From artificial intelligence and gene editing to Moon missions and particle physics, 2026 is shaping up to be a pivotal year for global science, according to projections highlighted by the international science journal Nature
Five experts look ahead and imagine a future that looks totally different
Anthropic’s Claude ran a snack operation in the WSJ newsroom. It gave away a free PlayStation, ordered a live fish—and taught us lessons about the future of AI agents.
Digitalization that ignores a country’s strengths and fails to support the sectors that need it most is ultimately ineffective
According to Europol, robots are expected to become a routine part of daily life, delivering parcels, cleaning transport hubs.
Despite their openness to AI, 35% of Greeks say they encounter fake news very often, significantly above the European average at 27%.
If AI is the new currency of power, Europe is trying to mint its other side: a system in which authority remains accountable and humans are not assessed as statistical probabilities, but recognized as bearers of inalienable rights
After decades of aspirations, Greece is no longer talking about becoming a regional hub — it is unmistakably one. Not in shipping or energy, but in the single most valuable resource of the modern era: data
Greek PM Kyriakos Mitsotakis describes what he calls country's digital transformation; cites potential for public sector, justice system, education, but also the risks entailed
Two leading experts at the intersection of education and AI, Andreas Schleicher and Wayne Holmes, engage on a timely dialogue on what the rise of artificial intelligence means for today’s classrooms
It was so much easier to have a conversation with a chatbot than a human being. But the more I talked to AI, the less I talked to everybody else.
AI can write a novel, but it cannot give meaning to a life story. Nor can it be moved by one
This opinion piece is part of To BHMA International Edition’s NextGen Corner, a platform for fresh voices on the defining issues of our time.
Artificial Intelligence is reshaping daily life and Greeks are both fascinated and wary, torn between viewing AI as a revolutionary tool and fearing it as a potential threat to society. What are their attitudes towards AI?
Author and digital rights advocate Cory Doctorow speaks to To Vima on the coming AI crash, the “enshittification” of the Internet, and how Big Tech turned innovation into decay
The new ‘LOGOS’ tool provides accurate information on Orthodox theological, ecclesiastical and spiritual issues.
Your likeness is now fair game for AI. Anyone is a click away from creating a digital version of you.
Βy contrast to humanity, AI algorithms are programmed to be dispositional, to desire and pursue human goals
The new AI-powered search experience will be rolling out to users in 50 countries in the next week with support in 36 additional languages.
“The question is whether companies are using AI for your benefit or their own,” notes Ari Lightman, professor at Carnegie Mellon University.