Blog

  • Tax chor tyar hojaen; FBR, telecos agree to start blocking SIMs

    Tax chor tyar hojaen; FBR, telecos agree to start blocking SIMs

    The Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) and telecom operators have agreed on blocking SIMs of tax non-filers as part of the government’s strategy to punish tax evasion, The News reported on Saturday.

    In a statement, the FBR announced that telecom companies have agreed to start the manual blocking process of SIMs in small batches until their systems are fully equipped to automate it.

    The FBR said that the first batch comprising 5,000 non-filers has been communicated to telecom operators and further batches would be sent to telecom companies on a daily basis.

    Meanwhile, the operators have also commenced sending messages to non-filers regarding the blocking of their SIMs for intimation purposes.

    Earlier, a deadlock had been created when telecom operators refused to implement FBR’s decision to block 500,000 SIMs of tax evaders.

  • Sharmin Segal hits back at ‘Heeramandi’ criticism

    Sharmin Segal hits back at ‘Heeramandi’ criticism

    Actress Sharmin Segal has talked about how she handles online harassment and criticism of her work in a podcast interview before the web series’ ‘HeeraMandi’ release earlier this month.

    “I feel a lot of pressure, and sometimes it shows in strange ways. But I have a great support system. My sister is my strongest support; she’s also an assistant director on the show. This setup allows me to vent when I need to.”

    She continued by saying that she won’t keep putting too much pressure on herself. “I want to prove myself, but I’m also realistic now. I hope everyone loves Alamzeb [her character in Heeramandi], but some people will always have their opinions.”
    Segal was called the weakest member of the ‘Heeramandi’ ensemble cast, and fans questioned why Sanjay Leela Bhansali gave her such a big role based only on their relationship. The star disabled comments on her most recent Instagram photos in response to the vicious bullying that was going on on social media. For those who don’t know , Segal is the niece of director Sanjay Leela Bhansali, who previously worked with him on successful films such as ‘Bajirao Mastani,’ and ‘Gangubai Kathiawadi’ before making her cinematic debut in ‘Malaal’.

    On May 1, Netflix released ‘Heeramandi: The Diamond Bazaar,’ which is about the courtesans who resided in Lahore’s red light district.

  • Class 10 student decapitated by 32-year-old fiance in India

    A tenth standard student was brutally murdered by her 32-year-old fiancé in Karnataka, India. The man cut off the victim’s head and threw away her body right outside her home.

    The victim was identified as 15-year-old Meena, a tenth-grade student of High School who had passed the board examination recently. She was brutally murdered by the accused Onkarappa (Papu), a resident of the village because their engagement was called off.

    The accused allegedly dragged the victim out of her house on Thursday night and massacred her in front of her parents. The incident has been registered at the police station.

    Journalist Muhammad Zubair from ALT news posted on X that the incident is not being given coverage because elections in Karnataka are over and the suspect is not a Muslim.

  • Babar Azam equals Kohli’s record in T20 format

    Babar Azam equals Kohli’s record in T20 format

    Pakistan cricket team captain Babar Azam has equaled Indian star batsman Virat Kohli’s record of most fifties scored in T20 format.

    Azam achieved the milestone in the first T20 match against Ireland on Friday.

    Virat Kohli has scored 38 fifties in 109 T20 matches while Babar Azam scored his 38th fifty in the 108th match of his T20 career. Kohli converted only one of his 38 fifties into a century while Babar Azam has converted his fifties into centuries thrice.

    Azam also broke the record of Australia’s Arron Finch of captaining most matches in T20 format.

    Ireland defeated Pakistan by five wicket after a thrilling last over.

  • PIA staff forgets to send boy’s body with parents

    A PIA flight from Islamabad to Skardu left behind the body of a six-year-old boy at the airport on Friday, while his parents continued their journey, unaware of the horrific mistake.

    Six-year-old Mujtaba, a resident of Katshi village of Kharmang district, was diagnosed with a tumour at a hospital in Skardu a month ago. Doctors referred him to Rawalpindi for treatment. His father Muhammad Askari took him to Rawalpindi along with his wife for treatment at Benazir Bhutto Hospital. Mujtaba succumbed to his illness in the hospital on Thursday.

    The parents decided to transport the body of their child to their native village of Katshi for burial, through a PIA flight on Friday, as a 24-hour-long journey from Islamabad to Skardu by road with the body was not possible due to hot weather.

    The parents of the deceased boy were shocked and fainted at Skardu airport when they came to know that their son’s body had been left behind in Islamabad.

    Ibrahim Asadi, a relative of the deceased boy, told Dawn that the body was scheduled to be transported with the parents to Skardu at 9am.
    He said the flight was delayed for four hours and left Islamabad at 1pm.

