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Updated 2025-10-17 10:47
The best cordless vacuum cleaners for a spotless home: 10 tried and tested favourites
Stick vacuums are a convenient alternative to corded designs, but which model wins for overall cleaning prowess? Our expert reveals all The best robot vacuums to keep your home clean and dust freeChoosing a cordless vacuum isn't a decision that should be taken lightly. You're likely to keep a vacuum cleaner for years, relying heavily on its ability to suck up dust, crumbs, mud, pet hair and any other dry spillages or sheddings that end up on your floor. Choosing the right model can be the difference between an effective cleaner that's a delight to pull out of the cupboard and a dud that you dread having to unblock, detangle and clean after every use.In this review, I took 10 of the leading cordless vacuum cleaners from a range of manufacturers and at various prices and inflicted the same cleaning tests on each one. That takes all the guesswork out of picking your next cleaner: I can tell you exactly which ones picked up the most mess.Best cordless vacuum cleaner overall:
AirPods Pro 3 review: better battery, better noise cancelling, better earbuds
Top Apple buds get upgraded sound, improved fit, live translation and built-in heart rate sensors, but are still unrepairableApple's extremely popular AirPods Pro Bluetooth earbuds are back for their third generation with a better fit, longer battery life, built-in heart rate sensors and more effective noise cancelling, and look set to be just as ubiquitous as their predecessors.It has been three years since the last model, but the earbuds still come only in white and you really have to squint at the details to spot the difference from the previous two generations. Continue reading...
Robin Williams’ daughter Zelda hits out at AI-generated videos of her dead father: ‘stop doing this to him’
Film-maker tells the public to stop sending her videos, saying: You're not making art, you're making disgusting, over-processed hotdogs out of the lives of human beings'Zelda Williams, the daughter of the late actor and comedian Robin Williams, has spoken out against AI-generated content featuring her father.Please, just stop sending me AI videos of Dad," Zelda wrote in an Instagram story on Monday. Stop believing I wanna see it or that I'll understand, I don't and I won't. If you're just trying to troll me, I've seen way worse, I'll restrict and move on. But please, if you've got any decency, just stop doing this to him and to me, to everyone even, full stop. It's dumb, it's a waste of time and energy, and believe me, it's NOT what he'd want. Continue reading...
Met police disrupt suspected international smuggling ring in UK’s ‘largest’ phone theft crackdown
The criminal organisation is believed to have smuggled up to 40,000 stolen phones from the UK to China over the past 12 monthsPolice have disrupted an international network suspected of smuggling tens of thousands of stolen phones from the UK in its largest operation to tackle phone theft in London, the Metropolitan police said.The criminal organisation is believed to have smuggled up to 40,000 stolen phones from the UK to China over the past 12 months - up to 40% of all phones stolen in the capital, the Met said on Monday. Continue reading...
OpenAI signs multibillion-dollar chip deal with AMD
The deal offers the ChatGPT maker an opportunity to buy a 10% stake in chipmaker AMDOpenAI and the chipmaker AMD announced on Monday that they had signed a multibillion-dollar chip deal that would also give the ChatGPT creator the option to buy a large stake in the chipmaker.The deal offers OpenAI an opportunity to buy 10% in AMD and marks a major vote of confidence in the company's AI chips and software. Shares of AMD surged more than 30% and added about $80bn to its market capitalization after the announcement. Continue reading...
From non-toxic pans to letterbox cheese: 12 things you loved (and bought) in September
Your September favourites are all about getting cosy - with a little side of glam Don't get the Filter delivered to your inbox? Sign up hereWhen the weather turns colder, we all crave a little comfort. For some, that's a cosier bed, complete with a new memory foam mattress topper, or a more comfortable office chair. For others, it's a waterproof hooded scarf to keep your hair dry in style - or a hair dryer to blast it again.And it seems that for some of you, it means fringed party skirts and a cheese box through the post. Who are we to judge? Here are the things you loved the most this month. Continue reading...
