Technology | The Guardian

“Met AI adviser spreads disinformation about shootings, vaccines, and trans people.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 12 October 2025, 2329 UTC.

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Critics condemn Robby Starbuck, appointed in lawsuit settlement, for ‘peddling lies and pushing extremism’ A prominent anti-DEI campaigner appointed by Meta in August as an adviser on AI bias has spent the weeks since his appointment spreading disinformation about shootings, transgender people, vaccines, crime, and protests. Robby Starbuck, 36, of Nashville, was appointed in August as an adviser
The Oxbridge-educated boffin is feted as the codebreaking genius who helped Britain win the war. But should a little-known Post Office engineer named Tommy Flowers be seen as the real father of computing? This is a story you know, right? It’s early in the war and western Europe has fallen. Only the Channel stands between Britain and the fascist yoke; only Atlantic shipping lanes offer hope of the
Musicians have long criticized the streaming service’s paltry payouts, but a new wave of boycotts is emerging This month, indie musicians in Oakland, California, gathered for a series of talks called Death to Spotify, where attenders explored “what it means to decentralize music discovery, production and listening from capitalist economies”. The events, held at Bathers library, featured speakers

Yesterday

Don’t splash out just yet! Your existing laptop may have plenty left to give • From smash-proof cases to updates: how to make your smartphone last longer So you want a new laptop. Of course you do. Everybody always does, except for perhaps during that short honeymoon period after you’ve just bought one. But the glamour wears off, technology marches on, and before you know it, a newer, younger, mo
Where once people were duped by soft-focus photos and borrowed chat-up lines, now they have to watch out for computer-generated charm. But it’s one thing to use a witty phrase – another thing entirely to build a whole fake persona … Standing outside the pub, 36-year-old business owner Rachel took a final tug on her vape and steeled herself to meet the man she’d spent the last three weeks opening

Oct 10, 2025

Exclusive: Six tech leaders dined with investment minister, documents reveal, underlining growing influence of ex-PM’s consultancy Tony Blair and Nick Clegg hosted a private dinner earlier this year at which a select group of technology entrepreneurs were given access to a key minister, official documents have revealed. The former prime minister, who is a champion of the tech industry, held the d
Artificial intelligence is more than Trump deepfakes of Tilly the actor. It’s used in smartphones, customer service, healthcare – even legal cases. Is it possible to avoid? Get our breaking news email , free app or daily news podcast Using a swearword in your Google search can stop that annoying AI overview from popping up. Some apps let you switch off their artificial intelligence. You can choos
Silicon Valley titan desperately tries to detach self from power in amateurish talks attempting to ape his favorite philosopher Inside tech billionaire Peter Thiel’s off-the-record lectures about the antichrist Peter Thiel famously isn’t into academia . And yet, in four recent off-the-record lectures on the antichrist in San Francisco, the billionaire venture capitalist has made a good case for c
The political svengali and investor has been giving lectures on ‘an evil king or tyrant … who appears in the end times’ Peter Thiel’s off-the-record antichrist lectures reveal more about him than Armageddon Peter Thiel , the billionaire political svengali and tech investor, is worried about the antichrist. It could be the US. It could be Greta Thunberg . Over the past month, Thiel has hosted a se
His AI video generator Sora 2 has been reviled for pinching the work of others. One giant leap for Sam: for everyone else, not so much Take a look at Sam Altman. I mean, actually do it. Go to Google images, where you can find countless photos of the OpenAI boss smiling in a kind of wan genius way, the humble lost puppy of Silicon Valley. But I urge you to simply cover the bottom half of his face
CMA puts Google under tighter regulation with ‘strategic market status’ designation and can enforce changes Business live – latest updates Google faces enforced changes to its UK search business after the competition watchdog conferred a special status on the company that puts it under tighter regulation. The Competition and Market Authority (CMA) confirmed that Google has “strategic market statu
Carmakers accused of cheating air pollution rules have faced little punishment in UK but trial brought by 1.6m motorists is about to begin “Little lungs are still paying for Dieselgate every day,” says Jemima Hartshorn, the founder of the Mums for Lungs campaign group. Her own young daughter has suffered serious breathing problems, which at their worst involved the harrowing experience of having
Chiptune alt-rock band Anamanaguchi are having a bumper year, culminating in an opportunity to create the soundtrack they’ve always wanted to make – for a new Scott Pilgrim game Scott Pilgrim, the series of pop culture-saturated graphic novels by Canadian author and comic book artist Bryan Lee O’Malley, has become a timeless epic about teenage insecurity, love and redemption, and the intersection

