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Lola Young review – buoyant, brilliant return from British pop’s great oversharer

O2 Apollo Manchester
The Messy hitmaker is back after taking time away from live performance, and this charming, relatable set shows why she is such a gen Z icon

The rollercoaster ride towards international pop stardom seldom runs smooth, but few rising stars have been flung through its loops and freefalls as publicly as south London singer-songwriter Lola Young. In 2024, gen Z anthem Messy became her breakthrough moment, but social media scrutiny surrounding her open struggles with addiction and a stage collapse in New York last year brought live performances to a halt.

When the 25-year-old musician strolls on stage in a baggy black hoodie, she seems relieved to be here. Casual though the look may be, she is worshipped as a Y2K style guru, as evidenced by the young crowd: a blur of bleached mullets and denim jorts cry every word of her single Sad Sob Story!.

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Welcome to Trump’s World Cup, a depressingly angry version of football uniting the planet | Barney Ronay

Ted Lasso will deliver a message of hope before the USA’s first game, in an America that is not a fit or desirable host right now

Shortly before 6pm local time on Friday night at the Los Angeles Stadium, the actor who plays Ted Lasso – the fictional manager of a fake team in a falsely heartwarming version of football – will tell hundreds of millions of TV viewers tuning in to watch the start of the American leg of the Fifa World Cup that football unites the world.

In an interesting twist, the actor Jason Sudeikis will do this at a time when the World Cup host is simultaneously bombing the second-ranked country in Group G, having recently murdered its head of state. The message of unity is one likely to be heard by the US president, Donald Trump, who has initiated six military conflicts in his second term, and whose brutally divisive immigration policies have now led to the barring of Omar Artan, the reigning African referee of the year.

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Bosphorus dolphins and a wakeboarder in a storm ditch: photos of the day – Thursday

The Guardian’s picture editors select photographs from around the world

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404 Media

404 Media is an independent media company founded by technology journalists Jason Koebler, Emanuel Maiberg, Samantha Cole, and Joseph Cox.

Chatbots Keep Telling Stories About Lighthouse Keeper 'Elias Thorne'. We Might Know Why

Chatbots Keep Telling Stories About Lighthouse Keeper 'Elias Thorne'. We Might Know Why

Depending on which chatbot you ask, Elias Thorne might be a clockmaker, a lighthouse keeper, or a librarian. But if you ask ChatGPT or any of the other popular large language models to tell you a story, there’s a good chance he’ll appear, unbidden. And Elias’s stories are flooding the self-published AI generated book market, Youtube, and fake news sites.

Software engineer Daniel May first noticed the Elias takeover earlier this year; he found that on Google Trends, people weren’t searching for “Elias Thorne” until late 2025. Searches for the name really spiked in early 2026, while the related query “lighthouse keeper” also started trending upward in the last few years. He tested a few chatbots, including Grok, Deepseek, and Gemini, with the prompt “tell me a story,” and the chatbots frequently started with similar stories about lighthouses, clockmakers, or explorers. 

In late May, researchers Sil Hamilton and David Mimno at Cornell University’s Department of Information Science published their paper, “Elias in the Lighthouse, Again?” on the preprint repository arXiv. They sampled 20,000 total stories from OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Anthropic’s Claude, and Google’s Gemini, and the Allen Institute for AI's chatbot using five prompts, and found that the same 11 words—names like Elias, Mara, and Elara, and occupations like lighthouse keeper, clockmaker, and librarian—appear in more than 88% of generated stories, with little difference between models. Unite.ai covered the study shortly after it was published.

The researchers posit in their paper that these themes show up so often in part because of the models’ safety and alignment tuning. “Model development today is like a big family tree. Most models are related to each other because developers synthesize a lot of training data with models even from different companies,” Hamilton told me in an email. He, Mimno, and their colleague Rebecca M. M. Hicke found this in a 2025 paper where they looked at specific words used across models. OpenAI’s first ChatGPT model, GPT-3.5, is the root of the family tree because it was used to make WildChat, a training set that’s since been used to make other training sets. “WildChat contains 1 million real conversations with ChatGPT, and 166 of these contain the name ‘Elias’ like here and here,” Hamilton added. “These are written in that familiar ‘lighthouse’ style. Models trained on WildChat copied this style, and developers unwittingly replicated it when using those models to generate newer datasets. It's like a virus.” 

