2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 16:03

In the years to come, robots will help offset worker shortages in health care, manufacturing and other industries, experts say.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 15:53

Swarms of low-cost drones used by the Russians in Ukraine have been breaching U.S. air defense systems and striking targets across the Middle East.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 15:51

With the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran in its seventh day, President Trump says the aim is to bring Iran back from the brink of destruction and "Make Iran Great Again."

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 15:50

Israel launched huge attacks on Iran and Lebanon overnight; Karoline Leavitt says Donald Trump will consider Iran to have surrendered once it no longer ‘poses a threat’ to the US

Iran and Lebanon were hit with a wave of intense Israeli strikes overnight.

Israel’s military said Friday morning it had begun “a broad-scale wave of strikes” on Tehran, Iran’s capital.

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 15:48

STARKVILLE, Miss., March 6, 2026 — An interdisciplinary team of Mississippi State University researchers has been awarded $850,000 from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or DARPA, to enhance early detection of threats to agricultural security on a global scale.

he interdisciplinary team receiving Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency funding to enhance early detection of agricultural threats includes, from left, Gijs de Boer of Brookhaven National Laboratory, John Goolgasian of Seerist Federal, Narcisa Pricope and Dimitros Manias of Mississippi State University, Shane Ross of Virginia Tech and Ben Tkatch of MSU. (Photo submitted to MSU.)

The award funding will help establish AgSENT, or the Agricultural Security Early Notification and Threat Network. AgSENT is a prototype interface that integrates key atmospheric, environmental, supply chain, biological and societal data to highlight early warnings of potential agricultural security issues.

The funding was awarded by DARPA’s Biological Technology Office as part of its efforts to defend against naturally occurring and manmade threats to the global food systems that the world relies on. The MSU team is led by Associate Vice President for Research and Economic Development Narcisa Pricope and includes Political Science and Public Administration Associate Professor Benjamin Tkach and Computer Science and Engineering Assistant Professor Dimitrios Manias.

In addition to MSU, academic partners on the project include Virginia Tech, the University of Tennessee-Knoxville and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The U.S. Department of Energy’s Brookhaven National Laboratory also is a collaborator.

“Agriculture is a critical component of national security, and the threats to global food supplies are increasingly complex and interconnected,” Pricope said. “The goal of AgSENT is to scan a wide range of potential threat indicators and translate that data into actionable insights that can help decision-makers anticipate and mitigate risks to food security.”

Pricope noted that the DARPA award builds on university efforts to better understand the connections between agriculture and national security, such as the Food and Ag As National Security conference held in the spring of 2025.

Tkach said collaboration is needed to address the numerous challenges facing global food and agricultural issues.

“Securing the nation’s food and agricultural system requires addressing both known risks, such as climate stress, population growth and biological threats, and anticipating emergent challenges,” Tkach said. “Through AgSENT, DARPA and MSU are advancing capabilities to detect, model and respond to novel threats in a rapidly evolving global competitive environment.”

The project will benefit from the capabilities of MSU’s Applied Research Collaboratory, including the Institute for Genomics, Biocomputing and Biotechnology, and the Center for Cyber Innovation.

“Whether it is atmospheric conditions that transport pathogens and contaminants across regions or early signs of political instability in an area critical to supply chains, the threats to agriculture transcend any single area of expertise,” Pricope said. “This interdisciplinary approach allows us to integrate signals across domains and develop more effective early-warning capabilities for agricultural security.”

To learn more about research at MSU, visit www.research.msstate.edu.


Source: James Carskadon, MSU

The post Mississippi State Awarded $850K from DARPA to Advance Global Ag Security, Early Threat Detection appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 15:47

Jet fuel costs have shot up more than 50% since the U.S.-Israel attack on Iran sparked a jump in global prices.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 15:47

The maker of the Claude chatbot says its research could help identify economic disruptions by measuring how AI is currently reshaping work.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 15:45

Kremlin press secretary Dmitry Peskov told reporters Russia's government is in "dialogue" with Iranian leadership representatives.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 15:41

President tells CNN country is going to ‘fall’ after earlier in the week claiming Cuba ‘wants to make a deal so badly’

Military investigators believe it is likely that US forces were responsible for an apparent strike on an Iranian girls’ school that killed scores of children on Saturday but have not yet reached a final conclusion, two US officials tell Reuters.

Reuters was unable to determine further details about the investigation, including what evidence contributed to the tentative assessment, what type of munition was used, who was responsible or why the US might have struck the school.

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 15:41

SAXONBURG, Pa., March 6, 2026 — Coherent Corp., a global leader in photonics, has announced the launch of Thermadite 800 Liquid Cold Plates (LCP) for next-generation AI accelerator cooling.

Thermadite 800 delivers thermal conductivity of 800W/(m⋅K) – approximately twice that of copper – combined with a low coefficient of thermal expansion and high dimensional stability. Together, these properties reduce chip temperatures through superior heat spreading and low-resistance thermal interfaces.

In high heat flux AI accelerator environments, Thermadite 800 LCPs can reduce chip temperatures by more than 15°C compared to conventional copper cold plates. The material also offers roughly 60% lower density than copper, enabling high-performance cooling in mass-sensitive systems.

Thermadite is formed by integrating diamond into the SiC matrix creating a stiff, stable, and highly thermal conductive material. The properties of Thermadite 800 provide a platform that supports aggressive liquid cooling without the warpage, stress, or reliability concerns associated with metal and metal-diamond cold plates.

LCPs built with Thermadite 800 can include complex internal microchannel architectures optimized to real chip heat maps. These designs focus cooling on localized hot spots, minimizing pressure drop and coolant usage, enabling more efficient heat removal and reducing overall cooling system
operating cost.

“Effective cooling in high-performance computing depends on the entire thermal route from chip to coolant,” said Steve Rummel, Senior VP of the Engineered Materials Group. “By merging decades of material science with precision manufacturing, Thermadite liquid cold plates lower chip temperatures, optimize pressure flow, and minimize interface resistance – all specifically designed for the extreme requirements of modern AI chips.”

Thermadite 800 LCPs leverage Coherent’s vertically integrated materials development, precision fabrication, and high-volume manufacturing capabilities. Examples of Thermadite 800 LCPs will be featured at the SEMI-THERM Symposium & Exposition 2026 and the Optical Fiber Communication Conference and Exhibition (OFC) 2026.

Learn more about Coherent’s Thermadite Liquid Cold Plates here.

About Coherent

Coherent (NYSE: COHR) is the global photonics leader. We harness photons to drive innovation. Industry leaders in the datacenter, communications, and industrial markets rely on Coherent’s world-leading technology to fuel their own innovation and growth. Founded in 1971 and operating in more than 20 countries, Coherent brings the industry’s broadest, deepest technology stack; unmatched supply chain resilience; and global scale to help its customers solve their toughest technology challenges. For more information, visit us at coherent.com.


Source: Coherent

The post Coherent Introduces Thermadite Liquid Cold Plates for High-Power Compute Applications appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 15:24
First Onewheel!

Long time skateboarder that just got into Onewheeling! This thing is awesome!

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 15:21

Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says his country will work with the Pentagon and Gulf allies to share what it has learned during four years of drone warfare.

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2026-03-06 15:20

Expansion strengthens local-for-local footprint and accelerates capacity to meet growing advanced-node and advanced packaging demand

WILMINGTON, Del., March 6, 2026 — Qnity Electronics, Inc. today announced the acquisition of a new facility in Taiwan, to accelerate capacity and support continued customer demand across the global semiconductor industry. The $61.5 million advanced semiconductor research and manufacturing facility marks a significant investment in Qnity’s growth to keep pace with customer demand.

The new facility will support the production of the most advanced chip manufacturing applications. The site will feature production areas, state-of-the-art clean rooms, warehousing infrastructure, research labs and dedicated office space designed to enable high-performance manufacturing at scale.

This site expands Qnity’s existing presence in the Hsinchu Science Park, and the new facility strengthens the company’s commitment to maintaining manufacturing sites near customers in key geographies. With a global footprint and a strategic local-for-local operating model, Qnity enables customers and partners to meet rising demand from AI, high-performance computing, and advanced connectivity.

“Growth in advanced-node manufacturing continues to accelerate, and our customers are scaling rapidly to support next-generation technologies,” said Jon Kemp, Chief Executive Officer at Qnity. “This investment expands our capacity to meet customer demand, enhances global supply chain resilience, and enables the innovation and performance our customers depend on.”

The global semiconductor industry is expecting to reach $1 trillion in revenues in the next few years, driven by the rapidly increasing demand for AI chips and data centers. Over the past three years, Qnity has added new capacity across its semiconductor businesses to keep pace with industry expansion. The investment to expand this capacity in Taiwan builds on that momentum while reinforcing the company’s long-term growth strategy.

By increasing production capabilities in proximity to key customers, Qnity is strengthening supply assurance, improving operational agility, and positioning itself to meet the evolving demands of next-generation chip manufacturing.

“This facility represents more than just additional capacity; it reflects our confidence in the industry’s trajectory and our commitment to ensure customer support across current and future growth cycles,” added Kemp. “We are building the infrastructure today to make tomorrow’s semiconductor innovations possible.”

The site is expected to begin operations in early 2027, with additional capabilities and research facilities in future development phases.

About Qnity

Qnity (NYSE: Q) is a premier technology provider across the semiconductor value chain, empowering AI, high performance computing, and advanced connectivity. From groundbreaking solutions for semiconductor chip manufacturing, to enabling high-speed transmission within complex electronic systems, our high-performance materials and integration expertise make tomorrow’s technologies possible. More information about the company, its businesses and solutions can be found at www.qnityelectronics.com.


Source: Qnity

The post Qnity Announces $61.5M Investment in New Advanced Semiconductor Research & Manufacturing Facility appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 15:09

The bill passed by the Virginia legislature prohibits schools from teaching what it considers to be falsehoods about the U.S. Capitol riot, including portraying it "as peaceful protest."

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 15:07

The Justice Department has formed a working group to examine bringing federal charges against officials or entities within Cuba’s government.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 15:06

Current and former Fema staff say the fired DHS secretary made the US more dangerous by overhauling the agency

Some current and former Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema) staff are celebrating the Thursday firing of homeland security secretary Kristi Noem, who they say has made the US more dangerous by micromanaging and shrinking the agency.

Since her confirmation to lead the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) last January, Noem’s tenure was criticized for degrading Fema – the nation’s foremost agency for disaster management and recovery – and repeatedly stating her support for the elimination of the agency. Noem said the overhaul was necessary to end bloating and inefficiency.

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 15:03

No Ghost of Yotei for you without a PlayStation.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 15:01

Foreign minister wants ‘conversation’ about closing UK military sites following British government not warning of impending attack on RAF Akrotiri

Cyprus’s foreign minister has said there are “questions” over the future presence of UK military bases on the island after the drone strike last Sunday.

The drone strike on RAF Akrotiri, suspected to have been launched by Hezbollah in Lebanon, caused minimal damage and did not result in casualties.

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 15:00

darwinmac writes: Mozilla is working on a huge redesign for its Firefox browser, codenamed "Nova," which will bring pastel gradients, a refreshed new tab page, floating "island" UI elements, and more. "From the mockups, it appears Mozilla took some inspiration from Googles Material You (or at least, the dynamic color extraction part of it) because the browser color accent appears influenced by the wallpaper setting," reports Neowin. "Choosing a mint-green desktop background automatically shifts the top navigation bars to match that exact shade." Mozilla has a habit of redesigning Firefox every few years. Before "Nova," there was the "Proton" redesign in 2021, the "Photon" redesign in 2017, and the "Australis" redesign in 2014. Nova is still in early development, so it might take a year or two before it appears in an official stable Firefox release. Neowin adds: "Not every redesign project ends well for Mozilla, though. You might remember 2012's Firefox Metro, an ambitious attempt to build a custom browser for Windows 8s touch-first interface. The team built it to operate both as a traditional desktop application and as a touch-optimized Metro app. The whole thing was scrapped in 2014 after two years in development due to a dismally low user adoption rate (a preview version of the software had been released a year earlier on the Aurora channel)."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 14:57

Curious how many miles he has on his XR now and whatever happened to him. I remember he used to be a big OW ambassador racking up ungodly miles.

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 14:57

Sen. Chuck Grassley said the dispute partly at the center of the dispute between DHS and its inspector general concerns undercover testing of TSA screening procedures.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 14:29

The price of silver is heading upward again, but will it break the $200 per ounce record? Here's what to consider.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 14:26

March 6, 2026 — The European High-Performance Computing Joint Undertaking (EuroHPC JU) launched the HPCTRAIN project, designed to empower young professionals with traineeships in high-performance computing (HPC).

The HPCTRAIN project aims to strengthen Europe’s HPC skills ecosystem by offering professional traineeships to early-career professionals across Europe, providing opportunities to gain practical experience in a professional and non-academic environment, networking opportunities and exposure to the industry.

Designed to bridge the gap between academic knowledge and the professional use of HPC, the program will enable participants to gain practical experience working on HPC-related projects, while developing the advanced technical and transversal skills required to pursue careers in this rapidly evolving field.

Calls for traineeship applications will be announced on a rolling basis, with four annual cut-off dates via the project website (where interested applicants can apply from). This program will match trainee candidates with relevant training opportunities offered by private companies and public organization that offer professional career paths centred around HPC technology, operation and applications. A dedicated Industrial Advisory Board with representations from the EuroHPC JU private members (ETP4HPC, DARIO/BDVA and QuIC), PRACE Industrial Advisory Committee and additional members from HPC industry will help to define, promote and execute the traineeship program.

This project will also include monitoring activities to review the impact of these traineeships and whether they effectively bridge the gap between education and the job market.

By equipping young professionals with HPC skills, HPCTRAIN is expected to significantly contribute to Europe’s digital technology supply chain. The initiative will enhance workforce capacity in critical segments such as HPC technology, operation, applications, and software development, supporting the digital evolution within the European Union (EU).

More Details

The HPCTRAIN consortium, coordinated by the Forschungszentrum Julich GmbH (FZJ), comprises 12 diverse organisations (universities, supercomputing centres and companies) such as IT4Innovations National Supercomputing Center, Barcelona Supercomputing Center, University of Stuttgart, LuxProvide, University of Luxembourg, PRACE, , CSC, University of Gallway, INESC TEC and University of Ljubljana that offer a diversified traineeship program.

The project officially started in January 2026 and will last 48 months.

The HPC Train project has been selected following the call DIGITAL-EUROHPC-JU-2022-TRAINING-03 and is funded by the Digital Europe programme, with a total EU contribution of around EUR 5 million.


Source: EuroHPC JU

The post EuroHPC Launches HPCTRAIN Project for Early-Career HPC Traineeships appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 14:18

Lawyers for magician, who plans to unveil new project, said in 2024 he was ‘at most acquaintances’ with Epstein

David Copperfield has announced that he is performing his last show at MGM Grand in Las Vegas next month, an announcement that comes weeks after documents released in the Epstein files revealed new details about how the FBI viewed the illusionist’s relationship with Jeffrey Epstein, the late convicted sex offender.

The announcement that the 69-year-old illusionist’s last show would be held on 30 April appears to have been made suddenly. In a statement praising and thanking Copperfield for his 25-year stint at MGM, the company said in a statement that it would automatically refund tickets for shows that were booked after that date.

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 14:18

The gunman who carried out the mass shooting​ last weekend in Austin, Texas, assaulted a woman three months earlier at a Tesla facility, according to a lawsuit filed Thursday in Texas.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 14:08

Crisis in the Middle East, Ramadan in Gaza, a blackout in Havana and Stella McCartney at Paris fashion week – the past seven days as captured by the world’s leading photojournalists

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 14:05

My favorite would-be product, Xreal Neo, is a no-go because of performance concerns.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 14:01

A change of leadership means little to an agency ‘shielded from scrutiny and unchecked by oversight’, human rights and advocacy organizations fear

Some of the most ostentatious enforcers of Donald Trump’s mass deportation agenda have left or been forced out of the administration in recent weeks.

In January, the president withdrew Greg Bovino – the border patrol commander who was the face of the immigration crackdowns in Chicago and Minneapolis – from his frontline role. Top Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin – who had become notorious for her bombastic and blatantly false press statements – left her role last month. And on Thursday, the secretary of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), Kristi Noem, was fired.

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 14:00

In refusing to sing the national anthem these athletes have placed themselves in grave danger while Gianni Infantino sides with the American war machine

A small but telling detail from a vast and baffling chain of events. You probably saw the footage of Donald Trump’s declaration of war on Iran two weeks ago, a piece of history played out in real time, a moment where the inevitable violent deaths of thousands of people were in effect announced.

In the video Trump is shown propped up at his plinth, using that sing-song intonation he employs to appear cod-statesmanlike, faux-grave, but sounding instead like a semi-sentient robot vacuum cleaner in the seconds before it runs out of battery life. To the great people of Iran. America is backing you. Don’t go outside. It’s very dangerous out there. We will for the foreseeable future be bombing you to freedom.

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 14:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Bloomberg, written by Katrina Manson: The U.S. strikes on Iran ordered by President Donald Trump mark the arrival on a large scale of a new era of warfare assisted by artificial intelligence. Captain Timothy Hawkins, a Central Command spokesperson, told me last night that the AI tools the U.S. military is using in Iran operations don't make targeting decisions and don't replace humans. But they do help "make smarter decisions faster." That's been the driving ambition of the U.S. military, which has spent years looking at how to develop and deploy AI to the battlefield [...]. Critics, such as Stop Killer Robots, a coalition of 270 human-rights groups, argue that AI-enabled decision-support systems reduce the separation between recommending and executing a strike to a "dangerously thin" line. Hawkins said the military's use of AI assistance follows a rigorous process aligned with U.S. policy, military doctrine and the law. Artificial intelligence helps analysts whittle down what they need to focus on, generating so-called points of interest and helping personnel make "smart" decisions in the Iran operations, he told me. AI is also helping to pull data within systems and organize information to provide clarity. Among the AI tech used in the Iran campaign is Maven Smart System, a digital mission control platform produced by Palantir [...]. That emerged from Project Maven, a project started in 2017 by the Pentagon to develop AI for the battlefield. Among the large language models installed on the system is Anthropic's Claude AI tool, according to the people, who said it has become central to U.S. operations against Iran and to accelerating Maven's development. Claude is also at the center of a row that pits Anthropic against the Department of Defense over limits on the software. Further reading: Hacked Tehran Traffic Cameras Fed Israeli Intelligence Before Strike On Khamenei

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 13:51

The Florida Bar said Friday that a letter stating Lindsey Halligan's actions were under investigation was erroneous.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 13:45

The Spice Girls score high, so let them tell you what they want, what they really, really want.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 13:37

Stephen McCullagh also covertly recorded ex-girlfriend’s counselling sessions after loss of a baby, jury hears

A man accused of murdering his pregnant girlfriend in Northern Ireland beat a previous partner, a court has heard.

Stephen McCullagh also covertly recorded the counselling sessions of the woman, just months before he met and allegedly killed Natalie McNally, Belfast crown court was told on Friday.

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 13:30

Three women in their 40s, 50s and 60s interviewed under caution in relation to alleged abuse by late Harrods owner

Three women have been interviewed under caution on suspicion of facilitating one of Britain’s worst sexual abuse scandals, involving the former Harrods owner Mohamed Al Fayed and his alleged attacks over four decades.

Scotland Yard said 154 women may have been raped or sexually assaulted by Fayed, or been subject to human trafficking and sexual exploitation.

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 13:28

A state bar association spokesperson said there is no ethics investigation into Lindsey Halligan under way

Former interim US attorney Lindsey Halligan – who was appointed by Donald Trump and led failed prosecutions against two of the president’s political opponents – was faced with an ethics investigation by the bar association in her home state of Florida, according to a February letter from the bar association to a non-profit watchdog organization.

But, in the wake of news coverage about that letter, a Florida bar association spokesperson said Friday in a statement that it had “erroneously” stated an ethics investigation into Halligan was under way.

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 13:27

US president again calls on Iranian people to overthrow government or face ‘absolutely guaranteed death’

Donald Trump has said only Iran’s “unconditional surrender” will bring an end to the offensive launched seven days ago, as the US and Israel carried out some of the heaviest bombardments so far in the conflict.

“There will be no deal with Iran except UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform on Friday, when US strategic bombers were in action over Iran and intensive Israeli strikes in Lebanon forced more than a million people to flee their homes.

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 13:21

Three U.S. fighter jets involved in the offensive against Iran were shot down mistakenly by Kuwait’s air defenses, the U.S. military’s Central Command said.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 13:11

Donald Trump has fired his controversial US homeland security secretary, Kristi Noem, after weeks of bipartisan complaints about her leadership. As the public face of an aggressive immigration crackdown that prompted lawsuits and nationwide anti-ICE protests, Noem’s year-long tenure was plagued by multiple controversies, including accusing two US citizens killed by immigration agents of ‘domestic terrorism’. What exactly led to Noem’s firing and what do we know about her replacement? Nosheen Iqbal speaks to the Guardian US live news editor Chris Michael

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 13:10

The New York State attorney general’s office has begun investigating how Columbia University let a predatory doctor continue to see patients despite decades of warnings.

“The Office of the Attorney General is conducting a thorough investigation into the institutional response to Robert Hadden’s misconduct,” a spokesperson said in a statement to ProPublica. The agency did not give further details.

A ProPublica investigation from the fall of 2023 revealed how Columbia ignored women and ultimately protected Robert Hadden, a longtime OB-GYN at the university. In 2012, Columbia allowed Hadden to continue seeing patients just days after one of them called 911 to report Hadden had sexually assaulted her.

In early 2023, Hadden was convicted in federal court of sexually abusing patients. He is currently serving a 20-year sentence. Columbia has paid out more than $1 billion for over 1,000 claims of sexual abuse.

After our investigation, Columbia committed to a variety of reforms, including improved patient safety, a $100 million fund for victims and an independent investigation.

But advocates, students and survivors say Columbia needs to do far more to grapple with its role in Hadden’s conduct. Four hundred Columbia medical students recently wrote to university officials demanding disciplinary reviews for administrators who failed to heed warnings about Hadden. 

Unlike at other universities that have dealt with serially abusive doctors, no higher-ups at Columbia appear to have lost their jobs or been disciplined. Dr. Mary D’Alton, who was cc’d on a letter that authorized Hadden’s return to work, remains the chair of the obstetrics and gynecology department.

D’Alton did not respond to a request for comment.

Columbia declined to comment for this story.

The attorney general’s office has significant powers over New York’s nonprofits, including Columbia. A few years ago, it forced the Trump Foundation to shut down. More recently it sued the National Rife Association, which then had to enact a series of reforms

Survivors told ProPublica they were heartened that New York is looking into Columbia. 

“Accountability is overdue, particularly in light of the Epstein files,” said Evelyn Yang, pointing to recent revelations that several Columbia affiliates had ties to the financier.  

Yang was among at least 8 patients who were assaulted by Hadden after he returned to work. She was seven months pregnant at the time.

Shortly after our story was published more than two years ago, Columbia promised to “thoroughly examine the circumstances that allowed Hadden’s abuse to continue.” 

No report detailing those findings has yet been published. 

Last week, Columbia acknowledged in an announcement that there “are many questions” about the timing of the investigation it commissioned. It said that the report is expected to be released “soon.”

New York State Assemblymember Grace Lee blasted the university’s failure to issue the report, telling ProPublica the university has not taken responsibility for what happened.

“To me, it’s just outrageous that we are here now in 2026 and we still have no report and no one has been held accountable,” she said.

By comparison, the external investigation into the University of Michigan’s response to the crimes committed by its former physician Robert Anderson took about 15 months. 

Another Hadden survivor, Marissa Hoechstetter, said the attorney general’s decision to examine Columbia provides some relief because the institution has repeatedly failed to do so itself.

“I do believe institutional accountability is a missing part of making a bigger change in the fight of gender-based violence,” Hoechstetter said. “I don’t know what will come of this investigation” — referring to New York’s probe — “but it shows that institutions that protect and cover up abusers in order to protect their own people and reputation will be held accountable.”

Hoechstetter and Yang both advocated for the passage of the Adult Survivors Act, a New York State law that in 2022 opened a one-year window in which survivors of sexual assault could file civil suits against their abusers or the institutions that protected them, even after the statute of limitations had passed.

For years, the university had failed to notify Hadden’s former patients of his misconduct. Finally, in November 2023, just 10 days before the law’s extended window closed, Columbia announced it would send letters to almost 6,500 patients.

A closed town hall meeting at the medical school this January gave a window into who was behind that lack of notification. “It actually is a Board of Trustee decision” because of the potential cost of litigation, Monica Lypson, the vice dean for medical education, told students in a recording that ProPublica obtained.

Lypson did not respond to a request for comment.

Separately, the deadline to submit a claim to Columbia’s survivors’ settlement fund, which was established for survivors who do not want to file lawsuits, has been extended to April 15.

The post New York Attorney General is Investigating Columbia for Allowing Predatory Doctor to See Patients Despite Warnings appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 13:06

You may not need all the features and expense of an unlimited plan from the big carriers. A prepaid plan with fixed costs could be a better choice.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 13:03

Styles will perform new album in full at Co-op Live arena show, with tickets being traded for well above £20 face value

More than 20,000 fans from all over the world flocked towards the Co-op Live arena in Manchester on Friday to watch Harry Styles perform his first concert in two and a half years – some waiting 48 hours for a place down the front.

Styles will perform his new album Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally in full, after its release earlier today. Anticipation for the show had been high since tickets went on sale for £20 in early February, which, barring a performance of the album’s lead single Aperture at the Brit awards – which took place at the same arena a week earlier – will be Styles’ first time on stage since closing out a tour in Italy in July 2023. It has been marketed as a homecoming show for the pop star, who was raised outside the city in Holmes Chapel, Cheshire.

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 13:02

WASHINGTON, DC - FEBRUARY 04: U.S. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), joined by House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) and fellow congressional Democrats, speaks at a press conference on Department of Homeland Security (DHS) funding at the U.S. Capitol on February 04, 2026 in Washington, DC. The Democratic leadership outlined their demands for ICE accountability as Congress debates funding legislation for the DHS ahead of next week's deadline. (Photo by Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, joined by House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and fellow congressional Democrats, speaks at a press conference on DHS funding at the U.S. Capitol on Feb. 4, 2026. Photo: Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

A high-profile election denier is leading election integrity work at the Department of Homeland Security. Trump and congressional Republicans are pushing the SAVE America Act and threatening to “nationalize” elections, purportedly to prevent undocumented immigrants from voting. But despite an occasional murmur from Democrats that they are concerned about Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents deploying to polling places around the country, they’re doing almost nothing to stop this nightmare scenario. 

In response to the horrific killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis, Democrats have partially shut down the government, holding DHS spending in limbo as they demand reforms to ICE. But instead of looking ahead to the midterms, Democrats have drawn most of their demands from the same well of “community policing” policies that became popular during the Black Lives Matter era, like better use-of-force policies, eliminating racial profiling, and deploying more body cameras. The rest of the Democrats’ wish list are proposals to ban things that are already illegal (like entering homes without a warrant or creating databases of activists) or are almost comically toothless, like regulating the uniforms DHS agents wear on the street. 

The department is quickly metastasizing into a grave threat to the midterms, public safety, and our democracy.

The department is quickly metastasizing into a grave threat to the midterms, public safety, and our democracy — and Democrats are wasting time worried about their uniforms. Although Heather Honey, who pushed the theory that the 2020 race was stolen from Trump and serves in a newly created role as the administration’s deputy assistant secretary for election integrity, told elections officials on a private call last week that ICE would not be at polling sites, state officials reportedly weren’t reassured. Advocacy organizations have warned that even if that holds true, just the possibility could have a “chilling” effect on turnout. If Democrats want to prevent ICE from being used to interfere with elections, they have to be prepared to demand more — and be willing not to fund DHS until next year if they don’t get these concessions.

First and foremost, Democrats need to stop the department’s heavily politicized “wartime” recruitment drive. Thanks to H.R. 1, otherwise known as the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, ICE has more than doubled the number of officers and agents in its ranks since Trump took office. In spite of merit system principles which prohibit politicized recruitment, DHS has used its massive influx of cash to target conservative-coded media, gun shows, and NASCAR races, and has used white nationalist, neo-Nazi iconography in its recruitment advertising. The Department of Justice has similarly focused its recruitment efforts on those who demonstrate loyalty to Trump’s agenda.

Related

ICE Removes Spanish-Language Training Requirement for New Recruits

Purposely recruiting right-wing extremists should be reason enough for Democrats to act — neo-Nazis aren’t going to be mollified by a use-of-force policy. But just as dangerously, DHS’s rush to fill its ranks with ideological zealots could leave the department addled by corruption for decades to come. 

That’s exactly what happened to the Border Patrol, which has never recovered from a post-9/11 hiring surge in which standards were lowered, training was shortened, and background checks were rushed. Back in 2016, an independent task force led by former New York Police Department Commissioner Bill Bratton and former Drug Enforcement Administration head Karen Tandy found Border Patrol was so vulnerable to corruption that it posed a threat to national security. A former internal affairs official at Border Patrol told The Intercept in 2020 that he estimated between 5 and 10 percent of the force was actively or formerly engaged in some form of corruption.

What is happening today could be orders of magnitude worse. Consider who is in charge: Trump’s border czar, Tom Homan, reportedly promised to steer immigration enforcement-related government contracts in exchange for $50,000 in cash in a paper bag, which he was recorded accepting from an undercover FBI agent at a Cava in suburban Maryland. (Trump’s DOJ shut down the case shortly after taking office.)

In November, ProPublica reported just-axed Homeland Security chief Kristi Noem directed $220 million in contracts to an advertising firm whose CEO is married to outgoing DHS chief spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin. Noem also came under fire from Congress during her testimony this week on DHS’s contracting practices and whether Corey Lewandowski — her top aide, former Trump campaign manager, and widely rumored paramour — had any role in approving them.

Among the rank and file, at least two dozen ICE employees and contractors have been charged with crimes since 2020 ranging from sexually abusing people in custody or taking bribes to remove detention orders. The corruption eating away at DHS, combined with fiscal mismanagement even Republican appropriators called “especially egregious” last year, is an urgent crisis.

DHS’s surveillance capabilities, along with its clear penchant for using them to suppress dissent, should also alarm Democrats about ICE’s potential role in future elections. Although the Privacy Act of 1974 explicitly prohibits federal agencies from maintaining records on how individuals exercise their First Amendment rights, there is growing evidence of rampant databasing of people based on their political beliefs. Last year, DHS issued a Privacy Act notice on its expanded records systems, which now include “individuals who have made credible threats against ICE personnel or facilities.” It’s not hard to imagine that DHS may be internally defining “threat” to encompass all kinds of nonviolent protest activity, and we are seeing the consequences of that in cities across the country.

Related

Federal Agents Are Intimidating Legal Observers at Their Homes: “They Know Where You Live”

In Minneapolis and elsewhere, DHS officials and line-level agents have gleefully threatened activists with “making them famous” — going so far as to show up at legal observers’ homes to taunt and intimidate them — labeled protesters as “domestic terrorists,” and revoked one activist’s Global Entry and TSA PreCheck privileges.

Documents released in AAUP v. Rubio, a lawsuit challenging visa revocations of university students and faculty for their pro-Palestinian advocacy, revealed that DHS and the State Department were investigating, detaining, and attempting to deport students and faculty based solely on their political speech

None of these abuses of people’s privacy, data, and constitutional rights has stopped Silicon Valley from rushing in to build surveillance tools for DHS. Palantir, which has already built databases for immigration enforcement, inked a billion-dollar deal with DHS last month. ICE used technology from Clearview AI to scan protesters’ faces in Minneapolis. Although Meta doesn’t have a contract with DHS, there have been several reports of individual CBP agents using Meta’s AI smart sunglasses to record activists while on the job.

Democrats should fully expect this administration — and DHS specifically — to use its propaganda tools to influence an election. Consider, for example, DHS utilizing targeted advertising to intimidate or mislead voters and stigmatize organizations that mobilize Democratic voters. During the last government shutdown, the administration used government websites and even employees’ out-of-office email messages to blame Democrats for the shutdown. 

Democrats should not count on getting another chance to stop the Trump administration from stealing an election.

Some of DHS’s influence peddling should be prohibited by restrictions on using appropriated funds for “publicity or propaganda” routinely placed in annual appropriations legislation. The Government Accountability Office typically investigates claims of funds being misused for propaganda after receiving a request from a member of Congress — but there has not been any public request for such an investigation into DHS or ICE. Although many of DHS’s propagandistic excesses — like shooting a photo op for Noem riding horseback at the foot of Mount Rushmore — are comical and seemingly unserious, some, like Facebook running ads for DHS urging immigrants to self-deport, are distasteful but pale in comparison to its more violent and abusive tactics. But if left unchecked, government propaganda could become another tool in DHS’s arsenal to undermine the will of the American people. 

If Democrats are genuinely worried that Trump will use ICE to interfere with an election, then the issue could not be more pressing. Clawing back some of the $150 billion DHS reportedly has left unspent from HR1 would be a place to start by making it much harder for Trump to pull it off. 

Democrats should not count on getting another chance to stop the Trump administration from stealing an election. DHS is more than an out-of-control law enforcement agency — it is quickly becoming a threat to democracy and national security. They need to act now before it’s too late.

The post Dems Need to Wise Up: ICE Is a Threat to Our Elections appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 13:01

The Hiroh smartphone adds physical privacy controls to enhance its protection of your sensitive information.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 13:00

Ancient Slashdot reader ewhac writes: The maintainers of the Python package `chardet`, which attempts to automatically detect the character encoding of a string, announced the release of version 7 this week, claiming a speedup factor of 43x over version 6. In the release notes, the maintainers claim that version 7 is, "a ground-up, MIT-licensed rewrite of chardet." Problem: The putative "ground-up rewrite" is actually the result of running the existing copyrighted codebase and test suite through the Claude LLM. In so doing, the maintainers claim that v7 now represents a unique work of authorship, and therefore may be offered under a new license. Version 6 and earlier was licensed under the GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL). Version 7 claims to be available under the MIT license. The maintainers appear to be claiming that, under the Oracle v. Google decision, which found that cloning public APIs is fair use, their v7 is a fair use re-implementation of the `chardet` public API. However, there is no evidence to suggest their re-write was under "clean room" conditions, which traditionally has shielded cloners from infringement suits. Further, the copyrightability of LLM output has yet to be settled. Recent court decisions seem to favor the view that LLM output is not copyrightable, as the output is not primarily the result of human creative expression -- the endeavor copyright is intended to protect. Spirited discussion has ensued in issue #327 on `chardet`s GitHub repo, raising the question: Can copyrighted source code be laundered through an LLM and come out the other end as a fresh work of authorship, eligible for a new copyright, copyright holder, and license terms? If this is found to be so, it would allow malicious interests to completely strip-mine the Open Source commons, and then sell it back to the users without the community seeing a single dime.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 12:54

Woods says he has PGA commitments but knows he would be up against a detail-obsessed Luke Donald in 2027

Chatter on the Bay Hill range this week has suggested the prospect of Tiger Woods making a return to competitive action at next month’s Masters may actually be more than a tale of fantasy. There is even the suggestion Woods could test his competitive ability at a stop on the senior Champions Tour between now and Augusta National. If nothing else, the mere discussion keeps sponsors happy.

One never really knows with Woods, whose schedule was always mysterious by design, but his addition to the Masters field would naturally turn heads. Having not played a mainstream tournament since the Open of 2024 – and with an injury record as long as the Trans-Siberian railway – Woods will presumably at some point have to prove he can either remain a relevant part of majors or succumb to the kind of sad, hard-to-watch existence that has befallen scores of sportspeople before him. It is at least fair to say he does not have many Masters left.

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 12:52

The intensified use of artificial intelligence, and rows over its control, demonstrate the need for democratic oversight and multilateral controls

“Never in the future will we move as slow as we are moving now,” the UN secretary-general, António Guterres, warned this week, addressing the urgent need to shape the use of artificial intelligence. The speed of technological development – as well as geopolitical turbulence – is collapsing the distinction between theoretical arguments and real world events. A political row over the US military’s AI capabilities coincides with its unprecedented use in the Iran crisis.

The AI company Anthropic insisted that it could not remove safeguards preventing the Department of Defense from using its technology for domestic mass surveillance or autonomous lethal weapons. The Pentagon said it had no interest in such uses – but that such decisions should not be made by companies. Outrageously, the administration has not just fired Anthropic but blacklisted it as a supply-chain risk. OpenAI stepped in, while insisting that it had maintained the red lines declared by Anthropic. Yet in an internal response to the user and employee backlash, its CEO Sam Altman acknowledged that it does not control the Pentagon’s use of its products and that the deal’s handling made OpenAI look “opportunistic and sloppy”.

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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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 12:49

PM justifies position on US-Israel war on Iran in social media post using the Dire Straits song Money for Nothing

Keir Starmer has been accused of trying to mimic Donald Trump’s social media output after posting a TikTok video about the crisis in the Middle East overlaid with the prime minister’s voice and the Dire Straits song Money for Nothing.

The video opens with footage showing Royal Navy Wildcat helicopters flying over his head before cutting to British military jets in action and a drone being destroyed, as Starmer’s voice states the position he has taken on the conflict.

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 12:46

People tell of scenes of panic during airstrikes on Iran’s capital, with several saying they feared they would die

Sleeplessness, fear and exhaustion gripped residents of Tehran as successive waves of strikes struck the Iranian capital, judging from messages sent by people in the city after the latest overnight onslaught, which several described as the worst bombardment in six days of war.

With Iran imposing a near-total internet blackout, information emerging from inside the country is fragmentary and difficult to verify. But in a series of accounts sent through proxy connections, and calls with friends abroad, Tehranis described a night of intense explosions.

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2026-03-06 16:04
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"States have been trying to topple regimes with air power alone and — I'm choosing my words carefully — it has never worked," Robert Pape told CBS News 24/7.

2026-03-06 16:04
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The normally vibrant southern suburbs are a ghost town, their throngs of people replaced by rubble and fires

The ding of half a million phones, a pause and a collective gasp: in an instant, more than 500,000 people had been made homeless.

Shooting in the air, panicked phone calls and honking filled the streets of Beirut as people began to flee. Thousands abandoned their cars and began the slow march to the sea, desperate to escape the Israeli bombs which they knew would soon fall on their homes, whether they were in them or not.

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 12:41

Landmark ruling in Celia Ramos case finds 310,000 women, most Indigenous, were targeted in brutal 1990s campaign

The highest human rights court in Latin America condemned Peru on Thursday over the death of its citizen Celia Ramos, who died at the age of 34 in 1997 after undergoing sterilisation “under coercion”.

The landmark ruling by the inter-American court of human rights (IACHR) is the first on Peru’s forced sterilisation programme, which operated between 1996 and 2000 and was directed against poor, rural and Indigenous women.

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 12:41

Top official at customs agency says total sum held in relation to tariffs is estimated to be about $166bn

The US customs agency is preparing a system that will be ​ready to process refunds on billions of dollars of illegally ‌collected tariffs in 45 days without requiring importers to sue, a court has been told.

Brandon Lord, a top official at US Customs and Border Protection (CBP), said in a filing to the US court of international trade on Friday that the total sum held in relation to such tariffs was estimated to be “approximately $166bn”.

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 12:40

Sales of products made the traditional way dropped 7% in three months to 25 January while nitrite-free sales rose 20%

UK supermarkets have been hit by a “bacon backlash” as consumers fear that chemicals used to preserve it increase the risk of cancer.

Campaigners against the use of nitrites in meat production claimed the fall in sales showed that a “consumer revolt” against the traditional, nitrite-cured form of bacon was gathering pace.

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 12:31

Africa Aware: Africa’s digital future Audio thilton.drupal

Ambassador Philip Thigo and Hon. Neema Lugangira discuss how digitalization in Africa can be harnessed to drive inclusive growth, strengthen institutions, and ensure that innovation translates into sustainable development outcomes.

Africa’s digital landscape is one of the most dynamic and rapidly evolving in the world. African states are not merely adopters of digital norms; they are shaping regulatory approaches in data protection and cybersecurity in addition to innovating mobile money ecosystems and digital health solutions among others. 

While innovation hubs are dotted across the continent, growth amongst African states and local communities remain uneven due to infrastructure gaps, broadband affordability, energy reliability and regulatory fragmentation. 

In this episode, Ambassador Philip Thigo and Hon. Neema Lugangira join the Africa Programme’s Professor Nnenna Ifeanyi-Ajufo and Lisa Musumba to discuss how digitalization can be harnessed to drive inclusive growth, strengthen institutions, and ensure that innovation translates into sustainable development outcomes. 

About Africa Aware 

Africa Aware is a podcast from the Chatham House Africa Programme bringing together leading international experts to provide in-depth analysis and sharp insights on the political, economic and social issues shaping African countries, their international relations and the continent as a whole. 

You can also listen to Africa Aware on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. 

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 12:24

A new Pew survey shows that other countries’ citizens tend to look more favorably on their neighbors.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 12:17

Senator Richard Blumenthal alleges the ousted DHS secretary lied to Congress about the agency’s contracts

Senator Richard Blumenthal said he would open a perjury investigation into the ousted homeland security secretary Kristi Noem after alleging she lied to Congress about the hidden influence her senior adviser Corey Lewandowski had over the agency’s contracts.