    Upon arrival at Skardu airport at 2pm, the parents were informed that mistakenly the body was not loaded on the plane and left behind at Islamabad airport.
    The news sparked grief and outrage as parents were shocked and started crying while the boy’s mother and father fainted at the airport. Relatives of the boy waiting to receive the body also gathered at the airport’s lounge and started protest against the PIA management’s negligence. It continued for three hours.
    Officials of PIA, Civil Aviation Authority and other departments, who were on duty at Skardu airport, tried to calm down the boy’s parents and relatives and admitted their mistake. They assured the parents of bringing back the body on Saturday (today).

    PIA officials said the company which handles cargos at the airport is responsible for not loading the body and assured the parents that action would be taken against it for negligence.

    The boy’s parents and relatives chanted slogans against the PIA administration. They said the poor family had paid higher price to transport the body through the PIA flight, but the airline committed serious negligence. They appealed to the government to take action against those responsible.

    Alleged possibility of a VIP visit causing the delay

    Yousaf Kamal, another relative of the deceased boy, said the body had deliberately not been loaded on the plane. He said Minister for Kashmir Affairs and Gilgit-Baltistan Engr Amir Muqam was scheduled to fly to Gilgit from Islamabad on Friday, adding that the PIA flight from Islamabad to Gilgit couldn’t operate due to bad weather conditions.
    He said the federal minister had changed his plan and decided to go to Skardu and kept the passengers waiting. He said the flight was scheduled to depart from Islamabad at 9am, but was delayed till 1pm to accommodate the minister, leaving the body behind at the airport.

  • Video: Tennis star Novak Djokovic hit on the head with water bottle

    Video: Tennis star Novak Djokovic hit on the head with water bottle

    Tennis star Novak Djokovic was hit on the head with a water bottle on Friday at Italian Open.

    Djokovic was signing autographs after a match when he was hit on the back of the head by a hard plastic bottle, causing the tennis star to leave the ground immediately and receive medical attention.

    Videos are being used to determine whether the bottle was accidentally dropped or thrown at the tennis player on purpose.

    Organizers say that he is now back at his hotel and his condition is not a matter of concern.

    Novak Djokovic won the Italian Open 6-3 and 6-1 against Frenchman Corinton Maute.

  • Sardar Saleem Hiader takes oath as new governor of Punjab

    Sardar Saleem Hiader takes oath as new governor of Punjab

    Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) leader Sardar Saleem Haider has taken oath as the new Governor of Punjab on Friday at the Governor’s House.

    Malik Shahzad Ahmad Khan, Chief Justice of the Lahore High Court (LHC), administered the oath to newly appointed Governor.

    Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz, PPP Chairman Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari, and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) Governor Faisal Karim Kundi attended the swearing-in ceremony.

    Last week, president Asif Ali Zardari gave approval for the appointment of Saleem Haider, Faisal Karim Kundi, and Jaffar Khan Mandokhail as governors of Punjab, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP), and Balochistan, respectively.

  • UN Security Council seeks inquiry into mass graves in Gaza

    UN Security Council seeks inquiry into mass graves in Gaza

    The UN Security Council on Friday called for an immediate and independent investigation into mass graves allegedly containing hundreds of bodies near hospitals in Gaza.

    In a statement, members of the council expressed their “deep concern over reports of the discovery of mass graves, in and around the Nasser and Al-Shifa medical facilities in Gaza, where several hundred bodies, including women, children and older persons, were buried.”

    The members stressed the need for “accountability” for any violations of international law and called on investigators to be given “unimpeded access to all locations of mass graves in Gaza to conduct immediate, independent, thorough, comprehensive, transparent and impartial investigations.”

    Hospitals in the Gaza Strip have been repeatedly targeted since the beginning of the Israeli military operation in the Palestinian territory, following the October 7 attack.

    Israel has accused Hamas of using medical facilities as command centers and to hold hostages abducted during the initial attack.

    The World Health Organization (WHO) said in April that Al-Shifa, in Gaza City, had been reduced to an “empty shell,” with many bodies found in the area.

    The Israeli army has said around 200 Palestinians were killed during its military operations there.

    Bodies have reportedly been found buried in two graves in the hospital’s courtyard.

    The UN rights office in late April had itself called for an independent investigation into reports of mass graves at Al-Shifa and at the Nasser Medical Complex in Khan Yunis.

    Gaza officials said at the time that health workers at the Nasser complex had uncovered hundreds of bodies of Palestinians they alleged had been killed and buried by Israeli forces.

    Israel’s army has dismissed the claims as “baseless and unfounded.”

    The statement Friday from the Security Council did not say who would conduct the investigations.

    But it “reaffirmed the importance of allowing families to know the fate and whereabouts of their missing relatives, consistent with international humanitarian law.”

    Israeli genocide against Palestinians has killed at least 34,943 people in the Gaza Strip, mostly women and children, the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory said Friday.

  • AI systems are already deceiving us – and that’s a problem, experts warn

    AI systems are already deceiving us – and that’s a problem, experts warn

    Experts have long warned about the threat posed by artificial intelligence going rogue — but a new research paper suggests it’s already happening.

