Even a small increase in body weight can quietly affect your health, placing strain on critical organs over time. Excess fat, particularly visceral fat around the abdomen, is closely linked to type 2 diabetes, heart disease, liver damage,…
Blog
-
Just a moment…
Just a moment… This request seems a bit unusual, so we need to confirm that you’re human. Please press and hold the button until it turns completely green. Thank you for your cooperation!
Continue Reading
-
Increased exit activity and continuing focus in AI sees Global VC investment climb to US$120 billion in Q3’25, marking a fourth consecutive $100 billion+ quarter
October 15, 2025
Global VC investment remains strong, driven by AI and supported by increasing exit activity
Global venture capital (VC) investment rose from $112 billion in Q2’25 to $120 billion in Q3’25 — marking the fourth consecutive quarter of robust investment, according to the latest edition of Venture Pulse from KPMG Private Enterprise, a quarterly report tracking investment trends globally across major regions around the world.
The Americas led with $85.1 billion, while Asia saw muted investment at $16.8 billion. AI continued to dominate VC activity, with significant funding rounds for AI model development and applications. The US accounted for most of the VC investment in the Americas, while Europe saw solid growth. Global exit value climbed to $149.9 billion, the highest since Q4’21, driven by renewed IPO activity. Looking ahead to Q4’25, global VC investment is expected to remain stable, with AI continuing to dominate. Robotics and defensetech will also continue to be focus areas.
The last time the global VC market saw $100 billion+ in investment for four quarters in a row was between Q4’21 and Q3’22. While overall deal volume eased slightly — reflecting a typical seasonal slowdown across the Americas and Europe — the broader market trajectory remained positive. Investor sentiment strengthened steadily throughout the quarter, buoyed by renewed optimism around liquidity pathways and a gradual reopening of exit markets in the Americas and Asia.
During Q3’25, the focus of VC investors globally concentrated on large deals — with 10 megadeals valued at $1 billion or more. Eight of these deals occurred in the US, led by raises by Anthropic AI’s of $13billion and xAI’s $10 billion.
AI continued to dominate VC investment activity in other regions as well in Q3’25. In Europe, France-based Mistral raised $1.5 billion and UK-based Nscale raised $1.5 billion. In Asia, Australia-based Firmus raised A$330 million ($220 million), while China-based MiniMaxAI raised $300 million and South Korea-based Rebellions raised $244 million. In addition to startups engaged in foundational AI model development, venture capital investors worldwide demonstrated increasing interest in AI-powered applications and sector-specific innovations. Beyond AI, defense technology and space technology garnered significant attention during the quarter, largely due to persistent geopolitical tensions. Health technology, quantum computing, and alternative energy also maintained strong investor interest throughout Q3’25.
Regionally, the Americas led global VC investment, attracting $85.1 billion across 3,474 deals in Q3’25—more than 70% of the total funding seen globally during the quarter. Within the Americas, the United States accounted for $80.9 billion across 3,175 deals. Europe attracted the second-largest share of VC funding during the quarter—$17.4 billion across 1,625 deals—overtaking Asia, where VC investment remained somewhat sluggish at $16.8 billion across 2,310 deals.
Continue Reading
-
Matt Hauser chases first Aussie men’s title in 20 years in Wollongong
He has been the outstanding male athlete of 2025, now Matt Hauser will want to see the campaign through in style on 19 October in Wollongong and become Australia’s first World Champion since Peter Robertson in 2005 and the first person to win a…
Continue Reading
-
Samsung Electronics Ranks 5th in Global Brands for the Sixth Consecutive Year – Samsung Global Newsroom
Samsung recognized for AI leadership and accelerating adoption
Samsung Electronics today announced it has been recognized by Interbrand, a global brand consultancy, as the 5th-ranked global brand for the sixth year in a row. Interbrand releases its list of “Best Global Brands” each year. For this year’s list, Samsung recorded a brand value of $90.5 billion, upholding its position as the only Asian company to remain in the global top five since 2020.
