Thursday, July 02, 2026

 

All members of Venezuelan nu-metal band Van Der Dijs confirmed dead in devastating earthquakes

All members of Venezuelan nu-metal band Van Der Dijs confirmed dead in devastating earthquakes
Copyright Instagram screenshot

By David Mouriquand
Published on

The band Van Der Dijs were in their rehearsal space at the time of the natural disaster.

All four members of Venezuelan nu-metal band Van Der Dijs have died following the devastating earthquakes that struck the country on 24 June.

According to Venezuelan outlet Últimas Noticias, vocalist Manuel van Der Dijs, guitarist Gabriel Gómez, bassist Xander Hernández and drummer Abraham Foucault were killed after the Costamar II building where they were rehearsing in the coastal state of La Guaira collapsed.

La Guaira has been among the areas worst affected by the disaster. Their bodies were later recovered from the rubble by rescue teams.

Van Der Dijs were an emerging nu-metal band in Venezuela’s rock scene. They formed in 2024 and released their first single, 'Nemesis', later the same year. They released more singles, the latest being this year’s '15 Minutos' – released just one month ago

They had played a sold-out show at the Centro de Arte Moderno in La Castellana, Caracas, on 19 June, and their official Instagram page was promoting upcoming dates around the country.

The earthquakes that hit Venezuela registered magnitudes of 7.2 and 7.5 and caused widespread destruction across the country. They have left Venezuela facing a major humanitarian crisis. Hospitals are overwhelmed and rescue teams are continuing to search through collapsed buildings.

More than 2,290 people have been confirmed dead, with thousands more injured and many still missing.

D.E.I.

California to institute Bruce Lee Day, first for a Chinese-American in state history

A cardboard cutout of Bruce Lee at Oracle Park before a baseball game between the San Francisco Giants and the San Diego Padres in San Francisco, 30 July, 2020
Copyright AP Photo

By Gavin Blackburn
Published on

In the 1960s, Lee found work in Hollywood, notably as Kato in the TV series "The Green Hornet," but studios wanted him to play racist stereotypes and paid him less than his white counterparts.

Martial arts icon Bruce Lee, who was born in San Francisco, will become the first Chinese American in California history with an annual namesake day.

Governor Gavin Newsom signed a law on Tuesday afternoon officially designating 17 May as Bruce Lee Day, according to the office of state Assembly member Matt Haney, who represents San Francisco.

An 18-year-old Lee returned to San Francisco on 17 May 1959, after spending his childhood in Hong Kong.

Lee’s daughter, Shannon, who is CEO of the Bruce Lee Foundation, said the honour is a testament to her father's enduring legacy as a bridge between cultures.

“From young people who found confidence and possibility in his philosophy, to families who finally saw themselves represented on screen, to athletes who still draw on his teachings of discipline and inner strength, his reach is profound," she said in a statement.

Haney called Lee the epitome of the best of California.

California Governor Gavin Newsom delivers his final state budget plan at the Capitol Annex Swing Space in Sacramento, 14 May, 2026
California Governor Gavin Newsom delivers his final state budget plan at the Capitol Annex Swing Space in Sacramento, 14 May, 2026 AP Photo

“At a time when Asian Americans were too often absent from or stereotyped on screen, Bruce Lee helped generations see themselves represented with strength and dignity,” he said in a statement.

The foundation and various Asian American organisations hope Lee will be celebrated every year with voluntary commemorative activities around the state such as cultural exhibits, public events and classroom lessons.

Born in 1940 to Chinese parents who were touring with an opera, Lee was allowed to have birthright citizenship.

A few months later, the family returned to Hong Kong where Lee became a child actor and began learning Chinese kung fu.

He moved back to the US in 1959 and enrolled in the University of Washington in Seattle two years later. He dropped out and threw himself into practicing and teaching martial arts.

Soldiers stand next to an oversized food menu with images featuring Bruce Lee in Rio de Janeiro, 21 August, 2017
Soldiers stand next to an oversized food menu with images featuring Bruce Lee in Rio de Janeiro, 21 August, 2017 AP Photo

In the 1960s, Lee found work in Hollywood, most notably as Kato in the TV series “The Green Hornet,” but studios wanted him to play racist stereotypes and paid him less than his white counterparts.

He pivoted back to Hong Kong and soon became a megastar of martial arts flicks, including “The Big Boss” and “Fist of Fury.” Lee died in 1973 at 32 after an allergic reaction to pain medication.

Lee's name and likeness remain popular. A treatment for a proposed TV action series he wrote inspired the HBO Max show “Warrior.”

 

20 million children use AI and adopt it faster than adults, UNICEF says

FILE - A child holds an iPhone at an Apple store on Sept. 25, 2015 in Chicago. (AP Photo/Kiichiro Sato, File)
Copyright Copyright 2018 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

By Una Hajdari
Published on


New UNICEF analysis finds children are adopting AI faster than adults, with millions turning to it for homework help and, in some cases, personal advice — as safeguards for young users lag badly behind.

