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Feedback: More jobs lost to AI (that’s Avian Intelligence)

Feedback is our weekly column of bizarre stories, implausible advertising claims, confusing instructions and more

crows cartoon

Stone the crows

MORE human jobs lost to AI – that is, Avian Intelligence. The Puy du Fou theme park in the west of France has hired six corvids to pick up litter. The rooks have been trained to retrieve cigarette butts and other small bits of detritus, which they can deposit in a box to earn a food reward.

So far, so good. But Feedback suspects the site owners may be underestimating their feathered employees. How long before the six birds grow tired of working for chicken feed and decide to unionise? Or will the canny corvids begin subcontracting the work to sparrows, taking a cut for themselves? A paper on the economic policies of .

Comedian bombs

GOING down like a lead balloon: a suspicious package attached to a red parachute fell from the skies over New Jersey causing alarm, thanks to a note stuck to it with a message for US President Donald Trump. The note read: “NASA Atmospheric Research Instrument NOT A BOMB!… If this lands near the President, we at NASA wish him a great round of golf.” The president was indeed staying at a golf resort nearby. Police intercepted the package, which they say was making a hissing sound.

“Reader Joanne Wheeler finds herself puzzled by the many jigsaws available to buy on Amazon that are marked by the website as “no assembly required”. “They must be very boring puzzles,” she says”

NASA confirmed that the device was one of six weather balloons launched to measure ozone. The note was a “misguided attempt to be lighthearted” by a student researcher, who has since been removed from the project.

Lazy bones

to get out of bed in the morning? Spare a thought for Homo erectus, an early species of human that researchers claim went extinct through laziness. (It’s lucky you can’t libel the dead – or extinct species.) Ceri Shipton of the Australian National University found stone tools were typically made by H. erectus with whatever rocks were to hand, despite there being better stone available nearby.

From this, Shipton reaches the conclusion that H. erectus followed “a least-effort” strategy. Twinned with an inability to adapt to a changing environment, this sealed their demise. “The environment around them was changing, but they were doing the exact same things with their tools,” says Shipton. Thank goodness Homo sapiens would never make such a foolish mistake…

Current events

WHEN is a lake not a lake? When it is the Caspian Sea.

The world’s largest enclosed body of water has seen decades of wrangling between the five countries lying on its shores. Russia, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Azerbaijan and Iran are all keen to exploit the oil and gas deposits beneath the body of water. If the Caspian is a sea, territorial claims only extend a certain distance from the shoreline. But if the Caspian is a lake, no such rules hold, and the countries are free to divide up the oil fields.

Now the nations have reached an agreement. The wet bit of the Caspian will be treated as a sea, available for common use, while the land underneath is a lake bed, which will be carved up. This means these five nations will be the first you can reach from international waters .

Killer app

, Don Dennis was alarmed to read about a hospital sanitation robot that “can eliminate virtually all organisms in just 10 minutes, using the power of ultraviolet radiation”.

There’s only one metal monster we know of capable of that level of extermination, Don. Are you sure you weren’t reading that other fine BBC title, Doctor Who Magazine?

Hedging your bet

WITH much of Australia in drought, Tim McCulloch is informed by the Australian Broadcasting Network that “the official forecast is that there is a 50 per cent chance the rainfall over the next 12 months will be less than the median”. Isn’t that a given, he says. Well, they’re not wrong. Who said long-term forecasts were unpredictable?

Hair today

WEARING clothes made of fur and leather is so passé, darling. Why not instead wear a garment made from an extinct animal? Vladimir Ammosov, from Yakutsk, Siberia, acquired a bag of woolly mammoth hair, had it verified at the local mammoth museum, and hired a hat maker to crochet it into a Yakutian style hat. It’s basically a beanie made of the most itchy material you can imagine. “I kept looking at the bag, wondering what to do with the hair, and then thought why not try to make a hat?” says Ammosov. Better than a G-string, we suppose.

Cow parade

cow cartoon

AND finally, cows in Sweden are celebrating the ruling that they are allowed to visit nudist beaches. Vaxjo’s Culture and Leisure Department ruled the cows “have just as much right to be there as the human visitors”.

A representative from the Vaxjo herd confirmed to Feedback that the bovids are looking forward to mooving in.

You can send stories to Feedback by email at feedback@newscientist.com. Please include your home address. This week’s and past Feedbacks can be seen on our website.

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