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economist.com

3565articoli totali nell'archivio

economist.com
AIMondo

The war between businesses and hackers enters a perilous new era

AI agents present novel dangers

economist.com3 h fa
economist.com
AI

Maths enters its AI era

Our podcast on science and technology. Mathematicians want to use LLMs to push the frontiers

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economist.com
AI

Is AI putting graduates out of work already?

If you are studying coding, we might have some bad news

economist.com5 h fa
economist.com
AIMondo

AI models are being used to predict conflict

Good data are hard to come by

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Business

How the world has avoided an oil catastrophe so far

The great commodity-market mystery is deepening

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economist.com

Trump and Xi will struggle to strike a major economic deal

Just avoiding a renewed clash will count as success

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economist.com

The Trump-Xi summit will expose a dysfunctional duo

Mutual vulnerability is no substitute for global leadership

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economist.com

Only one of Berkshire Hathaway and SoftBank can survive

The two represent competing visions of the future

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Mondo

Not all oil giants are prospering from the Iran war

Exxon and Chevron have benefited less than their European rivals

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economist.com

Inside the Brussels deep state

The eurocratic guild at the heart of the EU is seeing its influence ebb

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economist.com

How worried should you be about hantavirus?

An outbreak on a cruise ship has authorities concerned

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economist.com

City parenting has become a financial flex

The wealthiest neighbourhoods are defying suburbanisation

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Politica

Friedrich Merz can’t go on like this

His one-year-old government looks exhausted, and voters are tiring rapidly

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Mondo

America is massing troops near Taiwan to deter troublemaking by China

The timing of annual exercises is set by weather patterns favourable to any possible invasion

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economist.com

Michael Pollan on the mystery of consciousness

Our podcast on science and technology. This week, author Michael Pollan says that understanding consciousness may require a new…

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economist.com
PoliticaMondo

Vladimir Putin is losing his grip on Russia

His every move to preserve power accelerates decay, writes a former senior official in the Russian government

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“Midwest Nice” is no match for presidential petty

In Indiana, Donald Trump takes his revenge

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Britain’s deer are thriving. It’s a nightmare for the countryside

Oh deer!

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Mondo

Six books to understand the Vietnam war 

Through the eyes of policymakers, spies, soldiers and civilians

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Wanted: a new tech-industry writer

An opportunity to join the staff of The Economist

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Mea culpa

Our report from 1974

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Analysing Africa newsletter: Inside a counter-terrorism bootcamp

Tom Gardner, our Africa correspondent, watches an American-led effort to fight jihadism

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Mondo

On the off chancellor: Friedrich Merz, one year in

Also on the daily podcast: chatbots become pitchmen and the lamentable coarsening of war rhetoric

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economist.com

Brazil’s polarised voters have one thing in common

A handpicked article read aloud from the latest issue of The Economist

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America must hope Donald Trump is not a new Caligula

In the annals of rulers committing acts of folly, Roman decadence stands out

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Can Bill Ackman save the closed-end fund?

An outspoken financier wants to build a modern-day Berkshire Hathaway

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AI

How AI tools could enable bioterrorism

Leading models are getting better at designing pathogens

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economist.com

Blighty newsletter: Six things to watch in Thursday’s elections

Owen Winter, our political correspondent, on what you need to know about May 7th

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Mondo

The architects of the Vietnam War knew it was doomed

Kennedy, Johnson and McNamara were private realists but chose the path of least resistance, writes Fredrik Logevall

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Mondo

Asia’s stranded seafarers suffer as the Iran war drags on

In a more dangerous world, unsung mariners are under increasing threat

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Mondo

Spoils of war: money flows into defence tech

Also on the daily podcast: how wars made America and oldies (mis)use emojis

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Politica

Javier Milei is in serious trouble

Argentina’s president claims he is the true victim of a struggling economy

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Mondo

The War Room newsletter: Is Russia being out-droned?

Shashank Joshi, our defence editor, invites a Ukrainian drone expert to write a guest edition

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Narendra Modi has extended his grip on India

India’s ruling party scores a historic victory in West Bengal—but should beware voters’ unhappiness with incumbents

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PoliticaScienza

Bad government statistics can cost the economy billions

A new study tries to put a number on the value of reliable numbers

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Mondo

China thinks America is declining but still uniquely dangerous

It sees Donald Trump as both symptom and accelerant of the decline

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economist.com

To improve Britain’s politics, improve its voting system

Ranking candidates by order of preference would better reflect the will of the people, writes Eric Maskin

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economist.com

Turn on, tune in, trust no one: the paranoid style captures TV

Conspiracy thrillers are the favourite genre of a distrustful age

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Mondo

What to do about Britain’s rising antisemitism?

A stabbing attack in a Jewish neighbourhood of London lends fresh urgency to the question

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economist.com

Global carmakers desperately want to be more Chinese

But partnering with local companies carries big risks

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Business

The remarkable revival of eBay

The internet’s flea market is back—and GameStop wants to buy it

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economist.com

Young men are souring on Donald Trump

But can Democrats win them over?

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economist.com

How to save the safari

Balancing the needs of locals, tourists and animals is a difficult business

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economist.com

The case against trees

India’s bureaucrats are bad at trade-offs between nature and roads

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economist.com

Checks and Balance: What a murder trial reveals about justice in the Trump era

Charlotte Howard, our New York bureau chief, on America’s legal system

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economist.com

Plot Twist newsletter: The real value of a baseball-card collection

Jon Fasman, our senior culture correspondent, on what makes someone pay millions of dollars for a collectible

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economist.com

17 siblings and counting

How donor conception could expand the meaning of family

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economist.com

Does acupuncture work?

It seems useful for pain. The jury’s out on everything else

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