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Written By Unknown on Rabu, 10 Juli 2013 | 23.18

Live: First Ashes Test, day one

Trent Bridge

THE Ashes is finally here. Join our live coverage of day one of the first Test, with all the latest scores, analysis, video and social media reaction.

'Robo-Lolita' lures sex predators

?Robo-Lolita? lures sex predators

AN ARTIFICIAL intelligence has been created to entice the attention of pedophiles lurking in online chatrooms frequented by children.

Gay couples flock to wed in NZ

Gay couples flock to wed in NZ

Meet the Australian same-sex couples vying to be the first to wed in New Zealand, and why we think they are winners, with or without a marriage certificate.

'Why do you look like that?'

?Why do you look like that??

WHAT'S on your face? What's wrong with you? You smell. Why are you yellow? These are the questions people dare to ask someone with a disability.


23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Pilot couldn't see runway before crash

THE flight crew of the Asiana Airlines Boeing 777 which crash-landed at San Francisco Airport couldn't see the runway just seconds earlier because the plane was so far out of position, US investigators say.

Asiana Boeing 777 crash animation

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Diet soft drinks 'make you fat'

Maddy Golding ponders a selection of diet drinks. Source: News Limited

A DIET soft drink a day could be making you fat, more likely to get diabetes and at higher risk of cardiovascular disease.

Artificial sweeteners used in these drinks are meant to give you the taste without the calories but a major review of scientific studies suggests they may instead interfere with the body's normal energy regulation.

Researcher Susan Swithers of Purdue University in the US says sweet tastes normally trigger a psychological response that signals the arrival of nutrients in the stomach.

However, research shows when artificial sweeteners are consumed no such energy burst follows the taste and over time this appears to weaken the body's natural response to a sweetness.

"By weakening the validity of sweet taste as a signal for caloric post-ingestive outcomes, consumption of artificial sweeteners could impair energy and body weight regulation," she says in a paper published in Trends in Endocrinology and Metabolism.

The research looks at 15 large health studies from around the world that included data on artificial sweetener consumption over the past 40 years.

The clear conclusion was that there was "little support for artificially sweetened beverages in promoting weight loss or preventing negative health outcomes such as Type 2 Diabetes, metabolic syndrome (increased blood pressure, high fasting blood glucose, large waist circumference, high cholesterol), and cardiovascular events," the study says.

Instead, a number of the studies suggested that people who regularly consumed artificially sweetened beverages were at increased risk compared with those that did not.

The San-Antonio Heart Study of 1250 men and women found risk of weight gain and obesity were greater in those consuming artificially sweetened beverages than those who did not.

A European study of over 66,000 women and a health professionals study of around 40,000 men found the risk of Type 2 diabetes doubled for the heaviest drinkers of artificially sweetened beverages.

The Nurses Health Study which included over 88,000 women found the risk for type 2 diabetes was increased by consuming only one artificially sweetened beverage a day.

While a study of normal weight children assigned to drink a single artificially sweetened beverage a day gained less weight than those who consumed one sugar sweetened beverage a day.

A second study of overweight and obese adults who substituted water or artificially sweetened beverages for sugar sweetened beverages found while there was an improvement in blood sugar levels in those consuming water, no such effect happened in those consuming artificially sweetened beverages.

The study comes as new research shows increasing exercise rates in the US have not helped cull rising obesity rates.

Obesity rates increased across the US from 2001 to 2009 despite an increase in the prevalence of sufficient physical activity and the George Institute's Bruce Neal says the most likely explanation is the 'excess of energy provided by the food supply'.

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23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Crisis sinks European birth rate: study

Live: First Ashes Test, day one

Trent Bridge

THE Ashes is finally here. Join our live coverage of day one of the first Test, with all the latest scores, analysis, video and social media reaction.

'Robo-Lolita' lures sex predators

?Robo-Lolita? lures sex predators

AN ARTIFICIAL intelligence has been created to entice the attention of pedophiles lurking in online chatrooms frequented by children.

Gay couples flock to wed in NZ

Gay couples flock to wed in NZ

Meet the Australian same-sex couples vying to be the first to wed in New Zealand, and why we think they are winners, with or without a marriage certificate.

'Why do you look like that?'

?Why do you look like that??

WHAT'S on your face? What's wrong with you? You smell. Why are you yellow? These are the questions people dare to ask someone with a disability.


23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

'Robo-Lolita' lures sex predators

Live: First Ashes Test, day one

Trent Bridge

THE Ashes is finally here. Join our live coverage of day one of the first Test, with all the latest scores, analysis, video and social media reaction.

'Robo-Lolita' lures sex predators

?Robo-Lolita? lures sex predators

AN ARTIFICIAL intelligence has been created to entice the attention of pedophiles lurking in online chatrooms frequented by children.

