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Tomos Williams injury leaves Farrell’s Lions facing race to fill scrum-half slot

about 12 hours ago
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The British & Irish Lions are weighing up their scrum-half options after an injury to Tomos Williams that threatens to sideline the Welshman at the busiest stage of the squad’s Australian tour.The head coach, Andy Farrell, said a decision on calling up a replacement would be made on Sunday, with Scotland’s Ben White among the leading contenders to replace Williams at No 9.Williams contributed two tries in a fine all-round performance as the Lions eased to a 54-7 victory over Western Force but tweaked his left hamstring while diving over the line for his second score.It leaves the Lions with only two fit scrum-halves, one of whom – Jamison Gibson-Park – has been managing a strained glute muscle.Farrell said Gibson-Park would be fit to face the Queensland Reds on Wednesday but the Lions will need some cover if Williams is ruled out even for a short period, with Alex Mitchell as the only available option in the position.

White has just arrived in New Zealand, where Scotland are due to kick off their summer tour against the Maori All Blacks next Saturday, and could easily hop on a plane to Brisbane if required.For the moment, Farrell is still waiting to learn the severity of the injury to Williams, the Premiership’s player of the season with Gloucester.“There was plenty of cramp last week, let’s hope it is one of those,” said Farrell.“He was playing well and I am sure there is a bit of concern there, but you can only deal with the here and now so fingers crossed.”Farrell, however, is adamant that there is no danger of Gibson-Park sitting out the Reds game.

“Jamison is fit and ready to go and has been training fully for the best part of a week.We are happy with that but we will only know [about Williams] in the morning.“I don’t what the timings are of that, with the flights, but you have to let these things settle down and give it a little bit of space.There is always something that is going to happen you are not quite sure about, that is the nature of the tour.We need to make the right call for the group.

”Sir James Wates CBE has been appointed chair of the Rugby Football Union board.He takes over the role from Sir Bill Beaumont, who was named chair on an interim basis in December last year following the resignation of Tom Ilube.Wates is currently a board director of the Wates Group, a privately-owned construction, development and property service company in the UK and served as chairman between 2013 and 2023.PA MediaOf their opening game in Australia, Farrell declared himself moderately satisfied with the result in the wake of the Lions’ defeat by Argentina in Dublin last week.“I am happy with the scoreline and how we got to that point because it wasn’t always going our way.

We fixed things up and played some good rugby and scored some nice tries.”Sign up to The BreakdownThe latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewedafter newsletter promotionHe was pleased, too, with the performances of Mack Hansen and the youthful Henry Pollock, despite the latter being sent to the sin-bin just before half-time.“He got a yellow card because of repeated infringements, which was fair enough, but you saw his point of difference, that is for sure.He is learning all the time and there is plenty to work on to make sure we are the team we want to be.He is part of that.

”Pollock also received a positive review from the Lions’ captain for the day, Dan Sheehan.“I thought he was brilliant today,” the Ireland hooker said.“He does his own thing, he plays his own way which is probably different to a lot of the forwards.I enjoy that kind of rugby: off the cuff, see what’s in front of you and make it happen.With his skillset and speed he can certainly make it happen.

“It is just about trying to make sure he is doing the right thing for the team all the time.All these big games are massive for him, massive for all of us.He will just get better and better from here.”
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Inside a plan to use AI to amplify doubts about the dangers of pollutants

An industry-backed researcher who has forged a career sowing doubt about the dangers of pollutants is attempting to use artificial intelligence (AI) to amplify his perspective.Louis Anthony “Tony” Cox Jr, a Denver-based risk analyst and former Trump adviser who once reportedly claimed there is no proof that cleaning air saves lives, is developing an AI application to scan academic research for what he sees as the false conflation of correlation with causation.Cox has described the project as an attempt to weed “propaganda” out of epidemiological research and perform “critical thinking at scale” in emails to industry researchers, which were obtained via Freedom of Information Act requests by the Energy and Policy Institute, a non-profit advocacy group, and exclusively reviewed by the Guardian.He has long leveled accusations of flimsiness at research linking exposure to chemical compounds with health dangers, including on behalf of polluting interests such as cigarette manufacturer Philip Morris USA and the American Petroleum Institute – a fossil fuel lobbying group he has even allowed to “copy edit” his findings. (Cox says the edit “amounted to suggesting a small change” and noted that he has also obtained public research funding

1 day ago
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Trump’s tax bill seeks to prevent AI regulations. Experts fear a heavy toll on the planet

