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A woman was found trapped under a driverless car. It's not what it looks like, the car company said
A woman was found trapped under a driverless car. It's not what it looks like, the car company said
A pedestrian in downtown San Francisco was found critically injured and trapped underneath a driverless car Monday night. But the company that operates the autonomous car says it's not at fault.
2023-10-03 19:47
Did MrBeast share a photo of his underwear? YouTuber's tweet leaves Internet in splits: 'Please wash them before sending'
Did MrBeast share a photo of his underwear? YouTuber's tweet leaves Internet in splits: 'Please wash them before sending'
MrBeast's tranformation photo has attracted praise from all corners of social media
2023-07-01 18:49
Call of Duty: Modern Warfare III Countdown: Multiplayer Release Time
Call of Duty: Modern Warfare III Countdown: Multiplayer Release Time
The Call of Duty: Modern Warfare III countdown is ticking away as multiplayer releases at Friday, Nov. 10, 2023, at 12 a.m. ET.
2023-11-09 03:17
WhatsApp unveils new feature to protect ‘your most intimate conversations’
WhatsApp unveils new feature to protect ‘your most intimate conversations’
WhatsApp has announced a new feature that it says will “protect your most intimate conversations”. Chat Lock will allow users of the messaging app to take a chat thread from their inbox and put it in a new folder that can only be accessed by a password or biometric information, such as a fingerprint. Meta, the company’s owner, on Monday, said this would keep users’ conversations behind “one more layer of security” and has already started rolling it out. The content of messages in notifications will also be automatically hidden, the tech behemoth said. In a press release, Meta said: “We believe this feature will be great for people who share their phones from time to time with a family member, or in moments where someone else is holding your phone at the exact moment an extra-special chat arrives. “You can lock a chat by tapping the name of a one-to-one or group and selecting the lock option. To reveal these chats, slowly pull down on your inbox and enter your password or biometric.” It comes after warnings from WhatsApp that it could face being banned in the UK under the government’s online safety bill. Will Cathcart, head of WhatsApp parent company Meta, said in late March that the upcoming legislation could weaken the end-to-end encryption that secures messages on the service. He added that if the government told the company to weaken any security features it would resist, leading to the possibility it could be banned in the UK." width="500"> Just last month it signed an open letter with its competitors, including Signal, arguing that the bill poses “an unprecedented threat to the privacy, safety and security of every UK citizen”. The row is over end-to-end encryption, used by WhatsApp, which allows only the sender and recipient to access the contents of a message. However, police and law enforcement agencies argue this feature makes it harder to uncover serious wrongdoing, such as child sexual abuse, and want to weaken the feature. Mark Zuckerberg, the founder and CEO of Meta, said in a statement on Facebook: “New locked chats in WhatsApp make your conversations more private. “They’re hidden in a password-protected folder and notifications won’t show sender or message content.” Read More Creepy WhatsApp update sparks fears users are being listened to through their phone Government faces years of strike action from nurses, warns RCN chief Creepy WhatsApp update sparks fears users are being listened to through their phone WhatsApp just fixed two of its most glaring quirks Scientist spends 74 days underwater and expects to lose an inch in height
2023-05-16 05:21
Coca-Cola Beverages Florida, LLC partners with Florida Prepaid College Foundation to Launch $2.8M Scholarship Program
Coca-Cola Beverages Florida, LLC partners with Florida Prepaid College Foundation to Launch $2.8M Scholarship Program
TAMPA, Fla.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Aug 8, 2023--
2023-08-09 04:22
HP Labor Day Sale: Save Up to 67% on Laptops, Desktops, Monitors, More
HP Labor Day Sale: Save Up to 67% on Laptops, Desktops, Monitors, More
Labor Day is a celebration of workers (you and us!) and our accomplishments, and it
2023-08-30 01:53
Green Bonds Take Big Lead Over Fossil-Fuel Debt Deals
Green Bonds Take Big Lead Over Fossil-Fuel Debt Deals
For the first time, companies and governments are raising considerably more money in the debt markets for environmentally
2023-07-05 18:57
What happened between Corinna Kopf and Adin Ross? Twitch streamer once revealed why she cut ties with Kick co-owner
What happened between Corinna Kopf and Adin Ross? Twitch streamer once revealed why she cut ties with Kick co-owner
Adin Ross friend zoned Corinna Kopf after she asked him to 'bend her over'
2023-08-26 16:55
Apple's charger switch is the smartest decision they've made in years
Apple's charger switch is the smartest decision they've made in years
Apple announced the new iPhone 15 in all its glory and colorful variations on Tuesday.
