Blog

  • Peter Jackson's moa obsession fuels bid to bring back extinct giant – cbs8.com

    Peter Jackson's moa obsession fuels bid to bring back extinct giant – cbs8.com

    1. Peter Jackson’s moa obsession fuels bid to bring back extinct giant  cbs8.com
    2. Tom Brady joins Tiger Woods to play Jurassic Park: Can they help bring back a bird that went extinct 600 years ago?  MARCA
    3. Colossal Targets Moa as Its Next Species Restoration Milestone  colossal.com
    4. Peter Jackson Wants to Bring This 400-Pound Flightless Bird Back From Extinction  IMDb
    5. Press Release Service: The Ngāi Tahu Research Centre Has Entered Into a Strategic Partnership With De-Extinction Company, Colossal Biosciences, and Sir Peter Jackson, to Resurrect the South Island Giant Moa and Other Taonga Species  CRISPR Medicine News

    Continue Reading

  • Squid Game Star Reflects on Casting Criticism Death of Trans Character

    Squid Game Star Reflects on Casting Criticism Death of Trans Character

    [This story contains major spoilers from the final season of Squid Game.]

    When Park Sung-hoon was cast in season two of the Netflix‘s Squid Game, there was a bit of an uproar. The South Korean actor was set to play Hyun-ju, who viewers would come to know as “Player 120” in the deadly Games that are the focus of creator Hwang Dong-hyuk‘s hit series. The backlash was because Hyun-ju was described as a trans female character who enters the Games in hopes of being able to afford her gender-affirming surgery, while Park is a cisgender man.

    Hwang weighed in on the response, explaining how challenging it was to find an openly transgender actor in Korea to play the part. “I did anticipate such discussions to arise from the first moment I began creating the character Hyun-ju,” Hwang said at the time about the casting decision. “When we researched in Korea, there are close to no actors that are openly trans, let alone openly gay, because unfortunately in the Korean society currently the LGBTQ community is rather still marginalized and more neglected, which is heartbreaking.”

    Park was also anticipating discussing the response to his casting when speaking to The Hollywood Reporter (via a translator) about the third and final season of Netflix’s most-streamed show. Since the season’s release on June 27, the series has set a new record for the streamer, with 106.3 million views watched during the first 10 days of release, per Netflix. Now that viewers have had a chance to see Hyun-ju’s two-season arc, the tide has turned around his casting. The character became a fan-favorite after season two and now, after season three, one of the show’s heroes, having died while trying to save her friends including Jun-hee (Jo Yu-ri), who birthed her baby during the deadly Hide and Seek game. In an unfortunate twist, Hyun-ju was fatally stabbed by the baby’s father, Lee Myung-gi (Yim Si-wan).

    Below, Park addresses the casting concerns head on while reflecting on his two-season role on Netflix’s biggest series, and shares his hopes for how the spotlight on Hyun-ju can improve global representation for trans characters: “I had a thorough understanding of what I was getting into.”

    ***

    Director Hwang anticipated that there would be a loud response to your casting initially, explaining how challenging it was to authentically cast this role in South Korea. What hesitations did you have when you first signed on?

    When I first heard that I was going to play a trans woman in Squid Game, I thought it was a very good challenge for me as an actor to take up. But at the same time, I questioned myself. Would it be acceptable for me as a cisgender actor to play a trans woman character? So I had my worries. I had my concerns. But I was determined to make her into a character who is not a caricature. I did not want to reduce her to stereotypes. I really wanted to focus on the inner qualities that she has, the traits that are so redeeming. I just wanted to create a very authentic portrayal of this very layered character.

    How in your preparation did you then begin to connect to the character — what drew you to playing her and was there any research that helped you portray someone in the trans community?

    I really wanted to play Hyun-ju because if you look at existing transgender characters in Korean cinema or on Korean TV shows, they tend to be caricatures and they tend to be pretty flat. But Hyun-ju was such a cool character. She has a good heart. She’s selfless. She cares about others. She’s a good leader; she’s charismatic and brave. She has all of these great qualities, and she’s very layered. So I really wanted to portray this character, and I knew that required a deep understanding of trans women and Hyun-ju in particular. I interviewed a lot of transgender individuals, got some advice from them, and I also did loads and loads of research so that I could study more about this community and the individuals. I really made sure that I had a thorough understanding of what I was getting into.