According to Interbrand, Samsung Electronics’ evaluation was positively influenced by:
- Strengthened AI competitiveness across the company’s business divisions
- Enhanced customer experiences through unified integration across products
- Focused investment in AI-related semiconductors
- Execution of a customer-centric brand strategy
“Through AI innovation and open collaboration, Samsung has worked to ensure that more customers can experience AI in their daily lives,” said Won-Jin Lee, President and Head of Global Marketing Office at Samsung Electronics. “Moving forward, we will continue to focus on benefits for customers including in health and safety so that Samsung can grow into an even more beloved brand.”
Under the vision of “Innovation for All,” Samsung consistently strives to make AI accessible to more customers worldwide.
This year, Samsung reinforced its leadership in mobile AI with the continued advancement of Galaxy AI, aiming to make it available on 400 million devices within the year driving the democratization of AI. In Consumer Electronics (CE), Samsung has expanded AI competitiveness by introducing AI technologies tailored to each product category, such as Vision AI and Bespoke AI.
Through open collaboration with diverse partners, Samsung has enhanced personalized AI experiences for customers, while also providing industry-leading security with Samsung Knox.
In semiconductors, Samsung has been addressing the growing demand for AI with a comprehensive portfolio across cloud, on-device and physical AI. This includes actively responding with advanced products including HBM, high-capacity DDR5, LPDDR5X and GDDR7.
Beyond AI, Samsung continues to enhance the accessibility of its products and services and drive sustainable innovation across all business divisions. This includes energy savings through energy-efficient appliances connected via SmartThings.
Samsung’s Recognized Efforts in Each Business Division
Mobile
- Leading the mobile AI era and driving the popularization of AI with Galaxy AI
- Strengthening foldable category leadership with the launch of Galaxy Z Fold7 and Z Flip7
- Enhancing customer trust through strengthened privacy and security technologies
- Expanding health services through advanced wearables, Samsung Health enhancements and open collaboration
Networks
- Reinforcing leadership in AI-powered virtualized Radio Access Networks (vRAN) and Open RAN
- Consistently innovating technologies to support various 5G use cases, including high quality streaming and gaming
- Leading the technical standardization of 6G
- Enhancing partnerships with customer companies and communicating the sustainability aspects of Samsung’s network technology
Visual Display
- Solidifying global leadership in TVs, soundbars and gaming monitors
- Innovating viewing with rich AI features based on Vision AI
- Enhancing The Frame and Art Store services to deliver personalized art TV experiences
- Expanding content offerings through partnerships in TV Plus, entertainment, gaming and music
Digital Appliances
- Maintaining global leadership in categories such as refrigerators and washing machines through consistent product innovation and advanced AI capabilities
- Providing differentiated convenience and advanced AI experiences through SmartThings integration
- Expanding Bespoke AI appliance leadership across energy efficiency, usability, performance and design
Semiconductor
- Operating a diverse portfolio across cloud, on-device and physical AI applications
- Maintaining leadership in mobile and automotive semiconductors, including DDR, SSD, LPDDR, UFS and Auto SSD
- Continuing development and investment in innovative solutions like CMM-D and HBM
- Sharing vision and industry leadership through influential tech events
Interbrand’s Best Global Brands are ranked based on brand value evaluation, which involves a comprehensive analysis of the company’s financial performance and outlook, the influence of the brand on customer purchases and brand competitiveness (including strategy, empathy, differentiation, customer engagement, consistency, trust and more). The ranking is one of the world’s longest-standing brand value evaluations, widely recognized for its credibility.
