Feed aggregator

MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab seed to signal: Amplifying early-career faculty impact

MIT Latest News - Tue, 03/17/2026 - 4:35pm

The early years of faculty members’ careers are a formative and exciting time in which to establish a firm footing that helps determine the trajectory of researchers’ studies. This includes building a research team, which demands innovative ideas and direction, creative collaborators, and reliable resources. 

For a group of MIT faculty working with and on artificial intelligence, early engagement with the MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab through projects has played an important role helping to promote ambitious lines of inquiry and shaping prolific research groups.

Building momentum

“The MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab has been hugely important for my success, especially when I was starting out,” says Jacob Andreas — associate professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS), a member of the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL), and a researcher with the MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab — who studies natural language processing (NLP). Shortly after joining MIT, Andreas jump-started his first major project through the MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab, working on language representation and structured data augmentation methods for low-resource languages. “It really was the thing that let me launch my lab and start recruiting students.” 

Andreas notes that this occurred during a “pivotal moment” when the field of NLP was undergoing significant shifts to understand language models — a task that required significantly more compute, which was available through the MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab. “I feel like the kind of the work that we did under that [first] project, and in collaboration with all of our people on the IBM side, was pretty helpful in figuring out just how to navigate that transition.” Further, the Andreas group was able to pursue multi-year projects on pre-training, reinforcement learning, and calibration for trustworthy responses, thanks to the computing resources and expertise within the MIT-IBM community.

For several other faculty members, timely participation with the MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab proved to be highly advantageous as well. “Having both intellectual support and also being able to leverage some of the computational resources that are within MIT-IBM, that’s been completely transformative and incredibly important for my research program,” says Yoon Kim — associate professor in EECS, CSAIL, and a researcher with the MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab — who has also seen his research field alter trajectory. Before joining MIT, Kim met his future collaborators during an MIT-IBM postdoctoral position, where he pursued neuro-symbolic model development; now, Kim’s team develops methods to improve large language model (LLM) capabilities and efficiency. 

One factor he points to that led to his group’s success is a seamless research process with intellectual partners. This has allowed his MIT-IBM team to apply for a project, experiment at scale, identify bottlenecks, validate techniques, and adapt as necessary to develop cutting-edge methods for potential inclusion in real-world applications. “This is an impetus for new ideas, and that’s, I think, what’s unique about this relationship,” says Kim.

Merging expertise

The nature of the MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab is that it not only brings together researchers in the AI realm to accelerate research, but also blends work across disciplines. Lab researcher and MIT associate professor in EECS and CSAIL Justin Solomon describes his research group as growing up with the lab, and the collaboration as being “crucial … from its beginning until now.” Solomon’s research team focuses on theoretically oriented, geometric problems as they pertain to computer graphics, vision, and machine learning. 

Solomon credits the MIT-IBM collaboration with expanding his skill set as well as applications of his group’s work — a sentiment that’s also shared by lab researchers Chuchu Fan, an associate professor of aeronautics and astronautics and a member of the Laboratory for Information and Decision Systems, and Faez Ahmed, associate professor of mechanical engineering. “They [IBM] are able to translate some of these really messy problems from engineering into the sort of mathematical assets that our team can work on, and close the loop,” says Solomon. This, for Solomon, includes fusing distinct AI models that were trained on different datasets for separate tasks. “I think these are all really exciting spaces,” he says.

“I think these early-career projects [with the MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab] largely shaped my own research agenda,” says Fan, whose research intersects robotics, control theory, and safety-critical systems. Like Kim, Solomon, and Andreas, Fan and Ahmed began projects through the collaboration the first year they were able to at MIT. Constraints and optimization govern the problems that Fan and Ahmed address, and so require deep domain knowledge outside of AI. 

Working with the MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab enabled Fan’s group to combine formal methods with natural language processing, which she says, allowed the team to go from developing autoregressive task and motion planning for robots to creating LLM-based agents for travel planning, decision-making, and verification. “That work was the first exploration of using an LLM to translate any free-form natural language into some specification that robot can understand, can execute. That’s something that I’m very proud of, and very difficult at the time,” says Fan. Further, through joint investigation, her team has been able to improve LLM reasoning­ — work that “would be impossible without the IBM support,” she says.   

