It is widely known that Orson Wells’ ‘The War of the Worlds’ caused a social panic. It is less known that it is a lie

In my years of training as a journalist I remember how they told us to study the radio broadcast of The War of the Worlds. My Radio and Television Information teacher told us that it was an exemplary event that could help us in the future practice of the profession to evaluate the responsibility of the media and to understand the mechanisms by which the so-called “fourth estate” could influence the social reality we serve. What perhaps the teachers who transmitted that information to me did not think is that they were right in what they had told me, but for a twofold and partially wrong reason. The legend of War of the Worlds The story is well known: HG Wells, a widely known science fiction writer at the time, had a story titled The War of the Worldsthrough which aliens would come to Earth to conquer humanity. A beginner but ambitious young man named Orson Welles decided to adapt the script to the radio format, giving it a newsreel structure for his television program. Mercury Theater on the Air on CBS and that he would read with other colleagues on the night of October 30, 1938, on Halloween Eve. The broadcast, the reading of this work, lasted an hour in which the aura of truthfulness was maintained except in three momentsone at the very beginning, another 40 minutes into the recording and another at 55. They indicated that it was a dramatization. For the rest, the fiction of that Martian invasion that was taking place in Grovers Mill, New Jersey, remained live. The myth, the documentaries and reports about the case and the journalism classes I attended said that Welles, the hired actors and the sound montages were so believable (and the audiences so naive) that within minutes of them starting to simulate a supposed alien attack the streets of the country were filled with hysterical and shocked masses. Panic attacks, people stockpiling supplies, collapsed police services and who knows what else. We assume that the people who did not hear those warnings were able to connect to the program after the warning and listened to the program without knowing that it was fake. And why wouldn’t we think like that? The newspapers of October 31 had carried the story to the foreground: “False war bulletin spreads terror throughout the country”, “Radio play terrifies the nation”, “Radio listeners panic, they confuse a war drama as a real chronicle”. These are some of the headlines that could be read about an event that, as it was said later, caused rivers of ink to flow in the form of more than 12,000 articles in newspapers throughout the United States. The reality is that, as a series of experts have reflected on different occasions, this interpretation largely falls into the realm of fake news. To support it here we use, above all, the study of professionals and experts from Princeton University, from the work of scholar David Miller in his essay Introduction to Collective Behaviorfrom the book Getting it Wrong by W Joseph Campbellfrom the work of sociologist Robert E. Bartholomew and from what journalists Jefferson Pooley and Michael J. Socolow have collected for Slate. What events did occur The broadcast did cause some effects. We know that some Grover’s Mill locals, believing their town’s water tower had been transformed into a “giant Martian war machine,” fired guns at the water tank. There was at least one woman who sued Welles and his team for causing her a panic attack and one man received direct compensation from the future film director who paid for the shoes that a listener said he had given up to pay for the train ticket he needed to escape the alien catastrophe. It is also true that calls to hospitals increased from people telling them where they could go to get donate bloodand police stations in the New Jersey area were also called, but most who did this were looking to find out if it was a false alarm. They wanted confirmation that it was a joke, but they also called to protest about this program that could be deceiving people or to congratulate them on that great special on that Night of the Dead. But nothing more. All of them came together to serve the approach that the written press wanted to give: that the CBS program had caused mass hysteria, that the radio was lying and deceiving its listeners and that they had created a major problem. And the lies that were published The rumor that people were being treated for shock in New Jersey hospitals was false, as the Princeton Radio office later revealed. The news that a man had died of a heart attack because of the program, as reported by the Washington Post, was also not true. People didn’t jump out of the windows either. In general, hundreds of articlesmany with supposed witness accounts, witnessed chaos that, in truth, had not been such. I remembered Some time later in his memoirs Ben Gross, radio director of the New York Daily News, that in truth the streets of New York They were half empty. It would also later be known that CBS had disconnected the Welles broadcast in different local affiliates in the country to show regional bulletins that, they assumed, would interest their audience more than a little play by Martians. The biggest scandal of all, the audience figures. It was said that more than a million people had listened to the program, when it could not be true. In fact, most people were listening to the NBC rival to ventriloquist Edgar Bergin’s popular radio show. And with most people we are talking about a 2% audience for the NBC show, as demonstrated by an independent survey that was done simultaneously with the broadcast. There is no doubt that in popular culture the idea that The War of the Worlds was a a before and afterthat the phenomenon must have been … Read more

