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  • This fantasy Borderlands spin-off is free right now! Grab it before it ends

    This fantasy Borderlands spin-off is free right now! Grab it before it ends

    This article originally appeared on our sister publication PC-WELT and was translated and localized from German.

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  • WordPad is dead in Windows 11, but Notepad is absorbing its skills

    WordPad is dead in Windows 11, but Notepad is absorbing its skills

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  • Legal aid hack: data from hundreds of thousands of people accessed, says MoJ | Legal aid

    Legal aid hack: data from hundreds of thousands of people accessed, says MoJ | Legal aid

    The personal data of hundreds of thousands of legal aid applicants in England and Wales dating back to 2010, including criminal records and financial details, has been accessed and downloaded in a “significant” cyber-attack.

    Officials admit that the data may have included contact details and addresses of applicants, their dates of birth, national ID numbers, criminal history, employment status and financial data such as contribution amounts, debts and payments.

    Lawyers said they had complained for years about the Legal Aid Agency’s IT system and were concerned that the cyber-attack would leave vulnerable claimants and those briefly represented by a duty solicitor open to exposure and possible blackmail.

    Hackers have claimed that they accessed 2.1m pieces of data, a figure that has so far been unverified.

    It is understood that authorities do not believe that the hack is the work of a state actor, and that it appears to be the work of a criminal gang.

    A Ministry of Justice source put the breach down to the “neglect and mismanagement” of the previous government, saying vulnerabilities in the Legal Aid Agency (LAA) systems had been known for many years.

    “This data breach was made possible by the long years of neglect and mismanagement of the justice system under the last government. They knew about the vulnerabilities of the Legal Aid Agency digital systems, but did not act,” the source said.

    The MoJ said officials became aware of a cyber-attack on the LAA’s online digital services on 23 April but believed it had accessed data from legal aid providers such as solicitors’ firms, not from applicants. It is understood that officials discovered on Friday that it was much wider and involved applicants.

    The LAA’s online digital services, which are used by legal aid providers to log their work and get paid by the government, have been taken offline. Legal aid providers will be given phone numbers or email addresses to contact as they seek payment for the next few weeks.

    Officials are attempting to build an upgraded system over the next few weeks that will replace the hacked system.

    The MoJ said: “We believe the group has accessed and downloaded a significant amount of personal data from those who applied for legal aid through our digital service since 2010.

    “This data may have included contact details and addresses of applicants, their dates of birth, national ID numbers, criminal history, employment status and financial data such as contribution amounts, debts and payments.

    “We would urge all members of the public who have applied for legal aid in this time period to take steps to safeguard themselves. We would recommend you are alert for any suspicious activity such as unknown messages or phone calls and to be extra vigilant to update any potentially exposed passwords.

    “If you are in doubt about anyone you are communicating with online or over the phone, you should verify their identity independently before providing any information to them.”

    The MoJ has been working with the National Crime Agency and the National Cyber Security Centre, and has informed the information commissioner.

    A National Crime Agency spokesperson said it was aware of the incident.

    The LAA’s chief executive, Jane Harbottle, apologised for the breach: “I understand this news will be shocking and upsetting for people and I am extremely sorry this has happened.

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    “Since the discovery of the attack, my team has been working around the clock with the National Cyber Security Centre to bolster the security of our systems so we can safely continue the vital work of the agency.

    “However, it has become clear that, to safeguard the service and its users, we needed to take radical action. That is why we’ve taken the decision to take the online service down,” she said.

    Harbottle said contingency plans were in place to make sure those in need of legal support and advice could continue to access it.

    In 2023, the Law Society, the professional body for solicitors in England and Wales, called on the government to invest in the LAA digital system, saying the system was “too fragile to cope”. As recently as March 2024, the Law Society pointed to the “antiquated IT systems” of the LAA as “evidence of the long-term neglect of our justice system”.

    Richard Atkinson, the Law Society’s president, said: “The fragility of the IT system has prevented vital reforms, including updates to the means test that could help millions more access legal aid, and interim payments for firms whose cash flow is being decimated by the backlogs in the courts, through no fault of their own.

    “If it is now also proving vulnerable to cyber-attack, further delay is untenable.

    “Legal aid firms are small businesses providing an important public service and are operating on the margins of financial viability. Given that vulnerability, these financial security concerns are the last thing they need.”

