Surge in AI Ethics Program Enrolment Sets the Stage for Students and Teachers to Succeed in the Battle for Responsible AI Development

From the University of Toronto to MIT and ETH Zurich, universities worldwide are seeing rapid growth in AI ethics enrolment. As regulators struggle to keep pace with AI’s ethical challenges, the surge in student interest – together with with increased training resources for teachers and freely available information for the public – is removing barriers to responsible AI development.

Engineering a Post-Carbon Future with Natural Hydrogen Discovery, Battery Innovation, and Environmental Governance

From white hydrogen flowing out of ancient Canadian rocks to solid-state batteries and China’s vast renewable buildout, the post-carbon future continues to take shape. The harder challenge may not be discovering clean technologies, but building the governance systems, policies, and international coordination needed to reduce emissions at scale and protect today’s youth who will live with the outcomes.

There’s No Time Like the Present as High Schools Begin Preparing Youth for a Future in Quantum Computing

As major developers race to produce fully functioning quantum computers by 2029, high schools worldwide are beginning to introduce students to the the technology’s foundations. Supported by national quantum strategies in the U.S., Canada, the EU, and elsewhere, educators are beginning to prepare elementary and secondary school students for graduation into a quantum job market, although questions remain whether current efforts will meet future demand, and whether students in under-resourced regions will be left behind.

The Geopolitics of AI: Can AI Become a Force for Global Equity?

AI could expand access to education, healthcare, public services, and economic opportunity, but wealthier countries and companies dominate in development and adoption. Without broader access to infrastructure, skills, data, and effective governance, existing inequalities could be reinforced. Whether AI becomes a tool for inclusion or a new source of global differences will depend on how its benefits, power, and costs are distributed.

In Focus

Technology as a Tool for Youth-Led Change: Three Young People Advancing Environmental, Social, and Civic Causes

Young people around the globe are using technology, research, and advocacy to address environmental, social, and political challenges. Three examples, from community-led water restoration in India to responsible AI governance in Tunisia and digital tools for youth participation in Japan, show how young changemakers are helping shape the systems and decisions that affect their futures.

The AI Education Gap: Students Are Adopting, While Schools Are Adapting

AI is reshaping education at all levels, but evidence suggests that access is not enough. The bigger challenge is building the human, ethical, and institutional infrastructure needed to make AI educationally meaningful, with teachers able to guide its use, students who understand its limits, grading that rewards thinking, and policies to protect equity, privacy, and development of young minds.

The Algorithmic Governance Challenge: Inside the Battle Over Social Media Algorithms

For almost two decades, social media platforms have influenced public attention through largely opaque algorithms optimized for engagement and maximizing advertising revenue. Today, scientific evidence, legal challenges, and regulatory efforts are converging around the same question: should for-profit companies retain unilateral control over the systems that shape what billions of people see, believe, and discuss?

Podcasts and Webcasts

How the Asteroid Institute Defends Earth from Asteroids with the THOR algorithm

Dr. Florian Neukart on Quantum Information and the Fundamental Basis of Reality

Louis Rosenberg on Our Future with Virtual Reality’s Risks and Benefits

The Quantum Record is a non-profit journal of philosophy, science, technology, and time.

The potential of the future is in the human mind and heart, and in the common ground that we all share on the road to tomorrow. Promoting reflection, discussion, and imagination, The Quantum Record highlights the good work of good people and aims to join many perspectives in shaping the best possible time to come.

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Latest Quantum Computing

There’s No Time Like the Present as High Schools Begin Preparing Youth for a Future in Quantum Computing

As major developers race to produce fully functioning quantum computers by 2029, high schools worldwide are beginning to introduce students to the the technology’s foundations. Supported by national quantum strategies in the U.S., Canada, the EU, and elsewhere, educators are beginning to prepare elementary and secondary school students for graduation into a quantum job market, although questions remain whether current efforts will meet future demand, and whether students in under-resourced regions will be left behind.

Quantum Internet Potential Strengthens With Teleportation Record Between Different Quantum Sources

The transfer of a quantum state from one location to another, called “teleportation” because it’s instantaneous, is an exceedingly difficult feat when the quantum source at each location is different. Using quantum dot technology, scientists have teleported a quantum state between different sources over a record 270 metres with a rate of fidelity as high as 83%. The breakthrough is a key step in the creation of a quantum internet.

