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SATURDAY, 19 JULY 2025, 00:47

Science/Tech

A.I. Is Starting to Wear Down Democracy

26 June at 11:00 AM, via New York Times

Content generated by artificial intelligence has become a factor in elections around the world. Most of it is bad, misleading voters and discrediting the democratic process.

‘Huge advances in cancer and rare diseases’: 25 years of the human genome – podcast

26 June at 06:00 AM, via The Guardian

It has been 25 years since Bill Clinton announced one of humanity’s most important scientific achievements: the first draft of the human genome. At the time, there was a great deal of excitement about the benefits that this new knowledge would bring, with predictions about curing genetic diseases and even cancer. To find out which of them came to pass, and what could be in store over the next...

Equivalent of one child in every British classroom now born via IVF, data shows

26 June at 06:00 AM, via The Guardian

Proportion of women giving birth after fertility treatment up by more than a third in a decade, figures reveal

The proportion of women giving birth after fertility treatment in the UK has increased by more than a third in a decade, with the equivalent of one child in every classroom now born as a result of IVF, figures show.

One in 32 births in 2023 were the result of in vitro fertilisation, up...

Hundreds of weight loss and diabetes jab users report pancreas problems

26 June at 01:01 AM, via The Guardian

UK health officials launch study into side-effects of weight loss drugs after increased reports of acute pancreatitis

Hundreds of people have reported problems with their pancreas linked to taking weight loss and diabetes injections, prompting health officials to launch a study into side-effects.

Some cases of pancreatitis reported to be linked to GLP-1 medicines (glucagon-like peptide-1...

Overfishing has caused cod to halve in body size since 1990s, study finds

25 June at 20:00 PM, via The Guardian

Evolutionary change driven by intensive fishing led cod to ‘shrink’ from average 40cm length in 1996 to 20cm in 2019

Overfishing has led to a collapse in the eastern Baltic cod population, but over the past three decades the size of the fish themselves has also been dramatically and mysteriously shrinking.

Now scientists have uncovered genomic evidence that intensive fishing has driven rapid...

James Webb telescope captures the first direct images of an exoplanet

25 June at 17:00 PM, via The Guardian

About the mass of Saturn and 110m light years from Earth, TWA 7 b provides insights into an infant planetary system

The James Webb space telescope has captured unprecedented direct images of a planet beyond our own solar system in its first exoplanet discovery.

The observations reveal a planet, called TWA 7 b, carving its way through a disc of glowing dust and rocky debris in orbit around a...

India, Poland and Hungary make spaceflight comeback with ISS mission

25 June at 13:28 PM, via The Guardian

Countries send first astronauts in decades into space on Axiom Mission 4, along with US commander

A US commercial mission carrying crew from India, Poland and Hungary blasted off to the International Space Station on Wednesday, taking astronauts from these countries to space for the first time in decades.

Axiom Mission 4, or Ax-4, launched from Nasa’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida at 2:31am...

The Covid ‘lab leak’ theory isn’t just a rightwing conspiracy – pretending that’s the case is bad for science | Jane Qiu

25 June at 09:00 AM, via The Guardian

While figures like Steve Bannon have exploited the issue, scientists have done themselves no favours by shutting down legitimate inquiry

More than five years after the Covid-19 pandemic was declared, its origins remain a subject of intense – and often acrimonious – debate among scientists and the wider public. There are two broad, competing theories. The natural-origins hypotheses suggest...

Dogs pulling on leads cause large number of hand and wrist injuries in UK, study shows

25 June at 08:00 AM, via The Guardian

Women and older adults most likely to suffer dog walking injuries such as finger and wrist fractures, research says

Walking your dog may be good for you and your canine companion, but research shows it can also be dangerous.

While the health benefits are numerous – encouraging increased activity levels and physical exercise, improving cardiovascular health and weight – researchers found...

Red-letter day as gemologists discover why crimson diamonds are so rare

25 June at 07:00 AM, via The Guardian

The Winston Red, one of only 24 red diamonds of more than one carat publicly recorded, is on display in Washington DC

Red diamonds are some of the rarest gems on the planet: only 24 stones of more than one carat (200 milligrams) have been publicly recorded.

Now, one of the finest red diamonds – the Winston Red – has gone on public display at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural...

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