London Telegraph | Approximately 50,000 British holidaymakers currently in Florida should avoid unprotected sex for the rest of the summer holidays because of the risk from Zika virus, according to government advice.

Daily Mail | China has allocated 199 million yuan ($29.76 million) to spend on its weather modification programme as part of efforts to combat drought and reduce the impact of natural disasters.

London Independent | There have been no new antibiotics discovered for 30 years.

Daily Caller | “We all know it’s happening. It’s real. It’s happening now.”

CBS LA | Residents from Sacramento to Los Angeles and Las Vegas reported seeing mysterious lights streaking across the night sky.

Anna Scanlon | New estimates have shown that around 1.65 million women in Latin America could become infected with Zika while they are pregnant, with Brazil carrying the highest number of all.

The College Fix | A first-year seminar class on tap this fall at the University of Wisconsin–Green Bay promises to merge civil rights with pollution.

The Sun | People’s Republic takes the lead in race to build super-secure communications network of the future.

Sky News | Experts are warning that humans “have the most to lose” from the manmade, toxic pollutants that marine life are being exposed to.

The Sun | Nightmare scenario means humanity will be simply unable to power the systems which keep us alive.

The Daily Sheeple | For the past two years ISIS had made a terrifying name for itself.

Daily Mail | In the 2004 film, iRobot, Will Smith’s character must stop an army of robots from outnumbering humans and taking over the world.

Daily Mail | Strange bubbles have been discovered in the Arctic permafrost – adding to mysterious behaviour seen in the region, including the sudden appearance of giant holes in northern Siberia.

RT | The amount of radioactive substances in seabed off Fukushima is hundreds of times higher than before the disaster, a report issued by Greenpeace reveals.