Through the lab, Faez Ahmed’s collaboration facilitated the development of machine-learning methods to accelerate discovery and design within complex mechanical systems. Their Linkages work, for instance, employs “generative optimization” to solve engineering problems in a way that is both data-driven and has precision; more recently, they’re applying multi-modal data and LLMs to computer-aided design. Ahmed states that AI is frequently applied to problems that are already solvable, but could benefit from increased speed or efficiency; however, challenges — like mechanical linkages that were deemed “almost unsolvable” — are now within reach. “I do think that is definitely the hallmark [of our MIT-IBM team],” says Ahmed, praising the achievements of his MIT-IBM group, which is co-lead by Akash Srivastava and Dan Gutfreund of IBM.

What began as initial collaborations for each MIT faculty member has evolved into a lasting intellectual relationship, where both parties are “excited about the science,” and “student-driven,” Ahmed adds. Taken together, the experiences of Jacob Andreas, Yoon Kim, Justin Solomon, Chuchu Fan, and Faez Ahmed speak to the impact that a durable, hands-on, academia-industry relationship can have on establishing research groups and ambitious scientific exploration.

Three anesthesia drugs all have the same effect in the brain, MIT researchers find

MIT Latest News - Tue, 03/17/2026 - 11:00am

When patients undergo general anesthesia, doctors can choose among several drugs. Although each of these drugs acts on neurons in different ways, they all lead to the same result: a disruption of the brain’s balance between stability and excitability, according to a new MIT study.

This disruption causes neural activity to become increasingly unstable, until the brain loses consciousness, the researchers found. The discovery of this common mechanism could make it easier to develop new technologies for monitoring patients while they are undergoing anesthesia.

“What’s exciting about that is the possibility of a universal anesthesia-delivery system that can measure this one signal and tell how unconscious you are, regardless of which drugs they’re using in the operating room,” says Earl Miller, the Picower Professor of Neuroscience and a member of MIT’s Picower Institute for Learning and Memory.

Miller, Edward Hood Taplin Professor of Medical Engineering and Computational Neuroscience Emery Brown, and their colleagues are now working on an automated control system for delivery of anesthesia drugs, which would measure the brain’s stability using EEG and then automatically adjust the drug dose. This could help doctors ensure that patients stay unconscious throughout surgery without becoming too deeply unconscious, which can have negative side effects following the procedure.

Miller and Ila Fiete, a professor of brain and cognitive sciences, the director of the K. Lisa Yang Integrative Computational Neuroscience Center (ICoN), and a member of MIT’s McGovern Institute for Brain Research, are the senior authors of the new study, which appears today in Cell Reports. MIT graduate student Adam Eisen is the paper’s lead author.

Destabilizing the brain

Exactly how anesthesia drugs cause the brain to lose consciousness has been a longstanding question in neuroscience. In 2024, a study from Miller’s and Fiete’s labs suggested that for propofol, the answer is that anesthesia works by disrupting the balance between stability and excitability in the brain.

When someone is awake, their brain is able to maintain this delicate balance, responding to sensory information or other input and then returning to a stable baseline.

“The nervous system has to operate on a knife’s edge in this narrow range of excitability,” Miller says. “It has to be excitable enough so different parts can influence one another, but if it gets too excited it goes off into chaotic activity.”

In that 2024 study, the researchers found that propofol knocks the brain out of this state, known as “dynamic stability.” As doses of the drug increased, the brain took longer and longer to return to its baseline state after responding to new input. This effect became increasingly pronounced until consciousness was lost.

For that study, the researchers devised a computational model that analyzes neural activity recorded from the brain. This technique allowed them to determine how the brain responds to perturbations such as an auditory tone or other sensory input, and how long it takes to return to its baseline stability.

