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Elon Musk’s management is killing Science Twitter
A new survey indicates X's major changes are destroying the platform's online research communities.
Associated Press sets its first AI rules for journalists
The AP's Vice President for Standards and Inclusion estimates their AI committee could issue updates as often as every three months.
Canadian territory capital ordered to evacuate due to approaching wildfire
More than 200 wildfires have already burned large regions of the Northwest Territories this summer.
The New York Times is the latest to go to battle against AI scrapers
The development adds to the mess of lawsuits and pushbacks that AI makers are facing from copyright owners.
Harrison Ford’s latest namesake is an Andean snake species
'Snakes. Why did it have to be snakes?'
Japan’s Hirota people intentionally reshaped their skulls more than 1,000 years ago
Evidence of cranial modification has been found in societies from Mexico to France and may even date back to the Neanderthals.
Scientists made a Pink Floyd cover from brain scans
By analyzing patients' neural activity, researchers reconstructed audio from 'Another Brick in the Wall (Part 1).'
Ancient Egyptians used crocodile dung for birth control—and it kind of worked
Plus other weird things we learned this week.
The same metal found on hot rods and Harleys could revolutionize solar panels
Chromium is showing immense promise as a cheap, plentiful alternative to metals used in smartphone screens and solar cells.