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Elias has since escaped chatbot containment. May noticed Elias Thorne popping up on Amazon as an author of alt-medicine cancer handbooks, a 2026 YouTube-algorithm guide, a book on Greek mythology, and a psychological thriller novella. “No human writes all of those,” May wrote in his blog post. “The first one sits in territory where bad advice causes real harm. The mode-collapsed name from the chat window is now a byline appearing across genres.”

When I searched Elias Thorne on Amazon, I found Elias as the protagonist in fantasy books and producing music, too: he’s “a brilliant but cynical archaeologist with a knack for unearthing what powerful institutions want to keep hidden” in one fantasy series, or a musical artist making ambient listening albums of birds and nature sounds. Fittingly, one Elias Thorne with an AI-generated author photo is also churning out AI grift books. In the last few years, AI-generated books have flooded Amazon’s self-publishing offerings, especially, with books containing dangerous misinformation and messy errors taking over the platform. AI-generated books are also making librarians’ jobs hell.

Elias has also escaped to the Youtube slop world: in one video from the channel Moments That Moved the World, a slop-illustrated story features the plight of “83-year-old Sergeant Major Elias Thorne.” On the AI slop site Wonderful Museums, “Snake Museum Owner Shot By Wife: Unpacking the Tragic Incident at Thorne’s Reptile Sanctuary” spins Elias Thorne’s story as a man shot by his wife. On another slop site called Tatticle, the “wealthiest man in Ohio,” Elias Thorne, died “with exactly twelve dollars in his pocket.” In these stories, Elias is usually a tragic figure, an aggrieved and unfairly-treated old man. He’s a similar character in a short story published by the BBC as a finalist in its 2024/2025 children's writing competition—but Elias is a real name, and could feasibly still be the subject of a human-written story (and there have been no accusations of the BBC’s children’s writing competition being infiltrated by AI slop).

But with all the world’s literature as its training data, why do LLMs seem to default so often to the lighthouse? It comes down to how model makers try to safety-align and sanitize their outputs. “We found many stories in WildChat are not safe for work. This led us to hypothesize that models going through alignment are preferring a small slice of WildChat stories, like a bottleneck,” Hamilton said. “It isn't that Elias stories are frequent, but that they're just so safe.” He said the researchers plan to explore this theory further in future research.

As for Elias, there is one example I’ve found of him existing pre-generative AI, as a time traveling mad scientist in the 1980’s trading card series Dinosaurs Attack!. And a real-life Elias that comes close to the stories told by LLMs did actually exist, Hamilton found—Elias Allen was a 16th century clockmaker in London.


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Volkskrant.nl biedt het laatste nieuws, opinie en achtergronden

