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AI War Games Go Nuclear, Pentagon Pressures Anthropic, Sodium-Ion Battery Breakthrough, and Flock Camera Backlash Jim Love covers four stories: a King's College London pre-print (Project Khan) where frontier AI models in 21 simulated nuclear crisis games frequently chose escalation—tactical nukes were used in 20 of 21 runs, with no surrender and rapid retaliation—raising concerns about framing and incentives if models inform security decisions. He reports the U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has allegedly given Anthropic a Friday deadline to drop internal military-use restrictions (no autonomous weapons without humans; no mass domestic surveillance) or risk losing Pentagon contracts, highlighting tension between company ethics and legal standards. He also notes University of Surrey research improving sodium-ion batteries by retaining water in a cathode, boosting storage and charging, and growing vandalism of Flock Safety license-plate cameras amid broader privacy backlash. Hashtag Trending would like to thank Meter for their support in bringing you this podcast. Meter delivers a complete networking stack, wired, wireless and cellular in one integrated solution that's built for performance and scale. You can find them at Meter.com/htt 00:00 Sponsor Message Meter 00:19 Headlines And Intro 00:46 AI War Games Go Nuclear 02:23 Why Models Escalate 03:22 Pentagon Vs Anthropic 05:39 Sodium Ion Battery Breakthrough 07:40 Flock Cameras Privacy Backlash 09:16 Wrap Up And Sponsor Thanks |