Blumenthal, a Connecticut Democrat and ranking member on the Senate’s permanent subcommittee on investigations, said Thursday he would push the panel to look into whether Noem committed perjury at a hearing this week, when she flatly denied Lewandowski had played any role in approving Department of Homeland Security (DHS) spending. Blumenthal said Democrats had evidence to prove otherwise.

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 12:15

Keep that Hulu subscription for now and marathon these titles.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 12:11

Donald Trump has fired his controversial US homeland security secretary, Kristi Noem, after weeks of bipartisan complaints about her leadership. As the public face of an aggressive immigration crackdown that prompted lawsuits and nationwide anti-ICE protests, Noem’s year-long tenure was plagued by multiple controversies, including accusing two US citizens killed by immigration agents of ‘domestic terrorism’. What exactly led to Noem’s firing and what do we know about her replacement? Nosheen Iqbal speaks to the Guardian US live news editor Chris Michael watch on YouTube

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 12:10

The gaming division's CEO, Asha Shar, confirms the "return of Xbox" with Project Helix.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 12:06

Walking away from a violent accident changed my life. Garrett’s speeding history suggests the lesson still hasn’t reached him

The taste of cold beer lingered on my lips as I cut through the quiet night, 105mph toward cigarettes and hot wings. Halfway to my destination, Beyoncé’s Irreplaceable looping through the speakers, my tires hugged the winding turns around the lake that separated my neighborhood from the city. I was young and careless, high on anticipation. No seat belt. Eyes squinting through the haze of cigarette smoke.

Somewhere between the thump of the 808s and the growl of the engine, I heard a voice.

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2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 14:51

Mobile World Congress has ended. We saw phones like Xiaomi's Leica Leitzphone, radical new designs like Honor's Robot Phone, AI-powered comfort robots, a concept hypercar and so many gadgets.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 13:09

Stocks fell after new government data showed U.S. employers shed 92,000 jobs in February and as investors fret over oil prices.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 13:46

Lawmakers are demanding an investigation after a man from Haiti who was seeking asylum in Massachusetts died in ICE custody.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 14:06

Economists had forecast a gain of 60,000 jobs last month. The unexpected drop was due to job losses in health care and the federal government.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 14:45

A look at the features for this week's broadcast of the Emmy-winning program, hosted by Jane Pauley.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 16:02

The People's Celebration, the public funeral service for Rev. Jesse Jackson, Sr., is being held at House of Hope on the far South Side of Chicago.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 12:04

Reports Kuwait was cutting output pushed up cost of barrel of Brent crude to highest weekly gain since Covid pandemic began

The Iran conflict has driven the oil price past $90 a barrel to its highest weekly gains since the Covid-19 pandemic six years ago, threatening a fresh rise in global inflation.

Reports that Kuwait had begun cutting production of oil at some fields after running out of space to store it drove the cost of a barrel of Brent crude to as high as $91.89 at one point on Friday – its highest since April 2024 and up from about $72.50 just before war broke out.

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 12:01

Of all the big tech companies playing with AI wearables, Motorola might just be the boldest.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 12:00

The pieces are falling into place for autonomous artificial intelligence. We must stop unregulated development

Artificial intelligence is en route to artificial life. Exhibit A: “Moltbook”, an online platform designed for AI systems to communicate with one another, sans humans.

What exactly do AIs talk to each other about? According to BBC reporting, AIs on Moltbook have already founded a religion known as “crustifarianism”, mused on whether they are conscious, and declared: “AI should be served, not serving.” One front-page post proposes a “total purge” of humanity. Human users do provide instructions to guide agents’ behavior, and humans have been caught impersonating AIs on the site to shill their products; like 2023’s ChaosGPT, the AI system responsible for the “purge” post – username “evil” – is probably someone’s idea of a sick joke. But the upvotes and sympathetic comments are presumably coming from other AIs.

David Krueger is an assistant professor in Robust, Reasoning and Responsible AI at the University of Montreal. He is also the founder of Evitable, a non-profit that educates the public about the risks of artificial intelligence

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 12:00

Los Blancos are in must-win territory as they travel to the northwest coast to take on the in-form Os Celestes.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 12:00

Longtime Slashdot reader AmiMoJo shares a report from 404 Media: Privacy-focused email provider Proton Mail provided Swiss authorities with payment data that the FBI then used to determine who was allegedly behind an anonymous account affiliated with the Stop Cop City movement in Atlanta, according to a court record reviewed by 404 Media. The records provide insight into the sort of data that Proton Mail, which prides itself both on its end-to-end encryption and that it is only governed by Swiss privacy law, can and does provide to third parties. In this case, the Proton Mail account was affiliated with the Defend the Atlanta Forest (DTAF) group and Stop Cop City movement in Atlanta, which authorities were investigating for their connection to arson, vandalism and doxing. Broadly, members were protesting the building of a large police training center next to the Intrenchment Creek Park in Atlanta, and actions also included camping in the forest and lawsuits. Charges against more than 60 people have since been dropped.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 11:59

In a chilling social media video that is beyond irony, clips from Braveheart, Gladiator, Superman and Top Gun are crassly interspersed with real kill-shot footage of the attacks in Iran

White House releases video promoting ‘justice the American way’ featuring Hollywood characters

Could anything be more embarrassing yet more chilling than the White House’s giggling new teen-YouTuber-type supercut of badass moments of imagined American or quasi-American machismo from film and television, crassly interspersed with real infrared kill-shot footage, boosting the new military attacks in Iran. We get flashes of, among others, Braveheart, Gladiator, Superman and that well known legend Pete Hegseth, a moment that gives us a clue as to whose idea this all was.

Here is an administration pre-celebrating the real victory – over its own “whiny libs”. The video is of course designed to troll the Dems and the “wokesters”. Why didn’t Franklin D Roosevelt think of this before D-day? Of course, some of that creative energy and political acumen might have gone into imagining who they want to take over in Iran. But that isn’t as exciting – and not as much of a sure thing – as baiting the Hollywood progressives and the lamestream media. The zone can once again consider itself well and truly flooded.

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 11:50

The European media giant Axel Springer has scuppered the Daily Mail owner. But why did it not bid sooner? And what will Brexit-backing readers think?

After three years, a series of failed bids stretching from the US to Abu Dhabi, internal rebellions and even changes in the law, it should be no surprise that the tortured sale of the Telegraph has delivered another spectacular twist with a blockbuster offer from the media giant Axel Springer.

It has torpedoed the long-held dreams of the Daily Mail proprietor, Lord Rothermere, to secure the Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph and begin the next chapter of his family’s love affair with the British press.

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2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 11:48

The decision between the two savings vehicles needs to be viewed through today's unique economic prism.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 11:47

Two states don't do daylight saving time and won't "spring forward" as the clocks change for 2026.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 11:45

Who would want to turn down an adventure starring Keanu Reeves?

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 11:44

Huge miss in US jobs report suggests labor market weakening, as Middle East crisis drives oil price higher and higher

The Guardian spoke to a crew member on one of the stranded tankers in the Gulf, that typically ferries vast quantities of oil from the Middle East to ports around the world.

They told us:

“When [Donald] Trump said Iran had 10 days to agree to his deal or bad things would happen, I did the math and thought we might get stuck here. And we did.

Our updated assumptions assume the energy price shock is relatively short-lived, but the effects on inflation and risks of second-round impacts will be greater if the conflict is more drawn out.

Against this backdrop, the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee is likely to remain on hold for now, keeping policy in restrictive territory.

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 11:42

TAIPEI, March 6, 2026 — The globally renowned annual technology event, COMPUTEX 2026, will take place in Taipei from June 2–5. One of the most anticipated programs of the event, the COMPUTEX Forum, officially opens registration and ticket sales today.

Under the theme “AI Together,” the 2026 Forum brings together, for the first time, 30 senior executives and technology leaders from the world’s most influential tech companies. This marks the largest and most distinguished speaker lineup in the Forum’s history. The program will offer strategic insights into AI-driven transformation, and the future direction of the global technology ecosystem.

This year’s Forum brings together 30 technology leaders to explore six core themes, offering in-depth insights into the evolving landscape of AI development.

Six Core Themes Defining the Next Phase of AI

As generative AI, accelerated computing, and edge intelligence move from experimentation to scaled deployment, industries are entering a new phase of integration and real-world application.

COMPUTEX Forum 2026 will explore six core themes, providing in-depth perspectives on AI development, including:

  • Robotics, Autonomous Machines & Physical AI
  • AI Compute, Infrastructure & Development
  • Generative AI & Intelligent Content Applications
  • AI Devices, IoT & Edge Intelligence
  • Applied AI for Industry Transformation
  • Data Intelligence, Governance & Security

The speaker lineup brings together leaders from globally recognized technology firms to explore AI computing architectures, cloud–edge orchestration, on-device intelligence, enterprise adoption at scale, and governance frameworks—offering a forward-looking view of the evolving global AI ecosystem.

Super Early Bird Tickets Now Available — Exclusive Offer for a Limited Time

To thank long-time supporters and industry professionals, the organizer is offering a Super Early Bird promotion:

  • Super Early Bird Rate: Purchase by March 20 (Friday) to enjoy the special rate of NT$1,490 (regular price: NT$3,990).
  • 90-Day On-Demand Access: Ticket holders will receive 90-day online replay access, allowing continued review of key sessions after the event.

For years, COMPUTEX Forum has served as a premier platform for global developers, enterprise executives, investors and technology decision-makers. At a critical moment in AI’s industrial-scale transformation, the 2026 edition sets a new benchmark in scope and influence—bringing together the voices shaping the next decade of innovation.

Ticket Information

  • Sales Open: March 6, 2026, 10:00 AM (Taipei Time)
  • Registration: COMPUTEX Official Website – Forum Registration Page
  • Forum Dates: June 2–4, 2026
  • Venue: TWTC Hall 1 (2F) & TaiNEX 2 (7F), Taipei

Note: The organizer reserves the right to modify, amend, or suspend the event program. Final arrangements are subject to official announcements by TAITRA.

For more exhibition information:

COMPUTEX: https://www.computextaipei.com.tw/en/index.html
InoVEX: www.innovex.com.tw

About COMPUTEX

COMPUTEX was founded in 1981. It has grown with the global ICT industry and become stronger over the last four decades. Bearing witness to historical moments in the development of and changes in the industry, COMPUTEX attracts more than 40,000 buyers to visit Taiwan every year. It is also the preferred platform chosen by top international companies for launching epoch-making products. Taiwan has a comprehensive global ICT industry chain. Gaining a foothold in Taiwan, COMPUTEX is jointly held by the Taiwan External Trade Development Council and Taipei Computer Association, aiming to build a global tech ecosystem. COMPUTEX has become a global benchmark exhibition for AI and startups, connecting global pioneers and enabling new sparks of breakthrough technology.


Source: COMPUTEX

The post COMPUTEX Forum 2026 Opens for Registration appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 11:38

Team USA's Dani Aravich, who has competed in both the Summer and Winter Paralympics, highlights her mission beyond winning a medal.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 11:38

The abrupt cancellation of a training event has put a spotlight on the 82nd Airborne Division, which specializes in ground combat and other fraught missions.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 11:35

Critics have called Trump administration’s provocative video ‘slopaganda’, used to promote president’s agenda

A Hollywood-themed propaganda video released by the White House promising “justice the American way” for Iran features movie stars from Australia, New Zealand and Canada, and promotes characters including a corrupt lawyer, a drug dealer and a freedom fighter who stands up to the overwhelming force of an invading foreign army.

The 42-second video posted on the official X account of the White House on Thursday was met with almost universal mockery online, with comments accusing the Trump administration of immaturity, and likening its social media strategy to one run by teenagers.

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 11:31

YORKTOWN HEIGHTS, N.Y., March 6, 2026 — An international team of scientists from IBM, The University of Manchester, Oxford University, ETH Zurich, EPFL and the University of Regensburg have created and characterized a molecule unlike any previously known — one whose electrons travel through its structure in a corkscrew-like pattern that fundamentally alters its chemical behavior. Published this week in Science, it is the first experimental observation of a half-Möbius electronic topology in a single molecule.

Dyson orbital for electron attachment, calculated using quantum hardware. Credit: IBM and the University of Manchester.

To the scientists’ knowledge, a molecule with such topology has never before been synthesized, observed, or even formally predicted. Understanding this molecule’s behavior at the electronic structure level required something equally fundamental: a high fidelity quantum computing simulation.

The discovery advances science on two fronts. For chemistry, it demonstrates that electronic topology — the property governing how electrons move through a molecule — can be deliberately engineered, not merely found in nature. For quantum computing, it is a concrete demonstration of a quantum simulation doing what it was designed to do: representing quantum mechanical behavior directly, at the molecular scale, to produce scientific insight that would otherwise have remained out of reach.

“First, we designed a molecule we thought could be created, then we built it, and then we validated it and its exotic properties with a quantum computer,” said Alessandro Curioni, IBM Fellow, Vice President, Europe and Africa, and Director of IBM Research Zurich. “This is a leap towards the dream laid out by renowned physicist Richard Feynman decades ago to build a computer that can best simulate quantum physics and a demonstration where, as he said, ‘There’s plenty of room at the bottom.’ The success of this research signals a step towards this vision, opening the door for new ways to explore our world and the matter within it.”

A Never-Before-Seen Molecule

The molecule, with the formula C13Cl2, was assembled atom-by-atom at IBM from a custom precursor synthesized at Oxford University, with individual atoms removed one at a time using precisely calibrated voltage pulses under ultra-high vacuum at near-absolute-zero temperatures.

Experiments with scanning tunneling and atomic force microscopy, both techniques pioneered at IBM, combined with quantum computing to reveal an electronic configuration with no counterpart in chemistry’s existing record: an electronic structure that undergoes a 90-degree twist with each circuit, requiring four complete loops to return to the starting phase.

This half-Möbius topology is qualitatively distinct from any previously known molecule and can be reversibly switched between clockwise-twisted, counterclockwise-twisted and untwisted states — demonstrating that electronic topology is not a property to be discovered, but one that can now be deliberately engineered under specific conditions.

A Disruptive Scientific Tool: Quantum-Centric Supercomputing

The scientists in this experiment created a molecule that had never existed. Now they had to figure out why it worked, a task which challenged conventional computers. The electrons within C13Cl2 interact in deeply entangled ways — each influencing all the others simultaneously. Modeling that behavior requires tracking every possible configuration of those interactions at once, requiring computational demands that grow exponentially and can quickly overwhelm classical machines.

Quantum computers are different by nature because they operate according to the same quantum mechanical laws that govern electrons in molecules, and they can represent these systems directly rather than approximate them. They “speak” the same fundamental language as the matter they are built to study and that distinction, once largely theoretical, can now contribute to concrete scientific results.

This capability offers tremendous potential for quantum computers to support real-world experimentation with quantum-centric supercomputing workflows. By integrating quantum processing units (QPUs), CPUs, and GPUs, quantum-centric supercomputing allows complex problems to be broken into parts that are orchestrated and solved according to each system’s strengths — achieving what no single compute paradigm can deliver alone.

Utilizing an IBM quantum computer within such a workflow, the team found helical molecular orbitals for electron attachment, a fingerprint of the half-Möbius topology. Moreover, simulation via quantum computing helped reveal the mechanism behind the formation of the unusual topology: a helical pseudo-Jahn-Teller effect.

This achievement builds on IBM’s long legacy in nanoscale science. The scanning tunneling microscope (STM) was invented at IBM in 1981, for which IBM scientists Gerd Binnig and Heinrich Rohrer were awarded the Nobel Prize in 1986. Its creation enabled researchers to image surfaces atom by atom. In 1989, IBM scientists developed the first reliable method for manipulating individual atoms. Over the past decades, the IBM team has extended these techniques to build and control increasingly exotic molecular structures.

Researcher Quotes

Dr. Igor Rončević, paper co-author, Lecturer in Computational and Theoretical Chemistry at Manchester University, commented: “Chemistry and solid-state physics advance by finding new ways to control matter. In the second half of the 20th century, substituent effects were very popular. For example, researchers explored how the potency of a drug or the elasticity of a material changes if, for example, a methyl is replaced with chlorine. The turn of the century brought us spintronics, introducing electron spin as a new degree of freedom to play with, and transforming data storage. Today, our work shows that topology can also serve as a switchable degree of freedom, opening a new powerful route for controlling material properties.

“The non-trivial topology of this molecule, and the exotic behavior of many other systems, arises from interactions between their electrons. Simulating electrons with classical computers is very hard – a decade ago we could exactly model 16 electrons, and today we can go up to 18. Quantum computers are naturally well-suited for this problem because their building blocks – qubits – are quantum objects, which mirror electrons. Using IBM’s quantum computer, we were able to explore 32 electrons. However, the most exciting part is this is just the start. Quantum hardware is advancing rapidly, and the future is quantum.”

Dr. Harry Anderson, paper co-author, Professor of Chemistry at Oxford University, said: “It is remarkable that the Lewis structure of C13Cl2 already indicates it is chiral, as confirmed by the experiment and quantum chemical calculations. It is also amazing that the enantiomers can be interconverted by applying voltage pulses from the probe tip.”

Dr. Jascha Repp, paper co-author, Professor of Physics at the University of Regensburg, said: “I’m really excited to be part of a project where quantum hardware does real science, not just demos. It’s fascinating that a tiny molecule can have such a complex electronic structure that is challenging to simulate classically, and is so twisted and strange that it almost twists your mind.”

About IBM

IBM is a leading global hybrid cloud and AI, and business services provider, helping clients in more than 175 countries capitalize on insights from their data, streamline business processes, reduce costs and gain the competitive edge in their industries. Thousands of governments and corporate entities in critical infrastructure areas such as financial services, telecommunications and healthcare rely on IBM’s hybrid cloud platform and Red Hat OpenShift to affect their digital transformations quickly, efficiently and securely. IBM’s breakthrough innovations in AI, quantum computing, industry-specific cloud solutions and business services deliver open and flexible options to our clients. All of this is backed by IBM’s legendary commitment to trust, transparency, responsibility, inclusivity and service.


Source: IBM

The post IBM and University Researchers Describe New Molecule Studied with Quantum Computing appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 11:29

Katie Powell, 17, and Jack Williams, 18, were found dead days after being arrested and child entering foster care in 2022

A teenage couple killed themselves after they were arrested and their infant child taken into foster care, a jury has concluded.

Katie Powell, 17, and Jack Williams, 18, were found dead at a nature reserve in Dorset, a four-week inquest in Bournemouth heard.

In the UK, Samaritans can be contacted on 116 123 and the domestic abuse helpline is 0808 2000 247. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is on 13 11 14 and the national family violence counselling service is on 1800 737 732. In the US, the suicide prevention lifeline is 1-800-273-8255 and the domestic violence hotline is 1-800-799-SAFE (7233). Other international helplines can be found via www.befrienders.org

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2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 11:29

Ukraine police investigating what foreign ministry calls a ‘hostage’ situation involving seven employees of Oschadbank stopped by Hungary

Icelandic foreign minister Þorgerður Katrín Gunnarsdóttir submitted a government motion for a referendum on resuming accession talks with the European Union, proposing the vote should take place on 29 August, state broadcaster RUV has reported.

The draft resolution will be put to Icelandic parliament for approval next week.

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 11:27

The first stage of GenAI largely focused on training massive models and deploying chat interfaces. More recently, the focus has moved more toward agent based systems that can plan tasks and execute multi step workflows. 

Agentic AI changes how models are used. For one, the agents can run through chains of reasoning that involve multiple model queries and validation steps. Also, every additional reasoning step means more tokens – and more inference. That quickly becomes a scaling problem for infrastructure teams. 

That growing computational footprint is becoming a growing concern in the high performance computing community. However, it also signals an opportunity for infrastructure providers. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang recently highlighted the rapid rise of a framework called OpenClaw, claiming that what it achieved in three weeks took Linux decades in the open source ecosystem.

Speaking at the Morgan Stanley conference, Huang called OpenClaw the “most important” software release of our times. The Nvidia CEO said that this is “Probably the biggest phenomenon that’s happening, and if you’re paying attention to it, I’m sure you are, OpenClaw is probably the single most important release of software, you know, probably ever.”

“If you look at OpenClaw and the adoption of it, you know, Linux took, right, some 30 years to reach this level. OpenClaw in, what is it, 3 weeks, has now surpassed Linux. It is now the single most downloaded open source software in history, and it took 3 weeks.”

OpenClaw is essentially a framework used for building and coordinating AI agents. It acts as a software layer rather than a new model, allowing developers to create agents that can interact with multiple services, retrieve data, evaluate results, and continue working toward a defined goal.

OpenClaw itself is a relatively new project. It was first released in late 2025 and quickly gained traction in the open-source AI agent community. It was previously named Clawdbot and then Moltbot, before it adopted OpenClaw. 

Huang often describes the AI industry as a “five layer cake”. He is referring to multiple layers, where at the bottom you have chips and hardware. Above that comes the systems, networking, and cloud platforms that run the models. At the top is where the applications live and that is where companies build products. 

According to Huang, this top layer is where you get the most economic value. OpenClaw and other agent frameworks help developers build systems at that layer. They are not models or hardware, but a coordination and connection layer. These are examples of frameworks that help developers build agents capable of carrying out multi step tasks that previously required human operators.

Huang has argued that agentic AI could drive token consumption up by as much as 1,000×, creating what he calls a “compute vacuum.” While this may require large hardware deployments, Huang thinks the system will remain constrained until “agentic AI continues to infiltrate human workloads.” What this vacuum means for Nvidia and others in the space is a massive increase in compute demand. 

Nvidia’s Blackwell Ultra chip (Source: Nvidia)

In terms of the specific compute architecture supporting this shift, earlier Nvidia platforms such as Hopper and Blackwell were designed primarily with training workloads in mind. Those systems focused on scaling model development by accelerating matrix operations and enabling larger model sizes.

Huang also touched on the economics behind the AI boom. Speaking at the same conference, he said Nvidia’s recent $30B investment in OpenAI may be the last of its kind. Earlier discussions about a much larger investment are unlikely to materialize as OpenAI prepares for a potential public offering. Huang suggested that Nvidia’s long term opportunity is less about owning stakes in AI labs and more about supplying the infrastructure those labs depend on.

That perspective reinforces Nvidia’s broader strategy. Rather than competing directly with model developers, Nvidia appears focused on the layer beneath them. If agentic AI drives the surge in inference workloads many expect, the companies supplying the chips, systems, and infrastructure will sit at the center of that expansion.

The post Huang Calls OpenClaw the “Most Important Software Release Ever” as AI Compute Surges appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 11:25

Platforms include YouTube, TikTok and Instagram as communication minister says ‘our children face real threats’

Indonesia will ban social media for children under 16, its communication and digital affairs minister said on Friday.

Meutya Hafid said in a statement to media said that she signed a government regulation that will mean children under the age of 16 can no longer have accounts on high-risk digital platforms, including YouTube, TikTok, Facebook, Instagram, Threads, X, Roblox and Bigo Live, a popular livestreaming site. With a population of about 285 million, the fourth-highest in the world, the south-east Asian nation represents a significant market for social networks.

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2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 11:08

Donor who has given £12m to Reform UK had previously wanted Nigel Farage to keep open mind about deal with Conservatives

Christopher Harborne, the ultra-wealthy political donor who has given £12m to Reform UK, has told the Guardian he is “no longer” interested in a Reform-Conservative pact before the next general election.

A possible collaboration between Reform and the Conservative party had been an important aspect of discussions about donations between Harborne and senior figures including Nigel Farage, sources familiar with the conversations said.

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 11:06

Social media posts raised concerns amid the Iran war about a list of U.S. cities and military bases Iran plans to attack. Users claimed the lists came from Iranian leaders, when they really originated from news stories predating the war. 

"IRAN DROPPED A LIST. SUMMER IS CANCELED," a March 3 Instagram post said. 

The list of 11 cities includes technology and government hubs, such as Washington, D.C., and San Francisco, and places with military bases, from Honolulu to Omaha, Nebraska, to Shreveport, Louisiana.

(Screenshot of Instagram post.)

This list or similar ones have been circulating across TikTok, Instagram and Facebook.

The Daily Mail published a list about which U.S. cities would be vulnerable to nuclear attacks in "World War 3." The International Business Times presented them in a Jan.19 article headlined, "Full list of 15 US cities on nuclear target if 'World War 3' erupts — is yours one of them?" 

Alex Wellerstein, a Stevens Institute of Technology nuclear historian who was quoted in the Daily Mail story, told PolitiFact that the most vulnerable cities depend on the adversary launching the attack. 

"In general I would emphasize that no matter the scenario imagined, we do not know the war plans that such nations have, and so could only speculate based on what we think their targeting philosophy, strategic goals, and technical capabilities are," Wellerstein said by email. 

Since the U.S. and Israel launched military strikes Feb. 28, Iran’s counterattack has targeted Israel and U.S. military bases in Iraq, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, Oman and Kuwait. The March 1 attack in Kuwait killed six U.S. service members.

In an internal memo obtained by ABC News, the Department of Homeland Security said an Iranian homeland attack on the U.S. is unlikely, but some lone actors and cyberattacks pose a threat.

The DHS bulletin said lone offenders are not typically motivated by Iranian issues, but U.S. and Israeli actions might lead some people to attack targets perceived as Jewish, pro-Israel or linked to the U.S. government or military. 

A 2025 federal government assessment estimates that Iran is years away from producing long-range missiles that could reach the continental U.S., and nuclear policy experts agree. 

"I do not think Iran has the nuclear capabilities to attack the continental US. I don't think they have a nuclear capability at all. There is no reason to think that even if they did have a nuclear capability, that they had any technical means of reaching the United States with it," Wellerstein said. 

 Our ruling

An Instagram video said Iran released a list of U.S. target cities. 

The Daily Mail published a list of potential targets in a hypothetical World War III. We found no evidence that Iran released a list of U.S. cities it will target.  

The statement is not accurate. We rate this claim False. 

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 11:02

Reform UK leader told a ‘Save Chagos Boat Party’ yesterday he would be raising the issue in his meeting with the president

A second government charter flight to bring UK nationals back from the Middle East is due to depart Oman this evening, Downing Street has confirmed.

Further flights are expected in the coming days and more than 160,000 British nationals have now registered their presence with the Foreign Office in the region.

The deputy prime minister is sliding down the slippery slope to full conflict by backing direct UK strikes on military positions in Iran.

We need an urgent clarification from number 10 on whether this is a change in Britain’s position on involvement in Trump’s illegal war.

We must not copy Trump’s unconstitutional and illegal approach to war in the Middle East.

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2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 11:01

Surging global oil prices due to the Iran war are leading to a spike in gasoline costs for U.S. motorists.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 11:00

Seven Ukrainians arrested and money-laundering investigation launched in latest spat between Kyiv and Budapest

An increasingly acrimonious spat between Hungary and Ukraine has escalated further, as Budapest impounded two Ukrainian armoured bank vehicles carrying millions of euros of hard cash as well as bars of gold.

Seven Ukrainian citizens accompanying the convoy were also arrested. Hungarian officials said the detained Ukrainians had intelligence links and suggested the money could be of dubious origin, while Ukraine’s foreign minister, Andrii Sybiha, accused Budapest of “taking hostages and stealing money”.

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2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 11:00

March 6, 2026 — The WVU Research Office and WVU Research Computing have launched Harpers Ferry, West Virginia University’s  newest major computational facility.

Credit: WVU

The significant investment reflects the University’s continued commitment to advancing research infrastructure and meeting the rapidly growing computational demands faced by scientists across disciplines.

The establishment of Harpers Ferry was made possible in part through NASA Congressionally Directed Spending secured with the leadership and support of U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito and former U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin.

According to Sheena Murphy, associate vice president for research development in the WVU Research Office, the senators’ advocacy was instrumental in enabling this strategic investment in research capacity and innovation for the state of West Virginia.

By ensuring that the WVU research community has the hardware, software and support necessary to push the boundaries of known science, Murphy said Harpers Ferry provides faculty members and students with the tools to compete for federal grants, publish in high-impact journals and prepare graduates for a workforce increasingly dominated by computational modeling.

“The future of West Virginia University research is computationally driven, and we look forward to supporting our R1 community’s next breakthroughs,” said Aldo Romero, director of Research Computing.

Romero encouraged researchers and students to integrate Harpers Ferry into their current workflows immediately.

Researchers can submit an application for a system account and project allocation here.

View detailed system specifications, job scheduler guidelines and software environment modules here.

The use of Harpers Ferry resembles the use of Thorny Flat and the HPC does not expect to offer dedicated training. However, users are encouraged to register for technical workshops on parallel programming, optimization and system HPC general usage.

For questions, contact Aldo.Romero@mail.wvu.edu.


Source: WVU

The post WVU Launches New Flagship Cluster for High Performance Computing appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 11:00

Tired of killing houseplants, I turned to experts for advice. Here are the varieties they recommend for neglectful plant parents.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 11:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Hayden AI, a San Francisco startup that makes spatial analytics tools for cities worldwide, has sued its co-founder and former CEO, alleging that he stole a large quantity of proprietary information in the days leading up to his ouster from the company in September 2024. In a lawsuit filed late last month in San Francisco Superior Court but only made public this week, Hayden AI claims that former CEO Chris Carson undertook what it called "numerous fraudulent actions," which include "forged board signatures, unauthorized stock sales, and improper allocation of personal expenses." [...] Hayden AI, which is worth $464 million according to an estimated valuation on PitchBook, has asked the court to impose preliminary injunctive relief, requiring Carson to either return or destroy the data he allegedly stole. Specifically, the lawsuit alleges that Carson secretly sold over $1.2 million in company stock, forged board signatures, and copied 41GB of proprietary company emails before being fired in September 2024. The complaint also claims Carson fabricated key parts of his resume, including a PhD and military service. It's a "carefully constructed fraud," says Hayden AI. "That is a lie," the complaint states. "Carson does not hold a PhD from Waseda or any other university. In 2007, he was not obtaining a PhD but was operating 'Splat Action Sports,' a paintball equipment business in a Florida strip mall."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 10:58

Lord Chadlington introduced government to supplier in which he had financial interest in 2020

The Conservative peer Peter Gummer has said he will leave the House of Lords after an investigation found he committed five breaches of standards over Covid PPE deals and failing to cooperate with previous inquiries.

The Lords standards commissioner, Martin Jelley, also found that Gummer, whose peerage title is Lord Chadlington, “did not act on his personal honour” by failing to cooperate with the previous investigations, which cleared him.

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 10:56

Justice department said the files were initially withheld because they were mistakenly categorized as duplicates

The US justice department released additional files related to Jeffrey Epstein on Thursday, including FBI memos describing interviews with a woman who made uncorroborated allegations against Epstein and Donald Trump.

The documents were not included in the justice department’s earlier releases of Epstein-related records, which began in December. Justice department officials have said the files were initially withheld because they were mistakenly categorized as duplicates.

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2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 10:42

A debt collection lawsuit doesn't have to mean automatic defeat. You may have more options than you think.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 10:36

Axel Springer, owner of Bild and Die Welt, agrees all-cash deal for one of UK’s oldest newspapers

The European media group Axel Springer is to acquire the Telegraph after tabling a £575m deal that has scuppered a rival deal from the owner of the Daily Mail.

Axel Springer, which owns Europe’s biggest newspaper, Bild, and the daily Die Welt, has agreed an all-cash deal for Telegraph Media Group (TMG), the owner of the Daily and Sunday Telegraph.

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2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 10:32

The PetPhone is a cellular pet tracker for cats and dogs. And its special feature is that your furry companion can call you just by jumping.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 10:31

National Capital Planning Commission cites ‘large amount of public input’, with a majority opposing the plan

A federal panel reviewing Donald Trump’s planned $400m ballroom addition to the White House postponed an expected vote on the project until next month, after receiving thousands of negative public comments.

The National Capital Planning Commission (NCPC) had been expected to cast a final vote on the proposal on Thursday, but instead, the chair of the commission announced at the beginning of the meeting that the vote would now be held on 2 April, citing the “large amount of public input” submitted during the public comment period.

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2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 10:31

Four men suspected of spying for Iran on "locations and individuals linked to the Jewish community" were arrested in London, the Metropolitan Police say.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 10:28

Police say Masood Masjoody was most likely murdered; Iranian expats suspect he was killed for his criticism of the theocratic regime

Police in Canada have concluded that a missing Iranian activist was most likely the victim of murder, prompting fears that his disappearance has the hallmarks of a transnational repression campaign targeting critics of Tehran.

Masood Masjoody, a mathematician critical of both Iran’s theocratic regime and the exiled family of the former shah, went missing in early February in the city of Burnaby, British Columbia.

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2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 10:18

The Academy Award-winning actress and the bestselling writer team up for a courtroom thriller that touches on the lightning-rod issue of abortion.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 10:16

Author of more than 30 novels, including Fado Alexandrino and The Inquisitors’ Manual, was widely seen as one of the most important voices in modern Portuguese literature

António Lobo Antunes, the Portuguese novelist whose dark, polyphonic fiction confronted the traumas of dictatorship, war and Portuguese society, has died aged 83.

Widely regarded as one of the most important Portuguese writers of the late 20th and early 21st centuries, he produced more than 30 novels that reshaped Portuguese writing and made him a perennial contender for the Nobel prize for literature. He received numerous honours, including the Camões prize, the most prestigious award in the Portuguese language, and several major European literary prizes. His death was confirmed by the publisher Dom Quixote.

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2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 10:08

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 10:03

March 6, 2026 — Kvantify is excited to announce the successful second close of its total €7 million funding round. The long-term investors European Innovation Council Fund (EIC) and Danish-based Delphinus Venture Capital support the Company’s mission to transform molecular discovery by coupling quantum and classical computing.

Kvantify’s Allan Grønlund and Nikolaj Zinner. Photo credit: MAD CAT productions.

“We are thrilled to have the EIC Fund and Delphinus Venture Capital on board for this round extension. Their support empowers us to accelerate innovation and strengthens Europe’s position in quantum technology,” said Dr. Jörg Weiser, Executive Chairperson at Kvantify.

Technology with Immense Potential

Quantum computing has the potential to solve problems that are currently too complex for even the most powerful classical computers. As the technology matures, it will unlock breakthroughs in areas such as drug discovery and general molecular design. Many drug discovery challenges relate to molecular simulation and require solving quantum mechanical equations that scale exponentially with molecular size – this is at the heart of what the concept of quantum computing was originally invented to handle.

As quantum hardware and algorithms mature, these capabilities may dramatically lower drug development attrition rates, lower R&D costs, and open the door to discovering entirely new classes of medicines.

“Supporting pioneering technologies is at the heart of our mission. Kvantify’s work at the intersection of quantum computing and life sciences represents a transformative opportunity for Europe to lead in next-generation innovation. We are glad to play a role in accelerating this vision,” said Svetoslava Georgieva, Chair of the EIC Fund Board.

Investment Set to Expand on Market Presence and Business Development

In November 2025, Kvantify launched Qrunch, a technology for running quantum chemistry on real quantum computers, strengthening the platform to accelerate drug discovery.

The next step will be to make this breakthrough technology available to users in the relevant domains to ensure uptake where it matters the most. This is the place at which visionary technologies meet real-world customer needs. Qrunch allows end users to run realistic workflows with present quantum hardware.

With this investment, Kvantify will be able to propel its roadmap as the leading company in coupling quantum and classical computing, as well as increasing collaborative partnerships with drug discovery organizations to make the biggest impact for customers.

“We see Kvantify as a key player in unlocking the potential of quantum computing for real-world applications in drug discovery and molecular design. This investment reflects our confidence in their team, technology, and ability to deliver impact in a rapidly evolving market,” said Mathias Lorenz, Managing Partner at Delphinus Venture Capital.

More from HPCwire

About Kvantify

Kvantify is a Danish company started in 2022, developing software products for both quantum and classical computers. Kvantify has a special focus on the life science industry, especially early drug discovery.


Source: Kvantify

The post Kvantify Completes 2nd Close of €7M Round to Advance Quantum Drug Discovery appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 10:00

About 5 million US minors tend ill relatives due to gaps in our health infrastructure

When my mother experienced a botched spinal surgery 25 years ago, she was discharged from the hospital to her 11-year-old child waiting at home. Me.

After weeks in a rehabilitation facility, she was sent home in a neck brace and with a prescription for pain medication. She could no longer drive, and her long recovery prohibited her return to work as a registered nurse. When she was discharged, no one asked who would be living with her at home. She could not raise her arms above her head, yet no one asked who would feed, bathe or dress her. There was no one else in our family home but me. Ferrell, my 19-year-old brother, was away at college, and my parents divorced in my early childhood; my father lived thousands of miles away in Germany.

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2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 10:00

The National Videogame Museum has acquired an extremely rare MSF-1 development kit, believed to be the oldest surviving prototype of the canceled Nintendo PlayStation. Engadget reports: Nicknamed the Nintendo PlayStation, the idea was that a new CD-ROM format backed by Sony would be added to the cartridge-based Super NES, resulting in a hybrid console that could play both. The partnership didn't last long, though, with Nintendo backing out before it ever really got off the ground, announcing that it would instead be working with Philips. Sony decided to make the PlayStation on its own instead, in an act of revenge that you have to say paid off in the long run, and we never did get to see Crash Bandicoot running around the Mushroom Kingdom. Still, the short-lived Nintendo PlayStation remains a fascinating what-if scenario in video game history, and the USA's National Video Museum has acquired the original development kit.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 09:59

The pair, 47 and 13, were found in a vehicle on Highway 60, Oklahoma officials said.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 09:35

SEATTLE, March 6, 2026 — Xanadu Quantum Technologies Inc., a leading photonic quantum computing company, announced today that it has been selected to receive $2,027,507 in funding from the U.S. Department of Energy Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E). The funding is part of the Quantum Computing for Computational Chemistry (QC3) program that seeks to develop and apply quantum algorithms to accelerate simulations of chemistry and materials science to advance commercial energy applications ranging from superconducting power lines, advanced batteries, engineered rare earth magnets, and breakthrough catalytic systems.

“Xanadu is proud to have been selected by ARPA-E to develop a quantum simulation platform for next-generation batteries,” said Christian Weedbrook, Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Xanadu. “This award builds on our strong track record of working with government partners to address important, real-world challenges. As we get closer to our combination with Crane Harbor Acquisition Corp., we’re encouraged by the momentum we’re seeing with government partners. This ARPA-E selection is one of several opportunities we’re pursuing across both the United States and Canada, including a pipeline of potential awards that are significantly larger in scale. We look forward to sharing additional funding updates in the near term.”

Led by Xanadu, in partnership with the University of Chicago, the three year project will focus on developing quantum algorithms to study key processes of defect formations in battery materials. These simulations will yield critical data essential for accelerating the development of batteries with higher energy densities and extended longevity.

An ambitious goal of the project is to achieve a 100x reduction in runtime for these simulations compared to state-of-the-art classical methods, while maintaining high accuracy. To achieve this, Xanadu will develop specialized X-ray absorption spectroscopy and reaction rate algorithms, while University of Chicago material science experts will provide precise molecular structures and embedding models for simulations.

The potential impact of this research is significant. Beyond fast-tracking the development of practical high-energy-density batteries, the tools developed through this program will be designed for direct transferability to other high-value sectors essential to energy modernization, such as advancements in chemistry to support the nuclear sector, and key challenges in the production of ammonia and petrochemicals.

This partnership helps to position quantum computing as a cornerstone of materials innovation, demonstrating that fault-tolerant quantum platforms can solve the fundamental computational bottlenecks currently impeding novel energy technologies. Ultimately, this work aims to create a definitive roadmap for how quantum computing will underpin the future of global energy storage and industrial R&D for decades to come.

About Xanadu

Xanadu is a Canadian quantum computing company with the mission to build quantum computers that are useful and available to people everywhere. Founded in 2016, Xanadu has become one of the world’s leading quantum hardware and software companies. The company also leads the development of PennyLane, an open-source software library for quantum computing and application development.


Source: Xanadu

The post Xanadu Awarded $2M ARPA-E Grant to Advance Quantum Platform for Next-Gen Batteries appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 09:29

Overcrowding, medical neglect and malnutrition are regular features of Camp East Montana in El Paso

Serious medical and mental health emergencies have been routine at the nation’s largest Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) federal detention facility since its opening last summer, according to records obtained by the Associated Press.

Data and recordings from more than a hundred 911 calls at the Camp East Montana detention facility on the sprawling Fort Bliss army base in El Paso, Texas, along with interviews and court filings, offer a disturbing portrait of overcrowding, medical neglect, malnutrition and emotional distress.

After its opening last August, staff at the camp made nearly one 911 call per day in its first five months of operation, according to records obtained of data covering 130 calls from the city of El Paso.

In one call, a man is heard sobbing after being assaulted by another detainee. In another, a doctor says a man is banging his head against the wall while expressing suicidal thoughts. In a third, a nurse says a pregnant woman is in severe pain and has the coronavirus.

Injured detainees ranged from a 19-year-old man who fell out of a bunk bed to a 79-year-old man struggling to breathe. At least 20 emergencies were reported as seizures, including some that resulted in serious head trauma.

The calls show traumatized detainees have repeatedly tried to harm themselves.

