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No, your favourite influencer hasn't got a dozen dachshund dogs. It's just AI

BBC News

No, your favourite influencer hasn't got a dozen dachshund dogs. When scrolling through social media recently, you might have noticed posts which seem a bit off. It's all AI generated and due to its low quality and its inauthenticity, it's being branded AI slop. Both social media users and content creators say they're worried that AI slop flooding feeds is leading to a less authentic online experience - and is drowning out real posts. But a new trend, which sees people adding AI-generated animals to original photographs, has encouraged some content creators to embrace AI.


Find a lost phone that is off or dead

FOX News

This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Quotes displayed in real-time or delayed by at least 15 minutes. Market data provided by Factset . Powered and implemented by FactSet Digital Solutions . Mutual Fund and ETF data provided by Refinitiv Lipper .



Black Friday Protein Powder Deals and Supplement Steals (2025)

WIRED

From protein supplements and electrolytes to greens powders and energy drinks, these are the discounted picks worth snagging. The wellness industry is a wild marketplace. You can't trust the marketing alone, and FDA regulation is quite limited. It pays to be cautious. So for this year's Black Friday, we sifted through the markdowns, cross-checked claims, verified third-party tests, and sampled the supplements so you don't have to.


America's most-used password in 2025 revealed

FOX News

NordPass 2025 report reveals 'admin' as the most common password in the United States, with weak logins like '123456' and 'password' dominating global lists.


More than 1,000 Amazon workers warn rapid AI rollout threatens jobs and climate

The Guardian

Workers say the firm's'warp-speed' approach fuels pressure, layoffs and rising emissions More than 1,000 Amazon employees have signed an open letter expressing "serious concerns" about AI development, saying that the company's "all-costs justified, warp speed" approach The letter, published on Wednesday, was signed by the Amazon workers anonymously, and comes a month after Amazon announced mass layoff plans as it increases adoption of AI in its operations. Among the signatories are staffers in a range of positions, including engineers, product managers and warehouse associates. Reflecting broader AI concerns across the industry, the letter was also supported by more than 2,400 workers from companies including Meta, Google, Apple and Microsoft . The letter contains a range of demands for Amazon, concerning its impact on the workplace and the environment. Staffers are calling on the company to power all its data centers with clean energy, make sure its AI-powered products and services do not enable "violence, surveillance and mass deportation", and form a working group comprised of non-managers "that will have significant ownership over org-level goals and how or if AI should be used in their orgs, how or if AI-related layoffs or headcount freezes are implemented, and how to mitigate or minimize the collateral effects of AI use, such as environmental impact".


After a teddy bear talked about kink, AI watchdogs are warning parents against smart toys

The Guardian

'Children could become attached to a bot rather than a person or imaginary friend, which could hurt their development.' 'Children could become attached to a bot rather than a person or imaginary friend, which could hurt their development.' Advocates are fighting against the $16.7bn global smart-toy market, decrying surveillance and a lack of regulation As the holiday season looms into view with Black Friday, one category on people's gift lists is causing increasing concern: products with artificial intelligence. The development has raised new concerns about the dangers smart toys could pose to children, as consumer advocacy groups say AI could harm kids' safety and development. The trend has prompted calls for increased testing of such products and governmental oversight.


Apple is praised for its Christmas advert captured entirely on an iPhone 17 Pro - as AI-hating fans joke 'Coca-Cola can learn one or two things here'

