Day: September 29, 2025
Czech authorities are investigating hundreds of fake accounts on TikTok suspected of attempting to sway the country’s upcoming parliamentary elections in favor of anti-establishment parties. On September 28, the portal Deník N reported that the network is spreading pro-Russian narratives, attacking the EU and NATO, and amplifying the positions of the populist SPD (“Freedom and Direct Democracy”) and Stačilo! (“Enough!”).
Automated accounts boosting pro-Russian content
Experts from the Czech Center for Online Risk Research identified nearly 300 interconnected accounts that artificially inflated the reach of their posts to millions of weekly views. The accounts, which show signs of automation, coordinate likes, comments, and shares within seconds of publication, making TikTok’s algorithm treat the content as popular and promote it to real users. Frequent errors in Czech diacritics and sudden language switches further point to non-authentic, bot-driven activity.
The Czech Telecommunications Office (ČTÚ) is in talks with TikTok and relevant institutions, while the government has opened consultations with the European Commission. Officials believe the operation resembles a troll factory and forms part of a wider strategy to undermine Czech democracy.
Elections approaching amid concerns over Russian influence
Parliamentary elections are scheduled for October 3–4, 2025. Polls show the populist opposition ANO, led by former prime minister Andrej Babiš, in the lead, followed by the governing Spolu coalition under Prime Minister Petr Fiala. Analysts say Babiš is well-positioned to form the next government, potentially with support from SPD.
Babiš has repeatedly criticized military and financial aid to Ukraine as well as the current sanctions regime against Russia. He has pledged to halt Prague’s initiative to supply ammunition to Kyiv if elected. Observers warn that such a shift could align Czech policy more closely with Moscow’s interests.
Kremlin strategy targets younger voters
According to security analysts, the Kremlin’s objective goes beyond boosting pro-Russian parties. The coordinated activity aims to destabilize democratic processes, erode trust in institutions, and deepen divisions within Czech society. TikTok is a particularly strategic tool, as younger voters could play a decisive role in the election outcome.
Pro-Russian campaigns have previously been documented in other countries, where Russian-linked disinformation spread across TikTok, Facebook, Telegram, and X. Narratives often included false corruption allegations and anti-establishment rhetoric designed to weaken pro-Western governments.
Calls for stronger cybersecurity cooperation
Czech officials have warned that if left unchecked, such influence operations could serve as a precedent for larger campaigns in future elections. Experts stress the need to strengthen national cybersecurity, enhance cooperation with social media platforms, and coordinate defensive measures at the EU level to counter Russian information warfare.

In 1654, the French philosopher and mathematician Blaise Pascal explained the logic of believing in God, expressed as a wager. The cost to a believer of wrongly placing faith is trivial, but the cost of disbelieving if God exists could be infinite. Therefore, Pascal argued that for a rational actor, the choice is obvious: bet on God.
Today, we face an analogous wager about the arrival of immensely capable artificial intelligence, but with a crucial difference—the evidence for AI’s transformative impact is mounting daily, and the timeline in which it may occur isn’t eternity but the next handful of years.
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The wager is this: Either AI will radically transform work, education, corporations, and society within a short interval of time, or it won’t. If we prepare for change and it doesn’t materialize, we’ve likely invested in digital literacy, rethought ossified institutions, and considered options for how to distribute income other than through wages. These are hardly catastrophic losses. But if we fail to prepare and transformation arrives quickly, we risk mass unemployment, obsolete educational institutions, and widespread social disruption.
The rational choice is clear. We must bet that transformation will happen.
Consider the job market, which already may be experiencing early, AI-induced tremors. Although hyperbolic, tech leaders such as Dario Amodei, founder and CEO of Anthropic, and Eric Schmidt, former CEO of Google, predict that AI will eliminate up to 50% of all entry-level white-collar jobs within one to five years. These two prognosticators join a fast-growing group of economists, Nobel laureate Geoffrey Hinton, omnipresent Elon Musk, and many other prominent academics and tech executives that warn of an impending “jobpocalypse”.
