Anthropic's Olah says AI must be guided from outside Big Tech

VATICAN CITY, May 25 (Reuters) - Anthropic co-founder Chris Olah said on Monday ‌that the development ofartificial ‌intelligencecannot be left solely to technology companies, urging ​greater oversight from religious leaders, governments and civil society.

Reuters

Speaking in the Vatican at the presentation of Pope Leo's first ‌encyclical on artificial ⁠intelligence, Olah said there was "a real possibility" that AI will ⁠displace human labor "at very large scale".

"If that happens, supporting those displaced will be ​a moral ​imperative of historic ​proportions," he said, ‌sitting alongside the pope.

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He added that companies like his operated under strong commercial, geopolitical and personal pressures that can be at odds with the broader interests ‌of society.

"Every frontier AI ​lab ... operates inside a ​set of ​incentives and constraints that can ‌sometimes conflict with doing ​the right ​thing," he said, adding that even well-intentioned researchers remain influenced by those ​forces.

Olah said ‌this made outside scrutiny essential.

(Reporting by ​Giselda Vagnoni and Joshua McElwee; Editing ​by Crispian Balmer)

Anthropic's Olah says AI must be guided from outside Big Tech

VATICAN CITY, May 25 (Reuters) - Anthropic co-founder Chris Olah said on Monday ‌that the development ofartificial ‌intelligencecannot ...
After Cheek Filler, Veneers and a Boob Job That Made Her Sick, This Mom, 26, Is Now ‘Reversing the Damage’ (Exclusive)

Tilly Whitfeld is “reversing the damage” of her cosmetic procedures after getting cheek filler, veneers, breast implants and more

People Tilly Whitfeld.Credit: Tilly Whitfeld/Instagram (2)

NEED TO KNOW

  • She underwent her first procedure at age 18 after her dentist recommended veneers when she was only 14

  • “Society has an ever-changing version of perfection. I jumped to the next best thing to attempt to like how I looked and hope others would too," Whitfeld tells PEOPLE

A young mom is looking back on her cosmetic procedures.

Tilly Whitfeld, 26, of Sydney, Australia, is opening up about “reversing the damage” of her cosmetic procedures after getting cheek filler, veneers, breast implants and more.

She underwent her first procedure at age 18 after her dentist recommended veneers when she was only 14.

“Society has an ever-changing version of perfection,” Whitfeld, who starred onBig Brotherin 2021, tells PEOPLE. “I jumped to the next best thing to attempt to like how I looked and hope others would too. I went on reality TV very young and was exposed to criticism at 20.”

“Having every piece of your face and body commented on definitely created a deep-rooted insecurity,” she continues.

Tilly Whitfeld.Credit: Tilly Whitfeld/Instagram

Whitfeld has been candid about her experience on Instagram, where she has over 137K followers. Shesharedphotos of her procedures on March 29, writing, “Things that I regret doing to my body now that my frontal lobe has developed.”

“Gosh it’s been a wild ride 🤪 thankfully found a partner who screwed my head on and a naturopath who steered me in the right direction,” she captioned the post.

The content creator made asimilar poston May 17 with the caption, “Things I regret doing to my body and face now that I’m someone’s mum.” She added that she will “never stop sharing this message.”

“Let the consequences of my actions be your lesson,” Whitfeld continued.

Both posts have received support from her followers, who have thanked her for her transparency.  “Love the openness and honesty,” wrote one, while another said, “You're teaching and touching many.”

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Tilly Whitfeld.Credit: Tilly Whitfeld/Instagram

In the first post, Whitfeld said sheregretted her tattooed freckles, lips and eyebrows, as well as her breast implants, cheek filler and veneers. Her second post included additional tattoos and her belly button piercing.

She tells PEOPLE that she started to regret her past choices after her breast implants made her “very ill.”

“This was the turning point. I did research and realized the long- and short-term implications of what I’d done to my body and how it could begin to impact me. I begin to get very sick. I began to remove my tattoos, had filler dissolved and booked my explant,” she says.

Now, Whitfeld is on a mission to reverse more of her procedures.

Tilly Whitfeld.Credit: Tilly Whitfeld/Instagram

“Besides fake tan, hair dye and extensions, everything more ‘permanent,' I attempted to remove," she says.

But the process has not been easy. Whitfeld, who welcomed her first son in January, says, “Tattoos take a very long time to laser off, my filler migrated and could probably do with one more session of removal, my veneers are irreversible.”

