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The four types of dementia most people don’t know exist

By Clarissa Giebel

What most people think of when they hear the word dementia is memory problems and forgetfulness. But what people often dont know is that dementia can cause many different symptoms affecting speech, behaviour, sleep, motor...

Meta and Google just lost a landmark social media addiction case. A tech law expert explains the fallout

By Rob Nicholls

Social media platforms Instagram and YouTube have a design defect which means they are addictive, a jury in the United States has ruled. The Los Angeles jury took nearly nine days to reach its verdict in the landmark case...

Why did Iran bomb Dubai? A Middle East expert explains the regional alliances at play

By Andrew Thomas2

US-Israeli joint strikes on Iran over the weekend have seen war break out in the region once again and the death of Irans supreme leader. Iran has retaliated with volleys of ballistic missiles and drones targeted at...

The Pentagon strongarmed AI firms before Iran strikes – in dark news for the future of ‘ethical AI’

By Bianca Baggiarini

In the leadup to the weekends US and Israeli attacks on Iran, the US Department of Defense was locked in tense negotiations with artificial intelligence (AI) company Anthropic over exactly how the Pentagon could use the...

The strikes on Iran show why quitting oil is more important than ever

By Hussein Dia

As Israel and the United States strike Iran, global oil markets are on edge. Oil prices have begun rising even before any disruption to supply. Oil traders are factoring in the possibility the Strait of Hormuz might close....

Does international law still matter? The strike on the girls’ school in Iran shows why we need it

By Shannon Bosch

As the US and Israel began their joint assault on Iran, reports emerged from Iran that a strike hit the Shajarah Tayyebeh girls elementary school in the southern city of Minab. The school was reportedly packed with young...

Booked to travel through the Middle East? Here’s why you shouldn’t cancel your flight

By Natasha Heap

Travellers are being advised not to cancel their tickets for flights through the Middle East and check with their airlines, as airspace remains closed indefinitely. If travellers cancel a ticket, they may lose some of...

AI is already creeping into election campaigns. NZ’s rules aren’t ready

By Andrew Lensen

If youre often on social media, youve probably seen it: the deluge of low-quality, artificial intelligence-made material clogging up our feeds. So-called AI slop the Macquarie Dictionarys Word of the Year for 2025 is the...

Failure of US-Iran talks was all-too predictable – but Trump could still have stuck with diplomacy over strikes

By Nina Srinivasan Rathbun

Three rounds of nuclear talks between the U.S. and Iran failed to persuade President Donald Trump that a solution to the two countrys nuclear impasse lay in diplomacy, rather than military action. A perceived lack of...

How can Europe meet the challenge posed by the retreat of the US?

By Niall Oddy

At the Munich security conference, US secretary of state Marco Rubio spoke more warmly about the transatlantic relationship than US vice-president J.D. Vance at the same venue last year. However, faced with the presidency...

Intermittent fasting doesn’t have an edge for weight loss, but might still work for some

By Evelyn Parr

Intermittent fasting has become a buzzword in nutrition circles, with many people looking to it as a way to lose weight or improve their health. But new research from the Cochrane Collaboration shows intermittent fasting...

Amazon’s Ring wanted to track your pets. It revealed the future of surveillance

By Dennis B Desmond

As a career counterintelligence officer for the US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and Defense Intelligence Agency, I worked inside a fully integrated intelligence system. Signals intelligence from the National...

Why Trump’s new pick for Fed chair hit gold and silver markets – for good reasons

By Henry Maher

After months of speculation, US President Donald Trump confirmed he will be nominating Kevin Warsh as the next chair of the US Federal Reserve. The appointment has been closely watched in the context of Trumps ongoing...

Rewardy Wallet Integrates 1inch Swap API to Enable Gasless, Optimized Token Swaps

By TokenPost Team

Rewardy Wallet has announced the integration of the 1inch Swap API, bringing optimized, gasless token swaps to users across major EVM-compatible blockchain networks. Through the integration, Rewardy Wallet users can swap...

Tabletop particle accelerator could transform medicine and materials science

By Carsten Welsch

A particle accelerator that produces intense X-rays could be squeezed into a device that fits on a table, my colleagues and I have found in a new research project. The way that intense X-rays are currently produced is...

Yes, there is an AI investment bubble – here are three scenarios for how it could end

By Sergi Basco

Booms and busts are a recurring feature of modern economics, but when an assets value becomes overinflated, a boom quickly becomes a bubble. The two most recent major bubble episodes were the dot-com bubble in the United...

Is space worth the cost? Accounting experts say its value can’t be found in spreadsheets

By Basil Tucker

Since the early days of human space exploration, the endeavour has been haunted by a very good question: why spend so much on space when there are so many urgent problems here on Earth? Its a valid concern, and one that...