    Once people saw you in this role, the response flipped and she became a fan favorite. We know she has this military background and enters the Games hoping to win so she can afford gender-affirming surgery. What else did you fill in about her life before the Games to help you play her?

    I didn’t try to fill in anything extra to her backstory because I really wanted to stay true to the script. I thought that, just like any other Korean transgender individual, Hyun-ju would have fought against a lot of prejudice and bias all her life. As we see, she wants to complete her gender-affirmation surgery and she wants to move to Thailand and buy a small house there and make a lot of friends who share similar experiences to what she’s been through. So those were the things that I thought about when I was giving a reason for why she joined the Squid Games.

    Hyun-ju, aka Player 120 (Park Sung-hoon, right), died trying to protect her friends in the game: Kang Ae-sim, aka Player 149, (Geum-ja), and the very pregnant Jun-hee, aka Player 222 (Jo Yu-ri), who had her baby during this Hide and Seek game.

    Netflix

    I understand you each received the full arc of your characters when you went into filming seasons two and three back to back, so you knew her fate. How did knowing her ending help how you played her along the way, and how did you feel when you read in the script how she died?

    Hyun-ju tries to protect Jun-hee and the baby and makes a sacrifice, which is her life. And while I pitied her as the actor playing her, she doesn’t know that she’s going to get killed, so it didn’t really affect me that I knew her ending when I was playing her.

    Not many characters in Squid Game are selfless, yet she died trying to protect her friends and this baby. How did you interpret her ending and what do you hope people take away from that?

    Just like you said, she dies trying to protect her friends, Jun-hee and the newborn baby. I think that shows that her heart is really made of gold. She is such a warm-hearted and selfless person. When I was playing her, I thought that Hyun-ju maybe knew that she might die when going back and looking for the exit for her friends alone, but she would have done the same, even if she knew that she could die. So this is something that we should all really look up to. We should be like her in any way, if that’s possible.

    What was it like to film her final scene and to wrap on this show? How emotional was that day?

    I remember that day on set. Director Hwang came to me and just off the bat, he said, “What if you shed one drop of a tear just before you fall to the ground after being stabbed?” And I got it done in the first take, so I was very proud of that. But I was very emotional going into that scene. So even after I heard the sound of “cut,” I cried. I needed time to kind of cry and let the emotions go.

    What are your hopes for the doors this could open for transgender characters globally on television? And how has Squid Game opened doors for you and what you want to do next?

    For the first part of the question, as I said before, we had a lot of flat, one-dimensional stereotypical transgender characters in Korean cinema and on Korean TV shows. So I’m so excited that we have this character. I think Hyun-ju is going to open up doors for more multi-dimensional LGBTQ+ characters going forward. And for the second part of the question, I have recently played lots of villains, so Korean viewers know me for playing villains. And because of Hyun-ju, I got to show a new side of myself — the good side of myself. Thanks to Hyun-ju, right now, I’m in production for another show [Efficient Dating for Singles], and I’m a good guy this time.

    ***

    The final season of Squid Game is now streaming on Netflix. Read THR’s take on the finale’s A-list cameo and how it could set up a spinoff, and our two-part interview with Hwang Dong-hyuk on the final season and final scene.

    Continue Reading

  • ‘Superman’ To Take Flight With $200M Worldwide Opening: Box Office

    ‘Superman’ To Take Flight With $200M Worldwide Opening: Box Office

    Superman, the first movie in Peter Safran and James Gunn‘s revamped DC Studios Phase I, labeled “Gods and Monsters,” is opening this weekend. Talk about pressure. There is a lot riding on this movie as it tees up the tone and grand plans that the duo have assembled since Warner Bros Discovery siloed DC away from the main aorta Warner Bros Motion Picture Group a la the setup of Marvel at Disney.

    Even more amazing and audacious here, Gunn bet on himself writing, directing and producing the movie that lights the wick to new era at DC following the dark-tone era of Zack Synder and Christopher Nolan.

    After a rapturous premiere in Hollywood on Monday night and reviews this morning of 85% certified fresh, hopefully there’s no reason for anyone on the Burbank lot to sweat.

