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World Wide May 27, 2026

US Donor Bodies Sold for Israeli Military Training

The University of Southern California has been selling bodies donated for scientific research and e…
The University of Southern California's Involvement The University of Southern California has been selling bodies donated for scientific research and education to the United States Navy. The Use of Donor Bodies for Military Training Some of these bodies are being used to train Israeli military surgical teams in Los Angeles – all without the donors’ consent. Investigative Reporting and Documentary Watch the AJ+ documentary here and read students’ reporting here. Episode Credits and Contributors Dena Takruri (@denatakruri), AJ+ senior presenter This episode was produced by Chloe K. Li with Spencer Cline, Catherine Nouhan, and our host, Malika Bilal. It was edited by Tamara Khandaker. Our sound designer is Alex Roldan. Our video editors are Hisham Abu Salah and Mohannad al-Melhem. Alexandra Locke is The Take’s executive producer.
#USC #Israeli Military #US Navy
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Economy May 27, 2026

Singapore's Economy Surges 6% as AI Chip Demand Outweighs Middle East Risks

Singapore's economy grew 6% year-on-year in Q1 2026, exceeding expectations as strong demand for AI…
The Lead: Singapore's Unexpected Economic Surge Singapore's economy has grown faster than expected in the first three months of 2026, with furious demand for AI chips outweighing the fallout from the US-Israel war on Iran. The city-state's gross domestic product (GDP) expanded 6 percent year-on-year in Q1, significantly beating the official advance estimate of 4.6 percent. Technical Breakthrough: AI-Driven Manufacturing Growth On a seasonally adjusted basis, GDP grew 1 percent from the previous quarter. The Trade Ministry attributed this growth to strong performances in Singapore's wholesale trade, manufacturing, and finance and insurance sectors. In particular, robust AI-related demand led to growth in the machinery, equipment & supplies segment of the wholesale trade sector, as well as the electronics and precision engineering clusters within the manufacturing sector, the ministry stated. Financial Impact: Global Context and Regional Position Singapore accounts for approximately 10 percent of global semiconductor production and 20 percent of semiconductor chip equipment production, making it a key player in the AI revolution. The United Nations recently cut its 2026 global growth forecast to 2.5 percent (down from 2.7 percent) due to the Middle East conflict. Despite these global challenges, Singapore maintained its 2026 growth outlook at between 2 and 4 percent, acknowledging downside risks from rising energy and fertilizer prices amid the closure of the Strait of Hormuz to most shipping. Industry Transformation: The AI Boom and Singapore's Strategic Position As one of the world's most trade-reliant economies, Singapore has played a major role in the global rollout of AI technologies. The city-state's specialized manufacturing sector has benefited significantly from the ongoing AI investment boom. The AI-related investment boom is powering the manufacturing sector, and unless the Singapore economy runs out of oil, strong activity in manufacturing will continue to drive growth, said Khoon Goh, head of Asia research for ANZ. Future Outlook: Balancing Growth with Global Uncertainties Economists predict that the full impact of the Middle East crisis may become more apparent in Q2 2026, though the strong Q1 performance provides a solid foundation for the rest of the year. Local economists expect around 3.6 percent growth for 2026, acknowledging significant downside risks. The 6 percent year-on-year figure is strong, especially for a mature economy like Singapore, noted Yeow Hwee Chua, an economics professor at Nanyang Technological University. It is certainly encouraging, although I would interpret it with some caution given Singapore's high exposure to global demand and external conditions.
#Singapore #AI chips #Semiconductors
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Tech May 27, 2026

