-
Assefa wins London Marathon in women's-only world record time
-
Superstar galloper Ka Ying Rising storms to 20th straight win
-
Austria's Wiesberger wins first DP World Tour title in 1,792 days
-
Cummins hails teen wonder Sooryavanshi as 'my new favourite player'
-
New fighting in Mali's Kidal between army and rebels
-
Chernobyl refugee town welcomes Ukraine's conflict displaced
-
World leaders react to Washington gala shooting
-
Zelensky accuses Russia of 'nuclear terrorism' on Chernobyl anniversary
-
Coach says 'glimmer of hope' for imperilled Moana Pasifika
-
'I've studied assassinations': Trump muses on reasons for latest shooting
-
What we know about the Trump press gala shooting
-
Al Ahli made to 'suffer' in winning Asian Champions League: coach
-
India plugs oil gap as Middle East supplies sink
-
Trump evacuated as shooter opens fire at Washington gala
-
'Get down!' Panic and chaos at glitzy media gala
-
Timberwolves' Edwards, DiVincenzo injured in playoff win over Nuggets
-
T'Wolves shake off key injuries to beat Nuggets for 3-1 series lead
-
Japan's Machida had 'mental pressure' in Champions League final loss
-
US Fed set to hold rates steady again on cost hikes from Mideast war
-
Trump evacuated as shooter opens fire at Washington gala event
-
Exiled Tibetans to elect government in vote condemned by China
-
Exiled Tibetans elect government in vote condemned by China
-
Japan inflation cools demand for vending machine drinks
-
Badminton eyes 'next generation' with new scoring system
-
Acid attacks highlight growing danger for Indonesian activists
-
Loud bangs and a Trump evacuation: chaos at correspondents' dinner
-
Shots fired, Trump evacuated unhurt from press dinner in Washington
-
TotalEnergies refinery working full tilt to keep France fuelled
-
Eurovision, venerable institution where art meets politics
-
Rampant Gilgeous-Alexander fuels Thunder, Magic and Knicks win
-
Shots reportedly fired, Trump evacuated from press dinner in Washington
-
East Jerusalem residents anguished as homes demolished to make way for biblical park
-
The rescuers of Khartoum: How to keep a city alive in war
-
Hurricanes lament looming loss of four-try winger Fineanganofo
-
Bomb attack on Colombia highway kills 14 ahead of election
-
Boston Red Sox fire coach Alex Cora
-
Highway bomb attack kills 10 ahead of Colombia election
-
Rampant Gilgeous-Alexander fuels Thunder win, Magic hold off Pistons
-
Korda's lead shrinks to five at LPGA Chevron
-
Favored Renegade draws inside post for Kentucky Derby
-
Barcelona on brink of La Liga triumph, Atletico build confidence
-
Trump cancels Pakistan talks trip, says Iran war on hold
-
Atletico build confidence before Arsenal but Barrios hurt
-
Reiss edges Wiley for Drake title in year's best outdoor mile
-
Magic hold off Pistons for 2-1 series lead
-
Trump orders new, blue surface for Washington's Reflecting Pool
-
Guardiola hails 'extraordinary' Man City reaction to make FA Cup history
-
Arteta in red card rant after Arsenal regain top spot
-
Jihadists, Tuareg rebels, claim attacks across Mali
-
Cummins back as Hyderabad overcome Sooryavanshi's IPL century
Zuckerbergs put AI at heart of pledge to cure diseases
The Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, a nonprofit launched by Mark Zuckerberg and his wife aimed at curing all disease, on Thursday announced it was restructuring to focus its efforts on using artificial intelligence to achieve that goal.
The philanthropic mission created in 2016 by the Meta co-founder and his spouse, Priscilla Chan, said that its scientific teams will now be centralized in an organization dubbed Biohub.
"This is a pivotal moment in science, and the future of AI-powered scientific discovery is starting to come into view," Biohub said in a blog post.
"We believe that it will be possible in the next few years to create powerful AI systems that can reason about and represent biology to accelerate science."
Biohub envisions AI helping advance ways to detect, prevent and cure diseases, according to the post.
The mission includes trying to model the human immune system, potentially opening a door to "engineering human health."
"We believe we're on the cusp of a scientific revolution in biology -- as frontier artificial intelligence and virtual biology give scientists new tools to understand life at a fundamental level," Biohub said in the post.
The first investment announced by the Zuckerbergs when the initiative debuted was for the creation of a Biohub in San Francisco where researchers, scientists and others could work to build tools to better study and understand diseases.
Shortly after it was established, the initiative bought a Canadian startup which uses AI to quickly read and comprehend scientific papers and then provide insights to researchers.
"Our multidisciplinary teams of scientists and engineers have built incredible technologies to observe, measure and program biology," Biohub said of its progress.
Meta is among the big tech firms that have been pouring billions of dollars into data centers and more in a race to lead the field of AI.
D.Sawyer--AMWN