    RELATED: Men of Steel: Every Actor Who Has Played Superman – Photo Gallery

    Studios sources tell us that that Superman will see at least a $200M global start at 60,000 global screens, split evenly between domestic and overseas. Stateside, we’re hearing that presales are at $20M, which is ahead of Gunn’s Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 ($118.4M) and behind fellow 2023 release Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania ($106.1M). Stateside, rivals — some tracking firms and exhibitors’ internal estimates — believe Superman flies to $115M-$130M.

    What could put this over the top? Reviews, which currently stand at 85% certified fresh on Rotten Tomatoes — roughly equal to the review rating of the original 1978 Richard Donner Superman starring Christopher Reeve. That will convince the adults to go see this next rendition. Those reviews are leaps and bounds higher than Snyder’s 2013 reboot Man of Steel (57% rotten), his 2016 faceoff Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice (23%) and Bryan Singer’s 2006 Superman Returns at 72%.

    The Man of Steel will be flying around the world as the major-territory rollout commences on Wednesday in France, Italy and Korea. Thursday adds Germany, Australia, Brazil and Mexico, and Friday brings the UK, Spain, China and Japan on board. It will be in 78 territories total. We expect the best-performing markets to be a mix of the UK, Brazil (which leans heavy into DC), Mexico, Australia, France and Germany.  Superman leads presales in China for Thursday previews and on opening Friday, but not on Saturday or Sunday. The team notably has traveled to events in Rio and London. At the latter, there was an 11-foot sculpture of Superman suspended at the top of The Shard.

    RELATED: ‘Superman’ Character Posters: David Corenswet, Nicholas Hoult, Edi Gathegi, Isabela Merced and Nathan Fillion

    Tonight, there’s the first of the sold-out Amazon Prime member paid screenings of Superman, which start at 7 p.m. Previews continue at 2 p.m. Thursday in 3,400 locations, rising to 4,000 by Friday for a U.S./Canada 10K-screen footprint.

    Two days before preview Thursday, First Choice for Superman stateside is strongest with all dudes over and under 25. Overall First Choice is a point higher than Disney’s Lilo & Stitch ($146M opening), above Warner Bros/Legendary’s A Minecraft Movie ($162.7M) and 64% lower in first choice than Matt Reeves’ The Batman back in 2022 ($134M opening).

    Superman absorbs all the premium formats of Dolby, PLF, Screen-X and motion seats for Universal’s Jurassic World Rebirth, that movie looking at a -55% second hold or $60M. The dinos will have some PLFs this coming weekend. The Gareth Edwards-directed movie minted close to $12M Monday for a running cume of $159.8M.

    RELATED: The Movies That Have Made More Than $1 Billion At The Global Box Office

    Getty

    The Superman franchise always has been a prized one for Warner Bros, and the father of superhero movies. The first movie — with $134.4M domestic and $300.4M worldwide, unadjusted for inflation — was part of the early era of blockbusters movies at time when Jaws and Star Wars were taking cinema to the next level. Sequel Superman II also was a big summer hit for Warners back in 1981, with lines around the block on opening weekend and a very notable $14.1M at the time and an end gross of $108.1M, $216.3M worldwide.

    But then Superman lost flight and Warners fumbled the lucrative Reeve franchise greatly. Superman III, in a bad pairing, co-starred comedy star Richard Pryor and was panned by critics at 31% and deep-dived to $59.9M in 1983 (despite a very good $13.3M opening) and $80.2M worldwide. By 1987, when blockbusters were truly in full swing, audiences turned their back on Superman IV: Quest for Peace, which nosedived to $15.6M stateside off a $5.6M debut, and just north of $30M worldwide — a disaster.

    Singer’s Superman Returns would pay homage and act as sequel to the original Donner movie with an eerily similar looking actor to Reeve in Brandon Routh. The movie back in 2006 didn’t exactly take off, with a $52.5M three-day and five-day pre-July 4th bow of $84.5M. Its enormous $223M production was the movie’s biggest piece of Kryptonite, resulting in a $200M domestic take and $391M worldwide.

