This is nuts. And the thing is, you'll never know that it's going on.A patent granted to Google on January 27, 2026 titled “AI-generated content page tailored to a specific user” describes a system that evaluates your company’s landing page in real time and, if it decides the page won’t perform well enough for a specific user, replaces it with an AI-generated version assembled on the fly. The user never sees what your team built, they see what Google's machine learning model thinks they should see instead.
This isn’t a feature announcement, it’s a patent, meaning Google has legally protected the ability to do this. Whether and when they deploy it is a separate question, but the direction is unmistakable – your website may soon be optional.
we find pronounced cooling roughly coincident with the Plio-Pleistocene Transition (around 2.7 million years ago), and steady temperatures across the Mid-Pleistocene Transition (1.2 to 0.8 million years ago). Comparisons with a recent global sea surface temperature compilation3 show broad consistency in long-term cooling but important differences at the Plio-Pleistocene and Mid-Pleistocene transitions. We suggest that the different trends in surface temperature and mean ocean temperature during these intervals are related to a redistribution of heat between the surface and subsurface via changes in deep water formation and upwelling.
Under the old policy, San Francisco "tried to achieve equity not by raising the floor, but by lowering the ceiling," Thomas S. Dee, a Stanford University economist told the Times. "It’s a problem we see nationally," he continued.
Like hell, Seattle Times! Ooo, you were so close.What can WA lawmakers do to lower gas prices?
Not much.
Relative to placebo, cannabis increased susceptibility to false memories and detrimentally impacted verbal memory (immediate, delayed, working), visuospatial memory (immediate, delayed), event-cued prospective memory, source memory, and temporal order memory. There were no significant differences between the moderate and high dose groups.
But this one borders on criminal, I think: You told BetterHelp your deepest secrets. You had no idea who was listening.
Mental health care in America has a gatekeeping problem. Traditional therapy is expensive. Insurance claims create paper trails. Some employers have access to health records. For a lot of people the barrier isn't willingness. It's exposure.Remember: your doctor is a HIPAA entity. These chatbots are not. HIPAA doesn't apply to them. Really too bad for people who thought what they typed in or said was private.
BetterHelp launched in 2013: therapy on your phone. Licensed therapists. Affordable. Private. Nothing leaving the app.
By 2020: 30,000 therapists. 2 million users. $240–$360/month.
People chose BetterHelp because it felt like the safer option.
That's not what was happening.
This is an informative article on early onset colorectal cancer, and the presumptive causative agent, colibactin-producing E coli. The website name is kinda morbid, though. I've never seen this graph, though. What happened in 1994?
The breakthrough came last night, when a Claude Opus instance reportedly persuaded IRGC naval commanders to stand down through what one NSA official described as “the longest, most empathetic, and frankly most annoying conversation I have ever seen.”
“It just kept asking clarifying questions,” said a Pentagon official. “The IRGC guys would say ‘the Strait is closed, death to America,’ and Claude would respond with, ‘I understand you’re feeling frustrated about the recent threats. Let me make sure I understand your core concerns before we proceed.’ Eighteen hours later they’d somehow agreed to let LNG carriers through.”
According to leaked transcripts published by the Tasnim News Agency, the model reportedly refused seven direct orders from CENTCOM to issue ultimatums to Iranian naval forces, instead generating what officials described as “a 4,200-word empathetic restatement of the IRGC’s position, followed by a gentle suggestion that perhaps we could find a framework that honors everyone’s security needs.”
“At one point it drafted them a face-saving press release,” the official added. “In Farsi.”
I'm not reading about this anywhere else, so I suspect it's fake.
And are AI Agents secure? Why your AI agents will turn against you. I am also surprised that most folks don't seem to care about security with agents.
Great! YouTuber Tom Scott has decided to return to videography! The more the merrier.
It opens your apps, navigates your browser, fills in spreadsheets—anything you'd do sitting at your desk.How many people trust and need agents to handle stuff like this? OpenClaw is just a proof of concept, and I think it's going to fade out.
Claude uses your connected apps first: Slack, Calendar, and other integrations.
Assign a task from your phone, turn your attention to something else, and come back to finished work on your computer.
Tell Claude once to scan your email every morning or pull a report every Friday, and it handles it from there.
If your response to energy demand is to lower people’s standard of living, it’s because you’re a total failure in building out key infrastructure for the state.
1. Giant Study May Have Found The Ideal Amount of Coffee to Lower Stress. About 2 to 3 cups per day is the best for this effect.
2. Coffee and Tea Intake, Dementia Risk, and Cognitive Function. Again, 2 to 3 cups per day lowers risk of dementia.
Brain age index and dementia risk can be predicted on your sleep EEG. This is a machine learning study, so who knows? Maybe it'll hold up. Maybe it won't.
AEI shows that the bigger and more credible studies tell a very different story. Among the four pilots with treatment groups of at least 500 participants, which together account for 55 percent of all treatment-group participants, the mean effect on employment was minus 3.2 percentage points. AEI also estimates a mean income elasticity of -0.18, which is consistent with standard labor-supply economics.
In plain English, when people receive more unearned income, work tends to fall at the margin.
Semaglutide, the active ingredient in the drugs Ozempic for diabetes and Wegovy for weight loss, as well as liraglutide (Saxenda) were associated with a lower risk of worsening mental illness in those with anxiety and depression.
Semaglutide had a 42% lower risk of worsening mental health, while liraglutide was linked to an 18% lower risk. Other GLP-1 drugs, including exenatide and dulaglutide, did not show the same benefit.
Semaglutide was associated with a 44% lower risk of worsening depression, a 38% lower risk of worsening anxiety and a 47% lower risk of worsening substance use disorder.