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Muir fourth again after agonising tumble as Oldham wins big air gold for Canada

about 8 hours ago
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This time, Kirsty Muir must surely have believed that a Winter Olympic medal was in her grasp.But as a thrilling big air competition reached its denouement, an Italian with no anterior cruciate ligament in her right knee came down a 180‑feet ramp and drove a stake through the Briton’s heart.It all looked so promising when the 21-year-old from Aberdeen landed a stunning left double 1620, with four and a half rotations, to move into the medal positions after two of the three rounds.However, with just four jumps of the competition remaining, Flora Tabanelli, who tore her ACL in November, did the same trick as Muir but only better to score 94.25 points to steal the bronze medal.

“It was a little bit bittersweet,” said Muir, who fell on her final jump and finished fourth,“I didn’t know what she did, but I knew it bumped my score by a decent amount and therefore I really did have to go for it,I gave it my all and I’m taking that with me,”Muir was right to hold her head high,After a competition that was delayed 75 minutes because of heavy snow and high winds, she played a blinder – only to find three women performing even better in a competition for the ages.

Having also come close in Beijing, when she was just 17, she will hope it is third time lucky in 2030.The Canadian Megan Oldham deservedly took gold with a score of 180.75, with China’s Eileen Gu second with 179 and Tabanelli third on 178.25.Muir was 3.

5pts back in fourth,It was her second time in eight days that the Scot had finished fourth, after she missed out in the women’s freeski slopestyle by 0,45pts,Earlier, Dave Ryding zigged and zagged for a fifth and final time at a Winter Olympics before announcing his retirement,“I said I would ski race until my legs fall off and I think they pretty much have,” he said.

Ryding’s 17th-placed finish in the men’s slalom in Bormio was not quite the swansong the 39-year-old had intended.But sometimes legacy matters as much as medals.He leaves the slopes as undoubtedly Britain’s greatest skier, after an unlikely journey that started by dodging sheep on a 50m dry-ski slope in Pendle, Lancashire.“I did it a totally different way and you probably say it was a one in a million shot,” he said.“But I proved that you can do it.

”UK Sport may think differently, but not all Winter Olympic events are created equal.In some sports, having a technical advantage gives a competitor one hand on a medal before they even start; while in others, such as slalom skiing, the heritage and depth of competition matters.So when Ryding became the only Briton to win a World Cup skiing event, in Kitzbühel four years ago, it really cut through.“Five-time Olympian, World Cup winner – I really can’t ask for much more,” he said.“The icing on the cake would have been to pull something out today.

I just didn’t quite have it to be honest.But I will never look back thinking: ‘Did I stop too soon?’ I gave it my all until the last gate.”As Ryding watched, Loïc Meillard became Switzerland’s first men’s Olympic slalom champion since 1948 after the first-run leader, Atle Lie McGrath, straddled a gate in his second run.And while skiing has a reputation in Britain for being a posh sport, Ryding is anything but.His dad was a market trader, his mother a hairdresser.

When he started at the age of six, sometimes the sheep would run across him while he was training.On other occasions they would leave excrement that would cause him to slip.He had to struggle to make his fifth Olympics too.In 2022, UK Sport completely cut skiing’s funding; while it then relented and gave Ryding £80,000 a year, he decided it would be better spent helping his teammates, including Billy Major, who finished 16th, travel to events.While he is retiring, Ryding says he wants to bring through the next wave of British skiers and help them become World Cup winners.

“I would put a bit of money on it saying that it is possible,” he said.“We have Youth Olympic and world junior championship medals so the next generation is amazing.I really hope UK Sport sees that and get behind them.”Ryding has already set his sights on a new target: lowering his parkrun personal best of 16min 54sec.“For sure, I don’t think I’ll get a dad bod too soon,” he said, smiling as he waved a final goodbye.

