Skip Navigation
We've seen particles that are massless only when moving one direction
www.newscientist.com We've seen particles that are massless only when moving one direction

Inside a hunk of a material called a semimetal, scientists have uncovered signatures of bizarre particles that sometimes move like they have no mass, but at other times move just like a very massive particle

We've seen particles that are massless only when moving one direction
4
New cyanobacteria strains could sequester carbon
wyss.harvard.edu New cyanobacteria strains could sequester carbon

Strains specialized to live in high-CO2 oceanic environments have evolved traits that are useful for decarbonization and bioproduction

New cyanobacteria strains could sequester carbon
2
A Lost Mayan City Has Been Found With Laser Mapping
www.wired.com A Lost Mayan City Has Been Found With Laser Mapping

Archaeologists have revealed an ancient lost Mayan city using advanced laser mapping technology, unearthing monumental structures such as pyramids and plazas. Named Valeriana, the city is believed to have been founded before 150 AD.

A Lost Mayan City Has Been Found With Laser Mapping
2
Anthropic's latest advance with AI, where it can operate on-screen software, shows us how future AI can replace much of today's human knowledge work.
  • There is a tsunami coming in the workplace, you can already buy a humanoid robot for $16k (1), which is less than the cost of an employee. When these robots can become actually useful (instead of marketing material) businesses who use labour will not think twice about swapping over. What do we do when unemployment goes up to 25%, 50% etc

    (1) https://www.unitree.com/mobile/g1

  • Melting Arctic sea-ice could affect global ocean circulation, study warns
  • I’ve seen more and more concern about the AMOC slowdown. Wouldn’t be good if that goes away. Talking a change of -10c in Europe

  • UN Emissions Gap Report 2024 - Chance of limiting global warming to 1.5C is 'virtually zero'
  • We should aim for 1.6 next, every fraction of a degree makes a difference

    Although the report also says they expect us to hit 3.1 based on current trends

  • UN Emissions Gap Report 2024 - Chance of limiting global warming to 1.5C is 'virtually zero'
    www.unep.org Emissions Gap Report 2024

    As climate impacts intensify globally, the Emissions Gap Report 2024: No more hot air … please! finds that nations must deliver dramatically stronger ambition and action in the next round of Nationally Determined Contributions or the Paris Agreement’s 1.5°C goal will be gone within a few years. The ...

    Emissions Gap Report 2024
    2
    Increased global integration in the brain after psilocybin therapy for depression - Nature Medicine
    www.nature.com Increased global integration in the brain after psilocybin therapy for depression - Nature Medicine

    The antidepressant response to psilocybin in individuals with treatment-resistant depression is distinct from escitalopram and depends on a global increase in brain network integration.

    Increased global integration in the brain after psilocybin therapy for depression - Nature Medicine
    0
    6G phone networks could be 9000 times faster than 5G
  • 640k should be enough for anyone too

  • 6G phone networks could be 9000 times faster than 5G
    www.newscientist.com 6G phone networks could be 9000 times faster than 5G

    Next-generation phone networks could dramatically outperform current ones thanks to a new technique for transmitting multiple streams of data over a wide range of frequencies

    6G phone networks could be 9000 times faster than 5G
    4
    De-extinction company claims it has nearly complete thylacine genome
    www.newscientist.com De-extinction company claims it has nearly complete thylacine genome

    Colossal, a US firm that is aiming to revive lost species such as the woolly mammoth, says it now has a near-complete genome of the extinct thylacine

    De-extinction company claims it has nearly complete thylacine genome
    5
    Drug may boost motivation for people with depression
    www.futurity.org Drug may boost motivation for people with depression

    "It's exciting to see how modulating inflammation can directly influence motivation, one of the most challenging symptoms to treat in depression."

    Drug may boost motivation for people with depression
    7
    Physicists Reveal a Quantum Geometry That Exists Outside of Space and Time | Quanta Magazine
    www.quantamagazine.org Physicists Reveal a Quantum Geometry That Exists Outside of Space and Time | Quanta Magazine

    A decade after the discovery of the “amplituhedron,” physicists have excavated more of the timeless geometry underlying the standard picture of how particles move.

    Physicists Reveal a Quantum Geometry That Exists Outside of Space and Time | Quanta Magazine
    3
    Climate Change Is Drying Up All the World’s Rivers at an Alarming Rate
  • Warmer air can hold more water, so humidity increases. It also drives stronger winds...

  • It’s too late to save Britain from overheating, says UN climate chief
  • The IPCC has always been thought of as being conservative in its estimates of climate change, so to hear Jim Skea, the Chair of the IPCC, say it’s too late is sobering

  • Research in child day care centers in Helsinki shows purifying the air reduces infectious illness by almost 20%, and that purifying the air in all public spaces should be examined.
  • Instead we'll build something that needs a subscription, and you can only get the filters from 1st party sources and the filters have a chip that requires you to swap them even if they are not full

  • Your TV set has become a digital billboard. And it’s only getting worse.
  • Unless the set top box (apple or whoever) has an aerial/satellite /Cable input you still need to use the normal TV to watch standard channels, exposing you to the UI adverts.

    I had considered buying an Apple TV, but my Samsung TV does everything I want just with stupid adverts, which I won't be able to get away from if I have to swap sources to Apple TV and back to live TV

  • Ford Steps Back From EVs—and Says Hybrids Are the Future
  • Ford are wrong, and history will prove it.

  • Irish Taoiseach Simon Harris declares regulatory war on social media over online hatred and racism
  • The Sunday Independent understands the Taoiseach wrote to ministers this weekend insisting social media can no longer be a “hiding place for bullies” or people with “sinister motives” who threaten and incite violence

    Mr Harris is especially concerned about the slow response times from some social media companies when they are alerted to malicious material on their platforms.