Oct 9, 2025

Strava, the Instagram for exercise, is suing Garmin for allegedly copying its features. Josh Taylor explains it to Miles Herbert Get our breaking news email , free app or daily news podcast Josh, there’s a lot of commentary online from runners and cyclists over Strava suing Garmin. I am a runner, but I must confess I run to get away from the world – not participate in more online discourse . What
Twelve months, thousands of tests and a revolutionary potato masher – here are our readers’ and writers’ ultimate buys • Don’t get the Filter delivered to your inbox? Sign up here The Filter is turning one. Since we launched a year ago, we’ve run, hiked, camped and swum; we’ve drunk 455 cups of coffee; washed 34 loads of clothes; slept on mattresses for 2,240 hours, and much more, testing a total

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Discover Magazine-The Sciences

“How many stars are in the Milky Way?  More than you can imagine.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 12 October 2025, 1349 UTC.

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Ars Technica-All Content

“How close are we to solid state batteries for electric vehicles?”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 11 October 2025, 2127 UTC.

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Every few weeks, it seems, yet another lab proclaims yet another breakthrough in the race to perfect solid-state batteries: next-generation power packs that promise to give us electric vehicles (EVs) so problem-free that we’ll have no reason left to buy gas-guzzlers. These new solid-state cells are designed to be lighter and more compact than the lithium-ion batteries used in today’s EVs. They sh
Cards Against Humanity (CAH) this week announced its newest stunt : a “Cards Against Humanity Explains the Joke” edition that ditches the game’s rules and adds explanatory notes to each card in the box. This makes the project “informational material” rather than a “game,” and therefore CAH can avoid import tariffs. All profits from the one-off project will be donated to the American Library Assoc
Since launching its bug bounty program nearly a decade ago, Apple has always touted notable maximum payouts— $200,000 in 2016 and $1 million in 2019. Now the company is upping the stakes again. At the Hexacon offensive security conference in Paris on Friday, Apple vice president of security engineering and architecture Ivan Krstić announced a new maximum payout of $2 million for a chain of softwa