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

As for what she’d like others to take away from her experience, she says, “There are consequences to your actions. Eventually your body will pay in some way or another.”

“Nothing is more beautiful than a body and face that is unique. I know it can be hard, but learn to love yourself first,” Whitfeld adds.

Read the original article onPeople

After Cheek Filler, Veneers and a Boob Job That Made Her Sick, This Mom, 26, Is Now ‘Reversing the Damage’ (Exclusive)

Tilly Whitfeld is “reversing the damage” of her cosmetic procedures after getting cheek filler, veneers, breast implants and more ...
Trump talks up his ballroom plan dozens of times but plays down Americans' economic pain

By Steve Holland, Andy Sullivan, Richard Cowan and Nandita Bose

Reuters U..S. President Donald Trump gestures at the site of ongoing construction of the planned White House ballroom in Washington, D.C., U.S., May 19, 2026. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque FILE PHOTO: A commercial aircraft flies above, as workers paint the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool blue at the directive of U.S. President Donald Trump on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., U.S, May 18, 2026. REUTERS/Tom Brenner/File Photo U..S. President Donald Trump shows images of the concept at the site of ongoing construction of the planned White House ballroom in Washington, D.C., U.S., May 19, 2026. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque FILE PHOTO: Workers paint the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool blue at the directive of U.S. President Donald Trump on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., U.S, May 18, 2026. REUTERS/Tom Brenner/File Photo

The site of ongoing construction of the planned White House ballroom in Washington

WASHINGTON, May 24 (Reuters) - Standing in front of the White House ballroom construction site, U.S. President Donald Trump appealed for patience from Americans struggling with soaring gas prices as he sought to justify the cost of a project critics call a vanity effort.

"This is peanuts," he said on Tuesday in an apparent reference to the economic damage inflicted on the U.S. by ‌the Iran war. "I appreciate everybody putting up with it for a little while. It won't be much longer."

The moment crystallized concerns among some in his Republican Party, who worry that the billionaire president's focus on the ballroom ‌appears insensitive as Americans struggle to fill their gas tanks ahead of November's midterm elections.

A Reuters review of Trump's public comments shows he has mentioned the ballroom - either via speeches, social media posts, or in comments to reporters - at least 40 times this year, including nine times this month alone. By comparison, he ​mentioned it 35 times in all of 2025.

He is prone to launching into sales pitches for the ballroom at any moment, whether talking to reporters on Air Force One, speaking to guests in the Oval Office or posting on his Truth Social platform.

A White House official rejected Democrats' contention that the ballroom is a vanity project.

"This is about legacy, not vanity," the official said. "The president is deeply passionate about this and wants to get it done."

It is hard to quantify how many times Trump has talked about the economy, but as gas prices have spiraled, he has repeatedly played down the economic impact of the war, counseling patience and offering little acknowledgement of Americans' financial strain.

“I don’t think about Americans’ financial situation," he said earlier this month in a viral off-the-cuff comment about the war's economic ‌impact that was seized on by Democrats. “The only thing that matters when I'm talking about ⁠Iran, they can't have a nuclear weapon."

SOME REPUBLICAN LAWMAKERS SAY BALLROOM IS A DISTRACTION

The Reuters review shows that the ballroom, reconstruction of the Washington Reflecting Pool and plans for a 250-foot Independence Arch in the capital are top of mind for a president whose second term has been dominated by legacy-building projects.

Even amid crises and diplomatic summits, Trump has kept the ballroom at the forefront. Within ⁠hours of an apparent assassination attempt at a Washington hotel, he used the incident to argue for building one. After his high-stakes meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping, Trump posted on Truth Social that the trip reinforced his case.

“China has a Ballroom, and so should the U.S.A.!” Trump wrote alongside a photo of him and Xi outside Beijing's cavernous Great Hall of the People.

In Republican-led focus groups, however, voters are expressing concerns over the ballroom and the arch, a senior Republican campaign operative told Reuters, requesting anonymity to discuss the matter.

"For voters, the message that is ​coming ​from the White House is Trump is focused on vanity projects and foreign policy, and those are things that voters don't care about," the ​operative said.

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Republican Senator Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming said in an interview that the attention being given ‌to the White House ballroom is "absolutely" sucking up more time than it should.

"It would sure be nice if the public understood that the ballroom itself was private money," Lummis said.