At least 20 million children across 10 countries have used artificial intelligence, according to new analysis from UNICEF, with many young people adopting the technology far faster than adults.

The UN children's agency said children are outpacing adults "by adopting it at rates more than three times faster," based on data gathered from the 10 countries surveyed.

The findings show more than 2 million children or one in ten said they turn to AI "for advice on things that worry them." An estimated 13 million children reported using AI tools to support their learning and homework.

UNICEF said the rapid uptake is running ahead of efforts to regulate the technology, leaving children particularly exposed.

"Children are more exposed to AI systems — including how they are designed, their underlying business models, and how their own data is used — yet have far less power to avoid or challenge them," the agency said, adding that "most AI governance does not prioritise children."

The organisation also warned that the long-term effects of AI on young people remain largely unknown.

"Evidence about its role in cognitive development, emotional dependency, and exposure to harm is just emerging," UNICEF said. "In effect, a generation is growing up inside a global experiment."

Children themselves have expressed unease about the technology.

According to the analysis, a third of children in the surveyed countries said they were worried about AI being used "to scam and trick others, or spread misinformation," while a quarter feared having their images or videos manipulated into sexually explicit deepfakes.

UNICEF said many AI systems are reaching children with inadequate protections, describing safety as "seemingly, an afterthought."

Calls for action ahead of UN dialogue

The findings were released ahead of the first Global Dialogue on AI Governance at the United Nations.

UNICEF is urging governments, the private sector and other partners to embed children's rights, particularly the right to safety and protection, into global AI governance.

The agency's recommendations include investing in research into AI's effects on children's development and well-being, especially the risks.

UNICEF described the current period as "a decisive moment," saying that "the choices made about AI now will shape children's safety, privacy, well-being, and their equal access to opportunities for decades to come."

 

How NASA, Microsoft and the EU use AI to speed up post-quake rescues in Venezuela

These satellite images provided by Vantor show buildings in Caraballeda, Venezuela, on 28 December 2025 (left) and on Friday 26 June 2026.
Copyright AP Photo

By Christina Thykjaer
Published on


Artificial intelligence is now a key ally for emergency crews. Space agencies, tech firms and international bodies use satellite images and AI to map the areas hardest hit by the quake.

As rescue teams continue to search for survivors in the rubble of the twin earthquakes that struck Venezuela, another race is under way from space. Space agencies, tech companies and international organisations have activated a network of artificial intelligence and geospatial analysis tools to identify, within hours, the areas most likely to have been devastated and to help direct emergency resources where they are needed most.

One of the key players is NASA, which has activated its disaster response programme together with researchers at Oregon State University. Their task is to analyse radar images captured before and after the quake to detect abrupt changes in the ground and in buildings. Using this system, scientists estimate that nearly 59,000 buildings may have been damaged or destroyed, a preliminary figure that helps to steer the initial rescue efforts.

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However, those images would not be possible without the European Copernicus programme. The Sentinel-1 satellites, operated by the European Union and the European Space Agency, supply the high-resolution radar imagery that makes it possible to measure ground movements of just a few centimetres and to spot buildings whose shape has changed after the earthquake. That information is the raw material on which the artificial intelligence algorithms work.

Microsoft has joined that effort through its AI for Good lab. The company has developed computer vision models capable of automatically analysing thousands of satellite images to classify buildings according to the likelihood that they have been damaged. Rather than replacing teams on the ground, these models help set priorities and highlight which neighbourhoods should be inspected first.

All that information ultimately reaches those who need it thanks to the United Nations Centre for Humanitarian Data (HDX), the platform where Microsoft publishes its damage maps so that governments, NGOs and rescue teams can consult them almost in real time. This way, different organisations work from the same database and can better coordinate the humanitarian response.

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Experts stress that none of these tools replaces inspection on the ground. The maps generated by artificial intelligence provide probabilistic estimates, not a definitive diagnosis. But when thousands of buildings may have been affected and every hour counts in the search for survivors, having an almost instant snapshot of the disaster can make the difference between arriving in time and arriving too late.

 

Window to control AI is closing and it could widen inequality, UN experts warn

United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres speaks about the release of a U.N. report on artificial intelligence during a news conference at U.N. headquarters, July 1
Copyright AP Photo/Jason DeCrow

By Pascale Davies
Published on


UN warns AI could widen the gap between rich and poor countries in a new report.

The development of artificial intelligence may worsen global inequality and the window for global governance to remedy that is closing fast, according to a new report from the United Nations.

The findings come from a preliminary report released this week by the UN's Independent International Scientific Panel on Artificial Intelligence, a body of 40 experts drawn from around the world and established by the General Assembly in 2025.

