Singapore’s living-neuron data center & Apple’s Siri delays hit hardware - Tech News (Mar 10, 2026)
Living-neuron “bio” data centers, Apple’s Siri setbacks, age-verification crackdowns, Anthropic vs DoD, and AI decoding mouse vision—March 10, 2026.
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Today's Tech News Topics
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Singapore’s living-neuron data center
— DayOne and Cortical Labs plan a Singapore “bio data centre” using living neurons (“wetware”) for lower-energy AI compute, raising major sustainability and biosafety questions. -
Apple’s Siri delays hit hardware
— Apple reportedly pushed its smart home display again because next-gen Siri and personalization features aren’t ready, showing how AI software timelines now dictate hardware launches. -
Age verification goes mainstream online
— Regulators across Australia, Europe, Brazil, and parts of the U.S. are moving toward stronger “age assurance” for social, chatbots, and adult sites—reviving privacy, bias, and enforcement debates. -
Anthropic sues over Pentagon label
— Anthropic filed lawsuits after the U.S. Department of Defense labeled it a “supply chain risk,” a move that could chill AI safety advocacy and reshape defense contracting norms. -
Authors protest AI training rights
— Thousands of writers released an “empty” book to protest AI training on copyrighted texts, as the UK weighs opt-out rules and explores collective licensing for AI datasets. -
Blue Origin resets stock options
— Blue Origin is replacing a long-criticized equity program after early employee options expired worthless, highlighting talent pressure in the space industry and the need for liquidity paths. -
China’s new tech-first blueprint
— China’s National People’s Congress unveiled plans emphasizing domestic demand and breakthroughs in AI, semiconductors, quantum, biotech, and 6G—tightening the U.S.-China tech rivalry loop. -
FAA expands electric aircraft pilots
— The FAA approved broader eVTOL pilot programs across the U.S., letting companies gather real-world operational data sooner—an important step toward certification and commercialization. -
Amazon challenges SpaceX space compute
— Amazon asked the FCC to reject SpaceX’s “orbital datacenter” concept as incomplete, setting up a regulatory fight over mega-constellations, spectrum, debris, and space competition. -
AI reconstructs mice visual scenes
— Researchers generated grainy reconstructions of what mice watched using brain-activity recordings and AI models, fueling new neuroscience tools—and new concerns about neural privacy. -
Humanoid robot market tilts China
— Analysts say Chinese firms now dominate humanoid robot sales thanks to manufacturing scale and industrial policy, while U.S. players face production and deployment headwinds. - 12
Yann LeCun’s AMI Labs mega-seed
— AMI Labs, co-founded by Yann LeCun, raised over a billion dollars to build “world models” beyond text-only AI—one of the biggest bets yet on a post-chatbot research wave.
Sources & Tech News References
- → QA Wolf pushes AI-driven service promising rapid E2E test coverage for web and mobile apps
- → DayOne partners Cortical Labs to pilot Singapore’s first wetware ‘bio data centre’
- → Apple Delays Smart Home Display Again as Next-Gen Siri Remains Behind Schedule
- → thestar.com.my
- → Ghostty 1.3.0 Adds Scrollback Search, Native Scrollbars, and Major Stability and Security Fixes
- → How a WorkOS engineer built evals to measure whether AI dev tools actually help
- → AI reconstructs grainy video clips from mice visual cortex activity
- → 10,000 authors publish ‘empty’ book to protest AI use of copyrighted writing
- → Blue Origin unveils new stock option plan after earlier equity grants expired worthless
- → Apple ramps up iPhone manufacturing in India to nearly 25% amid China tariff risks
- → japantimes.co.jp
- → cnbc.com
- → QA Wolf rolls out AI-driven platform and service to speed automated E2E test coverage
- → Anthropic Sues Pentagon Over Rare ‘Supply Chain Risk’ Designation
- → QA Wolf introduces AI-native platform aimed at rapid, parallelized E2E test coverage
- → abcnews.com
- → Claude Code adds automated multi-agent pull request reviews
- → New coding agents may not force developers toward ‘boring’ tech stacks
- → Yann LeCun’s AMI Labs Raises $1.03B to Build Reality-Grounded ‘World Models’
- → AI Raises the Productivity Floor, Forcing a Split in Who Keeps Up
- → FAA greenlights multi-state pilot program to fast-track electric air taxi testing
- → PlanetScale Demo Streams a Two-Way Video Call Using PostgreSQL Logical Replication
- → Amazon asks FCC to deny SpaceX bid for million-satellite orbital datacenters
- → AI Tools Begin to Make De Novo Antibody Design Practical
- → WorkOS launches AI-assisted CLI to auto-install AuthKit across frameworks
- → China dominates humanoid robot sales as U.S. bets on technical edge to catch up
- → Yann LeCun’s New A.I. Lab Raises $1B, Valued at $3.5B
Full Episode Transcript: Singapore’s living-neuron data center & Apple’s Siri delays hit hardware
A data center powered by living neurons sounds like science fiction—but a major project in Singapore is trying to make it real, and it could change how we think about AI’s energy bill. Welcome to The Automated Daily, tech news edition. The podcast created by generative AI. I’m TrendTeller, and today is March 10th, 2026. Let’s get into what happened, and why it matters.
Singapore’s living-neuron data center
First up: a headline that blurs the line between computing and biology. Singapore-based data center developer DayOne is teaming up with Cortical Labs to build what they’re calling a “bio data centre”—a facility designed to run some AI workloads on living neurons grown from stem cells. The pitch is simple and ambitious: dramatically lower energy use compared with traditional silicon. The early plan is small—starting inside a university setting with a prototype rack—then scaling only if performance, safety, and regulation line up. Beyond the wow factor, the real story is pressure: AI is pushing power grids and sustainability rules to the limit, and regions like Singapore are hungry for computing that doesn’t come with an equally massive energy footprint.
