
AI at the World Cup: smarter tactics, healthy players, safer crowds – but new risks
This year’s World Cup will be the biggest ever – it also promises to be the most technologically advanced.
Independent Analysis and Reportage

This year’s World Cup will be the biggest ever – it also promises to be the most technologically advanced.

The AI era has fundamentally changed the risks associated with poor cybersecurity practices.

Democracies can either defend rights in the digital age, or drift into complicity as the architects of a new, global authoritarianism enabled by AI.

As an overhauled rulebook for commercial forestry comes into force, there are concerns it could weaken safeguards as climate risks intensify.

There is no approved vaccine to curb the Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Uganda. But new funding offers hope.

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Class has always mattered, and now labour parties around the world are finding out why.

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The best part of having fun with rhymes and words, noticing letters and reading together is that interactions build both early literacy skills and family connections.