10 Things That Matter in AI Right Now

MIT Technology Review / 4/22/2026

💬 OpinionSignals & Early TrendsIdeas & Deep Analysis

Key Points

  • The article is a roundup-style overview of major themes in AI, presenting “10 things” the author considers important right now.
  • It frames current AI priorities across technology, deployment realities, and broader societal or business implications rather than focusing on a single product release.
  • The piece emphasizes that practitioners should pay attention to multiple dimensions of AI progress (capabilities, risks, usability, and operational constraints) simultaneously.
  • It functions as a high-level guide for staying current, helping readers identify what developments and considerations matter most in the AI landscape at present.

10 things that
matter in AI

right now

What is really worth your attention in the busy, buzzy world of AI? Our reporters and editors have spent years thinking about this question, charting AI’s progress and mapping out what’s next. Now, for the first time, we’ve distilled our answers into a single list.

Inspired by our annual list of 10 Breakthrough Technologies, here’s a brand new look at the big ideas, trends, and new advances in AI that are driving progress or shifting power dynamics today—and will shape what’s possible tomorrow.

Tech Card 1

Humanoid data

Just as our words became training data for large language models, videos of our movements are now being collected en masse to train humanoid robots. From sprawling “training centers” where workers repetitively complete tasks to tele-operated bots “puppeted” by strangers overseas, it’s a bizarre effort with no guarantee of success.

Tech Card 2

LLMs+

Large language models took the world by storm. Now everyone in AI is chasing the next big thing. The low-hanging fruit may be gone, but LLMs aren’t going anywhere. There’s a lot of juice left to squeeze out of this technology.

Tech Card 3

Supercharged scams

AI is lowering the barriers for scammers and hackers, making attempts to infiltrate targets faster, cheaper, and easier than ever before.

Tech Card 4

World models

AI companies want to build systems that understand the external world. If they succeed, they may overcome limitations of LLMs and help AI enter physical environments.

Tech Card 9

The new war room

Algorithms have long automated military grunt work, but now generative AI has its own seat in the war room, and commanders take its advice seriously. It’s reshaping how militaries share intelligence, work with Big Tech, and make lethal decisions.

Tech Card 6

Weaponized deepfakes

Between improvements in generative AI, Grok’s mass generation of nonconsensual sexual images, and a US administration using the technology for propaganda, the long-predicted threat of weaponized deepfakes is here.

Tech Card 7

Agent orchestration

The first wave of AI agents were able to run your browser or write snippets of code. But they could only act alone. Coming next are teams of agents that cooperate to achieve far more complex goals.

Tech Card 8

China’s open-source bet

Giving away frontier models for free has earned Chinese labs global credibility and lots of good favor with developers. Is it financially sustainable? No one knows—but the world is already building on Chinese foundations.

Tech Card 5

Artificial scientists

Academics and companies alike are developing agents that can carry out research tasks autonomously and work with scientists as genuine collaborators. Some believe these AI co-scientists will one day reach Nobel Prize–worthy heights.

Tech Card 10

Resistance

After years of unfettered AI development, a powerful backlash is building around the world. From conservatives to liberals and artists to labor unions, activists are gaining momentum and starting to earn small wins.

10 things that matter in AI right now

Credits

Editorial
Lead editors: Niall Firth, Amy Nordrum
Editing: Rachel Courtland, Niall Firth, Mary Beth Griggs, Charlotte Jee, Amy Nordrum, Amanda Silverman
Copy editing: Sarabeth Fields, Linda Lowenthal, Sara Shay
Managing editor: Teresa Elsey
Engagement: Abby Ivory-Ganja
Fact checking: Ena Alvarado, Anna Pujol-Mazzini, Clare Watson

Art
Art direction: Stephanie Arnett
Illustration: Stephanie Arnett, Max-o-matic

Technology
Lead developer: Andre Vitorio
Design: Vichhika Tep
Product management & analytics: Allison Chase
Creative direction & product strategy: Mariya Sitnova
CTO: Drake Martinet