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Daily
Telegraph
07/11/2025 06:30:25 PM
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Letters to the Editor
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Norway freezes ethics rules to back tech companies with Israeli ties
World’s largest wealth fund rejects Musk’s $1tn payout
A Wikipedia rival is long overdue – if only it didn’t use AI slop
Now, witness the limited power of the Royal Navy’s ‘fully operational’ Death Star
Hamish de Bretton-Gordon
Putin’s nuclear-powered crawler missile is a white elephant. The US holds the whip hand
Amazon to slash 14,000 jobs in cost-cutting drive
The internet is an unreliable mess that we have bet our lives on
Artificial intelligence is dangerous and it must be regulated
The best gaming laptops for 2025: I’ve put them all to the test and there’s a clear winner
Europe’s carmakers became hooked on Chinese chips. Now they can’t get them
Meta to axe hundreds of AI jobs after offering $100m signing bonuses
EU watchdog attacks Britain over iPhone ‘backdoor’ demand
Amazon failure exposes our dangerous digital dependencies
Legal battle delays Reeves’s bond market growth push
Hamish de Bretton-Gordon
Putin’s defences are no match for the Tomahawk missile: this has been proved in combat
World War Three is looming as ‘transparent ocean’ technology advances
The endless IOU powering Silicon Valley’s AI boom
Silicon Valley’s wokest billionaire gets on board the Trump train
Netherlands seizes Chinese-owned microchip maker to protect national security
Squeamish Labour can’t defend us against Chinese hackers
Britain’s fintech crown is slipping
Billionaire Revolut founder abandons Britain for UAE
Revolut vows to invest £3bn in UK as it hunts banking licence
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
The strange paradox of Chinese economic decline
Palantir, the company that’s always watching you
Chinese owners of UK factory move crucial chip production out of Britain
Young adults use AI before NHS for health advice
‘Big Short’ trader makes $1bn bet against AI boom
Rachel Reeves is destroying the graduate job market, not AI
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
07/11/2025 06:30:11 PM
Space ExplorationNovember 5, 2025NASA Administrator Nominee Would Shift Future of Space Exploration
COVID Is Beginning to Surge Globally. Here’s What We Know
ARFID Is More Than Picky Eating—And the Condition Is on the Rise
Astronomers Are Agog over This All-Day Gamma-Ray Burst
Archaeologists Uncover a Monumental Ancient Maya Map of the Cosmos
Gene Editing Helped One Baby—Could It Help Thousands?
Catch the Taurid Meteor Shower—And Learn Why Scientists Are Watching It Closely
Mysterious Rocks Could Rewrite Evolution of Complex Life
The Slippery Slope of Ethical Collapse—And How Courage Can Reverse It
Which Anti-Inflammatory Supplements Actually Work?
The Sordid Mystery of a Somalian Meteorite Smuggled into China
Type 1 Diabetes Science Is Having a Moment
Diagnosing Type 1 Diabetes before Symptoms Strike
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
PsychologyNovember 1, 2025How Childhood Relationships Affect Your Adult Attachment Style, according to Large New Study
AstrophysicsNovember 5, 2025Astronomers Are Agog over This All-Day Gamma-Ray Burst
COVIDNovember 5, 2025COVID Is Beginning to Surge Globally. Here’s What We Know
AstronomyNovember 3, 2025Catch the Taurid Meteor Shower—And Learn Why Scientists Are Watching It Closely
Genetic EngineeringNovember 4, 2025Gene Editing Helped One Baby—Could It Help Thousands?
BBC
05/11/2025 04:10:25 AM
08:29 GMT 3 NovemberAt least 20 dead after magnitude-6.3 earthquake hits Afghanistan, published at 08:29 GMT 3 NovemberAt least 20 dead after magnitude-6.3 earthquake hits Afghanistan
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New
Scientist
07/11/2025 06:30:10 PM
TechnologyAdvanced quantum network could be a prototype for the quantum internetNews
SpaceBrightest black hole flare ever caused by huge star being ripped apartNews
HealthCavities could be prevented by a gel that restores tooth enamelNews
HealthWalking 3000 steps a day seems to slow Alzheimer's-related declineNews
Student & graduate
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Nature
07/11/2025 06:30:14 PM
Explore articles by subject
Can AI be truly creative? Chatbots and AI models are challenging ideas about who — or what — can create art, music and more. news feature | 05 Nov 2025
Antibody drugs show promise for treating bird flu and HIV Scientists are developing antibodies to track the evolution of these viruses and better treat infections.
COVID-19 is spreading again — how serious is it and what are the symptoms? Limited COVID-19 surveillance data are hampering vaccination and health strategies, researchers say.
Biggest black-hole outburst ever seen records death throes of a star news | 04 Nov 2025
Alzheimer’s decline slows with just a few thousand steps a day news | 03 Nov 2025
How to fight climate change without the US: a guide to global action news feature | 03 Nov 2025
‘Biotech Barbie’ says the time has come to consider CRISPR babies. Do scientists agree? news | 03 Nov 2025
Japan’s first female prime minister doesn’t call herself a feminist — but the country needs her to tackle sexism in science Misa Shimuta world view | 04 Nov 2025
Can AI be truly creative? Chatbots and AI models are challenging ideas about who — or what — can create art, music and more.
How to fight climate change without the US: a guide to global action With the US government absent from the COP30 global climate summit, it will be up to others to avert catastrophe.
Meet the ‘Wee-rex’. Tiny tyrannosaur is its own species NATURE PODCAST | 05 NOV 2025
‘Mind-captioning’ AI decodes brain activity to turn thoughts into text NEWS | 05 NOV 2025
Personalized gene editing helped one baby: can it be rolled out widely? NEWS | 31 OCT 2025
Powerful new antibiotic that can kill superbugs discovered in soil bacteria NEWS | 31 OCT 2025
How the rush for critical minerals is neglecting human needs A focus on national security alone is limiting people’s access to key materials. comment
Climate change is devastating mining of minerals needed to fight it Extreme weather threatens the extraction of critical minerals required to produce clean energy.
Images for AI use can be sourced responsibly editorial
We need a new Turing test to assess AI’s real-world knowledge Vinay K. Chaudhri world view
The ‘implementation COP’: why the Belém summit must ratchet up climate action Editorial
Images for AI use can be sourced responsibly Editorial
How to fight climate change without the US: a guide to global action News Feature
Developmental maps of the brain trace when cell types emerge News & Views
A tweezer array with 6,100 highly coherent atomic qubits Article
Many-body interference in kagome crystals Article
By the time you hear these bats, it’s too late The fringe-lipped bat ambushes its prey, helping to make it an exceptionally efficient hunter.
Artificial brains with less drain Biologically inspired electronic neurons could boost the efficiency of artificial-intelligence systems.
Secret route to warm cosmic ‘inflation’: the nuclear force Modelling shows how the infant Universe might have stayed warm and dense during its primoridal expansion.
Most Antarctic ice shelves are set to disappear if greenhouse-gas emissions remain high research briefings
The new frontier in understanding human and mammalian brain development
Ultrashort laser pulse amplified by back-and-forth propagation news and views
Developmental maps of the brain trace when cell types emerge news and views
Cake to the rescue: how these PhD students are cooking up a sense of community One treat at a time, these graduate students are helping to raise funds for charitable organizations.
How I’m helping to cultivate science entrepreneurship in Brazil career q&a
My funding applications are taking up too much time. How can I stay focused on my research? career feature
Anosophoros futures
PhD training needs a reboot in an AI world essay
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