Gay couples flock to wed in NZ

Gay couples flock to wed in NZ

Meet the Australian same-sex couples vying to be the first to wed in New Zealand, and why we think they are winners, with or without a marriage certificate.

'Why do you look like that?'

?Why do you look like that??

WHAT'S on your face? What's wrong with you? You smell. Why are you yellow? These are the questions people dare to ask someone with a disability.


23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

'Boston bomber' to appear in court

Live: First Ashes Test, day one

Trent Bridge

THE Ashes is finally here. Join our live coverage of day one of the first Test, with all the latest scores, analysis, video and social media reaction.

'Robo-Lolita' lures sex predators

?Robo-Lolita? lures sex predators

AN ARTIFICIAL intelligence has been created to entice the attention of pedophiles lurking in online chatrooms frequented by children.

Gay couples flock to wed in NZ

Gay couples flock to wed in NZ

Meet the Australian same-sex couples vying to be the first to wed in New Zealand, and why we think they are winners, with or without a marriage certificate.

'Why do you look like that?'

?Why do you look like that??

WHAT'S on your face? What's wrong with you? You smell. Why are you yellow? These are the questions people dare to ask someone with a disability.


23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Porn, booze steamrolled for Ramadan

Live: First Ashes Test, day one

Trent Bridge

THE Ashes is finally here. Join our live coverage of day one of the first Test, with all the latest scores, analysis, video and social media reaction.

'Robo-Lolita' lures sex predators

?Robo-Lolita? lures sex predators

AN ARTIFICIAL intelligence has been created to entice the attention of pedophiles lurking in online chatrooms frequented by children.

Gay couples flock to wed in NZ

Gay couples flock to wed in NZ

Meet the Australian same-sex couples vying to be the first to wed in New Zealand, and why we think they are winners, with or without a marriage certificate.

'Why do you look like that?'

?Why do you look like that??

WHAT'S on your face? What's wrong with you? You smell. Why are you yellow? These are the questions people dare to ask someone with a disability.


23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

School's reading list riddled with errors

Live: First Ashes Test, day one

Trent Bridge

THE Ashes is finally here. Join our live coverage of day one of the first Test, with all the latest scores, analysis, video and social media reaction.

'Robo-Lolita' lures sex predators

?Robo-Lolita? lures sex predators

AN ARTIFICIAL intelligence has been created to entice the attention of pedophiles lurking in online chatrooms frequented by children.

Gay couples flock to wed in NZ

Gay couples flock to wed in NZ

Meet the Australian same-sex couples vying to be the first to wed in New Zealand, and why we think they are winners, with or without a marriage certificate.

'Why do you look like that?'

?Why do you look like that??

WHAT'S on your face? What's wrong with you? You smell. Why are you yellow? These are the questions people dare to ask someone with a disability.


23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Nations 'hiring hackers to attack enemies'

Nations are apparently using hackers to attack their enemies.  Source: Supplied

A BRITISH intelligence report has found that other nations are hiring hackers to launch attacks against their enemies.

The warning over cybermercenaries came in an annual report published by Britain's Intelligence and Security Committee, a watchdog body of senior lawmakers that oversees Britain's spy agencies.

Citing testimony from British eavesdropping agency GCHQ, the report described the mercenaries as "skilled cyber professionals undertaking attacks on diverse targets such as financial institutions and energy companies.

"These groups pose a threat in their own right, but it is the combination of their capability and the objectives of their state backers which makes them of particular concern," it said.

The lawmakers didn't name any specific countries or say how widespread the practice was. The report didn't go into much further detail, but there's long been concern over the proliferation of private companies that profit from developing and distributing offensive software.

The report quoted GCHQ as saying that the electronic threat facing Britain is "at its highest level ever and is expected to rise further still" - a warning that tracks with longstanding trends relating to the growth of cybercrime and increasing official interest in online espionage.

As with past reports, lawmakers singled out Russia and China as two countries alleged to have carried out attacks over the internet.

The report also covered issues surrounding the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, counterintelligence, and terrorism. It touched on the threat of Islamic radicalism out of Syria, where it said a significant number of British citizens had flocked in order to fight a holy war.

It quoted Britain's security services as saying that "individual jihadists in Syria currently represent the most worrying emerging terrorist threat to the UK and the West" and said that there was a risk that the country's stockpile of chemical weapons could fall into the hands of extremists.

Not covered in the partially-redacted report were allegations published by the Guardian newspaper that GCHQ and its US counterpart, the National Security Agency, were engaged in a global surveillance campaign aimed at securing access to as much of the world's communications as technically possible.

Some of the revelations raised fears that Britain was swapping data with the United States on its own citizens to get around restrictions on domestic espionage.

A statement accompanying the report said lawmakers were investigating and would publish their findings on the program "as soon and as fully as we are able."

A spokesman for the committee said lawmakers were not immediately available for additional comment.


23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More
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