Computing Revolution is Closer with New Error Detection Protocol and the World’s “Most Accurate” Quantum Computer

Two major advances by Quantinuum have moved the goalpost closer for fully-functioning and error-free quantum computing. An unexpected result of the company’s research on the quantum contact process has led to a new method for error detection and correction, and Quantinuum’s new quantum computer, called Helios, boasts 99.9975% fidelity.

Featured Science News

Why Artificial Neural Networks Fail in Processing Emotions Essential for Human Memory—and How Failure Can Lead to Blackmail

Artificial neural networks behind ChatGPT, Claude, and other popular large language models fall short in processing emotions, which are essential to human memory and motivation. The fault lines that lead machines to sycophancy, blackmail, jailbreaking, and other serious output errors are rooted in machine learning and choices made by human trainers. We look at examples of algorithmic failures and the reasons why.

Latest Philosophy of Technology

Surge in AI Ethics Program Enrolment Sets the Stage for Students and Teachers to Succeed in the Battle for Responsible AI Development

From the University of Toronto to MIT and ETH Zurich, universities worldwide are seeing rapid growth in AI ethics enrolment. As regulators struggle to keep pace with AI’s ethical challenges, the surge in student interest – together with with increased training resources for teachers and freely available information for the public – is removing barriers to responsible AI development.

The Geopolitics of AI: Can AI Become a Force for Global Equity?

AI could expand access to education, healthcare, public services, and economic opportunity, but wealthier countries and companies dominate in development and adoption. Without broader access to infrastructure, skills, data, and effective governance, existing inequalities could be reinforced. Whether AI becomes a tool for inclusion or a new source of global differences will depend on how its benefits, power, and costs are distributed.

The Algorithmic Governance Challenge: Inside the Battle Over Social Media Algorithms

For almost two decades, social media platforms have influenced public attention through largely opaque algorithms optimized for engagement and maximizing advertising revenue. Today, scientific evidence, legal challenges, and regulatory efforts are converging around the same question: should for-profit companies retain unilateral control over the systems that shape what billions of people see, believe, and discuss?

Latest Technology Over Time

After Centuries of Exploring the Mysteries of the Great Pyramid Shafts, Will Robotics Help to Uncover Their Purpose? 

Over 200 years have passed since French Emperor Napoleon’s night in the Great Pyramid puzzling over its purpose, and there remains no consensus but many theories on the question. The reason for the shafts in the King’s and Queen’s Chambers is particularly mystifying, and we explore many possibilities. Will robots, which have penetrated the shafts most deeply, help to unlock the secret that’s thousands of years old?

Decoding Ancient Technology Using Modern Technology

From the discovery of a 500-year-old ocean-going canoe in the Chatham Islands to the AI-powered decoding of ancient Roman scrolls buried in volcanic ash, modern technologies—like radiocarbon dating, CT scanning, and AI—are transforming the study of ancient artefacts. Mysteries endure, however, like the undeciphered Voynich Manuscript, and continue to challenge our understanding of the past.

The Fascinating History of the Computer, from ENIAC, Vacuum Tubes and Transistors, to Microchips

We trace computing history from ENIAC, the first computer in 1947, from vacuum tubes to transistors, to the development of microchips that put far greater computing power in our our phones than the giant ENIAC had. With the world at the brink of a quantum computing revolution, what lessons can we draw from our computing history to shape the best possible future with our next technological leap ?

Latest Science News

Engineering a Post-Carbon Future with Natural Hydrogen Discovery, Battery Innovation, and Environmental Governance

From white hydrogen flowing out of ancient Canadian rocks to solid-state batteries and China’s vast renewable buildout, the post-carbon future continues to take shape. The harder challenge may not be discovering clean technologies, but building the governance systems, policies, and international coordination needed to reduce emissions at scale and protect today’s youth who will live with the outcomes.

Technology as a Tool for Youth-Led Change: Three Young People Advancing Environmental, Social, and Civic Causes

Young people around the globe are using technology, research, and advocacy to address environmental, social, and political challenges. Three examples, from community-led water restoration in India to responsible AI governance in Tunisia and digital tools for youth participation in Japan, show how young changemakers are helping shape the systems and decisions that affect their futures.

The AI Education Gap: Students Are Adopting, While Schools Are Adapting

AI is reshaping education at all levels, but evidence suggests that access is not enough. The bigger challenge is building the human, ethical, and institutional infrastructure needed to make AI educationally meaningful, with teachers able to guide its use, students who understand its limits, grading that rewards thinking, and policies to protect equity, privacy, and development of young minds.