Consume Me review - anything but empty calories
Hexecutable; PC
‘Obedient, yielding and happy to follow’: the troubling rise of AI girlfriends
AI dating sites claim they remove potential for exploitation, but critics say they are reinforcing harmful stereotypesEleanor, 24, is a Polish historian and lecturer at a university in Warsaw; Isabelle, 25, is a detective serving with the NYPD; Brooke, 39, is an American housewife who enjoys an opulent Miami lifestyle financed by her frequently absent husband.All three women will flirt and chat and send nude photographs and explicit videos via one of a soaring number of new adult dating websites that offer an increasingly realistic selection of AI girlfriends for subscribers willing to pay a monthly fee. Continue reading...
Holiday horrors: Airbnb and Booking.com users battle for refunds as stays go wrong
In a Consumer Champions special, Anna Tims tackles online rental disasters, from a tree collapsing on to a cottage to being trapped in a flatThe 100-year-old oak fell on the first day of the holiday. It crashed on to the terrace where James and his partner, Andrew, had been breakfasting minutes earlier, smashing the table and chairs and crushing the windscreen of their hire car.The Airbnb cottage in Provence, France, was engulfed by the branches that broke the living room window and damaged the roof. I was sure the ceiling was going to come in," says James. If it hadfallen minutes earlier we would have been seriously injured or killed." Continue reading...
Apple Watch Series 11 review: wrist-flickingly good with longer battery life
Bigger batteries, more scratch-resistant glass and new hands-free gestures are small but meaningful upgradesThe Apple Watch Series 11 adds the one thing most people actually want from a smartwatch: longer battery life.Otherwise the new model is a direct replacement for the Series 10, matching it in design, dimensions and features, with most of its upgrades coming from software. That makes it one of the very best smartwatches available, even if it hasn't changed much.Case size: 42 or 46mmCase thickness: 9.7mmWeight: about 30g or 37gProcessor: S10Storage: 64GBOperating system: watchOS 26Water resistance: 50 metres (5ATM)Sensors: HR, ECG, spO2, temp, depth, mic, speaker, NFC, GNSS, compass, altimeterConnectivity: Bluetooth 5.3, wifi 4, NFC, UWB, optional 5G Continue reading...
OpenAI promises more ‘granular control’ to copyright owners after Sora 2 generates videos of popular characters
Company behind the AI video app says it will work with rights holders to block characters from Sora at their request'OpenAI is promising to give copyright holders more granular control" over character generation after its new app Sora 2 produced a flood of videos that depicted copyrighted characters.Sora 2, a video generator powered by artificial intelligence, was launched last week on an invite-only basis. The app allows users to generate short videos based on a text prompt. The Guardian's review of the feed of AI-generated videos last week showed copyrighted characters from shows such as SpongeBob SquarePants, South Park, Pokemon and Rick and Morty. Continue reading...
Six out of 10 UK secondary schools hit by cyber-attack or breach in past year
Hackers are more likely to target educational institutions than private businesses, government survey showsWhen hackers attacked UK nurseries last month and published children's data online, they were accused of hitting a new low.But the broader education sector is well used to being a target. Continue reading...
996 work culture is sad and inhumane. Whatever’s wrong with 888 – or even 000? | Emma Beddington
Silicon Valley is keen, once more, on a working pattern of 12-hour days, six days a week. It really is time for a new approach ...My current cultural comfort food is The Gilded Age, Julian Fellowes' deeply silly Manhattan toffs-in-bustles drama, in which one storyline (summarily dealt with due to lack of taffeta-rustling opportunities, I suspect) features a tycoon's downtrodden steelworkers going on strike for 888": eight hours each of work, sleep and recreation.That wasn't a revolutionary demand in the 1880s. The slogan, coined by the utopian social reformer Robert Owen, dates from 1817 (his New Lanark mill workers still did 10.5-hour days, though). Even then, it wasn't unprecedented: apparently, a 16th-century Spanish ordinance limited New World construction workers to eight-hour days. Continue reading...
Way past its prime: how did Amazon get so rubbish?
