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Innocent Man Freed After Spending Over 50 Days in Jail Due to Horribly Inaccurate AI Facial Recognition Tech
Futurism

Innocent Man Freed After Spending Over 50 Days in Jail Due to Horribly Inaccurate AI Facial Recognition Tech

Genetically modified worms can now produce and deliver drugs inside a living body, scientists say
Live Science

Genetically modified worms can now produce and deliver drugs inside a living body, scientists say

Mysterious 'cold blob' in the Atlantic is a sign of the Gulf Stream weakening — and that's bad news for the US East Coast
Live Science

Mysterious 'cold blob' in the Atlantic is a sign of the Gulf Stream weakening — and that's bad news for the US East Coast

Largest whale ‘graveyard’ discovered, with skeletons spanning 5 million years
Scientific American

Largest whale ‘graveyard’ discovered, with skeletons spanning 5 million years

Sleep and exercise may dampen genetic drivers of heart disease
Science News

Sleep and exercise may dampen genetic drivers of heart disease

Gears of War E-Day developer The Coalition explains why the prequel was 'just too good to pass up'
SPACE.com

Gears of War E-Day developer The Coalition explains why the prequel was 'just too good to pass up'

California Primed for Apocalyptic Earthquake, Geological Research Finds
Futurism

California Primed for Apocalyptic Earthquake, Geological Research Finds

A nuclear war between India and Pakistan could destroy the ozone layer
New Scientist

A nuclear war between India and Pakistan could destroy the ozone layer

How FIFA is engineering natural grass for the 2026 World Cup
Scientific American

How FIFA is engineering natural grass for the 2026 World Cup

Swirling spiral galaxy will hypnotize you | Space photo of the day for June 10, 2026
SPACE.com

Swirling spiral galaxy will hypnotize you | Space photo of the day for June 10, 2026

China Opens World's First Wind-Powered Underwater Data Center
WIRED Science

China Opens World's First Wind-Powered Underwater Data Center

Scientists Have Detected Something Deeply Alarming at the Bottom of the Ocean
Futurism

Scientists Have Detected Something Deeply Alarming at the Bottom of the Ocean

Cats, unlike dogs and toddlers, help you only when it helps them
Scientific American

Cats, unlike dogs and toddlers, help you only when it helps them

Fully autonomous drones have killed human soldiers for the first time
New Scientist

Fully autonomous drones have killed human soldiers for the first time

Engineered hookworms could one day dispense drugs from inside your gut
Science News

Engineered hookworms could one day dispense drugs from inside your gut

NASA is building a new space telescope to search for life on nearby planets. What would it see on ancient Earth?
SPACE.com

NASA is building a new space telescope to search for life on nearby planets. What would it see on ancient Earth?

June 10, 1927: The birth of Eugene Parker
Astronomy Magazine

June 10, 1927: The birth of Eugene Parker

College Students Are Rapidly Losing the Ability to Read
Futurism

College Students Are Rapidly Losing the Ability to Read

Annular solar eclipse 2027: everything you need to know about the 'ring of fire' on Feb. 6
SPACE.com

Annular solar eclipse 2027: everything you need to know about the 'ring of fire' on Feb. 6

How Canadian rock duo Angine de Poitrine play with neurobiology and physics to make viral music
Scientific American

How Canadian rock duo Angine de Poitrine play with neurobiology and physics to make viral music

A Waymo nearly hit me, but I'm still optimistic about driverless cars
New Scientist

A Waymo nearly hit me, but I'm still optimistic about driverless cars

Scientists discover giant, fan-shaped structure deep beneath the East Antarctic Ice Sheet
Live Science

Scientists discover giant, fan-shaped structure deep beneath the East Antarctic Ice Sheet

The World Cup could be a petri dish for disease. Wastewater could sound the alarm
Scientific American

The World Cup could be a petri dish for disease. Wastewater could sound the alarm

Diagnostic dilemma: Man who donated his body after death had rare 'triple penis'
Live Science