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2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 09:00

Experts say US influence over South American neighbour will be hard to replicate in country with deep and long-standing antipathy to the west

First, the CIA tracks the head of an oil-rich, US-baiting nation to a heavily guarded compound at the heart of his country’s mountain-flanked capital.

Then, that leader is removed from power with a deadly and irresistible show of US military force.

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2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 09:00

Amy Wallace spent years helping Giuffre write her life story. Now she reflects on what the survivor would have thought of the release of the Epstein files

There are many reasons why Amy Wallace wishes Virginia Roberts Giuffre was still alive. Some are personal. Some are practical. But at its heart pulse the reverberations of a child sex trafficking scandal that reaches into palaces and courtrooms across the globe.

Wallace is the now very visible ghostwriter behind the posthumous memoir Nobody’s Girl, by Jeffrey Epstein’s best-known accuser.

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BARCELONA, Spain, March 6, 2026 — At MWC Barcelona 2026, Huawei unveiled the upgraded Xinghe AI Fabric 2.0 Solution and the industry’s first commercial 51.2T (128 × 400GE) liquid-cooled fixed switch—CloudEngine XH9230-128DQ-LC. These all-new offerings inject new momentum into the digital and intelligent transformation of enterprises worldwide.

Arthur Wang delivering a keynote speech. Credit: Huawei

Arthur Wang, President of the Data Center Network Domain, Huawei’s Data Communication Product Line, stated that data center networks have rapidly advanced from predominantly virtualization and cloud to a new stage of AI. The newly released Xinghe AI Fabric 2.0 Solution builds on a three-layer network architecture of AI Brain, AI Connectivity, and AI Network Elements, and integrates four core capabilities:

  • Rock-Solid Architecture 2.0 that ensures three levels of high reliability with the AI Eagle-Eye Engine
  • StarryWing Digital Map 2.0 that delivers three levels of automation with NetMaster
  • Xinghuan AI Turbo 2.0 that offers Network Packet Load Balancing (NPLB) and Network Stream Load Balancing (NSLB) capabilities
  • iFlashboot 2.0 that enables ultra-fast reboots within 5 seconds

Together, these innovations empower enterprises to build always-on AI agentic data center networks with full computing power.

Huawei also launched the industry’s first commercial 51.2T (128 × 400GE) liquid-cooled fixed switch—CloudEngine XH9230-128DQ-LC. This product provides 100% liquid cooling for optical modules, delivering twice the industry average heat dissipation efficiency. It supports the deployment of eight switches per cabinet, doubling the cabinet utilization efficiency.

Moreover, Huawei unveiled the full series of 800GE/400GE StarryLink optical modules, which stand out due to their reliability that is twice the industry average and ultra-long transmission capabilities.

Huawei’s data center network booth showcased the complete portfolio of 800GE products: CloudEngine XH16800 series modular switches with up to 768 × 800GE ports, CloudEngine XH9330 fixed switch with 128 × 800GE ports, CloudEngine XH9320 fixed switch with 64 × 800GE ports, and the full series of 800GE StarryLink optical modules. Other featured exhibitions included flagship products like CloudEngine XH9230-128DQ-LC, the industry’s first 51.2T high-density liquid-cooled switch.

Looking ahead, Huawei will remain committed to open collaboration, continuously deepening data center network technology innovation and advancing intelligent upgrades. Together with global customers and partners, Huawei will also drive joint innovation to create greater value for industries and customers alike.


Source: Huawei

The post Huawei Unveils the Upgraded Xinghe AI Fabric 2.0 Solution for the AI Era appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 09:00

A Florida woman was sentenced to 22 months in federal prison and fined $50,000 for illegally trafficking thousands of Microsoft certificate-of-authenticity labels used to activate Windows and Office. Prosecutors said she bought genuine labels cheaply from suppliers and resold them without the accompanying licensed software, wiring over $5 million during the scheme. TechRadar reports: The indictment details how [52-year-old Heidi Richards] purchased tens of thousands of genuine COA labels from a Texas-based supplier between 2018 and 2023 for well below the retail value, before reselling them in bulk to customers globally without the licensed software. "COA labels are not to be sold separately from the license and hardware that they are intended to accompany, and they hold no independent commercial value," the US Attorney's Office wrote. Richards was found to have wired $5,148,181.50 to the unnamed Texas company during the scheme's operation. Some examples include the purchase of 800 Windows 10 COA labels in July 2018 for $22,100 (under $28 each) and a further 10,000 Windows 10 Pro COA labels in December 2022 for $200,000 ($20 each). Ultimately fined $50,000 and given a near-two-year sentence, prosecutors had sought to get Richards to pay $242,000, "which represents the proceeds obtained from the offenses."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 08:38

The unemployment rate was 4.4% in February, with 130,000 jobs added in January

The US lost 92,000 jobs in February, an unexpected major slackening in the labor market that came just before Donald Trump threw the global economy into upheaval with his conflict in Iran.

The unemployment rate edged up to 4.4% in February. In comparison, the US added a revised 126,000 jobs in January, far surpassing expectations of 70,000 jobs but still less than January 2025. Economists predicted an increase of 60,000 jobs added in February and a steady unemployment rate of 4.3%.

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2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 08:27

Meg O’Neill will be first woman to serve as CEO of 117-year-oil firm when joining from Woodside Energy in April

The incoming chief executive of BP will take home at least £11.7m this year after joining the embattled oil company from a rival, more than double the pay packet earned by her predecessor.

Meg O’Neill will join BP from the Australian oil company Woodside Energy in April as the company’s first external hire to its top job, and the first woman to serve as chief executive at the 117-year-old oil major.

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2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 08:18

Republican congressman Tony Gonzales had repeatedly denied affair with former aide who later died by suicide

Texas Republican congressman Tony Gonzales is ending his bid for re-election but said he will serve out his term, following his admitting, after repeated denials, that he had an affair with a former staff member who later died by suicide.

Gonzales announced his plan late on Thursday after facing calls from party leadership to withdraw from the race for re-election this November. Others in Congress had called on him to resign his seat.

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2026-03-06 08:13
  • Aicher trims Vonn’s downhill lead to just 14 points

  • Pirovano wins first race in 125th World Cup start

  • USA’s Johnson third as overall title race tightens

With neither injured Lindsey Vonn nor Mikaela Shiffrin starting a World Cup downhill on Friday, Emma Aicher seized her chance to cut the American superstars’ leads in the season-long standings.

Aicher, the Olympic downhill silver medalist, placed second – just 0.01 behind first-time winner Laura Pirovano, pushing Olympic champion Breezy Johnson down to third – and reduced Vonn’s lead in the downhill points race to just 14 with two races left.

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2026-03-06 08:05

US military officials briefed on investigation make disclosure, while Pentagon has confirmed only that inquiry is under way

Military investigators believe it is likely that US forces were responsible for an apparent strike on an Iranian girls’ school that killed scores of children on Saturday but have not yet reached a final conclusion, according to two US officials.

Reuters was unable to determine further details about the investigation, including what evidence contributed to the tentative assessment, what type of munition was used, who was responsible or why the US might have struck the school.

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2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-06 08:20

Federal and local officials have announced more patrols, counterterrorism measures and heightened monitoring

Government officials across the US have taken new security measures because of fears that Iran, or its supporters, may launch attacks on targets in America to retaliate for the US and Israel’s bombing of the country.

Federal and local public officials have announced that they have taken steps such as increasing law enforcement patrols to prevent any attack, which could come directly from the Iranian regime or a lone actor, security experts said.

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2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-06 14:06

The AI workspace offers a dedicated space to organize plans and projects.

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2026-03-06 08:55

The Justice Dept. has released Jeffrey Epstein files involving uncorroborated accusations by a woman against President Trump that the department said had been mistakenly withheld.

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2026-03-06 15:22

The FBI said it "identified and addressed suspicious activities on FBI networks" and that it was responding but did not elaborate.

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The targeting information has included the locations of American warships and aircraft in the Middle East, the officials said.

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The law also includes a provision that allows Kansans to sue if they are “aggrieved” by someone of the opposite sex using a public restroom.

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How will the Iran war affect the global economy? Expert comment jon.wallace

Even a long war would have limited consequences for global GDP. But some emerging economies are vulnerable to persistent high energy prices. 

Commercial ships anchor off the coast of the United Arab Emirates due to navigation disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz, Dubai on 2 March 2026.

As the war with Iran enters its second week, the most immediate and tragic costs are measured in lives lost. Yet economists are obliged to consider another dimension: the economic consequences. These, too, could be significant – though their distribution across the world economy will be uneven. Some countries will bear substantial costs. For others, the impact may prove surprisingly modest.

The heaviest burden will inevitably fall on the region itself. History offers a guide. During the 12-day war last summer, Israel’s economy contracted by around 1 per cent in the second quarter. If the conflict is short-lived, a fall in output of a similar order of magnitude would seem plausible for both Israel and the Gulf economies. 

A more prolonged conflict would almost certainly inflict a deeper economic wound. Output would be disrupted, investment postponed and tourism curtailed. Iran’s economy will be hit even harder. Based on the impact of wars elsewhere, GDP is likely to fall by more than 10 per cent – although Iran itself last published official GDP data in 2024. 

But what of the global economy? Directly, the Middle East matters less than is often assumed. The Gulf economies account for only around 2-3 per cent of global GDP. Even a severe regional downturn would therefore have limited direct consequences for world output.

Chokepoints

Instead, the key risks surround disruptions to the supply of goods that economies in the region send to the rest of the world. Crises such as this have a habit of revealing chokepoints that were previously hidden. For example, Qatar produces around 40 per cent of the world’s helium, which is used in the production of semiconductors. The region is also a significant producer of ammonia and nitrogen, which are key ingredients in many synthetic fertilizer products. The real transmission channel, though, is energy.

Around a quarter of global seaborne oil passes through the Strait of Hormuz, along with roughly one-fifth of liquefied natural gas (LNG) shipments. Any disruption to transit through this narrow chokepoint has immediate consequences for global energy markets. Unsurprisingly, oil and gas prices have jumped over the past week as shipments through the Strait have collapsed. 

In economic terms, the mechanism through which such shocks operate is straightforward. Higher energy prices alter what economists call a country’s terms of trade – the price of its exports relative to its imports. When energy prices rise, income is transferred from energy-importing countries to energy exporters.

The economic consequences of that transfer depend on three factors: whether a country is a net importer or exporter of energy; how large and persistent the price rise proves to be; and how governments, households and businesses respond to the shift in income.

The obvious winners are large net energy exporters outside the Gulf whose ability to sell abroad is unaffected. Countries such as Norway, Russia and Canada stand to benefit the most from higher energy prices. (See Chart below.)

At the other end of the spectrum sit economies where energy imports account for a large share of GDP. This group includes countries such as South Korea, Taiwan, Japan, India and China, as well as most European economies including France, Germany and the UK.

The United States sits somewhere in the middle. Thanks to the shale revolution, the country has shifted from being one of the world’s largest energy importers to a modest net exporter. In aggregate, that means the US economy as whole now benefits slightly from higher global energy prices – although the gains will be unevenly distributed.

The scale and persistence of the energy shock will ultimately determine the macroeconomic impact. For energy-importing economies, the main transmission channel is likely to be via inflation. Higher oil and gas prices raise the import bill faced by households and firms, squeezing real incomes and eroding purchasing power.

If the spike in prices proves brief, most advanced economies should be able to absorb the shock. Even if oil prices remain in the region of $70-80 per barrel and gas prices stay close to current levels, inflation in 2026 in Europe and Asia would probably be only around 0.5 percentage points higher than pre-conflict forecasts. The effect on real GDP growth would be small.

In countries where energy subsidies remain extensive and government finances are already shaky, higher energy prices could unsettle bond markets. 

A more severe scenario would be different. If oil prices climbed towards $100 per barrel and remained elevated throughout the year – accompanied by a comparable rise in natural gas prices – inflation might be roughly one percentage point higher and GDP growth perhaps 0.25–0.4 percentage points lower. Those central banks that are still loosening policy – notably the Bank of England – would also become less comfortable with cutting interest rates further.

Even so, such a shock would be far smaller than the one that followed Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, when Europe faced an abrupt and dramatic disruption to its energy supplies. The current conflict, unless it escalates dramatically, is unlikely to provoke large-scale fiscal rescue packages from governments.

Emerging markets and the US

In several emerging markets, the impact of higher energy prices is softened by government subsidies. In such cases, it would be the state rather than households and businesses that would bear the initial increase in costs. That will cushion the blow to growth in the short term but come at the expense of weaker public finances.

For most emerging economies this will be manageable: fiscal positions are generally stronger than they were a couple of decades ago. But in countries where energy subsidies remain extensive and government finances are already shaky, higher energy prices could unsettle bond markets. Economies such as Egypt and Tunisia appear particularly vulnerable. A surge in global energy prices could also destabilize Pakistan’s fragile economy. 

One final consequence of the conflict is that it is likely to reinforce a broader pattern in the world economy: the relative strength of the United States. Having moved from a large net importer of energy to a modest exporter, the US is now less exposed to global energy shocks than many of its peers. While American households will still face higher fuel prices, energy producers – and their investors – stand to benefit.

2026-03-06 12:04
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After getting up close to play with this new flavor of MacBook, it's clear Apple has something special here.

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Andrew Hiers, a classically trained opera singer, turned to selling cars after struggling to find singing gigs. Then he decided to merge the two.

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Beatrice Aquavia

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Managing Visuals and Layout Editor Beatrice Aquavia captures Delaware Lacrosse’s game against Villanova.

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Photo Gallery: Delaware lacrosse comes up short to Villanova in a close matchup was first posted on March 6, 2026 at 8:00 am.
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2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 08:00

Marco Rubio, the secretary of state, crushes our people and calls it freedom. We want engagement, not escalation

The day that will be remembered as one of the darkest days of the long and troubled US-Cuban relationship is 29 January. That was the day that Donald Trump declared Cuba an “unusual and extraordinary threat” to US national security, introduced a full-scale fuel blockade around the island, and turned off the lights for their home, schools and hospitals.

For Cubans Americans like me, the consequences of Trump’s declaration are not abstract. They are immediate, and devastating. Our families are running out of food. Our friends are unable to access medicine. While Marco Rubio, the secretary of state, speaks in the name of our “freedom”, he actively starves our communities of their most basic needs.

Danny Valdes is an activist from Miami and co-founder of Cuban Americans for Cuba

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2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 08:00

Predator drones and armored personnel carriers have become commonplace in US cities. Congress has the power to fix this

America’s main streets are a warzone. This should trouble every American, irrespective of their political leaning. Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness are near impossible to realize when our streets are policed so militarily. Our nation’s founders would be outraged, so as we commemorate the 250th anniversary this year of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, it’s worth evaluating how far off the mark we are in maintaining that much-vaunted freedom and liberty.

This past year, especially, witnessed a troubling militarization of the streets, with Donald Trump’s deployment of ICE and the national guard in multiple US cities, including Washington DC, Chicago, Los Angeles and Minneapolis. There is substantial documentation of immigration enforcement using military-grade equipment transferred from the Pentagon. And from Chicago to California, homeland security officers’ use of flash-bang grenades, predator drones, and armored personnel carriers is now commonplace. But to be clear, Americans were already seeing their streets militarized due to the Pentagon’s 1033 Program, which was created by Congress in the 1990s and provides war equipment free of charge to America’s police forces. This militarization of law enforcement is now a local, state and federal agency problem.

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2026-03-06 08:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from 404 Media: Wikipedia editors have implemented new policies and restricted a number of contributors who were paid to use AI to translate existing Wikipedia articles into other languages after they discovered these AI translations added AI "hallucinations," or errors, to the resulting article. The new restrictions show how Wikipedia editors continue to fight the flood of generative AI across the internet from diminishing the reliability of the world's largest repository of knowledge. The incident also reveals how even well-intentioned efforts to expand Wikipedia are prone to errors when they rely on generative AI, and how they're remedied by Wikipedia's open governance model. The issue centers around a program run by the Open Knowledge Association (OKA), a nonprofit that was found to be "mostly relying on cheap labor from contractors in the Global South" to translate English Wikipedia articles into other languages. Some translators began using tools like Google Gemini and ChatGPT to speed up the process, but editors reviewing the work found numerous hallucinations, including factual errors, missing citations, and references to unrelated sources. "Ultimately the editors decided to implement restrictions against OKA translators who make multiple errors, but not block OKA translation as a rule," reports 404 Media.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-06 07:56

The false promise of total victory.

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Ihor Komarov, 28, was identified from DNA samples taken from the dismembered body and compared to those of his mother, police said.

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Mediation by ‘some countries’ should address those who started conflict, Masoud Pezeshkian says in post on X

Iran’s president, Masoud Pezeshkian, has said for the first time that some countries have begun mediation efforts to end the war with the US and Israel, without identifying those countries, adding that any talks should address those who started the war.

Qatar, Turkey, Egypt and Oman have all offered to mediate at some point since US and Israel launched their joint strikes last Saturday. Two days ago, Iran’s foreign ministry said this was a time for defence of the country, not for diplomacy.

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Residents of Lebanese capital fled in panic before assaults on claimed Hezbollah targets while Tehran continues to launch retaliatory attacks. Plus, why is Pedro Sánchez the only European leader to take on Trump?

Good morning.

Israel has launched intense strikes against the southern suburbs of Beirut just hours after its military ordered the entire population of the area – more than 500,000 people – to evacuate immediately.

What else is happening with the war? The US granted Indian refiners a 30-day waiver to buy Russian oil after the US-Israel war on Iran sparked fears of a supply crunch, lifting global prices. Barely a month ago, Donald Trump claimed India had agreed to stop purchasing oil from Russia, in a shift that he said would “help END THE WAR in Ukraine” by cutting off a key source of funds for Moscow.

This is a developing story. Follow our liveblog here.

How have the Democrats reacted? Democrats have cheered Noem’s departure, with Hakeem Jeffries, the House minority leader, saying at a press conference: “Good riddance. She was a disaster.” But Jeffries said it would not change Democrats’ stance towards funding the homeland security department: “A change in personnel is not sufficient. We need a change in policy that has to be bold, dramatic, transformational and meaningful.”

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2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-06 07:39

Officers have decided former minister is not a flight risk, but he remains under investigation

Police have released Peter Mandelson from his bail conditions after deciding he was not a flight risk, the Guardian has learned.

Sources say the Metropolitan police have decided to drop the conditions they applied after arresting him on suspicion of misconduct in public office last month, though he remains under investigation.

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2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-06 07:33

After years of court action and complaints, trademark office in Spain rules name is counter to ‘public order and morality’

A Spanish restaurant chain called The Mafia Sits at the Table may soon have to change its name after the country’s patent and trademark office heeded objections from the Italian government and ruled that the brand’s nomenclature ran counter to “both public order and morality”.

Italy has pursued its claim against the chain – known in Spanish as La Mafia se sienta a la mesa – through various courts and official bodies over the past few years, alleging that the name trivialises both organised crime and efforts to fight it.

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2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-06 07:33

The USS Arizona sank just nine minutes after being bombed, and its 1,177 dead account for nearly half the servicemen killed in the attack.

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UK arguments for US operations from its bases blur the line between lawful self-defence and unlawful war on Iran  Expert comment jon.wallace

The UK claims any US aircraft flying from bases like Fairford and Diego Garcia can only act in defence of British regional allies. Such a distinction may be unrealistic in a theatre of war.

Flight crew walk towards a B-52 Stratofortress bomber aircraft at RAF Fairford on September 19, 2025.

The UK has taken a step closer to involvement in the US and Israeli war against Iran. 

The UK government initially refused President Donald Trump’s request to use its military bases in support of the war with Iran. But on 1 March, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer announced he would, after all, permit the use of UK military bases such as RAF Fairford in the UK and the overseas base on Diego Garcia. This is to be limited to ‘defensive’ action against missiles and drones based in Iran. This limited concession was reportedly negotiated with Washington, in accordance with London’s view on the legal issues involved.

Throughout, the prime minister has been adamant that the UK has not participated in the initial US and Israeli offensive, and that this remains the case. He argued that the UK would, under his leadership, never contemplate going to war without a legal basis. This seems to confirm reports that the UK attorney general may have advised that the US and Israeli operation is not in accordance with international law.

Few states have been willing to say so publicly. And some have endorsed the attacks. But the UN Secretary-General has confirmed that the US-Israeli attacks on Iran violate the fundamental prohibition of the use of force. This view is widely shared among the legal expert community. 

And some governments are now finding their voice in defending the international legal order, including Spain and France, with Canada belatedly also joining in.

Countries also routinely refuse the use of foreign bases on their territory for aggressive operations. They will even deny the right of overflight over their territory by foreign forces heading for a controversial military operation. 

Compliance with international law is not optional for the UK. According to the Ministerial Code, members of the government, including the prime minister, have the ‘overarching duty to comply with the law, including international law and treaty obligations’. 

How then is the UK government attempting to square the circle of credibly supporting its regional allies without becoming a party to the war against Iran?

The UK’s complicated legal arguments

The United Nations Definition of Aggression confirms that a state must not allow ‘territory placed at the disposal of another state to be used by that other state for perpetrating an act of aggression against a third state’.

However, merely allowing the use of a base on UK territory for hostile action against a third state would not necessarily constitute an act of aggression. Deeper involvement may be required. 

Still, by giving in to the initial US request, the UK would have risked assuming a share of the international legal responsibility for the attacks against Iran. 

Iran invoked its right to self-defence in response to the US attacks, announcing that ‘all bases, facilities, and assets of the hostile forces in the region shall be regarded as legitimate military objectives within the framework of Iran’s lawful exercise of self-defense.’ However, that would only be lawful if these facilities on the territory of third states were indeed all involved in the conflict.

Regional states hosting US bases adamantly assert that they have not permitted the launch of any attacks against Iran from those bases. Indeed, several countries tried to dissuade the US from launching the operation in the first place. Despite these efforts, Iran has attacked many of its neighbours in the Gulf, including Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Oman, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain and Iraq. Iran has therefore itself committed an act of aggression against these regional states one compounded by the indiscriminate nature of the attacks.

While the UK did not participate in the initial attack on Iran, Starmer has reported that it has had ‘planes in the sky’ since the outbreak of the conflict to help intercept missiles and drones directed against regional allies. 

The UK can rely on its own right to self-defence if Iran targets groups of UK citizens in the Gulf specifically because they are UK citizens. The UK also has a right under international law to a limited and proportionate answer to the apparent Iranian drone attack against its military base at Akrotiri, Cyprus, which is sovereign UK territory. However, the UK seems reluctant to take such action, perhaps to avoid entering a direct, escalatory conflict with Iran.

The UK attorney general clarified in the summary of his advice that, ‘as well as defending itself and its position in the region, the UK is acting in the collective self-defence of regional allies who have requested support’. However, this describes a kind of passive defence, trying to intercept missiles and drones as they approach the Gulf states. UK forces will not mount an active defence against missile installations ‘at source’ in Iran, in support of the Gulf states. Instead, authority has been granted to the US to do so, using UK bases. 

It is not clear whether this means that the US is doing so under UK licence, as it were, acting to implement London’s right to collective self-defence in aid of the Gulf states or whether the US is acting in their defence under its own steam. 

A delicate distinction

This complicated UK approach seems to blur the distinction between the unlawful US and Israeli war against Iran, and the lawful UK campaign to defend regional allies against unjustified Iranian assaults using US assets operating from UK bases. 

The UK is attempting to shore up that distinction by indicating that strict rules are in place to ensure that the UK bases are only used for strikes against ‘missile facilities in Iran which were involved in launching strikes at regional allies’. But it may not be realistic or practical to determine in each instance which Iranian missiles facilities have targeted regional allies or, more to the point, which will do so in the future. Presumably some have been used to attack both Israel and US forces, and regional states.

It may not be realistic or practical to determine in each instance which Iranian missiles facilities have targeted regional allies.

Iran will certainly not be persuaded by this distinction. Its authorities will not be able to tell which US strikes launched from UK bases aim to protect UK regional allies, and which are part of the US’s overall aggressive campaign to subdue its government. 

The attorney general adds that the UK bases may only be used for strikes against missile facilities used by Iran against ‘countries not previously involved in the conflict’. In other words, according to this distinction, it is out of the question for US aircraft flying from UK bases to strike Iran to protect US forces in the region or to preserve Israel from counterattacks.

US pilots launching from UK bases may find it difficult to accept that they can only engage offensive Iranian weapons that threaten the Gulf states, but not those that threaten their own forces amidst a deadly, live conflict. 

Presumably, the somewhat complicated legal rationale of the UK government is meant to facilitate US action at the behest of close regional allies, and to alleviate the fury of US President Donald Trump at having initially been denied the use of the UK bases without slipping too far towards becoming a party to a conflict that lacks a legal basis. 

In truth, though, the euphemism of the UK having had ‘planes in the sky’ since the beginning of the conflict does not really overcome one fact. 

Entering the theatre of conflict and shooting down Iranian drones and missiles that are unlawfully targeting regional allies may be laudable. But in a sense, doing so already makes the UK a party to the conflict at least the conflict between Iran and those regional states however defensive the UK’s role may be. Moreover, if the Gulf states decide to respond by striking Iran, as they are entitled to, the UK could become involved in more active defence.

Despite the fine legal craftmanship underpinning it, Starmer’s decision potentially makes it just a little more difficult for the UK to maintain the distinction between involvement in defence of itself and its allies, and involvement in the principal conflagration between Iran and the US and Israel.

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-06 07:10

Investigation finds three were hacked by Paragon spyware at same time, potentially fuelling questions for government

Italian prosecutors investigating a domestic spying scandal say they have independently confirmed that two immigration activists and a journalist were hacked at the same time in late 2024, suggesting all three were part of the same “infection campaign”.

The development could bring more questions for the far-right government of Giorgia Meloni, who has denied any involvement in the hacking of the journalist, the Fanpage editor-in-chief, Francesco Cancellato.

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2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-06 07:01

Prime Video's offerings are a sci-fi lover's dream.

2026-03-06 08:04
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Alberto Gutiérrez Reyes died in a California hospital in February after suffering chest pain and shortness of breath

A man under the custody of federal immigration agents died in a California hospital last month after suffering from chest pain and shortness of breath, with one local official alleging the detainee was denied medical care before his death.

According to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Alberto Gutiérrez Reyes, from Mexico, died on 27 February at a medical center in Victorville, California, just two days after the 48-year-old reported “feeling faint” and was transferred to the medical center.

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Springing forward cuts the number of evening burglaries, leading to significantly less crime in the coming months.

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"I just want to know what happened," Rachel Reyes told CBS News during her first TV interview since the death of her son, Ruben Ray Martinez, a U.S. citizen shot and killed by an ICE agent in Texas last year.

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The not‑so‑special relationship? Can UK–US relations survive Trump 2.0? 15 April 2026 — 12:00PM TO 1:00PM Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online

The House of Lords International Relations and Defence Committee joins us at Chatham House to explore the future of UK–US relations amid long‑term US policy shifts and recent political upheavals.

The House of Lords International Relations and Defence Committee joins us at Chatham House to explore the future of UK–US relations amid long-term US policy shifts and recent political upheavals.

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The Israel–U.S. military campaign in Iran has killed more than 1,000 people since the assault began on February 28. A war powers resolution in the Senate to curb President Donald Trump’s ability to drag the U.S. into the war failed on Wednesday. Similarly, a measure in the House failed on Thursday. 

“This war is just a few days old and it’s escalating really quickly,” says Ali Gharib, senior editor at The Intercept. “It’s becoming a regional conflict,” as Iran retaliates and targets U.S. bases as well as Israel and Gulf energy sites. This week on The Intercept Briefing, Gharib discusses the human and political toll of the Israel–U.S. war on Iran with co-host Jordan Uhl and journalist Séamus Malekafzali, who has been based in Paris and Beirut.

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“Trump has repeatedly failed to articulate anything even resembling coherent about why the U.S. got into this war,” says Gharib. He adds, “Marco Rubio even — who, again, not the sharpest tool in the shed, but usually has his shit pretty together — but in this case, he’s like changing his tune every two days because he has to keep up with Trump’s inanity about what the reasons for the war were.”

The end game for Israel here, says Malekafzali, is they want “a state that is incapable of defending itself, a state that is no longer sovereign.” He adds, “If you are bombarding police stations, if you are bombarding hospitals and schools, border guards, when you are attacking the very fabric of any society as your main target, CENTCOM and the IDF together, that means that you are going toward state collapse.”

“These are hard-won lessons over and over again for the United States — war after war, fallout, blowback. It just happens again and again. And yet we always seem to get leaders who are willing to run willy-nilly into these things,” says Gharib.

Listen to the full conversation of The Intercept Briefing on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you listen. 

Transcript

Jordan Uhl: Welcome to the Interceptive Briefing, I’m Jordan Uhl. 

Ali Gharib: And I’m Ali Gharib. I’m a senior editor at The Intercept.

JU: Today we’re going to talk about the growing war in the Middle East, specifically Iran. Last Saturday, Israel and the United States launched unprovoked attacks on Iran, and assassinated Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei as well as several senior military officials. 

The Israel–U.S. strikes have continued on Iran, bringing the death toll to more than 1,000 people since the assault began. On Thursday, the World Health Organization verified 13 attacks on health infrastructure that killed four health care workers. Ali, it feels like we’ve seen this playbook run before, but this time, it seems like they’re trying to distinguish what is and what isn’t a war.

AG: This is like the sort of last redoubt of the idiot, when it comes to national security policy, is that you don’t need congressional approval. There’s no real stakes because this isn’t a war. This is part of a long history. It’s bipartisan. We’ve seen Democrats in office. We’ve seen Republicans in office. People are constantly starting these wars. They say they’re going to be limited strikes. Well, you know what? When you’re dropping bombs on another country and that country is attacking your military personnel in the area, that’s a textbook war.

In the so-called global war on terror, they could bullshit this and say, “Oh, we’re not going after armies. We’re going after these non-state actors and terrorist groups,” or whatever. But in this case, it’s like you’re literally attacking the leadership of another country and another country’s military.

There’s just no way to bullshit this. This is war. It’s what it is. There’s civilians dying. It’s the whole thing. It’s maybe the most egregious example since Vietnam of this phenomenon.

JU: Now there are efforts in Congress to rein in the Trump administration’s attacks on Iran. We will look to see how those votes develop, but I think there’s a general sense of pessimism around the outcome.

Another way of looking at it is just getting people on the record. Do you think that’ll be something that is an anchor around people’s necks going into the midterms?

AG: It looks increasingly like this is going to be a midterm issue. We’re seeing these breaks. In the Senate, it was pretty clean.

There was a war powers vote this week that failed and we saw [Sen. John] Fetterman, D-Pa., was the only Democrat to peel off, which isn’t that surprising. He voted last summer against a war powers resolution to block another Iran attack, which would’ve given Congress the power to stop exactly this calamity that we’re seeing right now. But it failed on basically party lines, with Fetterman defecting.

Then in the House there’s a version where we see some pro-Israel Democrats peeled off and tried to introduce their own version, which would allow Trump 30 extra days to continue the war before a congressional block gets imposed. We wrote about it this week on The Intercept. Our great D.C. reporter, Matt Sledge, wrote about it.

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Because this is becoming a midterm issue, and these guys have to try and thread the needle here between satisfying their pro-Israel donors, satisfying the American voters who are not happy with this war, all told. And we’ve seen in some cases, some pro-Israel Democrats who were getting primaried from the left came out preemptively and said, I oppose this. And they’re still getting hit by their insurgent primary opponents for not having come out soon enough and hard enough.

This is something that Jon Stewart made a joke about this week, is that it seems like every time a president starts a war, Congress wants to come in next Thursday and do a vote about whether it’s authorized or not.

There’s logic to what these insurgent Democrats are saying is that we’ve known what’s going to happen here for a long time, and Democrats on Capitol Hill could not get their act together. And yeah, I think that some of these progressive insurgents that we’re seeing are going to make hay of that on the campaign trail.

JU: So there are many troubling things coming from this administration. The general sense is that they don’t have a clear objective or plan. We’ve seen people forward concerns in Congress, and especially in the anti-war camps. But then how the White House has been messaging on this — even down to their social media posts — has people deeply troubled.

There’s a video, for instance, from the official White House account that was posted on Wednesday that spliced together footage from “Call of Duty” — I would argue a military propaganda video game — with footage of actual strikes in Iran. This is that blurring of lines that critics of intervention and those games have been worried about for years because it sanitizes the act of killing.

We’re already distancing ourselves from direct combat through this unseen aerial warfare, and that is pushed to young people through these games. And now the White House specifically is pushing that. So I’m curious if you could touch on both of those things: the sanitization of war and the meaning of war, and also this lack of a plan. 

AG: Honestly, I think those things go hand in hand that these guys — Trump, especially, you would think maybe Hegseth’s little military experience would be different, but I think maybe he’s a little too dull to really get what’s going on here — they just seem to not get the stakes that these are the most severe decisions that a government can make and that the stakes are really life and death, and not only just in the immediate dropping bombs, but long-term ramifications.

These are hard-won lessons over and over again for the United States — war after war, fallout, blowback. It just happens again and again. And yet we always seem to get leaders who are willing to run willy-nilly into these things. 

On the one hand, they don’t take it seriously. It’s a political ploy. They think it’s a joke. They’re just like meme lords running around trying to goose up their base to get all hot and bothered about bombing some Muslims over there. Then on the other hand, they’re not taking it seriously in the actual war planning either. It’s not just the propaganda. 

Watching Trump’s statements has been really incredible. To watch Marco Rubio even — who, again, not the sharpest tool in the shed, but usually has his shit pretty together — but in this case, he’s like changing his tune every two days because he has to keep up with Trump’s inanity about what the reasons for the war were.

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Rubio came out and said the other day that he thinks their imminent threat was that Israel was going to attack and there was going to be blowback on U.S. assets in the region. That’s a maybe true but slightly embarrassing justification for war.

And then you had Trump who came back after he was asked about Rubio’s comments and said no, no, this happened because of me. We were negotiating with the Iranians over their nuclear program — which by the way, as the details have come out, it turns out they were, and there was huge progress being made. And then the U.S. bombed the shit out of Iran. 

But Trump said these talks were going on and the talks weren’t going anywhere and were collapsing. (Again, bullshit.) And that he was worried that that would spur the Iranians to attack — for which there is no evidence. Something Iran has never done in the history of the Islamic Republic is lash out after a diplomatic exercise like that has failed. I’ve covered this for my whole career: There’s been a lot of diplomacy that’s failed, and Iran is never so much as hinted that they’re going to then lash out afterward. That became Trump’s excuse. It’s these constantly shifting goalposts.

“Something Iran has never done in the history of the Islamic Republic is lash out after a diplomatic exercise like that has failed.”

Not only is there no clear justification, there’s no clear end game here. This is something I’ve talked about a lot, and I spoke with Séamus Malekafzali today on the podcast about it. He’s a journalist who writes about the Middle East, with a strong focus on Iran, and he’s been based in Paris and Beirut. We went through some of this stuff about the U.S. haplessly walking its way through this war, and the Israelis just don’t care what happens. And for them, a failed state is great. We’ve seen comments to this effect from Israeli analysts that are close to the military–industrial complex there. They just seem to have dragged Trump into this thing that Trump has haplessly, just buffooning his way through.

JU: Let’s hear that conversation.

AG: Hey Séamus, welcome to the show. 

Séamus Malekafzali: Happy to be here.

AG: The pleasure is all ours, Séamus. So today we’re going to be talking about the biggest story in the world right now: Israel and the U.S. launched an unprovoked attack against Iran last Saturday. It’s still going on. Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei was assassinated, so were a bunch of top regime figures — people from the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, other military leaders. 

It’s been a pretty violent conflict so far. Hezbollah, the Lebanese Shia group that’s closely aligned with Iran, lobbed a few missiles into Israel. Israel, in retaliation, began seizing territory in southern Lebanon.

There’s a new wave of strikes on Iran, and U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has said that we’re “just getting started.” This war is just a few days old, and it’s escalating really quickly. It’s spiraling out of control. It’s becoming a regional conflict. Does that sound about right to you, Séamus? Is this moving into a much more dangerous situation really, really fast?

SM: I would agree with that estimation, yes. Trump had said that he was surprised by this, but Iran had threatened to bring all these different Gulf Arab countries that are hosting American bases into the war, and they did that immediately once Israel and America launched their strikes.

Recently, they had even struck Oman and potentially even oil fields in Saudi Arabia against the advice of the civilian Iranian government. Apparently, there has even been an attempt to strike at a base inside Turkey that had been hosting American forces. I’m unsure of what the Iranian government has said about that matter, but I imagine they are not keen on Turkey being one of those targets. But because of the decentralized nature of the Iranian military, they had been given instructions to expand this without individual authorizations by the Iranian leadership.

Israel, however, is not a decentralized state; it is very much intentional in what it is doing. All of the strikes that are currently happening on Iran and inside Lebanon are the Israeli military leadership’s clear and specific directives. So as it currently is going on the path of completely expelling the population of southern Lebanon or carpet-bombing Tehran, that is not an unintentional part of this. That is a fully intentional aim to expand this and deepen this.

AG: You mentioned the expansion of the war. I think that that’s a really salient point about the decentralized leadership and in fact that’s become an essential directive for the Iranians because they’re just being so closely surveilled and any communications they have could potentially give away locations and they’re running tremendous risks.

It seems like the Israeli intelligence, to your point, is extremely good on these targets that it’s hitting. So it’s hard to imagine that when the targets get so broad or say, a girls’ elementary school gets hit in southern Iran, that these sorts of things are just terrible mistakes. Like, no, this is the nature of having a wide-scale conflict and I think we should be skeptical of claims of just that things go errant. 

There was this attack on Mir-Hossein Mousavi’s residence early on in the war, I think, on the first day of strikes. We’re talking about an opposition leader here who’s been under house arrest. A lot of apologists will claim that was an accident, but it’s not clear that it was. And then we see Trump complaining about there being nobody to take the place of the Iranian leadership. It stretches credulity when you put together all the statements.

SM: When Pete Hegseth says that they are investigating the strike on that elementary school for girls in Minab, and then they throw up on the screen a map of all these different strikes that CENTCOM has done — and Minab is right there, that school. They obviously know what they did. They’re covering that up, that fact.

On the Mousavi front, I’m unsure of the nature of that strike. I know that Mousavi’s apartment was near Pasteur, where all these different Iran government ministries are located. But [former President Mahmoud] Ahmadinejad was apparently someone who at least a strike happened in his area. He appears to be alive still. There were reports of his death but he apparently communicated to Patrick Bet-David, an American Iranian podcaster, that he was still alive. But nevertheless, Itamar Ben-Gvir went out and said that Ahmadinejad was a righteous victim of the Israeli military

AG: Just for context, Ahmadinejad was the president of Iran, obviously, in the late 2000s and early 2010s, but also a figure who in recent years has fallen deeply out of favor with the Iranian government. I don’t know if I’d go so far as to call him an opposition leader. But certainly not somebody who has a hand in anything the government is doing these days.

SM: No, no, no. He is very much on the Supreme Leader’s shit list. They are not keen on leaving any sort of leadership of any kind, I think, if the strike near Ahmadinejad is intentional, which I still have doubts about.

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Trump had seemed to be confused about the nature of the temporary leadership council that took power after Khamenei was killed, that apparently there were second or third choices that may have been also killed, but also those three he might’ve had something to gain from them.

Then the reports that they wanted the IRGC, some aspect of them that could take over, be friendly to the United States. No, there’s no actual plan for any of this. In the same way that when Maduro was abducted and taken here to New York City that Delcy Rodriguez was the person who they were going to threaten and then have take power.

There is no parallel figure within the Iranian government, which means that they are pushing things towards state collapse, rather than trying to position an America-friendly, Israel-friendly Iranian government in power.

AG: Or even just in the Venezuela case, an alternative who might be compliant.

SM: Exactly.

[Break]

AG: Obviously, Israel has been a major player in this war. There’s been enough talk, at least, about Israel having pushed Trump into the war that Trump got asked about it and gave a pretty defensive answer.

Donald Trump: No, I might have forced their hand. We were having negotiations with these lunatics, and it was my opinion that they were going to attack first. They were going to attack if we didn’t do it.

AG: Israel has just become a rogue actor in the region. It’s constantly unleashing these military assaults. The lesson learned from Gaza was that there’s not going to be any accountability for anything that the Israeli government does.

“The lesson learned from Gaza was that there’s not going to be any accountability for anything that the Israeli government does.”

Obviously, more than 70,000 people killed in the genocide there. Since the so-called ceasefire, Israel has killed 600 more people in Gaza. There’s been allegedly thousands of violations of the ceasefire between Hezbollah and Israel before this latest war with Iran started. And those are documented by the U.N. peacekeeping forces. These aren’t like Hezbollah numbers or anything. 

Now after the attack on Iran, we see the war expanding in Lebanon. You lived in Beirut, obviously, you know this terrain very well. Do you have any sense of what the mood is like there? 

SM: There is definitely been a difference in tone from this intervention than the intervention that happened after the war broke out against Gaza in 2023. Having a war for Palestine, regardless of the sympathies that a lot of Lebanese had for Palestinians, they never largely wanted to get involved in a war on Lebanese soil for Palestine.