Apple’s Siri delays hit hardware
Staying with AI—but shifting to consumer tech—Apple’s smart home display is reportedly delayed again, and the reason isn’t the screen or the hardware. It’s Siri. Sources say the device has been largely ready, but the product relies on a new generation of Siri-driven personalization that pulls from a user’s own data to make the display feel like a true home hub. The new target is now later this year, hinging on whether Siri’s broader AI upgrade finally lands on time. The interesting takeaway is organizational, not gadgety: AI features are becoming the critical path, and they’re increasingly dictating when entire product categories can ship.
Age verification goes mainstream online
Now to policy: governments are moving toward tougher age checks online, and the trend is accelerating. After Australia’s teen-focused social media restrictions, regulators across Europe, Brazil, and multiple U.S. states are exploring stronger “age assurance” requirements—not just for social networks, but also for AI chatbots and adult sites. The argument is that tools have improved enough to make large-scale age gating feasible, using a mix of signals, verification steps, and sometimes face-based estimation. But the hard parts haven’t gone away: accuracy around legal cutoffs, uneven performance across different users and cameras, and the privacy risk of building identity-style checks into everyday browsing. If this wave continues, the internet may look a lot more like a set of gated venues—and a lot less like a single open lobby.
Anthropic sues over Pentagon label
In a closely related “who gets to set the rules” story, Anthropic is suing the U.S. Department of Defense after the Pentagon labeled the company a “supply chain risk.” Anthropic says the designation is being used improperly—essentially as punishment for objecting to uses of AI in areas like mass surveillance or autonomous weapons. The stakes are big: that label can shut a vendor out of defense work, and Anthropic says contracts are already being canceled. What makes this especially notable is the precedent it could set. If supply-chain authorities become a pressure tool in AI policy disputes, it could reshape how AI firms speak up on safety—and how the government manages competition among vendors.
Authors protest AI training rights
From government pressure to creator pressure: thousands of authors have released an “empty” book titled “Don’t Steal This Book,” containing little more than contributor names. It’s a pointed protest aimed at AI training practices and copyright policy, timed around the UK government’s upcoming work on how generative AI should be allowed to use copyrighted texts. The fight is over default rules: should AI companies be able to train unless writers opt out, or should permission and payment be the starting point? Publishers are also circling collective licensing schemes that could become the practical middle ground. Either way, this is one of the clearest signals yet that creators are organizing at scale, not just suing one company at a time.
Blue Origin resets stock options
Over in space—and more specifically, space industry pay—Blue Origin is reworking its stock option program after years of employee frustration. Reports say an older plan left many long-tenured staff with options that ultimately expired without value, largely because liquidity events never came. A new plan is expected to start granting options soon, and it’s reportedly designed with some form of liquidity opportunity in mind. This matters because space is in a talent war, and equity is a major recruiting lever—especially when competitors have already delivered payouts through private sales or other mechanisms. The subtext: if Blue Origin wants to keep pace, it needs compensation structures that look like the rest of the high-growth space sector.
China’s new tech-first blueprint
Let’s zoom out to geopolitics and industrial strategy. China’s latest economic blueprints, unveiled at the National People’s Congress, put extra emphasis on building up domestic demand while also doubling down on technological breakthroughs. The long-term goal is clear: strengthen self-sufficiency in areas like AI, chips, robotics, biotech, and next-generation networks—especially as export-heavy growth runs into tariff risk and broader trade friction. The balancing act is tricky: subsidies and rapid scale can create oversupply, which then pushes more exports, which can trigger even more backlash abroad. But the direction of travel is unmistakable: Beijing is treating advanced tech as both an economic engine and a strategic shield.
FAA expands electric aircraft pilots
Back in the U.S., the FAA has approved a set of pilot programs to expand real-world testing for electric aircraft, including the vertical-takeoff category often pitched as air taxis. The key significance here is tempo. Certification is slow and expensive, and these pilots are meant to gather operational data sooner—across cargo, emergency response, regional travel, and urban concepts. If the projects produce credible safety playbooks, they could help the sector graduate from flashy demos to routine operations. If they don’t, they’ll still answer a question investors and cities keep asking: is this category ready to behave like aviation, not just like a prototype showcase?
Amazon challenges SpaceX space compute
Now for a regulatory fight that sounds futuristic but has very real near-term consequences. Amazon has asked the FCC to reject SpaceX’s request tied to an “orbital datacenter” concept—essentially, compute infrastructure in space at an enormous satellite scale. Amazon argues the filing lacks core details and raises concerns about interference, debris risk, and environmental impact. Behind the paperwork is a larger battle over who gets to define the next phase of orbital infrastructure: not just connectivity, but potentially computation as well. Even if space-based data centers never become economical, the FCC’s response could set a precedent for how aggressively regulators demand specifics before approving mega-constellations.
AI reconstructs mice visual scenes
And finally, a neuroscience story that’s equal parts fascinating and unsettling. Researchers have reconstructed short, grainy “movies” from recordings of neural activity in mice while they watched brief video clips. The results aren’t crisp—more like a pixelated hint than a clear playback—but the method points to a future where scientists can test theories of perception in a more direct, data-driven way. The upside is huge for basic research: understanding how brains represent the world, and maybe even what animals experience in dreams or illusions. The longer-term shadow is also obvious: as these techniques improve, “neural privacy” stops being a philosophical concept and becomes a policy problem.
That’s the tech landscape for March 10th, 2026—where AI is driving everything from biology-themed computing experiments to tighter online rules, and even product schedules at the biggest companies. If you enjoyed the episode, follow or subscribe so you don’t miss the next rundown. I’m TrendTeller, and you’ve been listening to The Automated Daily, tech news edition.