2023-09-14 02:29
Scientists believe they have found a cure for alcoholism
Scientists believe they have found a cure for alcoholism
Alcohol addiction ruins millions of lives every year, but scientists may have found a cure for this terrible affliction. A new treatment for alcohol use disorder (AUD) has been trialled in monkeys with impressive results and, if these translate to human trials, the impact could be monumental. A team of neuroscientists and physiologists from across the US tested a new type of gene therapy to see if they could directly target the underlying brain circuitry associated with sustained heavy drinking. As they noted, in the journal Nature Medicine, people suffering from AUD commonly return to alcohol use even if they attempt to quit. This is largely to do with what’s known as mesolimbic dopamine (DA) signalling – meaning how the central nervous system circuit communicates the feelgood neurotransmitter dopamine. A protein called glial-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) is key to keeping these neurons in this reward circuitry functioning. However, experts have found that levels of GDNF are reduced in people with AUD during periods of alcohol abstinence, most notably in a region of the brain called the ventral tegmental area (VTA), as IFLScience notes. Therefore, the researchers decided to test whether using gene therapy to deliver more GDNF to the VTA could help reinforce this crucial dopaminergic signalling and prevent patients from suffering an alcoholic relapse. The team of scientists explained how alcohol consumption in non-addicts prompts the release of dopamine, creating a pleasurable buzz feeling, but chronic alcohol use causes the brain to adapt and stop releasing so much dopamine. “So when people are addicted to alcohol, they don’t really feel more pleasure in drinking,” Dr Kathleen Grant, a senior co-author of the study, said in a statement. “It seems that they’re drinking more because they feel a need to maintain an intoxicated state.” For their research, Dr Grant and her colleagues used eight rhesus macaque monkeys, who were exposed to increasing concentrations of alcohol over four 30-day “induction” periods. The monkeys then had free access to alcohol and water for 21 hours a day for six months, during which they developed heavy drinking behaviours. This was then followed by a 12-week abstinence phase, with the GDNF treatment performed four weeks in for half of the subjects. The gene therapy was delivered using a a viral vector containing a copy of the human GDNF gene injected directly into the primate’s VTA, according to IFLScience. And the results were truly jaw-dropping. “Drinking went down to almost zero,” Dr Grant said. “For months on end, these animals would choose to drink water and just avoid drinking alcohol altogether. They decreased their drinking to the point that it was so low we didn’t record a blood-alcohol level.” The most exciting aspect of their findings is the suggestion that gene therapy could offer a permanent solution for people with the most severe cases of AUD. This will be a welcome glimmer of hope to many, given that some 29.5 million people were diagnosed with AUD in the US alone in 2021, according to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. Of these 29.5 million sufferers, almost a million (894,000) were aged between 12 and 17. It’ll likely be some time before we know for sure whether the gene therapy can be rolled out in humans, but it’s an important first step in tackling this devastating disorder. Sign up for our free Indy100 weekly newsletter Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
2023-09-01 20:52
iPhone 15 hits shelves around the world. Here's what you need to know
iPhone 15 hits shelves around the world. Here's what you need to know
Apple's iPhone 15 lineup hit stores Friday as people waited in long lines across China, Europe and the US to be among the first to get their hands on one of the company's next-generation smartphones.
2023-09-23 00:59
Amazon begins offering physical products in games, VR
Amazon begins offering physical products in games, VR
Amazon said Tuesday it launched a new service that will allow customers to purchase physical products while playing video games or interacting in virtual reality
2023-05-10 01:54