Yesterday

An unknown number of federal health employees received termination notifications Friday afternoon as part of a mass reduction in force by the Trump administration that senior officials and federal employment lawyers say is almost certainly illegal. The Department of Health and Human Services has taken heavy hits since Trump came to office. Early in the year, the Trump administration pushed out 10
These are tough times for Russia’s civilian space program. In the last few years, Russia has cut back on the number of Soyuz crew missions it is sending to the International Space Station, and a replacement for the nearly 60-year-old Soyuz spacecraft remains elusive. While the United States and China are launching more space missions than ever before, Russia’s once-dominant launch cadence is on a
Amazon Echo Show owners are reporting an uptick in advertisements on their smart displays. The company’s Echo Show smart displays have previously shown ads through the company’s Shopping Lists feature, as well as advertising for Alexa skills . Additionally, Echo Shows may play audio ads when users listen to Amazon Music on Alexa. However, reports on Reddit (examples here , here , and here ) and f
Marvel Studios has dropped the first teaser for Wonder Man , an eight-episode miniseries slated for a January release, ahead of its panel at New York Comic Con this weekend. Part of the MCU’s Phase Six, the miniseries was created by Destin Daniel Cretton ( Shang-Chi and the Legend of Five Rings ) and Andrew Guest ( Hawkeye ), with Guest serving as showrunner. It has been in development since 2022
Donald Trump threatened China with a “massive increase” on tariffs and may cancel his upcoming meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping after China spent the past two days making “very hostile” trade moves—including aggressive rare-earths export restrictions and an attack on a key US semiconductor company . In a Truth Social post, Trump accused China of trying to “clog” markets by restricting no
Bose will brick key features of its SoundTouch Wi-Fi speakers and soundbars soon. On Thursday, Bose informed customers that as of February 18, 2026, it will stop supporting the devices, and the devices’ cloud-based features, including the companion app, will stop working. The SoundTouch app enabled numerous capabilities, including integrating music services, like Spotify and TuneIn, and the abili
Microsoft is warning of an active scam that diverts employees’ paycheck payments to attacker-controlled accounts after first taking over their profiles on Workday or other cloud-based HR services. Payroll Pirate, as Microsoft says the campaign has been dubbed, gains access to victims’ HR portals by sending them phishing emails that trick the recipients into providing their credentials for logging
Odontotermes obesus is one of the termite species that grows fungi, called Termitomyces, in their mounds. Workers collect dead leaves, wood, and grass to stack them in underground fungus gardens called combs. There, the fungi break down the tough plant fibers, making them accessible for the termites in an elaborate form of symbiotic agriculture. Like any other agriculturalist, however, the termit
Google is facing multiple antitrust actions in the US, and European regulators have been similarly tightening the screws. You can now add the UK to the list of Google’s governmental worries. The country’s antitrust regulator, known as the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA), has confirmed that Google has “strategic market status,” paving the way to more limits on how Google does business in t
It feels like it was just yesterday that Sony hardware architect Mark Cerny was first teasing Sony’s “PS4 successor” and its “enhanced ray-tracing capabilities” powered by new AMD chips. Now that we’re nearly five full years into the PS5 era , it’s time for Sony and AMD to start teasing the new chips that will power what Cerny calls “a future console in a few years’ time.” In a quick nine-minute
OpenAI will finally stop saving most ChatGPT users’ deleted and temporary chats after a court fight compelled the AI firm to retain the logs “indefinitely.” The preservation order came in a lawsuit filed by The New York Times and other news plaintiffs, who alleged that user attempts to skirt paywalls with ChatGPT would most likely set their chats as temporary or delete the logs. OpenAI vowed to f
Nevada state regulators have accused Elon Musk’s Boring Co. of violating environmental regulations nearly 800 times in the last two years as it digs a sprawling tunnel network beneath Las Vegas for its Tesla-powered “people mover.” The company’s alleged violations include starting to dig without approval, releasing untreated water onto city streets and spilling muck from its trucks, according to
The Chevrolet Bolt was one of the earliest electric vehicles to offer well over 200 miles (321 km) of range at a competitive price. For Ars, it was love at first drive , and that remained true from model year 2017 through MY2023. On the right tires, it could show a VW Golf GTI a thing or two , and while it might have been slow-charging, it could still be a decent road-tripper . All of this helped
Welcome to Edition 8.14 of the Rocket Report! We’re now more than a week into a federal government shutdown, but there’s been little effect on the space industry. Military space operations are continuing unabated, and NASA continues preparations at Kennedy Space Center, Florida, for the launch of the Artemis II mission around the Moon early next year. The International Space Station is still flyi
On January 1, 2008, at 1:59 am in Calipatria, California, an earthquake happened. You haven’t heard of this earthquake; even if you had been living in Calipatria, you wouldn’t have felt anything. It was magnitude -0.53, about the same amount of shaking as a truck passing by. Still, this earthquake is notable, not because it was large but because it was small—and yet we know about it. Over the pas

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Space X Newsletter

“Astronomers discover ultra-luminous infrared galaxy lurking behind quasar.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters  and correspondents.  Accessed on 11 October 2025, 1443 UTC.

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Spotlight Stories Headlines

Astronomers discover ultra-luminous infrared galaxy lurking behind quasar

Rare disease possibly identified in 12th century child’s skeletal remains

Strain engineering enhances spin readout in quantum technologies, study shows

Event Horizon Telescope images reveal new dark matter detection method

Size doesn’t matter: Just a small number of malicious files can corrupt LLMs of any size

By removing common biases, study debunks U-shaped happiness curve with age

Unified model explains extreme jet streams on all giant planets

‘Chinese lantern’ structure shifts into more than a dozen shapes for various applications

Freely levitating rotor spins out ultraprecise sensors for classical and quantum physics

A new method to build more energy-efficient memory devices could lead to a sustainable data future

Biohybrid leaf mimics photosynthesis to turn CO₂ and sunlight into useful chemicals

‘Disease in a dish’ study of progressive MS finds critical role for unusual type of brain cell

The playbook for perfect polaritons: Rules for creating quasiparticles that can power optical computers, quantum devices

Fire provides long-lasting benefits to bird populations in Sierra Nevada National Parks

Enhanced multi-omics tool illuminates cancer progression

Earth news

Pacific circulation key to lower CO₂ during ice ages, simulations show

New research from the University of St Andrews has shed light on a crucial mechanism of lowering atmospheric CO2 during Earth’s past ice ages.

