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2358 Interesting News

  • The age of the unicorn is over
  • What police commissioners tell you about the British election
  • Russia's economy once again defies the doomsayers
  • As payments systems go digital, they are changing global finance
  • 9 Best Smart Speakers (2024): Alexa, Google Assistant, Siri
  • The Low-Paid Humans Behind AI's Smarts Ask Biden to Free Them From 'Modern Day Slavery'
  • Boaz v BlackRock: Whoever wins, closed-end funds lose
  • A short history of the Arab-Israeli conflict
  • Pema Tseden was the founder and builder of Tibetan cinema
  • Acknowledgments
  • Israel's relations with America reach breaking point
  • The favourite in Indonesia's presidential election has a sordid past
  • How cheap drones are transforming warfare in Ukraine
  • Scarlett Johansson's OpenAI clash is just the start of legal wrangles over artificial intelligence
  • Justin Trudeau is beset by a divided party and an angry electorate
  • Ebrahim Raisi was obsessed with the security of the people
  • Hawaii may soon have America's first official state gesture
  • Russians have emigrated in huge numbers since the war in Ukraine
  • Is inflation morally wrong?
  • 'She Is the Icon of All That Is Joyful in the World'
  • Is Your Company's 401(k) Match Unfair?
  • Suitors are wooing Paramount
  • Think Tesla is in trouble? Pity even more its wannabe EV rivals
  • Can anything stop Nvidia's Jensen Huang?
  • Video: insights from the author
  • Which will grow faster: India or Indonesia?
  • Squadron Leader Johnny Johnson longed to give Hitler a bloody nose
  • China's fishing fleet is causing havoc off Africa's coasts
  • Rosemary Smith set out to prove that women drivers could do as well as men
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The Caribbean is awash with illegal American guns
  • How Hindu is India's foreign policy?
  • Why Iran is hard to intimidate
  • Hedge funds make billions as India's options market goes ballistic
  • Checks and Balance newsletter: Joe Biden's state-of-the-union speech
  • What Russia's budget reveals about the war in Ukraine
  • India's surging food prices are a problem not just for India
  • The best gaming monitors in 2024
  • "Trading Places" and the challenge of troubling art of the past
  • Armies are re-learning how to fight in cities
  • What will humans do if technology solves everything?
  • Ready, player four billion: the rise of video games
  • The world's most, and least, walkable cities
  • Gaza is on the brink of a man-made famine
  • Will Roy Cohn Save Donald Trump's Hide One Last Time?
  • Celtics rally to reach NBA finals as Pacers blow late lead once again
  • Spanish startups reached €100 billion in aggregate value last year
  • The fightback against Javier Milei's radical reforms has begun
  • Charred bodies and screams: Witnesses describe scenes of horror after an airstrike at a camp.
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • How NIMBYs increase carbon emissions
  • Generation Z is unprecedentedly rich
  • How China's political clans might determine its future
  • Footage from nearby building captures Rafah airstrike shortly after ICJ ruling – video
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • South Africa, With Elections, Is Becoming Something New
  • How China, Russia and Iran are forging closer ties
  • The Sordid History of U.S. Food Safety Highlights the Importance of Regulation
  • SQLMC - Check All Urls Of A Domain For SQL Injections
  • Towns in eastern Ukraine fear they will be Russia's next target
  • Robert Badinter persuaded France to abolish the guillotine
  • Working from home and the US-Europe divide
  • AI Is a Black Box. Anthropic Figured Out a Way to Look Inside
  • Highlights of a year when art mattered as much as ever
  • Chinese green technologies are pouring into Latin America
  • The campus is coming for Joe Biden
  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • What the last veterans can teach us all as D-Day fades from memory
  • LatAm startups: Apply to Startup Battlefield 200
  • Gftrace - A Command Line Windows API Tracing Tool For Golang Binaries
  • Today's AI models are impressive. Teams of them will be formidable
  • KAL's cartoon
  • Russia's gas business will never recover from the war in Ukraine
  • Four kids left: The Thai school swallowed by the sea – video
  • Pelé went from poverty to football superstardom
  • Is CBD Safe for Cats and Dogs?