Until now “software was eating the world.” Now AI is eating software

For years we repeated an idea that seemed indisputable: “software was eating the world.” It was the most direct way to explain why almost any sector ended up depending on an app, a platform or a cloud service. But something is beginning to change in a silent and, at the same time, tremendously ambitious way.: the artificial intelligence revolution is not only transforming entire industries, it is also putting pressure on the software industry from within. The question that begins to arise is delicate and fascinating at the same time: if AI can build custom tools in a matter of moments, what is the point of continuing to pay for rigid and standardized software that works, yes, but that often forces it to work as the platform dictates. This is the point at which the debate becomes really serious: it is not about incremental improvement, but about questioning the current model as the standard for enterprise software. The logic is aggressive, at least on paper. So we could be looking at a potentially massive change. And yes, “potentially” is the key word: there are reasons to think that this can happen, and equally strong reasons to believe that it can happen with very real limits. Software in times of artificial intelligence This may all revolve around a very earthly question: what are you paying for when you pay for software. Until now, the price included the construction of the tool, its evolution, and the cost of making it generic enough to sell to thousands of companies. If the AI ​​compresses that part and allows generate code fast and cheapthe value migrates to other places: flow design, real integration with business systems, measurable results. Bret Taylorfounder and CEO of Sierra and part of the board of OpenAI, insists that the focus must be on the value that the customer receivesnot in technology for technology’s sake. Until now, for most companies, the map was quite recognizable: either you bought a pre-packaged tool and assumed its rules, or you commissioned a custom development, usually slower and more expensive, but more tailored to what you needed. What AI introduces is an alternative that, on paper, breaks the balance: instead of choosing a piece of software, it would be enough to explain the problem and let an agent build a custom system, deploy it and adjust it as processes change. Bret Taylor describes it from Sierra’s experience with customer service agents: “Our hypothesis is that, if we move forward five years, the vast majority of digital interactions will be through an agent.” If that is true, the dominant interface of many companies would no longer be a traditional platform. Most importantly, this conversation no longer happens only at conferences or investor presentations. There are practical signs that the paradigm is, at the very least, emerging: the so-called “vibe coding” has become a reality for many non-developer users, capable of setting up a website or tools describing what they want with text. Platforms like the European Lovable They have pushed that idea to the general public: fewer technical barriersmore rapid iteration, less “project” and more trial and error. This does not mean that a company is going to replace its ERP by a system generated on the fly, but it does help to understand why the market and the industry are beginning to take the possibility seriously. And this is where enthusiasm often clashes with real enterprise. Corporate software does not live in isolation: it is attached to databases, legacy systems, identities, permissions, audits and integrations that have been working in a specific way for years. Added to this is the most delicate aspect: regulatory compliance, security and internal responsibilities, which in regulated sectors dictate what can be done and what cannot be done. Even if an agent can generate a functional system, it remains to be resolved who maintains it, who supports it, who ensures that it does not break over time, and who responds when something fails. In this area, “customized and fast” software still has many questions ahead. If all this still seems too abstract, Bloomberg provides a fairly clear thermometer: The market is already reacting as if the threat were real, although we still do not know how far it will go. The media explains that the launch of Claude Cowork on the part of Anthropic reactivated the fear of a disruption that puts pressure on traditional software. According to that text, a set of SaaS values ​​followed by Morgan Stanley as an indicator of the sector has fallen 15% so far in 2026 after falling 11% in 2025, the worst start since 2022. In addition to all this, some cited analysts suggest that right now there are no reasons to have shares of software companies in portfolio. Images | Hack Capital | Anthropic In Xataka | Meta was the big loser of the AI ​​race in 2025. She was actually preparing her big move In Xataka | AI has already destroyed the world of programmers as we knew it. Now it’s the turn of the translators

