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Amazon's delivery drivers will be forced to wear AI GLASSES that give them turn-by-turn directions to shave seconds off deliveries

Daily Mail - Science & tech

Tearful Kim Kardashian, 45, reveals doctors found brain aneurysm after MRI... as she blames stressful Kanye West divorce As royal insiders dish the dirt, this is what I'm told is the truth about Prince Andrew's daughters This is the exact plan I followed to supercharge my weight loss... and the surprising jab side-effect that cured me of my REAL problem: SUSAN ANDERSON Finance guru storms out of podcast with illegal migrants $420K in debt who insist they'deserve' new car and pool Dakota Johnson reveals her biggest'red flag' in men after Chris Martin split'Gaslighting' and'black out' fights: Kristen Bell and Dax Shepard's'volatile' marriage laid bare by insiders The secret calls and frantic meetings over Congressman's alleged affair with aide who set herself on fire in scandal that could upend Trump's future Pete Hegseth dealt another blow as judge shoots down effort to rebrand Pentagon with'warrior ethos' There's a taboo most men find repulsive... but if they can handle it, says JANA HOCKING, it's the biggest turn on ever The real reason behind Cracker Barrel's disastrous logo change... and it makes complete sense Astonishing new video shows Louvre robbers escaping in a mechanical delivery basket with ยฃ76m-worth of jewels - after evading CCTV that was'pointing the wrong way' Elon Musk's ex Grimes baffles fans with bizarre circular face tattoo as they insist inking looks like RINGWORM Putin ally accuses Trump of an'act of war' against Russia after US president imposed new oil sanctions French girl Lola, 12, who was'raped and murdered by Algerian woman' begged'please don't hurt me' before she was brutally killed, court hears Dave Grohl on'thin ice' with wife Jordyn Blum as insiders reveal her strict list of rules to save their marriage... and his plans for daughters to build relationship with his love child Amazon's delivery drivers will be forced to wear AI GLASSES that give them turn-by-turn directions to shave seconds off deliveries READ MORE: Amazon workers claim'kill switch' triggered massive outage In a bid to shave seconds off deliveries, Amazon will soon force its delivery drivers to wear smart glasses. The futuristic glasses use artificial intelligence ( AI) to feed drivers turn-by-turn directions leading up to customers' doorsteps. They're also fitted with cameras so drivers can scan packages and capture proof of delivery. Amazon claims the dystopian device will make deliveries'as safe and seamless as possible'. However, it seems not everyone agrees.


Trump, Ukraine and Europe target Russian energy as diplomacy falters

Al Jazeera

How much of Europe's oil still comes from Russia? The European Union is preparing to adopt a new round of sweeping sanctions against Russian energy exports on Thursday, a day after United States President Donald Trump imposed similar measures against Moscow amid setbacks to his efforts at diplomacy with Vladimir Putin. These steps come as Russia and Ukraine are increasingly targeting each other's energy infrastructure in an attempt to make it economically harder to wage war. On the ground, Russia's war in Ukraine remained stagnant. Russia claimed it had taken another handful of villages during the past week - Tykhe and Pishchane in Kharkiv, Novopavlivka, Chunyshyne and Pleshcheyevka in Donetsk, Poltavka in Zaporizhia and Privillia in Dnipropetrovsk. On the whole, however, Ukrainian front lines remained resilient and Russia scored no major breakthrough.


Illegal immigrant released by Biden admin accused of killing 3 in fiery crash and more top headlines

FOX News

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Once the AI bubble pops, we'll all suffer. Could that be better than letting it grow unabated?

The Guardian

If AI takes over many jobs, how will people make a living? If AI takes over many jobs, how will people make a living? Once the AI bubble pops, we'll all suffer. Could that be better than letting it grow unabated? The Guardian's journalism is independent.



Sudan's Khartoum targeted by RSF drones for third day after airport reopens

Al Jazeera

Sudan's Khartoum targeted by RSF drones for third day after airport reopens The paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) have targeted Sudan's capital Khartoum and its main airport with drones, a day after the first passenger flight in two years landed in the city amid the civil war. The government-aligned Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) intercepted the drones on Thursday, which caused no damage, a military official who spoke on condition of anonymity told The Associated Press news agency. The RSF and SAF did not immediately acknowledge the attack. The airport has come under repeated drone attacks blamed on the RSF since Tuesday. Al Jazeera's Hiba Morgan said "both sides seem to be stepping up the use of drones, with the RSF using them here in the capital, Khartoum, to target facilities such as the airport".


Inside Donald Trump's Attack on Immigration Court

The New Yorker

Judges describe a campaign of firings and interference which threatens the system's independence. On a Thursday morning last month, Patrick O'Brien, a federal immigration judge, walked into his courtroom in downtown San Francisco. He was scheduled for a master-calendar hearing, a roll call, essentially, to get cases ready for trial. O'Brien was wearing a matte-black robe that seemed to absorb the artificial light overhead. He took his seat, scanned the room, and angled himself toward a computer monitor. The court was leanly staffed. There was a judicial clerk but no bailiff or stenographer. Opposite the judge were tables for the prosecution--the Department of Homeland Security--and for the respondent, a succession of immigrants who were applying for asylum. A Spanish interpreter appeared as a faceless box on a big screen. About ten people, all Latino, sat in wooden pews, gripping folders full of esoteric documents.


Police agencies turn to virtual reality to improve split-second decision-making

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 .


Blackouts hit Russia's Belgorod as Ukrainian drone attacks surge

BBC News

Blackouts hit Russia's Belgorod as Ukrainian drone attacks surge Residents of Russia's Belgorod region say blackouts, air-raid sirens and the sound of gunfire aimed at incoming Ukrainian drones are becoming increasingly common, as Kyiv retaliates against repeated bombardments of its cities with cross-border strikes of its own. It's so loud and so terrifying, says Nina, a Belgorod resident who asked us to change her name. I was coming back from the clinic when a siren went off. As usual, I received Telegram alerts about a drone attack. Then bursts of automatic gunfire broke out, I ran into a nearby courtyard and tried to hide under an arch, she recalls.


ALHD: A Large-Scale and Multigenre Benchmark Dataset for Arabic LLM-Generated Text Detection

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Misuse of LLM-generated texts Modern LLMs are increasingly capable of generating highly fluent humanlike texts and adaptive to multiple dialects across genres [21]. While this progress unlocks many opportunities towards resolving daily life challenges, it also introduces risks in distinguishing between human-and machine-generated texts [22]. Undetected contents can cause serious cyber threats including misinformation, academic dishonesty, and even more aggressive consequences with phishing, smishing, and social engineering, where convincing texts are often used to manipulate individuals and organizations [23, 24]. For instance, the Anti-Phishing Working Group (APWG) have indicated in their phishing activity trends report that 932,923 phishing attacks were recorded worldwide in the third quarter of 2024, highlighting a significant increase in smishing by 22% during the same period. APWG also reported that social media platforms were the most targeted sector, representing 30.5% of all phishing attacks [24]. Furthermore, according to the FBI Internet Crime Report, losses due to cybercrimes in the United States have exceeded $12.5 billion in 2023 [25]. These examples illustrate how malicious manoeuvres can exploit machine-generated texts to scale deception. Hence, robust methods for detecting LLM-generated texts are urgently needed particularly with linguistically sensitive scripts such as Arabic, where formal, legal, and religious texts require extra reliability.