  • Now it's Prince William's turn to shape British town planning
  • A museum in Rotterdam opens up its collection
  • Big tech's great AI power grab
  • Chinese nationalists have issues with "3 Body Problem"
  • Move fast and mend things
  • Meet the digital David taking on the Google Goliath
  • Pemex is the world's most indebted oil company
  • Shrinking populations mean less growth and a more fractious world
  • How to benefit from the conversations you have at work
  • KAL's cartoon
  • London Moves to Revive Its Reputation as a Financial Hub
  • America's political paralysis is complicating its support for Ukraine
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Gang violence is spreading across Latin America
  • Local Coworking Spaces Thrive Where WeWork Dared Not Go
  • Emmanuel Macron in his own words (French)
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Why recorded music will never feel as good as the real thing
  • Questions grow over the future of the London stockmarket
  • The super-rich are trying new approaches to philanthropy
  • Mangosuthu Buthelezi had his own vision for a democratic South Africa
  • The Princess of Wales's cancer diagnosis is a very public ordeal
  • Argentina's Javier Milei begins his radical experiment in libertarian rule
  • Mikhail Gorbachev did not mean the Soviet Union to end that way
  • The speech police are coming for social media
  • Crow Country is a darkly meditative callback to survival horror's past
  • America's realtor racket is alive and kicking
  • Central-bank digital currencies are talked about more than coming to fruition
  • The secret behind the world's happiest country
  • Old Lesbians: reclaiming old age and queerness through storytelling
  • Austria's accidental hard-right leader
  • How race and politics interact in modern South Africa
  • The Next Front in the War Against Climate Change
  • Scientists have trained an AI through the eyes of a baby
  • China's deep-water fishing fleet is the world's most rapacious
  • Common sense is not actually very common
  • Can Home Depot's "amazing era" return?
  • A mano-a-mano contest between Michael Cohen and Donald Trump
  • Cashless talk
  • Some Australians are increasingly sceptical of AUKUS
  • After 12 years of blood, Assad's Syria rejoins the Arab League
  • 'I woke up face down on a Hollywood lawn': Bran Van 3000 on Drinking in LA
  • Business
  • 'TunnelVision' Attack Leaves Nearly All VPNs Vulnerable to Spying
  • Bitcoin's price is surging. What happens next?
  • Earthquake fears loom large in Istanbul's mayoral race
  • Facebook refused to take down fake account, says TikTok star
  • America's elite universities are bloated, complacent and illiberal
  • How India's imports of Russian oil have lubricated global markets
  • Espionage scandals are hurting Germany's far right
  • Elon Musk's Neuralink Gets FDA Green Light for Second Patient
  • Internal Emails Reveal How a Controversial Gun-Detection AI System Found Its Way to NYC
  • The Complex Social Lives of Viruses
  • Politics
  • Memorial Day Sales Aren't Over Yet: Grab Last-Minute Deals on TVs, Tech, Furniture and More - CNET
  • The people of Hong Kong are growing more tolerant
  • China is churning out solar panels—and upsetting sand markets
  • Which languages take the longest to learn?