In their new study, the researchers used the same technique to measure how the brain responds to not only propofol but two additional anesthesia drugs — ketamine and dexmedetomidine. Animals were given one of the three drugs while their brain activity was analyzed, including their response to auditory tones.

This study showed that the same destabilization induced by propofol also appears during administration of the other two drugs. This “universal signature” appears even though the three drugs have different molecular mechanisms: propofol binds to GABA receptors, inhibiting neurons that have those receptors; dexmedetomidine blocks the release of norepinephrine; and ketamine blocks NMDA receptors, suppressing neurons with those receptors.

Each of these pathways, the researchers hypothesize, affect the brain’s balance of stability and excitability in different ways, and each leads to an overall destabilization of this balance.

“All three of these drugs appear to do the exact same thing,” Miller says. “In fact, you could look at the destabilization measure we use and you can’t tell which drug is being applied.”

The researchers now plan to further investigate how each of these drugs may give rise to the same patterns of brain destabilization.

“The molecular mechanisms of ketamine and dexmedetomidine are a bit more involved than propofol mechanisms,” Eisen says. “A future direction is to do a meaningful model of what the biophysical effects of those are and see how that could lead to destabilization.”

Monitoring anesthesia

Now that the researchers have shown that three different anesthesia drugs produce similar destabilization patterns in the brain, they believe that measuring those patterns could offer a valuable way to monitor patients during anesthesia. While anesthesia is overall a very safe procedure, it does carry some risks, especially for very young children and for people over 65.

For adults suffering from dementia, anesthesia can make the condition worse, and it can also exacerbate neuropsychiatric disorders such as depression. These risks are higher if patients go into a deeper state of unconsciousness known as burst suppression.

To help reduce those risks, Miller and Brown, who is also an anesthesiologist at MGH, are developing a prototype device that can measure patients’ EEG readings while under anesthesia and adjust their dose accordingly. Currently, doctors monitor patients’ heart rate, blood pressure, and other vital signs during surgery, but these don’t give as accurate a reading of how deeply the patient is unconscious.

“If you can limit people’s exposure to anesthesia, if you give just enough and no more, you can reduce risks across the board,” Miller says.

Working with researchers at Brown University, the MIT team is now planning to run a small clinical trial of their monitoring device with patients undergoing surgery.

The research was funded by the U.S. Office of Naval Research, the National Institute of Mental Health, the Simons Center for the Social Brain, the Freedom Together Foundation, the Picower Institute, the National Science Foundation Computer and Information Science and Engineering Directorate, the Simons Collaboration on the Global Brain, the McGovern Institute, and the National Institutes of Health.

Trump officials scorned IEA. Now it’s helping them navigate an oil crisis.

ClimateWire News - Tue, 03/17/2026 - 6:48am
Energy Secretary Chris Wright threatened to quit the International Energy Agency about 10 days before the U.S.-Israel war on Iran plunged the world into energy volatility.

In reversal, Trump grants disaster aid to Michigan utilities

ClimateWire News - Tue, 03/17/2026 - 6:46am
The surprise decision comes as the president’s nominee for Homeland Security secretary faces a confirmation hearing Wednesday.

White House is targeting climate center to punish Colorado, lawsuit says

ClimateWire News - Tue, 03/17/2026 - 6:45am
The nonprofit manager of the National Center for Atmospheric Research is suing over what it called a "campaign of retribution" against Gov. Jared Polis.

Texas refining hub seeks water fix after Abbott threatens takeover

ClimateWire News - Tue, 03/17/2026 - 6:45am
A looming water shortage in Corpus Christi could disrupt life for residents and refineries, but the state’s Republican governor says Texans will be protected.

Physical activity drops as temperatures rise. That’s deadly.

ClimateWire News - Tue, 03/17/2026 - 6:44am
A new study finds that hundreds of thousands of people could die every year as heat lowers their activity levels.

Meet the lawyers powering DOJ environment’s fight against states

ClimateWire News - Tue, 03/17/2026 - 6:44am
Most joined DOJ last year as career environmental lawyers exited. Some have worked for Trump-aligned law firms and clerked for conservative Supreme Court justices.

