How Deepfakes Could Lead to Doomsday Erin D. Dumbacher December 29, 2025 Nuclear missiles at a military parade in Beijing, September 2025 Tingshu Wang / Reuters Since the dawn of the nuclear age, policymakers and strategists have tried to prevent a country from deploying nuclear weapons by mistake. But the potential for accidents remains as high as it was during the Cold War. In 1983, a Soviet early warning system erroneously indicated that a U.S. nuclear strike on the Soviet Union was underway; such a warning could have triggered a catastrophic Soviet counterattack. The fate was avoided only because the on-duty supervisor, Stanislav Petrov, determined that the alarm was false. Had he not, Soviet leadership would have had reason to fire the world’s most destructive weapons at the United States. The rapid proliferation of artificial intelligence has exacerbated threats to nuclear stability. One fear is that a nuclear weapons state might delegate the decision to use nuc...
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Navigated Menu Back Financial Times Financial Times UK 30 Dec 2025 Buttons.Search Options Headline homicide comparisons ignore London’s knife crime Settings Print Share Listen Your editorial (“Don’t believe the fake gloom about London”, December 20) is right to note that London’s homicide rate remains low by international standards. But the editorial’s broader assertion that London is “in most ways far safer” rests on a selective reading of crime indicators, and downplays a category of violence in which London is a clear international outlier: knife crime. Unlike most peer cities, England and Wales systematically record and publish “offences involving a knife or sharp instrument” per 100,000 inhabitants. On this official metric, London is not merely worse than other UK regions; it is exceptional by international standards. In the year ending March 2025, the Metropolitan Police area recorded around 180 knifecrime offences per 10...