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What happens when AI can hack everything?

What happens when AI can hack everything?

Test your knowledge—and read our stories for a little extra help.

CAR-T cell therapy, originally developed for cancer, is showing ever more promise as a treatment for autoimmune diseases.

Critics wrote the work off as kitsch for the masses. But a set of murals celebrating Social Security—now threatened with destruction—show that such sweeping judgments went too far.

With her first new novel in more than 20 years, Nancy Lemann returns, yet again, to New Orleans and its eccentricities.

A blockade of Taiwan would hurt the global economy more than Iran’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz.

The winning entries of this year’s World Press Photo Contest were just announced. This year, according to organizers, 57,376 images were submitted for judging, made by 3,747 photographers from 141 countries.

A phonics-based curriculum is only one part of how Mississippi went from worst to first in education. The other part is much harder to pull off.

Democrats want Virginians to aggressively gerrymander the state.

The president went from threatening that “a whole civilization will die” to claiming a “total and complete victory.” What does the already shaky cease-fire mean as he tries to steer his way out of the war?

And pretty much all of the 1980s do too.

“Color-blind and merit-based” now seems to be anything but.

Does Trump seem crazy? Sure. Credible, not so much.

Strength, courage, expertise, wonder: NASA’s moon-mission crew has reset the bar for greatness.

The fear of commitment transforms The Drama from a romance into a horror story.

If a new legal opinion stands, Donald Trump will be on track to become one of the most poorly documented presidents ever.

Ghostwriting is good, actually—when it’s done by humans.

U.S. declarations of victory ring hollow.

Fareed Zakaria and David Frum on whether they regret becoming American citizens. Plus: how 18 years of economic turmoil ushered in a new populist era, and a discussion of Invisible Cities by Italo Calvino.

The U.S. showed great tactical capabilities in the Iran war, but Iran emerged the winner at a strategic level.