Appeals court mulls whether GOP rescission has mooted climate grant dispute

ClimateWire News - Tue, 03/17/2026 - 6:43am
The judges appeared confused about whether the Trump administration's termination made the grant money subject to rescission under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.

Plans to repower 2 peaker plants floated in New York City

ClimateWire News - Tue, 03/17/2026 - 6:42am
The owner of aging fossil fuel generators has proposed updating the Narrows and Gowanus power plants to ensure reliability.

EU leans to short-term energy fixes to avoid climate law clashes

ClimateWire News - Tue, 03/17/2026 - 6:41am
A push by some countries to revamp key green legislation as the Iran crisis drives up energy bills is flatlining.

Gulf investors seen likely to keep funding Africa renewable energy

ClimateWire News - Tue, 03/17/2026 - 6:41am
Disruptions to oil and gas shipments due to the war with Iran may strengthen the case for renewable energy investment since they show how vulnerable such supply routes can be, an analyst said.

Statkraft CEO against power market changes that threaten EU renewables

ClimateWire News - Tue, 03/17/2026 - 6:40am
Statkraft CEO Birgitte Vartdal’s comments come as EU nations discuss ways to curb energy prices, as concerns mount over the economic impact of the Iran war.

South Korean Police Accidentally Post Cryptocurrency Wallet Password

Schneier on Security - Tue, 03/17/2026 - 6:01am

An expensive mistake:

Someone jumped at the opportunity to steal $4.4 million in crypto assets after South Korea’s National Tax Service exposed publicly the mnemonic recovery phrase of a seized cryptocurrency wallet.

The funds were stored in a Ledger cold wallet seized in law enforcement raids at 124 high-value tax evaders that resulted in confiscating digital assets worth 8.1 billion won (currently approximately $5.6 million).

When announcing the success of the operation, the agency released photos of a Ledger device, a popular hardware wallet for crypto storage and management...

Bonus Podcast Episode: Privacy’s Defender - Cindy Cohn with Cory Doctorow

EFF: Updates - Tue, 03/17/2026 - 4:03am

While How to Fix the Internet is on hiatus, we wanted to share a great conversation with you from last week. EFF Executive Director Cindy Cohn spoke with bestselling novelist, journalist, and EFF Special Advisor Cory Doctorow about Cindy’s new book, “Privacy’s Defender: My Thirty-Year Fight Against Digital Surveillance” (MIT Press).

%3Ciframe%20height%3D%2252px%22%20width%3D%22100%25%22%20frameborder%3D%22no%22%20scrolling%3D%22no%22%20seamless%3D%22%22%20src%3D%22https%3A%2F%2Fplayer.simplecast.com%2F6c05474d-b4a1-4ffb-8ad8-943bccf09a10%3Fdark%3Dtrue%26amp%3Bcolor%3D000000%22%20allow%3D%22autoplay%22%3E%3C%2Fiframe%3E Privacy info. This embed will serve content from simplecast.com

    

You can also listen to this episode on the Internet Archive or watch the video on YouTube.

Part memoir, part battle cry, “Privacy’s Defender” is the story of Cindy’s fights alongside the visionaries who looked at the early internet and understood that the legal and political battles over this new technology - the Crypto Wars, the NSA’s dragnet, the FBI gag orders - were really over the future of free speech, privacy, and power for all. 

Cindy Cohn and Cory Doctorow at City Lights.jpg This conversation was recorded on Tuesday, March 10 in front of a packed house at San Francisco’s iconic City Lights Bookstore. For more about the book and Cindy’s national book tour - with stops in places including Seattle, Silicon Valley, Denver, Boston, Ann Arbor, Iowa City, Washington DC and New York City - check out https://www.eff.org/Privacys-Defender  

And finally, stay tuned to this feed; we’re working on a special podcast series featuring key players and moments from the book! 

