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Sage iPhone for children review: ‘Would it make me want to divorce my parents?’

2 days ago
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I was intrigued to find out how this would work but a bit freaked out too.I use my iPhone non-stop: four hours each day during school terms; eight during holidays.Snapchat matters most, but I’m often following friends on TikTok and Instagram.The prospect of not having access to any apps or the internet was just “ugh”.Part of me wanted to scream at the thought of being cut off by this Sage phone.

Would it make me want to divorce my parents?I knew I was going to miss out.The Sage phone came loaded only with Google Maps, Spotify, Monzo, Uber, a calendar and the TfL Go transport app.None of that gave me much to do.There was messaging, but no one really uses messages and I can’t remember the last time I made a phone call to a friend.Let’s start with the positives.

Because the phone was so boring, I didn’t want to use it, [I] put it down and chatted more with my family.I spent less time in my room and was more productive – I even wrote this piece!The people at Sage said it could take a month to get used to the limitations, but I don’t have that long to test it.I can already tell you that if you are a teenager you are going to feel disconnected from all of your friends and the rest of the world and that feels unfair.Having TikTok and Instagram is the way the world is wired now.If you take them away then it’s quite hard to stay in the loop.

If I stayed with this phone I would also end up feeling left out when speaking in real life to my friends as this is where so many of our sayings and jokes come from.Social media is the way we know what everyone is up to and without it I felt I would be left out of the goings-on.We know social media is distracting, but it’s important to our social world now.During GCSEs some of my friends deleted apps, but they all ended up redownloading them within two days.I’m not as worried about the harms as many adults are.

I made some of my closest friends through playing Roblox during the Covid lockdown and that’s not allowed on this phone.I wasn’t addicted to it.It was just fun.I have lots of friends from other schools who I might not text or talk to for weeks at a time, but through Snap I can stay in contact with them, see what they are up to and exchange things like videos that keep our relationships going in a way that wouldn’t happen with just phones.It has become a social glue and without it our networks might fall apart.

It’s true that there are people who are negatively affected by exposure to TikTok accounts promoting a particular image of beauty.So this limited phone could prevent that and reduce the risk of people struggling with body image.And if your parents insist on you having a “dumb” phone, I think this could be an effective way to eliminate the shame of having a “brick” phone.If you were out with your friends and people were checking their phones it would be really weird to pull out a Nokia or not get a phone out.Overall, I understand the intentions and the appeal to parents, but unless everyone switched to Sage, I would miss out on too much.

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AI firms ‘unprepared’ for dangers of building human-level systems, report warns

Artificial intelligence companies are “fundamentally unprepared” for the consequences of creating systems with human-level intellectual performance, according to a leading AI safety group.The Future of Life Institute (FLI) said none of the firms on its AI safety index scored higher than a D for “existential safety planning”.One of the five reviewers of the FLI’s report said that, despite aiming to develop artificial general intelligence (AGI), none of the companies scrutinised had “anything like a coherent, actionable plan” to ensure the systems remained safe and controllable.AGI refers to a theoretical stage of AI development at which a system is capable of matching a human in carrying out any intellectual task. OpenAI, the developer of ChatGPT, has said its mission is to ensure AGI “benefits all of humanity”

2 days ago
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Zuckerberg says Meta will build data center the size of Manhattan in latest AI push

Mark Zuckerberg proclaimed that Meta would spend hundreds of billions of dollars on developing artificial intelligence products in the near future and, to that end, construct a data center planned to be nearly the size of Manhattan.The parent company of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp is among the large tech companies that have struck high-profile deals, and doled out multimillion-dollar pay packages to AI researchers in recent months – some as high as $100m – to fast-track work on machines that could outthink humans on many tasks, a concept known as “super-intelligence” or “artificial general intelligence”.Its first multi-gigawatt data center, dubbed Prometheus, is expected to come online in 2026, while another, called Hyperion, will be able to scale up to 5 gigawatts over the coming years, Zuckerberg said.“We’re building multiple more titan clusters as well. Just one of these covers a significant part of the footprint of Manhattan,” the billionaire CEO said

2 days ago
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Sage iPhone for children review: ‘Would it make me want to divorce my parents?’

I was intrigued to find out how this would work but a bit freaked out too. I use my iPhone non-stop: four hours each day during school terms; eight during holidays. Snapchat matters most, but I’m often following friends on TikTok and Instagram.The prospect of not having access to any apps or the internet was just “ugh”. Part of me wanted to scream at the thought of being cut off by this Sage phone

2 days ago
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Internet-safe iPhone for children goes on sale for £99 a month

A neutered iPhone, stripped of web browsers and social media apps, is going on sale to parents worried about their children’s phone use, but the “peace and freedom” its creators promise will come at a steep price.The pared-back version of the top-selling handset, which will not allow internet searches, gaming or downloads of Instagram, TikTok, Snapchat and other social media, is being offered in the UK for £99 a month by a US company that wants children to “reconnect with real life, not just reduce screen time”.At more than double the price of a typical two-year iPhone contract, Sage Mobile, an iPhone 16 handset loaded with custom software, will be a pricey way to avoid online harms. But it reflects growing parental dilemmas over the best way to start their children’s digital lives.Research has shown children with problematic smartphone use are twice as likely to experience anxiety and almost three times as likely to experience depression compared with those whose use did not resemble addiction

2 days ago
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WeTransfer says user content will not be used to train AI after backlash

The popular filesharing service WeTransfer has said user content will not be used to train artificial intelligence after a change in its service terms had triggered a public backlash.The company, which is regularly used by creative professionals to transfer their work online, had suggested in new terms that uploaded files could be used to “improve machine learning models”.The clause had previously said the service had a right to “reproduce, modify, distribute and publicly display” content, and the updated version caused confusion among users.A WeTransfer spokesperson said user content had never been used, even internally, to test or develop AI models and that “no specific kind of AI” was being considered for use by the Dutch company.The firm said: “There’s no change in how WeTransfer handles your content in practice

3 days ago
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Apple inks $500m deal for rare earth magnets with US mining firm

Apple has signed a $500m deal with a US firm for rare earth magnets, essential for manufacturing electronics, after China curbed exports of the scarce, vital materials.The backing from one of the world’s most valuable companies comes after MP Materials, which operates the only US rare earths mine, last week agreed to a multibillion-dollar deal with the US Department of Defense that will see the Pentagon become its largest shareholder. Both deals are aimed at mitigating supply chain risks after China limited the outgoing supply of rare earths earlier this year in response to Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs.The deal, announced on Tuesday, guarantees Apple a steady flow of rare earth magnets free from China – by far the world’s largest producer. For Apple, the cost to support US magnet production pales in comparison to the long-term risk that it could lose access entirely to the critical components, analysts said

3 days ago
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‘Three is the magic number’: Tyrrell Hatton says pints of Guinness can fuel Open glory

about 10 hours ago
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Feel v theory at the Open: MacIntyre and DeChambeau try to navigate Portrush chaos

about 11 hours ago
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‘Two fights left’: Usyk closes in on history and retirement with Dubois test

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Felix Baumgartner, who jumped from edge of space, dies in paragliding crash

about 11 hours ago
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Here’s one American who just can’t get enough of Test cricket | Letters

about 12 hours ago
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Tour de France 2025: Tadej Pogacar wins again on stage 13 mountain time trial – as it happened

about 12 hours ago