Artificial intelligence has moved from headline hype to everyday infrastructure in mid-2025, reshaping everything from research labs to regulatory agencies. As outlined in the latest Blog News briefing, the pace of change is now set by both Silicon Valley giants and teenage innovators who treat large language models as raw creative clay.
Take Pranjali Awasthi, the 16-year-old founder of Delv.AI, who secured $12 million to make academic data searchable with LLMs. Her story sits alongside a corporate landscape where 77 percent of companies are piloting or deploying AI, the market is growing 120 percent year-on-year, and analysts forecast a $15.7 trillion economic boost by 2030.
Governments are no longer bystanders. The U.S. FDA’s new INTACT platform is its first agency-wide AI system, streamlining risk assessments and approvals, while cities from Oslo to Phoenix run active robotaxi pilots. Meanwhile, AI-driven breakthroughs in protein engineering and climate modeling hint at scientific gains that once felt decades away.
Yet the same technology fueling progress is amplifying risk. WormGPT variants built on cutting-edge models automate phishing and malware creation, prompting urgent calls for safety standards. With 14 percent of workers already displaced—even as AI is projected to create a net 12 million jobs—leaders now face a dual mandate: accelerate innovation while guarding society against its unintended fallout, a balance Blog News will keep tracking closely.






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