News Highlights

At a glance

US fuel shortages despite record oil output

Reporting from El País notes that Donald Trump’s “drill, baby, drill” push has kept the US as the world’s top oil producer but has not prevented domestic fuel shortages.

Infrastructure gaps, refining bottlenecks, and distribution issues are contributing to tight supplies and higher prices, even with record crude output.

Read more at english.elpais.com

White House–China tensions over AI tech theft

An AI news roundup reports that the White House is accusing China of “industrial‑scale” theft of US AI technology, escalating existing geopolitical and technology frictions.

The allegations are framed within a broader contest over advanced chips, leading AI models, and dual‑use AI capabilities with security implications.

Read more at creati.ai

Market mood: cautious optimism in US stocks

Early US market coverage on April 25 points to cautious optimism following prior volatility.

Select sectors, including discount retail and agricultural commodities such as live cattle and feeder contracts, are seeing gains. Investors are tracking diplomatic developments around global tensions while positioning for potential recession risks.

Read more at ts2.tech

AI and chip ecosystem moves

Cadence has expanded its AI chip‑design collaboration with TSMC across advanced process nodes.

The move highlights how electronic design automation tools, leading foundries, and AI workloads are closely linked in the current semiconductor cycle.

Read more at ts2.tech

Global AI governance and security narrative

AI news digests for April 25 highlight governments speeding up work on AI security, export controls, and intellectual‑property protection.

At the same time, enterprises continue to roll out AI models and productivity tools, amid ongoing concern over data security, model misuse, and labor‑market disruption.

Read more at dentro.de

Lyrid meteor shower wraps up

The annual Lyrid meteor shower, which peaked on April 22, is in its final active night on April 25.

Observers can still expect reduced but visible meteor activity before the Lyrids conclude for the year.

Read more at space.com