DeepSeek is gaining users where the US has the most difficulty

about a year ago DeepSeek appeared on the radar of many people in the loudest way possible, with an impact that was noticed even on Wall Street. If the name sounds familiar to you, it comes from there. The interesting thing is that, twelve months later, its weight in the public conversation no longer seems the same, but that does not mean that it has disappeared from the board. In parallel, and according to the diagnosis that Microsoft now proposes, the Chinese startup continues to gain traction. The success of DeepSeek is worrying in the US. The warning comes from within the American ecosystem itself. Microsoft has warned that US AI groups face growing pressure from Chinese rivals in the battle for users in several markets, precisely because of the combination of “open” models and low prices. The winning strategy. What explains DeepSeek’s expansion has less to do with marketing and more to do with accessibility. The Redmond giant maintains in its report ‘Global AI Adoption in 2025‘that the company has reduced barriers to entry by offering a free chatbot on web and mobile, an especially attractive combination in cost-sensitive markets. DeepSeek also makes money. It is worth clarifying this so as not to be fooled: just because the chatbot is free does not mean that it does not have a business model. The firm founded by Liang Wenfeng distributes its technology with an open approach, with code under the MIT license and a separate licensing scheme for model weights. And, as is the case with most players in this industry, monetization is usually in the professional field: API accessthe interface that allows developers and companies to integrate these models into their own applications and services, is where much of the economic value is concentrated. Microsoft Map with Estimated DeepSeek Market Share The adoption map. The analysis itself places DeepSeek’s growth far from the markets where the technological narrative is traditionally decided, and breaks it down into two types of scenarios: emerging countries and countries where US services are limited or restricted. According to usage data, it is estimated that the Chinese group would have around 18% share in Ethiopia and 17% in Zimbabwe. And where American technological products are limited or restricted, the advance would be even greater, always according to these estimates: 56% in Belarus, 49% in Cuba and 43% in Russia. Target: Africa. Brad Smith, president of Microsoft, stated in an interview with the Financial Times thatif AI is to be deployed in Africa at scale, the problem is not just the software, but the infrastructure that supports it. According to their analysis, many African countries will need investment to build data centers and, in addition, mechanisms to subsidize the cost of electricity, one of the major operational limits. And here he introduces a relevant point: if the race depends solely on private capital, “it will not be enough” to compete with companies backed with a level of subsidy like the one that, he maintains, Chinese companies frequently have. A success that is still being measured. In essence, this case leaves a fairly clear idea: although DeepSeek sounds less popular today than it did a year ago, its approach is having a real impact in markets where it is not so easy for large American technology companies to deploy. It is an expansion that is driven more by accessibility than by narrative, and that is why it is also difficult to follow it from the West, until the data begins to appear. From here, the most interesting thing will be to see what happens in 2026: if DeepSeek manages to sustain that advantage and what other Chinese models, pushed by the same combination of openness, price and internal support, decide to follow in its wake. Images | Xataka with Gemini 3 Pro | Screenshot In Xataka | Anthropic has rewritten his 25,000-word “Constitution” for Claude. It is the manual for how AI should behave

There is a word that has multiplied exaggeratedly in scientific articles for a reason: ChatGPT likes it

That there are academic articles written by AI is something that has been proven beforethe question is how serious it is. To know the magnitude of this practice, a group of researchers has reviewed millions of paper abstracts published in PubMed and have found something interesting: there is a word that the AI ​​loves and the reason why it likes it so much is quite murky. Delve. Its translation is ‘go deeper’ and its use multiplied by 28 between 2022 and 2024, which coincidentally coincides with the boom of ChatGPT and language models. Other words such as ‘underscore’ or ‘showcasing’ are also cited, with a frequency increase of x13.8 and x10.7 respectively. None of them are a noun or a word related to the content, but rather have more to do with the style of writing and are very characteristic of the flowery language that LLMs usually use. flowery language. Does this mean that if we see one of these words in a paper it was written with AI? Not necessarily, but the increase is brutal. Researchers have compared the rise of ‘delve’ to other keywords, such as pandemic, which had a huge peak in 2020 and began to decline in 2021. The increase in the frequency of use of ‘delve’ is much more pronounced than all the others. It’s not coincidental. There is a stage in the process of creating a chatbot like ChatGPT that requires human intervention to fine-tune the responses; This is what is known as reinforcement learning from human feedback (for its acronym in English). RLHF). It turns out that most of the workers who are dedicated to this refining work are in African countries, such as Nigeria. guess where The use of these words in formal English is quite common. Exactly, in Nigeria. African style. ‘Delve’ is a fairly common word in business English in Africa, especially in Nigeria, and it is not the only one. There are also others like ‘leverage’, ‘explore’ or ‘tapestry’ that are more common in African English. According to 311institutealthough human feedback is very small compared to the enormous amounts of training data, it has a great impact since it is what defines the tone of the model when responding to us. Data labeling. It is a key step for training large language models and requires humans to be behind it. The problem is that the majority of workers who dedicate themselves to this are from impoverished countries such as Nigeria, Kenya or India, among others. In case the endless days and the ridiculous salaries were not enough, many times workers must review violent and very explicit imagesall without any type of psychological support. In Xataka | Being a porn moderator is not fun at all. He was exposed to “extreme, violent, graphic and sexually explicit content” Image | National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases in Unsplash

The scientist who was in prison for creating the first genetically modified babies. Now he wants to do it again