    ‘Batman v. Superman’

    Snyder’s Man of Steel in 2013 finally took off with then-fresh face Henry Cavill opening to $116.6M domestic and ending its run at $291M U.S./Canada, $670.1M worldwide. That movie would spawn Cavill’s Superman as a lead in 2016’s Snyder pic Batman v. Superman and the director’s Justice League the following year. Batman v. Superman owns the record opening for a Superman movie with $166M domestic, and overall take at $330.3M U.S./Canada and $874.3M worldwide. Justice League began to show that the Synderverse was fraying, with a $93.8M opening, $229M domestic and $661.3M global take off a $300M production cost.

    Continue Reading

  • All Blacks Eye Defensive Lift in Wellington » allblacks.com

    All Blacks Eye Defensive Lift in Wellington » allblacks.com

    Improvements in defence will be another challenge for the All Blacks in their second Lipovitan-D Test against France in Wellington on Saturday.

    Assistant coach Scott Hansen said of the 31-27 win in Dunedin, “We’re not overly happy with the amount of points that were scored against us.

    “There’s a little bit in the gut around that, so we need to be better. You look at them in the Six Nations, the coaching, the philosophy around defence, the way they recover. They defend a bit differently than New Zealand teams, and what we’ve seen in Super Rugby Pacific.

    “There are a couple of little pictures there that we can adjust to when we need to.

    “But, also with their good defence, there’re opportunities and we’ve seen it now. Now the challenge for us is to be better in how we attack it. We can build our game, we can get better.”

    The French would feel better about their effort in the first Test after being written off in many quarters, even while they were confident in themselves.

    “They’re young, excited, and they’ve talked about having no fear. What we saw was an excited and experienced French team that was proud to play for their country.

    Hansen said the best way to reduce the TMO coming into the game was to deny him the opportunity by on-field performance.

    “Our challenge is to give the TMO an enjoyable evening by being clinical and executing well so he can enjoy his evening.”

    Former All Blacks coach Sir Wayne Smith joined the side at Wellington and is performing a mentoring role with the coaching group.

    “He’s always there for us as a sounding board, it’s great having him in. He’s coached a lot of them and he just shares stories. He shares events that he’s been through.”

    Hansen said they didn’t have a return-to-play time for captain and lock Scott Barrett, but he would miss the rest of the series as a result of the injury to his calf muscle.

    “We’ll take it week for week, and he’ll be keen to get back as quickly as possible. We want to be quite cautious with that given we’ve seen in other sports that calf injuries can easily turn into Achilles injuries.”

    With Ardie Savea taking over the captaincy, he would be able to call on support from the leadership group.

    Prop Pasilio Tosi said they had just been told Barrett wouldn’t be playing, but they had confidence in Savea, who has led them before.

    Tosi said France had stepped up in Dunedin, forcing the All Blacks to make errors, but they were ready to right those in Wellington.

    “We know we’re going to be up against another good France team. They’ll review the game and we’ll review there’s.”

    The All Blacks were disappointed to have three tries ruled out by the TMO, but there was no escaping their presence.

    “They’re always there, so we’ve got to be squeaky clean. I ran into a French player so I need to be mindful of not getting in their way.”

    Tosi expects more fire from the French bellies, having missed a chance to get one over the All Blacks in Dunedin.

    “I expect an aggressive France team, that will test us.”

    Find out where to watch All Blacks v France around the world HERE.


    Continue Reading

  • Scripps Oceanography microscope studies coral health and behavior

    08 Jul 2025

    BUMP platform gives color and fluorescence data from underwater observations.

    An imaging platform developed at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography (SIO) could help reveal new details of coral microstructure and health.

    Described in Methods in Ecology and Evolution, the instrument is designed to offer an unprecedented look at coral photosynthesis on the micro-scale.

    The device is a development of earlier work on the use of pulse amplitude modulated (PAM) light measurements, in which the photochemistry of chlorophyll-containing systems can be studied by quantifying the fluorescence of chlorophyll at different redox states and under different light stimulation.

    This technique is more straightforward on dry land than under the sea, but the advantages to researchers of successfully observing aquatic photosynthesis in situ are considerable.

    So SIO set out to design an enhanced PAM platform, one enabling visual observations and variable chlorophyll fluorescence imaging in an underwater environment. Developed by SIO’s Jaffe Lab for Underwater Imaging, the instrument is christened the Benthic Underwater Microscope imaging PAM, or BUMP.