The comfortable response—I’ve heard it a thousand times—is that over millennia economies have weathered automation many times before and with each prior technical leap, the labor market adapts. New technologies always usher in a wave of new high-paying job roles to replace those they wipe out, right?
Maybe not this time. Previous waves of automation mostly replaced muscle; this one replaces judgment. Think of what will happen if easily scalable AI systems commoditize human intelligence? We’re not talking about gradually displacing factory workers over 100 or so years or small labor market shocks that can be resolved with retraining programs for a handful of service jobs. We’re talking about the displacement of a very large fraction of the white collar workforce in a very short window of time.
If we’re wrong about this transformation, what’s the cost of preparation? We’d probably create more flexible labor markets, portable benefits that aren’t tied to employment, and universal basic income pilots that might prove unnecessary. We’d teach children critical thinking and creativity instead of memorization. We’d help workers build AI-complementary skills. These investments aren’t wasted even in a “stable” world in which AI doesn’t turn the labor market upside down.
Regardless of the long-term impact of AI, our education system needs urgent reform. Our current system trains humans to do what AI does best: process information, follow rules, produce standardized outputs. In that case, universities are fine-tuning their students for obsolescence, and the latter are paying handsomely for this privilege. We already should be emphasizing judgment under uncertainty, ethical reasoning, creative problem-solving, and human connection—whatever things we believe will remain scarce when intelligence is available on demand.
It doesn’t stop there. Healthcare systems must prepare for hybrid AI-human medical teams and liability mechanisms for algorithmic decision makers. Financial markets may need circuit breakers for AI traders. Cities must plan for autonomous vehicles that will eliminate millions of driving jobs. Courts need frameworks for when agents sign contracts, invent things that are patented, or commit crimes. We also must prepare for a world where AI’s capabilities can be used for malice—powering cyberattacks, identity theft, and planning terrorist attacks.
Of great importance, we need new narratives about human worth that are less dependent on work and that account for AI’s full-fledged saturation of our lives. When machines out-think, out-work, and even out-create humans but also become the counterparty in many of our important relationships, what gives life meaning? Again, if we’re wrong about AI, we’ve done some healthy philosophical reflection. If we’re right and haven’t prepared philosophically, psychologically, and culturally, we risk a crisis of purpose that could manifest as mass mental health strain, or worse.
Some argue that AI progress has plateaued, that regulation will slow deployment, and that humans will always maintain an advantage. Perhaps. But Pascal’s logic holds: the asymmetry of outcomes demands action. There are likely to be benefits of preparing for a transformation even if it doesn’t come. The cost of not preparing for one that does will be enormous.
Pascal wagered on eternal matters. The AI wager is about the near future. The stakes for any individual might be lower in this case, but unlike Pascal’s God, AI’s arrival won’t wait for judgment day. It’s already knocking at the door. In this wager, the bad outcome isn’t that AI disappoints. It’s that it delivers on every promise while we’re still debating whether to believe it is happening.
Place your bet accordingly.
Denmark announced a temporary closure of its airspace to all civilian drones from September 29 to October 3, 2025, ahead of the European Political Community summit in Copenhagen. The decision follows multiple incursions by unidentified drones near Danish military and civilian infrastructure, prompting heightened security measures. Authorities describe the incidents as part of an emerging pattern of hybrid attacks targeting Western Europe.
Surge in drone intrusions near military sites
On September 26, 2025, Danish defense forces detected unauthorized drone flights near several sensitive locations, including Karup Air Base, the main airbase of the Royal Danish Air Force. These drones operated both within and beyond the perimeter of the base. Additional sightings were reported over Copenhagen airports and five other municipalities between September 22 and 26. The Danish government has classified these activities as serious threats to critical infrastructure, with Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen describing them as “the most significant attack Denmark has faced in recent years.”