ElevenLabs Unveils Music v2 Model That Switches Genres Mid‑Track

ElevenLabs released Music v2, a generative‑AI model that can shift between musical genres within a …
ElevenLabs announced the launch of Music v2, its latest AI‑driven music‑generation model capable of switching genres mid‑track and handling complex vocal arrangements. The new tool is positioned as a response to a growing wave of AI music solutions from rivals such as Google, Stability AI, and Suno. Music v2 Introduces Real‑Time Genre‑Switching Capability The model can move from opera to heavy metal, deliver rapid rap verses, and embed sound‑effects without breaking musical coherence. Users can select a specific section of a song—intro, verse, or chorus—and rewrite it via prompts while leaving the rest untouched. Supports multi‑language lyrics and diverse vocal styles. Allows section‑by‑section composition, enabling a stitch‑together workflow. Built on licensed data, cleared for commercial use. Competitive Landscape of AI‑Generated Music In the past year, major AI labs have accelerated music‑generation research. Google showcased its Flow Music tool at I/O, offering cover creation and song‑section editing. Stability AI and Suno have also released models that produce longer, more intricate tracks. ElevenLabs’ emphasis on commercial licensing differentiates it from startups like Suno and Udio, which have faced copyright lawsuits. Implications for Creators and the Music Industry By integrating Music v2 into the ElevenCreative suite and the new ElevenMusic platform, the company targets marketing teams and independent artists seeking rapid, royalty‑free production. The ability to edit specific song sections could streamline soundtrack creation for ads, games, and social media, potentially reshaping how content is produced at scale. Looking Ahead: Future Developments and Market Adoption ElevenLabs plans to roll out Music v2 via its ElevenAPI, widening access for developers. As AI‑generated music becomes more sophisticated and legally vetted, we can expect broader adoption across media firms, a rise in AI‑assisted songwriting, and intensified competition to secure licensing partnerships with record labels.
#ElevenLabs #Music v2 #AI music generation
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Tech May 27, 2026

China Tightens Grip on AI Talent Amid Growing Global Competition

Beijing is imposing travel bans and investment approvals on its top AI researchers and founders, si…
Lead: Beijing’s New Guard on AI Human CapitalChina is increasingly keeping its best AI talent to itself, imposing travel restrictions and mandatory government approval for foreign capital. The policy reflects a broader strategy to treat AI as both an economic engine and a national‑security priority.Travel Bans and Approval Requirements Target Top ResearchersResearchers, startup founders, and executives now need official clearance before traveling abroad.Restrictions were first reported by the Wall Street Journal in March 2025, advising top AI founders to avoid the U.S.Recent cases include the two co‑founders of Manus, barred from leaving China amid the Meta acquisition review.Quantifying the Controls: Deals, Funding, and Performance GapsMeta’s acquisition of Manus valued at $2 billion is under investigation for breaching foreign‑investment rules.The co‑founders are exploring a $1 billion buy‑back from external investors to unwind the deal.Stanford’s AI Index shows the performance gap between top U.S. and Chinese models narrowed to 2.7 % in March 2026, down from 31 % in 2023.China plans to require sign‑off before firms like Moonshot AI, StepFun, and ByteDance can accept U.S. capital, per Bloomberg (April 2026).2025 saw two rounds of export controls on 14 rare‑earth materials and a ban on state‑funded data centers using foreign AI chips.Implications for the Global AI Race and Capital FlowsThe restrictions tighten Beijing’s control over a talent pool that fuels rapid model training and fine‑tuning. While the U.S. still leads in model quality and high‑impact patents, China’s surge in publications, citations, and patent volume threatens to erode that advantage. Investment curbs could also deter U.S. venture capital, reshaping funding pathways for Chinese AI startups.Looking Ahead: Continued Containment or Strategic Opening?Analysts expect China to maintain, if not expand, travel and capital controls as it consolidates AI capabilities. Potential outcomes include a slower pace of cross‑border collaboration, increased domestic funding mechanisms, and heightened regulatory scrutiny of foreign acquisitions. The policy trajectory will likely influence whether China can sustain its rapid catch‑up without alienating key international partners.
#China #Artificial Intelligence #Meta
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Tech May 27, 2026

Tech CEOs' AI Psychosis: Overestimation Leading to Layoffs and Organizational Chaos