    Helen Morris, a partner and the head of reputation management at the law firm Kingsley Napley, said: “Today’s data breach will be of concern to anyone who has been arrested since 2010 and who has had an application for public funding made in their name. This could include those who were initially allocated a duty solicitor, even if they then changed to privately funded advice.

    “Such a breach is particularly concerning for those who were interviewed by the police but were never charged and the fact of the investigation never came into the public domain.

    “The possession of this highly sensitive information in the wrong hands could make any individual subject to blackmail threats.”

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  • Almost half of young people would prefer a world without internet, UK study finds | Internet

    Almost half of young people would prefer a world without internet, UK study finds | Internet

    Almost half of young people would rather live in a world where the internet does not exist, according to a new survey.

    The research reveals that nearly 70% of 16- to 21-year-olds feel worse about themselves after spending time on social media. Half (50%) would support a “digital curfew” that would restrict their access to certain apps and sites past 10pm, while 46% said they would rather be young in a world without the internet altogether.

    A quarter of respondents spent four or more hours a day on social media, while 42% of those surveyed admitted to lying to their parents and guardians about what they do online.

    While online, 42% said they had lied about their age, 40% admitted to having a decoy or “burner” account, and 27% said they pretended to be a different person completely.

    The results came after the technology secretary, Peter Kyle, hinted that the government was weighing up the possibility of making cut-off times mandatory for certain apps such as TikTok and Instagram.

    Rani Govender, the policy manager for child safety online at the NSPCC, said that digital curfews, while helpful, could not stop children being exposed to harmful materials online without other measures being put in place.

    “We need to make clear that a digital curfew alone is not going to protect children from the risks they face online. They will be able to see all these risks at other points of the day and they will still have the same impact,” she said.

    Govender added that the primary focus for companies and the government was to ensure kids are using “much safer and less addictive sites”.

    The study, conducted by the British Standards Institution, surveyed 1,293 young people and found that 27% of respondents have shared their location online with strangers.

    In the same survey, three-quarters said they had spent more time online as a result of the pandemic, while 68% said they felt the time they spent online was detrimental to their mental health.

    Andy Burrows, the chief executive of the suicide prevention charity the Molly Rose Foundation, said it was “clear that young people are aware of the risks online and, what’s more, they want action from tech companies to protect them”.

    He added that algorithms can provide content that “can quickly spiral and take young people down rabbit holes of harmful and distressing material through no fault of their own”. New laws were “urgently required to finally embed a safe by design approach to regulation that puts the needs of children and society ahead of those of big tech”, he said.

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  • Online criminals attacking HSBC ‘all the time’, says head of UK arm | HSBC

    Online criminals attacking HSBC ‘all the time’, says head of UK arm | HSBC

    The boss of HSBC’s UK arm has said the bank is “being attacked all the time” by online criminals, with cybersecurity now its biggest expense, costing the lender hundreds of millions of pounds.

    Ian Stuart sought to reassure MPs that cybersecurity was “very much at the top of our agenda”, amid growing concerns that other large businesses could fall victim to the kind of attacks that have caused chaos at retailers such as Marks & Spencer and the Co-op.

    M&S has been struggling for almost a month since its IT systems were targeted over the Easter weekend, with the attack hitting its online operations and leaving some store shelves empty.

    “It does worry me … We are being attacked all the time, so the defence mechanisms that you put in are absolutely critical,” Stuart told the House of Commons Treasury committee on Tuesday. That involved “investing hundreds of millions of pounds”, he said. “This is our biggest expense in business.”

    “The amount of money [that] banks, all of us, will be spending on our systems is enormous today – and it has to be. It has to be because our customers rely on digital technology all the time,” Stuart said.

    The need to keep a bank’s systems operating seamlessly – 24 hours a day, seven days a week – has increased since bosses started increasing the pace of branch closures and pushing more customers into using digital apps and online banking.

    Stuart said that, at a group level, HSBC alone processed 1,000 payments a second. Meanwhile, the bank was making about 8,000 changes to its IT systems every week. He said no bank would be able to guarantee that its services could stay online all the time. “So the skill is, how quickly can you recover?”

    Banks’ IT systems have come under increased scrutiny in recent months, with customers at Britain’s largest banks and building societies having suffered the equivalent of more than one month of IT failures between January 2023 and February 2025.

    Those figures did not include the full impact of an outage at Barclays that started at the end of January and affected 56% of online payments during the crucial payday period for many employees. There has been further disruption at Barclays since then.

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    Speaking to MPs on Tuesday, the chief executive of Barclays’ UK operations, Vim Maru, said the problems had been caused by software made by an external company.

