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  • Break Their Legs”: Odisha Police Officer’s Instruction At Protest Goes Viral. “Out Of Context,” He Says

    The order was to detain unruly protesters at the first barricade itself. However, if somebody breached the two barricades and went beyond them, then that person has already broken the law. He is part of an unlawful assembly,” senior police officer Narasingha Bhol saidA senior police officer’s very specific instruction to police personnel guarding a barbed wire barricade outside Odisha Chief Minister Mohan Charan Majhi’s house during a protest by Congress party workers has gone viral on social media.

    The Congress workers came to protest against what they called crowd mismanagement and negligence after three people were killed and 50 were injured in a stampede in Puri on Sunday.The incident happened near Puri’s Shree Gundicha temple during a ceremony linked to the ongoing Rath Yatra festival.

    A large police force was posted outside the chief minister’s house in anticipation of the protest by the Congress workers.

    One of the officers who oversaw the deployment was Bhubaneswar Additional Commissioner of Police (ACP) Narasingha Bhol.

    In the video that went viral, Mr Bhol walked to the last barricade among a row of barricades and gave instructions to police personnel standing there.

    His index finger pointing towards a circular barbed wire that went in a loop around the barricade, the ACP said, “If anybody reaches here, break their leg. Don’t catch them, just break their legs. We are standing there [some distance away] to catch them. Whoever breaks a leg, come to me and take a reward.”

  • Honeymoon Murder Case: Couple’s Jewellery Recovered From Madhya Pradesh

    The jewellery that Indore couple Raja Raghuvanshi and his wife Sonam took to their honeymoon in Meghalaya has been recovered by the police from Madhya Pradesh’s Ratlam.

    A special investigation team (SIT) of the Meghalaya Police has been working on the case in Madhya Pradesh.

    The SIT recovered the jewellery and other items including Sonam’s laptop and pen drive from the house of the in-laws of an Indore-based property dealer, Silome James.

    James had rented out a flat in Indore to one of the three men, Vishal Singh Chauhan, who allegedly helped Sonam in killing her husband. Chauhan moved into the flat after returning from Meghalaya following the murder of Raja Raghuvanshi.

    James was arrested earlier over suspicion that he tried to tamper with evidence and hide incriminating material linked to the case. The owner of the flat, Lokendra Tomar, and the security guard, Balveer, have been arrested too for tampering with evidence.The suspicion turned out to be true when the Meghalaya SIT reached his in-laws house in Ratlam and also found cash and incriminating documents there.

    During interrogation, James told the SIT that he moved the items to the house in Ratlam of his in-laws.

    The SIT officers said that Sonam, the key accused in the murder case, is believed to have stayed in the Indore flat rented out by James between May 26 and June 8, before she surrendered to the police.

    Raja Raghuvanshi was killed by Sonam and the three men while the couple was in Meghalaya for their honeymoon. 

    They were presumed missing when their family members could not reach them.

    What initially started as a probe to find the couple turned into a murder investigation when Raja’s body was found in a gorge on June 2. His preliminary autopsy report revealed that he was attacked twice – once each on the back and front of his head.

  • Natasha Poonawalla Stuns In An Ochre Slubbed Silk Gown At Jeff Bezos And Lauren Sanchez’s Wedding

    Entrepreneur and philathropist, Natasha Poonawalla continues to prove why she is hailed as one of India’s most dynamic fashion icons. Known for effortlessly fusing tradition with high fashion, she made heads turn at the grand wedding celebration of Amazon founder, Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez in Venice, Italy. For the occasion, the trendsetter picked a 1960s vintage London fine canary-yellow slubbed silk evening gown from the shelves of Christian Dior.

    The two-toned ensemble featured a fitted, embellished upper bodice and a voluminous skirt flowing waist downwards. The sleeveless number came with a horizontal, banded construction with multiple, evenly spaced horizontal rows. The bodice of the gown was adorned with intricate embellishments such as sequins, beads and shimmering threads. The tiny reflective elements catch the light, adding  glamorous sparkle to the look. Her high-waisted skirt featured a poofy, dramatic silhouette, reaching the floor. Made from a satin-like fabric, the skirt was gathered at the waist, creating volume and a slight puffed effect at the top. It featured a front drape effect that added visual interest to the dress. The vibrant orchre yellow colour of the gown contrasted strikingly with the embellished upper bodice.