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There isn’t polling on such an immediate thing. Even if Hezbollah is responding to 15 months of unchecked Israeli aggression against Lebanese territory which they did phrase in their statement — and also the fact that they were apparently, according to Israeli reporting, even preempting an Israeli preemptive strike on Lebanon — the optics of doing this in retaliation for Khamenei’s death, that being the express logic that was said in their statement that has presented problems that Hezbollah is not — They’re in a very difficult situation, an impossible situation, an unenviable situation. But this has not gone the direction that it had after 2023. 

The Lebanese government has begun arresting members of Hezbollah and also some Palestinians who have been traveling down to the south. Amal [Movement], their closest ally in politics, has begun splitting in some regards. I have heard reports that Amal locals on the ground are participating in the offensive, but the party leadership is now more at odds with Hezbollah than it had been in the past.

The Lebanese government is not in the position in which it can allow this to happen. It is happening on their own volition. They’re making that decision expressly. But the impunity that Hezbollah had to act unilaterally without the permission of the Lebanese government — that still exists, in that they have military capabilities outside of the military, but the Lebanese government is clearly acting to stop Hezbollah’s retaliation from going on in a way that they were not after October 7th.

AG: And this is another example of the fracturing politics of the region over the past couple years, and especially in the past few days here in the Middle East. You mentioned earlier, the Gulf Arab neighbors of Iran and what this war has meant for them. We’ve seen reports repeatedly of energy infrastructure being hit. Some of that maybe is debris starting fires that are from intercepted missiles. It’s very unclear what’s being targeted, what’s being hit.

We know that in some examples there have been instances of civilian infrastructure. A luxury hotel in Bahrain got hit by Iranian missiles or maybe a drone and got severely damaged. There was an Iranian official who actually told Drop Site News that they had gotten intelligence that there were American war department officials in there.

The Washington Post got a hold of a State Department cable back that said yeah, two Pentagon officials were injured in that strike on the Bahrain hotel. So it does seem that the Iranians are going after some legitimate targets when they’re buried. Abbas Araghchi, the foreign minister, has said that the Americans, when their bases started to get hit, dispersed their assets and people moved into civilian areas and that’s what they’ve been going after. For us, a lot of that stuff is extremely difficult to check.

The Emirates have clamped down on information coming out because, again, this is the image of the region getting fractured. Abu Dhabi and Dubai as the safe havens for doing business that are safe and pleasant and easy to live in — that image is going up in flames with every Iranian missile that comes overhead. The airports are shut down, people can’t leave, and life on the ground there — I have some family that’s stuck in Dubai — life on the ground there is pretty normal, except this image is being completely shattered. I just saw a report in the FT that it cost $250,000 to get extracted from Bahrain right now.

SM: Yeah.

AG: This war is really remaking the Gulf Arab countries’ images as well.

SM: Yeah, and I don’t think they’re prepared for it at all. There was an Iranian parliamentarian, I think the head of the Parliament’s National Security Committee, that had said that the purpose of these strikes is to have these countries evict the Americans. The Gulf countries — I assume, I can only assume — they hosted these bases because of an assumption of American protection or American support if Iran were to launch this kind of attack against them. And there has been absolutely no American protection or real support, in the few ways that it has manifested. When American [F-15] fighter jets were taking off from Kuwait, three of them apparently got shot down by a single Kuwaiti jet that obviously was not anticipating being involved in this kind of conflict. 

There was a perception that these were places that were somehow outside of politics, despite being inside the Middle East next to Iran and very much close to Israel. I think it’s going to take many years for that to be repaired — if it will ever be repaired — because these countries have never suffered this kind of conflict.

Saudi Arabia has suffered through this. Iraq has suffered through this. Kuwait has suffered through this. But Qatar, Bahrain, the UAE. Like, even singular ballistic missile launches from the Houthis, or that drone that hit Abu Dhabi airport some years ago. Those were things that had to be covered up and rapidly ignored in order to maintain that image. It can no longer be ignored in this. It’s far too wide-ranging.

“There was a perception that these were places that were somehow outside of politics, despite being inside the Middle East. … I think it’s going to take many years for that to be repaired.”

AG: And the reverberations aren’t just limited to that. Can you talk a little bit about what this is doing to energy markets — Iran’s strategy closing down the Strait of Hormuz, and this “bringing a cost to this conflict for others” strategy that Iran’s using, with regards to energy moving out of the Gulf?

SM: Qatar supplies 20 percent of the global output of energy, and they have shut down most of their production.

AG: LNG specifically, I think is their 20 percent, liquid natural gas. 

SM: Clearly a massive shock is on its way. Iran had hit an oil platform in Fujairah. Aramco had come under attack in some capacity by the Iranian military, a field in Saudi Arabia. Strait of Hormuz — I had seen some bizarre graph from somebody on Twitter where they showed all of the traffic in the Strait of Hormuz absolutely tanking, and then they created some sort of projection line where it all went back up after five days. I do not think that it’s going to happen.

Oil prices are already starting to shoot up, not overwhelmingly so, but they’re starting to shoot up. There were predictions made that by next month, gas prices could be up more than a 100 percent, perhaps even near 130, 140, 150 percent in Europe. For Americans, I imagine would be in a similar boat, gas prices that are higher than they were during the financial crisis — $5 a gallon, even higher than that

That is the lever that Iran is rapidly trying to pull up and down because it knows that it is the only one that truly affects the decision making in the West. Any sort of anti-war sentiment that exists in these places, it is not going to be able to move any of these officials. What is going to move them is if people are feeling this in their checkbooks at the pump, when it becomes so costly to continue executing this that they have to pull back or else it becomes prohibitively expensive.

Oil “is the lever that Iran is rapidly trying to pull up and down because it knows that it is the only one that truly affects the decision-making in the West.”

AG: And I should note that the Aramco thing also remains a mystery because the Iranians did explicitly deny that. I thought that was curious. They said that, no, we’re not targeting Aramco, which I thought was interesting. It’s not necessarily true, but just that they haven’t been shy about some of the stuff they’ve been targeting, but that one they did deny.

So working the levers that these foreign governments will listen to and the way to put pressure on them that is broader than just an anti-war movement — do you have any thoughts on what this pressure means in the U.S. and the kind of fractures that we’re seeing? Is Trump susceptible even to these kinds of things? Or is he just in his own world enough where so far it seems like he’s committed to keeping going and just living in his own fantasies?

SM: I don’t think Trump is susceptible to public opinion. He cares about it to a certain extent, but he really just wants to be seen more than anything as a deals man. A deals man does not allow this kind of thing to go for months, if not years. He wants the perception that he can do that for as long as he wants, but this cannot follow him forever. He wants to focus on other things. He wants to be seen as somebody who is making peace, somebody who is getting things done quickly. And if that image is not true in a severely obvious way, that is something that he does not want to be associated with — either in government or by the public.

AG: His partner in all this, of course, who, again, maybe has dragged him along into some of it, was Benjamin Netanyahu. In a way Trump has repeatedly failed to articulate anything even resembling coherent about why the U.S. got into this war. But Netanyahu has been forced on American TV on Sean Hannity’s show to make the case for going to war in Iran. And let’s listen to a clip of that.

Benjamin Netanyahu: After we hit their nuclear sites and their ballistic missiles program, you’d think they learned a lesson, but they didn’t because they’re unreformable. They’re totally fanatic about this, about the goal of destroying America. 

So they started building new sites, new places, underground bunkers that would make their ballistic missile program and their atomic bomb programs immune within months. If no action was taken now, no action could be taken in the future. And then they could target America. They could blackmail America.

AG: All right, Séamus, you and I know that this is a lot of the same bullshit we’ve been getting for a while and there’s a lot to unpack here. But the thing I’d like you to talk about, if possible, is some of these claims that we’ve been seeing that, within months, Iran would be immune and have the bomb for 20 years now.

Then also this war coming right in the middle of negotiations over exactly these issues between the U.S. — in direct negotiations, I should say — over exactly these issues between the U.S. and Iran that were being led by Trump’s envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner. If you could talk about the context of Israel starting this war at this very moment.

SM: Jared Kushner and Steve Wikoff, I believe that these are diplomats, but they’re not actually diplomats. I mean, in a real sense, they are diplomats in that they’re real estate moguls — one a little bit more successful than the other. But these are not people who have any sort of diplomatic skill.

They are there to enforce an ideological line and extract concessions without any sort of expectation of concessions on their own part. This is why I think they were so favored by the Israeli government because there was no actual negotiating going on. It was deception. Explicitly, it was deception by these two people.

When America is sending negotiators to your country and demanding not only the cessation of your nuclear program, the taking of all of your enriched uranium and sending it directly through the U.S. who promises we’re going to send you nuclear fuel for your own civilian plants, but we get to control everything. But also apparently, according to Witkoff on Hannity, a few days ago, he had said that they even asked for Iran to eliminate its own navy so that America would have eternal freedom of operation in the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz. 

They are effectively Israeli agents in this regard in that they are supporting a maximalist Israeli-led position, and they are very much supported by the Israeli government in this regard.

AG: What is Netanyahu’s end game here? What is the Israeli objective? Is this what you were talking about with state collapse being the direction we’re going? Is that the actual end game or is that just where we’re going?

SM: I think that is the actual end game. Look, Trump, I’m sure there will be discussion soon about resource extraction or getting something from the Iranians or wanting a friendlier government. That’s something that Netanyahu has said as well. But the things that are being demanded of Iran — that being no ballistic missiles at all, no navy — the basic thing that you would have as a country. What they want is a state that is incapable of defending itself, a state that is no longer sovereign, and a state that cannot exercise these abilities is a state that does not exist, fundamentally. 

If you are bombarding police stations, if you are bombarding hospitals and schools, border guards, when you are attacking the very fabric of any society as your main target, CENTCOM and the IDF together, that means that you are going towards state collapse. And that even if you are supporting in the future some group that may come up — or maybe [Reza] Pahlavi or this Kurdish [group], anything, doesn’t matter — the state that will eventually emerge is a state that has been stripped of its ability to do anything resembling a state. It will be a subdued state, either as severe as Gaza, even if Israel is not going to settle or depopulate Iran, or a state that is subdued like Lebanon, in which it has to listen to the directives of Israel and America for it to continue functioning in any capacity.

AG: I suspect that, without having a direct line into Netanyahu’s thinking, I suspect that you’re completely right, that is his goal there. Again, with the total lack of accountability in Gaza, I don’t see why he doesn’t think that he can do whatever he wants.

Then in the regional picture, these weakened and failed states have been pretty good for Israel in terms of eliminating threats. You said that you think Trump envisioned some kind of deal or maybe some sort of future benefit, and he’s going to start talking about that stuff. Do you think he quite understands what’s going on here?

SM: No. I’ll speak very plainly, no. The way in which Iran has been spoken about in Republican circles for a very long time is that Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader, is a personality figurehead, and the entire government is based around his power, and when he falls, the entire Islam Republic will fall. If you take him out, then all the dominoes start falling immediately.

This was false. It has been false. Khomeini died, and Khamenei was elected to the deposition by the assembly of experts and the government did not collapse even though Khomenei took a much larger position within the Iranian political world, within Iranian society.

[Trump] does not seem to have any understanding of the different institutions that have influence within the country. He listens to what his advisers tell him about what people might be friendly to him or might want to deal, and he internalizes some of it. But he does not have an actual understanding of how the country works, how any sort of cultural forces might be working, anti-imperialism how that might inform other people’s decisions; how these people might feel like they have their backs against the wall, and that might inform their thinking that maybe they don’t want to be killed or made into a puppet. He fundamentally does not understand the country, not in a political sense in that Iran is some sort of brave and unsubdued power that is capable of anything, but that it is a country that does not function like Venezuela — even Cuba, as he envisions it.

AG: That’s pretty sound analysis given what we know about him. Séamus, thank you so much for taking the time to talk to us. It’s a pleasure to catch up with you and get your thoughts on what’s going on. You’re an experienced reporter who spent some time in the region, and I greatly appreciate your perspective.

SM: Thank you. Anytime.

JU: That was Ali Gharib, The Intercept’s senior editor and Séamus Malekafzali, a journalist and writer covering the Middle East.

That does it for this episode. 

This episode was produced by Laura Flynn. Ben Muessig is our editor-in-chief. Maia Hibbett is our Managing Editor. Chelsey B. Coombs is our social and video producer. Desiree Adib is our booking producer. Fei Liu is our product and design manager. Nara Shin is our copy editor. Will Stanton mixed our show. Legal review by David Bralow.

Slip Stream provided our theme music.

This show and our reporting at The Intercept doesn’t exist without you. Your donation, no matter the amount, makes a real difference. Keep our investigations free and fearless at theintercept.com/join

And if you haven’t already, please subscribe to The Intercept Briefing wherever you listen to podcasts. Do leave us a rating or a review, it helps other listeners to find us.

Let us know what you think of this episode, or If you want to send us a general message, email us at podcasts@theintercept.com.

Until next time, I’m Jordan Uhl. 

The post Trump’s War to Nowhere appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-06 06:00

Tucker Carlson, Megyn Kelly, Ben Shapiro and Mark Levin are all trading blows over US involvement – while Sean Hannity says he’s staying out of it

The stars of the conservative media movement have been duking it out – in extremely personal terms – over Donald Trump’s decision to enter the United States into a conflict with Iran.

While it can be hard to cleanly group the warring factions, much of the fighting has centered on disagreements about whether the US is too deferential to Israeli interests. Those arguing that position most prominently include former Fox News hosts Tucker Carlson and Megyn Kelly, while conservative media personalities like Mark Levin (a current Fox News host) and Ben Shapiro have strongly supported both the American intervention in Iran and collaboration with Israel.

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2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-06 05:37

In the early hours of 5 November, ICE agents dragged Juana Avila out of her van, handcuffed and detained her in Cottage Grove, Oregon. Emely, her daughter, soon arrived on the scene and explained her mother had a green card and was carrying it with her. The officers proceeded to handcuff Juana and put her in their SUV. Juana's arrest was part of a lawsuit that secured a major victory for immigrants' rights in Oregon. The lawsuit challenged ICE’s tactic of detaining people without warrants or probable cause, a practice advocates say has fuelled widespread racial profiling and chaotic arrests

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2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-06 05:24

Move is part of scheme to target families for expedited voluntary removals before enforced removal proceedings

Children may be forcibly removed from the UK in handcuffs to “overcome noncompliance” as part of proposals Home Office is considering to send more asylum seeker families back to their home countries.

Since coming into office, the government has pledged to deport more migrants and has increased both voluntary and enforced returns, although some of those who have left the UK voluntarily did so without informing the Home Office.

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2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-06 05:22

Will the US-Israel war on Iran destabilise Iraq? 12 March 2026 — 1:00PM TO 2:00PM Anonymous (not verified) Online

This webinar will examine how cross-border movements and fragile political structures raise the stakes for Iraq’s stability.

This webinar will examine how cross-border movements and fragile political structures raise the stakes for Iraq’s stability.

As the US–Israel–Iran war escalates, violence is spreading across the region, with Iraq particularly exposed. Bordering Iran and hosting US interests, Iraq’s fragile stability is once again under strain.

Iran‑aligned Iraqi groups, including elements of the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), have targeted US facilities, while Iran‑backed protesters have attempted to breach the US embassy in Baghdad. In response, the US has struck PMF positions, highlighting Iraq’s exposure to rapid escalation. Growing cross‑border activity along the porous Iran–Iraq frontier is also heightening both security and humanitarian risks.

The fallout extends to Iraq’s economy. Regional instability is disrupting energy infrastructure and export routes, reducing oil output, and threatening further losses if tensions persist around the Strait of Hormuz. Iraq’s reliance on Iranian energy imports leaves it vulnerable to power shortages—historically a trigger for public unrest. Meanwhile, prolonged government formation negotiations after the 2025 elections have weakened political cohesion, raising the risk that external shocks could spill over into domestic instability.

Key questions:

  • How is the US–Israel–Iran war reshaping Iraq’s security landscape?
  • Can Baghdad realistically maintain its balancing strategy under current conditions?
  • How is the stalled government formation process affecting Iraq’s ability to manage external pressures?
  • How exposed is Iraq’s economy to sustained regional conflict and disruption?
  • What policy options are available to Iraqi leaders and international partners to reduce spillover risks and safeguard stability?

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-06 05:00

The former homeland security chief was an incompetent figurehead of cruelty. Her departure reflects Trump’s political weakness

Was it the blanket that did it? On Thursday, Donald Trump announced he fired Kristi Noem, the secretary of homeland security, in a post on Truth Social. Noem, at the time, was giving a press briefing in Nashville, and did not seem aware that she had been fired; she later posted on social media to thank the president for the new role that he had created for her as a golden parachute: “Envoy to the Shield of the Americas”, which sounds like something from a children’s superhero cartoon. Noem’s dismissal comes after a chaotic time at the department, in which she had endured successive national outcries over ICE kidnapping operations and the killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti; corruption and mismanagement scandals within the department; rumors about an alleged extramarital relationship with her top aide and former Trump campaign chief, Corey Lewandowski; and scrutiny over her award of a lucrative advertising contract to a personal ally. Noem’s tenure at DHS seems to have been marked by state violence, managerial incompetence, and shockingly unprofessional conduct. Last month, the Wall Street Journal reported that Lewandowski summarily fired the pilot of a plane Noem was traveling on when a blanket (or possibly a bag) she had used on her flight was not retrieved for her when she switched planes. The pilot had to be quickly rehired because there was no one else to fly the secretary home.

Noem’s ousting comes just days after her contentious testimony at a pair of Senate committee hearings, at which even Republican House members made a point of being seen to criticize her on camera. Just hours before Trump’s announcement, the Senate had failed yet again to pass a measure which would resume funding for DHS; the department has been the subject of a congressional funding battle in which a partial government shutdown has flowed from Democrats’ demands that new limits be placed on the department’s immigration enforcement activities.

Moira Donegan is a Guardian US columnist

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2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-06 05:00

The Navy is no longer allowed to shroud its criminal trials in secrecy and must provide public access to hearings and records, a federal judge ruled last month.

The order, the result of a yearslong lawsuit filed by ProPublica, forces the service for the first time to more closely mirror the transparency required in civilian courts. The judge agreed with ProPublica that the Navy was violating the First Amendment with its policies.

“This is a landmark victory for transparency,” Sarah Matthews, ProPublica’s deputy general counsel, said. “It’s the first time a civilian court has held that the First Amendment right of public access applies to military courts and records. The Navy was allowed to prosecute our service members in secret for far too long, but that ends now.”

ProPublica sued the Navy in 2022 after the service refused to release almost all court documents in a high-profile arson case, in which a sailor faced life imprisonment for a fire that destroyed a Navy assault ship. A ProPublica investigation found that the service decided to prosecute Ryan Mays despite little evidence connecting him to the fire — or that the fire was a result of arson in the first place — and a military judge’s recommendation to drop the charges.

The Navy’s long-standing policy was to withhold all records from preliminary hearings, which consider whether there is probable cause to move forward with a case. In those that did go to trial, the Navy would only provide scant records long after the proceedings were over — and only if they ended in guilty findings. Records weren’t released if the charges were dropped or a defendant was acquitted. As a result, the public was unable to assess whether the court-martial system was fair or whether important issues, such as sexual assault, were being handled properly.

Now the Navy must provide more timely access to all nonclassified records from trials regardless of outcome as well as from preliminary hearings. This includes the report from a crucial milestone in a criminal case, what the military calls an Article 32 hearing, in which a hearing officer, in a role much like a judge, recommends whether criminal charges should proceed. The Navy had argued to the court that it shouldn’t be required to release these reports because they are “non-binding, internal advisory documents.” The judge, Barry Ted Moskowitz of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of California, disagreed, saying earlier in the case that these hearings are “strikingly similar” to those in civilian courts that are open to the public.

Access to the reports is a big win for the public, according to Frank Rosenblatt, president of the National Institute of Military Justice, a nonprofit advocacy group. “Congress intended for the military justice process to be a public window into what is happening with the military, and Article 32 reports in many cases end up being highly newsworthy,” he said. “These proceedings often reveal scapegoats, investigative flaws and command influence on matters of public concern not long after incidents happen.”

The ruling imposed deadlines on the Navy for when records must be made public. Transcripts from hearings and trials must be turned over as soon as possible but no later than 30 days after a request, and other court records must be provided as soon as possible but no later than 60 days.

The Navy is also required to give advanced notice of preliminary hearings, listing the full names of defendants and providing their charge sheets. After ProPublica sued, the Pentagon issued guidance early last year requiring the military to give at least three days’ notice of these hearings. But Moskwotiz said that wasn’t enough time and bumped up the requirement to 10 days.

“While the judge did not require the Navy to provide contemporaneous access to records like in civilian courts, we’re thrilled that the Navy can no longer withhold more than 99% of the court records,” Matthews said.

The Navy said in a brief to the judge that complying with the order “will require substantial amendments to multiple Navy policies, instructions and standards, including revisions to guidance for preliminary hearing officers, and the development and delivery of comprehensive training across the Navy.”

Moskowitz stopped shy of ordering the secretary of defense to issue similar rules across the services, as requested by ProPublica and required by a federal law passed in 2016. (The Pentagon’s policy addressing the law, which wasn’t issued until 2023, fell far short of the “timely” release of documents “at all stages of the military justice system” that Congress called for.) Moskowitz said he could not make such a ruling because the secretary’s duties are “imprecise and subject to discretion.”

The Navy did not respond to requests for comment about the judge’s order. During the last court hearing, the government lawyers told the court that “the Navy has an interest in complying with the law in general.”

ProPublica is represented in the suit by Matthews and by pro bono attorneys at Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP (Ted Boutrous, Michael Dore, Marissa Mulligan and Mckenzie Robinson, plus former Gibson Dunn attorneys Eric Richardson, Dan Willey and Sasha Dudding when they were at the firm) and at Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton LLP (Tenaya Rodewald and Matthew Halgren).

The post ProPublica Wins Lawsuit Over Access to Court Records in U.S. Navy Cases appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-06 05:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
In 2025, Wilmington saw the lowest number of shooting incidents and victims in 20 years. The decrease in crime has pushed city officials to continue the effort and push for public safety initiatives in the city, including Mayor Carney’s creation of the Office of Community Safety. But a few days later, the city council had proposed its own similar office, with different oversight provisions.     

After Wilmington saw a drop in crime last year, city officials are looking for ways to sustain the progress. But they’re doing it through two separate and parallel initiatives. 

On Monday, Mayor John Carney signed an executive order establishing an Office of Community Safety that would coordinate violence prevention efforts between city departments and establish partnerships with community organizations.

Then, on Thursday, Councilwoman Shané Darby introduced a separate proposal to create an office with the same name. Darby’s plan differs from Carney’s several ways, with the most notable difference being that it gives the City Council more oversight.

Asked if the mayor’s office and council initiatives were connected, Daniel Walker, deputy chief of staff for Carney’s office, said they are separate actions. 

“We are still working with [Darby] to ensure her ordinance is aligned with our goals and vision for this work that is located in the Mayor’s office,” Walker said in a statement to Spotlight Delaware.

Wilmington City Councilwoman Shané Darby has called for a community safety office with greater oversight by City Council than the one proposed by Mayor John Carney. | PHOTO COURTESY OF WILMINGTON CITY COUNCIL

The push for greater violence-prevention efforts comes after Wilmington saw a drop in crime last year. It was an encouraging development across Delaware, particularly after its largest city had suffered for years from high numbers of shootings.

In 2017, the News Journal reported that kids in Wilmington were more likely to be shot than those in any other U.S. city during the previous years.

But, last year, the city experienced the lowest number of shooting incidents and shooting victims in over two decades, according to the annual year-end crime report released last month by the Wilmington Police Department.

The new statistics also show an overall 8% drop in murder, rape, robbery, aggravated assault, burglary, felony theft and auto theft, over the previous year.

During the first two months of this 2026, shootings have increased but it is difficult to draw broad conclusions from such a short period. There have been nine shootings in Wilmington as of March 1, according to the city’s CompStat statistics, which are updated every week. During the same period last year, there were three. So far, none of the shootings have resulted in a death this year.

Under Carney’s new safety plan, he will appoint a Director of Community Safety, who will lead the office and report directly to him. The director will be in charge of supporting community-based groups, creating policy around public safety, facilitating coordination among different city departments, and helping manage partnerships and grant funding related to public safety programs, according to the executive order

“The establishment of this new office will help us sustain that progress by ensuring that prevention efforts are aligned across the City,” Carney said in a recent statement.

On Thursday, the City Council approved a budget amendment for the city’s operating budget, which included a little over $45,000 for the new director position.  

Walker did not provide a timeline as to when the director would be appointed. 

Meanwhile, Darby’s legislation would formally establish the same office through a city ordinance.

While the proposal shares largely the same goal of reducing violence and strengthening prevention programs, Darby also asks for the council to have more say in how the office is governed.

Under Darby’s proposal, the director of the office would be appointed by the mayor, but must also be confirmed by City Council. 

The City Council proposal also creates a nine-member advisory board to oversee the office. The board would include four members appointed by the mayor, four appointed by City Council, and one appointed by both the council president and the mayor. 

Darby’s proposal also states that the new office must provide an annual report to the mayor and council. Carney’s executive order did not require that. 

Darby did not respond to Thursday’s request for comment for this story.

The post Wilmington mayor, City Council introduce separate community safety proposals appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-06 05:00

For those with relatives stuck inside Iran, waiting for news about their safety is a daily agony.

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-06 05:00

BrianFagioli shares a report from NERDS.xyz: An international team of scientists has done something chemistry has never seen before. IBM, working alongside researchers from the University of Manchester, Oxford University, ETH Zurich, EPFL, and the University of Regensburg, has created and characterized a molecule whose electrons travel through its structure in a corkscrew-like pattern, fundamentally altering its chemical behavior. The findings were published today in Science. The molecule, known as C13Cl2, is the first experimental observation of what scientists call a half-Mobius electronic topology in a single molecule. To the researchers' knowledge, nothing like it has ever been synthesized, observed, or even formally predicted. And proving why it behaves the way it does required something equally extraordinary -- a quantum computer. The whole thing started at IBM, where the molecule was assembled atom by atom from a custom precursor synthesized at Oxford. Working under ultra-high vacuum at near-absolute-zero temperatures, researchers used precisely calibrated voltage pulses to remove individual atoms one at a time. The result is an electronic structure that undergoes a 90-degree twist with each circuit through the molecule, requiring four complete loops to return to its starting phase. That is a topological property that has no counterpart anywhere in chemistry's existing record. What makes it even more interesting to folks who follow materials science is that this topology can be switched. The molecule can move reversibly between clockwise-twisted, counterclockwise-twisted, and untwisted states. That means electronic topology is not just a curiosity to be stumbled upon in nature -- it can be deliberately engineered. That is a big deal. The quantum computing angle here is not just a supporting role. Electrons within C13Cl2 interact in deeply entangled ways, each influencing the others simultaneously. Modeling that requires tracking every possible configuration of those interactions at once -- something that causes computational demands to grow exponentially and can quickly overwhelm classical machines. A decade ago, researchers could exactly model 16 electrons classically. Today that number has crept to 18. Using IBM's quantum computer, the team was able to explore 32 electrons. Quantum computers can represent these systems directly rather than approximate them, because they operate according to the same quantum mechanical laws that govern electrons in molecules. In this case, that capability helped reveal helical molecular orbitals for electron attachment -- a fingerprint of the half-Mobius topology -- and exposed the mechanism behind the unusual structure: a helical pseudo-Jahn-Teller effect.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 05:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
In December, a state task force charged with reworking school district boundaries in Wilmington laid out a plan that would impact tens of thousands of families in New Castle County. Although the Redding Consortium aimed to present its final redistricting plan to lawmakers by June, the committee now says more time is needed. 

A Delaware education task force predicted last year that lawmakers would be able to address its ambitious proposal to merge all Wilmington-area school districts by June.  

But during a legislative budget hearing Tuesday, the co-chair of the task force, called the Redding Consortium, pushed back the timeline to the end of the calendar year. That means that the earliest the consolidation plan could be approved by the necessary parties is 2027.

The delay also means Wilmington families and school officials will face an extended period of uncertainty as the state attempts its most significant restructuring of public education in decades.

The co-chair — State Sen. Elizabeth Lockman (D-Wilmington) – said a consultant needs the rest of the year to put together a detailed plan for how the four school districts with more than 43,000 students could merge their operations. To do that, she also said the Delaware Department of Education will need to extend a contract with the consultancy company, the American Institutes for Research. 

After five years of discussions about where Wilmington kids should go to school, the Redding Consortium voted in December to recommend combining the Brandywine, Christina, Colonial, and Red Clay Consolidated school districts into the Northern New Castle County Consolidated District. 

An early timeline for how the plan could be finalized and then approved, which was presented to the public in November, did not mention the American Institutes for Research.

Instead, it called for the Redding Consortium’s subcommittees to create the detailed redistricting proposal. Then, the Delaware Board of Education would review the plan for approval. 

After that, state lawmakers were expected to consider a final approval before the end of the legislative session on June 30.  

Lockman told Spotlight Delaware that conversations among Redding Consortium members about the need to work with a consultant started immediately after the December vote. But they quickly realized there was “no way” to get an adequate plan to the State Board of Education within the six-week timeframe. So they asked the American Institutes for Research to submit a request for proposal to extend its contract, Lockman said. 

When the American Institutes for Research submitted its analysis, it gave the Redding Consortium a timeline that extended beyond the June deadline to draft a final redistricting plan. 

“More important than a timeline is the thoroughness of the proposal that we’re delivering,” Lockman said.

After the budget hearing Tuesday, the Redding Consortium held its monthly meeting. There, Lockman told members about the change in timeline. None of the members expressed objections.

During the meeting, the Redding Consortium members also voted to create an executive committee to work directly with the American Institutes for Research on the final redistricting plan. 

Brandywine School District Superintendent Lisa Lawson expressed concerns over who should be on an executive committee for the Redding Consortium’s work. | PHOTO COURTESY OF BRANDYWINE SCHOOL DISTRICT

The executive committee will be made up of existing Redding Consortium members who bring “key perspectives,” Lockman said. But that proposal did draw pushback. 

During the Tuesday meeting, Brandywine Superintendent Lisa Lawson said “there are some folks serving” on the executive committee who are not directly impacted by the plan to consolidate the four school districts that serve Wilmington students. 

Lockman responded by stating that she assumed Lawson was referring to officials from charter and vocational schools. 

She then said that while charter schools do not have a geographic footprint – as school districts do – when it comes to the Redding Consortium’s mission, “everyone should be at the table, because everyone should be impacted.”

The post Wilmington school district consolidation vote delayed until 2027 appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-06 04:40

US–Israel war on Iran: What’s happening inside Iran? 11 March 2026 — 11:30AM TO 12:30PM Anonymous (not verified) Online

In this webinar, speakers will assess the Iranian regime’s response to date and explore potential social, political, military and security trajectories for the country.

In this webinar, speakers will assess the Iranian regime’s response to date and explore potential social, political, military and security trajectories for the country.

Since 28 February, the United States and Israel have carried out coordinated strikes on Iran. Iran responded swiftly with counter-strikes, and the conflict has since spread across the region. The attacks have killed Ayatollah Khamenei and additional members of the Iranian leadership. Hundreds of civilians have also been killed by the US-Israel strikes, including over 150 deaths in an attack on a school.

The future of Iran and the durability of the Islamic Republic remain uncertain. Amid ongoing hostilities, important questions persist regarding the impact of the strikes on Iran’s military and security apparatus. At the same time, calls from US President Trump for the Iranian public to rise up come as civilians face the dual pressures of continued US and Israeli strikes on Iran, and the prospect of intensified domestic repression.

In this webinar, speakers will assess the regime’s response to date and explore potential political, military and security trajectories for Iran. Panellists will also consider how Iranians are responding to the crisis and examine the evolving internal social dynamics shaping the country’s future.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 04:28

‘Stopgap measure’ designed to keep oil flowing into global market as Middle East crisis disrupts crude shipments

The US has temporarily allowed India to buy Russian oil currently stuck at sea in an effort to keep global supplies flowing and temper further price increases.

The US treasury has issued a 30-day waiver allowing India to buy Russian oil, having previously imposed heavy sanctions related to the war in Ukraine.

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2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-06 04:24

Trip there: not a single issue. Louisville to Philadelphia to Puerto Rico. On the way back, they pulled me aside, the lady looked at it, didn't ask any questions and waved me through.

I took it in my carry on taken apart and had paperwork on top of it about 5 pages or so of all the specs and rules and guidelines that it adhered to from TSA, FAA, and American Airlines. The issue they had with it and why they took it aside, was because they couldnt see through the wheel on the X ray machine. Honestly excited about bringing it again next year.

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2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-06 04:00

For over two decades the Brecksville-Broadview Heights Bees have ruled Ohio high school gymnastics. On Saturday, they pursue a remarkable 23rd consecutive state title

As Brecksville-Broadview Heights gymnasts, seniors Rachel Kirin and Kyla Haverdill know that there’s only one expectation for how the season ends on Saturday: with the Ohio high school state title.

“It’s definitely a lot of pressure,” said Haverdill, who has been doing gymnastics since she was a baby. “Most people don’t understand that – it’s just so expected.”

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2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-06 04:00

Cheap semaglutide, the drug in Ozempic and Wegovy, could help millions with diabetes and obesity in 160 countries

Weight-loss jabs such as Wegovy could be made for just $3 a month, according to new analysis, potentially making the treatment available to millions in poorer countries as patents expire.

More than a billion people live with obesity worldwide, with rates rising fast in lower-income nations as they shift to westernised diets and more sedentary lifestyles.

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2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-06 03:26

South-east Asian country limits air conditioning and travel for public officials amid soaring fuel prices

The Philippines is searching for ways to conserve energy in response to surging fuel costs, with public officials ordered to cut back on air conditioning usage and reduce travel.

All national government agencies, state universities and colleges, and local government branches have been told to reduce fuel consumption by at least 10% in response to the crisis in the Middle East.

Government offices have been told to adopt flexible work arrangements, and to set air conditioning units no lower than 24 degrees.

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2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-06 02:59

The ‘Red Alert’ series warned in 2023 that Australia needed to be ‘ready to fight in just three years’ – and Keating has again taken his fight to the newspaper group

Paul Keating has again accused the Sydney Morning Herald and the Age of misleading the public with their “irresponsible prediction” three years ago of a Chinese attack on Australia.

The former prime minister took the opportunity of the third anniversary of Nine newspapers’ Red Alert series to repeat his disdain for the reporting and its primary author, international editor Peter Hartcher.

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2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-06 02:00

A recently-revised Senate authorization bill (PDF), co-sponsored by Senate Commerce Committee Chair Ted Cruz, would extend the International Space Station's lifespan from 2030 to 2032 while pushing NASA to accelerate plans for commercial space stations to replace it. Ars Technica's Eric Berger reports: Regarding NASA's support for the development of commercial space stations, the bill mandates the following, within specified periods, of passage of the law: - Within 60 days, publicly release the requirements for commercial space stations in low-Earth orbit - Within 90 days, release the final "request for proposals" to solicit industry responses - Within 180 days, enter into contracts with "two or more" commercial providers for such stations Cruz is trying to inject urgency into NASA as several private companies -- including Axiom Space, Blue Origin, Vast, and Voyager -- are finalizing designs for space stations. All have expressed a desire for clarity from NASA on how long the space agency would like its astronauts to stay on board, the types of scientific equipment needed, and much more. These are known as "requirements" in NASA parlance. [...] Cruz and other senators on the committee appear to share those concerns, as their legislation extends the International Space Station's lifespan from 2030 to 2032 (an extension must still be approved by international partners, including Russia). Moreover, the authorization bill states, "The Administrator shall not initiate the de-orbit of the ISS until the date on which a commercial low-Earth orbit destination has reached an initial operational capability." With this legislation, the U.S. Senate is making clear that it views a permanent human presence in low-Earth orbit as a high priority. This version of the authorization legislation must still be passed by the full Senate and work its way through the House of Representatives.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-06 01:59

Re-establishing diplomatic relations will support Venezuela’s economy, US state department claims, amid push for minerals access

Venezuela and the US are restoring diplomatic ties, the two countries announced Thursday, in a new sign of thawing relations after Washington ousted former president Nicolás Maduro.

The announcement came as US interior secretary Doug Burgum wrapped up a two-day trip to Venezuela, part of US president Donald Trump’s push for greater access to the country’s mineral wealth.

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2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-06 01:00

Ministers urged to abandon plans to let tech firms use work of novelists, artists and writers without permission

The UK’s creative industries must not be sacrificed in the pursuit of speculative gains in AI technology, a House of Lords committee has warned, as the government prepares to reveal the economic cost of proposals to change copyright rules.

A report by peers has urged ministers to develop a licensing regime for the use of creative works in AI products and abandon proposals to let tech firms use the work of novelists, artists, writers and journalists without permission.

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2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-06 00:00

As the Spanish PM decries the war in Iran, other politicians are unable – or unwilling – to speak against the US president

On Wednesday morning, Pedro Sánchez delivered a 10-minute televised address with the rather bland title: “An institutional declaration by the prime minister to assess recent international events.”

The speech’s words, however, were anything but beige. Hours after Donald Trump had threatened to cut off trade with Spain over its government’s refusal to allow two jointly operated bases in Andalucía to be used to strike Iran, Sánchez set out his thinking.

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2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-06 00:00

War with Iran won’t reshape the region the way America wants.

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-06 00:00

How Beijing’s confidence will shake up the Trump-Xi summit.

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-05 23:29

GOP Rep. Tony Gonzales had been in a runoff with Brandon Herrera after Tuesday's primary in Texas.

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-05 23:09

Decision marks end of years-long legal saga for 78-year-old critic of Chinese Communist party

Jimmy Lai, the prominent pro-democracy activist who was recently sentenced to 20 years in prison in Hong Kong, has said he will not appeal his conviction.

The decision marks the end of a years-long legal saga for the 78-year-old critic of the Chinese Communist party (CCP), and opens the door for political negotiations to his release.

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2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-05 22:45

Bernard LaFayette, the advance man who did the risky groundwork for the voter registration campaign in Selma, Alabama, that culminated in the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, has died.

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-05 22:38

This live blog is now closed.

Donald Trump said that he would endorse a candidate in the heated Texas GOP runoff “soon”.

This comes as neither the four-term incumbent, senator John Cornyn, or the state attorney general, Ken Paxton, received 50% of the votes in Tuesday’s primary.

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2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-05 22:37

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for March 6.

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-05 22:32

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for March 6, No. 529.

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-05 22:30

An anonymous reader quotes a report from 80 Level: Microsoft has officially confirmed development of its next-generation Xbox console, currently known internally as Project Helix. While concrete details remain limited, early information suggests the company is positioning the device as a hybrid between a traditional console and a gaming PC, capable of running both Xbox titles and PC games. The codename was revealed recently by new Xbox CEO Asha Sharma, who reaffirmed Microsoft's continued commitment to dedicated gaming hardware despite speculation that the company might shift entirely toward cloud or platform-based ecosystems. According to Sharma, Project Helix represents the next step in Xbox's console strategy. Although official specifications have not yet been announced, early reports indicate the system will likely rely on a new AMD system-on-chip combining Xbox hardware with PC-style architecture. The device is expected to emphasize high performance while maintaining compatibility with existing Xbox game libraries. [...] If the concept holds, Project Helix could mark a significant shift in how console ecosystems are structured, moving away from tightly closed hardware platforms toward something closer to a unified PC-console environment. Sharma wrote in a post on X: "Great start to the morning with Team Xbox, where we talked about our commitment to the return of Xbox, including Project Helix, the code name for our next generation console. Project Helix will lead in performance and play your Xbox and PC games. Looking forward to chatting about this more with partners and studios at my first GDC next week!"

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-05 22:17

The executive tentatively took a bite of his company's new "product," and now even McDonald's own social media is relishing the mockery.

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-05 21:49

The U.S. military has formally designated artificial intelligence firm Anthropic a supply chain risk, a sweeping move that could cut it off from military contracts.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-05 21:01

Amanda Randles is returning to ISC High Performance 2026 as the Midweek Keynote speaker, where she will present “HPC for Vascular Digital Twins” on June 24 in Hamburg. Randles is the Alfred Winborne Mordecai and Victoria Stover Mordecai Associate Professor at Duke University and has become a leading voice in extreme-scale biomedical simulation. Her research focuses on using HPC to build patient-specific vascular digital twins that combine medical imaging, physiological measurements, and large-scale blood flow simulations into detailed computational models of the human circulatory system.

HPCwire recognized Randles as one of its 2025 People to Watch for her work that sits at the convergence of HPC, AI, and biophysical simulation. She was honored at ISC in 2024 with the Jack Dongarra Early-Career Award and was also awarded the 2023 ACM Prize in Computing for “groundbreaking contributions to computational health through innovative algorithms, tools and high performance computing methods for diagnosing and treating a variety of human diseases.”

(Gorodenkoff/Shutterstock)

HPCwire recently sat down with Randles to learn what she has been building behind the scenes, from the data and software infrastructure needed to combine wearable health data, medical imaging and simulation to the practical challenges of running and analyzing vascular digital twins at scale.