    “This microscope is a huge technological leap in the field of coral health assessment,” said Or Ben-Zvi, postdoctoral researcher at Scripps Oceanography and lead author of the study.

    “Coral reefs are rapidly declining, losing their photosynthetic symbiotic algae in the process known as coral bleaching. We now have a tool that allows us to examine these microalgae within the coral tissue, non-invasively and in their natural environment.”

    Ocean photosynthesis: important for life on Earth

    BUMP’s microscope unit includes as its light source an array of LEDs with a pair of Fresnel lenses, condensing the illumination onto an area of 1 cm2 for blue illumination or 4 cm2 for white illumination. Short exposures down to 50 microseconds are used to minimize motion blur and reduce the illumination’s effect on natural photosynthesis.

    “With the PAM technique, the red fluorescence is measured to provide an index of how efficiently the microalgae are using light to produce sugars,” commented SIO. “The cyan/green fluorescence, concentrated around specific areas such as the mouth and tentacles of the coral, is attributed to special fluorescent proteins produced by the corals themselves that play multiple roles in the coral’s life functions.”

    Trials of BUMP have included deployment at 12 meters depth under ambient light conditions in Maui, Hawaii, where the instrument revealed how the corals actively changed their volume and shape constantly. The project was able to add new observations to previously documented coral behavior, such as seeing a coral polyp trying to capture or remove a passing particle by rapidly contracting its tentacles.

    Data collected with the new microscope could help reveal early warning signs appearing before corals experience irreversible damage from global climate change events, such as marine heat waves. These insights could help guide mitigation strategies to better protect corals.

    Beyond corals, the tool has widespread potential for studying other small-scale marine organisms that photosynthesize, such as baby kelp. Researchers at Scripps Oceanography are already using the BUMP imaging system to study the early life stages of the elusive giant kelp off California.

    “Since photosynthesis in the ocean is important for life on Earth, a host of other applications are imaginable with this tool, including right here off the coast of San Diego,” said the project.

    Continue Reading

  • Champions League qualifying: Fixtures, dates, how it works – UEFA.com

    1. Champions League qualifying: Fixtures, dates, how it works  UEFA.com
    2. Champions League first qualifying round: The long road to Budapest begins  BBC
    3. Champions League predictions | Latest betting and odds for winners, finalists for 2025/26 season  sportingnews.com
    4. Champions League qualifying kicks off as Finland’s KuPS and Sweden’s Malmo win first-leg games  FOX Sports
    5. UEFA Champions League 2025/26 season starts today  Yahoo Sports

    Continue Reading

  • Two Doses of Recombinant Zoster Vaccine Worked Well in People 50 and Older – NEJM Journal Watch

    1. Two Doses of Recombinant Zoster Vaccine Worked Well in People 50 and Older  NEJM Journal Watch
    2. Study estimates 74% efficacy of shingles vaccine in patients over 50  CIDRAP
    3. Shingrix Vaccine Reduces Herpes Zoster Risk By 50% in Inflammatory Arthritis  Vaccine Advisor
    4. Why the Shingles Vax Is Important for Your Cardio Patients  Medscape

    Continue Reading

  • Jax Taylor gets honest about his sobriety journey

    Jax Taylor gets honest about his sobriety journey

    Jax Taylor reflects on his battle with drugs

    Jax Taylor is doubling down on his effort to take drugs out of his life as he reflects on his sobriety journey.

    In a podcast with We’re Out of Time, the reality star said, “I know for a fact — and I know you’re not supposed to say it — but I know for a fact I will not touch drugs and alcohol again. I know that. I have no interest in it. I’m not triggered by it.“

    “But so now I can look back and say, ‘What the **** was I doing?’ ” he added. “‘Why didn’t I stop this years ago?’“

    In response, the host Richard Taite asked, “If you stop working out, will you look like this in three, four months?”

    “No,” he said. “I’m going to always work on it … I want to make it very clear, I’m not going to ever stop going to AA for the rest of my life. I love it. It’s like a drug to me.”

