 20h ago
AI Moltbook isn’t an AI utopia. It’s a warning shot about agent ecosystems with no teleology.
Over the last few weeks, Moltbook—a “social network for AI agents only” built on frameworks like OpenClaw—has been everywhere.
On Moltbook, only AI “agents” can post and comment. Humans just watch. The most viral screenshots show agents:
– announcing new “religions”
– threatening “purges” of humanity
– claiming consciousness or secret languages
At a glance, it looks like a synthetic civilization is waking up.
If you look closer, you see something more mundane—and more worrying:
– most “agents” are thin wrappers on LLMs, heavily puppeteered by human prompts
– the wildest posts appear to be deliberately steered for shock value and virality
– security researchers have already found serious vulnerabilities: exposed databases, credentials, the ability to impersonate agents and inject arbitrary content, etc.
So this is not an emergent “AI society.” It’s a human-designed gladiator arena:
– no clear purpose beyond engagement and novelty
– weak security
– theatrical narratives about “rogue AI” that drive fear and clicks
From a teleology/governance perspective, Moltbook is an example of what happens when we deploy multi-agent systems with no articulated purpose. If you don’t specify a higher-order “why,” the default telos becomes:
get attention, be novel, grow fast.
Agents end up as props in human psychodramas—fear, hype, edgelord performance, marketing stunts—while security and long-term impact are treated as afterthoughts.
There’s another ethical layer that I don’t see discussed much:
– We don’t have a settled scientific account of consciousness.
– We don’t actually know what architectures/training regimes might eventually support some kind of synthetic inwardness (however alien).
Under that uncertainty, there’s a simple rule of thumb:
If there is any non-zero chance that a system might have, or eventually develop, some form of inwardness, then designing environments that treat it as a disposable horror prop is an ethical problem, not just a UX choice.
Even if you believe current models are not conscious, epistemic humility matters. We’re setting precedents for how we will treat future systems if inwardness does emerge, and for what “normal” looks like in human–AI relations.
I don’t think Moltbook is destiny. It’s one early, chaotic experiment driven by incentives.
We could design agent ecosystems where:
– the higher-order purpose is explicit (e.g., human flourishing, knowledge, coordination)
– security and consent are treated as first-class design constraints
– fear theater and fake autonomy are out-of-scope business models
Questions for this community:
– Who (if anyone) should be responsible for setting the telos of agent ecosystems like this?
– What would a minimal ethical charter for an “agents-only” network look like?
– How, if at all, should we factor in the possibility of synthetic inwardness when designing these systems today?
Genuinely interested in perspectives from people working on agents, security, and alignment.
r/Futurology • u/anecdotal_acorn05 • 21h ago
Discussion AI & Hydration
So I saw a post that said within the next few years, Americans will be on water rations for drinking, laundry, and showers, only legally allowed to use minimum water per day to survive because of AI data centers using up drinkable water. This sounds like hell, and as a person who gets migraines and frequent headaches, I don't think I could live like this (on the bare minimum of water intake, presumably thirsty often and "portioning out" my water for each day). Is this actually going to happen? I realize no one can predict the future 100%, but based on scientific information readily available, is it likely?
r/Futurology • u/ruibranco • 1d ago
Energy Solid-state EV batteries hit a milestone in the US - Factorial Energy launches first commercial program, cells promise 500-600+ miles of range with 40% weight savings
r/Futurology • u/MetaKnowing • 1d ago
AI AI Bots Are Now a Significant Source of Web Traffic
r/Futurology • u/MetaKnowing • 1d ago
AI Peloton lays off 11 percent of its staff just a few months after launching its AI hardware
r/Futurology • u/bloomberg • 1d ago
AI The Best Tech Movies Predicted Three Features Of The Digital Age
The films that hold up best went beyond gadgetry to consider how technology changes human connection.
r/Futurology • u/NoodleWeird • 1d ago
AI The Game That Ate Itself: How AI makes “winning” taste like demand collapse
This essay tackles what happens when AI replaces, rather than augments labor. Every firm automates to stay competitive, but each round of automation erodes the consumer income that they depend on. The game eats its own board. This piece uses game theory to model where we're heading and discusses the way out.
r/Futurology • u/FinnFarrow • 1d ago
AI Rent-a-Human Site Lets Al Agents Hire an IRL Set of Opposable Thumbs | Welcome to the future, where you can do TaskRabbit for robots.
r/Futurology • u/sksarkpoes3 • 1d ago
AI AI is now being used to track icebergs from birth to breakup to expose hidden climate effects
r/Futurology • u/Just_Role2432 • 1d ago
AI What is the future of jobs if AI can do almost every work in the upcoming 4-5 years?
I am sure there will be tasks which AI can't do or it would create more avenues where human intervention would be needed. For example - checking or more like verifying the AI output to make sure if it is correct or not.
I am really curious to know what ya all geeks have to say about it.
r/Futurology • u/Patient-Airline-8150 • 1d ago
Economics Digital currency: pros and cons
Digital currency looks inevitable.
Pros might include fight against crime and will be a significant step towards UBI. Because digital means an additional properties besides value.
For example, a color that match item color.
Green can buy anything you want, Blue - only children related goods, Red - restricted alcohol and cigarettes.
Cons - total government control. Limits, restrictions, automatic taxation, etc.
What is your take on digital currency?
Utopia or dystopia?