Tech CEOs are reportedly suffering from 'AI psychosis,' overestimating AI capabilities while implem…
The Lead A phenomenon dubbed "AI psychosis" is reportedly affecting tech executives, particularly CEOs, who are overestimating artificial intelligence capabilities while simultaneously implementing mass layoffs. This disconnect between perception and reality is creating organizational chaos in the tech industry. The CEO AI Delusion Box founder Aaron Levie has suggested that CEOs are uniquely prone to "AI psychosis" because they're sufficiently distant from the implementation details of AI systems. When executives "play with AI" by developing prototypes or generating contracts, they often make the leap to believing AI agents can fully handle complex work without understanding the limitations. Unlike their technical teams, CEOs aren't responsible for reviewing code, discovering bugs, or training AI models on company-specific requirements. This lack of firsthand experience with AI's limitations doesn't stop them from making decisions based on overoptimistic assessments of AI capabilities. The Layoff Numbers In the first five months of 2026 alone, the tech industry has already seen 115,430 people fired from 152 tech companies. This nearly matches the 124,636 people let go by 275 companies throughout all of 2025, according to industry tracker Layoffs.fyi. The majority of these layoffs have been attributed to AI, though many argue that companies are engaging in "AI washing" - crediting AI productivity gains when other business decisions are really driving the cuts. The ClickUp Experiment Zeb Evans, CEO of project management software startup ClickUp, proudly declared on X that he had laid off almost a quarter of his employees (22%) after implementing approximately 3,000 AI agents for internal work. Evans insisted this wasn't a cost-cutting measure but rather an attempt to create what he calls a "100x org" composed of people who run and review AI agents' work. The Productivity Paradox Research on AI and productivity presents a complex picture. A meta-analysis published in UC Berkeley's California Management Review found "no robust relationship between AI adoption and aggregate productivity gain." Meanwhile, research from the National Bureau of Economic Research concluded that while AI adoption does improve productivity, there's a "productivity paradox" in which perceived gains exceed measured improvements. MIT researchers studying thousands of AI agents found they aren't yet producing human-quality work in many cases. They predict that at the current rate of improvement, large language models will "be able to complete most text-related tasks with success rates of, on average, 80%–95% by 2029 at a minimally sufficient quality level," with additional time needed to outperform humans. The Executive Bottleneck Research published in the Harvard Business Review suggests that when everyone in an organization uses AI to produce more output, the bottleneck simply shifts to executives. Their work awaits authorization of all the content being generated by AI-empowered employees. If everyone is empowered to act, the system risks becoming overwhelmed, as evidenced by OpenAI's experience last year. As Levie advises, CEOs should use AI extensively to understand both its capabilities and limitations. However, with the current trend of mass layoffs and organizational restructuring based on overoptimistic AI assessments, the tech industry may face continued chaos until this balance is achieved.
#AI #Tech CEOs #Tech Layoffs
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Lifestyle May 27, 2026

Rio's Vibrant Mural Project Celebrating Black Cultural Heritage

A mural project in Rio de Janeiro, called NegroMuro or BlackWall, has been recognised as part of th…
The Birth of NegroMuro Rio de Janeiro, once home to the world's largest port of arrival for enslaved Africans, has a majority Afro-descendant population. Despite this, the city's public monuments largely overlook its Black heritage. Only about 10% of the 360 statues and busts across Rio commemorate Black people, with just 29 men and three women represented. The Mural Project's Impact This striking lack of representation drove two Black men, Fernando Cazé and Pedro Rajão, to create the NegroMuro project in 2018. The project now comprises 80 murals spread across the city, portraying about 120 people, 60% of them men. The duo aims to address the disparity by including more women in future murals. A Cartography of Black Memory “We're creating a cartography of Black memory,” says Pedro Rajão, a researcher and producer who created the project alongside visual artist Fernando Sawaya. The murals, on walls of schools, museums, train stations, and private homes, feature brightly coloured, bold-lined paintings of people born in Rio or with a strong connection to the city. Honouring Black Figures The murals depict notable figures such as Brazilian singer-songwriter and composer Luiz Melodia, writer Machado de Assis, and Black feminist activist Lélia Gonzalez. By honouring these individuals, the project seeks to celebrate Black cultural heritage and provide a more inclusive representation of Rio's history.
#Rio de Janeiro #Brazil #Black cultural heritage
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Health May 27, 2026