Diagnostic dilemma: Man who donated his body after death had rare 'triple penis'

Strange 'spacetime crystals' could give birth to tiny black holes
SPACE.com

Strange 'spacetime crystals' could give birth to tiny black holes

The surprising science behind the 2026 World Cup grass
Scientific American

The surprising science behind the 2026 World Cup grass

Rare tiger cub from litter of four dies
BBC Science News

Rare tiger cub from litter of four dies

The Sky Today on Wednesday, June 10: The Moon shines with Saturn
Astronomy Magazine

The Sky Today on Wednesday, June 10: The Moon shines with Saturn

The eagle’s lair
Astronomy Magazine

The eagle’s lair

MIT’s new spacecraft engine could send tiny satellites to Mars
ScienceDaily

MIT’s new spacecraft engine could send tiny satellites to Mars

A classic brain test exposed AI's biggest weakness
ScienceDaily

A classic brain test exposed AI's biggest weakness

Scientists mapped every neural connection in a fruit fly and found a surprise
ScienceDaily

Scientists mapped every neural connection in a fruit fly and found a surprise

Robots are about to overtake armed soldiers as the deciders of war
New Scientist

Robots are about to overtake armed soldiers as the deciders of war

'Our nature project has been amazing for wildlife'
BBC Science News

'Our nature project has been amazing for wildlife'

Women prepare for 'space jobs that don't exist yet'
BBC Science News

Women prepare for 'space jobs that don't exist yet'

Popular joint supplement glucosamine linked to faster Alzheimer’s progression
ScienceDaily

Popular joint supplement glucosamine linked to faster Alzheimer’s progression

Earth's first animals barely evolved until sex changed everything
ScienceDaily

Earth's first animals barely evolved until sex changed everything

Iron Age Britons may have removed the brains of the dead
New Scientist

Iron Age Britons may have removed the brains of the dead

2,000 years ago in Scotland, people removed a corpse's brain and fashioned the arm bones into tools
Live Science

2,000 years ago in Scotland, people removed a corpse's brain and fashioned the arm bones into tools

700,000-Year-Old Ground Squirrel Droppings Reveal a Lost Arctic Ecosystem
Discover Magazine

700,000-Year-Old Ground Squirrel Droppings Reveal a Lost Arctic Ecosystem

800,000 Years Ago, Ancient Humans Knew Which Stones Made the Best Tools
Discover Magazine

800,000 Years Ago, Ancient Humans Knew Which Stones Made the Best Tools

Great White Sharks Have Been in the Mediterranean Sea for Millions of Years—but Sightings Are Incredibly Rare
WIRED Science

Great White Sharks Have Been in the Mediterranean Sea for Millions of Years—but Sightings Are Incredibly Rare

Rare, Possibly More Severe Lyme Bacterium Found in New York Ticks for the First Time
Discover Magazine

Rare, Possibly More Severe Lyme Bacterium Found in New York Ticks for the First Time

Hundreds of twitchers flock to see African bird in UK for first time
BBC Science News

Hundreds of twitchers flock to see African bird in UK for first time

Earliest Known Flickering Quasar Suggests a Shift From Chaotic to Calm 850 Million Years After the Big Bang
Discover Magazine

Earliest Known Flickering Quasar Suggests a Shift From Chaotic to Calm 850 Million Years After the Big Bang

Meet the astronauts flying on Artemis 3
Astronomy Magazine

Meet the astronauts flying on Artemis 3

Cancer patients found a simple way to stay mentally sharp during chemotherapy
ScienceDaily

Cancer patients found a simple way to stay mentally sharp during chemotherapy

Previously Unexplored Arctic Seamount Reveals Potential New Species in Deep-Sea Mining Zone
Discover Magazine

Previously Unexplored Arctic Seamount Reveals Potential New Species in Deep-Sea Mining Zone

These record-breaking black hole winds could create a category 79 hurricane on Earth
SPACE.com

These record-breaking black hole winds could create a category 79 hurricane on Earth

