All posts tagged: human

Uncovering coded antisemitism online takes both human expertise and AI automation

Uncovering coded antisemitism online takes both human expertise and AI automation

(The Conversation) — This article includes examples of antisemitic hate speech. The men accused of carrying out high-profile antisemitic attacks in the United States in recent years shared an important characteristic: They posted hate speech on their social media accounts beforehand. The FBI said the man who drove his truck into a synagogue outside Detroit in March 2026 posted on Facebook that “Israel is a cancerous/malignant growth” and “Israel is pure evil.” The online footprint of the gunman charged with shooting and killing two Israeli Embassy staffers at the Capital Jewish Museum in May 2025 contained anti-Israel comments. The shooter sentenced to death for killing 11 worshippers at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh in October 2018 frequently used antisemitic hate speech in his social media. Hate speech uses feelings, emotions and attitudes that seek to dehumanize individuals or groups. At times, animosity is clear. But it can also take a more hidden form, using code words or terms understood only by like-minded people. Coded hate speech can evade online content censors and recruit …

Magnifica Humanitas Is the Pope’s Bid for Human Dignity in the Age of AI

Magnifica Humanitas Is the Pope’s Bid for Human Dignity in the Age of AI

Welcome to CNET’s new series of guest columns called Alt View, a forum for a diverse array of experts and luminaries to share their insights into the rapidly evolving field of artificial intelligence. For more AI coverage, check out CNET’s AI Atlas. The last industrial revolution got its moral framework too late. AI doesn’t have to. Last November, I was fortunate enough to meet Pope Leo XIV at a private audience on child dignity and artificial intelligence. I asked Pope Leo whether he was comfortable with artificial intelligence becoming the operating system for people’s lives. He paused for what seemed like an eternity. Then he said, simply: no. On May 15, Pope Leo signed Magnifica Humanitas — his first encyclical, on artificial intelligence and the protection of human dignity — and it was published on May 25. He signed it 135 years to the day after his namesake, Leo XIII, published Rerum Novarum — the document that gave the industrial revolution its moral framework. The parallel is deliberate. Rerum Novarum arrived decades after the industrial revolution …

What Defines the Human? 8 Philosophical Perspectives on Our Essence

What Defines the Human? 8 Philosophical Perspectives on Our Essence

  The journey of finding the answer to the question “What is the Human Being?” is not something new. Throughout the history of humankind, there have been hundreds of authors who have sought to give a precise definition in response to the question. Each of them took a different approach and a standpoint that best described what a human being is. Probably the most famous definition from the ancient period is Aristotle’s zoon politikon. He saw the human being as a political creature, in the sense that man is part of society and lives within it, bounded by social norms and laws that he obeys. He even went further, saying that anyone isolated from society would have to be either a savage or a God. What are the other definitions? Let’s take a look.   1. Homo Sapiens The Creation of Adam, a fresco in the Sistine Chapel made by Michelangelo, via Musei Vaticani.   The most recognized starting point for defining ourselves is the biological term Homo sapiens. At its simplest, this identifies the …

The Case Against Human Exceptionalism

The Case Against Human Exceptionalism

“Anthropocentrism is at the root of all abuse of our fellow creatures on earth — the logically unsupportable belief that humans are the only species on the planet worthy of consideration.” –Sir Brian May, founding member of Queen and Save Me Trust.1 The mental territory we can claim to be ‘uniquely human’ is shrinking at an alarming rate. Wasps can distinguish faces, dolphins call one another by name, pigs use tools, zebra finches dream, parrots go on Zoom, and sometimes crayfish get anxious. Chimps, meanwhile, exist in complex cultures, rather like ours, with fashion trends. –Martha Gill2 For far too long, self-serving speciesist anthropocentrism has dominated how we view and position nonhuman animals (animals) in the natural world. Arguing for human exceptionalism while placing animals below and separate from ourselves, misleads some people into thinking we are above and separate from other species—often cashed out as we are “better” and “more valuable“ than them—a myth that doesn’t represent what solid transdisciplinary science has repeatedly shown.3 In fact, nonhumans are not sub-human, and viewing all species …

Judge dismisses criminal charges against Kilmar Abrego Garcia in human trafficking case

Judge dismisses criminal charges against Kilmar Abrego Garcia in human trafficking case

A federal judge in Tennessee dismissed the criminal charges against Kilmar Abrego Garcia on Friday, finding that the investigation into his alleged involvement with human trafficking was “tainted.” Subscribe to read this story ad-free Get unlimited access to ad-free articles and exclusive content. He said the probe was only launched to justify the government’s decision to remove him to El Salvador. “The objective evidence here shows that, absent Abrego’s successful lawsuit challenging his removal to El Salvador, the Government would not have brought this prosecution,” U.S. District Judge Waverly Crenshaw wrote in his decision. Prosecutors in the Middle District of Tennessee were investigating him with the support of the Department of Justice in Washington. After Abrego was deported to El Salvador last year, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled the Trump administration had to work to bring him back. He was eventually returned to the U.S. and was immediately hit with human smuggling charges, based on a 2022 traffic stop in Tennessee. He pleaded not guilty. Body camera video from a Tennessee Highway Patrol officer shows …

