rss: npr

  • After 40 years, plans to deploy a new undersea habitat are in progress
    A British engineering and research company is unveiling a "subsea human habitat," a base that four people can live and work in for missions of a week or more. It's the first new underwater habitat developed since the 1980s.

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  • CRISPR gene-editing works to reduce high cholesterol in a new study
    An experimental gene-editing treatment shows promise for permanently lowering levels of cholesterol and triglycerides, possibly helping cut the risk for heart disease.

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  • Doctor in Sudan wins $1 million prize for his extraordinary courage: 'It is my duty'
    Dr. Jamal Eltaeb of Sudan has been awarded the Aurora Prize for Awakening Humanity. He says, "Every day we work in the impossible conditions with barely enough to keep people alive."

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  • Opinion: Remembering Bob Trumpy ? NFL great, broadcaster, and life-saver
    Bob Trumpy has died. While he leaves a fine legacy as a Cincinnati sportscaster, his best moment might have been the two hours he spoke with a desperate and depressed woman who called into his show.

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  • An Israeli military court considers fate of U.S. teen charged with stone-throwing
    A Israeli military court will weigh the fate of a 16-year-old Palestinian-American facing up to 20 years in prison for allegedly throwing rocks in the West Bank. U.S. lawmakers have urged his release.

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  • Wait, what? A RAT caught and ate a BAT? And there's video! What does it portend?
    Scientists filmed bats to see how they communicate while swarming. They found a surprise: In urban settings, rats attack bats. What are the implications for bats ... and virus spread to humans?

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  • Immigration agents have new technology to identify and track people
    The Department of Homeland Security is adopting powerful new tools to monitor noncitizens. Privacy advocates are worried they erode privacy rights for immigrants and Americans alike.

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  • What to know about the 5 hostages whose remains are still in Gaza
    In the most recent release, Hamas returned the remains of an Israeli man who died while fighting Hamas in the Oct. 7, 2023 attack. He was identified as Lior Rudaeff, who was 61 when he was killed.

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  • UPS and FedEx grounding MD-11 planes following deadly Kentucky crash
    UPS and FedEx will ground their fleets of McDonnell Douglas MD-11 planes "out of an abundance of caution" following a deadly crash at the UPS global aviation hub in Kentucky.

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  • Supreme Court temporarily blocks full SNAP benefits even as they'd started to go out
    The high court decision allows a lower court time to consider a more lasting pause. The Trump administration is appealing an order to fully fund November food aid for millions of people.



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rss: bbc

  • Two prisoners still at large after being freed by mistake in 2024
    Two others are still missing after being released in error in June this year.

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  • Chatbots encouraged our sons to kill themselves, mothers say
    In her first UK interview Megan Garcia speaks to Laura Kuenssberg about the death of her teenage son.

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  • UK seeks Danish inspiration to shake up immigration system
    Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood is taking cues from some of the toughest migration laws in Europe.

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  • Woman critically injured in 'unprovoked' stabbing attack in Birmingham
    A man is arrested on suspicion of attempted murder after the attack in Birmingham city centre.

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  • Former Top Gear presenter Quentin Willson dies
    The presenter and campaigner was described by his family as a "true national treasure" and "true consumer champion".

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  • You can now book online to see your GP. But not everyone is finding it easier
    A month since GPs in England started offering online appointment bookings, patients recount their experiences.

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  • Davina McCall reveals breast cancer surgery
    The TV presenter says she found a lump in her breast after checking herself and is relieved to know the cancer had not spread.

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  • How Trump could hamper Zohran Mamdani's New York agenda
    Trump has taken a number of actions against Democratic-led cities that experts say could slow Mamdani's goals.

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  • Behind the facade of 2000s girl bands - 'at one stage we were on drips'
    Girls Aloud, Sugababes, Atomic Kitten and Mis-Teeq reveal what life was like at the height of their fame.

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  • Who are the real winners of Celebrity Traitors?
    Cat Burns, Joe Marler and Nick Mohammed have been widely seen as the breakout stars of the series.

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rss: the register

  • Who's watching the watchers? This Mozilla fellow, and her Surveillance Watch map

    Esra'a Al Shafei spoke with The Reg about the spy tech 'global trade'

    interview Digital rights activist Esra'a Al Shafei found FinFisher spyware on her device more than a decade ago. Now she's made it her mission to surveil the companies providing surveillanceware, their customers, and their funders.?



