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  • Australia leader defends social media ban as teens brag about staying online

    Australia leader defends social media ban as teens brag about staying online

    Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese acknowledged some young people were still on social media a day after a world-first ban on under-16s went live, saying the rollout was always going to be bumpy but would ultimately save lives.

    A day after…

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  • YouTuber bypasses AI ethics, successfully gets robot to shoot him in chest in chilling video

    YouTuber bypasses AI ethics, successfully gets robot to shoot him in chest in chilling video

    In a chilling social experiment, a YouTuber demonstrated how easy it was to bypass the safety protocols of AI. The man gave a BB gun to an AI-powered robot and asked it to shoot him. Though it initially refused the direct command, a twist in…

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  • Access Denied


    Access Denied

    You don’t have permission to access “http://indianexpress.com/article/health-wellness/pune-woman-fights-depression-not-pills-talk-therapy-lancet-study-finds-antidepressants-tapered-10414185/” on this server.

    Reference…

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  • Morgan Charriere Always Brings Excitement

    Morgan Charriere Always Brings Excitement

    While the sport was well established in North America, Japan and Brazil and beginning to flourish in various other places, it was still banned in France, making it difficult for Charriere and others to see a means of translating their passion for…

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  • Epilepsy can lead to earlier deaths in people with intellectual disabilities, study shows

    Epilepsy can lead to earlier deaths in people with intellectual disabilities, study shows

    A combination of missed prevention opportunities and health inequalities can result in the early deaths of people living with epilepsy and intellectual disabilities, a study has shown.

    Around 1.2million people in England have some…

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  • Dollar slides as Fed dents hawks, markets eye two more rate cuts

    Dollar slides as Fed dents hawks, markets eye two more rate cuts

    The dollar fell on Thursday after the Federal Reserve delivered an outlook that was not as hawkish as some had anticipated.

    Oleg Dubyna / 500px | 500px | Getty Images

    The dollar fell on Thursday after the Federal Reserve delivered an outlook that was not as hawkish as some had anticipated, giving investors confidence to short the currency as they bet on two more rate cuts next year.

    The Fed at the conclusion of its two-day policy meeting lowered rates by 25 basis points as expected, but remarks from Chair Jerome Powell at his post-meeting press conference surprised some who had been positioned for a more hawkish tone.

    “For us, the big takeaway was a dovish tilt to the accompanying commentary, and at Fed Chair Powell’s press conference,” said Nick Rees, head of macro research at Monex Europe.

    As a result, investors sold the dollar, which in turn pushed the euro above the key $1.17 level and close to a two-month high of $1.1705 in early Asia trade on Thursday.

    Sterling touched a 1-1/2-month peak of $1.3391, while the yen, which has recently come under pressure from still-wide interest rate differentials between Japan and the rest of the world, rose 0.25% to 155.64 per dollar.

    Against a basket of currencies, the dollar fell to its lowest since October 21 at 98.543.

    “I think most were looking for a rerun of the same hawkish sentiment which we saw in that October FOMC meeting. But this has certainly a different tone about it, the commentary’s different, the T-bill buying supportive, the vote certainly wasn’t as hawkish as everybody expected,” said Tony Sycamore, a market analyst at IG.

    “This is, for me, the green light for risk assets to rally into year-end.”

    Wednesday’s outcome reinforced market expectations for two more rate cuts next year, against the Fed’s median expectation for a single quarter-percentage-point cut next year. 

    The central bank also announced that it would start buying short-dated government bonds to help manage market liquidity levels beginning December 12, with the initial round totaling around $40 billion in Treasury bills.

    That kept bonds supported, with the two-year U.S. Treasury yield falling about 3 bps to 3.5340%. The benchmark 10-year yield was similarly down 3 bps to 4.1332%. Bond yields move inversely to prices. 

    “The earlier start and size of the T-bill purchases surprised investors, leading (to) a meaningful rally led in Treasuries by the front-end,” said analysts at Societe Generale in a note.

