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Slow mining could be a solution to overconsumption in an increasingly fast-paced world

By Deborah Johnson Et Al

A fast approach to business characterized by overconsumption across supply chains has become almost ubiqutous in recent years. Fast fashion is one of the most polluting industries globally, often relying on synthetic...

From runways to film: the untold story of trailblazing First Nations fashion designer Stephen FitzGerald

By Treena Clark

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised this article contains names and/or images of deceased people. In August, I attended the Darwin Aboriginal Arts Fair to witness First Nations designers and...

Has AI hacked the operating system of human civilisation? Yuval Noah Harari sounds a warning

By Darius von Guttner Sporzyns

Just as artificial intelligence (AI) models are trained on vast data sets to learn and predict, Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind and Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow have trained us to expect disruptive ideas...

Local papers are central to our democracy. We must do more to bring them out of crisis

By Kristy Hess

This is the second piece in a series on the Future of Australian media. You can read the first piece in the series here. Australians who are unaware of stories about social disorder and crime gripping Alice Springs must...

Apple’s iPhone 16 launch shows AI is shaking up the tech giant’s core market

By Lewis Endlar

As someone who helped set up one of the first iPhones back in late 2007 on live TV, I found the launch of the first iteration of Apples smartphone an exciting time. At the launch in June of that year, a grinning Steve Jobs...

What remains of ‘Operation Car Wash’, Brazil’s historic anti-corruption probe?

By Manoel Gehrke Et Al

Ten years ago, in March 2014, prosecutors in the Brazilian city of Curitiba transformed a money laundering investigation into a historic anti-corruption probe known as Operação Lava Jato (Operation Car Wash)....

91% of Australian teens have a phone – but many are not keeping their identity and location secure

By Yeslam Al-Saggaf Et Al

Most Australian teenagers have their own smartphone. According to a 2023 survey, 91% of young people between 14 and 17 owned a phone. At the same time, there is huge community concern about young people being exposed to...

Treasurer distances himself from his former boss’ Reserve Bank attack

By Michelle Grattan

Treasurer Jim Chalmers has distanced himself from the strident attack his one-time boss Wayne Swan launched on the Reserve Bank, which the former treasurer accused of putting economic dogma over rational...

The Boeing Starliner has returned to Earth without its crew – a former astronaut details what that means for NASA, Boeing and the astronauts still up in space

By Michael E. Fossum

Boeings crew transport space capsule, the Starliner, returned to Earth without its two-person crew right after midnight Eastern time on Sept. 7, 2024. Its remotely piloted return marked the end of a fraught test flight to...

Five disinformation tactics Russia is using to try to influence the US election

By Precious Chatterje-Doody

The White Houses recent exposure of Russian attempts to influence this years US presidential election will come as little surprise to anyone who followed disinformation tactics during the last US election. During the...

How much does aging affect mental acuity? It’s debatable

By Donald Jurivich

I cringed recently while driving to the clinic where I specialize in geriatric medicine when I heard a young radio announcer refer to old people as wiggy, a pejorative for wacky. As a doctor who has extensively...

Meteorite strike in South Africa: scientists offer clues about what it is and where it came from

By Roger Lawrence Gibson Et Al

On a Sunday morning in late August 2024 a nine-year-old girl named Eli-zé du Toit was sitting on her grandparents porch near a small town in South Africas Eastern Cape province, when she heard a long rumble, then...

The emotional toll of dating apps and why they’re no longer about finding love – podcast

By Gemma Ware1

Dating apps are having a rocky moment. In February, Bumble said it would lay off 30% of its workforce after disappointing results in 2023. Match Group, which has struggled to maintain paying subscribers for its most...

Could Bangladesh’s former prime minister, Sheikh Hasina, be extradited to the country to stand trial?

By Raisul Islam Sourav

Former Bangladeshi prime minister, Sheikh Hasina, fled to India in early August after a mass uprising forced her to step down. Her resignation followed weeks of unrest in which nearly 650 people were killed and many more...

Think you’re better at driving than most? How psychological biases are keeping our roads unsafe

By Gemma Briggs

You never have to look hard to find recent reports of fatal vehicle crashes on UK roads. After devastating events such as a crash in West Yorkshire in July 2024, where four adults and two children were killed, media...