    “A software issue was the root cause, and we worked with a third-party provider that provides us with that software. We’ve learned the lessons around that. We’ve put a fix in place that means that we won’t have a recurrence. And then, looking forward, there’s a further enhancement that we’re making, which is in the middle of implementation,” Maru said.

    The Barclays boss again apologised to customers affected. “We’re deeply sorry for the disruption that our technical issue on the 31st of January caused for our customers. We’ve clearly worked very hard to recover from that and make sure that we put the right steps in place,” he said.

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  • Children are speaking to strangers online – and grooming is on the rise. This is how to protect them | Devi Sridhar

    Children are speaking to strangers online – and grooming is on the rise. This is how to protect them | Devi Sridhar

    When we look at what causes poor mental health, we often think of stress, genetics, poverty or loneliness. These are all contributing factors, but there’s another, more hidden cause that isn’t talked about enough: abuse, especially during childhood. I recall Chad Varah, the founder of Samaritans, reflecting that there were many things that drove people to call the charity’s suicide helpline. But abuse was a prominent reason.

    Abuse isn’t an easy subject to raise or talk about. It brings up issues of gender dynamics – a colleague studying global sexual abuse told me: “The vast majority of perpetrators are men; the victims are equally boys and girls.” These are hard issues to think about, harder still to discuss and difficult to address. They challenge notions of safety, trust, family and community. But if we want to make progress in addressing poor mental health, we have to start here – with the truths we’d rather avoid.

    The internet has fundamentally changed our world. Where once we worried about a child walking home from school alone or sleeping over at a friend’s house, now we have the entire online world to contend with. Grooming and exploitation no longer happen only in person – they happen on smartphones, in video games and through tablets handed over to keep kids entertained. And too often, the adults meant to protect children are far behind.

    Recent research from Childlighta child safety charity at the University of Edinburgh, has shown a steep rise in online grooming cases. It estimates that about 830,000 young people worldwide are at risk of social exploitation and abuse every day. This includes explicit photo sharing, sexual extortion, solicitation, deepfake images, pornography and grooming. Social media platforms, messaging apps and multiplayer games have become common avenues for abusers to target youngsters. They’ve been designed to be attractive and addictive to children, but largely without their safety in mind. And that puts the burden of protection unfairly on parents, many of whom don’t understand the risks – or aren’t even aware that they exist.

    Take Roblox, a platform marketed as a child-friendly virtual playground. Behind its colourful, blocky graphics and simple games lies a reality far less innocent. A recent study examining interactions within the game found that through its open chat features, users were able to initiate contact with children as young as five, and were able to potentially speak with them over time before moving to other, less public platforms. Children could also see and hear sexual and suggestive content while playing various games. The researchers found that a test avatar registered to an adult could ask for a five-year-old’s test avatar’s Snapchat details on the platform. Just last month, a California man was accused of kidnapping and sexual conduct with a 10-year-old he met on Roblox. The surface looks benign. The danger lies underneath.

    One thing that should be noted, too, is that even if physical contact never occurs, exposure to traumatic or sexually inappropriate content can still leave lasting mental scars. The internet and social media in particular have made it easier to access this kind of content, even if a child is never contacted by a coercive individual. Online abuse can take many forms, from exposure to sexual images and videos to inappropriate sexual and non-sexual language, extortion and solicitation.

    In 2023, an estimated 19% of children aged 10 to 15 in England and Wales exchanged messages with someone online whom they had never met in real life. Nearly a third of eight- to 17-year-olds who game online say they chat to strangers while gaming. The vast majority of those interactions will be harmless, but when bad things do happen, many children feel isolated or unsupported: only half of children in a survey in England told their parents or teacher about harmful content they had seen online. The same shame, confusion, fear and guilt that silences victims of abuse in the real world also mutes those suffering from exposure virtually.

    That silence can be deadly. Studies have shown that children who are groomed or coerced online often suffer from anxiety, depression, PTSD and suicidal thoughts. According to Samaritans, children and young people with histories of abuse are at far higher risk of self-harm and suicide. Varah’s reflections underscore this: abuse, especially when unaddressed, can derail an entire life. But awareness is the first step towards prevention. We need to remove the stigma around abuse so that survivors of any age can speak up.

    We also need to better understand how quickly the landscape of risk is evolving. This means having open conversations with children, not just once but regularly. It means teaching them that they can talk to us about anything they see or experience online, without fear or shame.

