In today’s news, Japan helps alleviate food insecurity in Madagascar, Danish researchers urge sustainability as humanity’s resource use exceeds Earth’s yearly limits, international team of scientists develop solution to efficiently transform plastic waste into gasoline, real estate investment firm gives multimillion-dollar gift to Singaporean university to support service-learning course offerings, United Arab Emirates celebrates science and technology education milestone in pursuit of gender balance, United States’ first vegan butcher shop appears at state fair before official reopening, and Argentina’s wildlife rescue efforts succeed as animal-people freed from captivity and returned to the wild.
It’s a wonderful day to enjoy a vegan meal with friends and family. Before you do, here is an important tip on how to protect against cyberattacks. Google has issued an urgent warning to its 1.8 billion Gmail users about a sophisticated cyberattack. Hackers are exploiting AI through a method called “indirect prompt injection”, hiding malicious instructions in emails or invites that trick Google’s Gemini assistant into exposing sensitive data. This makes the attack hard to detect since it can happen without you clicking links or opening attachments. To protect yourself, always enable two-factor authentication, which adds a vital extra step if your password is compromised. Use strong, unique passwords that aren’t reused across sites. Stay alert to unexpected emails, calls, or messages, especially those asking for urgent action. Regularly review your account with Google’s Security Checkup tool and report any suspicious activity right away.
Let’s keep the energy kind and the laughs light with today’s joke. This one is called “Putting Your Man to Work.”
Two women went to the outlet mall and spent the entire morning as well as afternoon shopping. Finally done, they entered the parking lot. They noticed a sea of cars which stretched endlessly in every direction.
“This is like trying to find a needle in a haystack!”
Just then, a car horn beeped in the distance.
“Oh! That’s mine.”
“Lucky! I wish I had a gadget like that to help me find my car.”
“Actually... that’s my husband.”
?!
And now we have a heartline in Aulacese (Vietnamese), from Chiêu An in Âu Lạc, also known as Vietnam