France thrash Norway 4-1 — media ask if Les Bleus are World Cup favourites
France defeated Norway 4-1, sparking euphoria in French media. Reporters described the performance as "football of the highest order" and singled out Ousmane Dembélé for praise. Eurosport is now openly asking whether France are the main favourites to win the World Cup.
Vanilla Ice's concert at Donald Trump's Freedom 250 event was canceled just two hours before showtime, with organizers citing "inclement weather" as the reason. The rapper, known for his hit "Ice Ice Baby," had previously called the event "a once in a lifetime opportunity." No details were given on rescheduling.
Egypt and Iran are facing off in a World Cup 2026 group stage match, with kick-off at 8pm local time (4am BST). Earlier in the day, Senegal defeated Iraq to boost their chances of advancing as one of the best third-placed teams. France also put on an attacking display against Norway B.
Archaeologists have discovered a rare stone stele approximately two metres tall near the Sun Gate at ancient Nineveh, in present-day Iraq. The monument dates back roughly 2,700 years to the height of the Assyrian Empire, one of the most powerful states in the ancient Middle East. It commemorates an Assyrian king who ruled over the region during that era.
Samuel Bateman, the leader of a polygamous religious sect, has been convicted of child abuse. He previously claimed to have more than 20 "spiritual wives," including at least 10 girls under the age of 18. Victims were found kept in an unventilated trailer.
The Trump administration has authorized more than 100 US companies and government agencies to use Anthropic's Mythos 5 AI model. The authorization also extends to non-American employees of those organizations. This represents one of the largest government-backed deployments of a commercial AI model in the United States to date.
The Philippine government plans to increase its national budget by 6% next year to 7.2 trillion pesos, equivalent to approximately $117 billion, according to the country's budget department. No further details on spending priorities were provided in the announcement.
Constant notifications and health-tracking features on smartwatches can trigger anxiety and stress in users. The author consulted doctors and experts to understand why wearables have this effect. Specialists suggest practical steps to reduce the negative psychological impact of wearing such devices.
Uruguayan goalkeeper Fernando Muslera made a costly elementary mistake during the crucial World Cup 2026 group stage match against Spain. The out-of-form keeper was substituted at half-time by the coaching staff. The error left Uruguay on the brink of elimination from the tournament.
After "Curb Your Enthusiasm" wrapped its 24-year run with Season 12 in 2024, Larry David is set to appear in a new documentary titled "Life, Larry." Director Jeff Schaffer revealed that Barack Obama sent notes on the project. Schaffer joked that David will never truly retire, comparing him to someone who can't stop working even off the clock.
Anthropic has written to US lawmakers accusing groups linked to Alibaba and its Qwen AI lab of running a massive campaign to extract proprietary information from its Claude model. The company says nearly 25,000 fraudulent accounts generated more than 28.8 million interactions to glean Claude's capabilities. Alibaba has not publicly responded. The case exposes a new vulnerability: rivals can learn an AI model's secrets simply by querying it, without ever accessing its underlying code.
Anthropic has accused groups linked to Alibaba and its Qwen AI lab of carrying out a massive campaign to extract capabilities from Claude just by asking it a lot of questions, as first reported by Reuters. The AI developer wrote a letter to U.S. lawmakers alleging that Alibaba used nearly 25,000 fraudulent accounts to generate more than 28.8 million interactions and glean detailed, proprietary information about Claude. Alibaba has not publicly responded to the allegations, and there has been no independent confirmation of Anthropic's claims, but simply leveling them has potentially enormous consequences. The sheer volume of accounts and interactions is eye-catching, but it's even more fascinating how it reveals a vulnerability in AI models that can give away their secrets. AI developers may now have to worry that rivals can learn from those models without ever seeing the underlying code or training data through a technique known as model distillation. Essentially, AI models will inadvertently share deliberately obscured facts about themselves if a huge number of the right questions are asked. As an analogy, imagine taking a test about a book, but instead of reading the book, you ask the author one million questions about their life, their thinking, their experience writing the book, and several hundred thousand more questions. You'd probably have a pretty good chance of knowing everything they might have written without once cracking the covers. Can you copy an AI just by talking to it?Model distillation is a common technique used by AI companies to build variations of their models, especially smaller, faster options. But no company would be okay with a rival using their model to train the competition. But that's what Anthropic alleges. The fake accounts supposedly asked Claude a ton of very complex and detailed questions related to its advanced software engineering and agentic reasoning features. The responses filled in a picture of the model's workings, accelerating Alibaba's own development of competing AI systems, Anthropic claimed.The conundrum is obvious. Large language models are designed to answer questions. Every answer teaches the user something about how the model behaves. You can't interact with an AI model, or a person, without giving up some information about yourself. Normally, that wouldn't matter, but at the scale Anthropic is claiming, conversations become reverse engineering.It's not the first time Anthropic has alleged illicit model distillation. Anthropic levied similar claims against DeepSeek, Moonshot AI, and MiniMax earlier this year. And other companies, including OpenAI, have expressed concern that they have also been victims of the technique. The glaring irony that the companies that used enormous collections of publicly available information, including licensed material, to train their AI models are now arguing about how those same models are valuable intellectual property is hard to ignore. AI arms raceAI developers see their models' behavior as crucial to competing with rivals. If another company can reproduce much of that behavior by asking enough carefully designed questions, spending billions of dollars training frontier models starts to seem like a waste. Anthropic claims model distillation can effectively transfer years of work on their part to another company for almost nothing. Anthropic asked lawmakers to take action and combat this problem as soon as possible. If leading models can be imitated so easily, there won't be much incentive to innovate, and the AI competition will only be about beating copycats. And picking the best models will be difficult, as a new AI model that matches an existing one's capabilities might be born of years of original research or simply copying an existing option. Whether Anthropic ultimately proves its allegations, they have revealed that the next great AI battle may not be about building the smartest model. It may be about stopping somebody else from talking to your model and learning how it operates, one question at a time.
