By Will Dunham WASHINGTON, Jan 27 (Reuters) - Atomic scientists set their "Doomsday Clock" on Tuesday closer than ever to midnight, citing aggressive behavior by nuclear powers Russia, China and the ...
Risk of nuclear war is seen as being the closest it ever has been, due to weapons threats, emergence of AI, and climate crisis.
The global security landscape has shifted to one of unmapped volatility, with the expiration of the New START treaty, a high-stakes "Board of Peace" diplomacy, and a weaponized global supply chain, ...
Perspective: Washington and Moscow are sleepwalking into a new arms race—while AI speeds the march to a nuclear ...
Doomsday Clock warns humans are trending closer to catastrophe at 85 seconds from midnight. Here's what to know.
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists members, from left, Jon B. Wolfsthal, Asha M. George and Steve Fetter reveal the Doomsday ...
With great fanfare last week, the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists — the keepers of the Doomsday Clock — inched their symbolic ...
The New START, which Medvedev signed in 2010 when he was Russia’s president, expires today (February 5) unless Washington and ...
Bulletin: ...COLD WEATHER ADVISORY REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 10 AM EST MONDAY... ...WIND ADVISORY REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 1 AM EST MONDAY... * WHAT...For the Cold ...
In the realm of first-world problems, your cheap wall clock doesn’t keep time, so you have to keep setting it. The answer? Of course, you connect it to NTP and synchronize the clock with an ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Jon Wolfsthal, director of global risk at the Federation of American Scientists (FAS), Asha George, executive director of the ...