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When AI Argues Back: The Promise and Peril of Evidence-Based Multi-Agent Debate

Opening — Why this matters now The world doesn’t suffer from a lack of information—it suffers from a lack of agreement about what’s true. From pandemic rumors to political spin, misinformation now spreads faster than correction, eroding trust in institutions and even in evidence itself. As platforms struggle to moderate and fact-check at scale, researchers have begun asking a deeper question: Can AI not only detect falsehoods but also argue persuasively for the truth? ...

November 11, 2025 · 4 min · Zelina
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Better Wrong Than Certain: How AI Learns to Know When It Doesn’t Know

Why this matters now AI models are no longer mere prediction machines — they are decision-makers in medicine, finance, and law. Yet for all their statistical elegance, most models suffer from an embarrassing flaw: they rarely admit ignorance. In high-stakes applications, a confident mistake can be fatal. The question, then, is not only how well a model performs — but when it should refuse to perform at all. ...

November 10, 2025 · 4 min · Zelina
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Cities That Think: Reasoning AI for the Urban Century

Opening — Why this matters now By 2050, nearly seven out of ten people will live in cities. Yet most urban planning tools today still operate as statistical mirrors—learning from yesterday’s data to predict tomorrow’s congestion. Predictive models can forecast traffic or emissions, but they don’t reason about why or whether those outcomes should occur. The next leap, as argued by Sijie Yang and colleagues in Reasoning Is All You Need for Urban Planning AI, is not more prediction—but more thinking. ...

November 10, 2025 · 4 min · Zelina
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Dirty Data, Clean Machines: How LLM Agents Rewire Predictive Maintenance

Opening — Why this matters now Predictive maintenance (PdM) has been the holy grail of industrial AI for a decade. The idea is simple: detect failure before it happens. The execution, however, is not. Real-world maintenance data is messy, incomplete, and often useless without an army of engineers to clean it. The result? AI models that look promising in PowerPoint but fail in production. ...

November 10, 2025 · 4 min · Zelina
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When Algorithms Command: AI's Quiet Revolution in Battlefield Strategy

Opening — Why this matters now Autonomous systems have already taken to the skies. Drones scout, strike, and surveil. But the subtler transformation is happening on the ground—inside simulation labs where algorithms are learning to outthink humans. A recent study by the Swedish Defence Research Agency shows how AI can autonomously generate and evaluate thousands of tactical options for mechanized battalions in real time. In other words: the software isn’t just helping commanders—it’s starting to plan the war. ...

November 10, 2025 · 4 min · Zelina
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When Compliance Blooms: ORCHID and the Rise of Agentic Legal AI

Opening — Why this matters now In a world where AI systems can write policy briefs but can’t reliably follow policies, compliance is the next frontier. The U.S. Department of Energy’s classification of High-Risk Property (HRP)—ranging from lab centrifuges to quantum chips—demands both accuracy and accountability. A single misclassification can trigger export-control violations or, worse, national security breaches. ...

November 10, 2025 · 4 min · Zelina
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Levers and Leverage: How Real People Shape AI Governance

Opening — Why this matters now AI governance isn’t just a technical issue—it’s an institutional one. As governments scramble to regulate, corporations experiment with ethics boards, and civil society tries to catch up, the question becomes: who actually holds the power to shape how AI unfolds in the real world? The latest ethnographic study by The Aula Fellowship, Levers of Power in the Field of AI, answers that question not through theory or models, but through people—the policymakers, executives, researchers, and advocates navigating this turbulent terrain. ...

November 9, 2025 · 4 min · Zelina
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Parallel Minds: How OMPILOT Redefines Code Translation for Shared Memory AI

Opening — Why this matters now As Moore’s Law wheezes toward its physical limits, the computing world has shifted its faith from faster cores to more of them. Yet for developers, exploiting this parallelism still feels like assembling IKEA furniture blindfolded — possible, but painful. Enter OMPILOT, a transformer-based model that automates OpenMP parallelization without human prompt engineering, promising to make multicore programming as accessible as autocomplete. ...

November 9, 2025 · 4 min · Zelina
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Sovereign Syntax: How Poland Built Its Own LLM Empire

Opening — Why this matters now The world’s most powerful language models still speak one tongue: English. From GPT to Claude, most training corpora mirror Silicon Valley’s linguistic hegemony. For smaller nations, this imbalance threatens digital sovereignty — the ability to shape AI in their own cultural and legal terms. Enter PLLuM, the Polish Large Language Model, a national-scale project designed to shift that equilibrium. ...

November 9, 2025 · 3 min · Zelina
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Beyond Oversight: Why AI Governance Needs a Memory

Opening — Why this matters now In 2025, the world’s enthusiasm for AI regulation has outpaced its understanding of it. Governments publish frameworks faster than models are trained, yet few grasp how these frameworks will sustain relevance as AI systems evolve. The paper “A Taxonomy of AI Regulation Frameworks” argues that the problem is not a lack of oversight, but a lack of memory — our rules forget faster than our models learn. ...

November 8, 2025 · 3 min · Zelina