Trump says he has raised $400 million from wealthy donors and his own money for the ballroom. The Secret Service, however, has requested $1 billion in taxpayer money to fund security enhancements for the ballroom and the White House complex, a plan that lawmakers, including Republicans, have balked at.

Anxious Republican lawmakers and senior White House aides have for months urged Trump to focus more on the economy as voters look ahead to November, when Republicans are expected to face a difficult fight to retain control of Congress.

"Trump continues to talk about things that no one cares about," said a Republican strategist involved in efforts to help Republicans retain control of Congress. The strategist spoke on condition of anonymity in order to discuss the matter freely.

Trump's answer to questions about economic concerns is to repeatedly declare victory over inflation, despite official data showing otherwise. He has deflected ‌questions about economic uncertainty by boasting about a rise in the stock market and billions of dollars in foreign investment.

A January prediction from the ​White House that Trump would make weekly trips to promote Republican candidates and address economic concerns has not panned out.

After a flurry of weekly travel ​early in the year aimed at promoting his economic record, Trump has largely stayed at the White House or ​at his Florida weekend retreat since he launched the Iran war on February 28. He has made only a handful of domestic trips since then.

CHINA TRIP, ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT

As Trump faces a series of political ‌and policy challenges — including war with Iran, rising fuel costs, and dwindling popularity — he has increasingly ​turned to visiting construction sites tied to his initiatives, using them ​to underscore progress and reassert control over his agenda.

On Tuesday, he took reporters on a tour of the ballroom construction site and proudly described some of its planned security features. A week earlier, he rode in his armored limousine to inspect renovations at Washington's Reflecting Pool - which he has spoken about seven times this month alone.

Democrats who are trying to break Republicans' dominance in Congress in November say Trump's focus on legacy projects offers hope.

"I can't imagine that ​at a time when people are trying to figure out how to pay for their ‌groceries that are exorbitantly high thanks to Trump's tariffs that they're (Republicans) focused on a ballroom," Democratic Senator Raphael Warnock of Georgia told Reuters.

"Tone deaf is an understatement."

With polls showing a solid majority of Americans opposed to ​the ballroom, the message appears to have gotten through to Republicans. The $1 billion proposal was dropped last week - at least for now - from a spending bill in the Senate in a major setback for Trump.

(Reporting By ​Steve Holland, Andy Sullivan, Richard Cowan and Nandita Bose; Additional reporting by Bo Erickson; Editing by Ross Colvin and Alistair Bell)

Trump talks up his ballroom plan dozens of times but plays down Americans' economic pain

By Steve Holland, Andy Sullivan, Richard Cowan and Nandita Bose The site of ongoing construction of the planned White House ba...
Eva Longoria Looks Statuesque in a Plunging Gilded Sequin Gown in Cannes

Eva Longoria stepped out for the Lights On Women's Worth during the 79th Cannes Film Festival on May 22.

InStyle Credit: Getty

The Gist

  • She wore a plunging gold sequin gown by Carolina Herrera for the occasion.

  • The look comes after a string of other glamorous strapless gowns at the film festival.

Eva Longoriajust gave a masterclass in red carpet glamour. Because it doesn't get more elegant than this. The actress has been in Cannes for the last few days and on the evening of May 22, she stepped out for the Lights On Women's Worth event.

Longoria looked statuesque.Credit: Getty

She opted for a gilded strapless gown from Carolina Herrera's Spring 2026 collection for the occasion. It featured a deep plunging sweetheart neckline that dipped to her ribs and a bold sequined design. The form fitting gown came down to her ankles in a column skirt. She completed the look with a simple pair of drop earrings, gold strappy heels, and elegant, timeless smooth waves in a center part.

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She completed the look with strappy gold heels.Credit: Getty

Longoria's latest glamorous outing in Cannes comes after a few other show-stopping moments on the red carpet. On May 19, she made an appearance in adeep burgundy liquid sequined gownwith a chest cutout, halter neck, and long skirt that pooled around her ankles. On the same day, she also wore aglittering corseted LBDwith a strapless sweetheart neckline and bejeweled design. She also wore ared sequin strapless gownand awhite sculptural strapless gownfor other events. During one of her off-duty moments, the actress took a stroll in the French city wearing a pair ofwhite Bermuda shortspaired with a white ribbed crop top.

Longoria attended several other Cannes events.Credit: Getty

During her trip to Cannes the actress announced that she had a new, very French project in the works—she has officially joined the cast ofCall My Agent! The Movie. "Oui oui, a new cast member has joined the chat 🤭," she wrote onInstagram.