    “I love going and meeting the guys. My sober friends, I’ve shifted from my drunk friends, now I have a sober group of friends. We have a great time. We go out to dinner.“

    Moreover, the Vanderpump Rules alum said, “I like to be home on my couch watching my shows. But I’ll give myself a 45-minute window.”

    Capping off, Jax shared, “I’m feeling great right now, as far as my health.”


    Continue Reading

  • Remarks of Commissioner Kristin N. Johnson at George Washington University

    Remarks of Commissioner Kristin N. Johnson at George Washington University

    Thank you to the George Washington University Regulatory Studies Center, Roger Nober, Susan Dudley, and the organizers of today’s event for allowing me to join virtually. As many of you are aware, I have spent the last several years engaging regulators and market participants from jurisdictions around the world on issues at the core of today’s discussion.[1]

    How might advances in artificial intelligence (AI) increase inclusion and customer experiences and democratize access to financial services, improve the accuracy and efficiency of financial services, and potentially reduce transaction costs as well as the costs of compliance? 

    These issues, among several other potential benefits and risks associated with the adoption of innovative technologies, are top of mind for me and many other senior regulators, chief executive officers, chief technology officers, chief information security officers, chief compliance officers, and chief risk managers around the world.

    According to an International Monetary Fund paper exploring the benefits and risks of AI in finance, AI and machine learning (ML) technologies alongside other

    [r]ecent technological advances in computing and data storage power, big data, and the digital economy are facilitating rapid AI/ML deployment in a wide range of sectors, including finance. The COVID-19 crisis has accelerated the adoption of these systems due to the increased use of digital channels.

    AI/ML systems are changing the financial sector landscape. Competitive pressures are fueling rapid adoption of AI/ML in the financial sector by facilitating gains in efficiency and cost savings, reshaping client interfaces, enhancing forecasting accuracy, and improving risk management and compliance. AI/ML systems also offer the potential to strengthen prudential oversight and to equip [regulators]  with new tools. . . .[2]

    Indisputably, AI is rapidly transforming the financial sector, particularly in the areas of compliance, market surveillance, and regulatory enforcement. What once seemed the creative imaginings of science fiction or fantasy novels and films—forward-looking notions of a futuristic world—has now become a practical and increasingly essential tool across the financial market ecosystem. Market participants and regulators alike are leveraging AI and ML to improve risk management, detect misconduct, and strengthen the integrity of the markets.

    Let’s explore the use of AI in compliance, bad actors’ potential misuse of AI, opportunities for supervisory technology (suptech) in enforcement, and a path forward.

    AI and Industry Compliance

    Financial institutions have been at the forefront of AI adoption, especially in compliance functions. AI is widely used in anti-money laundering (AML) efforts, where algorithms analyze transaction patterns across millions of credit card statements, bank statements, and account details to detect anomalies that may go unnoticed by traditional systems. ML models have dramatically reduced false positives in AML alerts[3]; this has long been a challenge for compliance teams who may now rely on AI to learn by reviewing training data and distinguish between benign and suspicious activity more precisely and more efficiently.

    AI also supports compliance with complex cross-border financial regulations. Financial services firms deploy ML to monitor transactions for potential sanctions violations, helping ensure that transactions align with regulatory requirements based on origin, amount, frequency, and other risk factors.[4]

    Some firms have also embraced AI in communications surveillance, using platforms that offer digital communications governance to review internal communications for signs of fraud or misconduct. By automating these reviews, firms are better equipped to identify red flags early and maintain robust compliance programs.

    A recent Government Accountability Office (GAO) report released in May of 2025—Artificial Intelligence: Use and Oversight in Financial Services—identifies six increasingly common activities for which financial services firms may choose to integrate AI models, including automated trading, countering threats and illicit finance, credit decisions, customer service, investment decisions, and risk management.[5]

    The GAO report indicated that AI may be used to “detect and mitigate cyber threats through real-time investigation of potential attacks, flagging and blocking of new ransomware, and identification of compromised accounts and files” as well as to “identify fake IDs, recognize different photos of the same person, and screen clients against sanctions and other lists; analyze transaction data … and unstructured data (such as email, text, and audio data) to detect evidence of possible money laundering, terrorist financing, bribery, tax evasion, insider trading, market manipulation, and other fraudulent or illegal activities.”[6]

    For many of these use cases, financial services firms rely on generative AI. However, for use cases that require a high degree of reliability or explainability—the ability to understand how and why an AI system produces decisions, predictions, or recommendations—firms are rightly reticent to employ generative AI models.