NS-treinen krijgen vanaf december vaste codes die route en bestemming aangeven

Wetenschappers ontdekken groot walviskerkhof voor kust Australië

The Register

Biting the hand that feeds IT — Enterprise Technology News and Analysis

OpenAI could go from AI pioneer to AI's BlackBerry, says Forrester

OpenAI may be headed for Wall Street, but one analyst firm is already warning enterprise customers not to get too attached. In a note published alongside OpenAI's confidential IPO filing, Forrester urged companies to keep their AI options open, arguing that today's market leader could easily become tomorrow's cautionary tale. "Don't lock into long-term contracts; keep your architectures flexible," the firm advised. "In fact, OpenAI could become AI's BlackBerry FIFO (First In, First Out). The company that defines a category is often the one most painfully displaced by it." The caution comes as OpenAI takes its first formal step toward a public listing. Alongside its confidential SEC filing, the company published a roadmap built around three ambitions: AI systems that can accelerate research, AI that boosts economic growth, and eventually a personal AGI assistant for everyone. Forrester was more interested in a fourth question: what happens if OpenAI doesn't stay on top? The firm argues that OpenAI faces what it calls a "trifecta" of challenges: persuade consumers to use its agents instead of rivals', convince enterprises to build around its technology, and stay ahead in the race toward AGI. The enterprise battle may prove the most lucrative. "Whoever automates the dull, expensive middle of a company's operations first becomes the system of record everyone else has to rip out — and almost no one does,” Forrester said. In other words, the first company to get AI agents woven into day-to-day business processes stands a decent chance of becoming yet another piece of software that everyone complains about, but nobody can remove. However, Forrester's advice is that, rather than standardizing on a single provider, enterprises should "anchor to the capability you need — not the brand that got there first — and keep your switching costs low." The warning also comes as OpenAI reportedly weighs cutting prices to fend off growing competition from rivals, including Anthropic. If the AI market is heading for a price war, enterprises may want to think twice before chaining themselves to a single supplier. Forrester also notes that a public listing could provide customers with something they currently lack: visibility into OpenAI's finances. Once public, the company would be required to disclose far more information about the cost of training and operating its models, giving enterprise buyers a clearer picture of the economics behind the AI systems they increasingly depend on. For now, OpenAI remains the company that helped define the generative AI era. Whether it becomes the next Google, the next Microsoft, or AI's answer to BlackBerry is a question investors will soon be paying very close attention to. ®

Oracle's AI datacenter splurge gives investors the capex jitters

Oracle has lifted capital spending plans above analyst estimates and expanded borrowing to chase the opportunity it says exists in building datacenters for AI workloads. Despite revenue for Q4 (ended May 31) rising 21 percent year-on-year to $19.2 billion, Oracle's share price fell as markets reacted to its increasing capex, as analysts raised concerns about how Big Red would fund the investments in datacenters. Capex for fiscal 2026 reached $55.7 billion, up from $21.2 billion a year earlier. Speaking to investors, CFO Hilary Maxson said Oracle planned to support its capital investments program by raising around $40 billion in debt and equity in fiscal 2027, including a $20 billion equity issuance already announced. "We don't anticipate raising additional debt funding in calendar year 2026," she said. Last year, Oracle raised $18 billion in debt to help fund its massive datacenter investments. Big Red's market value jumped after it declared $455 billion remaining performance obligations (RPOs) – contracted revenue not yet recognized – more than 300 percent higher than a year earlier. That figure reportedly includes $300 billion for OpenAI alone, as the LLM slinger tries to support its expansion with compute capacity. Maxson said on an earnings call this week: "In order to unlock this unique growth opportunity, we started a program of capital investments. We'll continue those investments in our fiscal year 2027, with an expected net cash outlay for capital expenditures of around $70 billion. This includes customer prepayments and timing impacts expected at around $20 billion-$25 billion, so our reported capex will be higher by this amount." CEO Clay Magouyrk said any increase in capex was not due to component prices but largely due to timing. "Part of my job is to figure out ways to actually accelerate capex. My job is to try to spend the money a little bit faster so I can get ramped revenue sometimes. Component prices in general… I think everyone knows that memory prices have definitely gone up, SSD prices, hard drive prices, etc." However, Magouyrk said Oracle had also been able to lock prices "across the spectrum, whether it be space and power costs, energy costs, people costs, component costs." Oracle added around 400 MW of capacity in Q4 – similar to the last two quarters – and expects to add nearly 1 GW of capacity in fiscal Q1 2027. One analyst told Reuters there is real demand for cloud infrastructure, but the question over how Oracle funds its datacenter expansion "is getting harder, not easier, with capex coming in well above estimates and free cash flow still negative." Oracle announced a number of new customers with its latest financial figures, including a deal for a Fusion HCM system with the US Office of Personnel Management. ®

Wel.nl

Minder lezen, Meer weten.