  • Open Channel: Tell Us Your Thoughts on Furiosa
  • A new book celebrates Annie Leibovitz's fashion photography
  • Many mental-health conditions have bodily triggers
  • How two small Texas towns became the patent-law centre of America
  • Why Xi Jinping sounds friendlier to America
  • The dangers of carrying a child for someone else in China
  • Relations between Japan and South Korea are blossoming
  • "The Harder They Fall" offers a new take on the Old West
  • War and climate change are overwhelming Somalia
  • Ian Hamilton masterminded one of the most daring heists of the last century
  • Jeremy Clarkson, patron saint of the Great British bore
  • Poles and Ukrainians are at loggerheads. That's good news for Putin
  • Climate talks at last lead to a deal on cutting fossil-fuel use
  • China mulls a bold test of taxation without representation
  • Politics
  • A new Suez crisis threatens the world economy
  • Why young Russian women appear so eager to marry Chinese men
  • A new way to predict ship-killing rogue waves
  • How Ukraine's enemy is also learning lessons, albeit slowly
  • Homeland Economics
  • Abortion-pill foes get a chilly reception at the Supreme Court
  • App stores are hugely lucrative—and under attack
  • Humans have altered other species as well as the environment
  • Hopes for a truce in Gaza give way to fears of a long stalemate
  • The 30 Best Movies on Hulu This Week (May 2024)
  • Hard times for China's micro-industrialists
  • Politics
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The pros and cons of corporate uniforms
  • Big Oil May Pay Billions for Climate Pollution under New Legislation
  • Explore our prediction model for Britain's looming election
  • The push to decriminalise abortion in Britain heats up
  • How to be a good follower
  • Elon Musk's xAI raises $6B from Valor, a16z, and Sequoia
  • Russia-Ukraine war live: Belgium pledges 30 F-16 fighter jets with near €1bn in military aid
  • More women are getting onto corporate boards. Good
  • The 28 Best Movies on Max (aka HBO Max) Right Now (May 2024)
  • New industrial policies will not help economic stability
  • Damien Hirst and the dates that don't add up - podcast
  • Comb-Over No More: Why Men's Hair Transplants Are Flourishing
  • Pikmin Bloom has been helping me meet my outdoor walking goals for years
  • Meet the French oil major that balances growth and greenery
  • In defence of a financial instrument that fails to do its job
  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • Jack Jennings was one of the Allied POWs who built the Burma Railway
  • Data Breaches: The Complete WIRED Guide
  • Inflation estimates combined with voting data show that states where Trump got the most votes in 2020 have on balance experienced higher inflation than Biden-leaning states, an analysis by The Wall Street Journal found.
  • Vladimir Putin says the world's energy infrastructure is "at risk"
  • Chuck Schumer and Joe Biden pile pressure on Binyamin Netanyahu
  • Jet-setting Argentine President Javier Milei courts top US tech CEOs
  • Business
  • The cost of the global arms race
  • NATO's boss wants to free Ukraine to strike hard inside Russia
  • Cuba's private-sector experiment is faltering
  • I'm a brown, Muslim European. For people like me, these EU elections are terrifying | Shada Islam
  • Roomba robot vacuums are up to $425 off for Memorial Day
  • China's economy is suffering from long covid
  • Lawrence Wong will be only the fourth PM in Singapore's history
  • Rachel Roddy's recipe for barbecue-baked cheese with oregano and honey | A kitchen in Rome
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • An inspiring, if frustrating, portrayal of the Williams sisters' coach and dad
  • An Australian spy chief triggers a debate about China
  • Canadians are taking dramatic steps to avoid more ruinous firestorms
  • China's low-fertility trap
  • The world is (still) failing to come close to its climate goals
  • Issey Miyake saw clothes in a completely new way
  • Geert Mak takes stock of the past 20 years of European history
  • Without realising it, Britain has become a nation of immigrants
  • Protests have erupted against another Syrian dictator
  • JAW - A Graph-based Security Analysis Framework For Client-side JavaScript
  • KAL's cartoon
  • Checks and Balance newsletter: Trump, Biden and piratical shamelessness
  • Could America and its allies club together to weaken the dollar?
  • Ann Shulgin pioneered the use of psychedelics in therapy
  • A variety of new batteries are coming to power EVs
  • Gradually, the besieged city of Bakhmut is being abandoned by everyone
  • Hong Kong passes a security law that its masters scarcely need
  • The tech wars are about to enter a fiery new phase
  • How the Pentagon Learned to Use Targeted Ads to Find Its Targets—and Vladimir Putin
  • Can women-only factories help more Indian women into work?
  • Why Lula keeps meddling with Latin America's top oil company
  • Tracking ships in the Red Sea
  • What Is Quantum Computing? The Complete WIRED Guide
  • South-East Asia learns how to deal with China
  • Best Internet Providers in St. Paul, Minnesota - CNET
  • Apple built a Tetris clone for the iPod but never released it
  • EU's ChatGPT taskforce offers first look at detangling the AI chatbot's privacy compliance
  • Primary schools in Britain are beginning to close
  • Closing Arguments for Trump Hush-Money Trial to Begin
  • The economics of American lotteries
  • Graphene, a wondrous material, starts to prove useful
  • Business
  • Ukraine's animals are also victims of the war
  • PoolParty - A Set Of Fully-Undetectable Process Injection Techniques Abusing Windows Thread Pools
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Someone made a Flappy Bird tribute for the Playdate that lets you use the crank to fly
  • Japanese men have an identity crisis
  • Is China a climate saint or villain?