“The more AI advances without shared rules, the less say governments and people will have in the outcome,” said António Guterres, the UN secretary general, at a press conference on Wednesday.

“Our message to governments is simple: do not wait … the science is here. We can no longer say we did not know what we do.”

What did the report find?

The report said that the industry is moving at an exceptional speed and that generative AI can now write software, analyse huge datasets, produce lifelike images and video, and assist in scientific discovery.

It said agentic AI, where AI agents can complete complex tasks with minimal involvement, is going even further.

According to the panel, the difficulty of tasks these systems can handle has been roughly doubling every few months. As AI grows more autonomous, the panel warns it could become increasingly difficult to monitor and control without stronger safeguards in place.

The report flagged the growing risks, including AI being used to generate sexual abuse material and explicit deepfakes, with women and children disproportionately targeted.

It also noted AI is making disinformation more convincing and harder to detect, which the panel says is eroding public trust and democratic discourse.

Cybersecurity is also at risk, with criminals using AI for fraud and social engineering as well as being used for harmful thinking in vulnerable users, contributing to mental health crises, including suicide.

The report also noted that the data centres powering AI are also a growing source of greenhouse gas emissions.

The AI benefits

But the report was not all doom and gloom. Some of the benefits it noted were AI models mapping the structure of over 200 million proteins, speeding up drug discovery, vaccine research and work on antibiotic resistance.

It also said the technology is helping flag food insecurity before it turns into a full-blown crisis and broadening access to education, mental health support and tools for people with disabilities.

An uneven playing field

AI is also not being evenly distributed across the globe. The report estimates that the United States controls roughly three-quarters of the computing capacity behind the world's leading AI supercomputers, with China holding around 15%.

It means the two countries have around 90% of that capacity between them, with the most advanced AI models being built by companies based in those same two nations.

Developing countries, though, lack the talent, infrastructure and funding to build or audit the AI systems they use.

The panel warned that without effort to close this gap, AI risks widening global inequality.

Regulation struggles

When it comes to putting in place AI regulation, the report said there was an "evidence dilemma" in that lawmakers need solid data before writing effective rules, but AI often evolves past that data before it is even compiled.

More than 40 AI governance frameworks now exist worldwide, but the panel describes them as fragmented, inconsistent and rarely tested for whether they actually work.

Much of the safety testing that does happen is still conducted by the same companies building the technology, which raises questions about independence.

The panel calls for stronger third-party evaluation, more international coordination and shared standards, alongside investment so countries can build the expertise and infrastructure needed to govern AI on their own terms.

The panel's findings will feed into the UN Global Dialogue on AI Governance, set to open in Geneva on July 6, 2026, where member states will debate coordinated international approaches to managing the technology.

STATE CAPITALI$M 

OpenAI offers the US government a 5% ownership stake

FILE - Sam Altman, co-founder and chief executive officer, OpenAI, testifies before a Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation. May 8, 2025, Washington.
Copyright Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved

By Una Hajdari
Published on

Sam Altman reportedly wants to hand the US government a stake in OpenAI worth tens of billions, and he wants Silicon Valley's other giants to do the same.

OpenAI has offered the US government a 5% stake in the company, the Financial Times reported on Thursday, as the ChatGPT maker tries to head off growing political heat in Washington.

That slice would be worth around $42.6 billion (€37.4bn), a significant sum even for a company as flush as OpenAI. The figure is based on the $852 billion (€749bn) price tag investors put on the firm just three months ago, when OpenAI raised fresh funds in March.

According to the reporting, Sam Altman wants other big American AI players — Anthropic, Google and Meta among them — to hand over a similar 5% cut too, effectively creating a government-owned slice of the entire US AI industry.

It is not yet clear whether any of them would agree.

Altman's reported claims form a continuity with statements he has made in the past, where he pitched a "public wealth fund" that would invest in AI firms and pay out the profits to ordinary Americans.

The idea is inspired by Alaska's oil dividend scheme, which shares state oil revenue with residents each year.

Rival Anthropic has floated something similar, a "digital dividend" funded by taxing the AI sector.

Altman has already discussed the plan with US President Donald Trump, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent.

He has also spoken to Senator Bernie Sanders, who thinks the offer does not go nearly far enough.

Sanders wants a one-off 50% tax on the shares of OpenAI, Anthropic and xAI, and has dismissed Altman's proposal as a watered-down alternative to real public ownership.

Trump has acknowledged the talks but stopped short of confirming anything has been agreed upon.

Altman first raised the idea of giving Washington a stake in early 2025, and talks have rumbled on behind the scenes for more than a year.

CANADA DAY IS ALSO

International Joke Day: What is the funniest joke in the world (courtesy of Monty Python)?

