Keiran Hardy receives funding from the Australian Research Council for a Discovery Project on conspiracy-fuelled extremism. As controversy over Australia’s new hate laws continues, last weekend’s ...
Of the 40 million people living with HIV, nearly a quarter are not receiving life-saving treatment and new transmissions are not falling as fast as many experts hope. So how can the world meet the ...
Tech giants are in a heated race to build data centers and dominate the AI landscape. But America might not be ready for the energy demand. The country’s aging electrical grid could struggle to keep ...
Emily Henry’s first book-to-film adaptation, People We Meet on Vacation, has officially arrived — and it does not disappoint. “It’s surreal,” Henry exclusively told Us Weekly at the film’s Los Angeles ...
Australian Open prize money has increased by 16% on last year to a record total for the tournament starting Jan. 18. Organizers of the season's first tennis major on Tuesday announced their largest ...
This time of the year is known for its short days and early evenings due to the sun going down so early and the sun coming up so late. The shortest day of the year has already passed, being on the ...
It's important to build resilience, but how do we actually do it? I've spent 15 years researching happiness, and I've interviewed thousands of people about what makes it possible for them to thrive. I ...
A bombshell was dropped on the AI industry when an August 2025 USENIX study found that AI browsers violate user privacy by collecting customer browsing data. Conducted by researchers at the University ...
When AI falters, it’s easy to blame the model. People assume the algorithm got it wrong or that the technology can’t be trusted. But here’s what I've learned after years of building AI systems at ...
Starring Autumn Reeser and Niall Matter, “We Met in December” follows two strangers and their frantic love at first sight. When Annie Lane and Dave Weeks happen to meet in a festive hotel lobby, they ...
How do we stop the next big viral outbreak? The answer to that question lies in preventing zoonotic spillovers. Thousands of pathogens have been silently circulating in our forests for centuries.
For FAMU’s Vice Dean Vít Schmarc, the answer remains yes. Schools, he argued, are still “part of understanding film,” even if they’re wrestling with a contradiction: “We’re gatekeepers teaching the ...