Meta launches its AI chatbot in the UK on Facebook and Instagram

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Meta, the owner of Facebook and Instagram, has launched its artificial intelligence assistant in the UK, alongside AI-boosted sunglasses modelled by Mark Zuckerberg.Meta’s AI assistant, which can generate text and images, is now available on its social media platforms in the UK and Brazil, having already been launched in the US and Australia.Regulatory issues and product testing held up the UK launch, while Meta’s AI services remain unavailable in the EU due to the “unpredictable” regulatory environment.Facebook and Instagram users in the UK will now be able to access the Meta AI chatbot by tapping on an icon in their app or by buying a pair of £299 Ray-Ban Meta frames from a UK retailer and accessing its voice assistant.Zuckerberg, Meta’s co-founder, sported a pair of the Ray-Bans at a company event last month when he also announced that Meta AI would be able to respond to voice commands and use the voice of celebrities including Judi Dench, John Cena and Keegan-Michael Key.

However, the celebrity voice assistant will not be available in the UK.Meta said the latest rollout, which also includes the Philippines, “will help people get answers to their questions, brainstorm content and bring their ideas to life in places where they can easily share the results with their local network and our broader global community”.Meta’s AI products, powered by the company’s Llama 3.2 AI model, have been the focus of attempts by social media users to block the company from using their posts to train its AI tools.One viral post with the message “Goodbye Meta AI!” was shared by actors and sports stars – including James McAvoy and Tom Brady – before it emerged that the post gave no privacy or copyright protection.

Instead, UK users who wish to stop Meta from using their Facebook and Instagram posts to train its AI models need to fill out an objection form that can be obtained in their apps’ privacy settings.However, users of Meta’s AI products cannot block their interactions with the AI tools – as opposed to their actual social media posts – from being used to train and finetune the Llama model.Last week Meta said it had built a new artificial intelligence model called Movie Gen that could create realistic video and audio clips in response to user prompts – including a surfing koala.However, like OpenAI’s Sora video model, Movie Gen is not yet publicly available.
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Falafel, dips and mansaf: the Palestinian chef serving dishes ‘made with love’ in Melbourne

It’s an overcast afternoon in September and a crowd is gathering in the Melbourne suburb of Brunswick. The draw card: an unassuming food trailer parked in a loading bay on Hope Street, just off the suburb’s main drag.Brunswick is already famed for its vibrant Middle Eastern eateries and Aheda Amro, the woman behind this latest addition to the scene, knew it would be the perfect location to launch the project she has been working towards for the past five years.Originally from Halhul, a small city in Palestine’s West Bank, since arriving as an asylum seeker in 2018 Amro has been on a mission to bring the flavours of her homeland to Melbourne.The launch of her food van Aheda’s Kitchen is the result of years of determination and hard work; and not just Amro’s but that of the vast network of volunteers she has galvanised to help make her dream a reality

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What are the best fillings for a jacket potato? | Kitchen aide

There’s no denying a jacket potato is one of life’s simple pleasures, but sometimes minimalism is not the order of the day. So if, say, tuna mayo is as edgy as your fillings get, it’s time to broaden your horizons: “For a rich, savoury twist, crisp chorizo and cream cheese make the ultimate indulgent filling,” says Poppy O’Toole, spud queen and author of The Actually Delicious Slow Cooker. She starts by frying chopped chorizo in a dry pan until it releases its oil, then stirs half the meat and its fat through some cream cheese. “Butter up your jacket potato, top with a big spoonful of the chorizo cream cheese, and sprinkle the rest of the fried chorizo on top for a satisfying, flavour-packed meal.”The Guardian’s journalism is independent

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Georgina Hayden’s recipe for sausage meatballs with beans and caramelised peppers

For such a short ingredients list, this recipe is packed with flavour and something I cook almost weekly for my family (with slight variations). Using sausagemeat instead of mincemeat means instant flavour, and you can use whatever sausages you like (I love the ones with lots of fennel). You could serve this as is, on toast (think nostalgic beans on toast with sausages), or even substitute the beans for mini pasta shells – it’s a malleable and forgiving dish.If you have the time, give the peppers a little longer to cook, to make them extra sweet.Prep 10 min Cook 35 min Serves 42 tbsp olive oil6 sausages (about 400g)4 garlic cloves, peeled and finely chopped½ tsp sweet smoked paprika 3 peppers (red, orange or yellow), halved, seeds and pith removed, flesh very finely slicedSea salt and black pepper800g (2 x 400g tins) cannellini beans, drained ½ bunch flat-leaf parsley, finely choppedPut the oil in a large frying pan on a medium-low heat

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Mulled white wine? Perfect for Christmas guzzling

For the same reason you wouldn’t enjoy a protein shake at your anniversary dinner, you wouldn’t enjoy mulled wine at any time other than Christmas. Mulled wine is a drink that is tied to a specific moment. It’s not enough for the weather to be cold, grey and rainy (god knows we experience that often enough in the UK), it needs to feel festive – preferably in the presence of at least one adult dressed as an elf.In my head, mulled wine is a sort of goth sangria, a concoction that is flavoured, sweetened and spiced into something else entirely. This is also why people who don’t think of themselves as wine drinkers tend to enjoy mulled wine and sangria

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Rukmini Iyer’s quick and easy recipe for miso salmon noodles – recipe | Quick and easy

This flavour-packed dinner takes just minutes to put together. The salmon then looks after itself for 15 minutes in the oven with a miso-sesame glaze, and it’s just a quick stir-fry for the garlic, ginger, broccoli and noodles. We have variations of this on repeat at home for a quick dinner; thick straight-to-wok udon are my favourite here, but by all means use with watever you like, cooked according to the packet instructions.Prep 10 min Cook 15 min Serves 23 tbsp sesame oil, plus extra to serve2 tbsp white (or red) miso paste 2 sustainably sourced salmon fillets (I use wild Alaskan) 2 spring onions, finely sliced5cm piece (a thumb) ginger, peeled and finely grated2 garlic cloves, peeled and finely grated½-1 tsp chilli flakes200g Tenderstem broccoli, finely sliced½ tsp rice-wine vinegar2 x packs straight-to-wok thick udon noodles, or other cooked noodle of your choice Sea salt flakes, to tasteHeat the oven to 200C (180C fan)/390F/gas 6, and lay the salmon on a lined baking tray. Mix a tablespoon of sesame oil and a tablespoon of miso paste, then spread this over the salmon

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Rachel Roddy’s recipe for pumpkin, lentil and barley soup | A kitchen in Rome

Barley and, in no particular order, emmer and einkorn, wheat, rice, sorghum, peanuts, squash, cassava, lentils, chickpeas, bitter vetch and flax are the so-called founder crops that formed the basis of early agricultural economies in the various centres of domestication all over the planet. My first thought when I read this list of ingredients was: “What a fantastic soup!” And my second was: “What is bitter vetch?” The answer is it’s an ancient legume in the expansive Vicia genus that’s related to broad beans, although physically closer to the lentil and, taste-wise, nearer to a pea, only bitter. So, if you do make the founder crop soup, remember to parboil the bitter vetch several times, changing the water in between, before adding it to the soup. A small, portable oil press is also helpful, if you want to go all the way and turn flax seeds into oil, but remember to warm it gently.The Guardian’s journalism is independent