The Earth’s inner core is a total mystery – here’s how we’re starting to solve it

By Alfred Wilson-Spencer

Deep beneath our feet, at a staggering depth of over 5,100km, lies Earths inner core a solid ball of iron and nickel that plays a crucial role in shaping the conditions we experience on the surface. In fact, without it...

How Sigmund Freud attempted to solve the ‘riddle’ of Leonardo da Vinci’s genius

By Luke Thurston

The idea that prowess in activities like playing chess or writing poetry might be fuelled by frustrated, unconscious sexual desire is fairly well known today. But writing more than a century ago, Sigmund Freud was...

How Australia’s new AI ‘guardrails’ can clean up the messy market for artificial intelligence

By Nicholas Davis

Australias federal government has today launched a proposed set of mandatory guardrails for high-risk AI alongside a voluntary safety standard for organisations using AI. Each of these documents offer ten mutually...

If robots could lie, would we be okay with it? A new study throws up intriguing results

By Stine S. Johansen

Do you think a robot should be allowed to lie? A new study published in Frontiers in Robotics and AI investigates what people think of robots that deceive their users. Their research uses examples of robots lying to...

How to get the housing we need: healthy, affordable and resilient to climate change

By Lyrian Daniel Et Al

Imagine coming home after a long day at work. It is winter. You step inside your home. It is warm, quiet and dry. A storm is forecast to blow in tonight. Unprecedented rainfall, they are saying. But you are not worried....

GPS tracking is everywhere in pro sports but many AFLW players are uncomfortable with it

By Dr Paul Bowell Et Al

The 2024 AFLW season kicked off last week, continuing the growth of a variety of sports that were once considered only for men. This growth has resulted in more women athletes entering elite sporting structures for the...

Are the far-left and far-right merging together?

By Shannon Brincat

When most of us think about politics, we think of different views as sitting on a spectrum. Left wing is at one end, right wing at the other. We all, therefore, sit somewhere on this straight line in the way we view the...

Meta has a new plan to keep kids safe online. Will it work?

By Toby Murray

Meta, which owns social media platforms such as Instagram and Facebook, has revealed its plans for keeping kids safe online. It wants companies like Apple and Google, who run mobile phone app stores, to force parents to...

National debt explained: What you should know about Canada’s deficit

By Sorin Rizeanu

By the end of the 2024-25 fiscal year, Canadas total market debt is expected to surpass $1.4 trillion. Every day, this debt grows by more than $100 million, and every second, Canada pays more than $1,200 in...

드론 공격이 우크라이나 전쟁의 규칙과 비용을 어떻게 바꾸고 있는가

By Marcel Plichta

우크라이나가 새롭게 공개한 장거리 무기는 드론과 미사일 기술이 결합된 형태로, 키이우는 이를 통해 러시아군의 공격에 대처하는 능력을 크게 강화할 것으로 기대하고 있다. 우크라이나 홍보 자료에 따르면 이 로켓 드론은...

India’s new mega-dam will roil lives downstream with wild swings in water flow every day

By Parag Jyoti Saikia

Hey Rupam, open the door. Take this fish, a woman yelled from outside. I was sitting in the kitchen at my friend Rupams house in rural northeast India. It was the heart of monsoon season, and rain had been falling since...

Newspoll remains tied at 50–50, but Albanese’s net approval slumps

By Adrian Beaumont

A national Newspoll, conducted August 2630 from a sample of 1,263, had a 5050 two-party tie between Labor and the Coalition, unchanged from the previous Newspoll three weeks ago. This is the first time this term there have...

We found teenage girls don’t know vulvas from vaginas or when their menstrual cycle starts

By Felicity Roux Et Al

It is important for everyone but especially girls, women and people who menstruate to understand how ovulation and menstruation work. The menstrual cycle is a key indicator of overall health and sadly, issues such as...

‘It’s time to give up on normal’: what winter’s weird weather means for the warm months ahead

By David Bowman

Heavy winds struck south-east Australia over the weekend as a series of cold fronts moved across the continent. It followed a high fire danger in Sydney and other parts of New South Wales last week, and a fire in...

Military veterans with PTSD face an agonising choice: the stigma of declaring it to employers or being denied support

By Richard O'Quinn Et Al

Australia is home to almost half a million military veterans, most of whom are in the workforce. But most around 60% live with long-term health problems. About half of these face enduring mental health challenges,...

