Lucy williamson sent this report from the soroka medical centre in southern israel. Surrounded again by sunlight, by the sound of hebrew. Farhan alkadi, a 52 year old bedouin israeli, snatching a second chance at life. Crouched on the floor of a military helicopter, after 326 days in captivity, a smile. The start of his journey back home. At israel s soroka hospital, his last few moments in hiding. A wall of israeli soldiers shielding him from the world he left ten months ago. From a tunnel in gaza to an israeli ambulance in a couple of hours. His family racing the last few metres to greet him. Thin and pale but staff said in a good and stable condition. Translation: it is difficult to explain how it feels. It is better than having a newborn. We thank god and we thank everyone and hope to see him healthy. We re very happy, very happy. Israel s prime minister called to welcome him home, keen to be part of his release. We cannot go into many details of this special operation but i can sh
Algorithms used by social media companies may not be as polarising to society as previously thought, according to a study published in Nature. Researchers found exposure to content from "like-minded" sources did not change users political beliefs or attitudes during the 2020 US presidential election.
Algorithms controlling a social media user s feed, while largely opaque, may not be polarising the society in the same ways as the public tends to think, social scientists say.
Four research papers, published in Science and Nature, reveal the extent of political echo chambers on Facebook, where conservatives and liberals rely on divergent sources of information