Monty Python's Flying Circus
Copyright BBC - YouTube screenshot

By David Mouriquand
Published on


In 1969, the world was introduced to a joke so good, so funny, so ruthlessly powerful that anyone who read or heard it would die from laughter...

Today is International Joke Day, the annual celebration which encourages people to start the second half of the year with a smile on their faces. Especially when laughter can be in short supply when reading news headlines.

Those who choose to celebrate can either do so by telling a joke to a friend or co-worker, or by simply watching some comedy to lift their spirits. Some may choose to research the first joke ever told...

According to Guinness World Records, it’s been traced back to a Sumerian proverb dating from 1900 BC. It goes: "Something which has never occurred since time immemorial; a young woman did not fart in her husband's lap."

Charming - and shows that toilet humour was just as popular back then as it is now.

For us here at Euronews Culture, we can’t think about the art of the joke without being reminded of the funniest joke in the world, courtesy of Monty Python.

It was unleashed in the very first episode of the comedy troupe’s show Monty Python’s Flying Circus, which aired for the first time on 5 October 1969.

Shot in a quasi-documentary style, the sketch “Joke Warfare” (or “Killer Joke”) revolves around a gag so funny, so ruthlessly powerful that all who read or hear it promptly die from laughter.

It is created by Ernest Scribbler (played by Michael Palin), who writes the joke on a piece of paper, reads it to himself, and dies laughing. Hearing the commotion, his mother (Eric Idle) finds her son and also immediately dies laughing after reading what she thought was a suicide note.

Monty Python's And Now For Something Completely Different
Monty Python's And Now For Something Completely Different Columbia Pictures - YouTube screenshot

The joke is eventually contained, weaponised by the British army, and deployed against Germany during World War II.

The army does so by translating the joke into German in “joke-proof conditions” - with each translator working on only one word of the joke for their own safety. One translator saw two words of the joke and had to be hospitalised for several weeks.

British soldiers running through the fields, telling the German-translated version of the killer joke
British soldiers running through the fields, telling the German-translated version of the killer joke Columbia Pictures - YouTube screenshot

We witness its devastating effect - whether on a hapless British soldier / test subject, or on the bandaged German soldiers convulsing with laugher in a field hospital...

Monty Python - And Now For Something Completely Different
Monty Python - And Now For Something Completely Different Columbia Pictures - YouTube screenshot

We also learn that the Germans attempted a counter-joke.

The Pythons illustrated this by real footage of Adolf Hitler from Leni Riefenstahl’s film Triumph of the Will, in which the Nazi dictator delivers a speech with the following subtitles: "My dog has no nose" / "How does he smell?" (said by the crowd) / "Awful".

It was no match for the British killer joke.

Another Nazi attempt can be heard over the radio: "Zher were zwie peanuts walking down der strasse, und one was assaulted... peanut. Ho ho ho."

This too did not have the desired effect.

The sketch ends in 1950, when we learn that countries have agreed to a joke warfare ban at the Geneva Convention. The last copy of the killer joke is sealed under a monument, which bears the inscription “To the unknown joke”.

Monty Python's Flying Circus
Monty Python's Flying Circus BBC - YouTube screenshot

Throughout the absurdist sketch, the ultimate punchline is that the joke is never revealed to the audience. At least, not the English version.

WARNING: If you’re a German speaker, this article may become hazardous. Proceed carefully.

We jest, as the German translation of the unheard English killer gag is made up of meaningless German-sounding gibberish.

It goes like this: “Wenn ist das Nunstück git und Slotermeyer? Ja! Beiherhund das Oder die Flipperwaldt gersput!”

Any attempt to make heads or tails of it is the ultimate fool’s errand, and will probably break any translation software. But in case you’re tenacious about these things, it can be literally reduced to: “When is the ??? and ??? Yes! Something about a dog and the ???

What did you expect from the surreal masters of unfiltered silliness?

Terry Gilliam
Terry Gilliam Euronews Culture - David Mouriquand

Euronews Culture caught up with ex-Python Terry Gilliam three years ago at the Festival Lumière in Lyon, where he told us that Monty Python may not be able to do their brand of comedy in modern times.

"People are losing their sense of humour, and that, to me, is probably the most important sense," he said. "Sense of touch is very important, sense of taste also – but sense of humour is more important. You get to the point where people are frightened to laugh. ‘Oh, no, you’re making fun of somebody!’ No, I’m making fun of humanity, and we are an absurd species of creatures."

He added: "We are funny because we've got such pretentions, and we fall on our faces so constantly. Make jokes about it! It keeps life interesting."

Check out our full interview with Terry Gilliam here. And keep life interesting with a joke, today of all days. Who knows? Maybe that salted peanut one may find a chuckling audience.

The much-missed Graham Chapman
The much-missed Graham Chapman Screenshot BBC - X

Happy International Joke Day.