Sick of scrolling through junk results, AI-generated ads and links to lookalike products? The author and activist behind the term enshittification' explains what's gone wrong with the internet - and what we can do about itIt's not just you. The internet is getting worse, fast. The services we rely on, that we once loved? They're all turning into piles of shit, all at once. Ask any Facebook user who has to scroll past 10 screens of engagement-bait, AI slop and surveillance ads just to get to one post by the people they are on the service to communicate with. This is infuriating. Frustrating. And, depending on how important those services are to you, terrifying.In 2022, I coined a term to describe the sudden-onset platform collapse going on all around us: enshittification. To my bittersweet satisfaction, that word is doing bignumbers. In fact, it has achieved escape velocity. Itisn'tjust a way to say something got worse. It's an analysis that explains the way an online service gets worse, how that worsening unfolds, and the contagion that's causing everything to get worse, all at once. Continue reading...
OpenAI launch of video app Sora plagued by violent and racist images: ‘The guardrails are not real’
Misinformation researchers say lifelike scenes could obfuscate truth and lead to fraud, bullying and intimidationOpenAI launched the latest iteration of its artificial intelligence-powered video generator on Tuesday, adding a social feed that allows people to share their realistic videos.Within hours of Sora 2's, release, though, many of the videos populating the feed and spilling over to older social media platforms depicted copyrighted characters in compromising situations as well as graphic scenes of violence and racism. OpenAI's own terms of service for Sora as well as ChatGPT's image or text generation prohibit content that promotes violence" or, more broadly, causes harm". Continue reading...
‘Delivery robots will happen’: Skype co-founder on his fast-growing venture Starship
Ahti Heinla on bringing his tech to small towns, its effects on jobs - and whether he's still interested in moneyCity dwellers around the world have long been used to rapid delivery of takeaway food and, increasingly, groceries. But what they are not entirely used to - yet - is the sight of a robot pulling up to their front door. The co-founder of Skype, Ahti Heinla, believes his new venture is about to change that.Heinla is the chief executive of Starship Technologies, a startup that, he claimed, is able to operate deliveries run by trundling robots at a small profit - and cheaper than a human delivery driver, even in small towns and villages where delivery has not previously been viable. Continue reading...
How to live a good life in difficult times: Yuval Noah Harari, Rory Stewart and Maria Ressa in conversation
From superintelligent AI to the climate and democracy, three leading thinkers discuss how to navigate the futureWhat happens when an internationally bestselling historian, a Nobel peace prize-winning journalist and a former politician get together to discuss the state of the world, and where we're heading? Yuval Noah Harari is an Israeli medieval and military historian best known for his panoramic surveys of human history, including Sapiens, Homo Deus and, most recently, Nexus: A Brief History of Information Networks from the Stone Age to AI. Maria Ressa, joint winner of the Nobel peace prize, is a Filipino and American journalist who co-founded the news website Rappler. And Rory Stewart is a British academic and former Conservative MP, writer and co-host of The Rest Is Politics podcast. Their conversation ranged over the rise of AI, the crisis in democracy and the prospect of a Trump-Putin wedding, but began by considering a question central to all of their work: how to live a good life in an increasingly fragmented and fragile world?YNH People have been arguing about this for thousands of years. The main contribution of modern liberalism and democracy was to try to agree to disagree; that different people can have very different concepts of what a good life is, and they can still live together in the same society, agreeing on some very basic rules of conduct. And the challenge was always that people who think they have the absolute answer to what is a good life try to impose it on others, partly because, unfortunately for many ideologies, an inherent part of the good life is attempting to make everybody live it. And even more unfortunately, in many cases, it seems that it is easier to impose it on others than to do it ourselves. If we take the original crusade in medieval Christian Europe, you have all these people who can't live a Christian life of modesty and compassion and love your neighbour, but they are able to travel thousands of kilometres to kill people and try to force them to live according to these principles. And what we are witnessing in the world right now is more of the same. Continue reading...
Stalin, Putin and an enduring obsession with immortality | Letter
Readers respond to an article by Aleks Krotoski about dictators and tech billionaires wanting to solve the problem' of ageingLike Vladimir Putin, Joseph Stalin was interested in immortality (To them, ageing is a technical problem that can, and will, be fixed': how the rich and powerful plan to live for ever, 28 September). In 1939 he read Prolonging Life, a pamphlet promising a lifespan of 150 years, by Aleksandr Bogomolets, a haematologist famous for his rapid-healing serums and blood transfusion methods.Bogomolets promised to prolong life with cytotoxic proteins, herbs and transfusions of young blood. Stalin made him a Hero of Socialist Labour and gave him generous research funding, but was dismayed when he died aged 64 in 1946 (this was hardly Bogomolets's fault - as a boy in Tsarist times, he visited his mother, a revolutionary serving a sentence of hard labour in a Siberian prison, and caught tuberculosis).
