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Ex-Philadelphia police officer surrenders on murder charges after fatal shooting of Eddie Irizarry
Ex-Philadelphia police officer surrenders on murder charges after fatal shooting of Eddie Irizarry
A former Philadelphia police officer who shot and killed a driver has turned himself in to face murder charges
2023-09-09 00:56
Alabama brawl turns spotlight on Montgomery's racial history
Alabama brawl turns spotlight on Montgomery's racial history
Viral video of a chaotic brawl along Montgomery, Alabama's riverfront has renewed national conversations about racial tensions in America.
2023-08-09 05:46
AI 'no substitute' for fashion designers' creativity
AI 'no substitute' for fashion designers' creativity
AI is transforming the fashion world but the fast growing technology will never be a replacement for designers' "original creativity", according to the head...
2023-09-17 13:30
Bryce Harper came to heartbreaking realization days after Phillies playoff loss
Bryce Harper came to heartbreaking realization days after Phillies playoff loss
The Philadelphia Phillies lost to the Arizona Diamondbacks in Game 7 of the NLCS. Bryce Harper feels like he let the city down.
2023-10-31 08:11
Why the arrest of Pakistan's ex-PM Imran Khan could push the country into chaos
Why the arrest of Pakistan's ex-PM Imran Khan could push the country into chaos
Pakistan is in turmoil following the arrest of popular opposition leader and former Prime Minister Imran Khan
1970-01-01 08:00
West Virginia's Bob Huggins arrested on suspicion of drunken driving in Pittsburgh
West Virginia's Bob Huggins arrested on suspicion of drunken driving in Pittsburgh
West Virginia basketball coach Bob Huggins has been arrested on suspicion of drunken driving
2023-06-17 23:35
Chiefs unable to pull off the seemingly impossible by overcoming five turnovers in loss to Broncos
Chiefs unable to pull off the seemingly impossible by overcoming five turnovers in loss to Broncos
The Kansas City Chiefs were unable to overcome five turnovers in a loss to the Broncos, which ended their 16-game winning streak against their AFC West rival
2023-10-31 03:58
A scientist may have just proven that we all live inside a computer simulation
A scientist may have just proven that we all live inside a computer simulation
“The Matrix is everywhere. It is all around us. Even now in this very room." So says Laurence Fishburne’s Morpheus in sci-fi classic ‘The Matrix’ as he offers Keanu Reeves’s Neo the choice to find out just how “deep the rabbit hole goes”. Now, just as Neo discovered that the "life" he'd been living was little more than an algorithmic construct, scientists and philosophers are arguing that we could be stuck inside a simulation ourselves. In a paper published earlier this month, physicist Melvin Vopson, of the University of Portsmouth, offered scientific evidence for a philosophical theory known as the simulation hypothesis. This, in a nutshell, posits that the entire universe and our objective reality are just super-advanced virtual reality illusions. Elon Musk is among the well-known fans of the theory, which – as Dr Vopson notes in his paper – has been “gaining traction in scientific circles as well as in the entertainment industry”. The university lecturer also pointed out that recent developments in a branch of science known as information physics “appear to support this possibility”. Information physics suggests that physical reality is made up of bits of information. However, Dr Vopson has gone further and is working to prove that information has a physical mass and is a fundamental building block of the universe. He even claims that information could be the mysterious dark matter that makes up almost a third of the universe. In previous research, the physicist proposed that all elementary particles (the smallest known building blocks in the universe), store information about themselves, much like DNA in humans. Then, in 2022, he discovered a new law of physics, christened the second law of infodynamics, which states that entropy – the degree of randomness or disorder – within an isolated information system either remains constant or decreases over time. In other words, the system becomes less and less chaotic, implying that there is some kind of mechanism governing it rather than random chance. “I knew then that this revelation had far-reaching implications across various scientific disciplines,” Dr Vopson said in a statement released by the University of Portsmouth. “What I wanted to do next is put the law to the test and see if it could further support the simulation hypothesis by moving it on from the philosophical realm to mainstream science.” Is the Universe a Simulation? | Melvin Vopson www.youtube.com Dr Vopson employed the law in a range of different fields, including genetics, cosmology and even symmetry. Here, he found that the abundance of symmetry in the Universe (think snowflakes and facial structures) could be explained by the second law of infodynamics. "Symmetry principles play an important role with respect to the laws of nature, but until now there has been little explanation as to why that could be,” he said. “My findings demonstrate that high symmetry corresponds to the lowest information entropy state, potentially explaining nature's inclination towards it." Again, put simply, nature prefers things to be as well-ordered