    “I am most concerned about families who flag a post on a school night because of an emerging bullying problem and receive no response before content is reshared and enormous damage is done,” he said.

    The Taoiseach noted that while social media companies have increased their efforts to tackle harmful content it is also clear there is “too much violent, untrue, hate-filled and racist” material being used to incite violence.

    “It would not be tolerated from any of our newspapers or broadcasters so it cannot continue to be tolerated from multi-billion euro social media companies,” he added.

    Mr Harris’s intervention comes in a week when one man was arrested as part of an investigation into a bomb threat on his home and a separate investigation was launched into a death threat made against Mr Harris’s family via Instagram.

    Social media companies, like X and Facebook, have been blamed for fanning the flames of violent protests in Ireland and the UK in recent weeks.

    Last week, Tánaiste Micheál Martin said the “appalling” violence in the North and across Britain on “mindless, ill-informed stuff” was facilitated by social media platforms, stating Elon Musk’s X is particularly problematic.

    Mr Martin said he was “very concerned” about what was happening in Britain and Belfast and the level of violence involved, saying governments have to tackle social media giants, only some of whom are cooperating with nations’ leaders.

    ‘I think Elon Musk and I think X is problematic; they have a totally different approach in this,” he said.

    In his letter to ministers this weekend, Mr Harris said the key aims of his first online safety summit in the coming weeks will be to identify how to better protect children from social media, tackle the spread of misinformation and ensure laws are enforced to ensure online crime is punished.

    The Taoiseach said Coimisiún na Meán’s soon-to-be-published Online Safety Code will be “at the vanguard of Ireland and the EU’s attempt to harness the benefits of social media whilst also protecting citizens from harmful content.

    “The code of the independent regulator aims to do this to a much higher level than has been seen anywhere else before.

    "Put simply, self-regulation from social media companies has failed, a new era is about to begin,” he said.

    New figures show Coimisiún na Mean is actively investigating over 116 complaints over alleged illegal content across media platforms.

    The powerful regulator is responsible for ensuring social media giants deal with illegal content on their platforms properly - such as credible violent threats, cyberbullying and attempts to stir up hatred against a specific group of people.

    Coimisíun na Meán was set up last year by the Government to hold social media companies to account over not taking illegal content seriously.

    Users are able to make complaints to the regulator if they suspect content illegal under EU legislation is not being dealt with appropriately on the platforms.

    The commission has received nearly 300 queries at its call centre concerning suspected illegal content on social media sites, with 130 complaints which have been escalated further up the chain.

    These have included 46 passed on to its user complaints team and 84 received through the European Commission’s AGORA platform, which allows member state digital services co-ordinators to share information on the enforcement of the Digital Services Act (DSA).

    Of the escalated complaints, 116 are “open” which mean they have been accepted as valid or are waiting for a decision. Fourteen have been rejected as not valid or incomplete.

    The body has not fined anybody under the DSA, but it has the powers to not just fine but prosecute bosses of social media giants personally.

    “The era of self-regulation of these companies is well and truly over,” Mr Harris said last week.

    “This will be the year in which there will be binding codes, financial sanctions and personal liabilities on social media companies — and that day can’t come quickly enough.”

    “If anybody in any social media company is dining out on or thinking that somehow or other Ireland will not be robust in relation to this, they’re about to find out how extraordinarily wrong they just are.”

    The regulator declined to comment on how many complaints were from politicians.

    “The role of Coimisiún na Meán as Ireland’s digital services co-ordinator is to supervise how online platforms comply with their obligations under the DSA at a systemic level,” said a spokesperson.

    “These obligations include acting on reports of illegal content and ensuring that platforms diligently enforce their own rules about what they do or not allow on their services.”

    The regulator defines illegal content as: credible violent threats; cyberbullying; threatening or grossly offensive content; threatening, abusive or insulting and likely to stir up hatred against a group of people based on their race, nationality, etc; unsolicited nude images which cause distress; offensive sexual content; intimate images shared without consent; encouragement or information that would help with suicide; child abuse material; encouragement or threat of terrorist activity.

    Separately, the Sunday Independent understands the PSNI is co-operating in information sharing with An Garda Síochána about the presence of people from the south at the violent scenes in Belfast last weekend.

    The PSNI has more robust laws than gardaí in terms of its oversight and monitoring powers at riots, primarily related to video footage.

    Security sources say they expect this will be “helpful” as part of its investigations into member of the far-right suspected of involvement in criminality on both sides of the border.

    It has emerged that Irish far-right activists who travelled to Belfast last weekend for an anti-immigration protest were hosted by a loyalist who was arrested in connection with the murders of five Catholics in a sectarian attack.

  • As Big Tech's AI efforts plateau, in the past 24 hours two open-source AI's have caught up with them.
  • It’s really interesting that these open source models are nearly as powerful as the closed source ones. Meta is really out for blood here. It’s an arms race I hope is beneficial to humanity and not the other thing!

  • Bye Bye Superbugs? New Antibiotic Is Virtually Resistance-Proof
  • A new class of antibiotics is offering real hope of a response to the problem of antimicrobial resistance, hitting bacteria with a dual-pronged assault that’s almost impossible to combat. Called macrolones, the drugs target two bacterial processes simultaneously – and the scientists behind a new study say this makes evolving resistance 100 million times more difficult.

  • Global IT outage hits companies around the world as planes grounded and train services affected
  • Wow, that’s going to take weeks or even months to sort out.

  • Espiritdescali Espiritdescali @futurology.today
    Posts 445
    Comments 119
    Moderates