    Tech companies need to be regulated by government to be accountable for creating safer environments. Just leaving it to voluntary initiatives doesn’t seem to be enough. On 25 July, the Online Safety Act will be implemented in Britainwith clear safety rules for platforms to protect young people from harmful content, online abuse and sexual material. It is an important step forward in treating this issue with the urgency it deserves – just as we would with any other public health threat.

    While Samaritans continues its vital work supporting those in crisis, we owe it to our children to intervene earlier, to prevent that crisis from occurring in the first place. If we want to protect the mental health of young people, we need to start where the damage begins – and that means looking directly at the hard truths, online and off.

    • Prof Devi Sridhar is chair of global public health at the University of Edinburgh

    • Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

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  • What to do if you can’t get into your Facebook or Instagram account | Money

    What to do if you can’t get into your Facebook or Instagram account | Money

    Your Facebook or Instagram account can be your link to friends, a profile for your work or a key to other services, so losing access can be very worrying. Here’s what to do if the worst happens.

    What to do if your Facebook or Instagram account gets lost, hacked or stolen

    • If you have access to the phone number or email account associated with your Facebook or Instagram account, try to reset your password by clicking on the “Forgot password?” link on the main Facebook or Instagram login screen. Follow the instructions in the email or text message you receive.

    • If you no longer have access to the email account linked to your Facebook account, use a device with which you have previously logged into Facebook and go to facebook.com/login/identify. Enter any email address or phone number you might have associated with your account, or find your username which is the string of characters after Facebook.com/ on your page. Click on “No longer have access to these?”, “Forgotten account?” or “Recover” and follow the instructions to prove your identity and reset your password.

    • If your account was hacked, visit facebook.com/hacked or instagram.com/hacked/ on a device you have previously used to log in and follow the instructions. Visit the help with a hacked account page for Facebook or Instagram.

    Meta owns the Facebook and Instagram brands. Photograph: Algi Febri Sugita/ZUMA Press Wire/REX/Shutterstock

    What to do when you get back into your account

    • Change the password to something stronglong and unique, such as a combination of random words or a memorable lyric or quote. Avoid simple or guessable combinations. Use a password manager to help you remember it and other important details.

    • Turn on two-step verification in the “password and security” section of the Accounts Centre. Use an authentication app or security key for this, not SMS codes. Save your recovery codes somewhere safe in case you lose access to your two-step authentication method.

    • Turn on “unrecognised login” alerts in the “password and security” section of the Accounts Centre, which will alert you to any suspicious login activity.

    • Remove any suspicious “friends” from your account – these could be fake accounts or scammers.

    • If you are eligible, turn on “advanced protection for Facebook” in the “password and security” section of the Accounts Centre.



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  • How the Trump administration’s move will affect Harvard’s international students

    How the Trump administration’s move will affect Harvard’s international students

    WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s administration escalated its standoff with Harvard University on Thursday, revoking the school’s ability to enroll international students.

    The government told Harvard’s thousands of current foreign students that they must transfer to other schools or they will lose their legal permission to be in the U.S.

    The move could significantly affect the university, which enrolls nearly 6,800 international students, most of them in graduate programs. Those students may now have to scramble to figure out their next steps.

    The Department of Homeland Security took this latest step because Harvard refused to comply with requests to produce records about its foreign students, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said in a letter. Noem accused Harvard of “perpetuating an unsafe campus environment that is hostile to Jewish students, promotes pro-Hamas sympathies and employs racist ‘diversity, equity and inclusion’ policies.’” Harvard said the action is unlawful and undermines the school’s research mission.

    Here’s what to know about how this decision affects international students and what legal authority Noem has to take the step.

    The U.S. government has authority over who comes into the country. The Department of Homeland Security oversees which colleges are part of the Student Exchange and Visitor Program, and on Thursday it said it would remove Harvard. The program gives colleges the ability to issue documentation to foreign students admitted to the schools. Then, the students apply to obtain visas to study in the United States.

    Students who completed their degrees this semester will be allowed to graduate. Noem’s letter said the changes would take effect for the 2025-2026 school year. Harvard’s Class of 2025 is expected to graduate next week.

    However, students who have yet to complete their degree need to transfer to another university, Noem said, or they’ll lose their legal permission to remain in the U.S.

    No, not unless the government changes its decision or a court steps in. For now, Noem said Harvard could restore its status as a host institution for foreign students if it complied with a list of demands within 72 hours. Those demands include requests for a range of records, such as disciplinary records for international students, plus audio and video recordings of protest activity.

