Government
Russia targets Ukraine's energy as trilateral talks loom
Could Ukraine hold a presidential election right now? Will Europe use frozen Russian assets to fund war? How can Ukraine rebuild China ties? 'Ukraine is running out of men, money and time' Russia targets Ukraine's energy as trilateral talks loom As the presidents of Ukraine, Russia and the United States prepare to hold their first trilateral meeting to end Russia's war in Ukraine this weekend, almost half of Ukraine is without electricity and heat in sub-zero temperatures, following repeated Russian drone strikes targeting energy infrastructure. The strikes appeared designed to break Ukrainian resistance at the negotiating table on territorial concessions to Russia - the one issue Ukraine and the US said remained unresolved at the end of talks in Davos, Switzerland, between Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelenskyy and US President Donald Trump this week.
Malaysia lifts ban on Grok after taking X at its word
Malaysia was one of the first to ban Grok over the explicit deepfakes scandal earlier this month. After being one of the first countries in the world to block Elon Musk's Grok chatbot, Malaysia has now lifted its ban. Along with Indonesia, the country moved swiftly to temporarily to X's frequently controversial AI chatbot earlier this month, after multiple emerged of it being used to generate deepfake sexualized images of people, including women and children. At the time, the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC) said the restrictions would remain in place until X Corp and parent xAI could prove they had enforced the necessary safeguards against misuse of the above nature. Malaysian authorities appear to be taking X at its word, after the MCMC released a confirming it was satisfied that Musk's company has implemented the required safety measures.
Young will suffer most when AI 'tsunami' hits jobs, says head of IMF
Georgieva said that AI would wipe out many roles traditionally taken up by younger workers. Georgieva said that AI would wipe out many roles traditionally taken up by younger workers. Young will suffer most when AI'tsunami' hits jobs, says head of IMF Artificial intelligence will be a "tsunami hitting the labour market", with young people worst affected, the head of the International Monetary Fund warned the World Economic Forum on Friday. Kristalina Georgieva told delegates in Davos that the IMF's own research suggested there would be a big transformation of demand for skills, as the technology becomes increasingly widespread. "We expect over the next years, in advanced economies, 60% of jobs to be affected by AI, either enhanced or eliminated or transformed - 40% globally," she said.
The Download: chatbots for health, and US fights over AI regulation
Plus: how wastewater tracking could help curb measles' rise in the US. Can ChatGPT Health do better? For the past two decades, there's been a clear first step for anyone who starts experiencing new medical symptoms: Look them up online. The practice was so common that it gained the pejorative moniker "Dr. But times are changing, and many medical-information seekers are now using LLMs. According to OpenAI, 230 million people ask ChatGPT health-related queries each week.
Revealed: The hilarious slang used in London 300 years ago - so, do YOU know your 'fuddle cups' from your 'cackling farts'?
Border czar rips Virginia's new'Bond villain' governor after she blocked ICE on day one... as he lays out plans to move forward without her Texas's largest city warned temperatures will plunge below freezing for 40 HOURS as millions brace for life-threatening storm Mysterious UFO-shaped'Dorito' aircraft spotted over Area 51 as strange military code is heard Meghan Trainor's teary photo with her new baby born via surrogate has sparked an almost unsayable thought. Most women won't admit it... but I will: CAROLINE BULLOCK Billionaire who predicted 2008 crash issues stark warning over'worrying' new US trend but there's one way to protect your savings AND make money McDonald's customers mind-blown after seeing prices on 2009 menu...'when life was worth living' Ryan Reynolds's TORCHED by fans over'cringe' email he allegedly sent to It Ends With Us author Colleen Hoover Florida, Texas and California lead America's housing crash as other Sun Belt states start to crack as values plunge 7.6 percent Canadian woman was euthanized'against her will' after husband was fed-up with caring for her Ex-cop who was beaten on Jan. 6 unleashes on election skeptic in chaotic congressional hearing Dr. Phil's son blocked from selling'life-threatening' footage of NYPD after Mamdani lawsuit Chilling video shows high school student rampaging through classroom with knife... before teacher steps in Trump orders a'massive' military fleet toward Iran with ominous warning about what could come next: 'We're watching' Trump explains how he got bruise on his hand at Davos that sparked MORE health rumours... as he teases FOURTH term Michael Douglas and Catherine Zeta Jones's liberal nepo son is'too spooked' to return to CNN after Scott Jennings eviscerated him during debut appearance Another awkward moment between Victoria Beckham and Nicola Peltz goes viral as fans claim Brooklyn's mum'is not the problem' Woke Karen, 63, lets VERY embarrassing detail slip to the Daily Mail after she mistook cops rushing to school for ICE'and tried to obstruct them' Paris Hilton recalls'abuse' she endured after leaked 2004 sex tape as she protests against AI deepfakes The cancer now killing more Americans under 50 than any other... and why it's still being caught too late Revealed: The hilarious slang used in London 300 years ago - so, do YOU know your'fuddle cups' from your'cackling farts'? From '6,7' to'vibe-coding', new slang words and phrases seem to pop up on an almost daily basis. But it's time to wind the clock back, as a 327-year-old dictionary reveals the slang used in London in the 17th century. The glossary of terms, titled the'New Dictionary of the Terms..of the Canting Crew' was published in 1699 to help stop naive visitors to London from getting mugged or even killed.
149 Million Usernames and Passwords Exposed by Unsecured Database
This "dream wish list for criminals" includes millions of Gmail, Facebook, banking logins, and more. The researcher who discovered it suspects they were collected using infostealing malware. A database containing 149 million account usernames and passwords--including 48 million for Gmail, 17 million for Facebook, and 420,000 for the cryptocurrency platform Binance --has been removed after a researcher reported the exposure to the hosting provider. The longtime security analyst who discovered the database, Jeremiah Fowler, could not find indications of who owned or operated it, so he worked to notify the host, which took down the trove because it violated a terms of service agreement. In addition to email and social media logins for a number of platforms, Fowler also observed credentials for government systems from multiple countries as well as consumer banking and credit card logins and media streaming platforms.
Are ICE agents trained to use 'deadly force' and evade lawsuits?
Are ICE agents trained to use'deadly force' and evade lawsuits? In the weeks since United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent Jonathan Ross shot and killed Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis, Minnesota, another ICE agent shot a Latino man in the leg, according to the Department of Homeland Security. Good's killing and the subsequent shooting have ignited a wave of calls and queries about whether ICE officers can be prosecuted. But the shootings in Minnesota are not outliers, and the history of ICE shootings shows that holding officers to account has been next to impossible. I know, because I investigated the agency's practices, obtaining documents that reveal how it operates and how its officers are trained to shield themselves from scrutiny and lawsuits.