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The Financial Times published a short Alphaville post that points readers to several articles and speeches, including items about AI and security.
In short: The Financial Times published an Alphaville post that mainly serves as a curated list of links to other reads.
The post, written by Robin Wigglesworth, is titled “FTAV’s further reading” and was published on Thursday. It does not announce a new AI product or policy. Instead, it points readers to a set of outside articles and resources.
The links cover a mix of topics. They include an essay from MIT Press Reader, a Substack post about what a 1941 stock certificate can teach about AI, and the text of GCHQ’s Annual Lecture 2026 (GCHQ is the UK’s intelligence and cybersecurity agency). The list also includes articles from the American Prospect, the Library of Congress, and Quanta Magazine, with subjects ranging from government spending to obituaries and undersea volcanoes.
This kind of post is closer to a reading roundup than a news update. Think of it like a friend sending you a short list of “you might like these” links, rather than writing a full story.
Source: Financial Times