  • An election that could make the global internet safer for autocrats
  • Congress tells China: sell TikTok or we'll ban it
  • A new archive preserves the creative legacy of the East Village
  • New House of the Dragon Featurette Is Here to Remind Us Who's Really in Charge
  • Why are cities in Latin America getting more expensive?
  • China's high-stakes struggle to defy demographic disaster
  • Jiang Zemin oversaw a wave of economic change, but not much political reform
  • Simine Vazire hopes to fix psychology's credibility crisis
  • Eleanor Coppola recorded how a cinematic triumph almost came unstuck
  • For China, Taiwan's elections are a looming crisis
  • Ukraine's counter-offensive is speeding up
  • Atari just bought Intellivision, putting an end to the very first console war
  • A digital payments revolution in India
  • The "effective altruism" movement is louder than it is large
  • Scarlett Johansson Says OpenAI Ripped Off Her Voice for ChatGPT
  • Todd McFarlane's Spawn Hires an Oscar-Nominated Screenwriter
  • Today's NYT Connections Hints and Answers: Help for May 28, #352 - CNET
  • Rose Dugdale went from debutante to IRA bombmaker
  • Ranajit Guha revolutionised the study of India's past
  • An espionage case hurts Chinese relations with Australia
  • Is deploying soldiers on New York's subway as mad as it seems?
  • China's enormous surveillance state is still growing
  • KAL's cartoon
  • Could weight-loss drugs eat the world?
  • Carles Puigdemont aims to reignite Catalan separatism
  • Blighty newsletter: the Tories' 2015 playbook won't stop Keir Starmer
  • Two books assess the fight against global corruption
  • A Widely Used Criminal Justice Algorithm For Assessing Child Pornography Recidivism Is Flawed
  • How many people have died in Gaza?
  • Adani looks to battle Reliance, Walmart in India's e-commerce, payments race, report says
  • China is talking to Taiwan's next leader, just not directly
  • Media Companies Are Making a Huge Mistake With AI
  • The best television shows of 2021
  • Nick Train apologises to investors for flagship fund's poor performance
  • Going green could bring huge benefits for India's economy
  • Moon landing apart, Indian science punches far below its weight
  • Will Israel retaliate against Iran, or hold back?
  • Prabowo Subianto will be Indonesia's next president
  • Unexpectedly, the cost of big cyber-attacks is falling
  • Star Wars: The Acolyte Gets Rave First Reactions
  • England's historic buildings are causing headaches
  • Eric Freeman hoped to save the Gloucestershire of old
  • Apple's 16-inch MacBook Pro M3 Max is $250 off
  • One of the Middle East's oldest conflicts has entered a new era
  • The Essence of Star Wars: Galactic Starcruiser Was You Made the Experience
  • Europe can't decide how to unplug from China
  • Why AI needs to learn new languages
  • Globalisation may not have increased income inequality, after all
  • Inside Narendra Modi's battle to win over the south
  • Congo's M23 rebellion risks sparking a regional war
  • What if China and India became friends?
  • India's opposition bloc disintegrates
  • Most US TikTok Creators Don't Think a Ban Will Happen
  • Google plans to run a fiber optic cable from Kenya to Australia
  • It was hard for any viewer to look away from Sidney Poitier
  • Battles over streaming break out for video games
  • America's trust in its institutions has collapsed
  • A New Surveillance Tool Invades Border Towns
  • Ukraine's European allies are either broke, small or irresolute
  • An Israeli airstrike killed 45 Palestinians in an encampment for displaced people
  • The Pentagon is hurrying to find new explosives
  • For Gen-Z job-seekers, TikTok is the new LinkedIn
  • America's border crisis in ten charts
  • A new biography explains the genius of John von Neumann
  • Car shows in the West are in terminal decline
  • Metal Prices Rise; Gold Gains Ahead of Inflation Data Release
  • George Miller at the End of the World
  • What Is Lyocell Fabric, and Is It Eco-Friendly?