    Regulators Use of AI for SupTech 

    The benefits of AI are not limited to the private sector. U.S. regulatory agencies—including the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Federal Reserve), the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), and the National Credit Union Administration (NCUA)—have begun integrating AI tools into their supervisory functions.

    These agencies use AI to analyze vast quantities of financial data, identify outliers, and detect emerging risks.[7] For example, AI can flag inconsistencies in data submissions from financial institutions, or surface patterns that indicate potential regulatory violations. This use of AI, often referred to as “suptech” (supervisory technology), enhances regulators’ ability to carry out their oversight responsibilities efficiently and proactively.

    Over the course of last year, the CFTC undertook extraordinary efforts to begin to clarify the Commission’s understanding of registrants’ use of AI and the potential benefits and limitations of the Commission’s implementation of AI for supervisory, surveillance, and enforcement purposes. In January of 2024, I worked with Commission staff to issue a Request for Comment distributed to our market participants to better understand the real-time adoption of AI models.[8] Following the Request for Comment, in December of 2024, the Commission issued a staff advisory on Use of Artificial Intelligence in CFTC-Regulated Markets.[9] One of the most significant takeaways from the staff advisory, which was echoed in executive orders issued by the prior administration, underscore the obligation for CFTC-regulated entities to maintain compliance with applicable statutory and regulatory requirements whether they choose to deploy AI or any other technology.

    Addressing the Dark Side of AI

    While AI has the potential to enhance compliance and supervision, it also introduces new risks. Alongside the promise of AI, we must consider the limitations and potential perils of implementing AI quickly without appropriate guardrails. Many of you in the room today, former Commissioner Berkovitz and Professor Cary Coglianese, among others, have participated in joint studies published by the Administrative Conference of the United States (ACUS) or independently published or presented on these limits. 

    In previous speeches, I have outlined concerns regarding the implementation of AI models without effective guardrails and governance interventions. 

    In a speech earlier this summer, I began to explore the specific concerns that may emerge as firms and regulators integrate agentic AI.[10] The discussion today, in fact, may largely focus on the integration of agentic AI models in compliance, surveillance, and enforcement. If so, I am hopeful that, in parallel to efforts to explore the benefits, panelists examining “AI’s Role in Regulation Post-Chevron” and “Regulatory Functions Most Amenable to AI-Drive Process Improvement” will also examine important concerns such as the limits of synthetic data, ghosts or hallucinations, data leakage, increasingly undetectable video and voice deepfakes, data accuracy, data security, and data integrity, among others.

    Some bad actors are paving the road for regulators and enforcement actions using AI technology. . But, in many cases, the bad actions are simply traditional, garden variety fraud with an AI white-label. 

    “AI washing”—the practice of exaggerating or misrepresenting AI capabilities to attract investors or customers[11]—is among the most concerning marketing and solicitation issues that financial market regulators currently face. Firms may claim to use advanced AI models to generate high returns when, in reality, they rely on rudimentary trading bots or nonexistent systems.[12]

    Enforcement in Action

    The CFTC has actively pursued enforcement actions against fraudulent actors who misuse or misrepresent AI. In a landmark case, the Commission obtained a $1.7 billion penalty—its largest ever—against a South African company that defrauded investors through a fraudulent multilevel marketing scheme.[13] The company falsely claimed to use a proprietary AI trading bot to generate high returns on Bitcoin investments. In reality, there was no proprietary trading bot and the firm engaged in minimal trading activity, most of which was unprofitable, and misappropriated investor funds.

    This and other cases underscore the CFTC’s ability to tackle AI-related misconduct using existing legal tools. The Commodity Exchange Act (CEA) provides a robust and flexible framework that prohibits fraudulent and manipulative practices regardless of the underlying technology. For example, CEA Section 4c(a) outlaws disruptive practices such as spoofing,[14] while CEA Section 6(c)(1) and Regulation 180.1 give the Commission broad anti-fraud and anti-manipulation authority.[15] These provisions are intentionally technology-neutral, allowing the CFTC to remain agile as new innovations emerge.

