Migrants are seen after crossing the Rio Bravo with the intention of turning themselves in to US Border Patrol agents, May 9, 2023. REUTERS/Jose Luis Gonzalez |
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- China's consumer prices rose at the slowest pace in more than two years in April, while factory gate deflation deepened, suggesting more stimulus may be needed to boost a patchy post-COVID economic recovery. The CPI rose 0.1% year-on-year, the lowest rate since February 2021, and cooling from the 0.7% annual gain seen in March.
- The Bank of England raised its key interest rate by a quarter of a percentage point to 4.5%, taking borrowing costs to their highest since 2008 with its 12th consecutive rate rise, as it seeks to curb the fastest inflation of any major economy.
- Google is rolling out more artificial intelligence for its core search product, hoping to create some of the same consumer excitement generated by Microsoft's update to rival search engine Bing. Google already has a Bard chatbot that competes with ChatGPT, the chatbot from OpenAI. We have an explainer on when to Google and when to Bard.
- In more AI news, key EU lawmakers agreed changes to draft rules to rein in generative artificial intelligence and proposed a ban on facial surveillance. Following the deal by two European Parliament committees, the plenary will now vote on the draft next month. Here's what governments around the world are doing to regulate AI tools.
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A boy sits in rubble in the aftermath of earthquakes in Kahramanmaras, Turkey. Feb. 18, 2023. REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne |
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Asbestos, silica, mercury and lead are among thousands of toxins released by the huge earthquakes in February that killed more than 54,000 people in Turkey and Syria. Reuters spoke to a dozen experts who said that plumes of dust released from demolished buildings are carrying poisons into rivers and plants, lungs and organs, risking serious health problems for years to come. | - These graphics show how Turkey's deadliest quakes in modern times may have unleashed a health catastrophe for a generation.
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Ouma Katrina Esau, the last known fluent mother-tongue speaker of the indigenous N|uu language, April 18, 2023. REUTERS/Esa Alexander |
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When she was a girl in South Africa's Northern Cape, Katrina Esau stopped speaking her mother tongue after being mocked by other people and told it was an "ugly language". Now at age 90, she is the last known speaker of N|uu, one of a group of indigenous languages in South Africa that have been all but stamped out by the impacts of colonialism and apartheid. | |
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