Without sanctions, making companies disclose their environmental and social impacts has limited effect

By Charl de Villiers

As of last year, New Zealands largest companies and financial institutions have been required to disclose their climate-related risks and opportunities in their annual reports and regulatory filings. This follows a...

Aluminium foil that can clean water: we’ve developed a coating which attracts and traps dangerous microbes

By Taufiq Ihsan

More than 2 billion people around the world do not have access to safe, uncontaminated drinking water. Around 418 million of them live in African countries. The problem is most acute in rural communities, where peoples...

Is Iran’s anti-Israel and American rhetoric all bark and no bite?

By Shahram Akbarzadeh

On August 27, Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader of the Islamic Republic of Iran, told the newly elected president, Masoud Pezeshkian, and his cabinet that talking to the enemy may be useful. In a thinly veiled reference...

What is space made of? An astrophysics expert explains all the components – from radiation to dark matter – found in the vacuum of space

By Nilakshi Veerabathina

What is space made of what does gravity actually bend? Phil, age 12, Birmingham What comes to mind when you think of space? Imagine a friend boasting about a spacious building, stadium or museum they recently...

Healthy soils are good for your gut, brain and wellbeing – here’s why

By Jose David Henao Casas

Often overlooked, soil is one of our planets largest living ecosystems and the foundation of our lives. It provides 95% of our food, supports global biodiversity and helps balance the climate by storing atmospheric...

Five notorious cyberattacks that targeted governments

By Rachael Medhurst

Warfare is no longer confined to physical battlefields. In the digital age, a new front has emerged cyberspace. Here, countries clash not with bullets and bombs, but with lines of code and sophisticated malware. One of...

Home education: why are so many parents choosing it over mainstream school?

By Lucie Wheeler

There has been a notable rise in parents choosing to home educate their children over recent years, and particularly since the COVID pandemic. Elective home education carrying out a childs education at home, outside...

Sudan is the world’s worst modern war

By Kagure Gacheche

Sudans war has been raging since April 2023. The country was on a bumpy road to democracy after mass uprisings in 2019 ousted long-time dictator Omar al-Bashir. This all came to a halt when troops from the Rapid Support...

Is ‘coaching’ a shortcut to mental health care? Not so fast − here are key differences

By Emily Hemendinger

Life coach, wellness coach, business coach, weight loss coach, breakup coach the list goes on and on. All are different titles for similar jobs, with the same limitation: Anyone can claim to be an expert. Health...

If new technologies snarl your airline experience, here are old-school strategies to cope

By Christopher Schaberg

Ten years ago I wrote a book titled The End of Airports about how digital technologies and commercial air travel were on a collision course. Earlier this summer, I was proved right. In July, a cybersecurity software...

Trump and Harris, with starkly different records on labor issues, are both courting union voters

By Robert Forrant

Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris and Republican nominee Donald Trump are in a tight race for the White House. Every voting bloc will count including members of labor unions and other people in their...

When cannabis is rescheduled, states can look to Colorado and Washington for ideas on how to regulate it

By Boyoung Seo

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration has made moves to reclassify marijuana, making it a type of legal but regulated medicine, like Tylenol with codeine or some steroids. With the reclassification, 26 states where...

DRC: fighting with rebels in the country’s east has intensified, sparking fears of a wider war

By Dale Pankhurst

Security forces in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) have been battling the M23 rebel group in the east of the country since 2012. However, there has been a major upsurge in fighting so far this year. The M23...

How AI can dramatically reduce the time it takes to make VAR offside calls in Premier League football matches

By Mark Middling Et Al

The start of the new English Premier League (EPL) football season is seeing further changes to the way VAR (the video assistant referee) is operated. VAR was introduced to the EPL in 2019 in an attempt to reduce the number...

Robots are coming to the kitchen

By Patrick Lin

Automating food is unlike automating anything else. Food is fundamental to life nourishing body and soul so how its accessed, prepared and consumed can change societies fundamentally. Automated kitchens arent sci-fi...

How drone attacks are changing the rules and the costs of the Ukraine war

By Marcel Plichta

Ukraine has unveiled a new long-range weapon, a mix of drone and missile technology that Kyiv believes will significantly boost its ability to combat Russian military attacks. Ukrainian promotional material suggested...

