have the emotional reunions as 24 hostages, including 13 israelis, ten thai nationals, and one filipino, have been released as part of a temporary truce between hamas and israel. and more hostages could be set free at any moment. we re going to take a closer look at who s been released, and at the 49 palestinians that were also released as part of the steel. holding out hope. i ll talk to a man waiting to find out if his cousin and his cousins wife will be among the next group of hostages released by hamas. why he wants his loved ones to know this morning. and later, no holiday for donald trump s legal woes. the doj s thanksgiving day court filing spelling out just how dangerous trump s rhetoric can be, and why it s critical a gag order remain in place for the twice impeached, quadruple indicted, wonder of ex president. all of that and more is coming up. and a good saturday morning to you all, i m katie phang. we begin today s coverage with the shaky and temporary truce betwe
impacted and influenced and controlled by technology. certain parts of those digital surveys are supposed to be inaudible infrastructure, therefore governed by non profit and yet, there is so much capitalistic kind of approache to control of the commercial aspect and commercial potential of this technology. i think that openai saga was, you know the fundamental tension is really between the nonprofit mission versus full profit. of course, there is a lot of nuance between this in terms of how they governed, how the board handled this whole situation, including exactly what technical concerns that the board has seen to compel them to press the panic button. last night, overnight, ijust woke up to a lot of discussion in terms of studies we can take unpack that a little bit more but the most important thing we can ask is what kind of, you know, technology, what kind of digital service should be governed by non profit and regarded as a public service and what kind of technol
all of this is so that the sides are verifying that their enemies, their adversaries in this, i doing what the deal says, so there is a lot of mechanics to get through but there is also of course a lot of scope for things still to go wrong and that is, i think, because we are in unprecedented territory here due to the number of captives being held by hamas, ferocity and scale of the war itself and, of course, the war itself and, of course, the way in which all of this began, with the brutality of those attacks by hamas and that is why i think there is very, very little trust between these two sides. there is none at all and what it has been replaced with is a kind of confidence and respect in the media, qatar, to hold all this together. with the mediator. around 240 people were taken hostage from southern israel during the deadly attacks on october 7. among them, civilians, soldiers, people with disabilities, children and grandparents. 0rla guerin has this report and a w
to be finalised regarding the list of people to be exchanged. for now, the fighting continues there was a series of explosions in gaza through the night. israel s prime minister benjamin netanyahu says his country will continue to fight hamas until absolute victory is achieved. aid agencies are extremely concerned about the humanitarian situation in gaza. some trucks carrying supplies have been able to cross into the territory this week. but pictures like these with people struggling to secure bottles of water in gaza highlight how difficult conditions there are. also today, a doctorfrom gaza s largest hospital, al shifa hospital, have told the bbc that israel have arrested the hospital s director, detained while patients were being evacuated from the hospital. israel have not commented on the reported arrest. israel say that hamas were running a large command centre from beneath that hospital. the uk foreign secretary is in israel today. he said he wanted to see for hi
are sleepless, watching the news and the story unfolds every minute, and it does make a big impact, because chatgpt is now currently the leading product in the large language models and asia, especially china, is catching up and they are very concerned and keeping updated on the matter. how vociferous is the debate between the so called doomers and the people trying to commercialise artificial intelligence here in the region? i think it is somewhere in the middle. people are more optimistic in china about how the large language models and ai technology will bring to the daily lives and make our life more convenient and more productive, but yes, there are some ethical debates and concerns regarding the openai and how the chatgpt or the gpt s in training, how powerful it is, that it could bring a potential danger to humanity. are policymakers, governments, are they working to regulate fast enough here in asia? yes, i would think so. the governments are actively involved, and