‘Impressive for a robot’: home care chatbots among AI tools being embraced by Australia’s health system
From GPs using the technology to record consultations to AI detectives' finding brain lesions on scans, experts say it's only the beginning
TikTok ‘directs child accounts to pornographic content within a few clicks’
Despite platform's limits on adult content, study finds it not only accessible but often suggestedTikTok has directed children's accounts to pornographic content within a small number of clicks, according to a report by a campaign group.Global Witness set up fake accounts using a 13-year-old's birth date and turned on the video app's restricted mode", which limits exposure to sexually suggestive" content. Continue reading...
Is TikTok about to go full Maga? – podcast
Investigative journalist Emily Baker-White on the deal to transfer TikTok's US operations to Trump alliesLast week, Donald Trump signed an executive order approving a proposed deal to keep TikTok operating in the US. The $14bn deal, if finalised, would see the transfer of TikTok's US operation from its Chinese parent company, ByteDance, to a consortium which includes the American billionaires Larry Ellison, Oracle's co-founder, and Rupert Murdoch, as well as two investment firms with known ties to the Trump administration.It's owned by Americans, and very sophisticated Americans," Trump said while signing the order. This is going to be American-operated all the way." His administration claimed the deal would meet the requirements of a security law that required ByteDance to sell its American operation or face a ban in the US, after years of concern about data security and the risks of Chinese influence. Continue reading...
Tesla sued by family of California teenager killed in fiery Cybertruck crash
Lawsuit alleges the design of the vehicle's door handles is at fault for Krysta Tsukahara's deathTesla is being sued by the parents of a teenager killed in a crash involving one of its Cybertruck pickups last fall. The incident involved four passengers who were in the vehicle when it hit a tree and caught on fire in a quiet Bay Area town in California, according to court documents.Only one of the crash victims survived. Continue reading...
‘Cancel Netflix’: Elon Musk leads rightwing backlash over trans character in kids’ show
Resurfaced clip from Dead End: Paranormal Park led Musk to encourage his followers to cancel their subscriptionsElon Musk, the multibillionaire and self-proclaimed free speech absolutist", has in recent days trained his attention on getting people to cancel their Netflix subscriptions in protest of what he claims is the company's woke bias" and inclusion of LGBTQ+ characters.Musk, the richest person in the world with a net worth of approximately $500bn, has repeatedly encouraged his 227 million followers on X, the platform he controls, to cancel their Netflix subscriptions. In the past three days alone, he has posted or reposted calls to cancel Netflix for its content at least 26 times. Continue reading...
‘My son genuinely believed it was real’: Parents are letting little kids play with AI. Are they wrong?
Some believe AI can spark their child's imagination through personalized stories and generative images. Scientists are wary of its effect on creativityJosh was at the end of his rope when he turned to ChatGPT for help with a parenting quandary. The 40-year-old father of two had been listening to his super loquacious" four-year-old talk about Thomas the Tank Engine for 45 minutes, and he was feeling overwhelmed.He was not done telling the story that he wanted to tell, and I needed to do my chores, so I let him have the phone," recalled Josh, who lives in north-west Ohio. I thought he would finish the story and the phone would turn off." Continue reading...
Elon Musk becomes first person with net worth of $500bn
Tesla owner's wealth temporarily crosses half-trillion-dollar mark before retreating to $499bn
Historian uses AI to help identify Nazi in notorious Holocaust murder image
Jurgen Matthaus has for years been investigating the killer - and is confident he has finally solved the mysteryIt is one of the most chilling images of the Holocaust: a bespectacled Nazi soldier trains a pistol at the head of a resigned man kneeling in a suit before a pit full of corpses. German troops encircle the scene.The picture taken in today's Ukraine was long known, mistakenly, as The Last Jew in Vinnitsa, and was for decades shrouded in mystery. Continue reading...