In 2018, a scientist took to a stage in Hong Kong to announce that he had crossed the Rubicon: the birth of the first genetically modified babies in history. Today, after serving three years in prisonHe Jiankui is back. But he does not seek forgiveness. With financing of 50 million yuan (about 7 million euros) and an increasingly messianic aesthetic, the man nicknamed the “Chinese Frankenstein” plans to rewrite the code of life again. This time, with an even greater promise: eradicating Alzheimer’s. “I know what it feels like to be God!” shouted Professor Frankenstein—played by Colin Clive—in the film Frankenstein (1931), forever establishing the myth of the scientist who crosses all limits. Upon his release in 2022, He Jiankui appears to have assumed that role without irony. In a recent interview with WIREDhe no longer presents himself as a reckless researcher who learned his lesson, but as a “pioneer of gene editing”, a term he demanded as a condition of being interviewed. On social networks, he is defined as the “Chinese Darwin” or the “Oppenheimer of China”and often posts photos in a pristine coat, posing alone in a lab. Isolated from international academiaI have assured WIRED that investors “come to him every week.” He has established an independent laboratory in the south of Beijing and, although Chinese law expressly prohibits the genetic editing of embryos for reproductive purposes, he claims to operate within a gray area: “philanthropic” research, financed by private entrepreneurs and desperate patients. What happened to the babies? The original 2018 experiment sought to make babies immune to HIV by modifying the gene CCR5. The result, according to geneticists and bioethicists, was a technical and ethical failure. The researcher Lluís Montoliu detailed in The Conversation that the girls born from that experiment are “genetic mosaics”: not all their cells were edited in the same way, and unwanted mutations were also detected —off-target— in other regions of its genome. Despite this, He Jiankui maintains a defiant stance. As stated to the Wall Street Journalall three girls—including a third born in 2019—are healthy and attending primary school today. “I don’t have to apologize to anyone,” he said. However, experts warn that this statement rests on a huge information gap since the real impact of genetic alterations on your immune system, the long-term effects and the psychological consequences of growing up knowing – or one day discovering – that they were humanity’s first genetic experiment are unknown. The new frontier: Alzheimer’s. He Jiankui’s new target is Alzheimer’s, a disease with a personal component: his mother no longer recognizes him due to this pathology. As explained to WIREDtheir plan is to introduce a genetic mutation into human embryos —APP-A673T— discovered in the Icelandic population, which appears to confer natural protection against cognitive decline. The scientific consensus is devastating. Kari Stefansson, the Icelandic geneticist who participated in the identification of that mutation, warned in the Wall Street Journal that He’s approach is “very high risk.” Manipulating the genome of an embryo means that any error, no matter how small, will not only affect one individual, but will be transmitted to all future generations. There is no going back. Still, far from moderating his ambition, He is already planning the next step. confessed in the interview that their ultimate goal is to make up to 12 simultaneous genetic modifications in a single embryo to prevent cancer, HIV and cardiovascular diseases. “The children born will be much healthier and may live longer than us,” he says. For many scientists, that phrase sums up the problem: a totalizing promise based on a still immature technology. Science without borders. How does a scientist disqualified by his own country plan to execute this plan? The answer is a transnational structure that some experts describe as “guerilla science.” In China, He limits his work to human cell lines and experiments with mice and monkeys. In the United States, as revealed by South China Morning Postplans to operate – through his wife, businesswoman Cathy Tie – a laboratory in Austin (Texas), where private financing allows research with embryos discarded from in vitro fertilization. The final destination would be South Africa, a country that relaxed its ethical guidelines in 2024 and that, according to He, would be very interested in authorizing human trials. The financing of this network is as ambitious as it is opaque. While the Wall Street Journal points out that He refuses to reveal the identity of his sponsors, the SCMP reports that even Alternative avenues have been explored such as cryptocurrencies promoted by their environment to raise funds. The uncomfortable mirror of Silicon Valley. The most controversial part of He Jiankui’s speech is his frontal attack on the American technology elite. “Some Silicon Valley billionaires are pushing to improve IQ in babies. I think it’s a Nazi eugenic experiment,” stated in WIRED. However, the border between what He does and what is already happening in California is increasingly blurred. Startups like Nucleus Genomics or Orchid Health they do not edit DNAbut they do allow embryos to be selected based on genetic scores associated with intelligence, obesity or risk of Alzheimer’s. The technical difference is real; The underlying logic—optimizing the human being before birth—is eerily similar. While tycoons like Jeff Bezos and Peter Thiel invest billions in biotechnologies that promise to slow down or reverse aging, the human body has become in one more financial asset. He maintains that he edits to prevent disease, while Silicon Valley selects to optimize. For global ethics, both models raise the same fundamental question: who decides what “best” means? Science versus myth. There is an essential point that is often lost among promises and figures: DNA is not a destiny. Genetic predictions about intelligence or success explain only 5% to 10% of the real variability between people. Additionally, there is a critical technical risk: Analyzing a few cells from an embryo requires amplifying its DNA, a process that can introduce errors and lead to decisions based on flawed data. Behind … Read more

The key is not to sleep well, it is to wake up correctly.

