The AI Moive Star
Hollywood met its first AI actress — and couldn't look away. The question is no longer whether Tilly Norwood is real. It's whether that matters.
The biggest infrastructure companies in the world are quietly rewriting how the internet works — not for people, but for the AI agents that will increasingly act on their behalf. AWS, Cloudflare, and peers are developing new protocols, identity systems, and pricing models built around the assumption that machine-generated traffic will soon dwarf human traffic. The plumbing is changing before most users have noticed.
The practical implications run deep. Agents need to authenticate themselves to services, negotiate on behalf of users, and operate within trust frameworks that the current web was never designed to support. Building that layer is not a product feature — it is years of infrastructure work that favors the companies already running the cloud.
This is the unglamorous version of the AI race that rarely makes headlines. Whoever owns the pipes that agents run through holds structural leverage over the entire ecosystem. The model companies get the press. The infrastructure companies may get the margins.
Hollywood met its first AI actress — and couldn't look away. The question is no longer whether Tilly Norwood is real. It's whether that matters.
A technology reporter sold his house for $605k— without a real estate agent, and without losing a dime of commission.
Asked to expand a text prompt, Gemini Pro instead spent 15 seconds thinking — then went ahead and generated the video without being asked.