Autonomous robot glider to circle the globe in historic ocean mission

Guided by the rhythms of the sea and the promise of discovery, Teledyne Marine and Rutgers University will set Redwing, an autonomous underwater vehicle, on its journey on Friday, Oct. 10, leading to its launch into the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Martha’s Vineyard in Massachusetts.

Diterpenes from trees shown to form aerosols, prompting updates to atmospheric models

Compounds emitted by trees, diterpenes, could have a previously unconsidered impact on the formation of particles in the atmosphere.

Destined to melt: Study warns glaciers’ ability to cool surrounding air faces imminent decline

Glaciers are fighting back against climate change by cooling the air that touches their surfaces. But for how long? The Pellicciotti group at the Institute of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA) has compiled and re-analyzed an unprecedented dataset of on-glacier observations worldwide. Their findings, published today in Nature Climate Change, demonstrate that glaciers will likely reach the peak of their self-cooling power by the next decade before their near-surface temperatures spike up and melting accelerates.

To prevent rapid sea-level rise, study urges reducing emissions now

The timing of emissions reductions, even more so than the rate of reduction, will be key to avoiding catastrophic thresholds for ice-melt and sea-level rise, according to a new Cornell University study.

Analysis suggests attitudes, not income, drive energy savings at home

Some people flip off the lights the moment they leave a room, while others rarely think twice about saving energy. According to the most comprehensive analysis of people’s sentiments toward household energy savings to date, published in the journal Cell Reports Sustainability, people’s attitudes and moral sentiments about their energy usage—rather than income or knowledge of how to conserve power—determine whether they take action at home.

Chemical pollutants affect wildlife and human behavior—but toxicologists are reluctant to carry out tests

Most environmental scientists believe that chemical pollution can and is negatively affecting people and wildlife, according to my team’s recent survey.

Properly managed urban rainwater could also be used for cleaning or irrigation purposes

EHU researchers have explored how a sustainable urban drainage system built in Legazpi has affected various rainwater parameters, and have concluded that a permeable pavement has improved the quality of runoff water and has reduced turbidity, suspended solids and the amount of certain metals.

Powerful earthquake off southern Philippines kills 2 people, causes damages and tsunami evacuations

A 7.4-magnitude earthquake Friday morning off the southern Philippines killed at least two people, damaged a hospital and schools, knocked out power and prompted evacuations of coastal areas nearby due to a tsunami warning, which was later lifted.

Plastic pollution treaty not dead in the water: UN environment chief

The UN’s environment chief insists that a landmark global treaty tackling plastic pollution remains achievable, despite talks twice imploding without agreement, and the chair suddenly resigning this week.

 

Smithsonian Magazine-the Daily

“How a recipe engraved on a gravestone helps to remember the dearly departed.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 10 October 2025, 2222 UTC.

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Scientists Converted a Kidney’s Blood Type, Then Implanted It Into a Brain-Dead Patient for the First Time image
Scientists converted a Type A kidney to a Type O kidney, then transplanted it into a brain-dead patient. (Zeng et al. / Natura Biomedical Engineering, 2025)

Scientists Converted a Kidney’s Blood Type, Then Implanted It Into a Brain-Dead Patient for the First Time

This area of research is still in the early stages, but it could someday help reduce wait times for patients needing kidney transplants
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Scientific American

“Today in Science:  Record-breaking Everest blizzard explained.”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 09 October 2025, 2054 UTC.