Inflation slows again — but is it enough for the Reserve Bank to cut interest rates?

By Stella Huangfu

Inflation is moving in the right direction, but new figures released today may not be soft enough to trigger a cut in official interest rates in August. The Australian Bureau of Statistics released the June quarter...

The ghost of Robodebt – Federal Court rules billions of dollars in welfare debts must be recalculated

By Christopher Rudge

A recent landmark court decision could have significant ramifications for several million social security recipients. The ruling means the federal government will need to recalculate more than A$4 billion in debts owed to...

Want to save yourself from super scams and dodgy financial advice? Ask these questions

By Angelique Nadia Sweetman McInnes

Is there anything you can do to protect your superannuation from dodgy providers or questionable financial advice? And if someone rings you out of the blue and tempts you with a better return on your savings what should...

How do politicians view democracy? It depends on whether they win or lose

By Valere Gaspard

There is a heightened concern about the current state of democracy around the globe. These include worries about a decrease in freedom, the growing number of autocracies around the world and citizens dissatisfaction with...

Iranian Canadians watch the Israel-U.S. war in Iran from afar

By Fateme Ejaredar Et Al

Iranian Canadians have been following the news in Iran carefully. Sadaf Vakilzadeh/Unsplash, CC BY The recent war waged by Israel and the United States on Iran killed at least 935 people and wounded another 5,332. Theres...

How Marvel’s Fantastic Four discovered the human in the superhuman

By J. Andrew Deman

The Fantastic Four: First Steps is the second cinematic reboot of the Fantastic Four franchise, and theres a lot riding on this film. While cinema-goers have responded enthusiastically to many of the films in the Marvel...

There’s enough natural hydrogen in the Earth’s crust to help power the green energy transition

By Barbara Sherwood Lollar Et Al

Since their formation billions of years ago, the oldest parts of the Earths continental rocks have generated natural hydrogen in massive amounts. Some of this hydrogen may have accumulated within accessible traps and...

AI will soon be able to audit all published research – what will that mean for public trust in science?

By Alexander Kaurov Et Al

Self-correction is fundamental to science. One of its most important forms is peer review, when anonymous experts scrutinise research before it is published. This helps safeguard the accuracy of the written record. Yet...

How the world’s nuclear watchdog monitors facilities around the world – and what it means that Iran kicked it out

By Anna Erickson

This travel case holds a toolkit containing equipment for inspecting nuclear facilities. Dean Calma/IAEA, CC BY What happens when a country seeks to develop a peaceful nuclear energy program? Every peaceful program starts...

Big Beautiful Bill: Why Donald Trump is obsessed with the manipulative language of size

By Andy Curtis

Small is Beautiful: A Study of Economics as if People Mattered is the title of the highly influential 1973 book written by the German-born British economist E.F. Schumacher. The book marked its 50th anniversary in 2023,...

American science is in crisis. It’s a great opportunity for Australia to snap up top scientists

By Kylie Walker

Science in the United States in in trouble. The National Science Foundation, a key research funding agency, has suffered devastating funding cuts under the current administration. Critics say the cuts risk losing an entire...

Some young people sexually abuse. Here’s how to reduce reoffending by up to 90%

By Jesse Cale Et Al

When we think about whos responsible for sexual abuse in Australia, we usually picture adults. But young people are responsible for a substantial proportion of sexual offences nationwide. Up to a third of all child sexual...

Can a pizza box go in the yellow bin – or not? An expert answers this and other messy recycling questions

By Pooria Pasbakhsh

Have you ever gone to toss something into the recycling bin a jam jar, a pizza box, a takeaway container encrusted with yesterdays lunch and wondered if youre doing it right? Perhaps you asked yourself: should I scrub...

AI is driving down the price of knowledge – universities have to rethink what they offer

By Patrick Dodd

For a long time, universities worked off a simple idea: knowledge was scarce. You paid for tuition, showed up to lectures, completed assignments and eventually earned a credential. That process did two things: it gave you...

As Netanyahu meets Trump in Washington, what hope for peace in Gaza? Expert Q&A

By Jonathan Este

The US government remains upbeat about the prospects for at least a ceasefire in Gaza, according to the latest reports from Washington, where the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, has been meeting the US...

How to support someone who is grieving: five research-backed strategies

By Lucy Poxon

When someone we care about is grieving the loss of a loved one, our natural instinct is to ease their pain. But when words feel clumsy and gestures fall short, it can be hard to know how to help. Drawing on both my...