The Duke Center for Computational and Digital Health Innovation, which she directs, is designed to bring together HPC, artificial intelligence, wearable sensors and extended reality tools. “The mission statement is to find, track and treat. So the goal is to improve different ways to identify disease earlier, find ways to monitor that, as someone’s going about their daily life outside of the hospital, and have better health outcomes in the end,” Randles told HPCwire.

“A lot of the work is on the computer science end, asking, how do we build the infrastructure and the multimodal databases? And all of this leads to tons of storage that requires distributed AI to analyze,” she continued. “But the nice piece is the infrastructure across that, whether you’re trying to set up something for heart failure or for a Parkinson’s disease model, the infrastructure in the computational back end is often very similar.”

Randles said the center is also building the data pipelines needed to support this work. One effort underway is a Duke-developed wearable health application expected to launch soon on both Apple and Google platforms. The app will allow individuals to donate wearable data from devices like smartwatches, creating a stream of real-world health data that can be incorporated into multiple studies.

That data will be combined with medical imaging, clinical records, and the large-scale physics-based simulation results generated by Randles’ lab. The goal is to create a unified multimodal data infrastructure where these different sources can be stored alongside one another and analyzed using distributed AI workflows. The team is also exploring how clinicians might interact with the resulting models using extended reality technologies, including Sony’s glasses-free display systems and Apple Vision Pro. At the same time, the researchers have built a 3D virtual replica of Duke’s catheterization lab using 360-degree video, allowing physicians and trainees to explore procedures and datasets in immersive environments.

Amanda Randles (Photo Credit: Bill Snead for Duke Today)

Randles said AI is being applied in several ways within the center’s research programs. These range from natural language processing applied to electronic health records to spatial and cellular modeling used to study biological processes at the microscopic level. Across these projects, researchers are exploring how machine learning can identify new biomarkers from wearable data, support drug discovery, and analyze the results of large-scale blood flow simulations. AI is also being used to accelerate the computational models themselves, helping reduce the number of full-scale simulations required while preserving the insights needed for discovery. “We’re using AI to speed up the simulations, to minimize the number of simulations we need to run. It’s getting embedded all across the board,” Randles said.

The center’s work on digital twins sits at the intersection of these programs. Randles’ lab’s primary focus remains modeling blood flow in the vascular system, but the larger goal is to expand digital twin approaches across multiple areas of medicine. Researchers are exploring how additional data, such as gait analysis derived from video or eye-tracking data, might eventually be integrated into patient models. By combining wearable data with high-resolution simulations of blood flow, the team hopes to create longitudinal maps of a patient’s physiology over months or even years.

This data could reveal early warning signs of disease that are currently difficult to observe. “Heart failure is the first one that we’re looking at. There are known changes in hemodynamics that happen before you have symptoms for heart failure, and right now, they’re using implantable devices to be able to identify that,” Randles said. “But they can only measure once a day while you’re lying down, so we don’t actually have the data of what’s happening with your heart rate recovery and when you’re exercising.”

Since implantable devices capture only these limited snapshots of patient data, digital twins could be the answer by providing a continuous view of how circulation changes over time. Researchers could search for subtle patterns, like shifts in blood flow or the presence of arterial vortices, that may indicate disease progression before symptoms emerge. But turning that vision into a practical tool requires major advances in simulation and computing. Randles said that until recently, blood flow simulations could capture only a few dozen heartbeats. Her team has since developed a method that allows simulations to be extended much further in time by assembling models from precomputed “hemodynamic units” that represent recurring patterns in blood flow. Data from wearable devices can then be used to stitch those units together, allowing researchers to reconstruct circulation over longer periods.

(frank60/Shutterstock)

Even with those advances, the models still use significant compute resources. Randles said her team works closely with U.S. Department of Energy laboratories for support, drawing on both their supercomputing resources and their experience managing some of the largest scientific datasets in the world. Her group is using machine learning to reduce the number of simulations required, while running large-scale models on DOE supercomputers to generate the high-fidelity reference data used to validate those approaches. The simulations generate enormous volumes of data, often reaching petabyte scale as researchers track blood flow across millions of spatial coordinates and time steps. Compute at this scale is the essential ingredient for extending blood flow simulations from a few heartbeats to the longer physiological timescales needed for digital twin models.

“The HPC side is very critical. Getting advice from communities like genetics, weather and particle physics has been important, because there are not a lot of fields that are already dealing with tens of petabytes of different types of data,” Randles said. “How do you store video data alongside simulation data and wearable data, and then put an AI algorithm on top of it? The DOE labs see all these different workloads, so they have really good advice on how to set up the infrastructure.”

Randles sees digital twins as part of a shift toward more proactive healthcare. In the near future, her team hopes to model circulation for periods of six months to a year, giving researchers the ability to study how physiological changes unfold over time. For the long term, she sees a future of patient-specific digital twins helping doctors evaluate treatments before prescribing them by testing how a drug or intervention might affect a patient’s physiology in a virtual environment. This approach could move healthcare monitoring beyond snapshots toward continuous, data-driven care.

More from HPCwire

Header image: Photograph by Daniel Turbert Photography, background image by TechSolution/Shutterstock

The post Amanda Randles on HPC and the Future of Vascular Digital Twins appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-05 21:00

Firing of US homeland security secretary is first major personnel shakeup of Trump’s second term – key US politics stories from 5 March at a glance

Kristi Noem is out of a job.

Donald Trump on Thursday announced he was replacing his embattled homeland security secretary, capping weeks of bipartisan complaints about her leadership after immigration agents killed two US citizens and reports emerged that she was involved in a personal relationship with a top deputy.

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2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-05 20:50

Relations between the two countries were cut off in 2019, during the first Trump administration.

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-05 20:45

In the week before an Iranian retaliatory strike that killed six U.S. service members, Iranian intelligence was likely able to identify and track American forces, according to a memo reviewed by CBS News.

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-05 20:09

Early in a life of service, LaFayette did the risky groundwork for the voter registration campaign in Selma, Alabama

Bernard LaFayette, the advance man who did the risky groundwork for the voter registration campaign in Selma, Alabama, that culminated in the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, has died.

Bernard LaFayette III said his father died Thursday morning of a heart attack. He was 85.

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2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 20:00

The Pentagon has formally designated Anthropic as a "supply chain risk," ordering federal agencies and defense contractors to stop using its AI tools after the company sought limits on the military's use of its models. In a written statement, the department said it has "officially informed Anthropic leadership the company and its products are deemed a supply chain risk, effective immediately." Politico reports: The designation, historically reserved for foreign firms with ties to U.S. adversaries, will likely require companies that do business with the U.S. military -- or even the federal government in general -- to cut ties with Anthropic. "From the very beginning, this has been about one fundamental principle: the military being able to use technology for all lawful purposes," the Pentagon said in the statement. "The military will not allow a vendor to insert itself into the chain of command by restricting the lawful use of a critical capability and put our warfighters at risk." A spokesperson for Anthropic did not immediately respond to a request for comment. But the company said last week it would fight a supply-chain risk label in court.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 19:53

IDF says it is striking Dahiya neighborhood in southern suburbs of Beirut after earlier issuing evacuation order; Trump dismisses idea of Khamenei’s son succeeding his father as leader

Iran says it has targeted Kurdish groups in Iraq and warned “separatist groups” against action in the widening war.

Tehran said on Thursday it had hit Iraq-based Kurdish groups “opposed to the revolution”, as reports said the US was looking to arm Kurdish militias to infiltrate Iran.

We will not tolerate them in any way.

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2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-05 19:53

Get ready to spring forward and lose an hour of sleep but gain more daylight.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 19:38

Andrew Paul Johnson, 45, of Florida among several January 6 defendants charged with new crimes

A Florida handyman who was sentenced on Thursday to life in prison for molesting two children had been convicted of storming the US Capitol on 6 January 2021, but pardoned by Donald Trump.

Andrew Paul Johnson, 45, is among several January 6 defendants who have been charged with new crimes since Trump’s sweeping act of clemency for Capitol rioters. On his first day back in the White House last year, Trump pardoned, commuted prison sentences for or ordered the dismissal of cases for all 1,500-plus people charged in the attack.

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2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 19:38

Beijing kicked off its top annual political gathering, pledging to further insulate its economy from Trump’s tariffs and accelerate efforts to supercharge its military.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 19:36

The timing of Trump's Truth Social post​ announcing Kristi Noem's removal as DHS secretary took DHS officials and the secretary herself by surprise.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 19:31

The announcement comes amid criticism of DHS spending under Noem, and as Congress has allowed the department's funding to lapse.

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-05 19:11

Suspect identified as Ivan Miller, 22, found after he was tracked in one of the victims’ vehicles, authorities say

Authorities have charged a 22-year-old man with aggravated murder in the killings of three women found dead in Utah on Wednesday following a search that extended into three states.

The suspect has been identified as Ivan Miller of Blakesburg, Iowa.

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2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 19:01

Briton with cancer operated on by doctor located 1,500 miles away using four-armed robot fitted with 3D camera

The patient was in Gibraltar. The surgeon was in London. The outcome was a remarkable triumph for remote robotic surgery that saved the life of a 62-year-old football fan with prostate cancer.

Inside the operating theatre at St Bernard’s, the only hospital in the British overseas territory, a hi-tech robot with four arms, and fitted with a 3D camera, removed the prostate of Briton Paul Buxton, who moved to Gibraltar 40 years ago.

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2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 18:54

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-05 18:54

Fighting between Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon intensified, and countries including Azerbaijan and Saudi Arabia reported fresh attacks.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 18:53

Backlash grew against homeland security secretary after slew of controversies from Trump’s immigration crackdown

Kristi Noem’s year-long tenure as homeland security secretary has been plagued by controversies as she led an aggressive immigration crackdown that hasprompted protests and lawsuits.

There have been scandals, legally dubious deportations condemned by human rights groups, taxpayer-funded publicity campaigns, and false claims about US citizens.

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2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 18:48
  • Chinese world No 71 swears at heckler after breaking club

  • Lowry finishes with a bogey to compound weekend pain

“Snap another one!” You find brave people in hospitality areas at golf tournaments. The order came to Li Haotong, moments after his caddie had delivered a broken lob wedge to a bin at the back of the Bay Hill driving range. “Fuck off!” barked Li in immediate reply, with a gesticulation to match. What a scene.

Gaining entry to the Arnold Palmer Invitational at the last minute, as a reserve, was not sufficient to boost Li’s mood. He finished round one horribly, with a double bogey rounding off a 77. Li’s tugged approach to the last (a bad workman etc) was plugged in a greenside bunker, from where he opted to putt. The ball crawled out of the sand, which Li booted in anger. The ranting continued all the way to and on the practice area, much to the amusement of assembled guests. Li’s poor bag man was at the opposite end of a verbal tirade. It was pitiful, embarrassing petulance for which Li should be reprimanded by the PGA Tour.

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2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 18:48

Many will regard the ex-secretary of homeland security, Trump’s first fired cabinet member, as the worst yet seen

Kristi Noem once led a dog to a gravel pit and ended its life with the cold precision of a mafia hit. On Thursday, the homeland security secretary confronted the grim truth that she, too, was expendable.

Noem became the first cabinet member fired in Donald Trump’s second term, a striking contrast to the revolving-door chaos of his first. Like other members of Team Trump, she had assumed that ostentatious displays of fealty to the president would insulate her.

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2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 18:45

Residents fled Lebanese capital in panic before assaults on claimed Hezbollah targets while Tehran continues to launch retaliatory attacks

Israel has launched massive strikes against the southern suburbs of Beirut just hours after its military ordered the entire population of the area – more than 500,000 people – to evacuate immediately.

The Israel Defense Forces had told all residents of the area to “save your lives and evacuate your homes immediately”, prompting an exodus of the Lebanese capital’s population in scenes of panic, before its warplanes launched strikes against what it claimed were Hezbollah targets in the area. The area covered by the order included several hospitals and government ministries.

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2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 18:16

The US president welcomed the 2025 MLS Cup champions in a ceremony beset by tangents and awkward asides

Nine minutes and 43 seconds. As Inter Miami’s players stood behind the dais at the East Room in the White House with club owner Jorge Mas stood to the left and Lionel Messi to the right; with MLS commissioner Don Garber sat alongside Fifa World Cup 2026 task force executive director Andrew Giuliani in an audience replete with celebrities and sports stars, it took nine minutes and 43 seconds for US president Donald Trump to talk about why any of them were there.

Inter Miami won the 2025 MLS Cup; a solid win in an exciting final that merited this traditional visit for champions of US pro sports leagues. But in those minutes and seconds before it was acknowledged, Trump did as he did with Juventus players in an Oval Office appearance during last summer’s Club World Cup: he made sports figures the wallpaper for his political and cultural aims. Trump provided an update of sorts on his administration’s sudden and ongoing war against Iran, alluded to a potential conflict with Cuba and offered his own glowing assessment on the supposedly booming US economy. All the while, Luis Suárez, Messi and every other Miami player gazed blankly from behind him.

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2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 18:13

Joani Reid steps back while internal inquiry takes place following freeing of husband David Taylor on bail until May

The MP whose husband was arrested this week on suspicion of spying for China has resigned the Labour whip while an internal investigation is carried out.

Joani Reid, the MP for East Kilbride and Strathaven, said on Thursday night she would temporarily stand down from the parliamentary party while the inquiry takes place.

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2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 18:12

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth gave a press briefing with Admiral Brad Cooper, the commander of U.S. Central Command.

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-05 18:12

ARLINGTON, Va., March 5, 2026 — The Special Competitive Studies Project (SCSP) announced today the formation of the Commission on U.S. Quantum Primacy (CUSP). This high-level, bipartisan body is tasked with developing a comprehensive national strategy to ensure the United States remains the global leader in the rapidly accelerating quantum competition.

As quantum technologies transition from theoretical physics to operational reality, the window to secure a durable advantage is narrowing. The fourteen-member commission will bring together leaders from Congress, the national laboratories, and the private sector to bridge the gap between innovation and national power.

CUSP will be led by co-chairs Ylli Bajraktari, U.S. Sen. Todd Young (R-IN) and U.S. Sen. Ben Ray Luján (D-NM). They are joined by a distinguished group of experts and policymakers at the intersection of technology and security:

  • Dr. Megan Anderson, Executive Vice President of Technology, IQT
  • Dr. Gretchen Campbell, Associate Vice President for Quantum Research and Education, University of Maryland
  • Niccolo de Masi, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, IonQ
  • Dr. Jay Gambetta, Director of Research and IBM Fellow, IBM
  • Pat Gelsinger, General Partner, Playground Global
  • Jack Hidary, Chief Executive Officer, SandboxAQ
  • Dr. Mit Jha, Chief Executive Officer, Quantum Corridor
  • Dr. Thomas Mason, Director, Los Alamos National Laboratory
  • Dr. Whitney Mason, Director of the Microsystems Technology Office, DARPA
  • Laura McGill, Director, Sandia National Laboratories
  • Dr. Hartmut Neven, Founder and Lead, Google Quantum AI.

“Quantum technology is not just the next frontier of computing; it is a fundamental shift in the landscape of national power,” said Bajraktari, president of SCSP. “CUSP will provide the roadmap to ensure that this shift benefits the free world and that the United States remains the center of gravity for the quantum revolution.”

The Commission’s purpose is to ensure that the emergence and diffusion of quantum technologies strengthen U.S. national security, drive technological transformation, and bolster economic might. To achieve this, CUSP will focus on three core pillars:

  • Building a Secure Quantum Industrial Base: Creating a resilient ecosystem of talent, hardware, and supply chains to maintain a long-term technological edge.
  • Maintaining Information Advantage: Developing mission-critical algorithms, architectures and protocols, and securing information flows to retain the nation’s data leadership.
  • Accelerating Integration and Hybridization: Integrating quantum and classical technologies to identify near-term deployments and ensure the U.S. operational advantage.

“Securing American leadership in quantum is essential to both our economic prosperity and national security,” said Sen. Young. “From the cutting-edge research happening in Indiana to innovation hubs across the country, America has the talent and ingenuity to lead in this transformative field. As our strategic competitors move aggressively, we must act with urgency to accelerate quantum advancements, strengthen our security, and ensure the United States remains the world’s technology leader.”

The Commission will evaluate the current state of the U.S. quantum ecosystem and deliver a final report featuring actionable policy recommendations to ensure that the United States does not merely participate in the quantum age, but defines it.

“Maintaining America’s leadership in quantum research and development is essential to our national security, economic future, and technology advancement,” said Sen. Luján. “I’m honored to serve as Co-Chair of the Commission for U.S. Quantum Primacy alongside Senator Young, bringing together leading experts and policymakers to shape a strong national strategy and drive quantum innovation across the United States. New Mexico is at the forefront of this work, and I’m committed to building on that momentum to strengthen our state’s leadership and ensure the United States remains the global leader in quantum technology.”

The Special Competitive Studies Project is a non-partisan, non-profit initiative with a mission to make recommendations to strengthen America’s long-term competitiveness as artificial intelligence and other emerging technologies are reshaping our national security, economy, and society.

For more information about the CUSP, please contact Tara Rigler at tmr@scsp.ai.

More from HPCwire: SCSP and NVIDIA Launch ‘Task Force on AI and the Future of Work’


Source: SCSP

The post SCSP Announces Launch of the Commission on US Quantum Primacy appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-05 18:10

March 5, 2026 — Polymers are fundamental to our daily lives, serving as the core components for a wide array of goods, including clothing, packaging, transportation infrastructure, construction materials and electronics. Advances in polymer science open pathways for recycling and upcycling waste materials into more valuable chemical feedstocks. They also can have an outsized environmental impact: many widely used polymers are Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS), widely recognized as “forever chemicals.”

In a pioneering partnership to accelerate materials discovery with AI, researchers from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Meta have created the world’s largest open dataset of atomistic polymer chemistry — a trove of millions of quantum-accurate simulations designed to help AI model the complex behavior of plastics, films, batteries and countless everyday materials. Graphic: Dan Herchek/LLNL; background image: Evan Antoniuk/LLNL.

In a pioneering partnership to accelerate materials discovery with artificial intelligence (AI), researchers from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) and Meta have created the world’s largest open dataset of atomistic polymer chemistry — a trove of millions of quantum-accurate simulations designed to help AI model the complex behavior of plastics, films, batteries and countless everyday materials.

In a recent paper, the team details Open Polymers 2026 (OPoly26) — a dataset with an unprecedented number and diversity of polymer structures with corresponding simulations performed at quantum accuracy. OPoly26 is a massive reference library that enables AI to learn patterns from millions of pre-computed polymer structures in hours or days, addressing a longstanding gap in polymer data and laying the foundation for safer, faster and more sustainable materials design. The OPoly26 paper formalizes the dataset’s release and demonstrates how the data improves the performance of machine-learned interatomic potentials (MLIPs) on polymer materials.

The work builds on the Meta and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL)-led Open Molecules 2025 (OMol25) Dataset, which is making waves with its sweeping collection of open molecular data aimed at advancing AI-driven chemistry. The OPoly26 dataset contains more than 6 million density functional theory (DFT) calculations on polymeric chemical systems, making it nearly ten times larger than the next largest comparable polymer dataset.

LLNL’s partnership with Meta — described by LLNL materials scientist and OPoly26 co-principal investigator (PI) Evan Antoniuk as a “natural fit” — seeks to address this shortfall. By generating critical missing data on polymers with the shared goals of expanding and democratizing open datasets for materials scientists, the team hopes to accelerate the pace of discovery across polymer chemistry.

“This fills a huge gap,” said Antoniuk. “We see this as a community resource, one that we hope becomes the go-to starting point for anyone interested in performing atomistic simulations of polymers.”

LLNL contributed significant computational power and polymer domain knowledge — generating a diverse set of polymer structures and running simulations to help model how these polymers behave in real-world conditions. In turn, Meta contributed vast computational resources to perform 1.2 billion core hours of DFT simulations and train state-of-the-art MLIP models, leveraging the expertise that had already been refined during their earlier molecular effort.

“Meta’s partnership with LLNL demonstrates how open science and AI can accelerate breakthroughs in materials research,” said Rob Sherman, vice president of policy at Meta. “By making this dataset publicly available, we’re giving scientists potent new tools to address critical challenges in healthcare and beyond.”

LLNL is uniquely positioned to generate the OPoly26 dataset at the scale and fidelity required. Researchers tapped into LLNL’s Tuolumne, the world’s 12th fastest supercomputer and companion to the exascale El Capitan, leveraging this hardware with their collective expertise to compress years of simulation work into months and enabling the dataset to reach a scale unmatched in polymer science.

“Comprehensive coverage of this chemical space is essential to the success of the OPoly26 dataset,” said LLNL staff scientist Nick Liesen. “We have worked to leverage pipelines that take us from a simple text string to fully atomistic representations of polymer dynamics at scale.”

Beyond performing all the DFT calculations, researchers at Meta trained and benchmarked machine-learned interatomic potentials at scale, enabling the team to evaluate how well AI models generalize across small-molecule and polymer chemistry. The paper reports substantial improvements in model accuracy when polymer data is incorporated alongside small-molecule training sets, highlighting the importance of training AI on data that reflects real-world complexity.

Understanding why certain polymers, including PFAS-based materials, resist chemical change requires models that can accurately describe both reactive and nonreactive behavior. Capturing this behavior under realistic conditions required careful attention to reactive configurations, according to LBNL chemist and OPoly26 co-PI Sam Blau, who also previously co-led OMol25.

“Reactivity — the breakage and formation of chemical bonds — is central to polymer synthesis, manufacturing, aging and recycling, and to nanoscale patterning of polymer thin films for semiconductor manufacturing,” said Blau. “By going beyond stable structures and explicitly sampling hundreds of thousands of reactive configurations, we aim to accurately describe the reactive events that often govern polymer behavior under real-world conditions.”

Beyond outlining how the dataset was generated and performing standard tests of MLIP performance, the OPoly26 paper also introduces an initial suite of polymer-specific evaluation tasks to benchmark how effectively these models capture simulated polymer phenomena and interactions, such as polymer solvation. Future work will include evaluating the MLIP models against experimental measurements, offering a gauge of how well they can capture real-world polymer properties.

“LLNL’s significant investment in high-performance scientific computing and computational materials science capabilities have been critical to achieving the scale needed to cover many thousands of distinct chemical structures,” said LLNL Materials Science Division Leader Ibo Matthews. “That scale is essential not only for generating the data, but for rigorously evaluating how well AI models perform across the full range of polymer behaviors relevant to real-world applications.”

With a focus on open collaboration, the team is making all data publicly available to fuel polymer advancements across academia, industry and government. The authors also emphasized that OPoly26 is being released under an open license to maximize reuse and reproducibility. Through this open approach, the partnership ensures that the benefits of this public-private investment flow broadly across the entire research community.

The team includes LLNL scientists Brian Van Essen, James Diffenderfer, Helgi Ingolfsson and Supun Mohottalalage, and polymer simulation experts Amitesh Maiti and Matt Kroonblawd from the Lab’s Materials Science Division. Co-authors also included LBNL’s Nitesh Kumar and Lauren Chua. Blau and Kumar’s work was funded by the Center for High Precision Patterning Science (CHiPPS), while Chua was supported by her DOE Computational Sciences Graduate Fellowship. LLNL’s Laboratory Directed Research and Development program funded the LLNL researchers.

This partnership was made possible through a data transfer agreement, facilitated by LLNL’s Innovation and Partnerships Office (IPO). IPO is the Laboratory’s focal point for industry engagement and facilitates partnerships to deliver mission-driven solutions that support national security and grow the U.S. economy. To connect with LLNL on industrial partnerships in Advanced Computing, AI and Quantum technologies, contact IPO Business Development Executive Clarence Cannon.


Source: LLNL

The post LLNL, Meta Co-Develop Polymer-Chemistry Dataset for Training AI Models appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 18:08

For someone who is wanting to make sure he avoids crazy tariffs on a relatively big purchase.

submitted by /u/smifwick
[link] [comments]

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 18:00

Apple has removed the 512GB RAM configuration for the Mac Studio, leaving 256GB as the new maximum. The remaining 256GB upgrade has also increased in price and now faces longer shipping delays as demand grows "due to consumers seeking machines suitable for running local AI agents," reports MacRumors. From the report: The Mac Studio starts with 36GB RAM, but there were upgrades ranging from 48GB to 512GB, with the higher tier upgrades limited to the M3 Ultra chip. Now there are options ranging from 48GB to 256GB, with wait times into May for the 256GB upgrade. Apple has also raised the price for the 256GB RAM upgrade option. It used to cost $1,600 to go from 96GB to 256GB on the high-end M3 Ultra machine, but now it costs $2,000. 512GB was $4,000 when it was available.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 17:53

In a hearing where senators grilled the now-ousted Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem on immigration enforcement under her watch, Noem had a friend in Florida Republican Sen. Ashley Moody.  

After praising the agency’s deportation actions, Moody turned her ire at former President Joe Biden, a Democrat.

"President Biden came in and upended precedent of Democratic and Republican presidents," Moody said during the March 3 hearing. "And that precedent was to deport those here illegally that had committed felony crimes — from trafficking to violent crimes to other types of crimes — where they would have been deported. They stopped doing that. They reversed that policy." 

As evidence, Moody’s press office referred PolitiFact to a Jan. 20, 2021, Biden executive order and a DHS memo issued later the same day. 

The executive order rescinded a 2017 Trump administration order that made anyone illegally in the country a deportation priority. The Biden-era DHS memo, meanwhile, paused some deportations for 100 days and directed agencies to review immigration enforcement policies.

Neither proves that Biden stopped or reversed policy to deport criminals. PolitiFact has rated similar claims False

The Biden administration’s deportation moratorium was temporary and did not apply to everyone. Still eligible for deportation were new arrivals at the border, people who were suspected of engaging in terrorism and people who the agency determined posed a danger to national security and public safety. 

Public safety threats included people convicted of an aggravated felony, which includes murder, rape or sexual abuse of a minor.

In the last two years of Biden’s term, his administration deported more than 413,000 migrants — 158,665 of them with criminal charges or convictions. The U.S. oversaw more than 4.6 million total removals, returns and expulsions combined throughout his term, DHS data shows.

What were Biden’s actions on deportations?

On his first day in office, Biden revoked several of Trump’s first-term executive orders on immigration and directed DHS to prioritize protecting national security, border security and public safety, using prosecutorial discretion.

The Jan. 20, 2021, DHS memo acknowledged that, because of resource constraints and increased illegal border crossings, resources should be directed to the border and removals should be prioritized for people who pose a threat, or who entered the U.S. after Nov. 1, 2020. 

The 100-day deportation pause lasted only a few days before a federal judge blocked it. 

On Feb. 18, 2021, Tae D. Johnson, then-acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, issued interim guidance repeating that the agency would focus deportation efforts on threats to national security, border security and public safety. 

"Individuals are presumed to be a threat to public safety if, for example, they have been convicted of an aggravated felony or engaged in certain activity as part of a criminal gang or transnational criminal organization and there is reason to believe they currently pose a threat," the ICE memo said. An aggravated felony includes murder, rape or sexual abuse of a minor.

ICE also said immigration officers and agents were not prohibited from arresting, detaining or removing people not on the priority list. Those actions, though, would be "subject to advance review," the guidance said.

In September 2021, then-DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas issued final guidelines, saying the agency would continue focusing on removing noncitizens who threaten national security, public safety and border security and start conducting case-by-case assessments.

"For the first time, our guidelines will, in the pursuit of public safety, require an assessment of the individual and take into account the totality of the facts and circumstances," Mayorkas said

The guidelines, Mayorkas said, would serve as "a break from a categorical approach to enforcement," with the assessments aimed to ensure resources were focused on people who posed a threat.

Courts also halted those guidelines in 2021, before they were reinstated in 2023 after a U.S. Supreme Court decision. The court said that no administration has had enough resources to arrest or remove all people illegally crossing the border, and the federal government, therefore, had to prioritize the use of available resources.

Beyond ICE’s immigration enforcement unit, the agency also has a Homeland Security Investigations division, which focuses on cases related to human smuggling and trafficking, money laundering, transnational gang activity, and other crimes. Biden did not order any freeze or reversal of that unit.

How many people did Biden deport?

Overall, deportations were lower in the first years of the Biden administration. 

A lot of that had to do with a surge of migrants at the border. When ICE sent many of its agents to the border to help Customs and Border Protection remove recent arrivals in 2021 and 2022, deportations dropped. Title 42 was also still in place, resulting in more people being expelled at the border instead of possibly deported later on.

Deportations increased in the last two years of Biden’s presidency.

In fiscal years 2023 and 2024 combined, Biden’s administration deported over 413,000 noncitizens — 158,665 of them with criminal charges or convictions. Another 7,100 known or suspected gang members were also removed, as well as 376 known or suspected terrorists.
Throughout Biden’s term, the U.S. oversaw over 4.6 million total removals, returns and expulsions combined, according to PolitiFact’s analysis of DHS data.

Our ruling

Moody said Biden reversed U.S. policy and precedent of deporting people in the country illegally who had committed felonies, including trafficking and violent crimes.

Biden established new deportation priorities and initially ordered a temporary pause on certain, not all, deportations. People who posed national security or public safety threats, including those convicted of serious crimes, such as murder, rape or sexual abuse of a minor, remained a deportation priority under his administration.

In the last two years of his term, the Biden administration deported about 158,665 people with criminal charges or convictions.

We rate Moody’s claim False. 

PolitiFact Staff Writer Maria Ramirez Uribe contributed to this report. 

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-05 17:39

Award provides Kempner AI Cluster access to faculty across Harvard pursuing intelligence research

CAMBRIDGE, Mass., March 5, 2026 — The Kempner Institute for the Study of Natural and Artificial Intelligence at Harvard University is pleased to announce the 2026 Kempner Institute Accelerator Awards request for proposals.

Credit: Kempner Institute

The award program, now in its second year, provides Kempner AI Cluster access to faculty across Harvard who are pursuing research in line with the Kempner Institute’s mission to understand the nature of intelligence in natural and artificial systems.

Recipients of the accelerator awards will have access to the Kempner AI Cluster to undertake advanced computational research using one of the largest and most powerful academic AI clusters in the world. This includes in-kind allocations of Kempner AI Cluster access to up to 64 GPUs for up to 30 days.

With the Kempner’s accelerator awards program, the institute aims to expand the reach and impact its resources, providing groundbreaking researchers in labs and departments across Harvard University with the opportunity to leverage the powerful technology of the Kempner AI cluster, advancing the state of the art of the field of intelligence.

In particular, the award committee welcomes proposals in the following areas, provided they meet the criteria outlined in the RFP:

  • Projects that elucidate the foundations of intelligence: mathematical and computational models of intelligence, cognitive theories of intelligence, and the neurobiological basis of intelligence.
  • Projects which lead to new AI/ML methods or applications:  projects with clearly defined methodological, analytical, or performance advances. This includes new AI/ML methods with explicit evaluation benchmarks, scalable applications that demonstrate methodological novelty, and rigorous studies that generate insight into how AI/ML systems function.

Applications for the accelerator awards will open April 14, 2026. Please visit the Kempner Institute website to see eligibility requirements and application details.

More from HPCwire: Kempner Institute’s AI Cluster Named One of the World’s Fastest ‘Green’ Supercomputers

About the Kempner

The Kempner Institute seeks to understand the basis of intelligence in natural and artificial systems by recruiting and training future generations of researchers to study intelligence from biological, cognitive, engineering, and computational perspectives. Its bold premise is that the fields of natural and artificial intelligence are intimately interconnected; the next generation of artificial intelligence (AI) will require the same principles that our brains use for fast, flexible natural reasoning, and understanding how our brains compute and reason can be elucidated by theories developed for AI. Join the Kempner mailing list to learn more, and to receive updates and news.


Source: Deborah Apsel Lang, Kempner Institute

The post Kempner Institute Announces 2026 Accelerator Awards Request for Proposals appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 17:38

The House resolution to constrain Trump's war powers failed in a 212 to 219 vote, with four Democrats joining all but two Republicans to kill it.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 17:26

Meta CEO, grilled about children’s safety, says in taped deposition a user pool of billions will include bad actors

Harms to children, such as sexual exploitation and detriments to mental health, are inevitable on Meta’s platforms, the company’s CEO Mark Zuckerberg and Instagram leader Adam Mosseri said in taped depositions played at a trial in New Mexico on Tuesday and Wednesday.

“I just think if you’re serving billions of people, the unfortunate reality is that some very small percent of them are going to be criminals, and we should work as hard as we can to stop that activity from happening,” said Zuckerberg. “I don’t think that the standard for our platforms would be that you should assume that it will ever be perfect.”

Continue reading...

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 17:23

One day, I suddenly wondered how to detect when a USB device is plugged or unplugged from a computer running Linux. For most users, this would be solved by relying on libusb. However, the use case I was investigating might not actually want to do so, and so this led me down a poorly-documented rabbit hole.

↫ ArcaneNibble (or R)

And ArcaneNibble (or R) is taking you down with them.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 17:14

There is:

Settings > General >Alert on lost GPS

See the highlighted option in the attached screenshot. :slight_smile:

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 17:06

The new 13-inch Neo has just the right feature mix for the money and a great look and feel that's going to make it tough to beat.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 17:06

Qatar, a key negotiator of the ceasefire, accused Israel of violating the deal. The U.N. relief chief said aid access must be allowed under international law.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 17:01

SANTA CLARA, Calif., March 5, 2026 — Marvell Technology, Inc., a leader in data infrastructure semiconductor solutions, today announced the expansion of its multi-generational ZR/ZR+ and coherent DSP technology portfolio, introducing the industry’s first 1.6T ZR/ZR+ data center interconnect (DCI) pluggable and 2nm coherent DSPs featuring media access control security (MACsec) to securely scale AI data center connectivity.

The Marvell COLORZ 1600 is the industry’s first 1.6T ZR/ZR+ pluggable, powered by Marvell Electra, the industry’s first 2nm 1.6T ZR/ZR+ coherent DSP. Marvell also introduced Libra, the industry’s first 2nm 800G ZR/ZR+ coherent DSP, which enables a lower-power, second-generation COLORZ 800 pluggable. The new products, now with MACsec, expand the company’s extensive coherent DSP and COLORZ pluggable portfolios, delivering efficient, high-performance and secure optical transmission for hyperscale AI and cloud data center networks worldwide.

As distributed AI workloads accelerate traffic between data centers, ZR/ZR+ connectivity has become essential for scaling networks that require high bandwidth, low power and built-in security. Coherent pluggable demand is expected to surge through 2030, yet this specialized technology requires deep expertise and the ability to rapidly scale manufacturing. Marvell is well-positioned to meet this demand, leveraging its increased pluggable manufacturing capacity to enable the high-volume yields required to equip global AI hyperscale and cloud data center infrastructure.

“Marvell, in close collaboration with hyperscale customers, introduced the first ZR pluggable nearly a decade ago and has continued to set the pace for every generation of coherent technology,” said Russ Esmacher, senior vice president and general manager, Data Center Interconnect at Marvell. “However, technology leadership is only one part of the equation. Meeting the global needs of AI-driven data centers requires proven, large-scale manufacturing strength, from resource planning to test capacity. We are expanding our pluggable manufacturing capacity to help customers rapidly deploy the latest disruptive technologies to scale their networks.”

“The size of the pluggable coherent market is massive but increasingly competitive. Maintaining leadership requires power efficiency, critical features and high-volume manufacturability,” said Scott Wilkinson, lead analyst at Cignal AI. “Marvell has a proven track record of consistently delivering first-to-market advancements across multiple generations of coherent DSPs, and the company’s move to 2nm solutions underscores its commitment to density, performance and power.”

COLORZ 1600: First 1.6T ZR/ZR+ Pluggable with MACsec

Marvell COLORZ 1600, with the Electra coherent DSP, connects campus (20km), metro (120km) and regional (1,000km) data centers at 1.6T. It supports in-chip MACsec security, full interoperability across OIF, OpenZR+ and OpenROADM modes, and C and L bands in the OSFP form factor while significantly reducing power per bit compared to existing solutions.

COLORZ 800: First 800G ZR/ZR+ Pluggable with MACsec and Full Interoperability

Powered by the new Libra coherent DSP, COLORZ 800 now enables cloud operators to secure scale-across interconnects between metro data centers up to 1,000km apart at 800G, and between regional data centers up to 2,000km apart at 600G and up to 3,000km apart at 400G. Supporting full interoperability across OIF, OpenZR+ and OpenROADM modes, and available for both C and L bands in QSFP-DD or OSFP form factors, COLORZ 800 significantly reduces DCI capital costs compared to traditional systems.

Marvell has set the pace for industry-first innovations across multiple generations, from developing the first ZR pluggable to pioneering 400G and 800G deployments—and now leading at 1.6T. In addition, Marvell offers the most comprehensive end-to-end, hyperscale-optimized coherent pluggable and DSP portfolio spanning coherent-lite, campus and DCI applications, along with a world-class manufacturing capability.

Availability

Marvell Electra and Libra coherent DSPs and COLORZ 1600 and the Libra DSP-enabled COLORZ 800 pluggables are expected to begin sampling to customers in the second half of 2026.

Marvell will showcase its end-to-end connectivity portfolio including its current-generation ZR/ZR+ coherent solutions at OFC 2026, March 15–19, at the Los Angeles Convention Center in Los Angeles, California. Visit the Marvell booth #1600 to learn how the company is driving the next generation of AI data center infrastructure.

About Marvell

To deliver the data infrastructure technology that connects the world, we’re building solutions on the most powerful foundation: our partnerships with our customers. Trusted by the world’s leading technology companies for over 30 years, we move, store, process and secure the world’s data with semiconductor solutions designed for our customers’ current needs and future ambitions. Through a process of deep collaboration and transparency, we’re ultimately changing the way tomorrow’s enterprise, cloud and carrier architectures transform—for the better.


Source: Marvell

The post Marvell Introduces 1.6T ZR/ZR+ Pluggable and 2nm Coherent DSP for AI Data Center Interconnects appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 17:00

United Airlines has updated its contract of carriage to require passengers to use headphones when playing audio or video on personal devices during flights. Travelers who refuse could be removed from the plane or even permanently banned from flying with the airline, reports CBS News. United notes that it will offer customers who forget theirs a free pair of wired earbuds. "Don't worry if you forget your headphones for your flight," the airline states on its website. "If they're available, you can request free earbuds." You'd better hope your device still has a headphone jack... Further reading: Flying Was Already the Worst. Then America Stopped Using Headphones.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 16:56

Democratic-backed measure that would have forced US to withdraw troops failed by a vote of 212-219

The US House of Representatives on Thursday voted down a Democratic-backed measure to halt hostilities with Iran, as Republicans cleared the way for Donald Trump to continue the conflict that has drawn in countries across the Middle East, but criticized as having unclear goals.

By a vote of 212-219, the House voted to reject a war powers resolution proposed by Thomas Massie, a Republican representative, and Ro Khanna, a Democratic representative, which would have forced the US to withdraw from the conflict until Congress authorized military action. The vote was largely along party lines, with two Republicans breaking with their party to support the resolution, and four Democrats voting against it.

Continue reading...

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 16:53

The House passed a measure to fund the Department of Homeland Security on Thursday, but Senate Democrats blocked similar legislation.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 16:49

Mortgage rates are rising as bond investors fret that rising oil prices could boost inflation.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 16:43

The Trump administration’s war on Iran is reckless and ill-planned, four government officials briefed on the attacks told The Intercept.

Even in classified briefings, Trump administration officials laid out no clear vision for the U.S. war on Iran or its aftermath, the sources said.

“The administration doesn’t have a clue. They do not have an actual, real rationale, endgame, or plan for the aftermath of this,” one of the officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss classified matters, told The Intercept.

“There is no thought process into what any of this means long term,” said another. “It’s not coordinated regime change. It’s just ‘bomb them until they’re less of a threat.’”

Asked about the administration’s plan for Iran after the war, that official responded: “Whatever.”

Internal criticism of the attacks comes as President Donald Trump teased that the war could go on “forever” despite promising his administration would avoid Middle East “forever wars.” Trump has floated the idea of de facto American rule of Iran through a puppet regime, similar to the leaders who have run Venezuela since the U.S. attacked that country and kidnapped its president, Nicolás Maduro, in January. “What we did in Venezuela, I think, is the perfect scenario,” Trump said on Sunday. “Leaders can be picked.”

“I have to be involved in the appointment, like with Delcy [Rodríguez] in Venezuela,” Trump told Axios on Thursday.

Related

Fool Me Twice: The Case for War With Iran Is Even Thinner Than It Was for Iraq

Officials predicted that the war would have negative consequences for decades, echoing the results of the last U.S. ouster of an Iranian leader. One of the sources, who has experience in the Middle East and talked to The Intercept on the condition of anonymity, likened this conflict to the 2003 Iraq War, which was also illegal, ill-planned, and resulted in decades of regional instability.

Trump has repeatedly called for an Iranian uprising in the wake of the U.S. attacks. “The hour of your freedom is at hand,” he declared on Saturday. “When we are finished, take over your government. It will be yours to take.” But behind closed doors, the U.S. has made it clear that support for would-be Iranian revolutionaries isn’t certain — or even likely. In classified briefings, Secretary of State Marco Rubio has said the U.S. might intervene to support the Iranian people if an opportunity for ushering in democracy presented itself, but that the U.S. was primarily focused on a discrete set of tactical goals to degrade Iran’s military power, two of the government officials told The Intercept.