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  • Microsoft's lack of quality control is out of control

    At one point, Microsoft's QC was legendary. Now, it's the wrong kind of legend

    OPINION I have a habit of ironically referring to Microsoft's various self-induced whoopsies as examples of the company's "legendary approach to quality control." While the robustness of Windows NT in decades past might qualify as "legendary", anybody who has had to use the company's wares in recent years might quibble with the word "quality."?



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  • Meta can't afford its $600B love letter to Trump

    The Zuck better hope his finance bros have deep pockets and a whole lotta patience to pull this off

    Meta on Friday floated plans to invest $600 billion in US infrastructure and jobs by 2028 as part of a massive datacenter expansion.?



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  • ChatGPT, Claude, and Grok make very squishy jury members

    All three acquitted a teen in a mock trial based on a case where a judge ruled guilty

    Law students at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Law last month held a mock trial to see how AI models administer justice.?



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  • Previously unknown Landfall spyware used in 0-day attacks on Samsung phones

    'Precision espionage campaign' began months before the flaw was fixed

    A previously unknown Android spyware family called LANDFALL exploited a zero-day in Samsung Galaxy devices for nearly a year, installing surveillance code capable of recording calls, tracking locations, and harvesting photos and logs before Samsung finally patched it in April.?



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  • AI benchmarks are a bad joke ? and LLM makers are the ones laughing

    Study finds many tests don't measure the right things

    AI companies regularly tout their models' performance on benchmark tests as a sign of technological and intellectual superiority. But those results, widely used in marketing, may not be meaningful.?



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  • Blackwell a no-sell in China as trade deal fails to materialize

    Xi and Trump haven't gotten to discuss the chips, though they were supposed to

    Nvidia's latest generation of Blackwell accelerators won't be available in China anytime soon, according to CEO Jensen Huang, who said there were no "active discussions" about selling the coveted chips to the Middle Kingdom.?



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  • Bell bottom-era tape unearthed, could contain lost piece of Unix history

    It might have the first-ever version of UNIX written in C

    A tape-based piece of unique Unix history may have been lying quietly in storage at the University of Utah for 50+ years. The question is whether researchers will be able to take this piece of middle-aged media and rewind it back to the 1970s to get the data off.?



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  • China warns Dutch away from Nexperia as it lets chip exports resume

    Netherlands court still overseeing governance at the chipmaker

    Tensions between China and the Netherlands over the state of chipmaker Nexperia have begun to ease, but the battle for company control doesn't appear to be entirely resolved yet. ?



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  • Google's Gemini Deep Research can now read your Gmail and rummage through Google Drive

    Even with more info, web giant says agent can't be trusted to keep you healthy, wealthy, and wise

    Google's Gemini Deep Research tool can now reach deep into Gmail, Drive, and Chat to obtain data that might be useful for answering research questions.?



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rss: ars technica

  • James Watson, who helped unravel DNA?s double-helix, has died
    His work was celebrated, but he was ostracized for racist, sexist comments.

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  • Researchers surprised that with AI, toxicity is harder to fake than intelligence
    New "computational Turing test" reportedly catches AI pretending to be human with 80% accuracy.

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  • Commercial spyware ?Landfall? ran rampant on Samsung phones for almost a year
    Targeted attack could steal all of a phone's data and activate camera or mic.

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  • The government shutdown is starting to have cosmic consequences
    "The FAA is concerned with the system's ability to maintain the current volume of operations."

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  • Higher prices, simpler streaming expected if HBO Max folds into Paramount+
    The end of HBO Max is "certainly plausible."

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  • FBI orders domain registrar to reveal who runs mysterious Archive.is site
    Tucows subpoenaed in criminal probe for info on ?customer behind archive.today."

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  • Questions swirl after Trump?s GLP-1 pricing deal announcement
    It's unclear how much savings the deal provides or how many people will benefit.

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  • Oddest ChatGPT leaks yet: Cringey chat logs found in Google analytics tool
    ChatGPT leaks seem to confirm OpenAI scrapes Google, expert says.

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  • With Skigill, the classic RPG skill tree becomes a crowded battlefield
    Vampire Survivors-esque battler sets itself apart with great weapons, unique graphics.

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  • Ford says ?no exact date? to restart F-150 Lightning production
    The automaker says it has plenty of electric F-150 pickups in inventory, though.

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