US Republicans are pushing to pass a major spending bill that includes provisions to prevent states from enacting regulations on artificial intelligence. Such untamed growth in AI will take a heavy toll upon the world’s dangerously overheating climate, experts have warned.About 1bn tons of planet-heating carbon dioxide are set to be emitted in the US just from AI over the next decade if no restraints are placed on the industry’s enormous electricity consumption, according to estimates by researchers at Harvard University and provided to the Guardian.This 10-year timeframe, a period of time in which Republicans want a “pause” of state-level regulations upon AI, will see so much electricity use in data centers for AI purposes that the US will add more greenhouse gases to the atmosphere than Japan does annually, or three times the yearly total from the UK.The exact amount of emissions will depend on power plant efficiency and how much clean energy will be used in the coming years, but the blocking of regulations will also be a factor, said Gianluca Guidi, visiting scholar at the Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health

1 day ago
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Denmark to tackle deepfakes by giving people copyright to their own features

The Danish government is to clamp down on the creation and dissemination of AI-generated deepfakes by changing copyright law to ensure that everybody has the right to their own body, facial features and voice.The Danish government said on Thursday it would strengthen protection against digital imitations of people’s identities with what it believes to be the first law of its kind in Europe.Having secured broad cross-party agreement, the department of culture plans to submit a proposal to amend the current law for consultation before the summer recess and then submit the amendment in the autumn.It defines a deepfake as a very realistic digital representation of a person, including their appearance and voice.The Danish culture minister, Jakob Engel-Schmidt, said he hoped the bill before parliament would send an “unequivocal message” that everybody had the right to the way they looked and sounded

2 days ago
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Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez arrive in Venice for divisive wedding

The billionaire Amazon founder, Jeff Bezos, and the former TV journalist Lauren Sánchez have arrived in Venice as they prepare to tie the knot in a lavish three-day celebration that has divided the lagoon city.Scores of celebrities and other members of the world’s super-rich will also join the pair in Italy, arriving on superyachts and private jets.Bezos, the world’s fourth-richest person, and Sánchez were seen stepping off a water taxi on Wednesday as they entered the exclusive Aman Venice hotel on the Grand Canal, where many of the celebrities will stay.More than 90 private jets are expected to land in Venice before the celebrations officially begin on Thursday, bringing in guests for an event that some have called the “wedding of the century” and is rumoured to involve everything from pyjama parties to elegant dinners.Among the first guests to arrive were Donald Trump’s daughter Ivanka, her husband, Jared Kushner, and their children

2 days ago
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Group of high-profile authors sue Microsoft over use of their books in AI training

A group of authors has accused Microsoft of using nearly 200,000 pirated books to create an artificial intelligence model, the latest allegation in the long legal fight over copyrighted works between creative professionals and technology companies.Kai Bird, Jia Tolentino, Daniel Okrent and several others alleged that Microsoft used pirated digital versions of their books to teach its Megatron AI to respond to human prompts. Their lawsuit, filed in New York federal court on Tuesday, is one of several high-stakes cases brought by authors, news outlets and other copyright holders against tech companies including Meta Platforms, Anthropic and Microsoft-backed OpenAI over alleged misuse of their material in AI training.The authors requested a court order blocking Microsoft’s infringement and statutory damages of up to $150,000 for each work that Microsoft allegedly misused.Generative artificial intelligence products like Megatron produce text, music, images and videos in response to users’ prompts

2 days ago
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Meta wins AI copyright lawsuit as US judge rules against authors

Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta has won the backing of a judge in a copyright lawsuit brought by a group of authors, in the second legal victory for the US artificial intelligence industry this week.The writers, who included Sarah Silverman and Ta-Nehisi Coates, had argued that the Facebook owner had breached copyright law by using their books without permission to train its AI system.The ruling comes after a decision on Monday that Anthropic, another major player in the AI field, had not infringed authors’ copyright.The US district judge Vince Chhabria, in San Francisco, said in his decision on the Meta case that the authors had not presented enough evidence that the technology company’s AI would cause “market dilution” by flooding the market with work similar to theirs. As a consequence Meta’s use of their work was judged a “fair use” – a legal doctrine that allows use of copyright protected work without permission – and no copyright liability applied

3 days ago
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Thames Water court case shows there are alternatives to massive infrastructure

about 11 hours ago
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‘He left us with nothing’: the British investors swindled by a German property firm

about 14 hours ago
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Online hacks to offline heists: crypto leaders on edge amid increasing attacks

about 15 hours ago
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Jeff in Venice: seven takeaways from the Bezos-Sánchez wedding

1 day ago
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Glory and Fury to Devils and Dolphins: Australian team names come full circle | Jack Snape

about 7 hours ago
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Novak Djokovic confident Wimbledon is his ‘best chance’ of extending slam record

about 8 hours ago