rss: npr

  • Why next year's flu shot might not be as good as it should be
    America's withdrawal from the World Health Organization is affecting the ability of U.S. scientists to track flu and other pathogens. That could be a blow to the development of the 2025 flu vaccine.

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  • FAA to reduce air traffic by 10%. And, Trump administration plans to appeal SNAP ruling
    The FAA plans to reduce air traffic by 10% at busy airports. And, a federal judge orders the Trump administration to fully restore SNAP food benefits by today, which it plans to appeal.

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  • Under RFK Jr., the CDC is scrutinizing the childhood vaccine schedule
    Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has launched an unprecedented review of routine shots given to kids, alarming public health experts.

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  • The shutdown continues, but politics persists. That gives this quiz a lot of fodder
    Here are a bunch of questions about politics and one about bears.

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  • What's happening with furniture prices? A tale of $399 couches and tariffs
    Competition, whether from overseas rivals or second-hand goods, has kept the price of furniture relatively low. New tariffs may boost U.S. makers ? and raise prices.

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  • Support for Israel among U.S. conservatives is starting to crack. Here's why
    For a decade, political support for Israel has come from conservative Christians. But now isolationism and antisemitism are changing the tone.

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  • Want less screen-obsessed kids? Set better tech boundaries for yourself
    There's a lot of talk about how to monitor screen time for kids. But for kids to have healthy relationships with technology and smartphones, parents need to model good habits. Here's how.

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  • If we're being truthful, people are saying 'honestly' all the time
    The popularity of the word honestly online and in conversation has soared in recent years. TBH, we'd like to know what's going on.

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  • Is the job market getting worse? As the shutdown continues, this is what we know
    For the second month in a row, a government report on employment and unemployment has been delayed by the federal shutdown. That leaves analysts looking for other signs to gauge the job market.

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  • An NPR reporter's journey into Gaza, for the first time since the war began
    NPR Mideast correspondent Daniel Estrin has entered the Gaza Strip for the first time since the war began, but Israel still requires a military escort.

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rss: bbc

  • Woman who claimed to be Madeleine McCann found guilty of harassing family
    Kate and Gerry McCann say, despite the guilty verdict, they "take no pleasure in the result."

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  • A 20-minute date with a Tinder predator destroyed my life for years
    Nadia said the abuse started after she ended their date early because of "red flags".

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  • Six officers face misconduct hearing over Cardiff triple death crash
    A group of five people were reported missing before being found in a crashed car two days later.

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  • Elon Musk's $1 trillion pay deal approved by Tesla shareholders
    The richest man in the world will get hundreds of millions of new shares if he hits his targets.

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  • Test yourself: How many zeros are in Elon Musk's $1 trillion pay package?
    Can you fathom the scale of Elon Musk's pay rise?

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  • Lose weight or lose your jobs, North Sea offshore workers told
    Thousands of offshore workers are too heavy for the limitations of helicopter winch systems.

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  • Released Israeli hostage says he was sexually assaulted in Gaza captivity
    In an interview with Israeli TV, Rom Braslavski described how he was stripped naked and tied up by members of Palestinian Islamic Jihad.

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  • 'Our job is only killing' - how Sudan's brutal militia carried out a massacre
    BBC Verify tracks how the RSF killed unarmed people in a massacre that humanitarian officials believe left 2,000 dead.

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  • Mammoth ratings as Celebrity Traitors comes to a nail-biting end
    More than 11 million people tuned in to find out who emerged victorious in the Traitors' castle.

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  • Perimenopause at 38? I felt robbed, says Emma Barnett
    The BBC presenter says on her new podcast she hopes there can be a "normalisation" of the topic.

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rss: the register

  • Cybercrims plant destructive time bomb malware in industrial .NET extensions

    Multi-year wait for destruction comes to an end for mystery attackers

    Security experts have helped remove malicious NuGet packages planted in 2023 that were designed to destroy systems years in advance, with some payloads not due to hit until the latter part of this decade.?