Resources: 

International trade reduces emissions through technology transfer led by key emitters

Nature Climate Change - Tue, 03/17/2026 - 12:00am

Nature Climate Change, Published online: 17 March 2026; doi:10.1038/s41558-026-02595-z

Technology advancement is essential for climate action, yet the uneven distribution of technological progress across the world can slow mitigation. Through empirical and scenario analysis, researchers find that participating in trade agreements could enhance technological transfers and lead to emission reductions.

“We the People” depicts inventors, dreamers, and innovators in all 50 states

MIT Latest News - Tue, 03/17/2026 - 12:00am

Zora Neale Hurston remains one of America’s best-known authors. Charles Henry Turner developed landmark studies about the behavior of bees and spiders. Brian Wilson founded the Beach Boys. George Nissen invented the trampoline. What do they all have in common?

Well, for one thing, they were all innovative Americans — creators and discoverers, producing work no one anticipated. For another, they are all now celebrated as such, in verse, by Joshua Bennett.

That’s right. Bennett — an MIT professor, lauded poet, and literary scholar — is marking the 250th anniversary of the founding of the U.S. with a book-length work of poetry about the country and some of its distinctive figures. In fact, 50 of them: Bennett has written a substantial work featuring remarkable people or inventions from each of the 50 states, meditating on their place in cultural fabric of the U.S.

“There’s so much to be said for a country where you and I are possible, and the things we do are possible,” Bennett says.

The book, “We (The People of the United States),” is published today by Penguin Books. Bennett is a professor and the Distinguished Chair of the Humanities at MIT.

Bennett’s new work has some prominent Americans in it, but is no gauzy listing of familiar icons. Many of the 50 people in his book overcame hardship, poverty, rejection, or discrimination; some have already been rescued from obscurity, but others have not received proper acclaim. Few of them had a straightforward, simple connection with their times.

“It’s about feeling that you have a life in this country which is undeniably complex, but also has this remarkable beauty to it,” Bennett says of the work. “A beauty you helped to create, and that no one can take away from you.”

The figures that Bennett writes about are sources of fascination, and inspiration, demonstrating the kinds of lives it is possible to invent in the U.S.

“We’re in a moment that calls for compelling, historically grounded stories about what America is, what it has been, and what it can be,” Bennett adds. “Can we build a life-affirming vision for the future and those who will inherit it? I’m trying to. I work on it every day.”

Taking flight

“We (The People of the United States)” is inspired, in part, by Virgil’s “Georgics,” pastoral poems by the great Roman poet. Bennett encountered them while a PhD student in literature at Princeton University.

“The poet Susan Stewart, my professor at Princeton, introduced me to Virgil’s Georgics,” Bennett says. “I eventually started to think: What would it look like for me to cover Virgil?” Adding to his interest in the concept, one of his favorite poets, Gwendolyn Brooks, had spent time recasting Virgil’s ancient epic, “The Aeneid,” for her Pulitzer Prize-winning work, “Annie Allen.” She also translated the original work from Latin as a teenager. Moreover, Bennett’s writing has long engaged with the subject of people working the land in America.

“I decided to start writing all these poems about agriculture,” Bennett says. “But then I thought, this would be interesting as an epic poem about America.” As he launched the project, its focus shifted some more: “I started to think about the book as an ode to invention.”

Soon Bennett had worked out the structure. An opening section of the work is about his own family background, becoming a father, and the process of building a life here in Massachusetts.

“Where does my influence, my aspiration, end and the child begin?” Bennett writes in one poem. That section prefigures further themes in the collection about the domestic environments many of its figures emerged from. For the rest of the work, with one innovator or innovation for each of the 50 states, Bennett adopted a regular writing schedule, producing at least one new poem per week until he was finished. 

Hurston, one of several famous authors and artists featured in the book, represents Florida. From Ohio, entomologist Charles Henry Turner was the first Black person to receive a PhD from the University of Chicago, in 1907, before conducting a wide range of studies about the cognition and behavior of spiders and bees, among other things.

