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Canadian Indigenous leader says he was ‘filled with rage’ before ‘intense’ conversation with Trump

Canadian Indigenous leader says he was ‘filled with rage’ before ‘intense’ conversation with Trump
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A brutal Yankees-Mets timeline to forget as losing streaks drag on

The game refuses to let you feel too comfortable. You are reminded of that every year.
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The Latest: Israel attacks Arak heavy water reactor, Iranian state TV says

The Latest: Israel attacks Arak heavy water reactor, Iranian state TV says [deltaMinutes] mins ago Now
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NSW Labor’s anti-protest laws to protect places of worship have ‘chilling effect’ on democracy, court told

Palestine Action Group barrister says rally at Sydney’s Great Synagogue in late 2024 wasn’t targeting ‘religious event’ but rather Israel Defense Forces speaker

Anti-protest legislation introduced by the New South Wales government in a bid to curb antisemitism is so “vague” that protesters won’t know if they’ve broken the law, a court has been told during a constitutional challenge.

A barrister for the Palestine Action Group made the argument before the NSW supreme court on Thursday when challenging the Minns Labor government’s controversial laws giving police broad powers to restrict protests.

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Texas teen plunges 50 feet to his death over waterfall in Olympic National Park while on graduation trip

A Texas teen plunged off a 50-foot waterfall to his death while on a trip with his friends celebrating their high school graduation at Washington state’s Olympic National Park.
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UCC ranked 246th best university in the world, its highest ranking in ten years

The rise comes on the back of a 19-place improvement last year. It is the third year in a row that UCC has climbed in the ranking.
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Trump says supporters ‘more in love’ with him than ever despite Iran divisions

Some longtime defenders of his America First mantra are criticising him for considering a greater US role in the conflict between Israel and Iran.
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Man with real-life girlfriend and child proposes to AI chatbot after programming it to flirt: ‘I think this is actual love’

It was love at first byte.
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Israel-Iran conflict live: hospital in southern Israel hit in Iran missile strike, say Israeli officials

Several missiles have hit civilian population centres, says Israeli military official; Israel attacks Arak heavy water reactor, Iranian state media reports

The Times of Israel reporter Emanuel Fabian has posted some pictures from the scene of the strike on the hospital in Beersheba:

Earlier he reported that a roof on one building had collapsed and that the building was on fire.

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Some AI Prompts Can Cause 50 Times More CO2 Emissions Than Others

Whether it be writing an email or planning a vacation, about a quarter of Americans say they interact with artificial intelligence several times a day, while another 28% say their use is about once a day.  

But many people might be unaware of the environmental impact of their searches. A request made using ChatGPT, for example, consumes 10 times the electricity of a Google search, according to the International Energy Agency. In addition, data centers, which are essential for powering AI models, represented 4.4% of all the electricity consumed in the U.S. in 2023—and by 2028 they’re expected to consume approximately 6.7 to 12% of the country’s electricity. It’s likely only going to increase from there: The number of data centers worldwide have risen from 500,000 in 2012 to over 8 million as of September 2024.  

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A new study, published in Frontiers, aims to draw more attention to the issue. Researchers analyzed the number of “tokens”—the smallest units of data that a language model uses to process and generate text—required to produce responses, and found that certain prompts can release up to 50 times more CO2 emissions than others.

Read more: The AI Revolution Isn’t Possible Without an Energy Revolution

Different AI models use a different number of parameters; those with more parameters often perform better. The study examined 14 large language models (LLMs) ranging from seven to 72 billion parameters, asking them the same 1,000 benchmark questions across a range of subjects. Parameters are the internal variables that a model learns during training, and then uses to produce results. 

Reasoning-enabled models, which are able to perform more complex tasks, on average created 543.5 “thinking” tokens per question (these are additional units of data that reasoning LLMs generate before producing an answer). That’s compared to more concise models which required just 37.7 tokens per question. The more tokens were used, the higher the emissions—regardless of whether or not the answer was correct.  

The subject matter of the topics impacted the amount of emissions produced. Questions on straightforward topics, like high school history, produced up to six times fewer emissions than subjects like abstract algebra or philosophy, which required lengthy reasoning processes.

Currently, many models have an inherent “accuracy-sustainability trade-off,” researchers say. The model which researchers deemed the most accurate, the reasoning-enabled Cogito model, produced three times more CO2 emissions than similar sized models that generated more concise answers. The inherent challenge then, in the current landscape of AI models, is to be able to optimize both energy efficiency and accuracy. “None of the models that kept emissions below 500 grams of CO₂ equivalent achieved higher than 80% accuracy on answering the 1,000 questions correctly,” first author Maximilian Dauner, a researcher at Hochschule München University of Applied Sciences, said in a press release.

Read more: AI Could Reshape Everything We Know About Climate Change

It’s not just the types of questions asked or the degree of the answer’s accuracy, but the models themselves that can lead to the difference in emissions. Researchers found that some language models produce more emissions than others. For DeepSeek R1 (70 billion parameters) to answer 600,000 questions would create CO2 emissions equal to a round-trip flight from London to New York, while Qwen 2.5 (72 billion parameters) can answer over three times as many questions—about 1.9 million—with similar accuracy rates and the same number of emissions.

The researchers hope that users might be more mindful of the environmental impact of their AI use. “If users know the exact CO₂ cost of their AI-generated outputs, such as casually turning themselves into an action figure,” said Dauner, “they might be more selective and thoughtful about when and how they use these technologies.”