Brics is sliding towards irrelevance – the Rio summit made that clear

By Amalendu Misra

The Brics group of nations has just concluded its 17th annual summit in the Brazilian city of Rio de Janeiro. But, despite member states adopting a long list of commitments covering global governance, finance, health, AI...

Lost in space: MethaneSat failed just as NZ was to take over mission control – here’s what we need to know now

By Nicholas Rattenbury

This week’s announcement of the loss of a methane-detecting satellite, just days before New Zealand was meant to take over mission control, is a blow to the country’s space research sector. New Zealand invested NZ$29...

NHS ten-year plan for England: what’s in it and what’s needed to make it work

By Judith Smith

The UK government has published its eagerly awaited ten-year health plan for England, setting out how billions of pounds in NHS funding will be used to transform healthcare delivery across the country. As anticipated, the...

Conservatives notch 2 victories in their fight to deny Planned Parenthood federal funding through Medicaid

By Rachel Rebouche

Conservatives have won two important battles in their decades-long campaign against Planned Parenthood, a network of affiliated clinics that are the largest provider of reproductive health services in the U.S. One of these...

One ‘big, beautiful’ reason why Republicans in Congress just can’t quit Donald Trump

By Charlie Hunt

As the U.S. House of Representatives voted to approve President Donald Trump’s sweeping domestic tax and spending package, many critics are wondering how the president retained the loyalty of so many congressional...

Astronomers have discovered another puzzling interstellar object − this third one is big, bright and fast

By Darryl Z. Seligman

Astronomers manning an asteroid warning system caught a glimpse of a large, bright object zipping through the solar system late on July 1, 2025. The objects potentially interstellar origins excited scientists across the...

6 simple questions to tell if a ‘finfluencer’ is more flash than cash

By Dimitrios Salampasis

Images of flashy sports cars. Lavish lifestyle shots. These are just some of the red flags consumers should watch out for when they turn to social media for financial advice. Consumers should not believe everything they...

NZ will soon have no real interisland rail-ferry link – why are we so bad at infrastructure planning?

By Timothy Welch

Another week, another Cook Strait ferry breakdown. As the winter maintenance season approaches and the Aratere prepares for its final months of service, New Zealand faces a self-imposed crisis. The government has spent...

War, politics and religion shape wildlife evolution in cities

By Elizabeth Carlen

People often consider evolution to be a process that occurs in nature in the background of human society. But evolution is not separate from human beings. In fact, human cultural practices can influence evolution in...

Chatbots are on the rise, but customers still trust human agents more

By Vivek Astvansh

Customers contact companies regularly to purchase products and services, inquire about orders, make payments and request returns. Until recently, the most common way for customers to contact companies was through phone...

What makes a good football coach? The reality behind the myths

By Alan McKay

With Womens Euro 2025 underway, attention is turning not just to the players hoping for glory, but to the head coaches tasked with leading them. These include Englands Sarina Wiegman, who guided the Netherlands to Euro...

A brief history of the slogan T-shirt

By Liv Auckland

You probably have a drawer full of T-shirts. Theyre comfy, easy to style, cheap and ubiquitous. But the T-shirt is anything but basic. For 70 years, theyve been worn as a tool for self-expression, rebellion and protest....

The pandemic is still disrupting young people’s careers

By Sviatlana Kroitar

Unlike previous economic downturns, the COVID pandemic created a crisis that disrupted both education and employment, abruptly halting young peoples emerging careers and clouding their hopes for the future. It doubly...

US Supreme Court ponders the balance of power – and sides with President Trump

By John Stanton

Since his second inauguration in January, Donald Trump has issued more than 160 executive orders. These orders permit the US president to make directives concerning the workings of the federal government without the need...

A new Gaza ceasefire deal is on the table – will this time be different?

By Julie M. Norman

The US president, Donald Trump, says that Israel has agreed to terms for a 60-day ceasefire in Gaza. If that sounds familiar, it is. The idea of a two-month truce has been discussed since the collapse of the last...

What MAGA means to Americans

By Jesse Rhodes Et Al

A decade ago, Donald Trump descended the golden escalator at Trump Tower in New York City and ignited a political movement that has reshaped American politics. In a memorable turn of phrase, Trump promised supporters of...

Capitalism and democracy are weakening – reviving the idea of ‘calling’ can help to repair them

By Valerie L. Myers

Ask someone what a calling is, and theyll probably say something like doing work you love. But as a management professor who has spent two decades researching the history and impact of calling, Ive found its much more than...

U.S. Treasury Eyes Private Credit Oversight Through Insurance Regulator Talks

The U.S. Treasury Department is preparing to hold a series of meetings with domestic and international insurance regulators in the coming weeks, focusing on growing concerns within the $2 trillion private credit market....