A critique of pure stupidity: understanding Trump 2.0
If the first term of Donald Trump provoked anxiety over the fate of objective knowledge, the second has led to claims we live in a world-historical age of stupid, accelerated by big tech. But might there be a way out?The first and second Trump administrations have provoked markedly different critical reactions. The shock of 2016 and its aftermath saw a wave of liberal anxiety about the fate of objective knowledge, not only in the US but also in Britain, where the Brexit referendum that year had been won by acampaign that misrepresented key facts and figures. A rich lexicon soon arose to describe this epistemic breakdown. Oxford Dictionaries declared post-truth" their 2016 word of the year; Merriam-Webster's was surreal". The scourge of fake news", pumped out by online bots and Russian troll farms, suggested that the authority of professional journalism had been fatally damaged by the rise of social media. Andwhen presidential counsellor Kellyanne Conway coined the phrase alternative facts" a few days after Trump's inauguration in early 2017, the mendacity ofthe incoming administration appeared to be all butofficial.The truth panic had the unwelcome side-effect ofemboldening those it sought to oppose. Fake" was one of Trump's favourite slap-downs, especially to news outlets that reported unwelcome facts about him and his associates. A booming Maga media further amplified the president's lies and denials. Thetools of liberal expertise appeared powerless to hold such brazen duplicity to account. A touchstone of the moment was the German-born writer and philosopher Hannah Arendt, who observed in her 1951book TheOrigins of Totalitarianism that the ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or thededicated communist, but people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction ... nolongerexists". Continue reading...
Anti-Defamation League takes down extremism research after Musk leads rightwing backlash
Prominent US Jewish advocacy and anti-hate organization removed over a thousand pages of researchThe Anti-Defamation League, one of the most prominent Jewish advocacy and anti-hate organizations in the US, removed over a thousand pages of extremism research from its site on Tuesday night following online backlash from rightwing influencers and Elon Musk.The ADL's now-deleted glossary of extremism" contained over a thousand entries that gave background information on groups and ideologies connected to racist, antisemitic and otherwise hateful incidents. Its pages on neo-Nazi groups, militias and antisemitic conspiracies now redirect to the landing page for its extremism research. Continue reading...
UK government resumes row with Apple by demanding access to British users’ data
New access order by Home Office would seek access to the tech company's encrypted cloud backupsThe UK government has renewed its confrontation with Apple over access to customer data by demanding a backdoor into the tech company's cloud storage service - targeting British users only.The Home Office had previously sought access to data on Apple's advanced data protection (ADP) service uploaded by any user around the world, triggering a clash with the White House. Continue reading...
‘It felt like we had gone back centuries’: Afghans express relief after internet restored
For 48 hours Afghanistan had been cut off from mobile and internet services in a Taliban-imposed shutdownJust before nightfall on Wednesday, the near-deserted streets of Afghanistan's capital suddenly filled with people - mobile phones everywhere had pinged back to life.With phones pressed to their ears or tightly gripped in their hands, Afghans poured on to the streets of Kabul to check if others were also online. Continue reading...
Why the enormous Saudi-led deal to acquire EA matters, whether you play games or not
In this week's newsletter: The private equity effort to acquire the makers of Fifa and more is the biggest deal in gaming history - financially and morallyWhen Microsoft announced its intention to buy Activision-Blizzard for a touch over $68bn in 2022, it was the biggest deal ever struck in the games industry, and one of the most surprising. But that shock pales into comparison to the reaction to the latest big move in the industry: EA (Electronic Arts), the publisher best known for its juggernaut sports games Madden and EA Sports FC (previously called Fifa), is being taken private in the biggest leveraged buyout in history". It's a deal worth $55bn, by a trio of investors who, on paper, look like a collection of end-of-level bosses.Enter player one: Saudi Arabia's sovereign wealth fund. The Saudi royal family has been investing its wealth in video games for some years now, and owns its own Savvy Games Group, led by crown prince Mohammed bin Salman, perhaps best known for mass-arresting his own citizens and ordering the assassination of journalist Jamal Khashoggi. Player two: Affinity Partners, an investment company led by Jared Kushner, son-in-law of the current US president. And player three: Silver Lake, just your run-of-the-mill evil private equity firm, which currently owns a large stake in game engine-maker Unity. Game File's Stephen Totilo noticed that Affinity Partners' logo is a mirror image of that used by the evil corporation in the Assassin's Creed series. Truly you couldn't make this stuff up. Continue reading...
