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Let’s not wait for fatal accidents to happen | Letters

1 day ago
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Denis Campbell’s article rightly highlights the UK’s worsening health outcomes (UK ‘the sick person of the wealthy world’ amid increase in deaths from drugs and violence, 20 May), but it overlooks a key driver: the sharp rise in preventable accidents.Research by the Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents (RoSPA)  shows that the rate of accidental deaths has surged by 42% in the past decade and has risen fastest in the middle-aged.Accidents are now the second leading cause of death for under‑40s.These are not random tragedies; they are systemic failures.Currently there is no government plan to address this issue and responsibility is fragmented across many departments.

RoSPA is calling for a national accident prevention strategy to get the UK back on track.Accidents cost the NHS £6bn annually and result in 29 million lost working days – 10 times more than strikes.A coordinated, cross-government approach would save lives, ease pressure on the NHS and support economic growth.We cannot continue to ignore a crisis that is both avoidable and escalating.Other nations have shown that strategic, data-led prevention policies can dramatically reduce accidental harm.

The UK must follow suit by appointing a dedicated minister to lead a cross-departmental response.Without leadership and investment, we risk allowing this silent epidemic to grow – at immense human and economic cost.Steve Cole Director of policy and impact, RoSPA, Dr James Broun Research manager, RoSPA Have an opinion on anything you’ve read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.
technologySee all
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OpenAI buys iPhone architect’s startup for $6.4bn

OpenAI is buying an untested startup for $6.4bn, the ChatGPT maker’s biggest acquisition yet. The hardware startup, called io, was founded by Apple design guru Jony Ive, known best as one of the principal architects of the iPhone. Ive and OpenAI’s CEO, Sam Altman, said in a blog post that their partnership has been two years in the making.“A collaboration built upon friendship, curiosity and shared values quickly grew in ambition,” they wrote in the blog post, which offered scant details on upcoming devices

3 days ago
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Scattered Spider is focus of NCA inquiry into cyber-attacks against UK retailers

A hacker community known as Scattered Spider is a key suspect in a criminal inquiry into cyber-attacks against UK retailers including Marks & Spencer, detectives have said.Scattered Spider, a loose collective of native English-speaking cybercriminals, has been strongly linked with hacks against M&S, the Co-op and Harrods. M&S said on Wednesday it will take an estimated £300m hit to profits after its systems were hacked last month.The UK’s National Crime Agency, whose remit includes combating cybercrime, said the group was a focus in its investigations.“We are looking at the group that is publicly known as Scattered Spider, but we’ve got a range of different hypotheses and we’ll follow the evidence to get to the offenders,” Paul Foster, the head of the NCA’s national cybercrime unit, told the BBC

3 days ago
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Most AI chatbots easily tricked into giving dangerous responses, study finds

Hacked AI-powered chatbots threaten to make dangerous knowledge readily available by churning out illicit information the programs absorb during training, researchers say.The warning comes amid a disturbing trend for chatbots that have been “jailbroken” to circumvent their built-in safety controls. The restrictions are supposed to prevent the programs from providing harmful, biased or inappropriate responses to users’ questions.The engines that power chatbots such as ChatGPT, Gemini and Claude – large language models (LLMs) – are fed vast amounts of material from the internet.Despite efforts to strip harmful text from the training data, LLMs can still absorb information about illegal activities such as hacking, money laundering, insider trading and bomb-making

3 days ago
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‘Every person that clashed with him has left’: the rise, fall and spectacular comeback of Sam Altman

From Elon Musk to his own board, anyone who has come up against the OpenAI CEO has lost. In a gripping new account of the battle for AI supremacy, writer Karen Hao says we should all be wary of the power he now wieldsThe short-lived firing of Sam Altman, the CEO of possibly the world’s most important AI company, was sensational. When he was sacked by OpenAI’s board members, some of them believed the stakes could not have been higher – the future of humanity – if the organisation continued under Altman. Imagine Succession, with added apocalypse vibes. In early November 2023, after three weeks of secret calls and varying degrees of paranoia, the OpenAI board agreed: Altman had to go

3 days ago
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Elon Musk claims he will step back from political donations in near future

Elon Musk claimed on Tuesday that he would decrease the amount of money he spends on politics for the foreseeable future. If true, the reduction would represent a significant turnaround after the world’s richest person positioned himself as the Republican party’s most enthusiastic donor over the last year.“I think, in terms of political spending, I’m going to do a lot less in the future,” Musk said during a video interview with Bloomberg News at the Qatar Economic Forum.Bloomberg’s Mishal Husain asked the Tesla CEO if he had decided how much to spend on midterm elections, which elicited Musk’s response. When asked why he was pulling back, Musk said flatly: “I think I’ve done enough” – drawing laughs from the audience, although it was unclear if he was joking

4 days ago
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Almost half of young people would prefer a world without internet, UK study finds

Almost half of young people would rather live in a world where the internet does not exist, according to a new survey.The research reveals that nearly 70% of 16- to 21-year-olds feel worse about themselves after spending time on social media. Half (50%) would support a “digital curfew” that would restrict their access to certain apps and sites past 10pm, while 46% said they would rather be young in a world without the internet altogether.A quarter of respondents spent four or more hours a day on social media, while 42% of those surveyed admitted to lying to their parents and guardians about what they do online.While online, 42% said they had lied about their age, 40% admitted to having a decoy or “burner” account, and 27% said they pretended to be a different person completely

4 days ago
sportSee all
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Crocombe skittles Hampshire as Lancashire toil again – as it happened

about 12 hours ago
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‘My happy place’: Shoaib Bashir’s delight after taking historic 50th Test wicket

about 12 hours ago
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Sam Cook strikes early but he’s still in a race against time to convince England | Andy Bull

about 13 hours ago
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Bennett scores Zimbabwe’s fastest Test century before England regain grip

about 13 hours ago
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Hotazhell can edge out Field of Gold in intriguing Irish 2,000 Guineas

about 14 hours ago
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England enforce follow-on as Zimbabwe close the day two down still 270 runs behind – as it happened

about 14 hours ago