    Harvard previously declined to provide those records. The university said Thursday it was working to provide guidance to affected students.

    Harvard’s battle with the Trump administration dates to early April. The storied institution became the first elite college to refuse to comply with the government’s demands to limit pro-Palestinian protests and eliminate diversity, equity and inclusion policies. That kicked off a series of escalating actions against Harvard. Various federal agencies, including DHS and the National Institutes of Health, have cut their grant funding to Harvard, significantly impacting research projects conducted by faculty. Harvard has sued the administrationseeking to end the grant freeze.

    The administration first threatened to revoke Harvard’s ability to host international students back in April. Trump also has said Harvard should lose its tax-exempt status. Doing so would strike at the school’s ability to fundraise, as wealthy donors often give to tax-exempt institutions to lower their own tax burdens.

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    AP Education Writer Collin Binkley contributed.

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    The Associated Press’ education coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.

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  • Uncommon May nor’easter brings rain and snow to New England states just before Memorial Day weekend

    Uncommon May nor’easter brings rain and snow to New England states just before Memorial Day weekend

    BOSTON — An unusual May nor’easter was pulling away from New England on Friday after soaking the region and setting some record cold temperatures.

    Massachusetts and Rhode Island received the most rain, getting at least several inches. The coastal town of Kingston, Massachusetts, received 7.13 inches (18.1 centimeters) of rain in a 24-hour period ending early Friday, the National Weather Service said.

    Drivers were stuck in floodwaters in Cape Cod and fallen trees blocked some streets. There were no reports of injuries.

    Some higher elevations saw snow, with New Hampshire’s Mount Washington reporting 3.4 inches (8.6 centimeters) as of Friday morning.

    “Would it really be May in Maine without a little rain — and even a touch of snow — for Memorial Day Weekend?” Sugarloaf Mountain posted online. It delayed opening day for its golf club from Friday to Sunday.

    High temperatures for Thursday were about 20 degrees lower than usual.

    At least two cities — Concord, New Hampshire, and Portland, Maine — had record cold high temperatures. In Concord, it reached 47 degrees Fahrenheit (8.3 degrees Celsius) for Thursday. That broke the previous record on that date of 51 degrees set in 1939. Portland got up to 49 degrees (9.4 degrees Celsius), breaking the 50-degree record set in 2011.

    A nor’easter is an East Coast storm that is so named because winds over the coastal area are typically from the northeast, according to the weather service. They usually arrive in the end of fall and winter and bring high winds, rough seas and precipitation in the form of rain or snow. It’s rare to see them in May.

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  • Scientists have lost their jobs or grants in US cuts. Foreign universities want to hire them

    Scientists have lost their jobs or grants in US cuts. Foreign universities want to hire them

    As the Trump administration cut billions of dollars in federal funding to scientific researchthousands of scientists in the U.S. lost their jobs or grants — and governments and universities around the world spotted an opportunity.

    The “Canada Leads” program, launched in April, hopes to foster the next generation of innovators by bringing early-career biomedical researchers north of the border.

    Aix-Marseille University in France started the “Safe Place for Science” program in March — pledging to “welcome” U.S.-based scientists who “may feel threatened or hindered in their research.”

    Australia’s “Global Talent Attraction Program,” announced in April, promises competitive salaries and relocation packages.

    “In response to what is happening in the U.S.,” said Anna-Maria Arabia, head of the Australian Academy of Sciences, “we see an unparalleled opportunity to attract some of the smartest minds here.”

    Since World War II, the U.S. has invested huge amounts of money in scientific research conducted at independent universities and federal agencies. That funding helped the U.S. to become the world’s leading scientific power — and has led to the invention of cell phones and the internet as well as new ways to treat cancer, heart disease and strokes, noted Holden Thorp, editor-in-chief of the journal Science.

    But today that system is being shaken.

    Since President Donald Trump took office in January, his administration has pointed to what it calls waste and inefficiency in federal science spending and made major cuts to staff levels and grant funding at the National Science Foundation,the National Institutes of HealthNASA and other agencies, as well as slashing research dollars that flow to some private universities.

    The White House budget proposal for next year calls to cut the NIH budget by roughly 40% and the National Science Foundation’s by 55%.

    “The Trump administration is spending its first few months reviewing the previous administration’s projects, identifying waste, and realigning our research spending to match the American people’s priorities and continue our innovative dominance,” said White House spokesperson Kush Desai.