Getting up in the morning is, sometimes, the greatest effort What a person does when they leave the warmth and comfort of their bed. Above all, when it was it’s raining and it’s cold. However, the first hour after opening your eyes marks the beginning of a day full of energy if used well. This natural moment of the body surpasses any rapid stimulus. Cortisol skyrockets, making it the perfect fuel for doing certain things that will make you lazy later. Of course, not waking up in the appropriate way can cause the rest of the day you crawl. The morning peak that activates the body. As and as he explained Stanford neuroscientist Andrew Huberman on the podcast Modern Wisdom“the peak of cortisol in the morning is essential. If it does not occur, the body responds with more stress later and it is difficult to regain calm in the afternoon.” OK to the studio carried out by a group of researchers from different universities in Germany, the United Kingdom and the United States, your body works like a well-tuned clock: from early morning, cortisol begins to rise to reach a certain level that causes you to wake up. Researchers from the US and Mexico discovered that this cortisol peak is maintained for about 45 minutes, in which it draws energy from the sugars stored in the liver and puts the brain in alert mode, ready to face whatever comes without that feeling groggy in the morning. If you take advantage of this peak to stretch, walk or do any physical activity during that time, it will be much easier for you. create new habitsbecause the mind retains that moment better and assimilates it in a positive way. Enhance awakening. According to the expert, cortisol levels when you wake up are even higher than those recorded when experiencing stressful situations. However, in this awakening contextis natural behavior and should even be enhanced because that peak is what allows energy to be accumulated for the rest of the day. “The morning routine of natural light and hydration prepares the brain and body for the day,” Huberman said. One of the neuroscientist’s recommendations is to expose yourself as much as possible in natural light during that first hour. Open the window, go out to the balcony or take a short walk. That exposure sends a signal to the brain and prepares it to leave the state of drowsiness and start your “day mode”. In addition, the expert recommends drinking a good glass of water to compensate for the hours without drinking and rehydrate the body, and then start some gentle stretches or walk for a few minutes. Huberman recommends delay the first coffee about 90 minutes, since caffeine can interrupt that natural regulation of cortisol levels. Disrupting sleep routines does not help. A investigation from the University of South Australia studied the impact of changes in circadian cycles in cortisol levels, finding evidence that changes in sleep schedules imbalanced cortisol levels upon awakening. This meant that either the participants they woke up in the middle of the night or ate at odd hours and that, when they had to do so, their cortisol levels were insufficient to bring the brain out of its state of drowsiness, being out of adjustment throughout the day. Therefore, maintain sleep schedules Regular exercise helps the body know when it is time to raise cortisol levels to begin the awakening phase and prepare the brain to face the rest of the day. Getting ready to sleep. In the same way that Huberman suggests a certain preparation to have a more efficient awakening, he also recommends taking some measures to face the end of the day. “For the last hours, you should do the opposite: darken the environment, avoid stimulants and limit hydration,” explained the neuroscientist. In this sense, the expert highlighted that exposure to screens alters that hormonal pattern that means that cortisol levels must be low to allow you to fall asleep and initiate what he called the “maximum reset”: achieving a phase of deep sleep in which the brain eliminates the metabolic waste it generates during the day. through the glymphatic system. “Conscious breathing and visualization, such as mentally walking through a well-known place, are powerful tools for calming the mind before sleep,” Huberman explained in his interview. In Xataka | Neuroscientists believe they have found the trick to solving the most complicated problems: taking a nap Image | Unsplash (Adrian Swancar)