    In other currencies, the Australian dollar retreated from a roughly three-month top hit in the previous session and was down 0.14% to $0.66665. The New Zealand dollar eased 0.07% to $0.5812.

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  • Microsoft, Amazon bet big, but where does India stand in the global race?

    Microsoft, Amazon bet big, but where does India stand in the global race?

    NurPhoto via Getty Images) A man walks past a display featuring a humanoid robot illustration at the Automation Expo 2025 in Mumbai, India.NurPhoto via Getty Images)

    India is a hedge against the global AI bubble, some experts say

    This week, tech giants Amazon and Microsoft pledged an eye-popping $50bn-plus combined investment in India, putting artificial intelligence (AI) in the spotlight.

    Microsoft’s Satya Nadella announced his company’s largest investment ever in Asia – $17.5bn (£13.14bn) – “to help build the infrastructure, skills, and sovereign capabilities needed for India’s AI-first future”.

    Amazon followed suit, and said it was putting in more than $35bn in the country by 2030, with an unspecified chunk of that investment going into boosting AI capabilities.

    The announcements come at a particularly interesting juncture.

    As fears of an AI bubble swept global markets and tech stock valuations soared, several leading brokerages took a contrarian view on India’s AI landscape.

    Christopher Wood of Jefferies said the country’s stocks were a “reverse AI trade”. That basically means India should outperform other markets in the world “if the AI trade suddenly unwinds” – or simply put, the global bubble bursts.

    HSBC also held a similar view, saying Indian equities offered a “hedge and diversification” for those uneasy with the ongoing AI rally.

    This comes as Mumbai stocks have lagged behind their Asian peers over the past year, with foreign investors moving billions into Korean and Taiwanese AI-driven tech companies in the absence of comparable opportunities in India.

    In this backdrop, the Amazon and Microsoft investments provide a much-needed fillip – yet it remains worth asking where India truly stands in the global AI race.

    AFP via Getty Images Indian undergraduate students work on their computers as they take part in HackCBS, a 24 hour event of software development. Students gathered in teams to take part in a challenge to develop their ideas in the fields of Internet of Things (IoT), Artificial Intelligence (AI) an Blockchain among others. AFP via Getty Images

    India ranks among the top globally in terms of AI talent and developer activity

    There are no easy answers.

    The adoption of AI in India has been rapid. Investments into some parts of the value chain – such as data centres, the physical backbone of AI, or chip-making facilities – have begun trickling in. Just this week, American chipmaker Intel announced a collaboration with Mumbai-based Tata Electronics to manufacture chips locally.

    But when it comes to a sovereign AI model, it appears India is continuing to play catch-up.

    About a year-and-a-half ago, the Indian government launched an AI mission through which it began supplying start-ups, universities and researchers with high-end computing chips to develop a large homegrown AI model like OpenAI or China’s DeepSeek.

    According to the federal electronics ministry, the launch of the sovereign model – which supports more than 22 languages – is imminent. In the interim though, the likes of DeepSeek and OpenAI have made further advances, launching newer variants.

    While the government has recognised the need to reduce over-dependence on foreign platforms because of the risk of surveillance and sanctions, India’s $1.25bn sovereign mission is a shadow of France’s $117bn or Saudi Arabia’s $100bn programmes.

    The country’s ambitions also face numerous other hurdles – from semiconductor availability to skilled talent and fragmented data ecosystems, according to global consultancy EY.

    India currently lacks enough computational infrastructure or the billions of dollars of research and development (R&D) investment made over decades that gave China and the US a distinct leg up.

    Despite its global strength in AI talent, India struggles to keep its developers at home.

    “The current tightening of overseas work visas provides India a window of opportunity to retain domestic talent and attract Indian-origin talent at home. However, given that top-tier AI talent is mobile globally, attractive policy incentives need to be put in place to incentivise relocation to India,” the EY report says.