Read the original article onInStyle

Eva Longoria Looks Statuesque in a Plunging Gilded Sequin Gown in Cannes

Eva Longoria stepped out for the Lights On Women's Worth during the 79th Cannes Film Festival on May 22. The Gist ...
College Student’s Shocking Graduation Portraits Include Massive Alligators Named Tex and Big Al (Exclusive)

College Katalina Daley celebrated earning her degree with a graduation photo shoot featuring two massive alligators

People Katalina Daley's college graduation shoot with alligatorsCredit: Laura Oglesbee Photography l @katdaley919 l @gator_country_beaumont_texas

NEED TO KNOW

  • Daley, who works at Gator Country Adventure Park & Sanctuary in Texas, said she regularly works with the reptiles

  • The McNeese State University grad also told PEOPLE she has had a lifelong passion for wildlife

A woman'sgraduation photo shootcame with some serious bite thanks to a couple of massive alligators.

Katalina Daley recently graduated from McNeese State University in Louisiana with a Bachelor of General Studies.

Daley, 22, who has been working at Gator Country Adventure Park & Sanctuary in Beaumont, Texas, for the past year, celebrated the milestone with a wildlife shoot withtwo of the sanctuary's alligators: Big Al and Tex.

Katalina Daley poses with an alligator at Gator Country Adventure Park & Sanctuary in TexasCredit: Laura Oglesbee Photography l @katdaley919 l @gator_country_beaumont_texas

“My boss, Shannon Saurage, actually came up with the idea to put Big Al and Tex in my graduation photos and I loved it,” the animal care coordinator tells PEOPLE exclusively.

Katalina Daley poses with an alligator in her graduation cap and gown at Gator Country Adventure Park & Sanctuary in TexasCredit: Laura Oglesbee Photography l @katdaley919 l @gator_country_beaumont_texas

“I work with them almost every day, so putting them in my graduation photos just felt right,” she continues, adding that she is specially trained to work with the animals featured in the photos.

“We actually do educational shows with these two specific alligators daily,” she explains. “However, [I] also had other trained professionals behind me ready to help whenever I may need, as we do any time we interact with these animals.”

And while Daley says she was “excited” for the shoot, she also emphasizes the importance of remaining cautious andrespectful around the alligators.

“I always keep in mind that these are still wild animals at the end of the day, and keep a certain sense of weariness when working hands-on with them. I think it is always important to remember what they can do,” she adds.

Katalina Daley with an alligatorCredit: Laura Oglesbee Photography l @katdaley919 l @gator_country_beaumont_texas

Daley, who runs the sanctuary's Instagram account (@gator_country_beaumont_texas), as well as posts gator content under her personal handle (@katdaley919), says she’s a lifelong lover of animals and wildlife.

“Learning about and caring for animals has been a passion of mine ever since I can remember,” she tells PEOPLE.

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Katalina Daley poses with a young alligatorCredit: Laura Oglesbee Photography l @katdaley919 l @gator_country_beaumont_texas

“I have been involved inwildlife rehabilitationsince I was around seven years old,” she continues, adding, “Gators are definitely an obvious favorite for me, but raccoons and coatis are a pretty close second.”

Daley also says she believes alligators are largely misunderstood by the general public — which she attributes to misrepresentation in pop culture and media.

“Alligators and large reptiles are portrayed as the villain, and many times people are raised to fear them —  when in reality, they do not interfere with us as long as we don't interfere with them,” she says.

Katalina Daley kissing an alligatorCredit: Laura Oglesbee Photography l @katdaley919 l @gator_country_beaumont_texas

“Alligators are not out to get people. They would much rather be left alone,” the graduate adds.

As for Daley's plans post-graduation?

The animal lover, who co-manages the day-to-day operations of Gator Country with her fiancé, says she has already foundher dream jobat the sanctuary.

“We take care of all 1,000-plus animals in our care at the park and run our educational alligator feeding shows, where we interact with Big Tex and Al to teach the public about alligators,” she says, adding that they also train college interns on animal care and education.

“So I will stay where I am and see where it takes me!” she tells PEOPLE.

Read the original article onPeople

College Student’s Shocking Graduation Portraits Include Massive Alligators Named Tex and Big Al (Exclusive)

College Katalina Daley celebrated earning her degree with a graduation photo shoot featuring two massive alligators NEED TO KNOW ...

 

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