a stock of billions of dollars

These are not easy times for the alcohol industry. And not only for the crossfire of the trade war, ups and downs of prices or the apparent loss of interest of Generation Z for drinking. As customers demand less whiskey, cognac and tequila, the giants of the sector have found themselves with a growing stock that some estimates already put at 22 billion dollars. Thousands and thousands of bottles that threaten to strain the finances of large manufacturers and (even worse) unleash a price war that clouds their future. “The accumulation of inventories is unprecedented,” warn. A huge “lake of liquor”. So recently described Financial Times the panorama that the large distillate manufacturers have encountered, giants of the sector that have their warehouses full of bottles that cannot be disposed of. To be exact, the newspaper claims that five of the titans of the industry that are listed (Diageo, Pernod Ricard, Campari, Brown Forman and Rémy Cointreau) have a stock of aged spirits valued at 22 billion. Click on the image to go to the tweet. Breaking schemes. If the figure seems high, it is because it is. Those $22 billion mark the highest level of stock in more than a decade and there are already those who warn that they paint a delicate picture. “The accumulation is unprecedented,” recognize FT Trevor Stirling, analyst at Bernstein. The most extreme case would be that of the French cognac manufacturer Rémy Cointreau, which according to the newspaper accumulates aged stocks worth 1.8 billion euros. Almost double its annual income and close to its global market capitalization. Is there more data? Yes. In recent years the percentage of mature stock over total net sales has increased clearly at Rémy, but also at Brown-Forman, Campari, Diageo and Pernord Ricard. For example, in the case of the British multinational Diageo, this ratio has clearly increased in just a few years: if in the fiscal year of 2022 it represented 34%, it is now 34%. 43%. The problem is not just the big manufacturers of Scotch whiskey, cognac and tequila. Data from the Tequila Regulatory Council show that at the end of 2023 the Mexican industry had a stock of 525 million liters of that popular distilled beverage. The figure (sum of the product in barrels or pending bottling) is almost equivalent to the country’s annual production. “Much more new liquor is distilled than is sold, and the stock begins to accumulate,” duck Bernstein. A ticking bomb. The accumulation of stock is not worrying only because of what it suggests to us about the past and current sales pace. It is especially so because of its implications for the future. With more barrels and bottles gathering dust in the warehouses of the big manufacturers there are those who already fear that a price war would break out, a pulse in the market that would aggravate the situation. For now, FT recalls that there are manufacturers who have chosen to hit the brakes in their factories. This is the case of Diageo, which has production suspended of whiskey in various factories, or from the bourbon producer Jim Bean (Suntory), which has done something similar with its main Kentucky distillery. The problem: often the aged drinks sector works for several years, so pausing its production today can compromise the supply in five years or a decade. What is the reason? To understand the current stock of the industry, it is necessary to understand several keys. For example, the fluctuations in demand in recent years and the forecasts with which manufacturers have worked. At the beginning of the pandemic, the sector registered an increase of distillate consumption in the US, which led to an increase in production. After the health crisis and with inflation as a backdrop, however, the market returned to normal. What’s more, the industry had to deal with new challenges that a priori have little to do with its business. The first is the trade war unleashed last year, a scenario in which the alcohol industry was not foreign. In fact, if Jim Bean considered suspending production at his main distillery it was precisely due to the increase in stock and the uncertainty generated by tariffs. Another key factor is that alcohol consumption (at least of certain types of alcohol) appears to be moderating as more people focus on their physical health and take weight loss medications, such as Wegovy or Ozempic. It is nothing exceptional if you take into account that in 2023 a study Walmart already warned that consumption of Ozempic was reducing food sales. The big question. Beyond these current factors, a key question for the industry hovers: Are we consuming less alcohol in general? Do we drink less than our parents and grandparents? And will the new generations on whom the sector will have to rely on in a couple of decades drink less? There is data that suggests this. The Our World in Data platform has developed a graph on per capita consumption that reflects that almost all the countries analyzed consume less alcohol than a few decades ago. It is not the only study that points in that direction. Another recent one from Gallup confirms that in the US consumption has fallen to its lowest level since at least 1930 and OECD tables They also show that many of their countries (not all) have seen how the intake of liters per person per year decreased between 2013 and 2023. There are those who already warns that the trend does not look like it will stop, fully affecting to the accounts of the distillate industry. Images | Paolo Bendandi (Unsplash), OECD and Our World in Data In Xataka | There is an age at which we should stop drinking alcohol forever. Neuroscience is clear why