NASA’s Next Moon Mission Is a Rube Goldberg Machine of Corporate Failure Points
Futurism

NASA’s Next Moon Mission Is a Rube Goldberg Machine of Corporate Failure Points

How the new FDA-approved ingredient bemotrizinol enhances sunscreen protection
Scientific American

How the new FDA-approved ingredient bemotrizinol enhances sunscreen protection

Thruster breakthrough? New 2-in-1 propulsion system is about to get an in-space test
SPACE.com

Thruster breakthrough? New 2-in-1 propulsion system is about to get an in-space test

Sam Altman’s Eyeball Scanning Company Now Laying Off Workers
Futurism

Sam Altman’s Eyeball Scanning Company Now Laying Off Workers

3 new Ebola vaccines are being fast-tracked amid the current outbreak — when could they be ready?
Live Science

3 new Ebola vaccines are being fast-tracked amid the current outbreak — when could they be ready?

Investigators Questioning Bill Gates Over Ties to Jeffrey Epstein
Futurism

Investigators Questioning Bill Gates Over Ties to Jeffrey Epstein

Nasa reveals crew for Artemis III mission
BBC Science News

Nasa reveals crew for Artemis III mission

ChatGPT Caught Recommending “Products” That Are Just Scams That Steal Your Credit Card Info
Futurism

ChatGPT Caught Recommending “Products” That Are Just Scams That Steal Your Credit Card Info

What is PMOS (formerly PCOS)? What to know about the hormonal syndrome
Live Science

What is PMOS (formerly PCOS)? What to know about the hormonal syndrome

How math's 'hairy ball theorem' could explain bad hair days
Scientific American

How math's 'hairy ball theorem' could explain bad hair days

Do galaxies have a 'kill switch' that makes them stop growing?
SPACE.com

Do galaxies have a 'kill switch' that makes them stop growing?

Nasa names next astronauts for Artemis Moon programme
BBC Science News

Nasa names next astronauts for Artemis Moon programme

Nasa has named the Artemis III crew - what is their mission?
BBC Science News

Nasa has named the Artemis III crew - what is their mission?

2 giant 'super Earths' once orbited near Uranus and Neptune, messed up a bunch of moons, then vanished, new study hints
Live Science

2 giant 'super Earths' once orbited near Uranus and Neptune, messed up a bunch of moons, then vanished, new study hints

NASA reveals Artemis 3 astronaut crew
SPACE.com

NASA reveals Artemis 3 astronaut crew

Don't miss the moon and Saturn put on a spectacular show before sunrise June 10
SPACE.com

Don't miss the moon and Saturn put on a spectacular show before sunrise June 10

China unveils first-of-its-kind 'dual-core' quantum computer — its makers say it improves stability and efficiency
Live Science

China unveils first-of-its-kind 'dual-core' quantum computer — its makers say it improves stability and efficiency

Local Brand Realizes Customers Hate Its AI Ads, Switches to Charming Homemade Ones Instead
Futurism

Local Brand Realizes Customers Hate Its AI Ads, Switches to Charming Homemade Ones Instead

Americans’ trust in the CDC has plummeted since 2025, new poll finds
Scientific American

Americans’ trust in the CDC has plummeted since 2025, new poll finds

Artemis III crew revealed: NASA announces astronauts for 'one of history's most complex missions'
Live Science

Artemis III crew revealed: NASA announces astronauts for 'one of history's most complex missions'

Frozen squirrel scat preserves ancient DNA from hundreds of species
New Scientist

Frozen squirrel scat preserves ancient DNA from hundreds of species

NASA reveals astronauts who will fly Artemis III, its next step toward a moon landing
Scientific American

NASA reveals astronauts who will fly Artemis III, its next step toward a moon landing

Disaster Strikes When Meme Coin Pays Man to Tattoo Its Name on His Forehead, But They Misspelled It
Futurism

Disaster Strikes When Meme Coin Pays Man to Tattoo Its Name on His Forehead, But They Misspelled It

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