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Pro-doping Enhanced Games to debut in Las Vegas with Trump Jr backing

about 17 hours ago
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A controversial new Olympics-style sporting event where athletes will be permitted – and even encouraged – to use performance-enhancing drugs is set to debut in Las Vegas next May, organizers announced on Wednesday.The inaugural Enhanced Games will take place 21–24 May 2026 at Resorts World on the Las Vegas Strip.Over four days, competitors will race, lift and swim with full access to drugs and therapies banned in virtually every other elite athletic setting.Billed as a revolution in sport and science, the event aims to embrace what organizers call “superhumanity” – a future where pharmaceutical and technological enhancement is normalized in elite competition.But while promoters cast it as a bold break from the past, critics are already raising alarms about safety, fairness and the fundamental integrity of sport.

“We are creating a new category of human excellence,” the Enhanced Games’ promotional materials declare.“A world where performance-enhancing drugs are used safely, openly, and under medical supervision.”The pitch is simple but radical: rather than penalize athletes for using banned substances, normalize and study their use in a medically supervised environment.Under the Enhanced model, athletes can either compete naturally, follow independent enhancement protocols, or participate in a clinical trial using FDA-approved drugs designated as “Investigational Medicinal Products”.The event’s founder, the London-based Australian entrepreneur Aron D’Souza, argues that current anti-doping policies are outdated and hypocritical.

“The Enhanced Games is renovating the Olympic model for the 21st century,” he said.“In the era of accelerating technological and scientific change, the world needs a sporting event that embraces the future – particularly advances in medical science.”Organizers promise extensive medical screening, individualized health profiling and oversight by independent scientific and ethics boards.But athletes will not be subject to traditional anti-doping tests.Instead, they must disclose what substances they’re using – a model that some critics warn resembles “don’t ask, don’t tell” for doping in sport.

The first Games will be held at Resorts World in Las Vegas and feature sprinting, swimming and weightlifting.Prize money is substantial: up to $500,000 per event, including a $1m bonus for breaking the 100m sprint or 50m freestyle world records.That may not be a theoretical reward.In February, Greek-Bulgarian swimmer Kristian Gkolomeev recorded a time of 20.89sec in the 50m freestyle – 0.

02sec faster than the official world record, which has stood since 2009 – reportedly while following an enhancement protocol for the first time.The swim, held at a certified pool under Olympic-level oversight, was filmed for a forthcoming promotional documentary.Yet even this demonstration comes with caveats.Gkolomeev wore a full-body polyurethane suit not approved by Fina, swimming’s international governing body.Organizers claim the suit was commercially available and not decisive in the performance – but its inclusion underscores the ethical gray areas the Enhanced Games are poised to explore.

More fundamentally, many observers are uneasy with the concept itself,“As we have seen through history, performance-enhancing drugs have taken a terrible physical and mental toll on many athletes,Some have died,” the World Anti-Doping Agency said in a statement,“Clearly this event would jeopardize [athletes’ health and well-being] by promoting the abuse of powerful substances and methods that should only be prescribed, if at all, for specific therapeutic needs,”Travis Tygart, CEO of the US Anti-Doping Agency, was even more blunt.

“It’s a dangerous clown show, not real sport,” he said,The Enhanced Games are also attracting attention, and controversy, due to the event’s supporters,The latest funding round, reportedly in the millions, includes investment from 1789 Capital, a firm led by Donald Trump Jr, Omeed Malik and Chris Buskirk,Other co-leads include Apeiron Investment Group and Karatage, a hedge fund with stakes in cryptocurrency and AI ventures,A video announcing the funding suggests Donald Trump’s endorsement.

D’Souza described the involvement of Trump-aligned investors as a natural fit.“I’ve had the great fortune of working alongside many members of the administration and other prominent figures of the Trump movement over the years,” he said in February.“To know that some of the most significant figures in American social and political life support the Enhanced Games is more important to us than any investment.”Peter Thiel, the tech billionaire known for his libertarian politics and backing of controversial biotech ventures, is also listed as a major investor and “close advisor”, according to D’Souza.The participation of such figures has drawn further scrutiny from critics who view the Enhanced Games as not only a break from the Olympic model, but a calculated provocation – a challenge to elite sporting institutions, anti-doping agencies and what D’Souza has called the “anti-science” bent of legacy sports governance.

Organizers maintain they are not trying to overwrite Olympic records or discredit traditional sport.Instead, they frame the Enhanced Games as a parallel category, akin to the professionalization of sport in the 20th century.The goal, they argue, is to explore the boundaries of human potential while provoking a broader cultural conversation.It’s an ambitious vision – and a high-stakes gamble.Athletes from around the world are being recruited, including some who felt alienated by anti-doping regimes.

