The update, which also applies to iPadOS 26.4 and related systems, brings several brand-new emoji characters aligned with the latest Unicode standards.
YouTube's AI deepfake detection tool is becoming available to politicians, journalists, and officials, letting them flag unauthorized likenesses for removal.
During the Covid pandemic in mid-2021, when people had been social distancing for more than a year and most university classes were being conducted over Zoom, Jeremy Bailensen decided to hold his ...
Boecher’s graphic novel debut, Chicken Heart (Street Noise, out now), explores the intersections of grief and humor in the ...
Nippon Ichi Software have officially announced GOBBLE, a side-scrolling action previously teased under the same code-name. It will launch for PlayStation 5, Switch 2, Switch, and PC via Steam and ...
Opinion

When the 'zoom' looms

Smile, you are on camera!” The good-old phrase has taken a predatory tone in the era of social media. For women in particular, navigating public space now often ...
Why silence, obligation, and dissent mean different things across cultures, and what leaders get wrong when they assume voice is universal.
The BBC has announced the sixth annual Faith & Hope season, an unparalleled commitment to multi-faith religious programming across TV and Radio beginning this month which will run ...
Destructive US and Israeli war and Islamic republic’s resilience have alarmed even those who supported foreign intervention ...
YouTube is expanding its AI likeness detection tool to a pilot group of government officials, political candidates and journalists, allowing them to identify and request removal of unauthorised ...
Chief Justice Yamie Quiqui Gbeisay has reaffirmed the judiciary's firm stance against the use of vulgar and profane language in public discourse, calling on the Executive and Legislative branches of ...
The plan to train thousands of civil servants as National Reserve troops is drawing criticism over risks of militarising the bureaucracy. Indonesia’s proposal to train 4,000 civil servants as members ...