  • Singapore cracks down on Chinese influence
  • Crypto Astrologers See Price Moves in the Stars
  • Severe storms with tornadoes tore across states including Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas and Kentucky over theholiday weekend, killing at least 20 people and injuring dozens more.
  • Australia's enthusiasm for immigration is being tested
  • Vladimir Putin is dragging the world back to a bloodier time
  • The spat with India only adds to Justin Trudeau's woes
  • Scandals deprive Germany's AfD of breakthrough in local polls
  • Samsung S95D QD-OLED Review: A Matte Screen for Reflective Rooms
  • Kill Zone: Inside Gaza review – heartbreaking human stories within the carnage and chaos
  • A challenge to leftist bias moves into America's public universities
  • Streaming services are helping Arab producers liven up television
  • Last Year We Had 'Barbenheimer.' This Year It's the Summer of Sequels.
  • This week's cover
  • The EU's best-laid plans for expansion are clashing with reality
  • The Xi-Putin partnership is not a marriage of convenience
  • Betty and Veronica Join the Demon Fight as Archie Comics: Judgment Day Continues
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Where is the "motherhood penalty" greatest?
  • To save the Amazon, Lula must work out who owns it
  • Don't blame "quiet quitting" on Gen-Z
  • This week's covers
  • The White House unveils a pair of bad policies to woo voters
  • The Deaths of Effective Altruism
  • Apple's iPhone Spyware Problem Is Getting Worse. Here's What You Should Know
  • The best films of 2021
  • Introducing Middle East Dispatch, our latest newsletter
  • Five charts compare Democrats and Republicans on job creation
  • Even Xi Jinping is struggling to fix regional inequality
  • 5 days left to get your early-bird Disrupt passes
  • The dark side of growing old
  • Iran and Israel's shadow war explodes into the open
  • Gustavo Petro, Colombia's left-wing president, is floundering
  • What do Joe Biden and the boss of Starbucks have in common?
  • As the Euro-elections loom, Giorgia Meloni guards her right flank
  • NASA's PACE satellite will tackle the largest uncertainty in climate science
  • From hypersonic missiles to undersea drones, the PLA is making leaps
  • Wagner routinely targets civilians in Africa
  • Written on the body: portraits without faces – in pictures
  • The world's most violent region needs a new approach to crime
  • Terry Anderson was held by Islamic militants for 2,454 days
  • The six rules of fire drills
  • Complexities of moderating and classifying video games
  • Brazil's hinterland now resembles Texas
  • America's rental-market mystery
  • Over a million Paraguayans disappear in the latest census
  • A war correspondent's intimate portrait of an embattled minority
  • Don't be fooled by America's "new" supply chains
  • AI could accelerate scientific fraud as well as progress
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Lawrence Wong in his own words
  • What Our Brains Know About Stocks---but Won't Tell Us
  • Africa Inc is ready to roar
  • India's diaspora is bigger and more influential than any in history
  • Americans are fretting over their body odour
  • Technology is deepening civilian involvement in war
  • A lost opportunity to reform Tanzania
  • Mexico's mighty diaspora punches below its weight in elections
  • Can the IMF solve the poor world's debt crisis?
  • Sleep Better With These 23 Best Memorial Day Mattress Sales, According to Sleep Experts - CNET
  • Gilberto Rodríguez Orejuela once ran 80% of the world cocaine market
  • Latin America's new hard right: Bukele, Milei, Kast and Bolsonaro
  • Why are Arab armed forces so ineffective?
  • The Labour Party's grand bargain with business
  • Pocket-Sized AI Models Could Unlock a New Era of Computing
  • Can run-down Blackpool turn itself around?
  • The excitement of 70,000 Swifties can shake the Earth
  • Fewer states allow abortions, yet American women are having more
  • JS-Tap - JavaScript Payload And Supporting Software To Be Used As XSS Payload Or Post Exploitation Implant To Monitor Users As They Use The Targeted Application
  • Brain-boosting substances are all the rage
  • How not to run a water utility
  • Facing Global Outrage, Netanyahu Calls Civilian Deaths in Rafah Strike 'Tragic Accident'
  • A palatial museum of Edvard Munch's art opens in Oslo
  • Georgia's black Republicans have a battle plan for 2024
  • On screen, Father Christmas cuts a mercurial figure
  • Toss a Coin to This Week's Top Sci-Fi, Horror, and Fantasy Stories
  • What Scarlett Johansson v. OpenAI Could Look Like in Court
  • Three Mammoth Skeletons Discovered in Wine Cellar
  • America has had a Cuban agent in its midst for 42 years
  • Could Putting Neosporin in Your Nose Fend Off COVID?