Elsewhere, the British men’s and women’s curlers are in danger of missing out on the semi-finals after losing on Monday.Team GB’s men lost 7-6 against Norway, while the women were downed 6-10 by Switzerland.
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No swiping involved: the AI dating apps promising to find your soulmate

Dating apps exploit you, dating profiles lie to you, and sex is basically something old people used to do. You might as well consider it: can AI help you find love?For a handful of tech entrepreneurs and a few brave Londoners, the answer is “maybe”.No, this is not a story about humans falling in love with sexy computer voices – and strictly speaking, AI dating of some variety has been around for a while. Most big platforms have integrated machine learning and some AI features into their offerings over the past few years.But dreams of a robot-powered future – or perhaps just general dating malaise and a mounting loneliness crisis – have fuelled a new crop of startups that aim to use the possibilities of the technology differently

2 days ago
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The problem with doorbell cams: Nancy Guthrie case and Ring Super Bowl ad reawaken surveillance fears

What happens to the data that smart home cameras collect? Can law enforcement access this information – even when users aren’t aware officers may be viewing their footage? Two recent events have put these concerns in the spotlight.The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more.A Super Bowl ad by the doorbell-camera company Ring and the FBI’s pursuit of the kidnapper of Nancy Guthrie, the mother of Today show host Savannah Guthrie, have resurfaced longstanding concerns about surveillance against a backdrop of the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown

2 days ago
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US military used Anthropic’s AI model Claude in Venezuela raid, report says

Claude, the AI model developed by Anthropic, was used by the US military during its operation to kidnap Nicolás Maduro from Venezuela, the Wall Street Journal revealed on Saturday, a high-profile example of how the US defence department is using artificial intelligence in its operations.The US raid on Venezuela involved bombing across the capital, Caracas, and the killing of 83 people, according to Venezuela’s defence ministry. Anthropic’s terms of use prohibit the use of Claude for violent ends, for the development of weapons or for conducting surveillance.Anthropic was the first AI developer known to be used in a classified operation by the US department of defence. It was unclear how the tool, which has capabilities ranging from processing PDFs to piloting autonomous drones, was deployed

3 days ago
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Elon Musk’s xAI faces second lawsuit over toxic pollutants from datacenter

Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence company xAI is facing a second lawsuit alleging it is illegally emitting toxic pollutants from its enormous datacenters, which house its supercomputers and run the chatbot Grok.The new pending suit alleges xAI is violating the Clean Air Act and was filed Friday by the storied civil rights group the NAACP. The group’s 40-page notice of intent to sue alleges xAI has been polluting Black communities near its facility in Southaven, Mississippi. The pollution comes from more than a dozen portable methane gas generators that xAI set up without permits, the notice alleges.The NAACP’s first notice of intent to sue was filed last June and involves similar allegations regarding the company’s datacenter in Memphis, Tennessee

3 days ago
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AI is indeed coming – but there is also evidence to allay investor fears

The message from investors to the software, wealth management, legal services and logistics industries this month has been clear: AI is coming for your business.The release of new, ever more powerful AI tools has coincided with a stock market slide, which has swept up sectors as diverse as drug distribution, commercial property and price comparison sites. Advances in the technology are giving increasing credibility to predictions that it could render millions of white-collar jobs obsolete – or, at least, eat into the profits of established companies.Carl Benedikt Frey, the author of How Progress Ends and an associate professor of AI and work at the University of Oxford, says investors are reassessing the value of companies that rely heavily on selling software or specialist knowledge.“AI turns once-scarce expertise into output that’s cheaper, faster, and increasingly comparable, which compresses margins long before whole jobs disappear

4 days ago
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Anthropic raises $30bn in latest round, valuing Claude bot maker at $380bn

Anthropic, the US AI startup behind the Claude chatbot, has raised $30bn (£22bn) in a funding round that more than doubled its valuation to $380bn.The company’s previous funding round in September achieved a value of $183bn, with further improvements in the technology since then spurring even greater investor interest.The fundraising was announced amid a series of stock market moves against industries that face disruption from the latest models, including software, trucking and logistics, wealth management and commercial property services.The funding round, led by the Singapore sovereign wealth fund GIC and the hedge fund Coatue Management, is among the largest private fundraising deals on record.“Anthropic is the clear category leader in enterprise AI,” said Choo Yong Cheen, the chief investment officer of private equity at GIC

4 days ago
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Coles tells court its Down Down promotions were ‘fair dinkum’ and did not mislead shoppers

about 5 hours ago
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Car dealership tycoon ousted from his Kent company in ‘coup’, high court hears

about 11 hours ago
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TikTok creator ByteDance vows to curb AI video tool after Disney threat

about 21 hours ago
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Google puts users at risk by downplaying health disclaimers under AI Overviews

about 22 hours ago
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How did Australia – better known for its beaches than snow – become a consistent Winter Olympics performer? | Kieran Pender

about 5 hours ago
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Winter Olympics 2026: Elana Meyers Taylor wins monobob gold for USA; Canada’s Oldham lands freeski big air crown – as it happened

about 7 hours ago