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  • Can cheese help prevent dementia? Japanese researchers say it might

    Can cheese help prevent dementia? Japanese researchers say it might

    A large Japanese cohort study reveals that even modest weekly cheese consumption may help preserve cognitive health, offering fresh insight into how simple dietary habits could support an aging brain.

    Study: Cheese Consumption and…

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  • Miguel Announces 2026 ‘Caos’ Tour: See the Dates

    Miguel Announces 2026 ‘Caos’ Tour: See the Dates

    Miguel is bringing Caos to the world. On Monday, the R&B star announced the dates for his jam-packed North American and European tour scheduled for next February in celebration of his latest album, Caos.

    Joined by Jean Dawson on the road,…

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  • NBA League Pass Watch Guide: Week 2

    NBA League Pass Watch Guide: Week 2

    The Knicks head to Chicago to go head-to-head against the Bulls on Halloween.

    After an electric opening week, the excitement keeps rolling in Week 2. Stream some of the best matchups exclusively on NBA League Pass.


    Monday, Oct. 27: Thunder at…

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  • iOS 26 Brings Back Controversial AI News Summaries

    Apple’s latest iOS 26 update brings back one of its most debated artificial intelligence features. This time, the rollout feels different. iOS 26 includes an extensive collection of Apple Intelligence enhancements (9to5Mac), and the headline act…

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  • More than a million people every week show suicidal intent when chatting with ChatGPT, OpenAI estimates | Technology

    More than a million people every week show suicidal intent when chatting with ChatGPT, OpenAI estimates | Technology

    More than a million ChatGPT users each week send messages that include “explicit indicators of potential suicidal planning or intent”, according to a blogpost published by OpenAI on Monday. The finding, part of an update on how the chatbot handles sensitive conversations, is one of the most direct statements from the artificial intelligence giant on the scale of how AI can exacerbate mental health issues.

    In addition to its estimates on suicidal ideations and related interactions, OpenAI also said that about 0.07 of users active in a given week – about 560,000 of its touted 800m weekly users – show “possible signs of mental health emergencies related to psychosis or mania”. The post cautioned that these conversations were difficult to detect or measure, and that this was an initial analysis.

    As OpenAI releases data on mental health issues related to its marquee product, the company is facing increased scrutiny following a highly publicized lawsuit from the family of a teenage boy who died by suicide after extensive engagement with ChatGPT. The Federal Trade Commission last month additionally launched a broad investigation into companies that create AI chatbots, including OpenAI, to find how they measure negative impacts on children and teens.

    OpenAI claimed in its post that its recent GPT-5 update reduced the number of undesirable behaviors from its product and improved user safety in a model evaluation involving more than 1,000 self-harm and suicide conversations. The company did not immediately return a request for comment.

    “Our new automated evaluations score the new GPT‑5 model at 91% compliant with our desired behaviors, compared to 77% for the previous GPT‑5 model,” the company’s post reads.

    OpenAI stated that GPT-5 expanded access to crisis hotlines and added reminders for users to take breaks during long sessions. To make improvements to the model, the company said it enlisted 170 clinicians from its Global Physician Network of health care experts to assist its research over recent months, which included rating the safety of its model’s responses and helping write the chatbot’s answers to mental-health related questions.

    “As part of this work, psychiatrists and psychologists reviewed more than 1,800 model responses involving serious mental health situations and compared responses from the new GPT‑5 chat model to previous models,” OpenAI said. The company’s definition of “desirable” involved determining whether a group of its experts reached the same conclusion about what would be an appropriate response in certain situations.

    AI researchers and public health advocates have long been wary of chatbots’ propensity to affirm users’ decisions or delusions regardless of whether they may be harmful, an issue known as sycophancy. Mental health experts have also been concerned about people using AI chatbots for psychological support and warned how it could harm vulnerable users.

    The language in OpenAI’s post distances the company from any potential causal links between its product and the mental health crises that its users are experiencing.

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    “Mental health symptoms and emotional distress are universally present in human societies, and an increasing user base means that some portion of ChatGPT conversations include these situations,” OpenAI’s post stated.

    OpenAI’s CEO Sam Altman earlier this month claimed in a post on X that the company had made advancements in treating mental health issues, announcing that OpenAI would ease restrictions and soon begin to allow adults to create erotic content.

    “We made ChatGPT pretty restrictive to make sure we were being careful with mental health issues. We realize this made it less useful/enjoyable to many users who had no mental health problems, but given the seriousness of the issue we wanted to get this right,” Altman posted. “Now that we have been able to mitigate the serious mental health issues and have new tools, we are going to be able to safely relax the restrictions in most cases.”

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  • Live updates: Cavs-Pistons, Raptors-Spurs, Nuggets-Wolves

    Live updates: Cavs-Pistons, Raptors-Spurs, Nuggets-Wolves

    Cade Cunningham and the Pistons face the Cleveland Cavaliers in the first game of our Peacock-exclusive doubleheader at 7 ET.

    The first Peacock-exclusive NBA games tip off tonight!

    Enjoy the best of an 11-game night across the Association with…

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  • UK’s Eastern Airways suspends operations with all flights cancelled | Transport

    UK’s Eastern Airways suspends operations with all flights cancelled | Transport

    The UK domestic airline Eastern Airways has suspended operations and all of its flights have been cancelled.

    Customers of the airline, which operated regional services from airports across the UK, are urged not to go to the airport as flights will not be operating, the UK Civil Aviation Authority said.

    The airline flew to destinations including Aberdeen, Humberside, Gatwick, Newquay, Teesside International and Wick John O’Groats, according to its website.

    On Monday morning the company filed a notice of intention to appoint an administrator at the insolvency and companies court within the high court.

    Selina Chadha, consumer and markets director at the UK Civil Aviation Authority, said: “We urge passengers planning to fly with this airline not to go to the airport as all Eastern Airways flights are cancelled.

    “Eastern Airways customers should visit the Civil Aviation Authority’s website for the latest information.”

    In response to the suspension of Eastern Airways operations, London North Eastern Railway, ScotRail, TransPennine Express and Northern would offer free standard-class travel to Eastern Airways staff and customers on 28 and 29 October on suitable routes operated, the UK Civil Aviation Authority said.

    To access this support, people should show an Eastern Airways employee ID, boarding pass or flight confirmation to station staff.

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  • An Oncodermatologist’s Perspective on Dermatological Toxicities in Breast Cancer

    An Oncodermatologist’s Perspective on Dermatological Toxicities in Breast Cancer

    “Before [onco-dermatology] was created, skin toxicities, among other things, were one of the most common reasons that cancer-related therapies were stopped,” Allireza Alloo, MD, said in a recent interview with Cancer Network.

    As patients…

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  • Czech Republic Hepatitis A outbreak may last another one or two years: Health expert

    Czech Republic Hepatitis A outbreak may last another one or two years: Health expert

    In a follow-up on the hepatitis A epidemic in the Czech Republic in 2025, the outbreak that started last April in isolated areas of Ostrava, has grown to 2,141 cases and 26 deaths, ten of them in Prague.

    This compares to last year when 676 people…

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  • Famous birthdays recap: Celebs born between October 20- October 26

    Famous birthdays recap: Celebs born between October 20- October 26

    Actors Emilia Clarke and Bob Odenkirk were just two of the many celebrities who had birthdays last week.

    In case you missed any of last week’s birthdays, here’s a roundup of our daily famous birthdays lists that took place between October 20-…

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