George Nissen, alternately, was a University of Iowa gymnast who built the first trampoline in the 1930s in his home state — something Bennett calls a “magical device” that brings to life “the scene in your mind of the leap/and of the leap itself, where you are airborne, illuminated/quickly immortal.” Whether these innovations appear through rigorous academic exploration or became mass-market goods that produce flights of fancy, Bennett has a keen eye for people who break new ground and fire our own feelings of wonder.

“We actually are all bound up in it together,” Bennett says. “These different figures, from various fields, eras, and lifelong pursuits are in here together precisely because they helped weave the story of this country together. It’s a story that is still unfolding.”

Bennett is straightforward about the struggles many of his subjects faced. His choice to represent North Carolina is the poet George Moses Horton, an enslaved man who not only learned to read and write in the early 1800s — the state later made that illegal for enslaved persons, in 1830 — but made money selling poems to University of North Carolina students. Indeed, Horton’s work was published in the 1820s. Bennett writes that Horton’s public performance of his poetry was “an ancient art revived in the flesh of a prodigy in chains.”

Bennett’s unblinking regard for historical reality is a motif throughout the work. “To me it’s not only about exploring a history that a reader might feel connected to or want to learn more about,” he says. “It’s about honoring those who lived that history, who helped make some of the most beautiful parts of the present possible, through an engagement with the substance of their lives.”

Just my imagination

Many figures in “We (The People of the United States)” are artists, but of many forms. From watching VH1 as a child, Bennett got into the Beach Boys, and he devotes the California entry in the poem to them. Or as Bennett puts it, he was “newly initiated into a sound/I do not understand until I am old enough to be nostalgic/for windswept locales, and singular moments in time/I never lived through.”

Bennett was learning about the Beach Boys while growing up in Yonkers, New York, far from any California beaches. But then, Brian Wilson wasn’t a surfer either — he grew up in an industrial suburb of Los Angeles. Imagination was the coin of the realm for Wilson, something Bennett understood when Beach Boys songs would veer off in unexpected directions.

“I’ve always been drawn to moments of great surprise, or revelation, in the works of art I love,” Bennett says. “Which is part of why I’ve dedicated my life to poetry. You think one thing is happening in a poem, and suddenly that shock comes, that unexpected turn, or volta. Brian Wilson always had a great understanding of that. It works in pop music. Surprise, sometimes, is a shift in register that takes you higher.”

Various poems in the collection have down-to-earth origins. Bennett remembers his father often fixing things in the family home, from toys to the boiler, saying, “Pass me the Phillips-head,” when he needed a screwdriver. Thus Oregon appears in the book: Portland is where the Phillips-head screwdriver was invented.

In conversation, Bennett notes the hopeful disposition of his father, who after living through Jim Crow and serving in the Vietnam War, worked 10-hour shifts at the U.S. Postal Service to support his family. Even with all the difficulty he experienced in his life, Bennett’s father always encouraged his son to pursue his dreams.

“I’m grateful that I inherited a profound sense of belonging, and dignity, from my parents,” Bennett says. “There was always this feeling that we were part of a much larger story, and that we had a responsibility to tell the truth about the world as we knew it.”

And that’s really what Bennett’s new book is about.

“We can reckon with our history in its fullness and work, tirelessly, toward a world that’s worthy of the most vulnerable among us,” Bennett says. “Like Toni Morrison, we can ‘dream the world as it ought to be.’ And then make it real. That’s my vision.”

Blocking the Internet Archive Won’t Stop AI, But It Will Erase the Web’s Historical Record

EFF: Updates - Mon, 03/16/2026 - 3:26pm

Imagine a newspaper publisher announcing it will no longer allow libraries to keep copies of its paper. 

That’s effectively what’s begun happening online in the last few months. The Internet Archive—the world’s largest digital library—has preserved newspapers since it went online in the mid-1990s. The Archive’s mission is to preserve the web and make it accessible to the public. To that end, the organization operates the Wayback Machine, which now contains more than one trillion archived web pages and is used daily by journalists, researchers, and courts.

But in recent months The New York Times began blocking the Archive from crawling its website, using technical measures that go beyond the web’s traditional robots.txt rules. That risks cutting off a record that historians and journalists have relied on for decades. Other newspapers, including The Guardian, seem to be following suit. 