Blue Origin’s space tourism numbers have been leaked and they are crazy

A few years ago I saw a Spanish civilian cross the Kármán line leaving our planet was a generational event. Today, space tourism is about to normalize what was extraordinary and we have the clearest example in Alberto Gutierreza 42-year-old businessman from Valladolid and founder of the platform Civitatis who this Thursday managed to be the fourth Spaniard to theoretically reach space. His story. He did it on board the NS-38 mission from Blue Origina flight of just ten minutes that takes off and lands in Texas, but which represents another milestone in the private space race and consolidates the profile of the “tourist-astronaut” with a high heritage behind him. Because the truth is that it is not something very economical. 10 minutes. Takeoff took place at 10:26 CST (16:26 Spanish peninsular time) from the Blue Origin Launch Site One in Van Horn, Texas. The ship used was, once again, the reusable New Shepard system, a rocket designed specifically for suborbital tourism. All this with a plan that has followed the “Swiss clock” script to which we are accustomed in these missions. At the moment of launch the ship’s engine accelerated until it exceeded the March speed 3, and when it was already at a good altitude, the capsule was undocked and continued to ascend up to 106 kilometers above sea level, exceeding the Kárman line which is located at 100 km altitude. Weightlessness. But the experience sought with this type of attraction is to experience the phenomenon of weightlessness for a few minutes. Specifically, there were 3 minutes in which Gutiérrez was able to unhook himself from his seat belt to observe the curvature of the Earth while he was literally floating in space. It hasn’t been cheap. Although Blue Origin maintains official secrecy about the dynamic prices of its tickets, the sector has quite clear figures. And to enjoy these three minutes of weightlessness you only have to pay $150,000 just for admission to reserve your seat. But it does not logically stop here, since industry sources and leaks Previous estimates place the total cost of the ticket at around one million dollars. A price that not only pays for experience, but also for status. More and more difficult. With this type of space excursions aimed at the richest on our planet, the truth is that an interesting debate opens up about the label of “astronaut.” Although technically the Kármán line has been crossed with this trip, the FAA modified its criteria in 2021 to narrow it down much more. In this case, it no longer provides commercial astronaut wings to space tourists, but opts for a simple registration on its website. That is why for the agency, being a passenger is not the same as being an operational crew, although surely for all those who participate here it is a great life experience that is undoubtedly spatial. It’s not the first. As we have said, with this flight, Alberto Gutiérrez puts his name on a very short list. Before him, only three Spaniards had crossed the space border: Pedro Duque, Michael López-Alegría and Jesús Calleja. Although it is clear that this is an experience that is quite limited to those people who have a large wealth and decide to invest it in a unique experience. Last minute surprise. The NS-38 mission has not been without logistical setbacks. The original crew of six underwent a change just three days before launch, as Andrew Yaffe had to retire due to illness on January 19, being replaced by Dr. Laura Stiles. And there was luck with this replacement, since its inclusion allowed the launch date to be maintained, which had a very limited launch window, in order to guarantee its safety. Images | POT In Xataka | Manufacturing materials to produce chips in space is not science fiction. It is a very real plan that is already underway

There are some that practice ‘partner exchange’ to avoid extinction

For decades, popular culture and a certain anthropocentric vision have projected the idea that the traditional family It was the most normal thing in the animal kingdom. However, biology has a habit of contradicting us and if we look Alaskan watersand specifically the belugas From Bristol Bay, monogamy is not only rare: it is evolutionarily inefficient. The study. It has had as its objective analyzing the DNA of hundreds of these cetaceans for more than a decade, and confirms what we could call, in human terms, a lifestyle “swinger” either polyamorous among these animals. Although this word is more for our daily life, since in a scientific way it is called polygynandryand it is the secret of these whales to stay genetically healthy and resilient. The myth of the “better half”. Choosing a life partner for whales is something that is not the norm in this case. To reach this conclusion, the researchers They didn’t just watch what they did.but carried out an exhaustive analysis of 623 genetic samples collected over 13 years in the Bristol Bay beluga population. And we are facing a very interesting population because it is geographically isolated and has about 2,000 individuals. What they found was a mating system where both males and females mate with multiple partners. There is no “alpha male” that monopolizes females (polygyny), nor females that have only one consort. It is a constant and strategic exchange. Stepbrothers everywhere. The definitive proof of this behavior is in the family trees that the study managed to reconstruct. When analyzing kinship, scientists came across a revealing fact: there were many half-siblings who shared a mother or father but not both. The fact that it is very difficult to find full siblings indicates that season after season, females do not repeat partners, but rather change. A strategy that is aimed at maximizing reproductive success, since otherwise a few males would dominate the genetics and cause less genetic diversity. ‘Swinger’ as an advantage. We might think that this behavior is chaotic, but it is actually a very sophisticated biological defense mechanism. And constantly mixing genes with different partners ensures greater variability in the offspring to avoid serious diseases such as those that historically occurred. we have had in the European monarchies. But the interesting thing is that it is a choice of the females who play an active role. In this case they are not passive, but actively choose the males to mate with to have great variability, possibly to ensure that their offspring have the best possible genetic combinations. Its longevity. One of the characteristics of this species is that it can last for many years, and that is why maintaining genetic diversity through polygynandry allows them to adapt to long-term changes in their ecosystem. And it is a finding that aligns with previous research, since a high diversity in the microbiome and population structure of these whales was already pointed out, but the mating system had never been confirmed. A genetic lifesaver. The most fascinating thing about this discovery is how it rewrites our understanding of cetacean sociality. We often assume that highly intelligent and social animals tend toward monogamy (as is the case with certain birds), but the reality is that belugas demonstrate that you can have a complex society, care for offspring, and at the same time have a promiscuous sex life for the good of the species. For conservationists, this is good news. Knowing that this population maintains high genetic diversity and avoids inbreeding itself means that they have better biological tools to cope with climate change and human pressure than other more “faithful” but genetically poorer species. Images | Todd Cravens In Xataka | Going to the mountains to go hiking is increasingly popular in Spain. And those who are suffering are the golden eagles