U.S. Stock Futures Drop as Iran War Escalates, Oil Surges Past $115

03:13 AM| Economy

U.S. stock index futures declined Sunday evening as the ongoing Iran conflict intensified, with Yemens Houthi militants entering the war and sending oil prices sharply higher. The developments rattled investor confidence...

Trump Hints at Rift With Gabbard Over Iran Nuclear Policy

03:11 AM| Politics

President Donald Trump publicly acknowledged a rare internal disagreement within his administration on Sunday, suggesting that Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard holds a softer stance on Irans nuclear program...

Trump's White House Ballroom on Track Despite Historic Preservation Lawsuit

03:09 AM| Politics

President Donald Trump declared Sunday that the controversial White House ballroom project is progressing ahead of schedule and staying within budget, even as a high-profile legal challenge threatens to derail...

Middle East Conflict Drives Dollar Surge as Yen Hits Critical Threshold

01:49 AM| Economy

The U.S. dollar maintained its strong position on Monday, heading toward its best monthly performance since July, as escalating Middle East tensions continued to unsettle global financial markets. Investors fleeing to...

WTO Digital Trade Moratorium Expires Amid Stalled Negotiations

01:47 AM| Economy

The long-standing global moratorium on customs duties for digital downloads and streaming services has officially lapsed, according to a senior World Trade Organization official. The expiration marks a significant turning...

Israel Blocks Cardinal from Palm Sunday Mass, Then Reverses Ban

01:41 AM| Politics Governance

Israeli authorities initially prevented Jerusalems Catholic cardinal from celebrating Palm Sunday at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, triggering sharp international criticism before Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu...

Top Stories

Is dark chocolate healthier than milk chocolate? 2 dietitians explain

04:29 AM| Insights & Views Health

Easter chocolate is all over supermarket shelves. Some people reach straight for milk chocolate eggs while others pause at the darker varieties, assuming theyre healthier. Dark chocolate has gained a reputation as the...

Global Geopolitics Series

What does China’s host bid mean for the High Seas Treaty?

By Philippe Le Billon - 04:24 AM| Insights & Views Politics

Delegates are meeting in New York for the third session of the preparatory commission (PrepCom 3) on the Agreement on Marine Biological Diversity of Areas beyond National Jurisdiction (BBNJ), also known as the High Seas...

Global Geopolitics Series

Iran was always going to close the Strait of Hormuz

05:04 AM| Insights & Views Politics

The five-day deadline to open the Strait of Hormuz handed to Iran by Donald Trump on Monday expires some time tomorrow and the Islamic Republic needs to get serious before it is too late or so the US president has...

Climate Change Series

How the war in Iran is already affecting UK farmers and food production

05:06 AM| Insights & Views Economy

The conflict in Iran and the disruption to the strait of Hormuz are already starting to affect UK farmers. The closure of this vital shipping route threatens supplies of two essential agricultural necessities: fuel and...

AI Revolution Series

Makemation: a Nollywood movie that shows AI in action in Africa

By Tinashe Mushakavanhu - 05:12 AM| Insights & Views Technology

A new feature film, Makemation, is an African coming-of-age story set in a time of artificial intelligence (AI). Makemation was produced by Nigerian AI-developer-turned-filmmaker Toyosi Akerele-Ogunsiji. As conversations...

Global Geopolitics Series

God on their side: how the US, Israel and Iran are all using religion to garner support

05:15 AM| Insights & Views Politics

Americas secretary of defense, Pete Hegseth, sports an array of tattoos with Christian messaging, including one which reads Deus Vult, God wills it, and is associated with the medieval crusades. So perhaps it shouldnt come...

Econotimes Series

Economy

South Korea March Exports Expected to Surge to Near Five-Year High Amid AI-Driven Chip Demand

South Koreas exports in March are projected to have surged at their fastest pace in nearly five years, powered by soaring global demand for semiconductors driven by artificial intelligence investment. A Reuters poll of 11...

Gold Prices Inch Higher Amid U.S.-Iran War Tensions and Technical Rebound

Gold prices edged up in Asian trading on Monday, recovering modestly after a turbulent week marked by sharp volatility tied to escalating geopolitical tensions between the United States and Iran. Spot gold climbed 0.4% to...

Oil Prices Surge Amid Middle East Tensions as Houthi Attacks Escalate Conflict

Global oil prices climbed sharply at the start of Mondays trading session following a significant escalation in Middle East hostilities. Yemens Iran-backed Houthi group launched a missile barrage targeting Israel over the...