For nearly three decades, historians, journalists, and the public have relied on the Internet Archive to preserve news sites as they appeared online. Those archived pages are often the only reliable record of how stories were originally published. In many cases, articles get edited, changed, or removed—sometimes openly, sometimes not. The Internet Archive often becomes the only source for seeing those changes. When major publishers block the Archive’s crawlers, that historical record starts to disappear.

The Times says the move is driven by concerns about AI companies scraping news content. Publishers seek control over how their work is used, and several—including the Times—are now suing AI companies over whether training models on copyrighted material violates the law. There’s a strong case that such training is fair use

Whatever the outcome of those lawsuits, blocking nonprofit archivists is the wrong response. Organizations like the Internet Archive are not building commercial AI systems. They are preserving a record of our history. Turning off that preservation in an effort to control AI access could essentially torch decades of historical documentation over a fight that libraries like the Archive didn’t start, and didn’t ask for. 

If publishers shut the Archive out, they aren’t just limiting bots. They’re erasing the historical record. 

Archiving and Search Are Legal 

Making material searchable is a well-established fair use. Courts have long recognized it’s often impossible to build a searchable index without making copies of the underlying material. That’s why when Google copied entire books in order to make a searchable database, courts rightly recognized it as a clear fair use. The copying served a transformative purpose: enabling discovery, research, and new insights about creative works. 

The Internet Archive operates on the same principle. Just as physical libraries preserve newspapers for future readers, the Archive preserves the web’s historical record. Researchers and journalists rely on it every day. According to Archive staff, Wikipedia alone links to more than 2.6 million news articles preserved at the Archive, spanning 249 languages. And that’s only one example. Countless bloggers, researchers, and reporters depend on the Archive as a stable, authoritative record of what was published online.

The same legal principles that protect search engines must also protect archives and libraries. Even if courts place limits on AI training, the law protecting search and web archiving is already well established.

The Internet Archive has preserved the web’s historical record for nearly thirty years. If major publishers begin blocking that mission, future researchers may find that huge portions of that historical record have simply vanished. There are real disputes over AI training that must be resolved in courts. But sacrificing the public record to fight those battles would be a profound, and possibly irreversible, mistake. 

Ocean bacteria team up to break down biodegradable plastic

MIT Latest News - Mon, 03/16/2026 - 10:00am

Biodegradable plastics could help alleviate the plastic waste crisis that is polluting the environment and harming our health. But how long plastics take to degrade and how environmental bacteria work together to break them down is still largely unknown.

Understanding how plastics are broken down by microbes could help scientists create more sustainable materials and even new microbial recycling systems that convert plastic waste into useful materials.

Now MIT researchers have taken an important first step toward understanding how bacteria work together to break down plastic. In a new paper, the researchers uncovered the role of individual ocean bacteria in the breakdown of a widely used biodegradable plastic. They also showed the complementary processes microbes use to fully consume the plastic, with one microbe cleaving the plastic into its component chemicals and others consuming each chemical.

The researchers say it’s one of the first studies illuminating specific bacterial species’ role in the breakdown of plastic and indicates the speed of plastic degradation can vary widely depending on a few key factors.

“There is a lot of ambiguity about how long these materials actually exist in the environment,” says lead author Marc Foster, a PhD student in the MIT-WHOI Joint Program. “This shows plastic biodegradation is highly dependent on the microbial community where the plastic ends up. It’s also dependent on the plastics — the chemistry of the polymer and how they’re made as a product. It’s important to understand these processes because we’re trying to constrain the environmental lifetime of these materials.”

Joining Foster on the paper are MIT PhD candidate Philip Wasson; former MIT postdoc Andreas Sichert; MIT undergraduate Deborah Madden; Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute researchers Matthew Hayden and Adam Subhas; Chong Becker and Sebastian Gross of the international chemical and plastic company BASF; Otto Cordero, an MIT associate professor of civil and environmental engineering; Darcy McRose, MIT’s Thomas D. and Virginia W. Cabot Career Development Professor; and Desirée Plata, MIT’s School of Engineering Distinguished Climate and Energy Professor. The paper appears in the journal Environmental Science and Technology.