Malaria may have shaped human evolution for thousands of years

Malaria may have shaped human evolution for thousands of years

Malaria may have shaped early human life across Africa far earlier than once thought, steering where people could safely live and when groups stayed apart. By tracing ancient mosquito habitats, researchers found an overlooked disease barrier running through humanity’s deep past. For decades, scientists believed climate was the main force guiding where early humans lived across Africa. Shifting rain patterns opened green corridors. Expanding deserts cut populations apart. Wet and dry cycles pushed groups into new landscapes or trapped them in isolated regions. But a new study suggests another powerful force may have quietly shaped human history for tens of thousands of years: malaria. Researchers from the Max Planck Institute of Geoanthropology, the University of Cambridge and several collaborating institutions found evidence that malaria likely influenced where ancient human groups could safely live between 74,000 and 5,000 years ago. Their findings suggest the disease helped separate populations across Africa long before agriculture emerged. The study paints a striking picture of early human life. Ancient people were not only adapting to changing climates and dangerous predators. …

Israel’s Human Wrecking Ball – The Atlantic

Israel’s Human Wrecking Ball – The Atlantic

On Wednesday, after Israeli forces intercepted a protest flotilla headed to Gaza and brought the participants to an Israeli port, Itamar Ben-Gvir, the Israeli minister of national security, posted a video on social media. The short clip shows the far-right politician taunting the detainees with nationalist slogans as the handcuffed prisoners are forced to kneel. One activist shouts “Free Palestine!” and is pushed to the ground by security personnel. “This is how we receive supporters of terror,” Ben-Gvir posted. The latest provocation by Ben-Gvir proved something that many Israelis have suspected for years: Ben-Gvir is not merely a nightmare for Israeli liberals, but the fulfillment of the fantasies of Israel’s enemies. He provides them with precisely the ammunition they need to argue, time and again, that Israel, in its fight against Hamas and Hezbollah, is the aggressor, and a cruel one at that. Ben-Gvir is a gift to the terrorist groups and the countries that seek Israel’s destruction. The flotilla activists did not actually plan to “break the siege” of Gaza, as they claimed. They …

Why Devices Can’t Replace Human Connection at Work

Why Devices Can’t Replace Human Connection at Work

According to the research, birth rates have steeply declined around the world over the past 15 years—one clear sign that people are spending less time connecting in person. While many factors contribute to falling birth rates, growing research suggests we are increasingly substituting digital interaction for deeper forms of human connection. In our workplaces, for example, email, texting, Slack, Zoom, and Teams leave far less time for normal discourse. The average person now spends a significant portion of their waking life communicating through devices (even during face-to-face meetings) rather than in the physical presence of other people. And while technology undoubtedly makes communication more convenient and efficient, it may also be quietly depleting one of the most important contributors to human well-being: genuine human contact. The Illusion of Togetherness Human beings are not wired simply to exchange information. We are biologically wired for social bonding and in-person interaction—nature’s way of helping us regulate stress, stabilize our mood, and create essential feelings of safety and belonging. When we experience genuine connection, our nervous systems are regulated, …

Modern AI is often judged to be more human than actual humans in Turing test experiments

Modern AI is often judged to be more human than actual humans in Turing test experiments

Recent research published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences provides evidence that certain modern artificial intelligence systems can successfully pass a standard Turing test. When instructed to adopt a specific human personality, these computer programs fooled human judges into thinking they were real people more than half of the time. This finding provides the first empirical evidence that a modern system can pass this major scientific benchmark, raising profound questions about the future of online communication. To fully understand this research, it helps to know a bit about large language models (LLMs). These are highly complex computer programs trained on vast amounts of text data scraped from the internet. They power the popular AI chatbots that many people use today for writing emails, brainstorming ideas, and coding software. Large language models learn the statistical patterns of human language to predict the next word in a sequence. This allows them to generate incredibly natural-sounding text in response to user questions. The researchers conducting this study, Cameron R. Jones and Benjamin K. Bergen, wanted …

New Data Suggests That AI Really Is Already Replacing Human Jobs

New Data Suggests That AI Really Is Already Replacing Human Jobs

Sign up to see the future, today Can’t-miss innovations from the bleeding edge of science and tech For several years, a debate has been raging among economists: is AI really taking our jobs, or are CEOs just using it as an excuse when they conduct layoffs that they would have done anyway? There’s been endless back and forth on the topic, without much clarity. To be fair, it’s still a total morass — but we now have an interesting new clue that does seem to suggest that automation tech is really replacing certain jobs. Back in 2024, the US Bureau of Labor Statistics identified 18 professions that it believed might be impacted by the “increased adoption of AI,” ranging from graphic designers to sales representatives to legal secretaries. Now, according to new data published by the bureau, it turns out that the number of people in those specific occupations did see an overall drop of 0.2 percent between May 2024 and May 2025. That’s not huge, but it’s something — and certain categories were stark, …