News

One woman nearly gave up on solving global problems until she saw the data that changed her mind. Here's why stories of hope can drive real action.
Anglicans were part of a faith leaders meeting in Nice at the UN Oceans conference to discuss the importance of the ...
Climate activist breaks silence after being deported by Israel over Gaza aid boat - Greta Thunberg says the world ‘needs more ...
Said Google’s Gemini on Monday: "Yes, the scientific consensus is that climate change is an urgent threat to the planet." Grok’s recent responses to the climate question are different even ...
Etched onto rocks on a remote peninsula in Western Australia are millions of images drawn tens of thousands of years ago by the country’s original inhabitants, including the earliest known ...
Tech journalist Karen Hao's new book, "Empire of AI: Dreams and Nightmares in Sam Altman's OpenAI" (published by Penguin Press), examines the Silicon Valley billionaire and his advocacy of ...
While most of the world looked away, a new nuclear arms race has broken out between the US, Russia, and China, raising the risk of nuclear confrontation to the highest in decades.
But the Trump administration is turning a blind eye to the reality that climate change is a major threat to countries around the world, including the United States.
If we could prove this hypothesis wrong, it would mean that AI might be a real extinction threat to humanity. Many people are assessing catastrophic risks from AI.
It’s not hard to pinpoint when U.S. Secretary of Energy Chris Wright catapulted himself—and his views on climate change—into the national spotlight. It started with a corporate dust-up over ...