‘Sadbait’: Why algorithms, audiences and creators love to cry online
People say they don’t want to be sad, but their online habits disagree. Content that channels sorrow for views has become a ubiquitous part of online culture. Why does it work?
People say they don’t want to be sad, but their online habits disagree. Content that channels sorrow for views has become a ubiquitous part of online culture. Why does it work?
Robots in hospitals. Machines drawing blood. Surgical arms performing procedures. Is the future of medicine cold and metallic?Not quite.In this video, I brea…
A suspected attacker is also killed in an apparent exchange of fire during the incident in a village near Avignon.
MIT Media Lab Spin-off Augmental has developed the MouthPad, a device that allows users to interact with phones and computers using their tongue and other…
Before the internet took over the world, psychedelic rock band The Grateful Dead were among the first – and most influential – forces at the…
With a leap in the evolution of large language models, some leading thinkers are questioning whether AI might become sentient
Opposition MP Julius Malema is “non-conducive to the public good”, the Home Office says.
Digital health is a cultural transformation of traditional healthcare
A practical, fast-track course about how generative artificial intelligence could contribute to the practice of medicine and the delivery of healthcare.
Man, 22, and two relatives charged after setting up surgery and performing complex operations for two years, police say.
Let’s look at the top digital technologies from virtual reality through A.I. to CRISPR that will revolutionise dentistry in the future.