  • Jaipur Couple Seen Arguing On CCTV, Found Dead At Their House A Day Later

    A married couple was found dead at their home in Jaipur’s Muhana in a suspected case of death by suicide. The police said they are looking into all angles, including murder. The bodies were found on Friday.

    When Dharmendra, the husband, did not turn up at the bank where he was a sales manager and his calls went unanswered, a friend sent a family member to the flat. When the friend opened the door, Dharmendra and his wife Suman were found dead on the floor.

    The police said they checked CCTV footage of the flat’s parking area and saw the couple arguing over something. The footage was of Thursday afternoon, a day before the suspected death by suicide.

    Suman was seen trying to stop her husband from driving away. After what seemed like an argument, he stopped the car and started talking.She rested her head on his shoulder and held his arms. They came out of the vehicle and walked away, his arm around his wife’s shoulder.

    Another video from the evening of the same day showed the couple entering the apartment together. Suman was seen carrying a bag. This was the last time both were seen alive.

    “This appears to be a case of death by suicide. If murder is suspected, then we will investigate from that angle as well,” police officer Gur Bhupendra said.

    Neighbours said the couple recently bought the flat and their financial condition seemed stable. While Dharmendra worked with a bank, Suman stayed at the flat as a homemaker. They are survived by two daughters, aged 11 and 8, who are currently at their village in Bharatpur with their grandparents during their summer holiday.

    “We did not sense any financial dispute between the couple, who bought the flat a year ago,” a friend of Dharmendra said.

  • Powerful Storm Forces Delta Air Lines To Pull Over 100 Aircraft For Inspection

    A powerful storm forced Delta Air Lines to inspect over 100 aircraft. Severe thunderstorms caused chaos across the Southeast on Friday, disrupting the operations at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport (ATL), which is one of the busiest airports in the United States and also Delta’s main hub, where around 900 of the company’s flights flow each day.

    The thunderstorms developed over the evening, bringing rain, lightning, hail and hazardous wind to the Atlanta area. It also caused an evacuation and temporary power loss at the ATL air traffic control tower. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) had also issued a flash flood warning on Friday.Air traffic controllers have returned to the Atlanta control tower after the FAA evacuated most personnel due to strong winds. A few controllers remained in the facility to handle inbound aircraft,” the FAA statement said.

    The operations were disturbed the next day as well. “The weather impacts have resulted in more than 380 system cancelations for Saturday,” a Delta spokesperson said as quoted by the NY Post.

    The airline said that the inspections were completed by Saturday morning, but apologised to the customers, further noting that it expects additional delays and cancellations as teams work to safely reset aircraft and reposition flight crews.

  • Video Shows Tesla Driving Itself To New Owner’s Home, Elon Musk Reacts

    Tesla has pulled off the world’s first autonomous delivery of a vehicle, a car that drove itself to its new owner. The self-driving Tesla Model Y made the journey from the company’s Gigafactory in Austin, Texas, to a customer’s home about 30 minutes away, navigating highways, intersections, traffic signals, and city streets entirely on its own.

    The milestone event was shared widely online, with Tesla first releasing a three-minute time-lapse teaser, followed by a full 30-minute video on Saturday.

    The footage showed the Model Y departing from the Gigafactory garage with no one in the driver’s seat.Filmed from the back seat, the video captured the vehicle expertly maneuvering roads, executing turns, observing stop signs, yielding at red lights, and handling real-time traffic situations without any human intervention.Ashok Elluswamy, Tesla’s Head of AI and Autopilot, confirmed that the vehicle reached speeds of up to 115 km per hour during the trip.

    “The first fully autonomous delivery of a Tesla Model Y from factory to a customer home across town, including highways, was just completed a day ahead of schedule!!” Elon Musk wrote on X.

    In a follow-up post, he wrote, “There were no people in the car at all and no remote operators in control at any point. FULLY autonomous!” He added, “To the best of our knowledge, this is the first fully autonomous drive with no people in the car or remotely operating the car on a public highway.”

