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Telegraph
16/09/2025 09:10:24 AM
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Starmer and Trump to sign quantum computing pact amid China spying fears
Keir Starmer is now utterly obsolete
Apple needs to do better than a £2,000 iPhone to win the future
We can singe Putin’s beard, and do it without starting World War Three
Fix Britain’s sclerotic growth by replacing workers with robots
Here’s the truth about the Civil Service and AI
China has exhibited its new hypersonic ‘ship killer’. Here’s my take as a Navy missile man
The best dumbphones for a digital detox, tried and tested
Google told to pay $425m for invading users’ privacy
Putin sends mothballed Soviet-era nuclear battlewagon back to sea. Poor little Vladimir
AI isn’t just overhyped, unreliable and built on theft. It’s Left-wing too
The 14 best Bluetooth speakers, recommended by experts and tested at home and outdoors
Chinese backer of UK tech takeover accused of military ties
I used ChatGPT to try to code the next million-pound app
The next ‘AI winter’ is coming
The paedophile hunters tracking their quarry on Roblox
The warning signs the AI bubble is about to burst
Chatbots risk fuelling psychosis, warns Microsoft AI chief
JD Vance forced UK to drop demand for ‘backdoor access’ into iPhones
Government advice to save water by deleting emails is ‘inaccurate’
Dozens of Klarna staff become millionaires in $15bn stock market debut
Revolut share sale to propel boss into Britain’s richest top 10
‘People say London’s expensive, but I pay £1,100 a month and get a pool and cinema’
Flying taxis are not pie in the sky, says boss eyeing take-off
Vice was the epitome of liberal hypocrisy – working there was like being in prison
Tech founder paralysed in bike accident set for windfall from £1bn sale
Trump strikes TikTok deal with China
China accuses Nvidia of breaking the law in microchip trade war
Apple blocks EU from using AirPods’ new feature
Immigration lawyer caught citing ‘fake’ case after using ChatGPT
Starmer and Trump to sign quantum computing pact amid China spying fears
How my face ended up on a Russian propaganda site
Duty of Care campaign
Our Online Safety Act isn’t the problem, Labour is
Farage is siding with disgusting internet predators
Parents should have more control of children’s phones to keep them safe online, says Science Secretary
The best gaming laptops for 2025: I’ve put them all to the test and there’s a clear winner
Minecraft Experience London, review: You’re better off giving the kids an iPad for an hour
The billionaire free speech warrior who built Minecraft
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Scientific
American
16/09/2025 09:10:09 AM
EpidemiologySeptember 15, 2025Death Rates from Chronic Diseases Dropped in Most Countries
Mondays Really Are More Stressful on the Brain and Body
Freaky ‘Rubber Hand’ Illusion Works on Octopuses, Too
CDC Panel to Review Childhood Vaccines: What's at Stake
Our Body Clock Might Prefer Permanent Standard Time
New York City’s Rats Have a Secret Nightlife—And a Language Humans Can’t Hear
July 30, 2025Neurotic Cats, One-Eyed Aliens and Hypnosis for Liars Are among the Historical Gems Reported in Scientific American
One Year after Scientific American’s First Issue, the Solar System Grew by a Planet
U.S. Science and Scientific American Have Weathered Attacks Before and Won
Quantum Physics Is Bizarre. So Why Have We Loved It for 100 Years?
Can Peanut Allergies Be Cured?
What Happens When an Entire Generation of Scientists Changes Its Mind
How Scientists Finally Learned That Nerves Regrow
Plastics Started as a Sustainability Solution. What Went Wrong?