as possible. He continued: “This approach, where excess information is removed, resembles the process of a computer deleting or compressing waste code to save storage space and optimise power consumption.” As a result, this “supports the idea that we’re living in a simulation.” Dr Vopson is serious about this idea and, last year, even launched a crowdfunding campaign to test it. At the time, he announced that he had designed an experiment to determine whether we are all just characters in an advanced virtual world. “There is a growing community out there looking seriously at the possibility that information is more fundamental to everything than we think,” he said in a statement released back in December. “If information is a key component of everything in the universe, it would make sense that a vast computer somewhere is in control. “Assuming the universe is indeed a simulation, then it must contain a lot of information bits hidden everywhere around us. I’ve devised an experiment that proposes a way of extracting this information to prove it’s there.” His proposed experiment is based on his conclusion that information is physical and that elementary particles have a DNA of information about themselves. He posited that the information in an elementary particle could be detected and measured by using particle-antiparticle collision. “We can measure the information content of a particle by erasing it. If we delete the information from the particles, we can then look at what’s left,” he said in the December statement. “This experiment is highly achievable with our existing tools, and I’m hoping the crowdfunding site will help us achieve it.” And whilst the crowdfunder closed well before reaching its proposed £185,000 target, Dr Vopson still hopes to carry out the ambitious test. Following his most recent paper, he suggested the experiment had the power to confirm the “fifth state of matter in the universe” and “change physics as we know it.” Sign up for our free Indy100 weekly newsletter Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
2023-10-13 16:09
Australia’s Albanese May Face Anti-Nuclear Push at Pacific Talks
Australia’s Albanese May Face Anti-Nuclear Push at Pacific Talks
Australia’s prime minister is likely to face some pointed questions over climate action and a nuclear submarine deal
2023-11-09 02:00
Mikel Arteta: Arsenal must 'heal' after 'painful' title race
Mikel Arteta: Arsenal must 'heal' after 'painful' title race
Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta reacts to the end of the Premier League title race.
2023-05-21 03:40
Google to alert people when they appear in search results – and make it easier to remove personal information
Google to alert people when they appear in search results – and make it easier to remove personal information
Google will now alert people when their personal information appears online – and make it easier to get it removed. The new tools are aimed at giving people more control over the information and images of them that appear online, the company said. New rules on personal explicit images mean that users will be able to request that explicit images of themselves are taken down from search results. That extends to situations where someone has willingly uploaded explicit content themselves and then later wants it to be removed from search results. The same policy applies to personal information generally. That too will not only appear in Google’s tools but will also be easier to have removed. Google has long had policies that are intended to help people have non-consensual explicit imagery removed from search results. But the changes mean that people can have that content removed even when it was uploaded consensually at the time. In its update, Google stressed that it was only able to remove content from Google search, and that doing so would not affect its availability on other websites or search engines. But removing any unwanted images from search results should make them much more difficult to find. The new features are part of an expansion of Google’s “Results about you” tool, which it first made available last year. When it was launched, it was intended to make it easier for people to request the removal of search results that contain personal information, such as phone numbers or home addresses. Now it has been improved so that it is proactive in finding search results that include that information. Users will be able to access the dashboard and see any web results that include that contact information. Users will then be able to access an improved form to ask to have those taken down. The dashboard is available only in the US and in English for now. Google said it was “working to bring it to new languages and locations soon”. Read More Google Assistant will be ‘supercharged’ with AI like ChatGPT and Bard Google warns Gmail users they could be about to lose their account Apple gives update on its plans for AI – and says it is coming to every product
2023-08-05 01:18
Internet slams 'Today' host Savannah Guthrie for talking over Donald Trump's former lawyer John Lauro: 'Feel sorry for the guest'
Internet slams 'Today' host Savannah Guthrie for talking over Donald Trump's former lawyer John Lauro: 'Feel sorry for the guest'
In the interview, John Lauro questioned the concept of justice and discussed the possible reason behind timing of Donald Trump's trial
2023-08-03 12:04