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Week of November 10–14, 2025: Major AI News Highlights

Weekly AI News (Nov 10–14 2025): Anthropic commits $50B to U.S. data-centres; IBM survey finds 81% of CDOs prioritise AI but struggle with readiness; Gartner predicts 25% of IT work done by AI by 2030; Cerebras launches sovereign AI initiative; EU considers pausing parts of AI Act.

14 November 20252 min read

Introduction

The week of November 10–14, 2025 underscored how AI is increasingly shifting from novelty to essential infrastructure and enterprise value. From billion-dollar data-centre commitments to global readiness surveys and regulatory recalibrations, the pace of transformation remains relentless.

1. Anthropic Announces $50 Billion U.S. Data-Centre Build-out

Anthropic revealed plans to invest $50 billion in new U.S. data-centres (Texas & New York) in partnership with Fluidstack to scale compute for its Claude AI systems. The build-out is intended to meet surging enterprise demand while strengthening infrastructure sovereignty

2. IBM Study: 81 % of CDOs Prioritising AI — But Readiness Lags

An IBM Institute for Business Value study found that 81 % of Chief Data Officers now prioritise AI investment. Yet only 26 % say their organisation is confident in using unstructured data to drive business value. The gap between ambition and execution remains pronounced.

3. Gartner Survey: By 2030, 25 % of IT Work Will Be Done by AI Alone

Gartner released findings indicating that by 2030, 25 % of IT work is expected to be performed by AI alone; with 75 % of work being human-augmented. For CIOs, the challenge is not whether AI will touch their domain — but whether they are ready for the shift.

4. Cerebras Systems Launches “Cerebras for Nations” Sovereign AI Initiative

Cerebras announced the launch of “Cerebras for Nations”, a global programme to partner with governments and industries in developing sovereign AI models and infrastructure — signalling a push beyond commercial AI to national-scale capability.

5. European Commission Considers Pausing Key Provisions of the EU Artificial Intelligence Act

Under pressure from Big Tech and U.S. stakeholders, the European Commission is reportedly weighing delays to certain provisions of the landmark EU AI Act. The move, if confirmed, could reshape global benchmarks for AI regulation.

Conclusion

This week’s developments reaffirm three core themes:

  • Infrastructure scale is accelerating — both private and sovereign.

  • Readiness and data strategy remain the gating factors for enterprise-value from AI.

  • Regulation and national strategy are adapting under commercial and geopolitical pressure.
    For senior product and innovation leaders, the context is clear: to stay ahead you must align infrastructure, data strategy, and compliance — not just capability.

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