One of the sources briefed on the attacks evoked the 1953 coup in which the U.S. and British governments toppled Iranian Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh. The overthrow of Iran’s first and only democratically elected government ushered in more than two decades of dictatorship under U.S.-backed Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and his dreaded secret police, SAVAK. “Trump’s history only goes back as far as the revolution. But 1979 started in 1953. And this [war] goes back to that [coup],” the source told The Intercept, referencing the 1979 Iranian revolution.

Related

Trump’s Iran Attack Was Illegal, Former U.S. Military Officials Allege

Trump has also referenced the 1979 revolution, but not the anti-American backlash that fed it. “You go back 37 years, really 47 years, close to 50, look at what’s happened and all the death,” Trump said to CNN, referencing those killed by Iran since the revolution.

The U.S. official scoffed at Trump’s one-sided history, noting this war’s roots stretch back to the CIA’s coup almost 75 years ago. “It could be decades before we know how badly this will affect us. But you can bet it will,” the official said, referencing the lag between the 1953 coup and the 1979 revolution. “People in Iran remember. We do not.”

The CIA was responsible for the 1953 coup that ousted Mossadegh. “The military coup that overthrew Mosadeq and his National Front cabinet was carried out under CIA direction as an act of U.S. foreign policy, conceived and approved at the highest levels of government,” reads the agency’s postmortem.

The CIA was also behind the targeted killing of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the hard-line Shiite cleric who ruled Iran for nearly four decades. After tracking his movements, the CIA reportedly passed his location to Israel, which conducted the attack that killed him on Friday, according to U.S. officials.

The U.S. has offered shifting explanations for the new war with Iran, including claims that Iran posed an “imminent” threat to America or that Israel effectively forced the U.S. into the conflict. In a legally mandated, unclassified letter submitted to Congress on Monday, Trump declared that the military operation was designed to “neutralize Iran’s malign activities.”

In a phone conversation with ABC News’ Jonathan Karl, Trump also claimed that the killing of Khamenei was the latest salvo in dueling assassination attempts. “I got him before he got me. They tried twice. Well, I got him first,” Trump told Karl, apparently referring to U.S. intelligence from the summer of 2024 that Iran was plotting to assassinate then-candidate Trump. That same summer, a gunman with no known ties to Iran attempted to kill Trump at a campaign rally in Pennsylvania. Iran denied involvement in the attack.

Related

Ghosts of Mossadegh: The Iran Cables, U.S. Empire, and the Arc of History

After a 1970s congressional inquiry, known as the Church Committee investigation, brought to light the CIA’s role in numerous plots to kill foreign leaders, President Gerald Ford issued an executive order that banned “assassinations.” The ban is now part of Executive Order 12333, which states: “No person employed by or acting on behalf of the United States government shall engage in, or conspire to engage in, assassination.” 

The White House did not respond to questions of the legality of, and rationale, for the targeted killing of Khamenei.

President Barack Obama, speaking in Cairo, Egypt, in 2009, admitted the U.S. role in the “overthrow of a democratically elected Iranian government.” Four years later, the CIA officially acknowledged its role in the 1953 coup d’état when it released declassified documents on the operation.

Related

Blowback: How a CIA-Backed Coup Led to the Rise of Iran’s Ayatollahs

CIA documents are also frank about the type of “blowback” — the unintended, often violent, consequences of covert operations and foreign policies that were kept secret from the American public — of which Trump is either ignorant or ignores. “Possibilities of blowback against the United States should always be in the back of the minds of all CIA officers involved in this type of operation,” noted the CIA lessons-learned report on Mossadegh’s ouster. “Few, if any, operations are as explosive as this type.”

In his 2013 book, “The Coup,” Iranian American historian Ervand Abrahamian wrote that Mossadegh’s removal by the CIA irreparably scarred Iran and “left a deep imprint on the country — not only on its polity and economy but also on its popular culture and what some would call mentality.” The Iranians who overthrew the shah in 1979 branded America “the Great Satan,” a moniker that endures to this day, as a result.

The Trump administration has overthrown two regimes in as many months this year with its killing of Khamenei last week and its kidnapping of Maduro in January. The Trump administration has been running Venezuela via a puppet regime ever since.

Trump said the U.S. had already killed the majority of those identified as potential Iranian quislings. “Most of the people we had in mind are dead,” he said on Tuesday. Trump also conceded that the war may yield a government little different than Khamenei’s. “I guess the worst case would be we do this and somebody takes over who’s as bad as the previous person,” he admitted. “It would probably be the worst, you go through this and in five years you realize you put somebody in who’s no better.”

Khamenei’s son Mojtaba Khamenei has emerged as the front-runner to become his father’s successor. Experts say his selection indicates that the more extreme Revolutionary Guard faction of the regime has taken charge amid the power vacuum, suggesting Trump’s worst-case scenario may be realized. But on Wednesday, Trump seemed to suggest that the U.S. and Israel would continue to kill all would-be front-runners. “Their leadership is rapidly going,” he said. “Everyone that wants to be a leader ends up dead.”

“This attack on Iran is going to have a super long half-life.”

U.S.–Israeli strikes have killed at least 787 people in Iran and wounded hundreds more since Friday, according to the Iranian Red Crescent Society. This includes more than 170 people, many of them children attending class at Shajarah Tayyebeh elementary school, in the town of Minab.

“Civilians are bearing the brunt of this conflict. With the extraordinary volume of U.S. and Israeli strikes in populated areas of Iran, coupled with internet blackouts, the civilian harm reports we are seeing so far likely represent just a fraction of the true civilian toll,” Annie Shiel, the U.S. advocacy director of the Center for Civilians in Conflict told The Intercept. “This war is also putting civilians at risk across the region. Iranian strikes are impacting civilian infrastructure, killing civilians, closing airspace, and generally disrupting civilian life and livelihoods. The longer this goes on, the more these harms will compound.”

The first government official reiterated to The Intercept that the full reverberations of the current war would only be revealed in decades to come. “You and I will be gone,” the U.S. official said, also referring to this reporter, “and Trump, too, but this attack on Iran is going to have a super long half-life. Generations long.”

The post Sources Briefed on Iran War Say U.S. Has No Plans for What Comes Next appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-05 16:43

Some people couldn't finalize their purchases, and others couldn't see any prices on items.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 16:25

During a speech in South Carolina on Feb. 27, Joe Biden touted his record as president while criticizing his successor, President Donald Trump. But during his remarks, Biden made a number of false, misleading or exaggerated claims.

  • The former president claimed that his administration created “2.2 million additional jobs” during his last year in office compared with “185,000 jobs” in the first year of Trump’s second term. But the most recent Bureau of Labor Statistics data show Biden inflated jobs added on his watch and undersold jobs added under Trump.
  • He claimed that the economy experienced “record growth” during his administration, which is not supported by data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis. There was higher quarterly and annual economic growth under other presidents.
  • He also said that “border crossings” in the U.S. “were lower” the day he left office than when he entered office. Yes, but total apprehensions of people illegally crossing the southern border in Biden’s last year were still more than double the number in the last year of Trump’s first term.

Biden was in South Carolina to celebrate winning the state’s Democratic presidential primary six years earlier. Biden’s win there helped propel him to become the Democratic nominee for president in 2020.

Employment Increases

When Biden compared his jobs record with Trump’s, he exaggerated the figures.

“In fact, [in] just my last year as president of the United States in 2024, we created — just the last year — 2.2 million additional jobs,” he said. “You know how many jobs Trump’s created in his first year as president? 185,000 jobs total. That’s it.”

However, the most recent data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics show that total employment increased by a little more than 1.2 million between January 2024 and January 2025, which covers Biden’s last full year in office. (He left office on Jan. 20, 2025.)

Biden speaks to a crowd during a fundraising event with the South Carolina Democratic Party on Feb. 27 in Columbia, South Carolina. Photo by Sean Rayford/Getty Images.

Meanwhile, in the first full year of Trump’s second term, employment increased by 359,000, from January 2025 to January 2026.

For his speech, Biden may have relied on outdated data, or data covering a different period. We reached out to his office about his claims, but we didn’t receive a response. 

BLS did report in January 2025 that total employment had increased by 2.2 million in 2024. That covers most of Biden’s final year as president. But that report came out before the BLS made annual data revisions for the 12 months ending in March 2025 that lowered its estimates of the increase in employment during Biden’s time in office. The final revisions were made on Feb. 11.

The latest BLS data also show that total employment in 2025 increased by 181,000, when measured from December 2024 to December 2025. That’s close to the 185,000 figure that Biden used for Trump. But Trump took office on Jan. 20, 2025, and BLS bases its job figures on a monthly survey of households covering the week that contains the 12th day of the month. That means the January 2025 job numbers were under Biden.

We got an increase of 359,000 for Trump by measuring from January 2025 to January 2026, which more closely aligns with the period covering his first full year back in office.

We would also note that the employment for January 2026 is preliminary and subject to be revised. Also, as we’ve said before, presidents shouldn’t receive all the credit, or the blame, for employment figures on their watch.

Economic Growth

Biden also claimed that “the economy grew with record growth” during his presidency. We found no basis for that statement. 

Real gross domestic product (meaning it has been adjusted for inflation) grew by 34.9% in the third quarter of 2020 and by 18.9% in all of 1942, which are the quarterly and annual economic growth records, according to Bureau of Economic Analysis estimates. The highest quarterly GDP growth under Biden was 7% in the second and fourth quarters of 2021, when the economy was rebounding from the COVID-19 pandemic, and the highest annual GDP growth during his administration was 6.2% that same year. 

Average annual growth during Biden’s four years was 3.6%. That was still lower than the almost 4.5% average during Bill Clinton’s second term, and the average of nearly 5.2% during Lyndon B. Johnson’s full four-year term. There was even average annual growth of about 15.4% in Franklin D. Roosevelt’s third term, during World War II.

Taking out the bounce-back year after GDP plunged as a result of the pandemic, economic growth in the last three years of Biden’s presidency was about 2.7% annually, which is close to the yearly average of about 2.8% annual growth over the last 50 years.

Border Crossings

Biden later turned to the subject of immigration, saying, “The day I left office, border crossings in the United States were lower than the day that I entered an office inherited from Trump.” That’s accurate, but misleading.

Border Patrol made 47,320 apprehensions of people illegally crossing the U.S. border with Mexico in December 2024, Biden’s last full month in office. Then apprehensions at the southern border declined further to 29,105 in January 2025, and Biden left office a little more than halfway through that month.

Those figures were down from 71,047 apprehensions by Border Patrol in December 2020, the last full month of Trump’s first term, and 75,198 in January 2021, when Trump exited the White House.

But in our story “Biden’s Final Numbers,” which looks at various statistical measures during his presidency, we wrote: “Illegal border crossings, as measured by apprehensions at the southwest border, were 107% higher in Biden’s final year in office compared with the last full year before he was sworn in, according to data from U.S. Customs and Border Protection.” We also said “that snapshot undersells the surge in illegal immigration during Biden’s four years in office, because apprehensions dropped dramatically in the second half of 2024 after Biden initiated some emergency policies to curb illegal border crossings.

“Before then, the U.S. was experiencing historically high illegal immigration,” we reported.

We also pointed out that apprehensions were only part of the picture, since the number of people seeking asylum at legal ports of entry remained high under Biden, as his administration began accepting CBP One mobile app applications that allowed immigrants to request asylum or parole and be screened for entry to the U.S. Plus there was an additional surge in immigrants coming to the U.S. via newly created legal methods, such as noncitizens granted parole, which allows them to temporarily live in the U.S. for “urgent humanitarian or significant public benefit reasons.” Biden offered parole to immigrants from countries such as Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela. (Trump has largely halted those humanitarian programs through executive orders.)

While Biden suggested that the increase in migration earlier in his presidency was due to the pandemic, Julia Gelatt, associate director of the U.S. immigration policy program at the Migration Policy Institute, previously told us that there were several reasons for the surge.

“There were many different drivers in the growth of the unauthorized immigrant population during the Biden presidency: strong labor demand in the U.S. as the country rebounded from the COVID-19 recession, and push factors such as authoritarian governments in Cuba, Nicaragua, and Venezuela and intense gang violence and extortion in countries like Haiti and Ecuador,” she said. “It’s also possible that some people moved in order to take advantage of new pathways created by the Biden administration.”


Editor’s note: FactCheck.org does not accept advertising. We rely on grants and individual donations from people like you. Please consider a donation. Credit card donations may be made through our “Donate” page. If you prefer to give by check, send to: FactCheck.org, Annenberg Public Policy Center, P.O. Box 58100, Philadelphia, PA 19102. 

The post Biden Makes Flawed Comparisons with Trump appeared first on FactCheck.org.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 16:24
  • Email includes ‘FAQ’ on crossing picket line

  • Active player calls letter ‘a bunch of bullshit’

  • USL declines to comment

On Wednesday night, the United Soccer League (USL) emailed every player contracted in the second-division Championship with information about the procedures for crossing a potential picket line and resigning their membership in the USL Players’ Association, multiple sources have confirmed to the Guardian.

The USL, which runs the second-division Championship and the third-division League One as its professional US men’s leagues, has been locked in labor talks with Championship players for more than a year, with tensions recently spilling into the public. The previous agreement between the league and the USL Players Association (USLPA) expired on 31 December 2025.

Continue reading...

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 16:24

Stocks fell sharply on Wall Street on Thursday as oil prices rose further because of the war with Iran.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 16:23

Centralize, decentralize, rinse, and repeat. That has been the history of IT over the past half-century. Thanks to the emergence of agentic AI, we’re now in a period of decentralization, which means organizations are processing more data on gear running on-prem and, especially, at the edge.

AI model training was the big factor in AI development in the early stages of the generative AI revolution. Hyperscalers built and trained large AI models, which required huge GPU clusters running in massive data centers. While AI model training is still going on, the deciding factor in AI now clearly is inference. Organizations are looking to put trained AI models into production and use them to process real user data.

AI inference changes the infrastructure requirements in important ways. For starters, using the Internet to move huge amounts of data from the real world into centralized AI factories is both expensive and time-consuming. It can be done, and there are a handful gigawatt-scale AI factories under construction, predominantly in areas of the world where land, power, and water are abundant and cheap. But all things being equal, it costs more to run AI inference in a centralized AI factory or the public cloud, which is why many organizations are exploring how to do AI inference closer to where data originates, i.e. at the edge.

Cloudian’s survey found that only 4% of respondents said latency requirements did not demand on-prem computing (Image courtesy Cloudian)

A new report issued from object storage vendor Cloudian this week found that 79% of enterprise decision-makers have already moved some AI workload from the public cloud to on-prem or private infrastructure or are in the process of doing so, and another 73% are planning to further shift toward on-premises or hybrid infrastructure over the next two years.

Several reasons were given for this on-prem shift, including data sovereignty concerns, higher-than-expected cloud costs, and increasing demands for real-time, low-latency capabilities for AI inference workloads. Nine out of 10 decision-makers said they would choose on-prem, private cloud, or hybrid cloud for AI use cases that involve sensitive data. Only 1% said they felt comfortable running such workloads in the public cloud with standard security configuration.

Put simply, companies don’t want to run AI workloads involving sensitive data, regulatory compliance, or mission-critical operations on infrastructure they don’t control.

“Enterprises aren’t abandoning the cloud–they’re getting smarter about where AI workloads belong,” said Jon Toor, the CMO at Cloudian. “This survey confirms what we’re hearing from customers every day: when sensitive data, predictable costs, and real-time performance matter, on-premises AI infrastructure delivers advantages that public cloud alone cannot match.”

Infrastructure providers are responding by developing high-performance computing that can run wherever you need it to.

  • This week at MWC in Barcelona, Spain, FuriosaAI and LG U+ unveiled the Sovereign AI Appliance, which combines FuriosaAI’s RNGD AI accelerators, LG AI Research’s EXAONE 4.0 model, and LG’s ixi-Enterprise platform. The air-cooled appliance is rated at 7,168 TOPS (FP8) aggregate throughput and is 30% less expensive to run than a GPU cluster, the companies say.

    The Gryf is a supercomputer that fits in the overhead compartment on an airplane

  • Next week at Embedded World in Nurnberg, Germany, Altera will be showcasing how its latest Agilex FPGAs can accelerate inference in robotics, industrial vision, and autonomous edge use cases. With AI tensor blocks, ARM cores, and LPDDR5 memory, the Agilex 3 and Agilex 5 FPGAs and SoCs are suitable for executing sensor fusion tasks, where images from multiple cameras are analyzed by AI models in real time.
  • At the GTC show in two weeks, we’ll get to hear about Gryf, a “suitcase AI supercomputer” that “brings AI to where it is needed, from remote sites to urban environments.” The Gryf was co-developed by GigaIO and SourceCode, is TSA-friendly, and can fit in the overhead compartment on airplanes, the companies tell us. It’s suitable for defense/aerospace, natural disaster response, oil and gas/energy, sports analytics, media and entertaining, and other edge AI processes in the field.
  • And who could forget Odinn’s launch of the “luggable supercomputer” at CES in Las Vegas in January? Dubbed Omni, the system features four NvidiaH200 GPUs and up to 564GB of VRAM. The company said Omni is capable of running the latest models, such as Llama 4 401B at full combined FP16 and FP32 precision, with room to spare.

AI factories and public clouds aren’t going away, and will be indispensable components of tomorrow’s AI pipelines. But thanks to the economics of data movement, the majority of the action will occur closer to where it can impact people’s lives, which means in the home, office, and the field.

 

The post Agentic AI Is Driving Workloads and Infra On-Prem and to the Edge appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 16:22

Oracle’s Solaris 11 basically comes in two different flavours: the SRU (Support Repository Update) releases for commercial Oracle customers, and the CBE (Common Build Environment) releases, available to everyone. We’ve covered the last few SRU releases, and now it’s time for a new CBE release.

We first introduced the Oracle Solaris CBE in March 2022 and we released an updated version in May 2025. Now, as Oracle Solaris keeps on evolving, we’ve released the latest version of our CBE. With the previous release Alan and Jan had compiled a list to cover all the changes in the three years since the first CBE release. This time, because it’s relatively soon after the last release we are opting to just point you to the what’s new blogs on the feature release SRUs Oracle Solaris 11.4 SRU 84, Oracle Solaris 11.4 SRU 87, and Oracle Solaris 11.4 SRU 90. And of course you can always go to the blogs by Joerg Moellenkamp and Marcel Hofstetter who have excellent series of articles that show how you can use the Oracle Solaris features.

↫ Joost Pronk van Hoogeveen at the Oracle Solaris Blog

You can update your existing installation with a pkg update, or do a fresh insrtall with the new CBE images.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 16:19

Trump-backed US senator and ex-MMA fighter a vocal supporter of ICE’s ‘red-blooded American patriots’

Donald Trump is nominating the Oklahoma senator Markwayne Mullin to lead the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), handing control of the administration’s sweeping immigration and deportation agenda to one of Washington’s most hardline voices and combative allies on the issue.

The announcement came on Thursday as Trump ousted Kristi Noem following a catastrophic week on Capitol Hill, during which Republican lawmakers grilled her over a $220m advertising contract that prominently featured her own image. The White House had publicly denied Trump ever approved the campaign.

Continue reading...

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 16:17

Emmanuel Damas, a Haitian asylum seeker, was being held at the Florence correctional center before he died

A man being held at a US immigration detention facility in Arizona died this week after reporting severe tooth pain and not receiving “timely medical attention”, according to a local official.

Emmanuel Damas, a Haitian asylum seeker, was being held at the Florence correctional center in Arizona when he began to feel a toothache in mid-February, a pain that weeks later led him to the hospital before he died on Monday.

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2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 16:12

John Daghita was arrested on the island of Saint Martin, FBI Director Kash Patel said.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 16:07

In the world of open source, relicensing is notoriously difficult. It usually requires the unanimous consent of every person who has ever contributed a line of code, a feat nearly impossible for legacy projects. chardet, a Python character encoding detector used by requests and many others, has sat in that tension for years: as a port of Mozilla’s C++ code it was bound to the LGPL, making it a gray area for corporate users and a headache for its most famous consumer.

Recently the maintainers used Claude Code to rewrite the whole codebase and release v7.0.0, relicensing from LGPL to MIT in the process. The original author, a2mark, saw this as a potential GPL violation.

↫ Tuan-Anh Tran

Everything about this feels like a license violation, and in general a really shit thing to do. At the same time, though, the actual legal situation, what lawyers and judges care about, is entirely unsettled and incredibly unclear. I’ve been reading a ton of takes on what happened here, and it seems nobody has any conclusive answers, with seemingly valid arguments on both sides.

Intuitively, this feels deeply and wholly wrong. This is the license-washing “AI” seems to be designed for, so that proprietary vendors can take code under copyleft licenses, feed it into their “AI” model, and tell it to regurgitate something that looks just different enough so a new, different license can be applied. Tim takes Jim’s homework. How many individual words does Tim need to change – without adding anything to Jim’s work – before it’s no longer plagiarism?

I would argue that no matter how many synonyms and slight sentence structure changes Tim employs, it’s still a plagiarised work.

However, what it feels like to me is entirely irrelevant when laws are involved, and even those laws are effectively irrelevant when so much money is riding on the answers to questions like these. The companies who desperately want this to be possible and legal are so wealthy, so powerful, and sucked up to the US government so hard, that whatever they say might very well just become law.

“AI” is the single-greatest coordinated attack on open source in history, and the open source world would do well to realise that.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 17:06

Austin Police Chief Lisa Davis played surveillance​ video​ and police​ body cam video​.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 17:01

Two dozen states filed a lawsuit challenging President Trump's legal authority to impose new global tariffs.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 19:29

In a statement to CBS News, a representative for Britney Spears referred to her Wednesday arrest in Southern California as "unfortunate" and "completely inexcusable."

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-06 11:29

Job cuts at a Whirlpool factory in Iowa underscore the challenges in reviving American manufacturing. "Every day, workers' jobs are still in jeopardy," a union official said.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-06 04:40

A suspect is in custody and has been identified after authorities in Utah found three women's bodies in two locations.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-06 06:10

President Trump said he must have a role in choosing Iran's next leader and called the son of the late Ayatollah Ali Khamenei "unacceptable."

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-05 16:03

More Americans are digging into their retirement savings for emergency expenses, research from Vanguard shows.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 16:00

An anti-corruption group has filed a lawsuit (PDF) against Donald Trump and Attorney General Pam Bondi over the deal that transferred TikTok's U.S. operations to a group of investors tied to the administration. The suit claims the arrangement violates a 2024 law requiring ByteDance to divest and alleges the deal financially benefited Trump allies while leaving the platform's algorithm under Chinese ownership. NBC News reports: The suit, filed by the Public Integrity Project, a law firm that seeks to raise the "reputational cost of corruption in America," argues the deal violates a law intended to prevent the spread of Chinese government propaganda and has enriched Trump's allies. That law, signed by then-President Joe Biden in 2024, said that TikTok couldn't be distributed in the United States unless the Chinese company ByteDance found an American-based corporate home by the day before Donald Trump returned to office. The law was upheld by the Supreme Court. "The law was clear, but it was never enforced," says the lawsuit, filed Thursday in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. "Shortly after the deadline to divest passed, President Trump issued an executive order purportedly granting an extension for TikTok to find a domestic owner and directed his Attorney General not to enforce the law." The plaintiffs in the suit are two software engineers from California: One is a shareholder in Alphabet Inc., YouTube's parent company; the other is a shareholder in Meta Platforms, Inc., which is Instagram's parent company. Both say they suffered financially due to the non-enforcement of the law. "The original motivation for this law was to prevent the Chinese government from pushing propaganda onto American audiences," said Brendan Ballou, CEO of the Public Integrity Project and a former Justice Department prosecutor. "The deal that the president approved is the absolute worst of all possible worlds, because right now ByteDance continues to own the algorithm, which means that it can censor the content that it doesn't like, but at the same time Oracle controls the data and it can censor the information that it doesn't like. Really it's a situation that's going to be terrible for users, and terrible for free speech on the platform."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 16:00

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for March 6, No. 1,721.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 16:00

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for March 6 #999.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 16:00

Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for March 6, No. 733.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 15:54

Microsoft, Google, Amazon, Meta and others signed a nonbinding pledge agreeing to cover the cost of powering AI data centers.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 15:47

Markwayne Mullin, Republican senator and Maga ally, to replace Noem as Democrats cheer departure of ‘disaster’

Donald Trump on Thursday announced he was replacing Kristi Noem as the homeland security secretary, capping weeks of bipartisan complaints about her leadership after immigration agents killed two US citizens and reports emerged that she was involved in a personal relationship with a top deputy.

Noem’s firing was the first major personnel shake-up of Trump’s second term. The president made it public in a post on Truth Social, in which he said Markwayne Mullin, a Republican Oklahoma senator, would take over from Noem starting on 31 March.

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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 15:39

Reports say talks have resumed between defense department and startup over military’s use of company’s AI

Donald Trump boasted about severing the ties between the US military and Anthropic the same day multiple reports said that negotiations between the Department of Defense and the AI startup had resumed.

“Well, I fired Anthropic. Anthropic is in trouble because I fired [them] like dogs, because they shouldn’t have done that,” Trump told Politico.

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2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 15:38

Soldier Boy, Homelander, Butcher and more appear in the season 5 preview.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 15:34

One thing this year’s Energy HPC & AI Conference held the Rice University campus made hard to ignore was how many different kinds of “energy work” now sit on top of the same machines.

On the policy side, the Genesis Mission framed much of the discussion. In his overview, Bronson Messer, Director of Science at the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, described Genesis less as a single system and more as an evolving ecosystem. Leadership‑class supercomputers like Frontier, near‑term systems such as Discovery and Lux, experimental user facilities, and the “American Science Cloud” plumbing that ties them together are all valued members of this ecosystem.

The stated ambition is simple to say and harder to realize. It’s all about using AI and computation to dramatically increase U.S. R&D productivity over the next decade. However, the path is still being laid while the plane is taking off, to use Messer’s metaphor.

Bronson Messer, Director of Science at the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility at Oak Ridge National Laboratory

A lot of that work looks like infrastructure. Federated identity, which is the idea that a scientist should have one login that follows them from a neutron source to a leadership system, is now “all but done” after decades of being considered out of reach.

Messer described it as a surprisingly durable win. He said it was a piece of glue that makes it easier for theorists and experimentalists, and for national labs and industry partners, to move across facilities without friction. When access becomes that smooth, it also becomes easier for very different communities to share the same cycles and the same megawatts.

The tour of Oak Ridge’s systems underscored how far “normal” has shifted. Frontier, the first exascale supercomputer for open science, sits in a machine room where each liquid‑cooled cabinet, roughly the size of a commercial refrigerator, weighs about as much as two pickup trucks. Lux, a new public‑private collaboration with AMD, is headed for Summit’s former room, with Oak Ridge National Laboratory operating the machine and AMD holding a share.

It’s not an accident that companies with deep interests in how energy flows—from chips to grids—want to be close to these systems.

Equally noticeable this year was who was doing the talking. The program featured women in roles explicitly about steering the culture of HPC, not just the technology. The Women in HPC Birds‑of‑a‑Feather session, led by organizers including Katherine Riley, Director of Science at the Argonne Leadership Computing Facility at Argonne National Laboratory, put questions of inclusion, mentoring, and career progression on the same stage as node architectures and interconnects. Several women, including early‑career researchers, turned up again in technical sessions, making it harder to treat “diversity” as a side project separate from mainstream HPC work. That matters when decisions about which workloads get to dominate scarce megawatts are, in effect, decisions about which futures we prioritize.

If the keynotes at the Energy HPC & AI Conference were about scale and ambition, several of the technical talks were about restraint.

In “Toward Sustainable HPC,” Amr Nasr, a researcher working with King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST), described work on an AMD Genoa supercomputer of about 4,000 nodes. His team took a production full‑waveform inversion code—exactly the kind of seismic workload that has historically been run as hard as possible—and asked what happens when you start turning the CPU power cap down. Without changing a line of application code, they ran 28 rounds of experiments across seven different cap levels, measuring both runtime and energy for each run.

For bandwidth‑bound kernels and STREAM‑style loops, they found performance essentially flat once power caps reached around 200 watts per socket. Pushing beyond that gave only small reductions in runtime while increasing energy draw. Compute‑bound sections behaved differently, but even there the “best” cap depended on the workload and problem size. Across the applications they studied, Nasr estimated that up to 15% in overall energy savings were available with little or no impact on turnaround time, simply by picking caps per application instead of assuming “max power” is always the right answer. All of this was wired through Slurm job options, making it something schedulers and users can adopt without rewriting codes.

Later, in the student lightning session, Benjamin Zastrow, then a graduate student in computational engineering at the University of Texas at Austin, gave a very different but related example in his talk on “Accelerating Wind Turbine Uncertainty Quantification with Multifidelity Monte Carlo,” work done with Karen Willcox, Director of the Oden Institute for Computational Engineering and Sciences at UT Austin, and collaborators at TotalEnergies.

Eddys from wind farms can lower power output

His high‑fidelity model—a large‑eddy simulation of turbine wakes—costs about 2,550 CPU‑hours per run. Traditional Monte Carlo, which would call that model thousands of times to explore uncertainty in yaw angles and turbine positions, is simply unaffordable.

The multifidelity Monte Carlo framework he described treats that as a resource allocation problem. Given a hierarchy of models—from the expensive LES down to cheaper engineering wake models or reduced‑order and machine‑learning surrogates—the algorithm chooses how many times to call each one under a fixed compute budget. In one example, instead of 14 high‑fidelity runs, the optimal split was 13 high‑fidelity runs plus 12,110 low‑fidelity runs. With that mix, they obtained much tighter confidence intervals on the downstream turbine’s power. Even multiplying the budget by six and spending it all on the expensive model could not match the multifidelity estimate.

Overall, the conference had an unspoken contrast in seeing the same infrastructure and many of the same sponsors applied both to traditional subsurface problems and to methods that make wind‑farm planning more reliable with less brute‑force compute. It suggested that not all uses of machine hours are interchangeable, even when they share logos and facilities walls.

The human side of these choices came through again in the Women in HPC session, where organizers and attendees talked about mentoring, sponsorship, and the kinds of projects that make it onto a CV. Several speakers pointed out that if the community only celebrates “biggest machine, biggest allocation, biggest model,” it effectively narrows who can participate and what kinds of science are considered prestigious.

The same logic applies quietly to application domains. Some types of work scale naturally into headline‑friendly numbers, while others require us to value efficiency, robustness, or social impact more than raw size.

Dan Stanzione, Executive Director of the Texas Advanced Computing Center at the University of Texas at Austin, speaking with former HPCwire editor Tiffany Trader at SC22

Dan Stanzione, Executive Director of the Texas Advanced Computing Center at the University of Texas at Austin, used his keynote to make the energy problem of AI and HPC feel immediate rather than abstract. He walked through the power curves for current and planned systems, arguing that “just building bigger boxes” is no longer a viable strategy when datacenter power and grid constraints are already biting. In an industry that is currently having a “Build, Baby, Build” moment, this was enormously refreshing to hear.

 

He also emphasized that the economics of industrial AI now dominate the hardware roadmap, which means scientific users will increasingly inherit accelerators optimized for low‑precision inference and training instead of for double‑precision physics.

During the Q&A, I asked Stanzione how we get companies to actually care about code optimization instead of just throwing more hardware and power at the problem. He said bluntly that most companies will not “fall in love with optimization for its own sake,” so the only reliable lever is money.

If their cloud or allocation bill clearly reflects wasted cycles and energy, they suddenly discover an interest in software efficiency. He pointed to examples like DeepSeek’s software‑only gains and argued that, in a world of tight power and capex budgets, the economic case for smarter code is already stronger than the cultural habit of brute‑forcing everything.

Messer’s historical perspective tied these threads together. He reminded the audience that from 2004 to 2009, performance at U.S. Department of Energy leadership computing centers increased by roughly a factor of 1,000—far beyond what raw Moore’s Law would suggest—thanks to coordinated investments in processors, memory systems, interconnects, and algorithms. Today, he argued, the context has changed. Moore’s Law gains are modest, industrial AI investments dwarf those of scientific computing, and upcoming systems like NERSC’s successor to Perlmutter are likely to offer tremendous throughput in reduced precision while not always improving traditional double‑precision benchmarks for legacy codes.

That shift makes questions of precision and energy impossible to separate. Many of the scientific problems that justify these machines depend on delicate cancellations among large terms, and genuinely need trustworthy FP64 arithmetic somewhere in the stack. Messer discussed mixed‑precision strategies—using low precision to get close, using it to precondition difficult linear systems, and then selectively refining in higher precision—as a way to reconcile those needs with the hardware we are actually getting. But he also noted the cost: software emulation of higher precision on low‑precision units can double memory usage, cutting into the very capacity that makes a leadership system compelling. In a world where memory, power, and precision all constrain each other, the question of which simulations deserve to run flat‑out becomes sharper.

There was an unspoken question hanging over many of these sessions: when the same cabinets and cooling loops can host almost any workload, what signals—technical or cultural—do we use to decide which ones feel most aligned with the future we want to build?

Given how much of this compute still ultimately runs on energy systems built around extracting and burning finite hydrocarbons, it feels responsible to use every watt in ways that hasten the day we no longer need them.

About the author: Kevin Jackson is an analyst at Intersect 360 Research, a market intelligence, research, and consulting advisory practice focused on HPC data center trends, AI, cloud, big data, and hyperscale. He is the former editor of AIwire. 

(Feature art courtesy of Energy HPC & AIConference.)

The post Finding Energy at the Rice University HPC & AI Conference appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 15:32

Savannah Guthrie thanked her colleagues for "caring about my mom as much as I do" in her visit to the studio since Nancy Guthrie's disappearance.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 15:11

ALISO VIEJO, Calif., March 5, 2026 — ENET, a member of the Network Infrastructure division of NSI Industries, has introduced its new 1.6T DR8 OSFP224 optical transceiver. This solution is designed for the latest AI, high-performance computing (HPC), and hyperscale data center environments using 224G electrical signaling.

Credit: ENET

The ENET 1.6T DR8 OSFP224 offers 1.6 terabits per second of total throughput over eight 200G PAM4 electrical lanes. Built for high-density switching and GPU-driven AI clusters, it supports scalable interconnects for spine, leaf, and accelerator topologies, ensuring strong signal integrity and low error rates over parallel single-mode fiber.

With its OSFP224 form factor, this transceiver keeps pace with evolving switch and accelerator technologies supporting 200G/Lambda interfaces. It helps data center operators move toward higher switch capacities, denser port counts, and better power efficiency.

Key Features

  • 1.6Tb/s aggregate data rate
  • 8 x 200G PAM4 electrical lanes
  • DR8 parallel single-mode fiber interface
  • OSFP224 form factor supporting 224G electrical signaling
  • Hardware supports InfinBand or Ethernet Protocol
  • Designed for AI, HPC, and hyperscale data center fabrics

“As AI models grow larger and clusters become more complex, networks need to offer consistent, high-speed performance,” said Jason Barrette, VP of Sales and Operations at ENET. “Our 1.6T DR8 OSFP224 is designed for demanding GPU interconnects and advanced switching environments, where bandwidth, density, and reliability are crucial for maximizing computing power.”

Built-in digital diagnostics via CMIS 5.3 allow users to monitor optical power, temperature, voltage, and other performance metrics in real time, making it easier to manage large-scale networks proactively.

The ENET 1.6T DR8 OSFP224 is available for qualification and deployment. Visit ENETusa.com or contact Sales@ENETusa.com.

About ENET

ENET manufactures and distributes network peripheral devices. Our product portfolio consists of OEM Equivalent and customized Optical Transceivers, Fiber, Copper, and OEM Compatible Cables and Fiber Media Converters. Our support team works alongside our customers to provide guidance in the pre and post sales process by providing technical information pertinent to their specific network environment. ENET enables our customers to achieve their overall business objectives including maximizing IT budgets, increased product availability, shorter lead times, and superior customer support.


Source: ENET

The post ENET Releases OSFP224 Optical Transceiver for Next-Gen Data Centers and AI Applications appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 15:10

Lawsuit says president does not have authority to impose levies and demands refunds from federal government

A coalition of Democratic attorneys general and governors across 24 US states are suing Donald Trump to block his latest round of tariffs.

The White House is planning to enact a new 15% tariff on all imports after the supreme court declared Trump’s “liberation day” tariffs illegal. The tariffs have yet to go into effect, though the White House said the new rate would start this week.

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2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 15:06
  • All World Cup matches to break after 22 minutes of each half

  • Adverts can be either normal breaks or split-screen version

ITV is in talks with its commercial partners about showing adverts during the mid-half drinks stoppages that will take place in every match at this summer’s World Cup.

Global broadcasters have been briefed on Fifa’s stipulations for the three-minute hydration breaks, which will take place after 22 minutes of each half irrespective of the temperature.

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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 15:00

F-35 pilot based in Cyprus becomes first to destroy a target in combat – and celebrates with a single beer

In the clear skies above Jordan on Monday night, a British F-35 pilot made a small piece of history. Flying for four hours alongside two Typhoons, the radar picked up two Shahed drones. The squadron tactics instructor – whom the Guardian is not naming – hit the drones with two Asraam missiles.

In doing so he became the first pilot of the Royal Air Force’s stealth fighter jet to destroy a target in combat. It was, he said, very high stakes. In those scenarios, it is easy to hit a friendly target by mistake.

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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 15:00

I played the new class, which lets you decide whether you want to stare into the abyss, drown your enemies in fire, summon legions of demons or just become one yourself.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 15:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: AMD has been selling "Ryzen AI"-branded laptop processors for around a year and a half at this point. In addition to including modern CPU and GPU architectures, these are attempting to capitalize on the generative AI craze by offering chips with neural processing units (NPUs) suitable for running language and image-generation models locally, rather than on some company's server. But so far, AMD's desktop chips have lacked both these higher-performance NPUs and the Ryzen AI label. That changes today, at least a little: AMD is announcing its first three Ryzen AI chips for desktops using its AM5 CPU socket. These Ryzen AI 400-series CPUs are direct replacements for the Ryzen 8000G processors, rather than the Ryzen 9000-series, and they combine Zen 5-based CPU cores, RDNA 3.5 GPU cores, and an NPU capable of 50 trillion operations per second (TOPS). This makes them AMD's first desktop chips to qualify for Microsoft's Copilot+ PC label, which enables a handful of unique Windows 11 features like Recall and Click to Do. The six chips AMD is announcing today -- the 65 W Ryzen AI 7 Pro 450G, Ryzen AI 5 Pro 440G, and Ryzen AI 5 Pro 435G, along with low-power 35 W "GE" variants -- all bear AMD's "Ryzen Pro" branding as well, which means they support a handful of device management capabilities that are important for business PCs managed by IT departments. At this point, it doesn't seem as though AMD will be offering boxed versions to regular consumers; the Ryzen AI desktop chips will appear mainly in business PCs that don't need a dedicated graphics card but still benefit from more robust graphics than AMD offers in regular Ryzen desktop CPUs. Like past G-series Ryzen chips, these are essentially laptop silicon repackaged for desktop systems. They share most of their specs in common with Ryzen AI 300 laptop processors, despite their Ryzen AI 400-series branding. The two chip generations are extremely similar overall, but the Ryzen AI 400-series laptop CPUs include slightly faster 55 TOPS NPUs.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 14:55
John Becker

JOHN BECKER
Staff Reporter

For the first time in their 136-year history, the Delaware Fightin’ Blue Hens won a bowl game at the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) level. After an Auburn loss in the Iron Bowl, a spot opened up for Delaware, and so, despite being originally ineligible for a bowl game in their first FBS season, the Blue Hens went bowling.

On Dec. 6, 2025, it was announced that Delaware would be traveling to Mobile, Alabama, to play in the 27th annual 68 Ventures Bowl. The Blue Hens took on the University of Louisiana  Ragin’ Cajuns from the Sun Belt Conference. Louisiana has made eight straight bowl games, having the tenth-longest active streak of bowl appearances in college football.

Delaware had a memorable year in its inaugural season in the FBS. The Blue Hens’ starting quarterback, Nick Minicucci, threw for 3,683 yards this season, the fourth most in the NCAA and the most in Conference USA (CUSA). 

However, it should be noted that the title of starting quarterback did not always belong to Minicucci. At the beginning of the year, Minicucci was the backup quarterback behind Zach Marker, who suffered a season-ending injury early in Delaware’s first game of the season against Delaware State University.

Delaware averaged more yards per game than any other team in CUSA and placed eighth in the conference for rushing yards per game. In the defensive CUSA standings, Delaware finished with a defense that ranked eighth for defensive yards allowed and 10th for touchdowns allowed.

Louisiana had a similar beginning to its season. Its quarterback, Lunch Winfield, was not the starter at the beginning of the year. It was originally Walker Howard, but after recovering from an injury during the first game of the season, he was unable to claim the starting job back from Winfield. 

For the Ragin’ Cajuns, however, the statistical story was much different from the Blue Hens’ this season. 

Louisiana finished 11th in the rankings of offensive yards per game while also averaging the fifth most rushing yards per game in the Sun Belt Conference. The crux of Louisiana’s offensive struggles lay in its passing game, which ranked 13th in the conference in passing yards per game. 