GPS interference raises alarm in Baltic region
Compounding concerns, Germany’s air traffic control authority reported a sharp increase in GPS signal disruptions during flights. According to Deutsche Welle, 447 incidents were recorded between January and August 2025, compared with just 25 over the same period two years ago. Most disruptions occurred over the Baltic Sea and Baltic states, a pattern experts link to Russian hybrid warfare. Such interference, known as spoofing, can mislead flight crews about their position and altitude, presenting significant safety risks.
Government declares hybrid threat
Defense Minister Troels Lund Poulsen confirmed a sustained hybrid campaign involving various types of drones, underscoring that Denmark faces “systematic” threats rather than isolated incidents. He warned that “we will see more hybrid incidents” and stressed Denmark’s need to strengthen its preparedness. Justice Minister Peter Hummelgør suggested the aim of such attacks is to “spread fear and sow division” across Western Europe. Denmark’s Security and Intelligence Service chief Finn Borch confirmed rapid responses in affected areas, including deploying helicopters to intercept suspicious drones.
Broader context of hybrid provocations in Europe
This escalation is part of a larger pattern of disruptive acts in Western Europe over the past year, including underwater cable damage, pipeline sabotage in the Baltic Sea, mysterious warehouse fires, and targeted package explosions. In September 2025, Russian provocations included dispatching over twenty drones into Poland. The Danish measures resemble a preemptive effort to counter what experts see as Kremlin testing of hybrid warfare tactics. Law provisions allow the Minister of Transport to restrict airspace for public safety, with violations punishable by fines or imprisonment.
Strategic risks for Europe
The recent spike in drone activity and GPS disruptions signals a possible intensification of hybrid warfare targeting NATO members. Analysts caution that without coordinated countermeasures, such tactics could undermine European security and critical infrastructure resilience. Denmark’s decisive action sets a precedent for other states facing similar threats in the Baltic region and beyond.
Denmark’s move to ground civilian drones until October 3 reflects a broader urgency to adapt to evolving threats, particularly in a geopolitical climate marked by increased Russian hybrid activity in Europe.
Copenhagen – Sweden will provide Denmark with military anti-drone capabilities during this week’s summits in Copenhagen, following last week’s drone sightings that resulted in the closure of several airports, reports 24brussels.
Denmark is set to host European Union leaders on Wednesday, followed by a broader summit of the European Political Community on Thursday. In response to the drone incursions, Denmark has heightened security measures surrounding both events.
To bolster safety during the summits, Denmark declared on Sunday the closure of its airspace to all civilian drone operations until Friday, aiming to prevent potential misidentifications of hostile drones as legal ones.
Why does Sweden link drone activity to Russian actors?
Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson stated that Russia is likely behind the recent drone activity over multiple Scandinavian airports, coinciding with the upcoming EU summit in Copenhagen. Speaking to broadcaster TV4, he noted, “The likelihood of this being about Russia wanting to send a message to countries supporting Ukraine is quite high,” although he acknowledged, “nobody really, really knows.”
He also affirmed that there is “confirmation” that drones that violated Polish airspace in September were indeed Russian. “Everything points to (Russia), but then all countries are cautious about singling out a country if they are not sure. In Poland, we know that’s what it was,” he added.
What recent disruptions have drones caused at airports in Denmark?
The incidents followed the closure of Copenhagen Airport, Scandinavia’s busiest, last Monday evening due to drone sightings. Subsequently, drones were spotted at Aalborg, Esbjerg, and Sonderborg airports, as well as at Skrydstrup air base, prompting urgent actions from authorities.
Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen described the occurrences as “the most serious attack on Danish critical infrastructure to date.”
Which other European nations have also reported unidentified drone activity?
Several NATO and European nations have reported similar sightings and disturbances caused by unidentified drones. The initial intrusion occurred in Poland, leading to the temporary closure of Rzeszów-Jasionka Airport, a key transit hub for military aid to Ukraine. Unidentified drones were also observed over the Murmelon-le-Grand military base in the Marne department of France.
Drones have been spotted around the naval base at Karlskrona, Sweden, and in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, near the Danish border.