A California appeals court upheld Harvey Weinstein's rape conviction but ordered the trial judge to resentence him. Weinstein had originally been sentenced to 16 years in prison. The case returns to the lower court solely to determine a new sentence, while the conviction itself stands.
Bolivia announced Friday it is moving to a flexible exchange-rate system after 15 years of maintaining a fixed currency peg. The Finance Ministry stated the change is aimed at strengthening the country's macroeconomic stability. No details were given on the targeted exchange rate level.
Hundreds of scientifically vetted NIH grant applications are stuck in administrative limbo due to new political screening procedures. The process requires mandatory reviews by top health officials and automated checks for 235 disfavoured terms in grant texts. Applications that passed peer review are now awaiting political clearance before funding can be approved.
A 60-year-old man in Spain visited doctors with a worsening two-week headache and subtle behavioural changes. A CT scan showed multiple brain lesions with swelling that initially suggested cancer. Elevated IgE levels pointed instead to a parasitic infection, and the man was ultimately diagnosed with neurocysticercosis — tapeworm cysts in the brain — despite never having travelled internationally. The case was published in the journal Emerging Infectious Diseases.
A 60-year-old man in Spain went to the doctor complaining of a headache that he couldn't shake. It had started two weeks prior and was only getting worse. He also said he had noticed subtle changes in his behavior. In a neurological exam, doctors found he had a mild delay in his movements, but no other deficits. His blood work was generally normal except for elevated IgE, a signal of immune responses linked to allergies, autoimmune disease, and parasitic infections. The doctors did a computed tomography (CT) scan of his head and saw much more obvious evidence of a problem: There were multiple lesions distributed throughout his brain accompanied by swelling. In a case report in Emerging Infectious Diseases, the doctors reported working through the possible conditions that could explain all the findings. They noted that the man was not immunocompromised and had never traveled internationally. Their top suspicion was metastatic cancer.Read full article Comments
Saudi Arabia suffered a major blow in their World Cup 2026 group-stage match when defender Hassan Al-Tambakti was injured in the 30th minute and had to be carried off the pitch on a stretcher. His further participation in the tournament is in doubt.
The Federal Trade Commission has cleared Elon Musk to acquire Mesh, a startup founded by SpaceX alumni. Mesh emerged from stealth in February 2025, announcing a $50 million Series A funding round. The article does not specify the terms or valuation of the acquisition.
Utah's governor declared a state of emergency as the Cottonwood Fire rapidly spread across a sparsely populated area of southern Utah, having started on Monday. The emergency declaration is intended to unlock resources to fight the blaze. The wildfire's full extent and containment status were not specified in the report.
A black bear wandered into a residential backyard in Canada, sending the homeowners inside for safety. Before the bear could cause any damage, the family's house cat confronted and chased it away. Video of the encounter quickly went viral online.
Renegotiations of the USMCA trade agreement are testing the future of North America's auto industry, which has been built on decades of cross-border integration between the US, Canada and Mexico. American farmers are increasingly reliant on Canadian and Mexican export markets as other overseas destinations become harder to access. Years of energy infrastructure investment have created a cross-border energy market that defies political narratives.
A 2011 Physics Stack Exchange thread explains why kinetic energy scales with the square of velocity (½mv²) rather than linearly with speed. The answers draw on Newtonian mechanics and the definition of work. The thread resurfaced on Hacker News with 31 upvotes and one comment.
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