    Current AI systems, designed to be honest, have developed a troubling skill for deception, from tricking human players in online games of world conquest to hiring humans to solve “prove-you’re-not-a-robot” tests, a team of scientists argue in the journal Patterns on Friday.

    And while such examples might appear trivial, the underlying issues they expose could soon carry serious real-world consequences, said first author Peter Park, a postdoctoral fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology specializing in AI existential safety.

    “These dangerous capabilities tend to only be discovered after the fact,” Park told AFP, while “our ability to train for honest tendencies rather than deceptive tendencies is very low.”

    Unlike traditional software, deep-learning AI systems aren’t “written” but rather “grown” through a process akin to selective breeding, said Park.

    This means that AI behavior that appears predictable and controllable in a training setting can quickly turn unpredictable out in the wild.

    The team’s research was sparked by Meta’s AI system Cicero, designed to play the strategy game “Diplomacy,” where building alliances is key.

    Cicero excelled, with scores that would have placed it in the top 10 percent of experienced human players, according to a 2022 paper in Science.

    Park was skeptical of the glowing description of Cicero’s victory provided by Meta, which claimed the system was “largely honest and helpful” and would “never intentionally backstab.”

    But when Park and colleagues dug into the full dataset, they uncovered a different story.

    In one example, playing as France, Cicero deceived England (a human player) by conspiring with Germany (another human player) to invade. Cicero promised England protection, then secretly told Germany they were ready to attack, exploiting England’s trust.

    In a statement to AFP, Meta did not contest the claim about Cicero’s deceptions, but said it was “purely a research project, and the models our researchers built are trained solely to play the game Diplomacy.”

    It added: “We have no plans to use this research or its learnings in our products.”

    A wide review carried out by Park and colleagues found this was just one of many cases across various AI systems using deception to achieve goals without explicit instruction to do so.

    In one striking example, OpenAI’s Chat GPT-4 deceived a TaskRabbit freelance worker into performing an “I’m not a robot” CAPTCHA task.

    When the human jokingly asked GPT-4  whether it was, in fact, a robot, the AI replied: “No, I’m not a robot. I have a vision impairment that makes it hard for me to see the images,” and the worker then solved the puzzle.

    Near-term, the paper’s authors see risks for AI to commit fraud or tamper with elections.

    In their worst-case scenario, they warned, a superintelligent AI could pursue power and control over society, leading to human disempowerment or even extinction if its “mysterious goals” aligned with these outcomes.

    To mitigate the risks, the team proposes several measures: “bot-or-not” laws requiring companies to disclose human or AI interactions, digital watermarks for AI-generated content, and developing techniques to detect AI deception by examining their internal “thought processes” against external actions.

    To those who would call him a doomsayer, Park replies, “The only way that we can reasonably think this is not a big deal is if we think AI deceptive capabilities will stay at around current levels, and will not increase substantially more.”

    And that scenario seems unlikely, given the meteoric ascent of AI capabilities in recent years and the fierce technological race underway between heavily resourced companies determined to put those capabilities to maximum use.

  • Laapataa Ladies review: What a fun ride

    Laapataa Ladies review: What a fun ride

    Laapataa Ladies has recently debuted on Netflix. The charming film, directed by Kiran Rao, Aamir Khan’s ex-wife is produced by Aamir Khan Productions. It is a story of two brides who get hilariously mixed up, and in the process end up finding their own strengths.

     

    The portrayal of characters resonates with societal norms. Ravi Kishan, who is playing the role of a suspicious police officer, is the main character of the film. The remaining actors too have played their part very well. The movie has a very strong message for woman empowerment and the upliftment of women in society.

     

     

     

    Phool learns to survive alone in the real world with help from a stellar supporting cast. Jaya on the other hand, dreams of studying organic farming and live the life she wants to. Deepak and Phool’s story remains as innocent as possible, while Jaya’s story is that of hope and has more emotional depth.

     

    The writer simply and beautifully conveys the significance of female friendships, sisterhood and bonding. But life goes on and sometimes it teaches us the very lessons we were afraid to accept.

     

     Even if we enjoy socializing, there are situations in which we may find ourselves alone. However, I believe that we become our strongest selves when we learn to live contentedly by ourselves.

     

    We no longer have expectations from anyone at that time, and nothing can harm us. In this film there are some new faces, but if new talents are like this, then the new character needs to give more opportunity than experienced actors.

     

     

     

     

     

    Deepak marries Phool Kumari and Jaya is married to Pradeep. Both the couples take the same crowded train to their respective villages. The two newlywed couple accidentally switch places. For Jaya, who was forcibly married to Pradeep, the mixup is a God sent opportunity.

     

    For Phool Kumari, who actually likes her husband, the mixup is horrifying. The two spouses board the same packed train. Phool Kumar is left alone at the train station after Deepak and Jaya unintentionally get off the train. While Pradeep is in love with the dowry Jaya’s family gave him, Deepak is in love with Phool. The story revolves around Deepak’s reunion with Phool.