Study Links Climate Crisis to Accelerating Antibiotic Resistance in Salmonella

A new Lancet Planetary Health study finds that rising temperatures and changing rainfall patterns h…
Lead: Climate Crisis Amplifies Antibiotic Resistance ThreatThe latest Lancet Planetary Health study shows that rising temperatures and shifting precipitation patterns have accelerated the global spread of antibiotic‑resistant salmonella, adding urgency to both climate‑mitigation and antimicrobial‑stewardship efforts.The Study Reveals Climate‑Driven Surge in Salmonella Resistance GenesResearchers from the UK, France, Australia, Switzerland and China analysed the genomes of more than 480,000 salmonella samples collected in 139 countries between 1940 and 2023. By correlating resistance‑gene abundance with historical temperature and rainfall data, they identified a non‑linear amplification of antimicrobial‑resistance (AMR) genes linked to climate variables.Quantifying a 10% Global Rise in Resistance Genes (1940‑2023)10% increase in salmonella antibiotic‑resistance genes worldwide over the study period.82% of the examined countries showed rising resistance gene levels.Largest climate‑associated spikes observed in the Middle East & North Africa, followed by South Asia and Sub‑Saharan Africa.Resistance trends varied with both temperature and rainfall, indicating complex environmental drivers.Implications for Global Health and One‑Health StrategiesAntibiotic resistance already kills over 1 million people annually. The study underscores that climate change compounds this crisis by destabilising microbial ecosystems across human, animal and environmental reservoirs, reinforcing calls for integrated One Health surveillance and stricter antibiotic use policies.Future Outlook: Integrating Climate Policy with Antimicrobial StewardshipThe authors advocate urgent alignment of climate‑mitigation actions—particularly those under the Paris Agreement—with enhanced antimicrobial‑stewardship programmes. They argue that adhering to low‑emission scenarios could curb the further spread of AMR genes and reduce the future burden of resistant infections.
#Lancet Planetary Health #Antibiotic resistance #Climate change
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Environment May 27, 2026

Indonesia's 'Eternity Glaciers' on Puncak Jaya Disappear at Alarming Rate

An expedition to document the last tropical glaciers in Oceania has revealed that Indonesia's 'eter…
The Disappearance of Indonesia's 'Eternity Glaciers' An expedition to document the end days of the last tropical glaciers in Oceania has revealed sombre footage of “planetary destruction on fast-forward”. The State of Puncak Jaya's Glaciers The once-mighty ice sheets on Puncak Jaya, a mountain surrounded by dense rainforests in West Papua, Indonesia, have survived beyond projections they would disappear by 2026 but have shrunk to a fraction of their original size. The most significant of the two remaining glaciers, which are known locally as “eternal snow” and referred to in English as the “eternity glaciers”, has lost 95% of its area since 2002, the expedition found. The Data Behind the Disappearance Papua’s tropical glaciers lost 97% of their ice mass between 1980 and 2024, Indonesian researchers found in a study published last month. Four of its six glaciers have completely disappeared, and they project the final two will be gone by the end of the decade. 97% of ice mass lost between 1980 and 2024 4 out of 6 glaciers have completely disappeared The remaining 2 glaciers are expected to disappear by the end of the decade The Impact of Climate Change Carbon pollution and the destruction of nature has heated the planet by about 1.4C since preindustrial times, making it less hospitable to human life. Glaciers are projected to lose a quarter of their global mass by 2100, even in a best-case scenario for cutting emissions, with devastating consequences for drinking water and food security. The Future Outlook “The ice will be gone: it’s not a question of if, it’s a question of when,” said Klaus Thymann, a Danish explorer and the founder of Project Pressure, an environmental charity. “And ‘when’ is coming very, very soon.”
#Indonesia #Climate Change #Glaciers
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World Wide May 27, 2026

Iran-US War: 'Deep Suspicion' of US Lingers as Iran Ponders Agreement

Iranian lawmakers and officials express 'deep suspicion' of the US as they consider an agreement to…
The Lingering DistrustSenior Iranian lawmaker Abbas Moghtadaei described the situation to state television on Tuesday as: 'The fundamental principle is distrust towards America.' This sentiment comes as an Iranian delegation, led by Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, returned to Tehran from Qatar amid efforts to reach an understanding with the United States on ending the nearly three-month-long war on the country.The Recent EscalationHours earlier, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs accused Washington of committing a 'blatant violation' of the shaky ceasefire reached on April 8 by attacking the southern province of Hormozgan on Monday night. The Ministry added that the strikes validated the 'deep suspicion' Iran harboured towards the US.The Data AnalysisThe war has lasted for nearly three months.Iranian armed forces fired back and shot down a US-made RQ-4 drone.A tanker reported an external explosion and fuel leak some 60 nautical miles east of Oman’s capital city Muscat.The Impact AnalysisNicole Grajewski, an assistant professor at Sciences Po’s Center for International Research, said many in the Iranian leadership appear concerned that an agreement could simply provide operational pause, intelligence access or political cover before the US and Israel launch another round of large-scale attacks on the country.The PredictionFor a deal to succeed, the Iranian leadership will need to believe that some sanctions relief will be tangible and fast. Iran will also seek to preserve enough of a deterrence mechanism and symbolic dignity to avoid looking defeated, and ensure that the agreement prevents another war from breaking out in the future.
#Iran #US #Israel
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