Continue Reading
-
OPPO ColorOS 16 Set for Global Unveil: A New Era of Smoothness, Intelligence, and Seamless Connectivity
SHENZHEN, CHINA –
Media OutReach Newswire – 15 October 2025 – OPPO has revealed its first look at ColorOS 16, the latest version of its mobile operating system, launching with the upcoming Find X9 Series. The update sets a new…Continue Reading
-
Overdose in America – a Guardian Series |
This series is supported through philanthropic funding to theguardian.org, a US-based foundation that partners with the Guardian on independent editorial projects.
All of the journalism is editorially independent, commissioned and produced by our…
Continue Reading
-
Pupils fear AI is eroding their ability to study, research finds | Artificial intelligence (AI)
Pupils fear that using artificial intelligence is eroding their ability to study, with many complaining it makes schoolwork “too easy” and others saying it limits their creativity and stops them learning new skills, according to new research.
The report on the use of AI in UK schools, commissioned by Oxford University Press (OUP), found that just 2% of students aged between 13 and 18 said they did not use AI for their schoolwork, while 80% said they regularly used it.
Despite AI’s widespread use, 62% of the students said it has had a negative impact on their skills and development at school, while one in four of the students agreed that AI “makes it too easy for me to find the answers without doing the work myself”.
A further 12% said AI “limits my creative thinking” while similar numbers said they were less likely to solve problems or write creatively.
Alexandra Tomescu, OUP’s generative AI and machine learning product specialist, said the study was among the first to look at how young people in the UK were incorporating AI into their education.
“The thing I find fascinating is how sophisticated the answers are,” Tomescu said. “For 60% of students to say they are concerned that AI tools encourage copying rather than doing original work, that’s a very deep understanding of what your schoolwork is meant to help you do, and what the pitfalls and benefits are associated with this technology.
“Young people who are using this technology actually have a pretty sophisticated, quite mature understanding of what the technology does in relation to their schoolwork, which is fascinating because we don’t give young people enough credit when it comes to using technology in an educational space, unaided, in this way.”
OUP’s findings follow empirical studies on the use of AI in education. One published this year by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) measured brain electrical activity during essay writing among students using large language models (LLM) such as ChatGPT, and concluded: “These results raise concerns about the long-term educational implications of LLM reliance and underscore the need for deeper inquiry into AI’s role in learning.”
Nearly half of the 2,000 students surveyed by OUP said they were worried their classmates were “secretly using AI” for schoolwork without their teachers being unable to spot it.
Many reported that they wanted more help from teachers for the appropriate use of AI and in judging whether its output was reliable. OUP said it is launching a new AI education hub aimed at supporting teachers.
“Some of these findings will be very interesting for teachers, especially around how much students are expecting guidance from teachers. We sometimes think there is a technological generational divide, and yet they are still looking at their teachers for guidance in how to use this technology productively, and I find that very positive,” Tomescu said.
Daniel Williams, an assistant headteacher and AI lead at Bishop Vesey’s grammar school in Birmingham, said: “The findings closely reflect what I see in school. Many pupils recognise AI’s value for creativity, revision, and problem-solving but often use it as a shortcut rather than a learning tool.”
Just 31% said they didn’t think AI use had a negative impact on any of their skills. But most students said using AI helped them gain new skills, including 18% who said it helped them understand problems, and 15% said it helped them come up with “new and better” ideas.
Asked to elaborate, one 15-year-old female student said: “I have been able to understand maths better and it helps me to solve difficult questions.”
Meanwhile, a boy aged 14 claimed: “I now think faster than I used to.”
Continue Reading
-
Mission to Mars: The new space race
US President Donald Trump wants to “plant the stars and stripes on the planet Mars”. But more than 50 years on from the moon landings, America’s space agency, Nasa, is in disarray. Meanwhile, China is forging ahead with its own plans for…
Continue Reading
-
The Four Spent the Day Together — Chris Kraus’s preoccupation with her protagonist’s phone
Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free
Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.
In 2019, podcaster Dasha Nekrasova tweeted “Chris Kraus is a landlord” from a private account. A year later, user…
Continue Reading