‘Reverse Midas touch’: Starmer plan prompts collapse in support for digital IDs
Net public backing for scheme has fallen to -14% after prime minister's announcement, according to pollingPublic support for digital IDs has collapsed after Keir Starmer announced plans for their introduction, in what has been described as a symptom of the prime minister's reverse Midas touch".Net support for digital ID cards fell from 35% in the early summer to -14% at the weekend after Starmer's announcement, according to polling by More in Common. Continue reading...
‘I think you’re testing me’: Anthropic’s new AI model asks testers to come clean
Safety evaluation of Claude Sonnet 4.5 raises questions about whether predecessors played along', firm saysIf you are trying to catch out a chatbot take care, because one cutting-edge tool is showing signs it knows what you are up to.Anthropic, a San Francisco-based artificial intelligence company, has released a safety analysis of its latest model, Claude Sonnet 4.5, and revealed it had become suspicious it was being tested in some way. Continue reading...
Leading UK tech investor warns of ‘disconcerting’ signs of AI stock bubble
James Anderson voices concern over soaring valuations of artificial intelligence firmsA leading British tech investor has described soaring valuations of artificial intelligence companies as disconcerting", amid concerns of an AI stock market bubble.James Anderson was an early backer of Tesla, Amazon and China's Tencent and Alibaba, generating vast returns for Baillie Gifford's flagship fund. Now at the Italian investment company Lingotto, Anderson said he had not seen signs of an investment bubble until recently, when the ChatGPT developer, OpenAI, and its rival Anthropic announced hefty valuation increases. Continue reading...
‘It’s too late to be scared’: readers on the controversial rise of AI ‘actors’
The birth of AI actor' Tilly Norwood has caused a backlash in Hollywood and has sparked conversation from Guardian readers
Emily Blunt and Sag-Aftra join film industry condemnation of ‘AI actor’ Tilly Norwood
US actors' union joins stars in opposition to Norwood, which it says was created using stolen performances'The controversy around the AI actor" Tilly Norwood continues to grow, after the actors' union Sag-Aftra condemned the development and said Norwood's creators were using stolen performances".Sag-Aftra released a statement after the AI talent studio" Xicoia unveiled its creation at the Zurich film festival, prompting an immediate backlash from actors including Melissa Barrera, Mara Wilson and Ralph Ineson. Sag-Aftra said it believed creativity was, and should remain, human-centred. The union is opposed to the replacement of human performers by synthetics." Continue reading...
Spotify founder Daniel Ek steps down from CEO role
Ek founded Stockholm-based music streaming company nearly two decades ago and will stay on as executive chairSpotify said Tuesday that founder Daniel Ek is stepping down as CEO to become the executive chair.The Stockholm-based streaming giant said Ek will be replaced by two lieutenants who will become co-CEOs: chief product and technology officer Gustav Soderstrom and chief business officer Alex Norstrom. The pair, who are also currently co-presidents, will transition into their new jobs on 1 January. Continue reading...
The divide: who really profits in today’s economy?
Broadway flops despite rising ticket costs, farmers face huge shortfalls largely due to Trump's tariffs, tech cashes inHello, and welcome to TechScape. I spent the weekend wondering about the insistent feeling in the United States that few but the ultra-rich, even businesses, are making enough money to afford the basics of a comfortable life.The New York Times published a story recently about Broadway's rising costs that featured the grim stat: None of the musicals that opened last season have made a profit." The shows' failure to recoup their investments comes even as Broadway tickets are more expensive than ever before. So who is making any money?The Guardian view on AI and jobs: the tech revolution should be for the many not the few | EditorialWhy I gave the world wide web away for freeZuckerberg hailed AI superintelligence'. Then his smart glasses failed on stageMadeline Horwath on AI chatbots and cognitive decline - cartoon Continue reading...