Former swimming world champion James Magnussen is among them, though the Australian’s recent enhanced attempts fell short of record times.The organizers, now headquartered in New York, say they will not tolerate abuse of illicit substances.Drugs must be legally prescribed and athletes must be medically fit to compete.Still, enforcement appears to rely more on partnership than oversight – a feature, not a bug, according to the Enhanced team.“There are always risks in elite sport,” reads one of the Games’ internal FAQs.

“We believe the greater risk is pretending those risks don’t exist.”Whether the public buys into that logic remains to be seen.Organizers say they are in talks with major sponsors and streaming platforms, but have not confirmed any broadcast partners or marquee athletes beyond a handful of early adopters.If backlash builds – from federations, governments or regulators – it’s unclear whether the model will survive its first test.For now, though, the Enhanced Games are moving ahead, armed with a defiant slogan: Live Enhanced.

Whether the world embraces that vision or recoils from it may determine not just the future of one event, but the ethical limits of sport itself.
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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

2 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

3 days ago
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Microsoft employee interrupts CEO’s keynote with pro-Palestinian protest

A Microsoft employee disrupted a keynote speech by the company’s chief executive with a pro-Palestinian protest at the company’s annual developer conference on Monday.Joe Lopez, a Microsoft firmware engineer who worked on parts of the company’s cloud-computing platform, Azure, was escorted out the Build conference by security nearly immediately after he confronted Satya Nadella.“Satya, how about you show how Microsoft is killing Palestinians,” Lopez yelled. “How about you show how Israeli war crimes are powered by Azure?”After the disruption, Lopez sent an all-staff email explaining his decision to stage a protest.“As one of the largest companies in the world, Microsoft has immeasurable power to do the right thing: demand an end to this senseless tragedy, or we will cease our technological support for Israel,” read the email, which has also been published on Medium

3 days ago
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How to protect your data after a cyber-attack

Another cyber-attack has hit the headlines – this one involving the personal data of hundreds of thousands of legal aid applicants in England and Wales.It comes hard on the heels of recent cyber-attacks that caused huge disruption at Marks & Spencer and the Co-op, and has prompted fresh reminders for people to be extra-vigilant for any suspicious activity.If you’re worried your data may have fallen into the wrong hands somehow, here are some tips for protecting yourself.Always make sure you have strong passwords, and don’t use the same one on more than one account.If you have had any dealings with a company or organisation that has suffered a cyber-attack, change the password that you use for that website or app immediately

3 days ago
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Bankrupt DNA testing firm 23andMe to be purchased for $256m

The drugmaker Regeneron Pharmaceuticals has agreed to buy the genetic testing firm 23andMe Holding for $256m through a bankruptcy auction, the companies announced on Monday.Regeneron said it will comply with 23andMe’s privacy policies and applicable laws with respect to the use of customer data and that it is ready to detail its intended use of the data to a court-appointed overseer. The companies expect to close the deal in the third quarter.“Regeneron Genetics Center is committed to and has a proven track record of safeguarding the genetic data of people across the globe, and, with their consent, using this data to pursue discoveries that benefit science and society,” said Aris Baras, the senior vice-president and head of the Regeneron Genetics Center. “We assure 23andMe customers that we are committed to protecting the 23andMe dataset with our high standards of data privacy, security and ethical oversight and will advance its full potential to improve human health

3 days ago
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AI can be more persuasive than humans in debates, scientists find

Artificial intelligence can do just as well as humans, if not better, when it comes to persuading others in a debate, and not just because it cannot shout, a study has found.Experts say the results are concerning, not least as it has potential implications for election integrity.“If persuasive AI can be deployed at scale, you can imagine armies of bots microtargeting undecided voters, subtly nudging them with tailored political narratives that feel authentic,” said Francesco Salvi, the first author of the research from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne. He added that such influence was hard to trace, even harder to regulate and nearly impossible to debunk in real time.“I would be surprised if malicious actors hadn’t already started to use these tools to their advantage to spread misinformation and unfair propaganda,” Salvi said

3 days ago
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Athletes warn against potential health risks of ‘dangerous, unethical’ Enhanced Games

about 12 hours ago
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Jim Irsay, longtime owner of NFL’s Indianapolis Colts, dies aged 65

about 13 hours ago
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Sophia Dunkley launches England into new era with win over West Indies in first T20

about 16 hours ago
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England beat West Indies by eight wickets: first women’s T20 cricket international – as it happened

about 16 hours ago
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Oklahoma City Thunder’s Shai Gilgeous-Alexander named NBA MVP

about 17 hours ago
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Pro-doping Enhanced Games to debut in Las Vegas with Trump Jr backing

about 17 hours ago