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SciAm | Today in Science
 
October 9, 2025—Do pets improve our health? Plus, how birds responded to the 2024 total solar eclipse, and the latest COVID vaccine is effective for all age groups.
Andrea Gawrylewski, Chief Newsletter Editor

TODAY’S NEWS

Flash photo at night of greater noctule bat is caught in a mist net with a passerine feather and blood in its mouth

A greater noctule bat caught in a mist net with a passerine feather and blood in its mouth. Jorge Sereno

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TOP STORIES

Pet Benefits

Does owning a pet improve health? Many recent studies have found that yes, pets have a positive influence on our lives. In one study, 43 dog owners performed stressful tasks (like public speaking) with and without their pets. Those who had dogs accompany them showed lower spikes of cortisol, a hormone that rises under stress. In another study of 90 older adults, about half were given five crickets to care for. Adults who cared for the insects made improvements in mental and cognitive health, while the other half didn’t.
Why this is interesting: For the older adults who looked after the crickets, having a pet may have added a sense of purpose, says Jessica Bibbo, a gerontologist who studies human-animal interactions. On top of this, there are several consistent positive effects in owning a pet: owning a dog, for instance, is associated with increased physical activity (a great health boost). However, not all studies find a strong link between pet ownership and better health. The quality of the relationship between humans and their animals might be a better predictor of positive outcomes than just the fact that pets are in the home.
What the experts say: “Pets are not a medical intervention; they’re a relationship,” says Jessica Bibbo, a gerontologist who studies human-animal interactions. Even therapy animals are there to facilitate, not to fix, Bibbo says. People emphatically believe pets improve our quality of life, and that belief can affect health, even if indirectly. —Andrea Tamayo, Newsletter Writer
 

Birds, Eclipsed

During the April 2024 total solar eclipse, bird behavior shifted dramatically in the four minutes of darkness. Using data provided by nearly hundreds of community scientists and AI analysis of about 100,000 recorded bird calls during the eclipse, researchers discovered that some species’ vocalizations spiked during totality while activities like flying and feeding dropped. In total, 29 of the 52 species analyzed showed changes in their singing in at least one of the three time periods—before, during or after the eclipse—suggesting a widespread but species-specific sensitivity to light. Once sunlight returned, many species began singing again as if it were dawn.
Why this is interesting: Animal behavior is tied to natural light cycles, and the study shows that even brief disruptions can affect their biological rhythms. The results could help identify species most vulnerable to artificial light pollution. The eclipse also offered a chance to join professional and amateur bird observers in a huge natural experiment.
What the experts say: This new study provides a “rich and unique new dataset” to challenge what scientists think they know about how birds of different species respond to radical changes in light, says ornithologist Andrew Farnsworth of Cornell University. “There might be additional kinds of behaviors that are probably buried in their recordings and that the authors are going to be able to analyze further.” —Humberto Basilio, News Intern 

EXPERT PERSPECTIVES

  • In July, the FDA convened a panel on the use of the class of antidepressants called selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) during pregnancy. “The FDA panel tried to discredit the past years of research on SSRIs, the most studied category of medications in pregnancy, stoking fear over these drugs,” writes Catherine Birndorf, a reproductive psychiatrist and associate professor of psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medicine. “Untreated depression and anxiety during pregnancy are far more dangerous—to both parent and baby—than carefully managed antidepressant treatment,” she says. | 5 min read

SCIENTISTS AT WORK

Mahé Elipe

  • Biologist Carmen García-Chávez is the co-founder of a charity that works to recover the population of the Mexican wolf (Canis lupus baileyi), which had been hunted to near-extinction by the 1980s. Her work involves outreach to local landowners and communities to discuss benefits that can come from reintroducing the species. “I’ve watched children explain to their parents why ‘the wolf is not the bad guy,’ but a valuable animal that helps maintain the balance of the ecosystem,” she says.​ Nature | 3 min read
Content courtesy of Nature Briefing
 
I think most people would quickly agree that their pets improve their health. Some studies have found that listening to a cat’s purr can lower blood pressure, and the companionship of animals can give people hope and purpose, not to mention the life-saving benefit of alert dogs for certain illnesses like epilepsy and type I diabetes. Even without the data, the loss of a beloved friend reveals how much they imbue our lives with meaning.
Thanks for reading. Send comments or feedback on this newsletter to: newsletters@sciam.com. See you tomorrow!
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News from Science (AAAS)

“First approved drug for mitochondrial disease could pave way for more treatments.”

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Scientific American-Science Today

“5 tips for avoiding scams.  Will AI ever win its own Nobel Prize?”

