Xenomorphs are back and bad as ever in Alien: Earth trailer

“If we don’t lock them down, it will be too late.”

Alien: Earth is set two years before the events of 1979's Alien.

It's been a long wait for diehard fans of Ridley Scott's Alien franchise, but we finally have a fittingly sinister official trailer for the spinoff prequel series, Alien: Earth, coming this summer to FX/Hulu.

As previously reported, the official premise is short and sweet: "When a mysterious space vessel crash-lands on Earth, a young woman (Sydney Chandler) and a ragtag group of tactical soldiers make a fateful discovery that puts them face-to-face with the planet’s greatest threat."

The series is set in 2120, two years before the events of the first film, Alien (1979), in a world where corporate interests are competing to be the first to unlock the key to human longevity—maybe even immortality. Showrunner Noah Hawley has said that the style and mythology will be closer to that film than Prometheus (2012) or Alien: Covenant, both of which were also prequels.

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Nintendo: Unser Eindruck nach den ersten Stunden mit der Switch 2

Die Nintendo Switch 2 ist da: größer, schwerer und wertiger als ihr Vorgänger. Wir haben die neue Konsole eingerichtet und ausprobiert. Von Peter Steinlechner (Nintendo Switch 2, Nintendo)

Die Nintendo Switch 2 ist da: größer, schwerer und wertiger als ihr Vorgänger. Wir haben die neue Konsole eingerichtet und ausprobiert. Von Peter Steinlechner (Nintendo Switch 2, Nintendo)

“In 10 years, all bets are off”—Anthropic CEO opposes decadelong freeze on state AI laws

Amodei says AI “too fast” for blanket law ban; sees fundamental world change in 2 years.

On Thursday, Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei argued against a proposed 10-year moratorium on state AI regulation in a New York Times opinion piece, calling the measure shortsighted and overbroad as Congress considers including it in President Trump's tax policy bill. Anthropic makes Claude, an AI assistant similar to ChatGPT.

Amodei warned that AI is advancing too fast for such a long freeze, predicting these systems "could change the world, fundamentally, within two years; in 10 years, all bets are off."

As we covered in May, the moratorium would prevent states from regulating AI for a decade. A bipartisan group of state attorneys general has opposed the measure, which would preempt AI laws and regulations recently passed in dozens of states.

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