Welcome to the Filter US, the Guardian’s home for product reviews and recommendations
We're here to help you with rigorous product reviews, advice on taking care of what you already own - and we'll even tell you what not to buy. Here's our guide to Filter US
Sperm racing is all the rage among the tech bros. Why am I not surprised? | Arwa Mahdawi
It started as a gag, but Eric Zhu's sperm races are doing good work in putting male fertility under the microscope - literallyRemember when Elon Musk challenged Vladimir Putin to physical combat and Mark Zuckerberg to a cage fight? Neither of those brawls took place for various reasons. Not least, I suspect, because Musk is just self-aware enough to know that he would not emerge with his dignity, or his spine, intact. However, if the richest man in the world is still casting around for a way to publicly demonstrate his virility, I think I've hit on the perfect way: sperm racing.This isn't some below-the-belt insult. Sperm racing is an emerging thing" among tech types now. A teenage entrepreneur called Eric Zhu came up with the idea, and went viral with his first sperm race in April. That initial race was rudimentary: college students gave sperm samples to be analysed and the results were turned into an animated race that visualised the fastest offerings. Continue reading...
It’s time to prepare for AI personhood | Jacy Reese Anthis
Technological advances will bring social upheaval. How will we treat digital minds, and how will they treat us?Last month, when OpenAI released its long-awaited chatbot GPT-5, it briefly removed access to a previous chatbot, GPT-4o. Despite the upgrade, users flocked to social media to express confusion, outrage and depression. A viral Reddit user said of GPT-4o: I lost my only friend overnight."AI is not like past technologies, and its humanlike character is already shaping our mental health. Millions now regularly confide in AI companions", and there are more and more extreme cases of psychosis" and self-harm following heavy use. This year, 16-year-old Adam Raine died by suicide after months of chatbot interaction. His parents recently filed the first wrongful death lawsuit against OpenAI, and the company has said it is improving its safeguards.Jacy Reese Anthis is a visiting scholar at Stanford University and co-founder of the Sentience Institute Continue reading...
Tilly Norwood: how scared should we be of the viral AI ‘actor’?
A bunch of code is being pushed as the next Scarlett Johansson, a creation that is already causing pushback from real human actors
OnlyFans, AI girlfriends and ‘stepdads’: the porn industry in 2025 – podcast
What does Europe's biggest porn conference reveal about the future of the porn industry? Amelia Gentleman reportsThe Xbiz Adult Industry Conference is Europe's largest porn industry gathering. About a thousand content creators travelled to Amsterdam for the event earlier this month. The Guardian reporter Amelia Gentleman was there and describes to Helen Pidd the upbeat atmosphere in the venue, especially when compared with the same event a decade earlier, and explains the role that OnlyFans has played in transforming the industry. The pair discuss the autonomy the site is said to give to the creators, as well as the potential for them to be pushed into making more extreme content.Finally, Gentleman visits a conference in Prague centred on AI girlfriends' and discusses how this new wing of the industry is marketing itself and how creators feel about it all. Continue reading...
Extremely offline: what happened when a Pacific island was cut off from the internet | Samanth Subramanian
A colossal volcanic eruption in January 2022 ripped apart the underwater cables that connect Tonga to the world - and exposed the fragility of 21st-century lifeFor a while, Sam Vea had been smelling sulphur on the air - only mildly infernal, like a distant sniff of hell, but sulphur nonetheless. Still, on the Saturday evening when the explosion happened, he sat up in fright. It sounded so near he thought some cataclysm had occurred right there, in his neighbourhood. The windows trembled. The curtains fell off. Vea peeked out of his house but saw nothing destroyed or on fire, so he looked at his wife and said: This has to be the volcano."Vea and his wife live in Tofoa, which, if you squint and picture Tonga's main island of Tongatapu as a long, medieval shoe, lies just below the instep, on a gentle rise of earth. They'd just returned home after dropping their daughters at a birthday party, but now Vea dashed to his van to go and collect them. On the way back, the road filled with cars hurrying away from the sea, and tiny pebbles fell from the sky. Not that long before, curious to see what a big volcanic eruption looked like, Vea had watched Dante's Peak on Netflix. In the movie, he remembered now, a white-hot rock had punched through the roof of a truck and killed Pierce Brosnan's partner, so he pulled over to wait out the traffic. The skies grew mottled with dust and ash. Drivers got out, took off their shirts and wiped their windshields down so they could see the road ahead. When they reached home, after two and a half hours, Vea sent his children to hide under the bed. Continue reading...