  • Singapore has achieved astounding economic success
  • Bees, like humans, can preserve cultural traditions
  • Leaflet by Leaflet, a Few Aging Activists Fight India's Tide of Bigotry
  • Can Inflatable Outdoor Furniture Ever Be Chic?
  • WTF Is With the Pink Pineapples at the Grocery Store?!
  • A string of setbacks for the junta in Myanmar presents an opportunity
  • Donald Trump's first criminal trial will be both momentous and tawdry
  • A shadowy wartime economy has emerged in Gaza
  • A new leader offers little hope for Palestinians
  • Facebook turned off the news in Canada. What happened next?
  • Checks and Balance newsletter: The history of national conventions in Chicago offers hope to both parties
  • Germany is flunking the education test
  • Stockmarkets are booming. But the good times are unlikely to last
  • Criminal gangs are showing their muscle as Mexico's elections loom
  • This week's cover
  • By 2100 half the world's children will be born in sub-Saharan Africa
  • Disney Musician Richard Sherman Has Died at Age 95
  • Joe Biden is practising some Clintonian politics
  • Fernando Botero became famous for his over-size people and animals
  • Meet the Characters of Beetlejuice Beetlejuice: New, Old, and Very Old
  • Film-makers are finding horror, not comfort, in the natural world
  • Some good news about America's fertility problem
  • Ancient, damaged Roman scrolls have been deciphered using AI
  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Business
  • These Electric School Buses Are on Their Way to Save the Grid
  • The world's rules-based order is cracking
  • Why Agnes Chow fled Hong Kong and isn't likely to return
  • Why Are We Seeing These Crazy Northern Lights?
  • Phoenix, America's Hottest City, Is Having a Surge of Deaths
  • Xi Jinping plays social engineer
  • Universal Studios Hits Play on Summer and Horror Nights Reveals in This Week's Theme Park News
  • Spotify Tips for People Who Like to Listen to Whole Albums
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Brother Andrew secretly carried Bibles behind the Iron Curtain
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Best Internet Providers in Richmond, Virginia - CNET
  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Happy Birthday to Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom
  • Have McKinsey and its consulting rivals got too big?
  • I Went Undercover as a Secret OnlyFans Chatter. It Wasn't Pretty
  • The Morning After: Samsung's secret war on repair
  • Lost Caravaggio that was nearly sold for €1,500 goes on display at Prado in Madrid
  • Will Joe Biden's new plan bring relief to Gaza?
  • Can Bayer recover from its chronic pain?
  • The last scraps of the Haitian state are evaporating
  • Speaker Hoyle and the strange politics of human resources
  • The Unitree G1 Is a Short Humanoid Robot That Costs Just $16,000
  • France, Germany and Poland try to patch differences over Ukraine
  • KAL's cartoon
  • China's youth are rebelling against long hours
  • Why some whales can smell in stereo
  • Western armies are learning a lot from the war in Ukraine
  • The Conservatives' world has disappeared. Don't tell Rishi Sunak
  • Top FBI Official Urges Agents to Use Warrantless Wiretaps on US Soil
  • Elon Musk is reportedly planning an xAI supercomputer to power a better version of Grok
  • Godwin by Joseph O'Neill review – unmissable edge-of-your-seat drama
  • Israel faces wave of condemnation over strike on Rafah camp
  • What is weighing on CEOs' minds this earnings season?
  • The AirFish is a fast ferry that will fly above the waves
  • Microsoft Deploys Generative AI for US Spies
  • Oil Rises on U.S. Fuel Demand Expectations
  • A new English version of "The Arabian Nights" is the first by a woman
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • A new tragedy shows anarchy rules in Gaza
  • What causes turbulence on flights and which routes around the world are most affected?