Who says boys don’t cry? Why we must encourage men and boys to express their emotions

By Michael Kehler

The Democratic National Convention recently wrapped up in Chicago, where Vice President Kamala Harris and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz were officially nominated as the partys ticket for the 2024 presidential election. One...

How low can we go? To cut the carbon that goes into buildings to net zero, we need radical change

By Philip Oldfield Et Al

Philip Oldfield, Head of School and Professor of Architecture, UNSW Built Environment, UNSW Sydney Buildings are one of our biggest contributors to global heating. They produce 37% of all greenhouse gas emissions from...

Yes, you can borrow money to invest in shares

By Sean Pinder

In their scramble to secure a foothold on an increasingly unaffordable housing ladder, some young investors might be looking for new ways to boost their returns on savings. One such approach albeit highly risky is...

Why Americans do political speeches so well (and debates so badly)

By David Smith

The recent Democratic National Convention in Chicago was a showcase of impressive speeches. Presidential nominee Kamala Harris justified the newfound enthusiasm of Democrats with a strong acceptance speech, but even she...

Murdoch to Musk: how global media power has shifted from the moguls to the big tech bros

Until recently, Elon Musk was just a wildly successful electric car tycoon and space pioneer. Sure, he was erratic and outspoken, but his global influence was contained and seemingly under control. But add the ownership...

FxWirePro- Major economic events to watch

01:56 AM| Economy

Date Time (GMT) Currency Event Forecast Previous Sep 10th2024 6 am UK Claimant count...

Top Stories

How the oil and gas industry influences higher education

By Emily Eaton Et Al - 08:16 AM| Business

As the climate crisis gets worse, global fossil fuel production is growing and oil and gas companies are making record profits. While the powerful influence of the fossil fuel industrys lobbying on climate policy is...

Is America ready to elect a Black woman president?

By Emma Shortis - 08:16 AM| Insights & Views Politics

Its the big question that has loomed over Kamala Harris presidential campaign from the start: is the United States ready for a Black woman president? I get asked this almost every time I speak about American politics....

Econotimes Series

Economy

European Firms Skeptical of China’s Reform Promises as Investment Interest Declines

European firms in China are losing confidence in the governments ability to deliver long-promised economic reforms, according to a report by the European Union Chamber of Commerce. With declining profit margins and...

영국 임금 상승 둔화, 중앙은행 추가 금리 인하 가능성

7월까지의 3개월 동안 영국의 임금 상승률이 2년 만에 최저치를 기록하고 고용은 크게 증가하면서, 영국 중앙은행(BoE)이 연말까지 또 한 번 금리 인하를 단행할 가능성이 커졌다는 분석이 나왔다. 영국 통계청에 따르면, 7월까지 3개월...

금 가격 소폭 하락, 인플레이션 시험 앞두고 사상 최고치 근접

화요일 아시아 거래에서 금 가격이 소폭 하락했지만, 트레이더들이 미국의 주요 인플레이션 데이터를 기다리면서 최근 고점에 근접한 상태를 유지하고 있다. 이는 연방준비제도(Fed)가 금리 인하를 시작할 계획에 대한 추가 단서를 얻기...

호주 규제 당국, 은행의 하이브리드 증권 발행 단계적 중단 추진

호주의 금융 규제 기관은 소매 투자자들이 이러한 금융 상품의 위험을 제대로 이해하지 못하고 있다는 이유로, 2027년부터 은행이 자본 요구사항 충족을 위해 일부 하이브리드 증권 발행을 금지하는 방안을 제안했다. 호주 금융...

미 달러 약세 지속, 완전한 퇴장은 아냐

최근의 약세에도 불구하고, 월요일에 발표된 BCA 리서치 보고서에 따르면 미국 달러는 여전히 회복력이 있으며 앞으로 몇 달 안에 반등할 것으로 예상된다고 분석했다. 제조업 침체와 금융 시장의 신중한 움직임이 특징인 글로벌 경제...

Politics

Donald Trump Suggests Fox News Shakeup: Prefers Hannity, Watters, or Ingraham Over MacCallum and Baier for Hosting Potential Debate

In a bold move that could reshape the dynamics of the next Fox News-hosted presidential debate, Donald Trump has expressed a clear preference for a different set of moderators. Rather than having Martha MacCallum and Bret...