Uncovering collaboration

Scientists hope biodegradable plastic can be used to address the mountains of plastic waste piling up in our oceans and landfills.

“More than half of produced plastic is either sent to landfills or directly released into the environment,” Foster says. “But without knowing the specifics of different degradation processes, we won’t be able to accurately predict the lifetime of these materials and better control that degradation.”

To date, many studies into the biodegradation of plastics have focused on single microbial organisms, but Foster says that’s not representative of how most plastics are broken down in the environment.

“It’s really rare for a single bacterium to carry out the full degradation process because it requires a significant metabolic burden to carry all of the enzymatic functions to depolymerize the polymer and then use those chemical subunits as a carbon and energy source,” Foster says.

Other studies have sought to capture the molecular footprints of groups of bacteria as they degrade plastic, which gives a snapshot of the species involved without uncovering the mechanisms of action.

For this study, the researchers wanted to uncover the roles of specific bacterial species as they fully degraded plastic. They started with a type of biodegradable plastic known as an aromatic aliphatic co-polyester. Such plastic is used in shopping bags and food packaging. It’s also often laid across the soil of farms to prevent weeds and retain moisture.

To begin the study, researchers at BASF, which produces that type of plastic, first placed samples of the product into different depths of the Mediterranean Sea to let bacteria grow as a thin biofilm around the plastic. The company then shipped the samples to researchers at MIT, who isolated as many species of bacteria as possible from the samples. The researchers mixed those isolates and identified 30 bacterial species that continued to grow in abundance on the plastic.

Using carbon dioxide as a measure of plastic degradation, the researchers isolated each bacterium and found one, Pseudomonas pachastrellae, that could depolymerize the plastic compounds, breaking them into the three chemical components of the plastic: terephthalic acid, sebacic acid, and butanediol.

But that bacterium couldn’t consume all three components on its own. One by one, the researchers exposed each bacterium to each chemical, finding no bacteria that could consume all three, although they did find some species that could consume one or two chemicals on their own.

Finally, the researchers selected five bacterial species based on their complementary breakdown abilities and showed the small group exhibited the same ability to fully degrade the plastic as the 30-member bacteria community.

“I was able to minimize the degradation process to this simplistic set of specific metabolic functions,” Foster says. “And then when I took out one bacterium, the mineralization dropped, which indicated the organism was controlling the degradation of the polymer. Then when I had each one of the bacteria alone in a culture, none of them could reach the same degradation as all five together, indicating there was this complementary function required. It worked much better than I thought it would.”

The researchers also found the five-member bacteria community couldn’t mineralize a different plastic, showing groups of bacteria may only be able to mineralize specific plastics.

“It highlights that the microbes living where this plastic ends up are going to dictate the plastic’s lifetime,” Foster says.

Faster plastic degradation

Foster notes the bacteria in his study are likely specific to the Mediterranean Sea. The study also only involved bacteria that could survive in his lab environment. Still, Foster says it’s one of the first papers that identifies the roles of bacteria in consuming plastic.

“Most studies wouldn’t be able to identify the specific bacteria that’s controlling each complementary mineralization process,” Foster says. “Here we can say this bacteria controls degradation, these bacteria handle mineralization, and then we show the function of each bacteria and show that together, they can remove the entire polymer.”

Foster says the work is an important first step toward creating microbial systems that are better at breaking down plastic or converting it into something useful. In follow-up work for his PhD, he is exploring what makes successful bacterial pairs for faster plastic consumption and how enzymes dock on plastic particles to initiate and continue degradation.

The work was supported by the MIT Climate and Sustainability Consortium and BASF SE. Partial support was provided by the U.S. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program.

You can bet on climate disasters. Business is booming

ClimateWire News - Mon, 03/16/2026 - 6:23am
Traders are placing wagers on the likelihood of disasters, activists being jailed and oil depots exploding.

Pages