Even “diet” soda may be quietly damaging your liver, scientists warn

A large-scale investigation has found that people who regularly consume both sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs) and low- or no-sugar-sweetened beverages (LNSSBs) face a significantly greater likelihood of developing metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD).1 Presented at UEG Week 2025, the research followed 123,788 adults from the UK Biobank who had no signs of liver disease at…

Read More

Google AI Studio updates: More control, less friction

We’ve made it easier to find and switch between Google’s latest AI models. The new Playground is a single, unified surface where you can use Gemini, GenMedia (with new Veo 3.1 capabilities), text-to-speech (TTS) and Live models, all without losing your place or switching tabs. We’ve also refined the entire Chat UI for better consistency,…

Read More

Stanford scientists grow thousands of mini human brains using common food additive

For nearly ten years, the Stanford Brain Organogenesis Program has been redefining how scientists study the human brain. Instead of relying on intact brain tissue from humans or animals, researchers in the program grow three-dimensional brain-like structures in the lab using stem cells. These tiny models, called human neural organoids and assembloids, allow scientists to…

Read More

Chinese Nobel prize winning physicist dies aged 103

Chen Ning Yang, Nobel laureate and one of the world’s most influential physicists, has died at the age of 103, according to Chinese state media. An obituary released by CCTV cited illness as the cause of death. Yang and fellow theoretical physicist, Lee Tsung-Dao, were jointly awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1957 for…

Read More

Scientists just debunked the calcium and dementia myth

New findings from Edith Cowan University (ECU), Curtin University, and the University of Western Australia show no evidence that taking calcium alone increases the risk of developing dementia over time. The results help ease earlier fears that calcium supplements might have harmful effects on the brain health of older women. The investigation drew on data…

Read More

A Strategic Response to the F5 BIG-IP Nation-State Breach

In mid-October 2025, the cybersecurity landscape was dealt a severe blow. F5 disclosed a long-term, sophisticated breach by a nation-state threat actor. This was not a typical vulnerability disclosure. The attackers exfiltrated a strategic critical pair of assets: portions of BIG-IP source code, and internal details of undisclosed (unpatched) vulnerabilities. The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure…

Read More