After scientists showed that AI can design a working virus, it's time to address the obvious: what if it's also used to make ...
Research led by a physicist at the University of California, Riverside, shows how viruses form protective shells (capsids) ...
The work, described in a preprint paper, has the potential to create new treatments and accelerate research into artificially ...
A group of Stanford bioengineers claim that they've created synthetic bacteriophages using AI-generated designs that not only ...
Stanford and Arc Institute used AI to design viruses that kill bacteria, sparking hope for new therapies and warnings over biosecurity risks.
In 2010, a computer worm called Stuxnet sabotaged Iran’s nuclear program. It wasn’t ordinary malware—it was the world’s first true cyberweapon, capable of crippling nations.
To solve a problem, scientists first need to see it clearly. Whether it’s a virus slipping past the immune system or plaques ...
CCleaner promises less data waste, more storage space, better performance and fewer PC problems. We show you how to get the ...
To solve a problem, we have to see it clearly. Whether it's an infection by a novel virus or memory-stealing plaques forming ...
Looking for some help with today's NYT Connections? Some hints and the answers for today's game are right here.
To solve a problem, we have to see it clearly. Whether it's an infection by a novel virus or memory-stealing plaques forming in the brains of Alzheimer's patients, visualizing disease processes in the ...