Asia Markets Tumble as Gulf Conflict Drives Oil Prices to Historic Highs

Asian stock markets fell sharply on Monday as investors braced for a prolonged Gulf conflict that has sent oil prices surging to their highest monthly gains in decades, raising serious concerns about global inflation and a...

Bank of Japan Signals Rate Flexibility Amid Yen Volatility

Bank of Japan (BOJ) Governor Kazuo Ueda reaffirmed on Monday that the central bank will keep a close eye on foreign exchange rate movements, acknowledging their significant influence on Japans economic outlook and...

Politics

UNIFIL Peacekeeper Killed in Southern Lebanon as Tensions Escalate

A United Nations peacekeeper was killed and several others were wounded after a projectile struck a UNIFIL position near the southern Lebanese village of Adchit al-Qusayr on Sunday. Indonesias foreign ministry confirmed...

Trump Says Iran Nuclear Deal Could Be Near as Direct Talks Progress

President Donald Trump announced Sunday that the United States is actively engaged in direct negotiations with Iran, expressing cautious optimism that a diplomatic agreement could be reached soon. Speaking to reporters...

Pakistan Leads Diplomatic Push to Reopen Strait of Hormuz Amid Iran War

Pakistan brought together foreign ministers from Turkey, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia in Islamabad on Sunday in a high-stakes diplomatic effort to end the ongoing Iran war and restore critical oil shipping routes through the...

Trump Eyes Military Operation to Seize Iran's Uranium Stockpile

President Donald Trump is reportedly weighing a bold military operation to physically extract nearly 1,000 pounds of uranium from Iran, according to a Wall Street Journal report citing senior U.S. officials. While no final...

Iran-U.S. Military Tensions Escalate: Markets, Universities, and the Strait of Hormuz at Risk

Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East have intensified dramatically as Irans Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) issued a stark warning targeting U.S.-affiliated universities across neighboring countries. The IRGC...

Science

NASA's Artemis II Crew Arrives in Florida for Historic Moon Mission

The four astronauts chosen for NASAs Artemis II mission have touched down at Kennedy Space Center in Florida, marking the beginning of final launch preparations for the first crewed lunar journey in over 50 years. NASA...

SpaceX Pivots Toward Moon City as Musk Reframes Long-Term Space Vision

SpaceX CEO Elon Musk has revealed a significant shift in the companys near-term space exploration strategy, announcing that SpaceX is now prioritizing the development of a self-growing city on the Moon rather than focusing...

SpaceX Prioritizes Moon Mission Before Mars as Starship Development Accelerates

Elon Musks SpaceX is shifting its near-term space exploration strategy, choosing to prioritize a return to the Moon before pursuing missions to Mars, according to a recent Wall Street Journal report citing sources familiar...

NASA and SpaceX Target Crew-11 Undocking From ISS Amid Medical Concern

NASA has confirmed that the agency, in coordination with SpaceX, is targeting no earlier than 5 p.m. Eastern Time (2200 GMT) on Wednesday, January 14, for the undocking of the SpaceX Crew-11 mission from the International...

Neuralink Plans High-Volume Brain Implant Production and Fully Automated Surgery by 2026

Elon Musks brain-computer interface company Neuralink is preparing for a major expansion, announcing plans to begin high-volume production of its brain implant devices and transition to a fully automated surgical procedure...

Technology

Cybersecurity Stocks Tumble After Anthropic's Claude Mythos AI Leak Sparks Market Fears

Major cybersecurity stocks took a sharp hit Friday following reports that Anthropic accidentally exposed details about its next-generation AI model before its official launch. CrowdStrike fell 7%, Palo Alto Networks...

Chinese Universities with PLA Ties Found Purchasing Restricted U.S. AI Chips Through Super Micro Servers

Procurement records reveal that four Chinese universities, two of which have direct ties to the Peoples Liberation Army, acquired Super Micro Computer servers loaded with restricted Nvidia AI chips over the past year. The...

Federal Judge Blocks Pentagon's Blacklisting of AI Company Anthropic

A federal judge has temporarily prevented the Pentagon from enforcing its designation of Anthropic as a national security supply-chain risk, dealing an early blow to the Trump administration in a growing dispute over...

SMIC Allegedly Supplies Chipmaking Tools to Iran's Military, U.S. Officials Warn

Chinas top semiconductor manufacturer, SMIC (Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation), has reportedly been transferring chipmaking equipment to Irans military industrial complex, according to two senior Trump...

Google's TurboQuant Algorithm Sends Memory Chip Stocks Tumbling

Major memory chipmakers took a significant hit on Thursday after Google researchers introduced a groundbreaking compression algorithm that threatens to reduce artificial intelligence demand for memory chips. Samsung...
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