    Already, several universities have announced hiring freezes, laid off staff or stopped admitting new graduate students. On Thursday, the Trump administration revoked Harvard University’s ability to enroll international students, though a judge put that on hold.

    Research institutions abroad are watching with concern for collaborations that depend on colleagues in the U.S. — but they also see opportunities to potentially poach talent.

    “There are threats to science … south of the border,” said Brad Wouters, of University Health Network, Canada’s leading hospital and medical research center, which launched the “Canada Leads” recruitment drive. “There’s a whole pool of talent, a whole cohort that is being affected by this moment.”

    Universities worldwide are always trying to recruit from one another, just as tech companies and businesses in other fields do. What’s unusual about the current moment is that many global recruiters are targeting researchers by promising something that seems newly threatened: academic freedom.

    European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said this month that the European Union intends “to enshrine freedom of scientific research into law.” She spoke at the launch of the bloc’s “Choose Europe for Science” — which was in the works before the Trump administration cuts but has sought to capitalize on the moment.

    Eric Berton, president of Aix-Marseille University, expressed a similar sentiment after launching the institution’s “Safe Place for Science” program.

    “Our American research colleagues are not particularly interested by money,” he said of applicants. “What they want above all is to be able to continue their research and that their academic freedom be preserved.”

    It’s too early to say how many scientists will choose to leave the U.S. It will take months for universities to review applications and dole out funding, and longer for researchers to uproot their lives.

    Plus, the American lead in funding research and development is enormous — and even significant cuts may leave crucial programs standing. The U.S. has been the world’s leading funder of R&D — including government, university and private investment — for decades. In 2023, the country funded 29% of the world’s R&D, according to the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

    But some institutions abroad are reporting significant early interest from researchers in the U.S. Nearly half of the applications to “Safe Place for Science” — 139 out of 300 total — came from U.S.-based scientists, including AI researchers and astrophysicists.

    U.S.-based applicants in this year’s recruitment round for France’s Institute of Genetics, Molecular and Cellular Biology roughly doubled over last year.

    At the Max Planck Society in Germany, the Lise Meitner Excellence Program — aimed at young female researchers — drew triple the number of applications from U.S.-based scientists this year as last year.

    Recruiters who work with companies and nonprofits say they see a similar trend.

    Natalie Derry, a U.K.-based managing partner of the Global Emerging Sciences Practice at recruiter WittKieffer, said her team has seen a 25% to 35% increase in applicants from the U.S. cold-calling about open positions. When they reach out to scientists currently based in the U.S., “we are getting a much higher hit rate of people showing interest.”

    Still, there are practical hurdles to overcome for would-be continent-hoppers, she said. That can include language hurdles, arranging childcare or eldercare, and significant differences in national pension or retirement programs.

    Brandon Coventry never thought he would consider a scientific career outside the United States. But federal funding cuts and questions over whether new grants will materialize have left him unsure. While reluctant to leave his family and friends, he’s applied to faculty positions in Canada and France.

    “I’ve never wanted to necessarily leave the United States, but this is a serious contender for me,” said Coventry, who is a postdoctoral fellow studying neural implants at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

    But it’s not easy to pick up and move a scientific career — let alone a life.

    Marianna Zhang was studying how children develop race and gender stereotypes as a postdoctoral fellow at New York University when her National Science Foundation grant was canceled. She said it felt like “America as a country was no longer interested in studying questions like mine.”

    Still, she wasn’t sure of her next move. “It’s no easy solution, just fleeing and escaping to another country,” she said.

    The recruitment programs range in ambition, from those trying to attract a dozen researchers to a single university to the continent-wide “Choose Europe” initiative.

    But it’s unclear if the total amount of funding and new positions offered could match what’s being shed in the U.S.

    Even as universities and institutes think about recruiting talent from the U.S., there’s more apprehension than glee at the funding cuts.

    “Science is a global endeavor,” said Patrick Cramer, head of the Max Planck Society, noting that datasets and discoveries are often shared among international collaborators.

    One aim of recruitment drives is to “to help prevent the loss of talent to the global scientific community,” he said.

    Researchers worldwide will suffer if collaborations are shut down and databases taken offline, scientists say.

    “The U.S. was always an example, in both science and education,” said Patrick Schultz, president of France’s Institute of Genetics, Molecular and Cellular Biology. So the cuts and policies were “very frightening also for us because it was an example for the whole world.”

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    The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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