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In total there are 4898 links in this list. Showing results 1201-1225.
Your Body Killed Cancer 5 Minutes Ago
Sources & further reading: https://sites.google.com/view/sources-cancervsimmune/
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Somewhere in your body, your immune system just q
Tom Hanks' debut novel lifts lid on movie industry, and his on-set behaviour
Tom Hanks says he has written his first novel as a "release from the never-ending pressure" of making movies. The two-time Oscar winner is publishing The Making of Another Major Motion Picture Masterpiece, inspired by his own screen career.
Apple co-founder says AI may make scams harder to spot
Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak has warned that artificial intelligence (AI) could make scams and misinformation harder to spot. Mr Wozniak says he fears the technology will be harnessed by "bad actors".
Iran executes two men convicted of blasphemy
Iran has executed two men who were convicted of "burning the Quran" and "insulting the Prophet of Islam", the country's judiciary says.
St Kitts and Nevis is not totally free under King Charles III, says PM
The Prime Minister of a Caribbean nation has told the BBC his country is "not totally free" as long as King Charles III remains head of state. Dr Terrance Drew said that a public consultation on whether St Kitts and Nevis should become a republic would begin during his leadership.
The crazy plan to explode a nuclear bomb on the Moon
The moment astronaut Neil Armstrong stepped out on to the Moon's surface in 1969 is one of the most memorable moments in history. But what if the Moon Armstrong stepped onto was scarred by huge craters and poisoned from the effects of nuclear bombardment?
The jobs AI won't take yet
Since the start of the industrial revolution, there have been threats that new machines – from mechanised looms to microchips – would usurp human jobs. For the most part, the humans have prevailed.
Police arrest man for opening store selling hard drugs in Canada
BBC News, TorontoA Canadian man has been arrested in British Columbia for opening a mobile shop to sell cocaine, heroin and other hard drugs.Jerry Martin, 51, has said he plans to challenge his arrest in court, arguing contaminated drug supplies cause harm.
Covid global health emergency is over, WHO says
The World Health Organization (WHO) has declared that Covid-19 no longer represents a "global health emergency". The statement represents a major step towards ending the pandemic and comes three years after it first declared its highest level of alert over the virus.
What a 1.5C lifestyle actually looks like
As 2020 drew to a close, Carys Mainprize set herself a challenge for the approaching year: to spend the next 12 months living on two tonnes of carbon: an amount equivalent to around half the average yearly emissions of a petrol car in the US. It was not an easy challenge.
Coronation of King Charles III: Are you related to a King
Joy Ibsen, a retired Canadian journalist, had been an avid amateur geneaologist. Using digital census records, birth certificates and marriage documents, she painstakingly traced her family's ancestry back to the 14th Century.
TikTok tracked UK journalist via her cat's account
Two days before Christmas, TikTok called London-based journalist Cristina Criddle to tell her two of its employees in China, and two in the US, had viewed user data from her personal account without her knowledge or consent.
White House: Big Tech bosses told to protect public from AI risks
Tech bosses were summoned to the White House on Thursday and told they must protect the public from the dangers of Artificial Intelligence (AI). Sundar Pichai of Google, Satya Nadella of Microsoft, and OpenAI's Sam Altmann were told they had a "moral" duty to safeguard society.
Why teaching robots to blink is hard but important
It's my first time drumming along with a robot. I'm sitting across a table from an adorable humanoid robot called the iCub. We each have our own stick and box, and are meant to strike the box with the stick in sync with a light pattern.
Meteosat-12: Europe's new weather satellite takes first photos
To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.By Jonathan AmosBBC Science Correspondent@BBCAmosThe first images from Europe's new weather satellite, Meteosat-12, have just been released.
Can Morocco solve Europe’s energy crisis?
Morocco has big ambitions to export electricity produced by solar and wind farms to Europe, but should it be prioritising such renewable energy for its home market? Mr Zniber is a passionate man who senses opportunity out of crisis.
US drug regulator approves world's first RSV vaccine
The US Food and Drug Administration has approved a vaccine against respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) - an illness that kills thousands of Americans each year. The vaccine still needs approval from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention before it can be rolled out to the public.
New Alzheimer's drug slows disease by a third
We could be entering the era of Alzheimer's treatments, after the second drug in under a year has been shown to slow the disease. Experts said we were now "on the cusp" of drugs being available, something that had recently seemed "impossible".
Kremlin drone attack: Russia accuses Ukraine of trying to assassinate Putin
To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.Russia says it downed two drones that targeted the Kremlin in Moscow last night and accused Ukraine of attempting to kill President Vladimir Putin.
Missing Australian fisherman's body found in crocodile
The body of an Australian man who vanished while fishing with friends has been found inside a crocodile. Kevin Darmody was last seen at Kennedy's Bend - well-known saltwater crocodile habitat in a remote part of northern Queensland - on Saturday.
The Invisible Barrier Keeping Two Worlds Apart
In between two of the islands of Indonesia, there’s an ancient line that is both real and…not real.
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AI: Which jobs are most at risk from the technology?
As the man widely seen as the godfather of artificial intelligence (AI) warns about growing dangers from how it is developing, businesses are scrambling to see how they can use the technology to their advantage.
Fang Bin: China Covid whistleblower returns home to Wuhan after jail
Fang Bin, who documented the initial Covid outbreak in the Chinese city of Wuhan, has been freed from jail after three years, sources told the BBC. Mr Fang is one of several so-called citizen journalists who disappeared after sharing videos of scenes in Wuhan, the epicentre of the pandemic.
AI 'godfather' Geoffrey Hinton warns of dangers as he quits Google
To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.BBC NewsA man widely seen as the godfather of artificial intelligence (AI) has quit his job, warning about the growing dangers from developments in the field.
Bill C-11: Why is YouTube mad at Canada?
BBC News, TorontoA new law that seeks to give Canadian artists a leg up online has left many influencers and tech giants alike seeing red.They took out subway ads, they posted TikToks, but in the end, the score was Silicon Valley-0, Ottawa-1.