Última hora
ARاختراق طبي: تحديد مؤشر مبكر لالتهاب الأمعاءARرونالدو يرد على الانتقادات بتصريحات وصور عبر إنستغرامARميدو يتمنى رؤية محمد صلاح في روما الموسم المقبلARSyria rejects Trump's call to intervene in Lebanon against Hezbollah, Israel dismisses itARتسمم 25 سائحًا بالكلور في فندق بتركياARتشغيل أولى شحنات الترانزيت السككي المشترك من العراق إلى أفغانستان عبر كرمانشاهARتحذيرات طبية من مخاطر الحرارة الشديدة خلال كأس العالم 2026ARتركيا تودع كأس العالم بلا أهداف وسط دموع وخيبة أملARمنتخبات مصر والعراق تستعد لمواجهات كأس العالم 2026ARوزير الدفاع الإيطالي: صناعة الدفاع الأوروبية تواجه تحدي الزمنARاختراق طبي: تحديد مؤشر مبكر لالتهاب الأمعاءARرونالدو يرد على الانتقادات بتصريحات وصور عبر إنستغرامARميدو يتمنى رؤية محمد صلاح في روما الموسم المقبلARSyria rejects Trump's call to intervene in Lebanon against Hezbollah, Israel dismisses itARتسمم 25 سائحًا بالكلور في فندق بتركياARتشغيل أولى شحنات الترانزيت السككي المشترك من العراق إلى أفغانستان عبر كرمانشاهARتحذيرات طبية من مخاطر الحرارة الشديدة خلال كأس العالم 2026ARتركيا تودع كأس العالم بلا أهداف وسط دموع وخيبة أملARمنتخبات مصر والعراق تستعد لمواجهات كأس العالم 2026ARوزير الدفاع الإيطالي: صناعة الدفاع الأوروبية تواجه تحدي الزمن
Newsgather

siblings

Estable24 noticias16 fuentesÚltima actualización: 16 sa önce

Últimas noticias

Taiwan's Ministry of Justice Proposes Civil Code Amendments to Abolish Siblings' Forced Share
En desarrollo
Law·03.06.2026Resumen IA

Taiwan's Ministry of Justice Proposes Civil Code Amendments to Abolish Siblings' Forced Share

Taiwan's Ministry of Justice has proposed amendments to the Civil Code's inheritance provisions, aiming to abolish the "forced share" for siblings. The changes also introduce a "special contribution" system to recognize those who provided care or significantly contributed to the deceased's assets, thereby strengthening testamentary freedom and ensuring fairness for caregivers.

自由时报
Why human minds will stay special even as AI advances
NOTICIA
03.05.2026Resumen IA

Why human minds will stay special even as AI advances

Princeton professor Tom Griffiths argues that human intelligence will remain special despite AI advances because our cognitive abilities evolved in response to specific biological constraints – finite lifespans, limited brain capacity, and communication through speech. While AI systems can process more data and scale their capabilities, they lack the breadth of human experience and struggle with tasks humans find simple. Griffiths contends that intelligence isn't a single scale like height, but rather encompasses many different ways of being smart, and AI will ultimately be better at some things and worse at others rather than universally superhuman.

G
Guardian Tech
United Utilities shares surge 11% as Ofwat settlement proves more generous than expected
NOTICIA
30.04.2026Resumen IA

United Utilities shares surge 11% as Ofwat settlement proves more generous than expected

United Utilities share price jumped 11% after the water company announced an £800m share placing with Future Fund and Atlas as cornerstone investors. Ofwat's regulatory settlement a year ago has proven more generous than initially thought, particularly for companies not incurring heavy pollution fines. UU now targets 10-11% return on equity and seeks to spend an additional £2.5bn on infrastructure, potentially adding £10 to household bills. Severn Trent rose 7% in sympathy, with both companies at all-time highs.

G
Guardian Business
21-Year-Old Chinese Man Quits College Exam to Support Seven Siblings After Parents Have Six Children
NOTICIA
28.04.2026Resumen IA

21-Year-Old Chinese Man Quits College Exam to Support Seven Siblings After Parents Have Six Children

Sun Pan, a 21-year-old from Shaoyang, Hunan province, abandoned his chance to retake China's college entrance exam to work selling pork and support his six younger siblings. His family includes an 18-year-old sister with a disabled arm from a childhood fall, an infant brother born this year with Down syndrome, and grandparents including a paralyzed grandfather. The story captured national attention in April.

S
SCMP Economy
New Canadian Law Opens Easier Path to Citizenship for Americans with Canadian Grandparents
En desarrollo
Política·23.04.2026Resumen IA

New Canadian Law Opens Easier Path to Citizenship for Americans with Canadian Grandparents

A new Canadian law effective December 15 has made it dramatically easier for Americans with Canadian grandparents to obtain citizenship, prompting a surge in applications and overwhelming immigration lawyers on both sides of the border. Americans with Canadian-born grandparents can now claim citizenship through their lineage, with many viewing it as an escape route amid U.S. political uncertainty.

S
SCMP Economy