  • Why Former Employees & Scarlett Johansson Are Questioning OpenAI
  • Amazon's Fire TV Stick 4K Max is better as a retro gaming device than a streamer
  • Mike Sadler guided the first SAS raiders through the North African desert
  • Producing fake information is getting easier
  • We're hiring a senior India correspondent
  • Nearly 175 arrested as climate protesters target France's TotalEnergies and key investor
  • The mafiosi of Naples turn white-collar
  • Mexico's next president can reset relations with the United States
  • The Sea Is Swallowing This Mexican Town
  • What Is Blockchain? The Complete WIRED Guide
  • Haiti's transitional government must take office amid gang warfare
  • David Kirke believed safe sport repressed people's imaginations
  • Man Charged After Trying to Body Slam an Orca in New Zealand
  • A promising technique could make blood types mutually compatible
  • KAL's cartoon
  • Who are the Americans switching from Biden to Trump?
  • ABN AMRO to Buy Private German Bank for EUR672 Million
  • Uh-oh: ICQ is shutting down on June 26
  • Emmanuel Macron's vision of a more muscular Europe is coming true
  • An advocate of sustainable capitalism explains how it's done
  • A comical effort by China's intelligence agency
  • A fresh Russian push will test Ukraine severely, says a senior general
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Why China is unlikely to restrain Iran
  • Let's Talk About the Ending of Furiosa
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • A cautionary tale from the streets of San Francisco
  • George Miller Wants Mad Max to Take Another Ride Into Video Games
  • Wanted: a new economics writer
  • Physicists are reimagining dark matter
  • English football's financial fracas
  • Escalating protests expose three fault lines on American campuses
  • Ugandan judges uphold a draconian anti-gay law
  • A new technique to work out a corpse's time of death
  • How scared is China of Donald Trump's return?
  • South American governments are trying to curb illegal fishing
  • A new nuclear arms race looms
  • Google Search's New AI Overviews Will Soon Have Ads
  • Gucci, Prada and Tiffany's bet big on property
  • Why is Brazil a hotspot for financial crime?
  • Short of cash, Brazil's government may end its gambling prohibition
  • The Economist's science and technology internship
  • Moving weapons around Europe fast is crucial for deterring Russia
  • Bird Flu Makes Raw Milk Riskier, and Geomagnetic Storms Cause Colorful Skies
  • What would get China's consumers spending?
  • How the NFL keeps fans transfixed even when there are no games
  • China's quest to become a robot superpower
  • Why France has made abortion a constitutional right
  • Vivienne Westwood sowed never-ending revolution all through the fashion world
  • Hurricanes Caused Lost Income among at Least Half of Local Residents
  • India elections: PM Narendra Modi claims he has been chosen by God
  • Wind turbines keep getting bigger
  • Sunak struggles to control Tory party on chaotic fifth day of election campaign
  • SEC Widens Accessibility of Crypto Investing With Approval of ETFs for Ether
  • The success of "Succession" proves the virtue of hateful characters
  • A new psychological history of the cold war
  • The military dictatorship controls less than 50% of Myanmar
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • How Jim Simons revolutionised investing
  • Airbnb bookings for the solar eclipse reach astronomical levels
  • How Mexico's president won over the working class
  • The Great Solar Storm of 2024 May Have Made the Strongest Auroras in Centuries
  • Maya Widmaier-Picasso helped to revive her father's creativity
  • Politics
  • The Most Disturbing Places We've Found Microplastics So Far
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Families of Uvalde shooting victims sue Activision and Meta
  • Subhunter - A Fast Subdomain Takeover Tool
  • Western multinationals' Russian dilemmas
  • Is China a winner from the Red Sea attacks?
  • The old have come to dominate American politics
  • The 34 Best Shows on Amazon Prime Right Now (May 2024)
  • A new age of sail begins
  • Ukraine's draft dodgers are living in fear
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  • Checks and Balance newsletter: Trump's erstwhile allies
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  • Why are so many of the victims in Gaza children?
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  • Friday the 13th's Co-Creator Thinks Its Studio is Afraid to Revive It
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  • Craig Wright Lied About Creating Bitcoin and Faked Evidence, Judge Rules
  • Two new books explore the impact of accelerating technology
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  • South Africa election poll tracker, results and guide to the parties
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