“At Philips, our purpose is clear. We develop innovations that create better care for more people around the world,” said Roy Jakobs, CEO of Royal Philips. “Healthcare systems everywhere face growing pressure, from rising demand to workforce shortages. Our role is to help clinicians, providers, and partners deliver high-quality, more sustainable care through technology that truly makes a difference. Our new global headquarters reflects who we are and how we work: open, collaborative, and focused on impact and patient safety. It’s designed to bring people together, inspire innovation, and strengthen our global relations. From here, we continue our mission to improve lives and help shape the future of healthcare worldwide.”
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Philips Opens New Sustainable Global Headquarters in the Netherlands
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Record high 60 million viewers for Women's World Cup – France 24
- Record high 60 million viewers for Women’s World Cup France 24
- ICC Women’s Cricket World Cup India 2025 breaks viewership records on JioHotstar and Star Sports MediaNews4U
- Women’s cricket now attracts mainstream & premium brands: JioStar’s…
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Men’s T20 World Cup 2026: UAE deny Japan and seal final place at tournament
United Arab Emirates denied Japan and took the final place at next year’s men’s T20 World Cup with an eight-wicket victory in the qualifier in Oman.
Japan could have reached their first major tournament with a victory but UAE held them to 116-9…
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SignalChem’s Tau proteins in neurodegenerative research
Normally, Tau proteins stabilize microtubules and support neuronal function, but in neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s, they undergo abnormal changes that lead to aggregation and the creation of neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs).
These…
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Fans remember Liam Payne in Wolverhampton a year after he died
Rachael Lewisin Wolverhampton and
Andrew DawkinsWest Midlands
BBC
Tributes were left on railings at West Park in Wolverhampton on Thursday Fans have been paying tribute to the singer Liam Payne in his home city of Wolverhampton a year after his…
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A new assay for molecular identification of Anopheles squamosus (Diptera: Culicidae) using internal transcribed spacer 2 | Malaria Journal
WHO. Global technical strategy for malaria 2016–2030 [Internet]. Geneva, World Health Organization; 2015 [cited 2024 Dec 9]. Available from: https://iris.who.int/handle/10665/176712
Moonasar D, Nuthulaganti T, Kruger PS, Mabuza A, Rasiswi ES,…
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Identification of the Anopheles marshallii group and vector species composition in the forest ecozone of Akwa Ibom State, Southern Nigeria | Malaria Journal
There is a wide array of anopheline mosquitoes capable of transmitting malaria in Africa, and each species has varied behaviours, distribution, and seasonality that influences their roles in malaria transmission [25]. For vector control to be…
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Sheer, Daring, and High Fashion
The 2025 Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show is in the books, but the spectacle didn’t end with Angel wings and runway walks. Following the show—which featured Bella and Gigi Hadid, Alex Consani, Irina Shayk, Anok Yai, Emily Ratajkowski, and many,…
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Italian news publishers demand investigation into Google’s AI Overviews | Artificial intelligence (AI)
Italian news publishers are calling for an investigation into Google’s AI Overviews, arguing that the search engine’s AI-generated summaries feature is a “traffic killer” that threatens their survival.
FIEG, the Italian federation of newspaper publishers, said it has submitted a formal complaint to Agcom, Italy’s communications watchdog.
Similar complaints have been filed in other EU countries. Coordinated by the European Newspaper Publishers’ Association, the aim is to push the European Commission to open an investigation against Google under the EU Digital Services Act.
The threat posed by AI Overviews, which gives users information without them having to click through to the original source by summarising searches with a block of text at the top of the results page, is among the main concerns of European news outlets.
FIEG said it was also worried about the more recent AI Mode, which takes information from multiple sources and presents them as a chatbot.
The federation argues that the Google services “violate fundamental provisions of the digital services act, with detrimental effects on Italian users, consumers and businesses”.
“Google is becoming a traffic killer,” FIEG said in a statement, adding that the products not only directly compete with content produced by publishing firms, but also “reduces their visibility and discoverability, and thus their advertising revenues”.
“This has serious consequences for the economic sustainability and diversity of the media, with all the risks associated with a lack of transparency and the proliferation of disinformation in democratic debate,” the statement said.
A study published in July by the UK-based Authoritas analytics company claimed AI Overviews, launched by Google last year, caused up to 80% fewer clickthroughs. The research, which was submitted as part of a legal complaint to the UK’s competition watchdog about the impact of Google AI Overviews, also found that links to YouTube – owned by Google’s parent company Alphabet – were more prominent compared with the normal search result system.
A second study by the Pew Research Center, a US thinktank, also showed a big hit to referral traffic from Google AI Overviews, with users only clicking a link under an AI summary once every 100 times.
Google claimed the studies were inaccurate and based on flawed methodology.
Google AI Overviews arrived in Italy in March. In September, the country became the first in the EU to approve a comprehensive law regulating the use of artificial intelligence, including limiting child access and imposing prison terms on those who use the technology to cause harm, such as generating deepfakes.
Giorgia Meloni’s government described the legislation, which aligns with the EU’s landmark AI Act, as a decisive move in influencing how AI is used across Italy.
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Jennifer Lopez says she’ll never join celebrity dating app Raya, ‘I’m old-fashioned’
Jennifer Lopez says she’s too old-fashioned for celebrity dating app Raya, preferring love the traditional way
Jennifer Lopez has made it clear that…
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