Donald Trump’s Economic Trust Grows Post-Debate, Surpassing Kamala Harris by 20 Points in Latest CNN Poll

Donald Trump has seen a notable increase in voter trust when it comes to handling the economy, according to a CNN poll released following the latest 2024 presidential debate. The poll, conducted after the debate between...

Donald Trump Secures 60% of Undecided Voters Following Debate, Outshining Kamala Harris in Key Post-Debate Poll

In the aftermath of the highly anticipated 2024 presidential debate, Donald Trump emerged as the clear favorite among undecided voters, according to a post-debate poll conducted by Reuters. The survey, which polled...

Republicans Hold Strong 74% Chance of Winning Senate Control, According to Latest Polymarket Odds

As the 2024 elections approach, Republicans are gaining momentum in their bid to reclaim control of the U.S. Senate, with Polymarket odds now giving the GOP a 74% chance of victory. This significant shift in betting...

Nvidia's Future in Saudi Arabia Hinges on US Approval, China Ties Hang in Balance

The U.S. government is nearing a decision on whether to approve Nvidia chip sales to Saudi Arabia, a deal that could accelerate AI projects in the region while impacting the kingdoms relationship with China, which is under...

Science

SpaceX Reveals November Target for Delayed Starship Test Flight Amid FAA Hold-ups

SpaceX has set a new November target for the fifth Starship test flight after significant delays caused by the FAAs licensing process. The aerospace company addressed these delays, citing environmental reviews and...

Elon Musk Reveals SpaceX Starship’s First Mars Mission Set for 2026

Elon Musk has revealed that SpaceXs Starship will launch its first uncrewed mission to Mars in 2026. This historic flight will test the rockets ability to land on the red planet, and crewed missions are planned for 2028....

SpaceX President Urges Brazil to End Sanctions on Starlink Amid Financial Account Freeze

SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell has called on Brazil to end sanctions against Starlink, citing the recent freezing of the companys financial accounts and threats to revoke its ISP license. The move has sparked tensions...

Boeing’s Starliner Begins Critical Return from ISS After Months in Space Delays

Boeings Starliner spacecraft undocked from the ISS on September 6, beginning its journey back to Earth after months of delays caused by a thruster malfunction. The deorbit burn, scheduled for late evening, will determine...

SpaceX Hits 7,000-Starlink Milestone with Successful Falcon 9 Launch of 21 Satellites

SpaceX achieved a significant milestone on September 5, launching 21 additional Starlink satellites, surpassing 7,000 in orbit. The Falcon 9 rocket lifted off from Cape Canaveral, marking the 15th flight for this specific...

Technology

XRP's 3,750% Liquidation Imbalance Leaves Bulls Reeling Amid Failed Price Breakout

XRP bulls faced a dramatic 3,750% liquidation spike, with long positions dominating the market imbalance. Despite hopes for a breakout, the token experienced a sharp price rejection, leading to further losses for...

Sam Altman’s OpenAI Targets $150 Billion Valuation as ChatGPT Dominates AI Landscape

OpenAI, the artificial intelligence giant led by Sam Altman, is in discussions to raise capital at a potential $150 billion valuation. The success of ChatGPT has positioned the company at the forefront of the AI...

UK Brings Legal Clarity to Crypto: New Bill Defines Digital Assets as Personal Property

The UKs groundbreaking Property Bill, introduced on September 11, formally classifies cryptocurrencies and NFTs as personal property, providing legal clarity for digital asset holders and strengthening fraud protection...

Coinbase Restores Polygon’s POL Token After Migration, Will POL Price Rally or Retreat?

Coinbase has resumed transactions for Polygons new POL token following its migration from MATIC. Despite an initial price surge, POL has since dropped, but technical indicators suggest the potential for upward...

Shiba Inu (SHIB) Struggles Against 'Tremendous' FUD as Retail Investors Lose Interest

Shiba Inu (SHIB) is enduring a wave of FUD, with data showing rising whale dominance and declining social media interest. Despite the negativity, some analysts see a potential recovery if Bitcoin rebounds. SHIB Facing...
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