rss: npr

  • The quiz tracked Trump's wins and losses this week. Can you win bigly?
    Plus, Serena Williams, Peabo Bryson, Kalshi and United Airlines make an appearance. Have you been paying attention?
  • For many fans, the World Cup begins with a pack of stickers. The U.S. is catching up
    Collecting Panini stickers is a World Cup tradition beloved in Europe and Latin America. In the U.S., interest has been building steadily, and this summer, the buzz is bigger than ever.
  • The Supreme Court has left limited alternatives for protecting minority voting rights
    After a major Supreme Court ruling, state-level voting rights acts and redistricting strategies in Democratic-led states are among the limited ways left for protecting racial-minority voters' power.
  • Scientists are teaching AI-powered robots to run lab experiments
    Scientists are building autonomous robotic labs powered by artificial intelligence. The goal, they say, is for these robots to take over human researchers' most laborious, time-consuming tasks.
  • Most K-12 teachers say AI's impact on education will eclipse the internet or computers
    A new NPR/Ipsos poll shows many teachers are using AI to save time, but a majority are also worried the technology is making it harder for students to learn to think for themselves.
  • My husband planned our 'just us' trip and it was perfect. Here's why it worked
    For a smooth, rewarding and drama-free couples trip, take as much stress out of the equation as you can — and get comfortable with the fact that a fight may arise (and that's OK).
  • Morning news brief
    Senate Republicans worked overnight to try to pass ICE funding, Trump's agenda tests the limits of some lawmakers' support, John Bolton pleads guilty to mishandling classified information.
  • Putin says Russia will bolster air defenses in response to Ukrainian drone attacks
    President Vladimir Putin says Russia will strengthen its air defenses to counter recent Ukrainian drone attacks, which have reached deep inside his country and cast a cloud over his showcase economic forum in his hometown of St. Petersburg.
  • I wrote about George Santos. Then he made a violent threat and lied about it
    NPR reported on new federal investigations examining the former Congressman's bets on the prediction market site Kalshi. Then he threatened the NPR reporter who broke the story.
  • Republicans' sweeping election overhaul fails in the Senate
    The SAVE America Act, a far-reaching Republican election overhaul that President Trump said should be his congressional allies' top priority, has failed in the Senate.


rss: bbc

  • Andrew was sub-letting Royal Lodge cottages, watchdog reveals
    A public spending watchdog examines the property arrangements of royals including Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor.
  • Burnham says he would seek to enter any Labour leadership contest
    The Greater Manchester mayor would need to win the by-election in Makerfield to be a possible candidate.
  • World-first vaccine designed by AI could protect against whole families of viruses
    Cambridge scientists say they have, for the first time, tested a vaccine designed by AI.
  • UK in most dangerous period I've known, military chief says
    Russian incursions into UK defences risk crossing a line, Chief of the Defence Staff Sir Richard Knighton tells the BBC.
  • One in four births in England is now emergency caesarean, BBC analysis shows
    The shift marks a significant rise over the last five years, but experts say there is no single, clear explanation for the increase.
  • Mangrove forests are healing after decades of human destruction
    Swampy mangrove forests are staging a surprise comeback - which is good news for coastal communities and the climate.
  • Gareth Southgate: We need to teach boys differently to girls to get best out of them
    The former England manager has made a documentary looking at the issues affecting boys and young men.
  • The deeply contentious debate around what it means to be English
    The debate about English identity has been a perennial one but has now taken on a harder edge
  • Zelensky proposes face-to-face talks in open letter to Putin
    Ukraine's president tells the Russian leader that only "direct engagement" between the two countries could end the war, with the US focused on Iran.
  • We need to stop AI developing without human input, says Anthropic co-founder
    Jack Clark tells BBC's Newsnight AI could get to the point where it develops without human input.


rss: the register

  • UK's top crime agency hamstrung by legacy IT, watchdog warns
    Regulator says NCA's aging tech drags down productivity, forces officers to juggle hardware and do manual workarounds
  • Brit regulator finds mobile network service on trains is far from first class
    Comms watchdog says up to 83% of tests fail the 'good performance' threshold
  • Tech support chap hauled out to help SWAT team saw his life flash before his eyes
    Bulletproof vests and armored vehicles were not in the job description
  • 'It would be good for the world' to slow down AI sprints, Anthropic says
    The plea for caution comes the same week it beat AI archrival OpenAI to filing for an IPO
  • Pink is the latest goon squad to use fake helpdesk calls to steal creds
    A familiar tactic popularized by chaotic crime crew Lapsus$
  • Canada wants to make its own AI, break free from US bots
    Another ally questions reliance on American AI
  • OpenAI's agent chained decade-old DoS attacks to crash web servers in seconds
    Codex drops an HTTP/2 Bomb
  • AI heavyweights warn their tech could help terrorists develop bioweapons
    Scientists and industry leaders push for mandatory DNA synthesis screening
  • Benevolent dictator Zuck will give Meta staff 30-minute breaks from keylogging privacy assault
    Tech biz teaching AI to use computers by slurping staff activity
  • AMD takes a third of server CPU market as shipments grow
    Intel still owns the room, but Epyc keeps nicking the furniture


rss: ars technica

  • The skeptic’s guide to humanoid robots going viral on the Internet
    Robot demonstrations can distort public perceptions of robotic capabilities.
  • AT&T and Verizon lose Supreme Court case over fines for selling location data
    FCC did not violate carriers' right to jury trial, court says in 8-1 ruling.
  • These LLMs are the best at resisting Russian propaganda
    Estonian government benchmark shows how dozens of models combat Russia's "strategic narratives."
  • Dashlane explains how attackers managed to download encrypted password vaults
    By targeting large numbers of users, attackers increased their chances of success.
  • Elon Musk tries again to escape FTC audits of X data handling
    Musk can't be trusted to protect X user privacy, public commenters warn FTC.
  • Cable lobby warns of chaos if FCC doesn't relax ban on foreign routers
    NCTA seeks waiver from foreign-router ban, citing memory and substrate shortages.
  • Bumblebees can spontaneously solve problems, study finds
    Scientists in Finland found bees could solve an insect version of the classic "box-and-banana" problem.
  • After 11 years at Mars, NASA's MAVEN spacecraft went out with a whisper
    “I think the team has really experienced the loss of a loved one with the end of the mission.”
  • It doesn't feel very agricultural: The 2026 Subaru Solterra review
    Subaru's badge-engineered SUV remains on sale alongside the new Trailseeker.
  • How some data center operators are tackling their water use problems
    Hyperscalers have come under scrutiny for their impact on water quality and availability.


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