    China, for example, offers a range of incentives such as “financial support and subsidies, tax incentives and funding for research and development, special talent visas and fast-track immigration”, the report says.

    India has a much higher concentration of AI-skilled professionals than the global average – specifically, 2.5 times more. Policies that retain this talent are not yet in place.

    Bloomberg via Getty Images Industrial chiller at Yotta Data Services data centre, in Navi Mumbai, India. Bloomberg via Getty Images

    India has been attracting billions of dollars of investments into data centres

    Yet, despite the challenges, India – along with countries like Brazil and the Philippines – punches above its weight in AI, especially in the context of its stage of economic development, an UNCTAD (United Nations Conference on Trade and Development) study said.

    According to the widely tracked Stanford AI Index 2025, the country ranks among the top five in the world on new companies receiving AI investments.

    Last year, 74 new Indian AI startups received funding – a fraction of the more than 1,000 funded in the US.

    Indian AI startups raised just $1.16bn privately, compared with over $100bn in the US and nearly $10bn in China.

    But there’s enough intellectual engagement with AI in India, with the country accounting for 9.2% of AI article publications – slightly more than the US, but behind Europe and China according to the Stanford AI Index.

    Experts say India’s AI edge may lie less in building costly language models and more in using them downstream to spur entrepreneurship.

    “I think in the short term, there’s this big concentration of AI in the US. But over the next five-10 years, AI will have a massively democratising effect on the creation of new companies. Small founders and entrepreneurs will be numerous and the downstream effect will be amazing for places like India and the Asia-Pacific,” Shailendra Singh, managing director of Peak XV Partners which invests in AI start-ups, told the BBC.

    Mr Singh says India is seeing a surge in AI-powered consumer apps, with AI startup investments doubling from last year.

    Moreover, many Indian startups are now using AI to tackle real-world challenges for millions still on the wrong side of the digital divide.

    For example, MahaVISTAAR, an AI app run by the Maharashtra government, delivers vital agricultural information in the local Marathi language, reaching over 15 million farmers.

    “The hardest places to make artificial intelligence work are also the places where it matters most. If AI can serve India’s classrooms, clinics and farms, it can serve the world,” Nandan Nilekani, the architect of India’s biometric programme, wrote in The Economist magazine last month.

    Some of that has already begun to happen, as apps like MahaVISTAAR and others have shown.

    AI brings new opportunities, but could disrupt India’s IT services sector, which has driven its economy and created millions of jobs over the past 30 years.

    As AI upends some of their business functions, India’s billion-dollar IT firms will become a key area of “vulnerability”, according to Jefferies.

    That vulnerability is already showing.

    Growth in India’s IT back offices is slowing, stocks are underperforming, hiring has shrunk and wages have stagnated as the spectre of a new disruptor looms large.

    Follow BBC News India on Instagram, YouTube, X and Facebook.


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  • Experts make stunning scientific breakthrough with help of strangers: ‘Of significant importance globally’

    Experts make stunning scientific breakthrough with help of strangers: ‘Of significant importance globally’

    With the help of artificial intelligence and the public, researchers from the University of South Florida have identified what could be the first invasive malaria-transmitting mosquito in Madagascar, an island already plagued by a high prevalence…

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  • The Great Retreat – Dawn

    1. The Great Retreat  Dawn
    2. Inflation, job woes hit consumer trust  The Express Tribune
    3. Survey shows only 18% of Pakistanis view economy as strong, 89% struggling with household purchases  Profit by Pakistan Today
    4. Asad Umar voices alarm over economic…

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  • How much omega-3 do you need daily? New global review reveals DHA and EPA requirements

    How much omega-3 do you need daily? New global review reveals DHA and EPA requirements

    A new global review uncovers major gaps and inconsistencies in omega-3 guidance, showing why many populations still fail to meet recommended EPA and DHA targets for lifelong health.

    Study: An overview of national and international…

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