
Singapore Airlines profit falls as Air India loss hits earnings
The airline's net income dropped 59% to $145 million in the three months ended June 30, the carrier said in a statement on Monday. That was largely due to the results from Air India, in which it holds a 25.1% stake.
Its performance wasn't part of Singapore Air's results last year. The investigation into the crash of AI 171 in June is ongoing and the fallout is likely to continue to weigh on Singapore Air's results.
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Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
Air India rolls out dedicated emotional, mental well-being app for pilots, cabin crew
Air India has launched a mental well-being app for its pilots, crew, and families following the June crash of its Ahmedabad-London flight that killed 260 people. The app offers therapy, psychiatry, journaling tools, and AI support. The DGCA reiterated mental health training norms post-crash, where 112 pilots reported sick. Investigators found the engines were shut off mid-air accidentally. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tata Group-owned Air India has rolled out a dedicated emotional and mental well-being app for its pilots and cabin crew members and their families, offering over 600 expert-designed self-care techniques besides one-to-one therapy and psychiatry sessions, in the aftermath of one of the Ahmedabad plane crash in June this year, sources it also offers tools for journaling, tracking mood and goals and AI-powered chatbot support, they the crash, which killed 260 people, as many as 112 pilots had reported sick on a single day (June 16), comprising 51 commanders (P1) and 61 First Officers (P2).The government in response to a question in Parliament last month termed it as "a minor increase in sick leaves reported by pilots".Through the app, one-to-one sessions can be booked with the professional that best suits the user's comfort, ensuring personalised experience, the source said.A 2023 DGCA circular directs the airlines to offer specialised training to help flight crews and air traffic controllers identify and address mental health light of the tragedy, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) has reiterated its 2023 circular advising airlines to implement customised mental health training for crew and to ensure access to Peer Support Programmes (PSP) - confidential, non-punitive systems designed to help flight crew cope with stress, anxiety, and trauma, Minister of state for Civil Aviation Murlidhar Mohol had informed June 12, Air India's Boeing 787-8 aircraft en route to London Gatwick from Ahmedabad crashed into a building soon after takeoff, killing 260 people, including 19 people on the ground. Out of the 242 people onboard, one passenger July 12, the Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB), which has been probing the accident, released its preliminary report into the fatal report, which examined the sequence of events and engine behaviour leading up to the crash, revealed that the fuel to the engines of the plane was cut AAIB in its report said, within seconds of lift off, both engine fuel control switches of the aircraft transitioned from 'RUN' to 'CUTOFF' position one after another with a time gap of 01 seconds and turned off, resulting in devastating air to the preliminary report, one of the pilots can be heard on the cockpit voice recorder asking the other why he switched off the fuel supply to engines, to which the other pilot responded by saying that he did not. PTI


Mint
2 hours ago
- Mint
WhatsApp takes down 6.8 million accounts linked to criminal scam centers, Meta says
AP Updated 6 Aug 2025, 07:58 PM IST NEW YORK (AP) — WhatsApp has taken down 6.8 million accounts that were 'linked to criminal scam centers' targeting people online around that world, its parent company Meta said this week. The account deletions, which Meta said took place over the first six months of the year, arrive as part of wider company efforts to crack down on scams. In a Tuesday announcement, Meta said it was also rolling new tools on WhatsApp to help people spot scams — including a new safety overview that the platform will show when someone who is not in a user's contacts adds them to a group, as well as ongoing test alerts to pause before responding. Scams are becoming all too common and increasingly sophisticated in today's digital world — with too-good-to-be-true offers and unsolicited messages attempting to steal consumers' information or money filling our phones, social media and other corners of the internet each day. Meta noted that 'some of the most prolific' sources of scams are criminal scam centers, which often span from forced labor operated by organized crime — and warned that such efforts often target people on many platforms at once, in attempts to evade detection. That means that a scam campaign may start with messages over text or a dating app, for example, and then move to social media and payment platforms, the California-based company said. Meta, which also owns Facebook and Instagram, pointed to recent scam efforts that it said attempted to use its own apps — as well as TikTok, Telegram and AI-generated messages made using ChatGPT — to offer payments for fake likes, enlist people into a pyramid scheme and/or lure others into cryptocurrency investments. Meta linked these scams to a criminal scam center in Cambodia — and said it disrupted the campaign in partnership with ChatGPT maker OpenAI.