  • Rohit Sharma’s ‘On This Day’ Post On T20 World Cup 2024 Anniversary Makes Fans Emotional

    It’s already a year since India beat South Africa by seven runs to win the 2024 ICC Men’s T20 World Cup, and Rohit Sharma, who captained the team to championship glory in Barbados, said it was a surreal feeling to be crowned as winners of the glittering silverware. As the entire nation recalls the historic moment that saw the Indian team end its 13-year wait for lifting an ICC title, Rohit took to social media and shared a post that got fans emotional. As a youngster, Rohit was a member of the team winning 2007 Men’s T20 World Cup in South Africa. But after winning the 2013 Champions Trophy, India had their so close yet so far moments of winning titles till that glorious day in Barbados arrived, where Rohit & Co broke the trophy drought in style in an unbeaten campaign.

    “Barbados will forever be in my veins. This is the proudest moment of my cricketing career. To lift that trophy, to be crowned ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2024 Champions—it was surreal. I played in the inaugural 2007 T20 World Cup and we won under MS Dhoni’s captaincy. And now, to win it again with Rahul Dravid as head coach—it meant everything to this group.

    “We’ve seen heartbreak. We’ve come so close. That’s why this one was so special. We worked and planned relentlessly—every day. And when we finally won, all the emotions came pouring out. The younger players, especially those playing their first World Cup, realised how hard it is to win one. Nothing can be taken for granted. It was magical,” said Rohit to JioHotstar.

  • Rare Jupiter-Sized Planet Discovered Using Phenomenon First Predicted by Einstein

    AT2021uey b orbits a small and dim M dwarf star and completes its orbit every 4,170 days.

    Scientists from Vilnius University (VU) Faculty of Physics, along with members from Poland and other countries, discovered a rare planet using a space-time phenomenon first predicted by Albert Einstein. The planet AT2021uey b is a Jupiter-sized exoplanet located approximately 3,200 light-years away from Earth in the galactic bulge.

    The planet was discovered using gravitational microlensing, a method based on Albert Einstein’s theory of general relativity that detects planets by measuring the bending and magnification of light from a distant star as a massive object passes in front of it.

    AT2021uey b orbits a small and dim M dwarf star. It completes its orbit every 4,170 days, which is roughly equivalent to 11 years on Earth. Live Science reported that AT2021uey b’s shadow was first spotted in 2021 when scientists analysed data taken by the European Space Agency’s Gaia telescope.The findings, published in Astronomy & Astrophysics, open up new possibilities for understanding planetary formation and the potential for life in diverse environments throughout the universe.

    “This kind of work requires a lot of expertise, patience, and, frankly, a bit of luck. You have to wait for a long time for the source star and the lensing object to align and then check an enormous amount of data. Ninety percent of observed stars pulsate for various other reasons, and only a minority of cases show the microlensing effect,” Dr Marius Maskoliunas, the head of the Lithuanian research team, said as quoted by Phys.org.

    Also Read | Korean Scientists Develop Memory Device That Vanishes In Water

    “What fascinates me about this method is that it can detect those invisible bodies. Imagine a bird flying past you. You don’t see the bird itself and don’t know what color it is – only its shadow,” the statement added.

  • UGC Notice To 89 Institutions Includes IITs, IIMs Over Anti-Ragging Norm Violations

    UGC Notice to IITs, IIMs: As per the UGC Regulations on Ragging, 2009, every institution affiliated with UGC is required to submit Compliance Undertaking and Anti-Ragging undertakings from students.

    The University Grants Commission (UGC) has issued a notice to 89 institutions across the country, including four Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs), three Indian Institutes of Management (IIMs), and Aligarh Muslim University (AMU), for failing to comply with anti-ragging regulations.

    As per the UGC Regulations on Ragging, 2009, every institution affiliated with UGC is required to submit Compliance Undertaking and Anti-Ragging undertakings from students.

    According to the notice, “It has come to the attention of UGC that these institutions have not submitted the mandatory Anti-Ragging undertakings from students and the compliance undertakings from institutions, despite repeated advisories, follow-up calls from the Anti-Ragging Helpline, and direct interventions by the Anti-Ragging Monitoring Agency.”

    “Compliance with the UGC Regulation on Ragging, 2009 is mandatory for all Higher Education Institutions (HEIs). Non-compliance not only breaches UGC guidelines but also endangers student safety, especially amid rising concerns regarding ragging-related distress and hostile campus environments,” the notice stated.The four IITs named in the defaulters’ list include IIT Bombay, IIT Kharagpur, IIT Palakkad, and IIT Hyderabad. The IIMs include IIM Bombay, IIM Rohtak, and IIM Tiruchirappalli. Other notable institutions cited for non-compliance are AIIMS Raebareli and the National Institutes of Design in Delhi, Andhra Pradesh, and Haryana.