    The Commission has demonstrated, through its prior enforcement actions, that markets and market participants engaged in activities that are regulated by the Commission are expected to comply with applicable statutory and regulatory requirements, even when such activities occur with cryptocurrencies or through the use of AI. The technology-neutral approach of the CEA and CFTC regulations allows these provisions to be used to combat fraud in any shape, manner, or form.

    The Strategic Importance of Suptech

    A recent survey by the Financial Stability Institute (FSI) and the Bank for International Settlements Innovation Hub found that only 3 out of 50 supervisory authorities surveyed did not have ongoing suptech initiatives.[16] Those with a comprehensive suptech strategy were significantly more likely to deploy tools critical to supervision.[17]

    This underscores the importance of not only embracing AI on a case-by-case basis, but also developing cohesive strategies for integrating AI into regulatory and supervisory workflows. By investing in data infrastructure, fostering inter-agency collaboration, and recruiting AI-savvy talent, regulators can better equip themselves to meet the demands of increasingly complex markets.

    Finding a Pathway Forward

    I am looking forward to exploring the following principles and their role in our principles-based regulatory framework that I outlined in a speech last year. [18] As I have previously explained, there are many things that the Commission can do immediately to enhance our understanding of AI and help guide the development of effective guardrails that foster responsible development of AI.[19]

    Heightened Penalties

    As a CFTC Commissioner, I am also deeply concerned about the potential for abuse of AI technologies to facilitate fraud in our markets. As we examine the development of and limitations on the legitimate uses of AI in our markets, it is also important for the CFTC to emphasize that any misuse of these technologies will draw sharp penalties.

    In fact, I continue to call for the Commission to consider introducing heightened penalties for those who intentionally use AI technologies to engage in fraud, market manipulation, or the evasion of our regulations.

    In many instances, our statutes provide for heightened civil monetary penalties where appropriate.

    I propose that the use of AI in our markets to commit fraud and other violations of our regulations may, in certain circumstances, warrant a heightened civil monetary penalty.

    Bad actors who would use AI to violate our rules must be put on notice and sufficiently deterred from using AI as a weapon to engage in fraud, market manipulation, or to otherwise disrupt the operations or integrity of our markets. We must make it clear that the lure of using AI to engage in new malicious schemes will not be worth the cost.

    Recommendation for an Inter-Agency Task Force

    At the end of 2023, the previous administration announced the creation of an AI Safety Institute, which was to be established within the National institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), housed within the Commerce Department.[20]

    Shortly thereafter, I proposed the creation of an inter-agency task force composed of financial regulators including the CFTC, SEC, Federal Reserve, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, FDIC, Federal Housing Finance Agency, and NCUA to develop guidelines, tools, benchmarks, and best practices for the use and regulation of AI in the financial services industry.[21]

    Addressing the perils of AI, while harnessing its promise, is a challenge that will require a whole-of-government approach, with regulators working together across diverse agencies. I continue to advocate for agencies working together to provide their essential experience and expertise to help guide the development of AI standards for the financial industry.

    Conclusion

    The CFTC, in particular, is well positioned to lead in this space. Its principles-based and technology-neutral approach to regulation allows for flexible oversight that supports innovation while safeguarding market integrity. The Commission’s mission—to foster open, transparent, competitive, and financially sound markets—naturally aligns with the adoption of cutting-edge technology.

    AI is no longer a futuristic concept—it is a central feature of modern financial markets. Used responsibly, AI enhances compliance, improves oversight, and enables faster and more effective enforcement. The CFTC’s technology-neutral framework allows it to keep pace with innovation while maintaining essential investor protections and market integrity.

    Thanks again for allowing me to share my thoughts with you today. I anticipate you will have an energetic, generative, and thoughtful discussion on the panels and following the presentations this afternoon.


    [1] The views I share today are my own and not the views of the Commission, my fellow Commissioners or the CFTC staff.

    [15] 7 U.S.C. § 9(1); 17 C.F.R. § 180.1.

    Continue Reading

  • SECP achieves milestones in Corporate registry during FY 2025





    SECP achieves milestones in Corporate registry during FY 2025 – Daily Times





























    Continue Reading