The Universe Is Static. No, Expanding! Wait, Slowing? Oh, Accelerating
How RNA Unseated DNA as the Most Important Molecule in Your Body
The Brain Science of Elusive ‘Aha! Moments’
Building Intelligent Machines Helps Us Learn How Our Brain Works
Lifting the Veil on Near-Death Experiences
How the Brain ‘Constructs’ the Outside World
New Treatments Are Rewriting Our Understanding of Schizophrenia
The New Science of Controlling Lucid Dreams
NeuroscienceSeptember 5, 2025How the Brain Tells Imagination from Reality
DietSeptember 12, 2025Why Intermittent Fasting May Do More Harm Than Good
Public HealthSeptember 11, 2025Magic Mushroom Edibles Found to Contain Undisclosed Ingredients—And No Psilocybin
AnimalsSeptember 13, 2025New York City’s Rats Have a Secret Nightlife—And a Language Humans Can’t Hear
PoliticsSeptember 12, 2025How 3D Laser Scanning Could Reconstruct the Charlie Kirk Shooting
BBC
18/07/2025 04:50:23 AM
Poisoned water and scarred hills: BBC visits world's rare earths capital in China
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New
Scientist
16/09/2025 09:10:09 AM
SpaceJupiter is smaller and more squashed than we thoughtNews
SpaceA weird cloud forms on Mars each year and now we know whyNews
HumansEarly Neanderthals hunted ibex on steep mountain slopesNews
HumansBritain's economy thrived after the withdrawal of the Roman EmpireNews
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Nature
16/09/2025 09:10:13 AM
Explore articles by subject
How should ‘mirror life’ research be restricted? Debate heats up Some researchers are calling for strict limits, while others speak out against prematurely halting basic science. news | 15 Sep 2025
The chatbots claiming to be Jesus: spreading gospel or heresy? Jesus chatbots aren't the only AI technologies seeping into religious practice. Some worshippers don't agree with the use of them.
Weird 'time crystals' are made visible at last Time crystals, a state of matter once thought physically impossible, could soon be on a banknote.
RFK Jr’s vaccine advisers will soon review four shots: what’s at stake Restrictions to children's vaccine access are a likely outcome, infectious-disease specialists tell Nature.
Meet Europe’s first exascale supercomputer — can it compete in the global AI race? news explainer | 12 Sep 2025
LIGO is 10 years old: black-hole breakthroughs will ‘only get better’ news | 12 Sep 2025
Trump team disbands controversial US climate panel news | 11 Sep 2025
AI-generated medical data can sidestep usual ethics review, universities say news | 10 Sep 2025
AI chatbots are already biasing research — we must establish guidelines for their use now Zhicheng Lin world view | 09 Sep 2025
Why scientists are flocking to Substack A new generation of researchers is using the platform to build audiences and monetize their knowledge.
These nations are wooing PhD students amid US funding uncertainties NEWS | 12 SEP 2025
Dinosaur egg dated directly for the first time NEWS | 11 SEP 2025
AI tool detects LLM-generated text in research papers and peer reviews NEWS | 11 SEP 2025
Feeling the heat: fossil-fuel producers linked to dozens of heatwaves NATURE PODCAST | 10 SEP 2025
Synthetic data can benefit medical research — but risks must be recognized editorial
Global geopolitics should not stall science — 5 ways to push back comment
Synthetic data can benefit medical research — but risks must be recognized Editorial
Climate impacts are real — denying this is self-defeating Editorial
Scientists take on Trump: these researchers are fighting back News Feature
Mystery Martian minerals hint at the planet’s complex geochemical past News & Views
The emergence of globular clusters and globular-cluster-like dwarfs Article
Redox-driven mineral and organic associations in Jezero Crater, Mars Article
Songs of the striped mouse show who’s friend and who’s foe Ultrasonic calls, too high for the human ear to detect, convey a wealth of information across the rodent’s territory.
How to help refugees thrive: have local families host them Ukrainian refugees who moved into German households report greater social integration than those who lived in other settings.
Epigenetic clues from cancer’s past foretell its future news & views forum
Iron-respiring microbes could have a role in sulfur cycling research briefings
Designing an alloy microstructure atom by atom to withstand extreme cold research briefings
A common gut fungus worsens infection with the food-borne bacterium Salmonella research briefings
Sweet like chocolate: researching in the shade of a cacao tree Naailah Ali aims to support cacao farmers in the West Indies by improving the bean-fermentation process. where i work
‘Lipstick on a pig’: how to fight back against a peer-review bully Scientific societies, journals, editors and researchers are pushing back against mean-spirited peer reviews.
Why we launched Denmark’s second Young Academy (and what’s different about it) career column
Tips and tricks to plan your career in science nature careers podcast
The earth will not consume our bones Welcome to the garden.
How to build nature back better — read this manual By clearing the confusion, this comprehensive guide can help businesses to do more for nature.
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