Future battlefields will be shaped by AI weapons that defense firms and Big Tech are vying to build for the military. Guardrails are lagging.
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While Kuiper won’t generate revenue for a while, Amazon is still using its enormous influence to position itself for some corporate Star Wars.
The embattled aviation giant announced last week that it had sustained its best production levels in two years.
The EU last week announced plans to boost its defense spending, and defense stocks have been on the march ever since.
It was only last year that 737 felt like the number of scandals Boeing was embroiled in, rather than the name of its narrow-body aircraft.
The titanic port deal immediately made political waves, even as the seller, conglomerate CK Hutchison, denied politics were at play.
De Beers, one of the largest companies in the diamond mining sector, has been battered by the ascendance of cheaper lab-grown gems.
Shares of US steel and aluminum companies rose Monday, bolstered by a fresh round of tariff threats from the Trump administration.
China is a top global producer of 30 of the 50 minerals the US considers critical, and is sources more than half of the US annual supply.
The startup promises to fill a void in one area where US military research and development has been caught flat-footed.
Blue Origin is going slower than SpaceX, but it also nailed a massive rocket launch on the first try. Jeff Bezos is back in the space race.
The focus will be on mining earth metals including lithium, zinc, copper and nickel, all crucial metals for battery-making.
As a share of US GDP, the manufacturing sector has decreased from a nearly 25% peak in the 1950s to about 11% today.
It’s basic Newtonian physics, as Boeing just learned: When the sky falls for a company, so, too, will the bottom line.