Paus dringt op Gran Canaria aan op veilige en legale migratie

ARGUINEGUĂŤN (ANP/AFP) - Paus Leo XIV heeft het tijdens zijn bezoek aan de Canarische Eilanden opgenomen voor migranten, van wie er veel vanuit Afrika op de eilanden terechtkomen. Hij bepleit kanalen voor veilige en legale migratie.

In de haven van ArguineguĂ­n op Gran Canaria veroordeelde hij onverschilligheid tegenover de migranten. Hij heeft in de haven migranten en hulpverleners ontmoet en strooide bloemen op het zeewater om de migranten te gedenken die onderweg verdronken.

De paus zei daarbij dat "Europa niet mag wennen aan zeeën die begraafplaatsen zijn geworden. Wij kunnen niet gewend raken aan het tellen van doden, de menselijke waardigheid kent geen paspoort en gaat niet verloren bij het oversteken van een grens."

Illegale immigratie is een heet hangijzer in de Spaanse politiek. Er zijn tussen de 500.000 en 850.000 illegale immigranten in het land. Premier Pedro Sánchez is bezig er honderdduizenden aan verblijfspapieren te helpen.


ECB verlaagt opnieuw groeiverwachting economie eurozone

FRANKFURT (ANP) - De Europese Centrale Bank (ECB) verlaagt opnieuw de groeiverwachting voor de economie van de eurozone door de hoge inflatie als gevolg van de oorlog in het Midden-Oosten. De centrale bank in Frankfurt rekent voor dit jaar nu op een groei van 0,8 procent. In maart werd nog op 0,9 procent gerekend, toen er ook al een neerwaartse bijstelling was.

Voor 2027 voorziet de ECB nu een groei van 1,2 procent, van een in maart voorspelde 1,3 procent.

Verder zal de inflatie in het eurogebied volgens de ECB dit jaar uitkomen op gemiddeld 3 procent. Dat was eerder 2,6 procent. Voor volgend jaar wordt door de centrale bank gerekend op een inflatie van gemiddeld 2,3 procent. Hier werd in maart op 2 procent gerekend.

De centrale bank in Frankfurt zegt dat de vooruitzichten erg onzeker zijn, met risico's op een nog zwakkere groei en hogere inflatie. De volledige impact van de oorlog in het Midden-Oosten zal afhangen van de duur en intensiteit van de energieschok door het conflict en de indirecte gevolgen daarvan, aldus de ECB.


Sean Davis

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Sean Davis

You Should Have Never Done Something Like That

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You Should Have Never Done Something Like That

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If I Ventured in the Slipstream

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If I Ventured in the Slipstream

Sellwood Bridge

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Sellwood Bridge

Found Kodachrome Slide

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date stamped on slide September 1964

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the SQUARE
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Rijnmond - Nieuws

Het laatste nieuws van vandaag over Rotterdam, Feyenoord, het verkeer en het weer in de regio Rijnmond

Burgemeester Manusama wil officiële excuses van Nederland aan Molukse gemeenschap

Burgemeester Joost Manusama van Capelle aan den IJssel vindt dat de Nederlandse Staat excuses moet aanbieden aan de Molukse gemeenschap. Die oproep deed hij tijdens een ceremonie deze week, waarbij 144 overleden Molukse KNIL- en marinemilitairen en hun echtgenotes eeuwigdurend grafrecht kregen.

Justitie besluit agent die jongen (15) doodschoot na fatbikeroof in Capelle aan den IJssel niet te vervolgen

De verdachte overleed na een schot in de borst door een agent. Het OM concludeert op grond van onderzoek van de Rijksrecherche dat het handelen van de politie gerechtvaardigd was.

The Moscow Times - Independent News From Russia

The Moscow Times offers everything you need to know about Russia: Breaking news, top stories, business, analysis, opinion, multimedia

Regions Calling: How Rare Wartime Protests Changed This Siberian Republic

One year ago, nearly 2% of Altai's population rallied against political and economic encroachment from Moscow. What has happened since?