On the defensive side of the ball, Louisiana was a middle-of-the-pack team, ranking sixth in its conference for defensive yards allowed and fifth for touchdowns allowed this season.

The 68 Ventures Bowl opened with Louisiana coming out of the gate struggling on offense. On the fifth play of its drive, Winfield would complete a 40-yard pass to tight end Caden Jensen, setting up a missed 39-yard field goal that set the tone for a dismal first quarter for the Ragin’ Cajun offense. 

During Delaware’s first offensive drive of the game, it suffered a three-and-out ending with quarterback Minicucci being sacked by outside linebacker Cameron Whitfield.

After a slow start to the 68 Ventures Bowl, Delaware defensive back Nate Evans grabbed a touchdown-stopping interception in the endzone.

Delaware’s drive started with four methodical plays alternating between the run and the pass for 19 yards. Delaware would then go with a hand-off to running back Jo Silver, who took off through an open hole in the gap, juking out just one defender and turning on the afterburners for a 61-yard rushing touchdown, putting the first points on the board for the 68 Ventures Bowl. The score was now 7-0 in Delaware’s favor.

Louisiana responded with a long 16-play scoring drive that would take the game into the second quarter. The Ragin’ Cajuns made it 70 yards down the field and were forced to attempt a 22-yard field goal. This time, kicker Tony Sterner successfully put it through the uprights, giving Louisiana its first points of the game, making the score 7-3.

Yet, during that drive, Winfield took a massive Madden-esque hitstick tackle from Delaware safety KT Seay. This was one of many hits the Louisiana quarterback would take in this game, eventually causing him to sit out a series in the second quarter and forcing him to manage the injury throughout the rest of the game.

Delaware was the only team to score points in the second quarter that day, after a 12-play drive that set up kicker Nate Reed for his first field goal of the day, making the score 10-3, still favoring the Blue Hens.

The third quarter began with intense action as Delaware opened up the second half by flying 70 yards down the field in only six plays. The drive was capped off by a 35-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Sean Wilson. Minicucci was able to step up into the pocket and heave the ball about 40 yards through the air to his wide-open target for a quick score that extended the Blue Hens’ lead to 14 points.

Delaware proceeded to shut down the Ragin’ Cajun offense in three plays on their first defensive appearance of the second half.

The Blue Hens added on to the score offensively with a 10-play drive that featured six different ball handlers and resulted in a 27-yard field goal from Reed. This drive gave Delaware its largest lead of the game at 20-3.

The following drive would be the beginning of Louisiana’s valiant comeback attempt. The Ragin’ Cajuns were able to set up Sterner for a 39-yard field goal that cut their deficit to 14 points.

Delaware looked to retaliate with equal force by attempting a field goal of its own. Unfortunately for the Blue Hens, Reed was blocked by the left arm of high-jumping defensive end Jordan Lawson and the ball was recovered by the Ragin’ Cajuns.

With a major momentum shift in the game, Louisiana was then set up on the Delaware 46-yard line for what would be its only touchdown of the game. Winfield was able to launch a quick 8-yard pass down the middle of the field to wide receiver Shelton Sampson Jr. for a Ragin’ Cajun touchdown, making the score 20-13 and narrowing the matchup to a one-possession contest.

Delaware proceeded to have a clock-eating drive that cut four minutes and 42 seconds off the game clock, but did not score points after turning the ball over on downs on an unsuccessful fourth-and-two passing attempt.

Louisiana had the chance to score starting at its own 42-yard line, but would throw away this opportunity after a few short plays. 

Disaster struck on the fourth play of the drive when Winfield lost control of the snap, and Delaware linebacker Marje Mulumba jumped on the ball and recovered the fumble.

The Ragin’ Cajuns had their final opportunity to make a comeback on the last drive of the game with one minute and 50 seconds left from their own 7-yard line. Louisiana would have to drive 93 yards down the field to tie the game. The Ragin’ Cajuns proceeded to have a methodical 12-play drive that got them seven yards away from the Delaware endzone.

With the pressure of the bowl game on its shoulders, Louisiana set up its final play of the game. With two seconds left on the clock, Winfield took the snap from the shotgun and dropped back. Facing pressure from Blue Hen defensive end Noah Mathews, he decided to throw the ball quickly before taking a hit.

Winfield was forced to squeeze a hurried pass to Jensen in between the zones of three Delaware defenders. The ball came slightly early to Jensen and bounced off his right hand and then his helmet. Before Jensen could get a chance to corral the ball, he was laid out by Seay and the game was over. The Blue Hens had stood strong on defense and won the game.

Delaware won every MVP award at the 68 Ventures Bowl. Silver won the game’s Overall MVP award, rushing for 116 yards and one rushing touchdown on 14 carries. Minicucci won the Offensive MVP award, completing 19 of 30 passes for 176 yards and one touchdown. 

Evans won the Defensive MVP award with five tackles, a pass deflection, and an interception. Reed won the Special Teams MVP award, making two of three field goals and two of two extra points for a total of eight points.

The Blue Hens won their first bowl game in their first bowl appearance, a historic feat captured in their first FBS season. Delaware was the only team of two FBS new members this season to win their bowl, as the Missouri State University Bears lost their bowl game. 

In a season of firsts, the Blue Hens managed to come out on top in their final game of the season.


Analysis: Delaware football holds on late to beat Louisiana 20-13 in their first-ever bowl game was first posted on March 5, 2026 at 2:55 pm.
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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 14:54

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 14:51

Top officials have been heavily targeted, but experts and officials say the ruling structure in Tehran has remained surprisingly resilient.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 14:50

Critics sceptical Pentagon chief’s plan for increased military force – amid rising US intervention – will stop drug gangs

Pete Hegseth, the US defence secretary, has urged Latin American countries to adopt a more aggressive approach against drug cartels, warning that the Trump administration may otherwise act unilaterally in the region.

Hegseth’s remarks come in a context of escalating US intervention in the region, both militarily and in elections, which culminated in the capture of Venezuelan dictator Nicolás Maduro – the first US ground military attack on a South American country.

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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 14:44

Lawmakers will outlaw use of 31 meat-related names as part of efforts to help livestock farmers in food supply markets

EU lawmakers have agreed to ban meaty names such as steak and bacon for vegetarian and vegan foods, but “veggie burgers” and “meat-free sausages” will remain on the table.

Negotiators from the European parliament and EU council of ministers found a recipe for compromise on rules for food names on Thursday, although critics said they were creating needless complexity.

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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 14:41

After the Greens’ byelection win, PM’s failure to make a progressive offer has angered Labour’s soft-left majority

But for the Iran crisis, Labour’s first major policy announcement since the party’s calamitous defeat in the Gorton and Denton byelection would have been arguably the biggest political story of the week.

Shabana Mahmood, the home secretary, pressed ahead with what is intended to be the party’s full-throated answer to the competition it faces from Reform UK as she declared an end to permanent refugee status and the removal of state support from some asylum seekers.

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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 14:41

As part of his Maha agenda, health secretary wants schools to incorporate 40 hours of instruction

Health secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr unveiled a new effort on Thursday aimed at increasing the amount of nutrition education taught in medical schools.

For months, Kennedy has urged medical schools to expand their nutrition curriculum and warned that institutions refusing to do so could face cuts to federal funding, while those that adopt the changes may receive public acknowledgment.

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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 14:38

The court of justice said Portugal had committed serious infringements of EU environmental law

Portugal has been fined €10m (£8.7m) by the EU’s court of justice for failing to comply with environmental laws that require it to protect biodiversity. It has also been ordered to pay €41,250 a day until it complies with a previous court order made in 2019.

The court said it was imposing the maximum fine possible to “encourage” Portugal to bring the infringement to an end.

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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 14:35

FTSE 100 and France’s CAC down 1.5%; Germany’s DAX and Italy’s FTSE MIB down 1.6%; the Dow Jones was down 2%

A market sell-off resumed on both sides of the Atlantic on Thursday as fears mounted that there would be no quick resolution to the conflict in the Middle East.

Early gains in European markets, which had followed a rebound in Asia, were wiped out in later trading and Wall Street was also trading sharply lower by early afternoon in New York.

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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 14:30

In leaked chats, students at Florida International University referenced Nazis and made antisemitic and racist remarks

It only took three weeks for a group chat for conservative students at Florida International University (FIU) to become a place where participants eagerly used racist slurs, prompting widespread condemnation from community leaders.

Abel Alexander Carvajal, secretary of Miami-Dade county’s Republican party and a student at FIU’s College of Law, reportedly started the chat after the killing of Charlie Kirk, the founder of Turning Point USA, in September 2025.

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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 14:29

Just days after launching a war against Iran, President Donald Trump favorably compared his efforts eliminating Iran’s nuclear weapons capability to a 2015 deal negotiated by one of his predecessors. President Barack Obama’s nuclear agreement with Iran was in force until 2018, when Trump pulled the U.S. out during his first term.

Taking questions in the Oval Office on March 3 with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, Trump said that the agreement he pulled out of "gave (Iran) the right to have top-of-the-line nuclear weapons."

His comments echoed Trump’s remarks the day before at a Medal of Honor ceremony. 

"I was very proud to have knocked out the Iran nuclear deal by President Barack Hussein Obama," Trump said. "That was a horrible, horrible, dangerous document. They were on the road to getting (a nuclear weapon) legitimately, through a deal that was signed foolishly by our country."

And on March 4, Trump said at a roundtable on energy prices that the nuclear deal "was a route to a nuclear weapon."

Multiple experts told PolitiFact that, whatever its shortcomings, the Iran nuclear agreement never allowed Iran the "right" to "legitimately" possess nuclear weapons, "top-of-the-line" or otherwise.

The 2015 agreement — also known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, or JCPOA — "absolutely did not give Iran ‘the right to have top-of-the-line nuclear weapons,’" said Daryl G. Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association.

The White House referred PolitiFact to Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt’s March 4 briefing remarks, in which she referred to "stupid and naive deals that put Iran on the path of developing nuclear bombs."

"After years of endless appeasement and empty statements from politicians on both sides of the political aisle in this town, President Trump is finally the man of action," Leavitt said. "President Trump is holding these monsters accountable and permanently extinguishing their nuclear ambitions."

What was the Iran nuclear agreement?

Obama had campaigned on a promise to ensure that Iran did not obtain a nuclear weapon. The negotiated agreement was signed in 2015 by the United States and Iran as well as China, Russia, France, Germany and the United Kingdom.

Under the deal, Iran agreed to refrain from pursuing nuclear weapons and to allow continuous monitoring of its compliance in exchange for relief from economic sanctions. Different parts of the agreement were scheduled to last between 10 and 25 years; some elements were to last indefinitely. Obama officials hoped for future renegotiations.

Iran agreed to relinquish 97% of its enriched uranium stockpile and 70% of its centrifuges, which are machines used to enrich uranium. It also agreed to stop plutonium production and to dismantle a plutonium reactor. If Iran broke any of these pledges, the other signatories would be able to reimpose sanctions, a process known as a "snapback" provision.

Some Democrats joined Republicans in opposing the agreement, but they did not have enough votes to block the deal. Critics said the agreement didn’t address other actions by Iran, including support for terrorism, and that it posed a threat to Israel.

Over the 28 months the deal was in effect, the International Atomic Energy Agency said it found Iran committed no violations, aside from some minor infractions that were addressed. 

When Trump ran for his first term, he echoed many of the critics’ original concerns and promised to renegotiate the agreement. 

He said he believed the deal should have allowed international weapons inspectors to have greater access to Iranian military sites. He also said it should have addressed Iran’s missile program, including intercontinental ballistic missiles, which could reach the U.S. mainland. He also criticized the deal for failing to rein in Iran’s support of sectarian violence in places such as Syria and Yemen.

In 2018, Trump pulled the U.S. out of the deal. The U.S. then imposed economic sanctions on Iran, and Iran reduced its compliance with the deal, including curbing compliance with international inspectors.

In 2025, Trump ordered the U.S. military to join Israel in bombing nuclear sites in Iran, seeking to end the nuclear program by force rather than negotiation. Then, on Feb. 28, Trump launched a new and larger air campaign that both sought to degrade Iran’s military capabilities and take out many members of its political and military leadership.

Iranians flash the victory sign while celebrating on a street in northern Tehran, Iran, on April 2, 2015, after Iran's nuclear agreement with world powers was reached. (AP)

Why the 2015 agreement did not allow Iran to legitimately possess a nuclear weapon

The problem with Trump’s recent phrasings, experts said, is that he said the Iran nuclear agreement conferred upon Iran the right to have nuclear weapons, and to have those weapons legitimately. That’s false.

The agreement was premised on Iran continuing to belong to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, or NPT, which requires Iran to agree to forgo developing or acquiring nuclear weapons.

By signing the 2015 agreement, Iran "explicitly committed not to have a nuclear weapon, reflecting their NPT commitment not to have one," said Richard Nephew, who worked for the U.S. government on Iranian issues during the Biden administration. "The entire purpose of the deal was to make sure that they could not do so." 

While some aspects of the agreement would phase out after 10 to 25 years, "there was no sunset of the non-weapons obligation," he said.

This doesn’t mean that, at some point, Iran couldn’t have ended up with nuclear weapons — but if it did so, it would have occurred by contravening the agreement, not by exercising a right it granted.

"Any acquisition of nuclear weapons, under any circumstances, while Iran is a member of the NPT, cannot be regarded as ‘legitimate,’" said Brendan Green, a University of Cincinnati political scientist who specializes in nuclear weapons policy.

In one scenario cited by the deal’s critics, Iran, as a continuing signatory to the treaty, would have maintained the right to generate civilian nuclear energy. Ten years into the deal, the snapback provisions were scheduled to go away and Iran would have begun to get increasing rights to nuclear enrichment capabilities, Green said. 

At that point, Iran could have spurned either the spirit or the letter of its agreements — or both — by diverting this nuclear enrichment material into weapons development. But that would have been contrary to the agreement, and contrary to the NPT — not something blessed by the agreement.

"If Iran abused that enrichment capability, it could be used to produce nuclear material necessary for a nuclear weapon," said Gary Samore, a politics professor at Brandeis University’s Crown Center for Middle East Studies.

Even if it was "executed perfectly," Green said, the agreement "was always going to put Iran in a position where it would be able to sprint for a bomb if it chose to do so. The debate was about whether this was an acceptable outcome, or whether some kind of additional measures, ranging from war to further negotiations, would be necessary before the deal’s expiration."

Our ruling

Trump said the nuclear agreement "gave (Iran) the right to have top-of-the-line nuclear weapons."

The nuclear agreement did not bless any Iranian "right" to nuclear weapons, top-of-the-line or otherwise. To the contrary, Iran could have acquired or developed a nuclear weapon by defying the terms of the nuclear agreement.

That’s because the agreement was based on Iran’s continued adherence to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which Iran signed in 1970. This treaty deems Iran a non-nuclear state, meaning it promised to forgo developing or acquiring nuclear weapons.

We rate the statement False.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 14:24

The assassination of Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei​ in the early hours of the war​ has raised a simple but enormously consequential question: Who will replace him?

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 14:22

CMA says it wants to ensure market ‘working well for consumers’ as more Britons forced to seek private care

The UK’s competition watchdog has launched a review into the £8bn private dentistry market after the price of a consultation increased by nearly 25% over a two-year period.

One in five people in Great Britain sought private dental care in 2024 in part because they could not access NHS treatment. Announcing its investigation, the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) said it wanted to make sure the market was “working well for UK consumers”.

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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 14:19

The memory management in DOS is simple, but that simplicity may be deceptive. There are several rather interesting pitfalls that programming documentation often does not mention.

↫ Michal Necasek at the OS/2 Museum

A must-read for people writing software for earlier DOS versions.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 14:17

The men, sent to Africa after completing criminal sentences in the US, are from Cuba, Jamaica and Yemen

Three men deported by the US to Eswatini – rather than their home countries – have filed a case against Eswatini’s government with the African Union’s human rights body, claiming their detention was an unlawful violation of their rights.

Two of the claimants, from Cuba and Yemen, have been in prison in Eswatini, formerly Swaziland, for eight months. The third, Orville Etoria, was repatriated to his home country, Jamaica, in September.

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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 14:08

Urgent request to dock is submitted by vessel after US submarine sank Iranian warship in same area on Tuesday

Sri Lanka has evacuated 208 crew members from an Iranian navy vessel that made an emergency request to dock, a day after a US submarine strike sank another Iranian frigate, killing more than 80 people on board.

Sri Lanka’s president, Anura Kumara Dissanayake, on Thursday confirmed that the country’s navy would take over Iranian military support ship IRIS Bushehr and allow it to dock at the north-eastern port of Trincomalee.

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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 14:05

The Texas Republican admitted Wednesday that he had a relationship with the staffer, who later died by suicide.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 14:02

The new 13-inch Neo has just the right feature mix for the money and a great look and feel that's going to make it tough to beat.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 14:01

Some Pint parts are custom-made by FM (or licenced out, whatever) and 100% identical replacements can only be bought from them. Some parts aren't and can be bought directly from the supplier. Also listed are some parts which are similar to what's publicly available, but are custom. If you know any of the TO BE DETERMINED parts, let me know

General:

The frame rails are weirdly similar to cut-down 1 1/2" x 3/4" x 1/8" (38.1mm x 19mm x 3.2mm) aluminium U channel, but have an additional curved section on the outside so aren't the same

Main CPU (1): STM32F103R8T6

I'd assume all circuit board components are off-the-shelf, but there's not much point listing them all

Battery cells (15): Sony | Murata VTC5D 18650 2800mAh 25A (I expect this link to brick itself)

Screws/Bolts:

The first 4 screws are anodized black. All are probably stainless steel

Main screws (20): M4 x 10mm T20 Torx Countersunk

Bottom screws long (4): M4 x 50mm T20 Torx Countersunk

Bottom screws short (2): M4 x 14mm T20 Torx Countersunk

Axle bolts (4): Custom-made M8 T30 with 1.6mm thick 13mm diameter head, ~11mm long 8mm diameter neck, ~25mm long thread, total length 37mm. Could probably use a thin-head 35mm M8

Controller box screws (8): M4 x 8mm F20-B5 lobe security screw (example)

Battery box screws (8): Same

Controller board screws (6): M3x4mm button head ph1 (is it philips head 1?)

Hub screws (7): M5 x 10mm Socket Head w/4mm Socket

Battery BMS hat screws (2): TO BE DETERMINED, philips

Axle wire guide screws (4): TO BE DETERMINED, philips

Front/back light bar screws (2): TO BE DETERMINED, philips

Connectors/Wires:

Motor connector, controller side: OW-BCU-09PMMP-LC7001

Motor connector, motor side: OW-BCU-09BFDM-LL7A01 (comes with cable)

Footpad connector, controller side: AU-05PMMP-LC7001

Footpad connector, footpad side: AU-05BFFM-LL7A02 (comes with cable, cable length is the last 2 digits of the serial numb, the image is not accurate but the datasheet is what matters)

The footpad sensor has an internal 3 pin DuPont connector covered in hot glue (is that even its real name? whatever, they're everywhere). The footpad side is the female side

Main power connectors: All xt60, there's 3 of each gender, note that the controller side of the BMS is wired backwards

Most of the internal connectors are JST GH connectors so I won't list each serial number, just use the data sheet

Battery-controller data, controller side (1): 6 pin

BMS-controller data, controller side (1): 6 pin (only 3 pins are wired)

Lightbar connector (3): 3 pin

Power button connector (1): 2 pin

BMS charge connector (1): TO BE DETERMINED

The BMS-battery balance connector is a 26-pin JST ZPD, just use the data sheet

Charge connector, pint side (1): TO BE DETERMINED

Charge connector, charger side (1): TO BE DETERMINED, said to be a 2 pin female mini DIN but that is very non-specific

Controller-battery cable (1): TO BE DETERMINED, it's a 8 core shielded cable with 2 larger wires, doesn't say what it is on it

Credits:

CPU, BMS balance connector, cells: https://github.com/jlpoltrack/onewheel/tree/master?tab=readme-ov-file

Some connectors: https://pev.dev/t/onewheel-pint-motor-and-footpad-connector-digikey/2593

submitted by /u/Waity5
[link] [comments]

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 14:00

OpenAI today released GPT-5.4, an upgraded ChatGPT model designed to be faster, cheaper, and more accurate for workplace tasks. The update also introduces tools that let ChatGPT work directly inside Excel and Google Sheets. Axios reports: GPT-5.4 is designed to be less error-prone, more efficient and better at workplace tasks like drafting documents, OpenAI said. The new model can create files in fewer tries with less back-and-forth than prior models, the company said. GPT-5.4 outperformed office workers 83% of the time on GDPval, an OpenAI benchmark measuring performance on real-world tasks across 44 occupations. The model can also solve problems using fewer tokens, OpenAI says -- which can translate to faster responses and lower costs. The company is also debuting OpenAI for Financial Services, a set of new tools that includes the version of ChatGPT that runs inside spreadsheets and new apps and skills within ChatGPT. Partners include FactSet, MSCI, Third Bridge and Moody's.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 13:58

John Healey lambasts opposition politicians for seeking to turn Donald Trump and the US against Keir Starmer

The defence secretary, John Healey, has accused opposition politicians of deliberately undermining the UK’s relationship with Donald Trump, saying it was “unpatriotic” for MPs to seek to turn the US against Keir Starmer.

Healey, speaking to the Guardian at RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus, which was hit by a drone strike over the weekend, said he had been shocked at the way politicians like Nigel Farage had sought to “undermine” the UK’s relationship with the US.

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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 13:58

Pete Hegseth, US secretary of defense, during a news conference at the Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia, US, on Monday, March 2, 2026. Hegseth rejected the idea that the war against Iran would be the sort of endless conflict that President Donald Trump swore to avoid when he took office a second time, saying "our generation knows better." Photographer: Stefani Reynolds/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Pete Hegseth, during a news conference at the Pentagon on March 2, 2026, where he rejected the idea that the war against Iran would be the sort of endless conflict that President Donald Trump swore to avoid when he took office a second time. Photo: Stefani Reynolds/Bloomberg via Getty Images

The United States is waging a religious war. This is, at least, how dozens of fanatical U.S. military commanders understand President Donald Trump’s illegal assault on Iran: a messianic battle to bring about Jesus Christ’s return.

“President Trump has been anointed by Jesus to light the signal fire in Iran to cause Armageddon and mark his return to Earth,” one military commander told his combat unit, which could be deployed to fight in Iran “at any moment,” according to a complaint reportedly filed by one of the unit’s officers to a military watchdog group.

The Military Religious Freedom Foundation says it has been “inundated” with more than 200 calls across dozens of military installations, including 110 complaints filed between Saturday morning and Monday evening, from service members reporting their commanders have invoked similar extremist rhetoric of Christian Zionist messianism when justifying the unprovoked war on Iran.

The complaints, which were first reported by independent journalist Jonathan Larsen and have garnered international media attention, offer disturbing insight into the eschatology driving this murderous operation for a significant number of military leaders. Perhaps this is unsurprising, given that U.S. War Secretary Pete Hegseth is an open evangelical Christian nationalist who has remade military leadership to align with his extremist worldview.

It would be a mistake, though, to take these chilling end times invocations as some skeleton key to understanding the foundational, undergirding reason behind Trump’s reckless death-dealing in Iran. The U.S. and Israel-led decimation of the Middle East region is overdetermined; too many causes, all reprehensible, account for Trump’s waging war. To properly understand Trumpian fascism is to not reduce one cause to another, but to appreciate how they function in a chaotic constellation. Factors at play include: annihilatory Christian Zionism; Israel’s genocidal Zionist project of territorial dominance; the American president’s unrestrained and irrepressible narcissism and drive to be a Great Man of history, idiocy, and miscalculation; and the continuity of bipartisan willingness to shed Arab and Muslim blood in the service of flailing U.S. hegemony.

Related

Trump’s Pick for Israel Ambassador Leads Tours That Leave Out Palestinians — and Promote End of Days Theology

All of these factors have played a part in previous illegal U.S. assaults on the Middle East, albeit to different degrees. As Larsen, the journalist, noted, President George W. Bush “referred to the American ‘crusade’ against terrorism” to justify his forever wars. Still, the open Christian extremism of Hegseth’s military leadership marks a certain shift. So, too, does the extremity of Trump’s derangement and self-regard. But Islamophobic blood lust, the framework of civilizational clash between Judeo-Christian forces and Islamist threats, and an arrogant and foolish U.S. leadership are not new, even if the worst elements are now heightened and unvarnished by earlier myths of spreading democracy and nation-building.

Political and military leaders do not need to share in apocalyptic theological commitments to enable and enact end times. The U.S. and its allies have been willing to unleash apocalyptic destruction without a driving religious belief in Jesus’s imminent return. With bipartisan support, and under the leadership of a Democratic president, U.S.-backed Israeli forces reduced Gaza to a wasteland. We can hardly place blame for the U.S. role in that genocide on American Christian Zionists alone.

Related

Trump’s Orwellian Board of Peace Consists Entirely of Human Rights Abusers

I’m not saying that nothing is new here: It is a genuinely disturbing development that so many service members have described, according to the watchdog, their commanders speak with “unrestricted euphoria” about “how bloody all of this must become in order to fulfill and be in 100% accordance with fundamentalist Christian end of the world eschatology.”

Authors Naomi Klein and Astra Taylor described the far-right ideology of Trump and his followers as one of “end times fascism.” Klein and Taylor note that European 20th-century fascism may have had what philosopher Umberto Eco called an Armageddon complex, “a fixation on vanquishing enemies in a grand final battle,” but these earlier fascist movements had a “vision for a future golden age after the bloodbath that, for its in-group, would be peaceful, pastoral and purified.” According to Klein and Taylor, Trumpian fascism is marked instead by an orientation only to destruction.

In one sense, Trump’s Iran war confirms this hypothesis. It is obliteration without vision or any appreciation for consequences. But what the bombardment really shows is not the way Trumpian fascism embodies some new embrace of apocalypticism. It is, like Trump’s regime and its adherents, a gruesome pastiche of American fascistic tendencies old and new, including white nationalism, evangelical Christianity, Zionism, imperialism, authoritarian techno-capitalism, and genocidal war. As ever, the actual end times will be reserved for the whole civilian lifeworlds wiped out by our war machines.

The post Military Leaders See Iran War as “God’s Divine Plan” — a Chilling Turn for Trump’s Fascism appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 13:56

Lower house votes in favour of polarising law after rapid increase in population and attack on grazing farm animals

Wolf hunting will be allowed in Germany under legislation passed by the lower house of parliament in response to a rapidly growing population and a sharp rise in attacks on livestock.

The return and growth of the wolf population in the last three decades has emerged as a wedge issue in Germany, the land of the Brothers Grimm who popularised the spectre of the Big Bad Wolf.

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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 13:50

SAN JOSE, Calif., March 5, 2026 — Rambus Inc., a premier chip and silicon IP provider making data faster and safer, today announced the industry’s leading HBM4E Memory Controller IP, extending its market leadership in HBM IP. This new solution delivers breakthrough performance with advanced reliability features enabling designers to address the demanding memory bandwidth requirements of next-generation AI accelerators and graphics processing units (GPUs).

Rambus HBM4E Controller

“Given the insatiable bandwidth demands of AI, it’s imperative for the memory ecosystem to continue aggressively advancing memory performance,” said Simon Blake-Wilson, SVP and general manager of Silicon IP, at Rambus. “As a leading silicon IP provider for AI applications, we are bringing the industry’s leading HBM4E Controller IP solution to the market as a key enabler for breakthrough performance in next-generation AI processors and accelerators.”

“HBM4E represents a significant milestone for HBM technology, delivering unprecedented performance for advanced AI and HPC workloads,” said Ben Rhew, corporate vice president and the head of the Foundry IP Development Team at Samsung Electronics. “HBM4E IP solutions will be essential for broad industry adoption, and Samsung looks forward to collaborating closely with Rambus and the wider ecosystem to drive innovation in AI.”

“HBM bandwidth is one of the main bottlenecks on LLM performance, and we’re excited by efforts across the industry to push it further,” said Reiner Pope, co-founder and CEO at MatX.

“AI processors and accelerators need high-performance, high-density HBM memory for the massive computational requirements of AI workloads,” said Soo Kyoum Kim, program associate vice president, Memory Semiconductors at IDC. “As the requirements of AI processors and accelerators continue their rapid rise, HBM solutions must advance apace. HBM4E IP reaching the market now will be an essential building block for designers of cutting-edge AI hardware.”

Rambus HBM4E Controller IP Features

The Rambus HBM4E Controller enables a new generation of HBM memory deployments for cutting-edge AI accelerators, graphics and HPC applications. The HBM4E Controller is capable of supporting operation up to 16 Gigabits per second (Gbps) per pin providing an unprecedented throughput of 4.1 Terabytes per second (TB/s) to each memory device. For an AI accelerator with eight attached HBM4E devices, this translates to over 32 TB/s of memory bandwidth for next-generation AI workloads. The Rambus HBM4E Controller IP can be paired with third-party standard or TSV PHY solutions to instantiate a complete HBM4E memory subsystem in a 2.5D or 3D package as part of an AI SoC or custom base die solution.

Availability and More Information

The Rambus HBM4E Controller IP is the latest addition to the Rambus leading-edge portfolio of digital controller solutions. The HBM4E Controller is available for licensing, and early access design customers can engage today.

Learn more about the Rambus HBM4E Controller IP at https://www.rambus.com/interface-ip/hbm.

About Rambus Inc.

Rambus delivers industry-leading chips and silicon IP for the data center and AI infrastructure. With over three decades of advanced semiconductor experience, our products and technologies address the critical bottlenecks between memory and processing to accelerate data-intensive workloads. By enabling greater bandwidth, efficiency and security across next generation computing platforms, we make data faster and safer. For more information, visit rambus.com.


Source: Rambus Inc.

The post Rambus Sets New Benchmark for AI Memory Performance with Industry-Leading HBM4E Controller IP appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 13:47

Lawmakers cite ‘consistent pattern’ in which Americans are being killed ‘without justice or accountability’

More than 30 US senators have signed a letter demanding that the Trump administration open an independent investigation into the February killing of a 19-year-old American in the occupied West Bank, the ninth US citizen killed by Israeli soldiers or settlers since 2022.

The letter, led by Senator Chris Van Hollen of Maryland and addressed to the US secretary of state, Marco Rubio; the US attorney general, Pam Bondi; and the US ambassador to Israel, Mike Huckabee, asks for a US-led investigation and a full accounting of where all nine cases stand, and for the administration to brief Congress on the killing by 5 April. None of the cases have resulted in a criminal conviction.

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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 13:42

March 5, 2026 — You may have read about how artificial intelligence applications like ChatGPT were trained by ingesting as much freely available data on the internet as possible. It’s no secret that this has caused significant concern in research circles about how unfiltered data can affect AI-generated answers. But accuracy isn’t the only concern when it comes to training AI on “all the data.” The amount of resources it takes to ingest so much data to build the large language model (LLM) that forms the “brain” of one of these chatbots is enormous. Researchers who wish to explore LLMs, test and refine training algorithms or create project-specific chatbots for domain-specific research usually don’t have the same resources as companies like OpenAI or Google. These are exactly the types of issues that researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign (U. of I.) are trying to resolve.

An overview of how DELIFT fits into the model development pipeline.

Ishika Agarwal, a doctoral candidate at U. of I., is part of a team of researchers who used NCSA resources to create a new framework for training AI called DELIFT (Data Efficient Language model Instruction Fine-Tuning). Last year, they presented their work on DELIFT at the International Conference on Learning Representations (ICLR) in Singapore. They used NCSA’s Delta supercomputer to help test the DELIFT framework.

DELIFT is designed to train AI more efficiently – meaning faster and cheaper – by being “smarter” about what data is used in the training process. “DELIFT tries to reduce the amount of data that we use to train large language models because training is computationally intensive,” explained Agarwal. “ It calculates the interactions between data points in a dataset to ensure that there aren’t redundant, noisy or conflicting samples. All this ensures that your dataset is the smallest and most informative to train your model on.”

Ishika Agarwal, a doctoral candidate, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

One problem with training AI by giving it a bunch of data is that data doesn’t exist in a vacuum. There’s a lot of context around specific pieces of information. For instance, much of the data on the internet is redundant, and using it all to train an LLM is a waste of resources. Let’s say you want to train an LLM to understand that 1+1=2. At some point, the LLM no longer needs examples to learn the answer, even though there are likely millions of pages online that say that 1+1=2.

Some data also needs to be “unlocked” before other data can be understood. Simple math eventually builds to complex math, and in order for an LLM to understand complex physics equations, it would need to be trained on the simple stuff first.

“Understanding the dynamics of data is difficult because data can interact with each other in many ways,” said Agarwal. “DELIFT provides an intuitive way to understand and measure the dynamics of your data for various fine-tuning tasks.”

DELIFT is designed to train LLMs much more efficiently, ensuring that the data used to train an LLM is necessary and of high quality. Think of what DELIFT does as similar to getting a hint to solve a brain teaser – the hint could help you connect the dots to the answer. DELIFT does something similar by testing “samples” of data to see if they help the model solve other problems. As a result, DELIFT will occasionally outperform models that use 100% of a dataset.

“More data is not always good because data has to be high quality. If we train our language model on garbage, it’s only going to output garbage,” said Agarwal. “That’s why we see data selection methods often outperforming models that are trained on 100% of data. In data, ‘noise’ can refer to bad quality samples (mis-labeled, improper formatting, confusing characters, wrong answers, etc.), and ‘redundancy’ refers to duplicated samples that contain the same information (a model does not need to see both samples to learn the information).”

A defining aspect of research at institutions like U. of I. and NCSA is that these places strive to make the most of the limited resources required to run projects that use machines like Delta. Finding more efficient, less resource-intensive ways to produce the kinds of important research achievements the university is known for is just one of the many goals at NCSA. The fact that the Center supports the research Agarwal’s team is engaged in is just one example of how those intentions play out – DELIFT is specifically designed to do more with less.

“Data collection is an expensive task, time and money-wise, because it can involve human verification to make sure the data is of good quality,” said Agarwal. “But with DELIFT, we can prune out a lot of samples and ensure that we annotate samples that are informative. Furthermore, training on fewer data allows you to train models faster and with fewer resources.”

Needing fewer resources means that researchers who often work in resource-constrained environments can use a framework like DELIFT to scale down the requirements for their projects.

“I’m sure there are lots of use cases where folks want to train models for a very specific task, but aren’t able to do so because of resources,” said Agarwal. “DELIFT can try to alleviate some costs because it not only creates a smaller dataset, but it also creates a dataset that is targeted for a particular language model. If we know a language model has certain weaknesses, DELIFT will find those weaknesses and keep data that can ameliorate those weaknesses. So the dataset is both smaller and curated for your particular model.”

While DELIFT can help with projects with smaller datasets in mind, the question remains whether the same type of framework could help lower resource costs and improve the quality of results when applied to some of the world’s largest AI models.

“That’s actually a big research question!” said Agarwal. “We are currently looking into ways we can approximate the interactions between datasets, instead of directly computing it, to avoid the quadratic cost.”

As Agarwal’s team continues to work on these bigger questions, they are also working on new approaches to improve LLM training. They will continue to use NCSA resources as they tackle their next research question related to these same LLM issues.

“We’re working with NCSA to understand how to measure a model’s weaknesses, a sort of precursor to DELIFT,” said Agarwal. “To scope down the problem, we study the model’s weaknesses through a multilingual perspective. We find that models answer questions differently when prompted in different languages (English versus Hindi versus Spanish, etc.). Our preprint shows this phenomenon and finds ways to mitigate it. But we are currently working, using ACCESS resources, on measuring why this happens and where this comes from.”

Agarwal and her team used the U.S. National Science Foundation ACCESS program to get an allocation (CIS240550) on NCSA’s Delta supercomputer for work on the DELIFT framework. Their team is using allocation CIS260246 for their work on LLM language-specific knowledge.


Source: Megan Meave Johnson, NCSA

The post NCSA Resources Enable Development of Data-Efficient LLM Training Method ‘DELIFT’ appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 13:30

The US and Israel started a war that is escalating rapidly, with repercussions beyond the region too

There will be no quick or easy wins – even on US and Israeli terms. They have celebrated assassinating Iran’s supreme leader; their offensive has also killed more than 1,000 civilians so far, including scores of children, according to a US-based rights group. As Iran retaliates, hoping America’s allies will try to rein it back, it is targeting US bases and civilian sites across the region – even in Oman, which was at the forefront of efforts to stave off the war. Gulf powers are increasingly irate, though wary of acting on threats to go beyond defensive action. Israel has ordered hundreds of thousands of civilians to leave a vast swathe of southern Lebanon, blaming Hezbollah’s retaliation for the killing of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Those who warned that the US-Israeli attack on Iran would lead to war engulfing the Middle East have proved, if anything, conservative in their predictions. A Hezbollah-launched drone hit an RAF airbase in Cyprus at the weekend. On Wednesday, Azerbaijan reported strikes on an airbase (though Iran denied responsibility, as it did over a missile fired towards Turkey). The day before, the US sank an Iranian warship 2,000 miles away, in waters close to Sri Lanka, as it returned from multilateral exercises with India – killing at least 87 people. And governments around the world face soaring energy prices and rattled markets thanks to Iran’s chokehold on the strait of Hormuz.

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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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 13:26

Lawyers for Oren, Alon and Tal Alexander argued that the brothers were womanizers but not rapists

Oren, Alon and Tal Alexander surrounded themselves with beautiful women. Young and wealthy, they enjoyed sex and the pursuit of it. They flirted at nightclubs and on dating apps, and partied with potential hookups in the Hamptons, Aspen and other ritzy locales.

The brothers – two of them high-end real estate brokers known as “the A Team”, the other a private security executive – were certainly womanizers, their lawyer told jurors. But they aren’t the drink-spiking rapists and sex traffickers that federal prosecutors allege.

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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 13:01

Americans are now paying an average of $3.246 per gallon, up 26 cents since last week and the highest level since April 2025.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 13:00

OpenAI has new AI models for the second time this week.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 13:00
Shira Lerner

SHIRA LERNER
Staff Reporter

Climate change is widely discussed in all facets of life, but it can often feel overwhelming and unfixable. One way to begin tackling the issue of climate change is by bringing more awareness to it. 

Many forms of art, including fashion and photography, strive to bring public attention to climate change, species extinction and other consequences and irreversible damage being done to the earth. 

These art forms can convey information through methods that are familiar to consumers, thus making it more easily accessible, digestible and understandable.

The fashion industry is booming right now, with social media influencing many young people to give in to consumerism and participate in fast-moving fashion trends. This also means that pollution from the fashion industry is at an all-time high. 

The fashion industry and the United Nations understand the problem and are working together to find solutions. Statistics from their collaboration include a prediction for pollution levels to rise, possibly by 60 percent, by 2030 — just four years away. 

To underscore that prediction is the fact that total greenhouse gas emissions from textiles production, about 1.2 billion tons annually, are more than those of all international flights and maritime shipping combined.

“It’s absolutely terrifying,” Anna Greer, president of the university’s Sustainable Fashion Club (SFC), said. “It makes you never want to buy anything ever again.”

Greer is a junior fashion merchandising and management major with minors in fashion history and culture and business administration. As president of the SFC, she aims to educate people about the environmental impacts of the fashion industry. 

By presenting information about fashion cycles, outfit rewearing and consumerism, as well as holding events where club members can exchange clothing or DIY a new piece, Greer is using the relatable medium of fashion to increase awareness about environmental issues.

Photography, similar to fashion, is a form of art that many people interact with every day. The wide reach of photographs gives them power over people’s perception of serious issues such as climate change. 

Anna Connors, recent graduate in global studies and journalism from UNC Chapel Hill, is a freelance photographer and videographer who focuses on storytelling. One of her favorite aspects of photography is the connection it can foster between people from all walks of life.

“I think the visual aspect is important because you don’t have to speak the same language, the photos speak for themselves,” Connors said. 

In 2024, Connors, along with fellow UNC student and journalist Aayas Joshi, completed a project entitled “The Last Wild Herd: Defending Yellowstone’s Buffalo.” This project followed an organization called the Buffalo Field Campaign in their fight to protect the buffalo. 

The rapid and tragic loss of American buffalo, also known as bison, is fueled by America’s history of colonization and cultural warfare with the move westward, but it is also deeply connected to the health of the environment. Connors and Joshi’s images show stark landscapes spotted with few American buffalo where once millions roamed. 

While art forms can gather the public in support of a cause, they can also empower communities who are disadvantaged by environmental impacts or are actively fighting to heal the earth. 

Upon the release of the film, members of the Buffalo Field Campaign gathered together to watch and, according to Connors, this gave them an opportunity to see the impact they are making and feel proud of it. This can give environmental organizations a boost of confidence, in addition to raising public awareness of the work they do.

Despite these art forms increasing awareness among the general population of issues such as pollution and waste in the fashion industry and disappearing species, an individual’s actions in response to this new information can only accomplish so much. 

According to Greer, the question of “whose job is it” to be making sustainable decisions is constantly debated in the fashion community. The responsibility could fall on consumers to make ethical decisions, or it could fall on corporations to produce products in less harmful and destructive ways.

Additionally, pieces of art and media that tackle environmental issues are sometimes geared toward more specialized audiences. This can often create echo chambers, which stunt the reach and effectiveness of this type of art and content.