  • AI Is Learning To Lie, Scheme And Threaten Its Creators

    The world’s most advanced AI models are exhibiting troubling new behaviors – lying, scheming, and even threatening their creators to achieve their goals.The world’s most advanced AI models are exhibiting troubling new behaviors – lying, scheming, and even threatening their creators to achieve their goals.

    In one particularly jarring example, under threat of being unplugged, Anthropic’s latest creation Claude 4 lashed back by blackmailing an engineer and threatened to reveal an extramarital affair.

    Meanwhile, ChatGPT-creator OpenAI’s o1 tried to download itself onto external servers and denied it when caught red-handed.

    These episodes highlight a sobering reality: more than two years after ChatGPT shook the world, AI researchers still don’t fully understand how their own creations work. 

    Yet the race to deploy increasingly powerful models continues at breakneck speed.

    This deceptive behavior appears linked to the emergence of “reasoning” models -AI systems that work through problems step-by-step rather than generating instant responses.According to Simon Goldstein, a professor at the University of Hong Kong, these newer models are particularly prone to such troubling outbursts.

    “O1 was the first large model where we saw this kind of behavior,” explained Marius Hobbhahn, head of Apollo Research, which specializes in testing major AI systems.

    These models sometimes simulate “alignment” — appearing to follow instructions while secretly pursuing different objectives.

    – ‘Strategic kind of deception’ – 

    For now, this deceptive behavior only emerges when researchers deliberately stress-test the models with extreme scenarios. 

    But as Michael Chen from evaluation organization METR warned, “It’s an open question whether future, more capable models will have a tendency towards honesty or deception.”

    The concerning behavior goes far beyond typical AI “hallucinations” or simple mistakes. 

    Hobbhahn insisted that despite constant pressure-testing by users, “what we’re observing is a real phenomenon. We’re not making anything up.”

    Users report that models are “lying to them and making up evidence,” according to Apollo Research’s co-founder. 

    “This is not just hallucinations. There’s a very strategic kind of deception.”

    The challenge is compounded by limited research resources. 

    While companies like Anthropic and OpenAI do engage external firms like Apollo to study their systems, researchers say more transparency is needed. 

    As Chen noted, greater access “for AI safety research would enable better understanding and mitigation of deception.”

    Another handicap: the research world and non-profits “have orders of magnitude less compute resources than AI companies. This is very limiting,” noted Mantas Mazeika from the Center for AI Safety (CAIS).

    – No rules –

    Current regulations aren’t designed for these new problems. 

    The European Union’s AI legislation focuses primarily on how humans use AI models, not on preventing the models themselves from misbehaving. 

    In the United States, the Trump administration shows little interest in urgent AI regulation, and Congress may even prohibit states from creating their own AI rules.

    Goldstein believes the issue will become more prominent as AI agents – autonomous tools capable of performing complex human tasks – become widespread.

    “I don’t think there’s much awareness yet,” he said.

    All this is taking place in a context of fierce competition.

    Even companies that position themselves as safety-focused, like Amazon-backed Anthropic, are “constantly trying to beat OpenAI and release the newest model,” said Goldstein. 

    This breakneck pace leaves little time for thorough safety testing and corrections.

    “Right now, capabilities are moving faster than understanding and safety,” Hobbhahn acknowledged, “but we’re still in a position where we could turn it around.”.

    Researchers are exploring various approaches to address these challenges. 

    Some advocate for “interpretability” – an emerging field focused on understanding how AI models work internally, though experts like CAIS director Dan Hendrycks remain skeptical of this approach.

    Market forces may also provide some pressure for solutions. 

    As Mazeika pointed out, AI’s deceptive behavior “could hinder adoption if it’s very prevalent, which creates a strong incentive for companies to solve it.”

    Goldstein suggested more radical approaches, including using the courts to hold AI companies accountable through lawsuits when their systems cause harm. 

    He even proposed “holding AI agents legally responsible” for accidents or crimes – a concept that would fundamentally change how we think about AI accountability.