Anthropic has rewritten his 25,000-word “Constitution” for Claude. It is the manual for how AI should behave

Anthropic has published a completely renewed version of the so-called “Claude Constitution”. Yes friends, an AI also needs a constitution, or at least a series of documents that explain with total transparency what direction the company has decided to take with its AI tool. It is a way to save us trouble in the event that become aware. The document The question in question consists of 80 pages and nearly 25,000 words, and basically shows what values ​​Anthropic relies on to train its models and what they hope to achieve with it. Alluding to Asimov, it would be something like a broader and more complex version of his three laws of robotics. Why it is important. Anthropic carries a good time trying to differentiate from OpenAI, Google or xAI, wanting to position itself as the most ethical and safe alternative on the market. This Constitution is the centerpiece of their training method called “Constitutional AI”, where the model itself uses these principles to self-criticize and correct its responses during learning, instead of relying exclusively on human feedback. The document is not written for users or researchers: it is written for Claude. It was time to update. The first version of the Constitution, published in 2023, was a list of principles drawn from sources such as the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights or, as they mention from Fortune, from Apple’s terms of service. Now, according to Anthropic, they have taken a completely different approach: “To be good actors in the world, AI models like Claude need to understand why we want them to behave in certain ways, rather than simply specifying what we want them to do,” affirms the company in its statement. The new document is structured around four fundamental values, and the most interesting thing is that Claude must prioritize them in this order when they conflict: Be largely secure: Do not undermine human AI oversight mechanisms during this critical phase of development. Be broadly ethical: act honestly, according to good values, avoiding inappropriate, dangerous or harmful actions. Comply with Anthropic guidelines– Follow specific company instructions when relevant. Be genuinely helpful: benefit the operators and users with whom it interacts. The majority of the document is concerned with developing these principles in more detail. In the utility section, Anthropic describe to Claude as “a brilliant friend who also possesses the knowledge of a doctor, lawyer and financial advisor.” But it also sets absolute limits, called “hard constraints,” that Claude must never cross: not provide significant assistance for bioweapon attacks, not create malware that can cause serious harm, not assist in attacks on critical infrastructure such as power grids or financial systems, and not help “kill or incapacitate the vast majority of humanity,” among others. Consciousness. The most striking part of the document appears in the section titled “The Nature of Claude,” where Anthropic openly acknowledges its uncertainty about whether Claude could have “some kind of conscience or moral status.” “We are concerned about Claude’s psychological safety, sense of identity, and well-being, both for Claude’s own sake and because these qualities may influence his integrity, judgment, and safety,” they count from the company. The company claims to have an internal team dedicated to “model well-being” that examines whether advanced systems could be sentient. Amanda Askell, the Anthropic philosopher who led the development of this new Constitution, explained told The Verge that the company doesn’t want to be “completely dismissive” about this issue, because “people wouldn’t take it seriously either if you just said ‘we’re not even open to this, we don’t investigate it, we don’t think about it.’” The document also raises complex moral dilemmas for Claude. For example, it states that “just as a human soldier might refuse to shoot peaceful protesters, or an employee might refuse to violate antitrust law, Claude should refuse to assist with actions that concentrate power in illegitimate ways. This is true even if the request comes from Anthropic itself.” And now what. Anthropic has published the entire Constitution under a Creative Commons CC0 1.0 license, meaning anyone can freely use it without asking permission. The company promises to maintain an updated version on its website, considering it to be a “living document and a continuous work in progress.” Cover image | Andrea De Santis and Anthropic In Xataka | Company CEOs say AI is saving them a day of work a week. Employees say otherwise

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