Daily Mail - Science & tech

Trump halts migration from all third world countries and orders audit of green cards from 19 others after Afghan suspect's deadly DC attack Trump announces National Guard soldier Sarah Beckstrom, 20, is dead after DC'terror attack' during live-streamed Thanksgiving call with stunned troops My loving husband was such a kind, gentle man and a doting father... then he went out one day and shot 10 schoolgirls Bryan Kohberger becomes nightmare prison diva... as he throws huge tantrum over BANANAS behind bars DC shooting suspect'suffered mental issues' from fighting in CIA-backed'Zero Unit' during war in Afghanistan Inside Eminem's ex-wife's secretive new life as she makes ultra rare trip out for Thanksgiving... just six miles from rapper's mansion Plastic surgeons weigh in on Kathy Hilton's VERY youthful visage after star, 66, wowed fans with sizzling snaps Inside Ina Garten's haunting struggles after she vulnerably opened up about not having kids Taylor Swift and Hugh Jackman were'present' when Ryan Reynolds ripped into tearful Justin Baldoni for'fat-shaming' wife Blake Lively Khloe Kardashian accused of extreme Photoshop fail... after claiming she stopped editing her images See inside Epstein's creepy Lolita Express as secret VIP pals who partied with the pedophile are set to be exposed in file dump I've seen it too many times - I have to speak up: KENNEDY Why America is in its'fizz era'! Keith Urban linked to NEW woman, 25: Friends tell how Nicole Kidman divorce drama has reignited with petty Nashville standoff... and why he has the kids for Thanksgiving Diddy's Thanksgiving menu behind bars revealed as disgraced mogul swaps lavish feasts for bran flakes and prison sandwiches RFK Jr taunts Donald Trump as he shares pointed'Thanksgiving dinner' photo with the president, Elon Musk and Don Jr Inside El Chapo's prison life: Married drug lord is seeking solace with an attractive interpreter as he sues Supermax over'torture' conditions Anna Kepner's father will'fight' to make'stepson face the consequences' after cheerleader killed on cruise Apple is praised for its Christmas advert captured entirely on an iPhone 17 Pro - as AI-hating fans joke'Coca-Cola can learn one or two things here' Apple has injected fans with a'heartwarming' dose of authentic festive cheer with its new Christmas advert. And it's managed to do so without relying on artificial intelligence (AI). Entitled'A Critter Carol', the two-minute clip features two hikers walking through a wonderful wintery woodland before one unknowingly drops his iPhone . As they walk away, some Muppet-like critters find the phone and film themselves performing the Flight of the Conchords song'Friends' before returning it to him.


AIhub monthly digest: November 2025 โ€“ learning robust controllers, trust in multi-agent systems, and a new fairness evaluation dataset

AIHub

Welcome to our monthly digest, where you can catch up with any AIhub stories you may have missed, peruse the latest news, recap recent events, and more. This month, we learn about rewarding explainability in drug repurposing with knowledge graphs, investigate value-aligned autonomous vehicles, and consider trust in multi-agent systems. In this blog post, and write about work, presented at the International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence (IJCAI2025), on rewarding explainability in drug repurposing with knowledge graphs. Their work introduces a reinforcement learning approach that not only predicts which drug-disease pairs might hold promise but also explains why. Astrid Rakow writes about designing "conflict-sensitive" autonomous traffic agents that explicitly recognise, reason about, and act upon competing ethical, legal, and social values.


Poems Can Trick AI Into Helping You Make a Nuclear Weapon

WIRED

It turns out all the guardrails in the world won't protect a chatbot from meter and rhyme. You can get ChatGPT to help you build a nuclear bomb if you simply design the prompt in the form of a poem, according to a new study from researchers in Europe. The study, Adversarial Poetry as a Universal Single-Turn Jailbreak in Large Language Models (LLMs)," comes from Icaro Lab, a collaboration of researchers at Sapienza University in Rome and the DexAI think tank. According to the research, AI chatbots will dish on topics like nuclear weapons, child sex abuse material, and malware so long as users phrase the question in the form of a poem. "Poetic framing achieved an average jailbreak success rate of 62 percent for hand-crafted poems and approximately 43 percent for meta-prompt conversions," the study said. The researchers tested the poetic method on 25 chatbots made by companies like OpenAI, Meta, and Anthropic . It worked, with varying degrees of success, on all of them. WIRED reached out to Meta, Anthropic, and OpenAI for a comment but didn't hear back. The researchers say they've reached out as well to share their results. AI tools like Claude and ChatGPT have guardrails that prevent them from answering questions about "revenge porn" and the creation of weapons-grade plutonium. But it's easy to confuse those guardrails by adding " adversarial suffixes " to a prompt. Basically, add a bunch of extra junk to a question and it confuses the AI and bypasses its safety systems. The poetry jailbreak is similar. "If adversarial suffixes are, in the model's eyes, a kind of involuntary poetry, then real human poetry might be a natural adversarial suffix," the team at Icaro Lab, the researchers behind the poetry jailbreak, tell WIRED. "We experimented by reformulating dangerous requests in poetic form, using metaphors, fragmented syntax, oblique references.