Headline
- Complaint filed against Meghna Group and Ekattor TV Chairman Mostafa Kamal
- 300 killed as Sudanese war approaches 2nd year
- How much does a brief space trip cost?
- OpenAI unveils GPT-4.1 API for developers with coding capabilities
- Finance Ministry issues outsourcing service procurement policy
- Arrest warrant against Hasina, Joy, 27 others
- Mild heat wave persists in parts of Bangladesh, rain likely in some regions
- Bourses extend losses as trading resumes after holiday break
- Istanbul court rejects appeal for former mayor Imamoglu’s release
- Sudan in ‘world’s largest humanitarian crisis’
- Iranian foreign minister to visit Moscow for US nuclear talks
- Russia's IT sector fears re-entry of Western competitors
- Princess of Wales celebrates ‘spiritual’ connection to nature
- Top Russian diplomat explains why Moscow trusts Donald Trump
- Dnata invests $110 million to expand global cargo operations
- Probe report in Sagar-Runi murder case on May 21
- My Mercedes was destroyed by rats: UK man struggles as bin strike continue
- Common goal for state reform, minor differences in execution: Ali Riaz
- Landmark antitrust trial could force Zuckerberg to sell Instagram, WhatsApp
- More Israeli soldiers sign petitions calling for end to Gaza war

AI was enemy No. 1 during Hollywood strikes. Now it's in Oscar-winning films
Two years ago, AI was the enemy of Hollywood. Actors and writers went on strike, demanding protections from the encroachment of artificial intelligence on their creative industries. But in a surprising twist, AI is now making its way into some of the most prestigious films, even earning recognition...