Views expressed in this science and technology update are those of the reporters and correspondents.  Accessed on 08 October 2025, 2207 UTC.

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October 8, 2025—Chemical cages win the Nobel Prize in Chemistry. Plus, how to avoid scams and astronomers pick their favorite exoplanets.
Andrea Gawrylewski, Chief Newsletter Editor

TODAY’S NEWS

A depiction of an exoplanet orbiting a star.

An exoplanet orbits a star, in an artist’s depiction. ESO

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TOP STORIES

Molecular Cages Win the Nobel

The 2025 Nobel Prize in Chemistry has been awarded for a versatile technology that can be used for an astonishing variety of purposes, from environmental remediation to drug delivery and energy storage. Susumu Kitagawa, Richard Robson and Omar M. Yaghi shared the award for their development of metal-organic frameworks (or MOFs), chemical cages that have small openings that can capture a diverse array of other small molecules.
How it works: The cages are made of metal ions held together by organic, or carbon-containing, molecules. The cages can be one-dimensional or multi-dimensional, and they can be formed from a host of metals and organic linkers. Unlike polymers that grow in only one direction, MOFs build out as crystals in all directions. They have a very rigid, uniform, and precise arrangement of atoms.
Why this matters: MOFs are being explored for their use in wastewater cleanup, PFAS removal, timed or multi-drug release systems, and more. Some experts say that MOFs could be used for soundproofing and sensors, or to pull carbon from the atmosphere.
 

Avoiding Scammers

Every year, millions of adults lose their savings to scams (estimated annual losses of nearly $28 billion in the U.S. alone), but seniors are especially vulnerable. Scammers take advantage of the many challenges that come with aging, including cognitive decline, changes in life circumstances (such as the death of a spouse), and difficulty keeping up with evolving technology. Additionally, artificial intelligence has introduced new ways to scam people through replicated voices, videos, photographs and documents. But there are many ways to reduce the risk, research shows.

How to avoid scams: Criminologists Thomas Blomberg and Julie Brancale conducted surveys with hundreds of older adults and pinpointed practical steps people can take to avoid becoming a victim. Here are five of the many tips they share:

1. Resist pressure to act quickly.
2. Be suspicious of unsolicited telephone calls, mailings, online interactions or door-to-door services.
3. Never send personal identifiable information, money, jewelry, gift cards, checks, or wire funds or information to unverified persons or businesses.
4. Never open an e-mail attachment or click a link in a text message from someone you do not know.
5. Create a secret family password to verify the identity of a family member to use in the event you receive suspicious telephone or online requests for money for personal information.

Why this matters: By inciting panic and inducing isolation, scammers targeting older people push them to make decisions alone and quickly. Not to mention the financial loss, these events can damage mental and physical health, erode self-confidence, diminish one’s quality of life, and even contribute to premature death. —Andrea Tamayo, Newsletter Writer

EXPERT PERSPECTIVES

Humans have pushed past a planetary boundary of chemicals and “novel entities” altering Earth’s processes and systems. Chemists and the chemical industry should “focus on sustainable chemistry—the development and application of chemicals and chemical processes and products that benefit current and future generations without harmful effects on humans or ecosystems,” Joel Tickner, a professor of environmental health at the University of Massachusetts Lowell, wrote in 2024. “With the right policies, economic incentives and leadership, this shift could be easier than we think,” he says. | 5 min read

WHAT WE’RE READING

  • U.S. farmers apply hundreds of millions of pounds of pesticides to fruits and vegetables every year. They end up in human bodies and are linked to disease. | Inside Climate News
  • The math of why world records in sports are getting harder to break. | BBC
  • Students are visiting “embedded” counselors in college dorms and school buildings, and it seems to be helping. | The New York Times
 
Have you fallen for a scam? Nefarious actors are getting very sophisticated with their tools and tactics to part you with your money (and dignity). It may feel counterintuitive, but one of the best things to do if you do get conned, is to share the experience with people you know. As they say, information is power, and we can learn collectively from our individual missteps.
Send me your sad scam tales and any other feedback to: newsletters@sciam.com. And see you tomorrow.
—Andrea Gawrylewski, Chief Newsletter Editor
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