Robot Security Guard “Commits Suicide” In Mall Fountain
Zero Hedge | “We were promised flying cars, instead we got suicidal robots.”
Zero Hedge | “We were promised flying cars, instead we got suicidal robots.”
The Daily Sheeple | “The decision has already been made,” TEPCO chairman Takashi Kawamura told the media, according to the Japan Times.
Daily Mail | A star located just 11 light-years away from Earth is sending out ‘strange’ radio signals leaving experts baffled.
Joseph Jankowski | The development of automated lethal technology is truly beginning to take shape.
RT | Tesla founder Elon Musk believes artificial intelligence could prove to be one of the most destructive technological innovations for the human race, unless governments are “proactive” in regulation.
Daily Mail | Special Forces troops could travel through space to get to war zones in future, the head of the American air force suggested yesterday.
TheAntiMedia.org | It’s hard to know whether we should laugh or scream in horror.
Daily Mail | The US military is creating a new class of biosensors that could create weapons that sense if soldiers are stressed and know what they might need to fight better.
Daily Caller | CNN anchor Alisyn Camerota deleted her Twitter account because of “mean and verbally abusive” online trolls, she announced in a column Wednesday morning.
ARS Technica | The Moon could soon be open for business.
Michael Snyder | August 21st is the date of “the Great American Eclipse”, and the hype around it is already starting to reach a fever pitch.
Daily Mail | Earth’s sixth mass extinction is already underway, meaning thousands of species are at risk of disappearing forever, scientists have warned.
Mac Slavo | It may only be a matter of time before the power grid in the United States, which is far more vulnerable to hacking than most people realize, suffers from a catastrophic cyber attack.
Southgate arc | Sunspot AR2665, which emerged just a few days ago, has mushroomed into a behemoth nearly as wide as the planet Jupiter.
London Telegraph | Developing cancer is now more common than getting married or having a first baby, research suggests.