Tal Feldman is a student at Yale Law School who formerly built AI and data tools for U.S. government agencies. Jonathan ...
In real world experiments, a team of Stanford researchers demonstrated that a virus with AI-written DNA could target and kill ...
Research led by a physicist at the University of California, Riverside, shows how viruses form protective shells (capsids) ...
In 2010, a computer worm called Stuxnet sabotaged Iran’s nuclear program. It wasn’t ordinary malware—it was the world’s first true cyberweapon, capable of crippling nations.
Stanford and Arc Institute used AI to design viruses that kill bacteria, sparking hope for new therapies and warnings over biosecurity risks.
To solve a problem, scientists first need to see it clearly. Whether it’s a virus slipping past the immune system or plaques ...
Internet experts call it ransomware, a very particular type of virus that infects computers and restricts users’ access to their files or threatens the permanent destruction of their information ...
Malicious executable files represent one of the most direct threats to your hard drive's health and data integrity. These ...
They linger in our water, our blood, and the environment—"forever chemicals" that are notoriously difficult to detect.
Harnessing the power of AI, a research team at the MRC-University of Glasgow Center for Virus Research has launched ...
Tick-borne encephalitis virus can infect the nervous system and cause life-threatening illness. Finding the cellular gateway ...