Latest Episode
May 29 1200 UTC Brief
In Britain
The Home Office plans to use AI facial recognition to help estimate the ages of asylum seekers who say they are children, under a £322,000 contract for software from Akhter Computers. Ministers say it will support existing checks and help prevent adults posing as minors, while social workers warn that shortcuts in age assessment can lead to serious safeguarding mistakes. The government also says a second retrial will not go ahead for two men accused of assaulting a Greater Manchester Police officer in the 2024 airport brawl, ending that case for now.
In U.S. news
Donald Trump’s push to encourage more births is showing little obvious progress, according to experts who say parenthood does not appear easier and public appetite for having children has not rebounded much. In Congress, Republicans are increasingly worried about New Jersey Representative Tom Kean Jr., who has been absent from his district and the House for nearly three months, leaving a competitive seat and a narrow majority looking uncomfortably exposed.
In business
Anthropic says it has raised $65 billion at a $965 billion valuation, in one of the biggest AI funding rounds yet. The company says the money will go into research, development, and infrastructure as demand for Claude keeps climbing, with its revenue run rate now at $47 billion. In the housing market, the slowdown is pushing tens of thousands of U.S. real estate agents to look for second jobs, from classrooms to retail and substitute teaching, just to keep their incomes afloat.
In Europe
Germany’s climate experts say the country has made progress on parts of its 2025 climate goals, but not enough to count as a full success. In Romania, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Ukraine would support the country after an attack on a residential building and urged the European Union to keep tightening pressure on Russia.
In Africa
A court in Kenya has blocked a U.S. plan to set up an Ebola quarantine facility in the country. The proposal had drawn strong backlash from medical workers, despite no confirmed Ebola cases there. A rare moment where the local legal system and public health workers agreed the imported idea was a bad one.
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This podcast is a fully automated experiment in AI-generated content. Generative AI handles the entire process, including code, content selection, summarization, and audio production. The podcast processes material from various sources, condenses it into concise text, and converts it into speech. No human intervention is involved in the production process.
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