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  • Researchers want to kill the vibe, propose better model for AI coding

    MIT researchers offer cure for illegible software

    A pair of MIT researchers have detailed a proposed new model for software that would help both humans and AI code generators alike create better and more transparent applications. No more vibing!?



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  • Musk gets approval for bumper Tesla payout but, unlike his robot, there are strings attached

    Behold the one trillion dollar man

    Tesla is awarding its CEO Elon Musk a package worth a possible $1 trillion, however, it relies in part on a dramatic increase in the value of the electric vehicle manufacturer.?



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  • 'Windows sucks,' former Microsoft Engineer says, explains how to fix it

    Respecting users choices and offering a hardcore mode among key suggestions.

    Retired Microsoft engineer Dave Plummer has waded into the argument over where Microsoft has gone wrong with Windows, suggesting that perhaps the OS needs a hardcore mode to offset some of its fluffier edges.?



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  • 25 years of meatbags permanently in space on the ISS

    All good things come to an end, and the outpost is unlikely to reach 30

    Anyone turning 25 this week has never known a time when humans weren't living in space. The same might not be true when they're 30.?



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  • Microsoft's data sovereignty: Now with extra sovereignty!

    Under shadow of US CLOUD Act, Redmond releases raft of services to calm customers in the EU

    Microsoft is again banging the data sovereignty drum in Europe, months after admitting in a French court it couldn't guarantee that data will not be transmitted to the US government when it is legally required to do so.?



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  • Bank of England says JLR's cyberattack contributed to UK's unexpectedly slower GDP growth

    This kind of material economic impact from online crooks thought to be a UK-first

    The Bank of England (BoE) has cited the cyberattack on Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) as one of the reasons for the country's slower-than-expected GDP growth in its latest rates decision.?



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  • UK tax collector falls short on digital efficiency, watchdog says

    Treasury found £1.6 billion for extra tech investment expecting 15 percent efficiency saving. So far HMRC has underwhelmed

    The UK?s tax collector is yet to reach the levels of efficiency its investment in digital services has led auditors to expect, according to a new report.?



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  • ISP help desk manager fell for ?Internet Cleaning Day? prank - then swore he got the joke

    Lost packets would be cleaned out of routers, dead gopher servers would be pulled out of holes ?

    On Call Welcome to another instalment of On Call, The Register?s Friday reader-contributed column that celebrates the fine art of tech support.?



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  • Foxconn hires humanoid robots to make servers at Nvidia's Texas factory

    We're months away from AI building AI

    Taiwanese contract manufacturer Foxconn has confirmed it will use humanoid robots to make Nvidia servers in America.?



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rss: ars technica

  • Rocket Report: Canada invests in sovereign launch; India flexes rocket muscles
    Europe's Ariane 6 rocket gave an environmental monitoring satellite a perfect ride to space.

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  • How to trade your $214,000 cybersecurity job for a jail cell
    Ransomware doesn't pay what it used to.

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  • Next-generation black hole imaging may help us understand gravity better
    But the differences are likely to be subtle, so it won't be easy.

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  • Wipers from Russia?s most cut-throat hackers rain destruction on Ukraine
    Sandworm and other Russian-state hackers unleash data-destroying payloads on their neighbors.

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  • Elon Musk wins $1 trillion Tesla pay vote despite ?part-time CEO? criticism
    Tesla investors back Musk pay despite his busy schedule running other companies.

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  • Gemini Deep Research comes to Google Finance, backed by prediction market data
    Deep Research and predictions based on Kalshi and Polymarket data are coming soon to Google Finance.

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  • AT&T falsely promised ?everyone? a free iPhone, ad-industry board rules
    AT&T loses another ad-board ruling just a week after suing the organization.

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  • Bombshell report exposes how Meta relied on scam ad profits to fund AI
    Meta goosed its revenue by targeting users likely to click on scam ads, docs show.

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  • ?It?s only a matter of time before people die?: Trump cuts hit food inspections
    American inspections of foreign food facilities hit historic lows this year.

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  • After Russian spaceport firm fails to pay bills, electric company turns the lights off
    "If you increase the cost, you?ll get everything in two years. If not, I?m sorry.?

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