<p>Fable 5 was built to help with advanced cybersecurity work. Its sudden shutdown highlights a dilemma at the heart of AI security: the same tools can aid both defenders and attackers</p>
Vetenskapsnyheter
<p>Scientists have modeled the potential size of this current outbreak, which some experts think could become one of the worst Ebola epidemics on record</p>
<p>Find the lengths of the sides of the square in this math puzzle</p>
<p>Neuroscientist Kauê M. Costa talks about surprising results that are changing how we think dopamine works and how the brain really learns</p>
<p>Play this crossword inspired by the July/August 2026 issue of<i> Scientific American</i></p>
<p>In his final interview, the “swashbuckling” geneticist pointed the way for science</p>
<p>A meditation on life and the von Neumann–Wigner interpretation of quantum mechanics</p>
<p>How did we get here?</p>
<p>Letters to the editors for the March 2026 issue of <i>Scientific American</i></p>
<p>The Department of Energy bills Genesis as an AI push for scientific discovery. Its first public challenges tell a different story</p>
<p>Natural fission reactor uncovered; geometry of soap bubbles</p>
<p>Understanding the behavior of supermassive black holes</p>
<p>Exploring ice cores to foresee the effects of climate change</p>
<p>These young scientists are making waves in their own ways. Keep an eye on them—great things are ahead</p>
<p>On reclaiming America’s edge in research and public health</p>
<p>The story of the author’s extremely early career</p>
<p>Using viruslike particles to deliver therapies safely and effectively</p>
<p>On safeguarding independent research in the age of big tech</p>
<p>It’s a complicated time to be a young scientist in America. Lessons from history can tell us what the future might hold</p>
<p>On fighting for truth, inclusion and the next generation of scientists</p>
<p>Mimicking the chemistry of outer space to explain how planets form</p>
<p>Clocking the electrical messages between neurons using fluorescence</p>
<p>The great American brain drain could define science for a generation</p>
<p>On steering the path forward for research and innovation</p>
<p>Despite funding woes, American scientists are finding reasons for optimism</p>