AI in 2025: What to Expect

Plus: AI agents, healthcare’s AI horizon & more!

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Happy New Year! 2025 promises to be a year filled with dizzying challenges and changes.

The ripple effects of AI will be felt across industries, from healthcare and finance to retail and customer service—revolutionizing how we live, work, and solve problems.

As former OpenAI Chief Scientist Ilya Sutskever recently noted: we’re transitioning from an era of training AI on internet data to one centered on building systems capable of genuine reasoning and understanding. In short, the next generation of AI is not just smarter—it’s becoming more intuitive, adaptive, and transformative.

In this special edition, we’ll unpack what this means for key sectors, share expert predictions, and explore how you can harness these advancements to stay ahead.

Let’s get started!

Credit: Pixabay

AI Agents

Get ready for the “Year of the AI Agent.” AI agents are emerging as the next big tech leap, surpassing traditional chatbots with systems that can act, decide, and learn autonomously. These "killer apps" are poised to reshape personal and professional productivity.

Think of AI agents as virtual assistants on steroids—tools that not only assist but act independently based on your habits and preferences:

  • At home: A digital agent could book travel, reschedule medical appointments, or notify you of the best retail deals—all while respecting your privacy.

  • In business: Research and consulting firm Gartner named agentic AI the top tech trend for 2025.  These systems can automate customer service, streamline workflows, and enable faster data-driven decisions. Companies adopting them stand to gain a competitive edge by reallocating human resources to strategic, creative tasks.

Want to know more about AI agents? We recommend this explainer piece from Microsoft. Also, this article from Yahoo Finance has great examples of use cases that could be in our future. 

The tech giants are already eyeing agentic AI in their next-wave plans. Google’s Gemini 2.0 launched in December with it, and OpenAI is expected to roll out an autonomous agent platform sometime this month.

This transformation won’t happen overnight, but as AI agents grow more intuitive and accessible, they’re set to redefine how we manage tasks—ushering in unprecedented levels of personalization and efficiency.

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Credit: Pixabay

AI in Healthcare

Healthcare is one area where AI is driving much-needed advancements that are changing the landscape. In 2025, artificial intelligence is accelerating new approaches to patient care, medical research, and operational efficiency.

Generative AI is already tackling routine tasks like appointment scheduling and patient intake, reducing administrative burdens on clinicians and helping to address staff shortages. Beyond efficiency, AI is unlocking new possibilities in disease prevention, early diagnosis, and targeted treatments, offering hope for a healthier future.

Key breakthroughs expected in 2025:

  • Precision medicine: AI enables treatment plans tailored to individual patients by analyzing medical histories, genetic data, and lifestyle factors. Previously untapped healthcare data produced by hospitals—97% of it—can now drive better outcomes.

  • Digital twins: Virtual patient models simulate treatments to determine optimal outcomes. At Johns Hopkins, digital twins of hearts are already predicting arrhythmias and personalizing cardiac care.

  • Drug trials: AI-powered simulations speed up the drug approval process and reduce risks. Digital twins help identify patient subgroups where experimental drugs show maximum efficacy, offering new paths to success.

  • Drug discovery: Machine learning is accelerating the development of promising drug candidates, cutting years off traditional timelines and slashing costs.

  • Patient-facing AI: Tools like ChatGPT have outperformed doctors in diagnostic accuracy and empathy in controlled studies, hinting at a future where AI complements human providers (rather than replaces them) in patient care.

Despite its promise, AI in healthcare faces skepticism. A recent Deloitte report found that 80% of patients want transparency when AI influences medical decisions, and only 30% fully trust AI-generated information.

AI will play a central role in advancing medicine in 2025, but trust and accuracy remain critical. Building robust governance frameworks and addressing bias in AI systems will be essential to ensuring this transformation benefits everyone.

Credit: Pixabay

AI Cybersecurity

One area we’re keeping an eye on (and we won’t lie, it’s keeping us up at night) is the darker side of AI and its impact on our security. 2025 may turn out to be the year when detecting fraud is no longer straightforward, with deepfakes and AI-generated content making scams more convincing—and dangerous—than ever.

Online scams were once easier to detect, and needed special skills or expensive resources to pull off. Now, AI has democratized deception, enabling anyone to create lifelike imitations of voices, writing, and appearances.

How it works:

  • Text: AI models can replicate your writing style with access to just a few samples, crafting emails and messages that feel eerily authentic.

  • Audio: With as little as three seconds of your voice, AI can produce convincing conversations or speeches.

  • Video and images: Deepfakes create lifelike portrayals of individuals, including in compromising or fabricated scenarios.

Once aimed at celebrities, these impersonations now target everyday individuals, fueling sophisticated scams. Deepfake scams cost the U.S. billions annually. For example, impersonations of Elon Musk have been linked to significant fraud, according to this I-Team CBS news report.

AI tools amplify the risk of personalized scams. Scammers combine leaked data with AI to create highly tailored messages and media that bypass traditional skepticism.

How you can protect yourself:

  • Trust, but verify: Approach unexpected messages and media with caution. Assume they could be fully AI-generated until proven otherwise.

  • Minimize exposure: Protect your data. Limit what you share online to reduce the material scammers can use to mimic you.

  • Leverage AI tools: Emerging technologies like McAfee’s Audio Detection and AI-powered fraud detection systems are fighting back, flagging fake emails, audio, and websites before they reach you.

As AI becomes a tool for fraudsters and defenders, the balance of power will hinge on awareness and innovation. Cybersecurity experts emphasize vigilance: trust more slowly, verify more thoroughly, and expect that AI’s role in scams—and in stopping them—will only grow.

Credit: Mnemonade

AI Entertainment

2025 is poised to be the year when generative AI tools gain serious traction in the media and entertainment industry. AI is rewriting Hollywood’s script and leveling the playing field for independent filmmakers.

This year’s bold moves: Lionsgate announced a partnership with Runway AI, signaling a significant shift in how visual effects (VFX) are created. The goal: faster, more cost-effective VFX production that could reshape industry workflows.

Notable AI-driven projects include:

  • Tom Hanks’ Here where AI-driven age regression took center stage, showcasing how generative tools can seamlessly transform actors on screen.

  • The Last Screenwriter: A Swiss sci-fi drama written with AI made headlines as one of the first full-length films created with AI assistance.

Tools like Wonder Studio can automate intricate animation tasks, from lighting to character movements, giving smaller teams the ability to compete with Hollywood's biggest players.

Smaller production companies are harnessing generative AI to create high-quality content with fewer resources. We recently watched Meta Puppet’s Mnemonade, an award-winning AI-powered short film that tells the poignant story of an elderly woman with dementia who reconnects with lost memories through food.

While the visuals dazzled, the AI-generated aesthetic left us feeling strangely uncomfortable. Is “creepy” a new cinematic art style?

Expect breakout surprises in 2025 as experimental creators push generative AI to its limits, blending technology and artistry in ways we’ve never seen.

AI in the News (in case you missed it)
  • Move over, Gen Alpha: 2025 marks the start of the Gen Beta era. Watch here. 

  • AI trial to spot heart condition before symptoms. Read here.

  • If AI is so good, why are there still so many jobs for translators? Listen here.

  • How AI is unlocking ancient texts — and could rewrite history. Read here.

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Here.Now.AI Editorial team: Lori, Justin, and Lisa