Economic Times
2 hours ago
- Economic Times
Forget jobs, AI is taking away much more: Creativity, memory and critical thinking are at risk. New studies sound alarm
Synopsis Artificial intelligence tools are becoming more common. Studies show over-reliance on AI may weaken human skills. Critical thinking and emotional intelligence are important. Businesses invest in AI but not human skills. MIT research shows ChatGPT use reduces memory retention. Users become passive and trust AI answers too much. Independent thinking is crucial for the future. iStock A new study reveals that over-reliance on AI tools may diminish essential human skills like critical thinking and memory. Businesses investing heavily in AI risk undermining their effectiveness by neglecting the development of crucial human capabilities. (Image: iStock) In a world racing toward artificial intelligence-driven efficiency, the question is no longer just about automation stealing jobs, it's about AI gradually chipping away at our most essential human abilities. From creativity to memory, critical thinking to ethical judgment, new research shows that our increasing dependence on AI tools may be making us less capable of using them major studies, one by UK-based learning platform Multiverse and another from the prestigious MIT Media Lab, paint a concerning picture: the more we lean on AI, the more we risk weakening the very cognitive and emotional muscles that differentiate us from the machines we're building. According to a recent report by Multiverse, businesses are pouring millions into AI tools with the promise of higher productivity and faster decision-making. Yet very few are investing in the development of the human skills required to work alongside AI effectively."Leaders are spending millions on AI tools, but their investment focus isn't going to succeed," said Gary Eimerman, Chief Learning Officer at Multiverse. "They think it's a technology problem when it's really a human and technology problem."The research reveals that real AI proficiency doesn't come from mastering prompts — it comes from critical thinking, analytical reasoning, creative problem-solving, and emotional intelligence. These are the abilities that allow humans to make meaning from what AI outputs and to question what it cannot understand. Without these, users risk becoming passive consumers of AI-generated content rather than active interpreters and decision-makers. The Multiverse study identified thirteen human capabilities that differentiate a casual AI user from a so-called 'power user.' These include resilience, curiosity, ethical oversight, adaptability, and the ability to verify and refine AI output.'It's not just about writing prompts,' added Imogen Stanley, a Senior Learning Scientist at Multiverse. 'The real differentiators are things like output verification and creative experimentation. AI is a co-pilot, but we still need a pilot.'Unfortunately, as AI becomes more accessible, these skills are being underutilized and in some cases, lost this warning, a separate study from the MIT Media Lab examined the cognitive cost of relying on large language models (LLMs) like ChatGPT. Over a four-month period, 54 students were divided into three groups: one used ChatGPT, another used Google, and a third relied on their own knowledge alone. The results were sobering. Participants who frequently used ChatGPT not only showed reduced memory retention and lower scores, but also diminished brain activity when attempting to complete tasks without AI assistance. According to the researchers, the AI users performed worse 'at all levels: neural, linguistic, and scoring.'Google users fared somewhat better, but the 'Brain-only' group, those who engaged with material independently, consistently outperformed the others in depth of thought, originality, and neural ChatGPT and similar tools offer quick answers and seemingly flawless prose, the MIT study warns of a hidden toll: mental passivity. As convenience increases, users become less inclined to question or evaluate the accuracy and nuance of AI responses.'This convenience came at a cognitive cost,' the MIT researchers wrote. 'Diminishing users' inclination to critically evaluate the LLM's output or 'opinions'.'This passivity can lead to over-trusting AI-generated answers, even when they're factually incorrect or ethically biased, a concern that grows with each advancement in generative the numbers and neural scans lies a deeper question: what kind of future are we building if we lose the ability to think, question, and create independently?