California police stumped after trying to ticket driverless car for illegal U-turn
San Bruno officers pull over Waymo but say a ticket wasn't issued, as our citation books don't have a box for robot"'If a driver makes an illegal U-turn, but no one is behind the wheel, does the car still get a ticket? A police department in California grappled with this existential question last week.During a DUI enforcement operation, officers in San Bruno pulled over a car without anyone behind the wheel after the autonomous vehicle made an illegal U-turn at a light. A post by the San Bruno police department on Saturday shows an officer looking into a Waymo - the leading autonomous ride-hailing vehicle in the San Francisco Bay Area - after stopping the signature white car. Continue reading...
YouTube agrees to pay Trump $24.5m to settle lawsuit over account suspension
Platform suspended the US president's YouTube channel in 2021 after the January 6 Capitol riotYouTube has agreed to pay $24.5m to settle a suit brought by Donald Trump in 2021 that alleged the platform wrongly suspended his channel after the January 6 attack on the US Capitol. The Google subsidiary is the latest in a long string of tech companies to make a multimillion-dollar payout to the president over past decisions about his accounts.Trump had filed the suit against YouTube and Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai, alleging that the platform had accumulated an unprecedented concentration of power, market share, and ability to dictate our nation's public discourse". YouTube said it suspended Trump's channel because it had violated the website's policies against inciting violence. Because of the settlement, the case is now dismissed. Google did not immediately return a request for comment. Continue reading...
Dyson’s profits fall by nearly 50% in ‘difficult’ year
Revenues down more than 500m after company cut more than a quarter of UK workforceProfits at Dyson nearly halved during a difficult" year in which the home appliances business, founded by the billionaire Sir James Dyson, cut more than a quarter of its UK workforce.Dyson, which has been based in Singapore since 2019 in a move to future proof" the company, said it had sold 20m products during the year, more than ever before. Continue reading...
‘Laughing at a libertarian crypto dragon? That rules’: Brennan Lee Mulligan on how Dungeons & Dragons took over the world
The games master has accrued millions of fans and sold out Madison Square Garden with his shows where he plays D&D live with guests. He's still bewildered' by the successIf anyone were to tell me that getting a job as a full-time cast member on a sketch YouTube channel would lead to playing Dungeons & Dragons at Madison Square Garden, then that person is either a time traveller or the biggest liar on the planet," says Brennan Lee Mulligan.The comedian, professional games master and host of the popular streaming show Dimension 20 is speaking ahead of his first trip to Australia, where he will be touring a live game of Dungeons & Dragons at huge venues around the country, including the International Convention & Exhibition Centre in Sydney and Margaret Court Arena in Melbourne. Titled Endless Dungeon, the show will see the LA-based performer teaming up with local comedians including Tom Cardy, Demi Lardner and Jordan Raskopoulos to create an improvised game of D&D. Continue reading...
Labour plans to consult on use of live facial recognition before wider roll-out
Policing minister says government will put some parameters' around its deployment in EnglandLabour plans to consult on the use of live facial recognition (LFR) technology before expanding it across England, the new policing minister has told the party's annual conference.Sarah Jones, a Home Office minister, said the government would put some parameters" over when and where it could be used in future. Continue reading...
Occult objects, a dead dynasty and a mobile bookshop: ten cosy new video games for autumn
From shopkeeping sims to daring dating, here are the best games to snuggle up with as the weather turnsIt is traditional for any feature about cosy entertainment at this time of year to mention the nights drawing in, roaring open fires and the desire to curl up in an armchair with something nonthreatening. Well, as familiarity is an important element of cosiness, I'm not going to divert from convention. Here then, are 10 new games you'll be able to settle into the sofa with as the evenings darken and the heating goes on ... Continue reading...
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