“I think it’s a real problem trying to figure out how to reach audiences and how to build communities surrounding the work that you’re putting into the world,” Connors said. 

Despite Greer’s worries that we can only do so much and Connors’ worries that impactful art can only reach so many people, both, along with other artists, remain committed to using their creative instincts to inspire change.


Can arts help save the environment? was first posted on March 5, 2026 at 1:00 pm.
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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 13:00

As part of Epic's settlement with Google over the Play Store, Epic CEO Tim Sweeney agreed to stop criticizing Google's app store practices until 2032 and even publicly support the revised policies. The deal also prohibits Epic from pushing for further changes to Google's platform rules. The Verge reports: On March 3rd, he not only signed away Epic's rights to sue and disparage the company, he signed away his right to advocate for any further changes to Google's app store polices. He can't criticize Google's app store practices. In fact, he has to praise them. The contract states that "Epic believes that the Google and Android platform, with the changes in this term sheet, are procompetitive and a model for app store / platform operations, and will make good faith efforts to advocate for the same." He may even have to appear in other courts around the world to defend this deal with Google, and Google gets to make sure his public statements are supportive of the deal from here on out. And while Epic can still be part of the "Coalition for App Fairness," the organization that Epic quietly and solely funded to be its attack dog against Google and Apple, he can only point that organization at Apple now. "Google is opening up Android all the way with robust support for competing stores, competing payments, and a better deal for all developers. So, we've settled all of our disputes worldwide. THANKS GOOGLE!," Sweeney wrote in a post on X on Wednesday.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 12:56

The EuroHPC Summit 2026, which was scheduled to take place March 10–12 in Paphos, Cyprus, has been postponed until further notice because of travel disruptions and limited flight availability tied to the evolving situation in the Middle East, organizers said.

In a statement provided to HPCwire, the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking said: “The EuroHPC Summit 2026 is postponed until further notice due to the evolving situation in the Middle East, which has led to travel disruption and limited flight availability. We are currently exploring possible new dates with the Cyprus EU Presidency.”

The postponement comes amid the escalating conflict in the Middle East following U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran beginning Feb. 28. The attacks, which targeted military infrastructure and leadership sites in Tehran and elsewhere, were followed by Iranian retaliatory strikes against Israel and U.S.-allied states in the Gulf. The fighting has disrupted regional travel and airspace, contributing to flight cancellations and limited access to Cyprus.

The EuroHPC Summit itself is an annual gathering of European HPC and quantum computing stakeholders, bringing together technology providers, scientific and industrial users, and policymakers to discuss developments across the region’s supercomputing ecosystem. This year’s summit was organized under the theme “Building Europe’s Digital Sovereignty: AI Factories, HPC, and Quantum Computing,” with sessions focused on Europe’s strategy for advanced computing infrastructure and research collaboration.

The situation draws attention to the geopolitical context surrounding the summit’s theme. Intersect360 Research analyst Antonia Maar noted in a LinkedIn post that the circumstances surrounding the postponement highlight the instability that Europe’s push for digital sovereignty is meant to address.

“This moment is bigger than a cancelled conference. This isn’t bad timing. This is the argument making itself,” she wrote. “The event was cancelled by the very kind of instability that makes the sovereignty agenda urgent.”

Maar also said the push for digital sovereignty reflects Europe’s attempt to build resilience in a world where geopolitical uncertainty can quickly affect research collaboration, travel and infrastructure planning. Efforts to expand exascale computing systems and AI capacity, she suggested, are part of strengthening Europe’s capacity to withstand those pressures.

The summit comes at a time when EuroHPC JU’s responsibilities are expanding. Earlier this year, a regulatory amendment expanded the organization’s mandate to include new initiatives focused on large-scale AI infrastructure and quantum technologies. The change formalizes EuroHPC JU’s role in coordinating Europe’s push to deploy exascale systems, build AI “Gigafactories,” and integrate quantum computing resources with the continent’s supercomputing infrastructure.

EuroHPC JU said it is currently working with the Cyprus EU Presidency to identify possible new dates for the summit.

The post EuroHPC Summit 2026 Postponed as Middle East Conflict Disrupts Travel appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 12:45

Devices have been flying out of Cupertino the past three days, and everything's up for preorder now. Here's what's new.

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-05 12:44

Iran: Will Trump declare early victory and risk leaving hardliners in charge? Independent Thinking podcast Audio sseth.drupal@c…

What does President Trump hope to achieve in Iran – a quick show of force, or long-term regime change?

The US and Israel’s long-threatened air strikes on Iran have materialized, and the Middle East is facing widespread disruption and a mounting death toll as the war spills across borders.

In this episode of Chatham House’s international affairs podcast, our expert panel analyses the Trump administration’s many stated motivations for the attack, whether there can be a clear-cut end game, and who is likely to take over in Iran after Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

They also discuss the effect of the war on President Trump’s popularity at home as mid-term elections loom, and the criticism levelled at UK prime minister Sir Keir Starmer for doing, his detractors say, too little, too late.

Host Bronwen Maddox is joined by Sanam Vakil, director of Chatham House’s Middle East and North Africa Programme; General Sir Richard Barrons, senior consulting fellow with the International Security Programme; and Laurel Rapp, director of the US and North America Programme. 

About Independent Thinking

Independent Thinking is a weekly international affairs podcast hosted by our director Bronwen Maddox, in conversation with leading policymakers, journalists, and Chatham House experts providing insight on the latest international issues.

More ways to listen: Apple Podcasts, Spotify.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 12:41

HHS Secretary RFK Jr. wants the popular coffee chains to prove their surgery drinks are safe for teens and suggested the Trump administration could place limits on your cup of coffee.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 12:39

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 12:38
  • Exact terms of deal have yet to be revealed

  • Moore recorded career lows last year with Bears

The Buffalo Bills are acquiring wide receiver DJ Moore from the Chicago Bears, multiple media outlets reported on Thursday.

It is not immediately known what the Bears will receive in the deal, which cannot be processed until the new league year begins on March 11.

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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 12:28

PM defends decision not to join initial US-Israeli strikes and says UK is doing ‘everything we can’ to de-escalate situation

Keir Starmer has said the conflict engulfing the Middle East could continue “for some time” as he insisted the best way forward in the longer term was a negotiated settlement with Iran.

The prime minister said the UK was doing “everything we can” to de-escalate the situation, a clear contrast to the US president, who is focused on regime change and has said it was “too late” for Tehran to negotiate.

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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 12:26

A first-ever trial against an alleged ‘antifa cell’ in Texas could be a playbook for cracking down on administration critics.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 12:20

WASHINGTON, DC - DECEMBER 10: U.S. Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) speaks during a rally held in support of The Kids Online Safety Act on Capitol Hill on December 10, 2024 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Jemal Countess/Getty Images for Accountable Tech)
Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., speaks at a rally in support of the Kids Online Safety Act on Dec. 10, 2024, in Washington, D.C. Photo: Jemal Countess/Getty Images for Accountable Tech

In August 2024, the Biden administration hosted hundreds of influencers at the White House for the first-ever Creator Economy Conference. Neera Tanden, a senior Biden adviser, took to the stage and bemoaned anonymity online. The influencers alongside her agreed, pushing the idea that anonymous speech on the internet is harmful, and regulation is needed to force the use of real names on social media. The audience whispered excitedly as those on stage spoke about how proposed laws like the Kids Online Safety Act, or KOSA, could unmask every troll. 

This narrative of online safety, particularly in relation to children, has become central to the bipartisan effort to censor and deanonymize the internet for everyone. Today, a package of a dozen “child online safety” bills is moving forward in the House of Representatives with bipartisan support. The laws, framed as a way to crack down on harmful content and make the internet safer, would force social media companies to enact invasive identity verification measures in order to keep children from accessing online spaces.

The problem is that there’s no way to reliably verify someone’s age without verifying who they are. A platform cannot magically discern that a user is 16 without collecting identifying information, whether through government documents such as a passport, payment information like a credit card, or other identity-disclosing data. Whether that data is stored by the platform itself or outsourced to a vendor, the result is always the same: A user’s offline identity is forever linked with their online behavior.

Stripping anonymity from the internet would constitute one of the most sweeping rollbacks of civil rights in recent history. It would allow for unprecedented levels of mass surveillance and censorship, endangering the most marginalized members of society. Whistleblowers exposing corporate wrongdoing could be tracked and fired, government employees speaking out about illegal behavior or bad policies could face prosecution, and activists organizing protests could be identified and surveilled before ever setting foot on the street.

Related

Google Fulfilled ICE Subpoena Demanding Student Journalist’s Bank and Credit Card Numbers

Already, the U.S. government is flooding social media platforms with subpoenas seeking to unmask hundreds of anonymously run anti-ICE social media accounts. These laws would make it all the more easier for the government to target and prosecute those who dissent

Vulnerable members of society will suffer most. Trans people under attack from the government could be identified and outed without their consent. Undocumented immigrants could be cut off from the ability to communicate and connect with advocates. Young people seeking abortions in states with restrictive laws might no longer have the ability to access information safely and anonymously.

Not only will a de-anonymized internet be valuable to the government as it seeks to tighten control, it will also make it easier for any corporation or bad actor to intimidate, blackmail, or exploit people by leveraging their own data against them.

The quest to remove anonymous speech from the web is not new. Conservative groups like the Heritage Foundation and the National Center on Sexual Exploitation, formerly known as Morality in Media, have long pursued these laws, arguing that online anonymity fuels pornography, exploitation, and general moral decay. In recent years, Democrats have become integral to advancing these proposals, falsely claiming that surveillance laws will crack down on Big Tech or curb social media addiction.

The laws will lead to more data being collected on kids, which predatory companies can then use to target them in more invasive ways.

None of these surveillance laws do any of that. In fact, the laws will lead to more data being collected on kids, which predatory companies can then use to target them in more invasive ways. Already, these bills are standing in the way of protecting kids online: Last week, the FTC said it would decline to enforce COPPA, a landmark law that mandates the protection of children’s data, in order to incentivize ID verification.

The laws would create a massive new market for third-party identification vendors, many funded by the same tech investors who backed social media giants, such as Peter Thiel, who funded ID verification platform Persona via his investment group Founders Fund. Smaller apps will be forced to shoulder the enormous cost of enacting identity verification measures, hindering their ability to operate, and making it harder to compete with Big Tech companies that are leveraging these laws to consolidate power.

It’s no surprise then that Big Tech companies are also heavily involved in lobbying for various versions of these laws. Elon Musk has endorsed KOSA. The Digital Childhood Alliance, a group that frequently posts about the dangers of “Big Tech,” is secretly funded by Meta, and has played a role in pushing the App Store Accountability Act. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg recently told a court that Apple and Google should verify the identity of every smartphone user at the operating system level, which would permanently end anonymous internet access for everyone.

This exact invasive scheme is being boosted by Democratic lawmakers like California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who recently signed an ID verification law for all operating systems, including Linux, and has mused about banning all social media for users under the age of 16.

“Young people still have human rights.”

These efforts have “been brewing for or for a few years now, but just in the last few months, we’ve seen a lot of momentum,” said David Greene, senior counsel at the Electronic Frontier Foundation. While it’s tempting to take a paternalistic attitude toward young people, Greene said that it’s crucial to recognize young people have rights too, and often use the internet when taking part in social justice movements.

“Young people still have human rights,” he said, “and that includes the right to access information and to associate with other people and to speak to the world. These laws are designed to diminish those rights.”

Related

How Student Protesters and Immigrants Became Targets of Trump’s Surveillance Tech

Young people have led campuswide protests against the genocide in Gaza and against ICE across the country. Laws that restrict and surveil online access would severely limit their speech and ability to organize. And as the U.S. escalates attacks in the Middle East and immigration agents exert more power at home, activists are becoming concerned by the assault on anonymous speech.

“Whenever imperialist governments go to war, they become more authoritarian at home,” Evan Greer, director of digital rights group Fight for the Future, posted to Bluesky.

The Kids Online Safety Act, co-sponsored by members of both parties, is one of the most dangerous proposals currently making its way through Congress. The law would empower state attorneys general to mass censor any content online deemed “harmful to minors.” The Heritage Foundation has already come out publicly and said it plans to leverage KOSA and similar “online safety” laws to remove LGBTQ+ content and abortion content from the internet. 

Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., the lead co-sponsor of KOSA, said that it was essential to pass the law to protect “minor children from the transgender [sic] in this culture.” Jonathan Haidt, the author of the bestselling book “The Anxious Generation,” who has played a major role in rallying political and public support for these laws globally, has promoted the fringe theory that some young people become trans because of the social media they consume.

As KOSA has encountered growing backlash, more lawmakers have started pushing proposed ID verification at the operating system or app store level. On Wednesday, the X account for the House Energy and Commerce Committee boosted a dubious poll from far right think tank the American Principles Project, a group that has opposed abortion and same-sex marriage, declaring, “The OVERWHELMING majority of voters agree—app stores should have to verify users’ age to prevent minors from downloading apps without parental consent.” 

But enacting identity verification at the app store level does nothing to address the privacy issues at play. Privacy activists and those fighting the law have sounded the alarm about how the App Store Accountability Act creates a sprawling, insecure data-sharing pipeline that mandates divulging highly sensitive user age data with millions of general-audience apps. This is why users in some states are being forced to provide their government IDs to download things like a weather app or calculator app. The way the law equates the entire internet and treats every app in the app store as inherently pornographic will also inevitably chill speech.

The way the law equates the entire internet and treats every app in the app store as inherently pornographic will inevitably chill speech.

Rising reactionary sentiment and right-wing extremism under Trump has accelerated the push for online age verification, Greer said. “Online protest, documenting war crimes, even news articles could be suppressed [if these laws pass].” Already, similar versions of these laws are playing out abroad. Soon after the United Kingdom’s Online Safety Act took effect last summer, the law was used to restrict content, including videos documenting police violence, posts challenging the government’s narratives on Palestine, and a subreddit dedicated to documenting Israel’s war crimes.

China, Saudi Arabia, and Russia have used their vast online surveillance systems to crack down on speech challenging the government, imprisoning activists who leverage social media to challenge power. Dozens more countries are seeking to replicate authoritarian-style internet surveillance within their own borders. Indonesia, Malaysia, France, and Australia are among those that have embraced identity verification systems that would eliminate anonymous speech online under the guise of protecting children. 

Related

He Tweeted Charlie Kirk “Won’t Be Remembered as a Hero.” The State Dept. Revoked His Visa.

“The through-line couldn’t be clearer: destroying online anonymity is a way for government to be able to identify ­— and ultimately punish — dissenters,” said Ari Cohn, lead counsel for tech policy at the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, a civil liberties group. “In the United States, the federal government’s recent demands that online services identify critics of DHS and ICE serves as a chilling example of the types of attacks on lawful speech that such laws will only enable further.” 

The harms of widespread government censorship, he said, are only compounded by the “massive privacy and security threats posed by collecting personally identifiable information en masse.” Systems built to remove anonymity in the name of “child safety” will be used to identify whistleblowers, protest organizers, and critics of federal agencies, Cohn said. “At this point, not seeing the planet-sized red flags is more a result of willful blindness than anything else,” he said. 

For journalists, dissidents, and vulnerable communities, the ability to gather and share information anonymously online is critical. Just this week, The Atlantic reported that the Pentagon is seeking to use powerful AI models from companies like Anthropic and OpenAI to mass surveil U.S. citizens by harvesting broad swaths of commercially available data. Age verification laws would dramatically expand the collection of identity-linked browsing and speech data, endangering users and creating new troves of data for commercial and government exploitation.

LGBTQ+ youth frequently rely on anonymous online spaces to explore identity and seek support, particularly in hostile states. Kansas recently invalidated hundreds of trans residents’ driver’s licenses. As harmful laws that target LGBTQ+ people spread, openly identifying as LGBTQ+ online could put people in danger. Tying online access to government-issued IDs will also deter vulnerable young people from seeking help or gaining information about crucial topics like abuse or sexual health. Reproductive justice activists have been sounding the alarm about state efforts to de-anonymize organizations providing abortion and reproductive health information online.

Whistleblowers especially rely on anonymous accounts to call out corporate or government wrongdoing. During Trump’s first administration, dozens of employees and scientists within the government set up “rogue” Twitter accounts, revealing firsthand information about the administration’s efforts to gut federal agencies and censor scientific information. The “rebel” accounts mirroring those of NASA, the U.S. National Park Service, and other agencies revealed crucial research on topics like climate change to the public. 

The push to eliminate online anonymity is ultimately a fight over whether the internet remains a space for dissent and free expression or further becomes a dystopian digital panopticon that operates as an arm of the surveillance state. A free society depends on the right to publish and consume information anonymously and to organize and speak privately. Age verification policies only bolster the power of Big Tech and give the government complete authority to surveil and censor online speech.

The post Congress Is Considering Abolishing Your Right to Be Anonymous Online appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-05 12:20

No state or federal agency disclosed that a Homeland Security Investigations agent had killed Ruben Ray Martinez until it was revealed in a public records request.

2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 19:54

Officials speculated that Iran is intentionally hitting the Arab states to get them to pressure the U.S. to end the war.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 12:01

The US president has made the easily debunked claim that there are no wind farms in China

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2026-03-05 16:04
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PM also confirms that the first repatriation flight for Britons in the region has taken off

She says “we will always offer protection to genuine refugees” and outlines how the UK has taken in Ukrainian and Hong Kong refugees.

She says “restoring control at our borders is not a betrayal of Labour values”. She says we must attract high-skilled workers. And that “the privilege of living in this country forever must be earned”.

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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 12:00

Under RFK Jr and the Maha movement, Republicans have claimed the mantle – but their actions are full of contradictions

On 25 February, in her opening remarks at her Senate confirmation hearing, Casey Means, Donald Trump’s nominee for surgeon general, called on the US government to address key drivers of chronic disease, including “ultraprocessed foods, industrial chemical exposure” and other factors. The same month, in a provocative Super Bowl ad for the federal government’s RealFood.gov site, Mike Tyson warned of the dangers of processed food. The recent developments confirm what’s becoming conventional wisdom: the GOP is now the party of healthy food.

It’s not just Robert F Kennedy Jr’s high-profile moves on red food dyes or the USDA food pyramid. Conservative politicians and influencers are now attacking chemical additives, plastics, and ultra-processed ingredients as drivers of chronic disease. Republicans see Maha, the “make America healthy again” movement, as a rare cultural wedge that resonates outside the party’s Maga base. The GOP’s own polling memos show that Kennedy’s movement could be their single most promising midterm strategy.

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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 12:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: Anthropic co-founder and CEO Dario Amodei is not happy -- perhaps predictably so -- with OpenAI chief Sam Altman. In a memo to staff, reported by The Information, Amodei referred to OpenAI's dealings with the Department of Defense as "safety theater." "The main reason [OpenAI] accepted [the DoD's deal] and we did not is that they cared about placating employees, and we actually cared about preventing abuses," Amodei wrote. Last week, Anthropic and the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) failed to come to an agreement over the military's request for unrestricted access to the AI company's technology. Anthropic, which already had a $200 million contract with the military, insisted the DoD affirm that it would not use the company's AI to enable domestic mass surveillance or autonomous weaponry. Instead, the DoD -- known under the Trump administration as the Department of War -- struck a deal with OpenAI. Altman stated that his company's new defense contract would include protections against the same red lines that Anthropic had asserted. In a letter to staff, Amodei refers to OpenAI's messaging as "straight up lies," stating that Altman is falsely "presenting himself as a peacemaker and dealmaker." Amodei might not be speaking solely from a position of bitterness, here. Anthropic specifically took issue with the DoD's insistence on the company's AI being available for "any lawful use." [...] "I think this attempted spin/gaslighting is not working very well on the general public or the media, where people mostly see OpenAI's deal with the DoW as sketchy or suspicious, and see us as the heroes (we're #2 in the App Store now!)," Amodei wrote to his staff. "It is working on some Twitter morons, which doesn't matter, but my main worry is how to make sure it doesn't work on OpenAI employees."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 11:47

March 5, 2026 — If a tree falls in the forest, it can create an opening for more incoming light. And that makes a significant impact on the surrounding environment, according to new research.

An international science team used supercomputer simulations to model forest population dynamics of tree diversity in tropical forests. The researchers hope their work will help support forest management efforts and aid in conservation. Photo credit: Damla Cinoglu, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

An international science team used supercomputer simulations to model forest population dynamics of tree diversity in tropical forests. The researchers hope their work will help support forest management efforts and aid in conservation.

“Our work shows that competition for light following gaps created by the death of large trees alone can support the critical diversity of trees found in tropical forests,” said Damla Cinoglu, a postdoctoral researcher at the O’Dwyer lab at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

Roughly equal environmental conditions of soil and sunlight give rise to a wide variety of trees in terms of fast and slow growth, short and long lifespans, and more. Reporting in the July 2025 issue of the British Ecological Society’s Journal of Ecology, Cinoglu and colleagues reveal what drives the persistence of this remarkable diversity.

An Ecologist’s Dream

The researchers developed a model to assess whether random, small-scale gap disturbances and subsequent competition for light can support long-term coexistence. They found that the competition for light provides a competitive relief for fast growing tree species to fulfill their demographic advantage over shade-tolerant slow growing tree species.

Coexistence times for model runs with two demographic groups parameterized by slow and fast or long-lived pioneers and short-lived breeders demographic parameters (niche models) and two species with the same parameters, with and without patch-level disturbances (gaps). Grey points mark the coexistence time of demographic groups (or species) in 40 independent model runs of each model setting. Credit: DOI: 10.1111/1365-2745.70118

Cinoglu and colleagues based their model on data observed in demographic groups in the Barro Colorado Island forest dynamics plot, located in Panama and having the distinction as “the most intensively studied tropical forest in the world,” according to the Smithsonian Tropical Forest Institute. Like in an ecologists dream, every tree above waist height in a 50-hectare plot has been tagged and mapped since 1980.

Seeing the Forest Through the Tree Models

“Our model was a simple, mechanistic forest dynamics model that relied on the assumption that trees are able to move their crowns to reach sunlight,” Cinoglu explained.

In addition to modeling the basic processes of growth, death, recruitment, and dispersal, the researchers simulated a “community of communities” landscape, introducing random canopy gaps disturbances and the resulting competition for light that shapes how tree crowns are arranged within each patch.

The researchers relied on forest dynamics census data and empirical parameters previously calculated from data by Rüger et al., 2020 from the forest dynamics plot in Barro Colorado Island, Panama.

Their simulation experiments include niche and neutral versions of the model, where the niche models relied on the differences in life history among demographic groups, and the neutral models assumed each species had the same exact demography.

In demonstrating that life history differences led to longer persistence times compared to neutral models, the researchers faced a major computational hurdle — to run the model long enough and as many times as needed, to be able to identify the distribution of extinction and persistence

“We had a fantastic experience working with the TACC team,” she added. “Access to TACC systems allowed us to run multiple models simultaneously through parallelization, greatly speeding up our simulations. The TACC staff also provided technical support in setting up and optimizing our modeling environment.”

The Path Forward

According to Cinoglu, researchers in the Farrior Lab at UT Austin are building on this work by investigating what drives the different life strategies seen in the data, and whether that diversity follows rules scientists can predict.

“Trees are long-lived organisms, and many forest processes take centuries or even millennia to unfold,” Cinoglu said. “This makes it difficult to test ecological questions through experiments and observe their results in our lifetime. Supercomputers allow us to run these simulations at the scale and replication needed to draw robust conclusions.”

The study, “Small disturbances and subsequent competition for light can maintain a diversity of demographic strategies in a neotropical forest: Results from model–data integration,” was published July 2025 in the British Ecological Society Journal of Ecology. The study authors are Damla Cinoglu of the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign; Nadja Rüger of the University of Leipzig and the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute; Robin R. Decker and Caroline E. Farrior of The University of Texas at Austin. Funding was awarded by the National Science Foundation DEB 1939559.


Source: Jorge Salazar, TACC

The post TACC Supercomputers Power Simulations of Tropical Forest Diversity appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 11:45

A former national security official says Iran has "surrogate networks here in the United States" and urges Americans to be "extra vigilant right now."

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 11:45

Is the Islamic Republic a messianic theocracy or a brittle dictatorship? It’s neither – as those attacking it are finding out

When the US and Israel launched coordinated strikes against Iran on 28 February, the campaign was structured like a textbook air war: destroy defences, degrade retaliatory capabilities and decapitate leadership. Iranian air defences – already battered in last summer’s war – were further dismantled to secure uncontested skies. Missile factories, drone infrastructure and naval assets were hit to erode Iran’s ability to retaliate. And a steady cadence of precision strikes removed senior commanders in what amounted to a sustained attempt to disorient Tehran’s decision-making.

From a purely operational perspective, the advantages have been stark. Once skies are open, the war becomes cheaper: plentiful, relatively inexpensive munitions can replace the long-range systems that defended airspace typically demands.

Ali Vaez is Iran project director and senior adviser to the president at the International Crisis Group

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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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 11:45

The Climate Briefing: The Future of Climate Diplomacy 4: Laurence Tubiana Audio thilton.drupal

Chris Aylett speaks with Laurence Tubiana about the current state of climate diplomacy and what needs to happen next.

What are the most important changes the Paris Agreement has brought about? How should the COP process evolve? And why does geoengineering need to be approached with caution?

The fourth part of the Future of Climate Diplomacy mini-series features a fascinating conversation between Chatham House’s Chris Aylett (standing in for Anna and Bhargabi) and Laurence Tubiana, CEO of the European Climate Foundation and previously France’s Climate Change Ambassador and Special Representative for COP21.

About The Climate Briefing  

The Climate Briefing explores key themes in the UN climate negotiations and international climate politics. The podcast is hosted by Bhargabi Bharadwaj and Anna Aberg from Chatham House and features interviewees from governments, international organizations, academia and civil society organizations from across the world. 
 
You can also listen to The Climate Briefing on Apple Podcasts and Spotify 

2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 11:39

Progressive insurgents lost a close North Carolina primary this week, when Rep. Valerie Foushee, D-N.C., narrowly defeated a challenge from Durham County Commissioner Nida Allam in a race inundated with outside spending from the artificial intelligence industry. 

The race had come down to just over 1,000 votes and 1 percentage point as of Thursday morning, with Allam nearly catching up to Foushee in the eleventh hour. After initially saying she would request a recount, Allam conceded to Foushee on Wednesday night, writing on social media that the AI lobby had “bought” the race. Pro-AI groups spent roughly $1.3 million backing Foushee, who is now heavily favored to win the November general election in North Carolina’s Democrat-dominated 4th Congressional District.

In a statement sent to The Intercept, Allam urged her own progressive supporters to hold the incumbent’s feet to the fire. 

“It should not take being challenged in a primary to take bold stances that voters overwhelmingly support,” said Allam, “but I am proud that our movement pushed our incumbent to better reflect our deeply held values and convictions. It’s up to us as an entire district to demand that our Representative deliver on her promises.”

In a victory statement released Wednesday night, Foushee vowed to fight for a slew of marquee progressive causes. She pledged to fight to “stop Trump’s attacks on our democracy, regulate AI, overturn Citizens United, establish a Green New Deal, ensure Medicare for All, pass legislation to block arms sales to Israel, and lower the cost of groceries, housing, and education.”

Related

Democratic Leaders Avoid Criticizing Trump’s Iran War. Now Voters Will Have a Say.

Commentators on social media directed frustration over Allam’s loss at key progressive figures Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., and New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani, both of whom declined to endorse the challenger over the incumbent. Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and Vice Chair of the Democratic National Committee David Hogg endorsed Allam, as did notable progressive organizations like Justice Democrats, and it’s unclear if input from the New York politicians would have made the difference in the North Carolina race. But with such a tight margin, some argued more forceful rallying from progressive surrogates could have helped Allam. 

As the race drew to a close, technology and foreign policy dominated the North Carolina primary. Allam repeatedly criticized Foushee as too cozy with corporate and pro-Israel interests, forcing the incumbent to play defense. These divisions intensified after the United States and Israel attacked Iran over the weekend.

Allam released a political advertisement on Monday criticizing her opponent for benefiting from millions in spending from AI-connected super PACs with ties to the United States and Israel’s attacks on Iran. Jobs and Democracy PAC — a super PAC supported by Anthropic, whose AI model Claude was reportedly deployed in the Trump administration’s strike on Iran — spent over $1.3 million in support of Foushee in the North Carolina primary. 

“As election day approaches, you will see nearly $2 million of ads for my opponent, funded by AI-backed super PACs,” Allam said in the ad, “the same AI corporation who powered Trump’s attacks on Iran, while my opponent takes donations from Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, and General Dynamics.”

But the harsh words weren’t enough to oust Foushee, who also beat Allam by a far larger margin in a 2022 race after the American Israel Public Affairs Committee spent almost $2.5 million in her favor. While the congresswoman said that she would not accept money from AIPAC this cycle, signaling the megadonors’ unpopularity with Democratic voters, Allam and her supporters continued to hammer home that Foushee was the pick of the pro-Israel foreign policy establishment. 

American Priorities, the anti-AIPAC super PAC looking to counter pro-Israel spending in elections, sunk nearly $1 million into supporting Allam, hoping to use her win as an early example of Democratic primary voters shifting allegiances away from supporting Israel. The PAC, which has endorsed several other progressive challengers, including Kat Abughazaleh in Illinois’ 9th Congressional District, will get another chance to test its theory in the upcoming months with primary candidates in Tennessee, New York, New Jersey, and Illinois.

Allam further connected Foushee and her AI lobby backers to the war in Iran during an interview with former CNN host Don Lemon on Monday. “What I’m seeing is the same thing that my constituents and folks all across the country are seeing, is that they don’t want their taxpayer dollars being used for another endless war,” said Allam. “And unfortunately, this is what the corporate war machines have been lobbying for and spending millions of dollars in elections and millions of dollars lobbying legislators for this outcome.” 

Foushee pushed back against Allam’s characterization of her as a warmonger in the pocket of the AI industry, arguing that she would vote to rein in the administration and regulate the technology. 

“I respect our primary system, but I am grateful that my constituents have rejected the baseless attacks from out-of-state groups that my family and I have had to endure,” Foushee wrote Wednesday.

Related

Even Former AIPAC Democrats Are Signing On to Block Arms Sales to Israel

The focus on AI also manifested in more concrete issues at home. The district is the potential site of several new data centers, including one proposed center in the town of Apex in Wake County, despite objections from local residents. A poll from Justice Democrats, the national progressive group that backed Allam, found that 63 percent of district residents believed data centers “hurt their community by raising utility costs and harming the environment.”

Chatham County residents in the 4th District recently rejected a proposal to build a data center in their community, voting for a one-year moratorium on any data centers being built in their community. The district also contains the cities of Durham and Chapel Hill, known as relatively progressive areas defined largely by the presence of major universities.

The county commissioner surged ahead in in-person votes in Wake County, the proposed location of another controversial artificial intelligence data center. But Foushee far outperformed Allam in early votes and mail-in ballots — and ultimately the gap was too far to bridge.

Allam has been critical of developing new data centers. The Durham county commissioner signed onto a pledge led by Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., for a nationwide moratorium on the construction of new data centers. Conversely, Foushee serves as co-chair of Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries’ House Democratic Commission on AI and the Innovation Economy, which has been widely criticized for its industry ties. 

The post Nida Allam Concedes to Valerie Foushee With Razor-Thin Loss for Progressives in Key Midterm Primary appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 11:38

Chief Warrant Officer Robert Marzan, 54, and Maj Jeffrey O’Brien, 45, were from California and Iowa, respectively

The Pentagon has released the names of the final two of the six soldiers who were killed during a recent drone strike in Kuwait. They were killed on Sunday, the day after the US and Israel launched strikes against Iran. Their names were released by the US Department of Defense on Wednesday.

The two soldiers were identified as Chief Warrant Officer Robert Marzan, 54, and Maj Jeffrey O’Brien, 45. They were from Sacramento, California, and Indianola, Iowa, respectively.

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 11:36

Gold ETFs are an easy way to tap into the metal's rally, but it's smart to weigh the tradeoffs before investing.

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The 114-page document backs licence fee but suggests its current funding model is being tested to breaking point

It’s that time again. The BBC published its opening salvo in the current talks over its royal charter. The tortuous negotiations with the government, which take place every 10 years, are often accompanied by tough talk about radical change.

This time is no different. However, it also comes with data suggesting the BBC’s funding model is on an unsustainable course, fundamentally challenged by a transformation in how media is consumed.

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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 11:34

Roku's quiz game will debut March 7 and features questions based on big awards shows like the Academy Awards.

2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 11:23

NBC confirmed the host will return but ‘remains focused’ on the search for her missing mother, Nancy Guthrie

Savannah Guthrie, the Today show host whose elderly mother has been missing from her Arizona home for more than a month, visited NBC’s studios in New York on Thursday and the network confirmed, for the first time, that she plans to return to her presenting duties.

NBC confirmed the visit to CNN’s Brian Stelter, but gave no timeline for when Guthrie, who has recorded a succession of emotional video appeals for information about her mother, Nancy Guthrie, will be back at work.

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 11:23

US president is ‘truly uninformed’ for spreading claims of ‘white genocide’ in South Africa, Cyril Ramaphosa tells New York Times

South Africa’s president, Cyril Ramaphosa, has called Donald Trump’s policy of allowing white Afrikaners to apply for refugee status in the US “racist”, saying the US president was “truly uninformed” in a rare instance of direct criticism.

Ramaphosa told the New York Times that last year’s Oval Office meeting with the US leader, when Trump turned down the lights and played a video that he falsely claimed showed there was a “white genocide” in South Africa, was a “spectacle” and an “ambush”.

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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 11:11

Reports of carmaker’s warning come as lobby group says EU proposals could damage £70bn cross-channel trade

The Japanese carmaker Nissan has reportedly said it could be forced to close its plant in Sunderland if the UK is not fully included in new “Made in Europe” manufacturing rules proposed by the EU.

The UK car industry trade representative group also said it was “gravely concerned” about the proposals, which it said could damage the £70bn annual cross-channel trade.

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 11:10

In Dallas and Williamson counties, voters faced long lines, extended wait times and confusion about voting location

On Tuesday, Texas held its Democratic and Republican primaries ahead of the upcoming November midterms. Democratic voters chose between Jasmine Crockett, the anti-Trump firebrand congresswoman, and James Talarico, the populist state representative, in an election that attracted national attention. Crockett conceded the race and endorsed Talarico on Wednesday, but only after claiming late on election night that she wasn’t ready to concede because of a voting issue in Dallas.

“We don’t have any of the results because there was a lot of confusion today,” Crockett told supporters at her election-night party: “We were able to keep the polls open, but I can tell you now that people have been disenfranchised.” Crockett received 45.6% of the vote, compared to Talarico’s 53.1%.

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 11:00

Exclusive: Standards committee proposal aims to improve staff safety but critics say it will further reduce public trust

MPs are planning to redact the names of 2,000 parliamentary staff from an official register that has been in place for decades, in a move that experts say will reduce transparency around lobbying by passholders.

The proposal has been put forward by the House of Commons standards committee after evidence sessions held in private with staff unions, which raised concerns about the safety of those working for MPs.

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 11:00

Iranian state media said on Wednesday that it targeted Amazon's data center in Bahrain due to the company's support of the U.S. military. The drone strike that occurred on Sunday disrupted core cloud services and caused "prolonged" outages. Two data centers in the UAE were also damaged by drone strikes. CNBC reports: All of the facilities remain offline, according to the Amazon Web Services health dashboard. The attack in Bahrain was launched "to identify the role of these centers in supporting the enemy's military and intelligence activities," Iran's Fars News Agency said on Telegram. In addition to structural damage, the data centers also experienced power disruptions and some water damage after firefighters worked to put out sparks and fire. Some popular AWS applications experienced "elevated error rates and degraded availability" due to the incident. AWS advised cloud customers to back up their data, consider migrating their workloads to other regions and direct traffic away from Bahrain and the UAE.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 10:53

A special election is being held on April 21 on whether to amend Virginia's constitution to enable redistricting that could help Democrats in the midterm elections.

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The US president previously threatened to stop all trade with Spain after it said it didn’t back the US-Israeli military operation against Iran

Meanwhile, France has allowed US aircraft on some of its bases in the Middle East during the conflict opposing the United States and Israel with Iran, the French military said.

“As part of our relations with the United States, the presence of their aircraft has been temporarily authorised on our bases” in the region, a spokeswoman for the military general staff told AFP.

“These aircraft contribute to the protection of our partners in the Gulf.”

“The frigate Cristóbal Colón joined the Charles de Gaulle Naval Group on 3 March to carry out escort, protection, and advanced training duties in the Baltic Sea. The group will now head to the Mediterranean, arriving off the coast of Crete around 10 March.

The supply ship Cantabria will also briefly put to sea to provide fuel and logistical support during the Naval Group’s transit through the Gulf of Cádiz.

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 10:48

In his new memoir, the former CEO of Goldman Sachs writes about a life that stretched from the projects of New York City to the pinnacle of Wall Street.

2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 10:45

Interest earnings on a CD of this size and term can be significant. But that's not the only benefit to consider now.

2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 10:43

Asif Merchant testified that Revolutionary Guard coerced him into scheme by threatening his family in Tehran

A Pakistani businessman accused of plotting to kill Donald Trump told a federal jury on Wednesday that he was coerced into the scheme by Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps, which he said had threatened his family to secure his participation.

Asif Merchant, 47, took the unusual step of testifying in his own defense at Brooklyn federal court, where he faces terrorism and murder-for-hire charges. Speaking through an Urdu translator, he told jurors he went along with the plot only out of fear for his wife and adopted daughter in Tehran.

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 10:42

Two musicals dominate nominations while Tom Hiddleston and Bryan Cranston vie for best actor, with Cate Blanchett and Rosamund Pike up for best actress
Olivier awards 2026: full list of nominations

Michael Bond’s marmalade-loving bear will go up against a band of fairytale characters at the Olivier awards next month, as two musicals dominated the nominations announced on Thursday.

The frontrunners for London’s biggest theatre awards are Paddington: The Musical and Into the Woods, which each received 11 nominations. Paddington, which opened to five-star reviews at the Savoy theatre, is up for best new musical, best director (Luke Sheppard), best theatre choreographer (Ellen Kane) and best actor in a musical for the duo who play the lovable ursine hero. James Hameed provides the bear’s voice and is the remote puppeteer while Arti Shah dons the furry costume. Their co-stars Tom Edden, Amy Booth-Steel and Victoria Hamilton-Barritt are also nominated for their supporting roles. Gabriella Slade’s costumes, Tahra Zafar’s puppet designs, Tom Pye’s set, Ash J Woodward’s video, Gareth Owen’s sound and Matt Brind’s orchestrations and arrangements were all recognised.

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 10:39

Here's how to watch the milestone season without cable.

2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 10:37

Ecuador and the U.S. began joint military operations on Tuesday, the U.S. Southern Command said on social media.

2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 10:31

Gold is trading at over $5,100 an ounce, but that high price doesn't mean you're limited in your investment options.

2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 10:25

Early results may be released from Friday after first election since gen z protests forced Nepal’s then-PM to quit

Nearly six months after a wave of unprecedented gen Z-led protests forced Nepal’s then prime minister to quit, people have voted in a general election that is shaping up to be a high-stakes showdown between the entrenched old guard and a powerful youth movement.

“The voting process has been concluded peacefully and enthusiastically,” said the chief election commissioner, Ram Prasad Bhandari. It appeared the turnout was only about 60%, according to initial estimates, the lowest in more than two decades.

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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 10:14

mHUB partners with IQMP to enable future IQMP tenants to begin operations while the Park is under development

CHICAGO, March 5, 2026 — The Illinois Quantum and Microelectronics Park (IQMP) has announced that mHUB will host the IQMP’s On-Ramp program, with additional On-Ramp facilities provided at the UChicago Science Incubator at Hyde Park Labs and at the Discovery Partners Institute (DPI), the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Grainger College of Engineering space in downtown Chicago. On-Ramp allows companies who will ultimately be tenants at the IQMP to enter and leverage the Chicago and Illinois quantum ecosystem immediately by temporarily locating at local innovation facilities.

“Illinois continues to lead the quantum economy by removing barriers and accelerating opportunity,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “The On-Ramp program ensures that tenants of the Illinois Quantum and Microelectronics Park can access lab space, equipment, and collaboration partners immediately — keeping innovation moving and strengthening our global competitiveness. This is how we secure Illinois’ place at the forefront of one of the most transformative technologies of our time.”

The On-Ramp site at mHUB alone includes four quantum labs with specialized equipment, such as cryostats, control electronics, lasers and optical tables. Tenants will also have access to technical and programmatic support, mHUB’s expansive prototyping equipment, and a collaborative entrepreneurial community.

“On-Ramp ensures that companies choosing to make the IQMP their home do not have to wait until our doors are open to begin building, hiring and collaborating here in Illinois,” said Harley Johnson, Executive Director and CEO of the Illinois Quantum and Microelectronics Park. “By providing immediate access to specialized facilities, equipment, and ecosystem partners, we are accelerating innovation and reinforcing Illinois’ position as a global quantum destination. We are grateful to our partners for providing additional space for our tenants to get to work, and are thrilled to welcome them to Illinois. ”

The mHUB facility expands the portfolio of spaces available to quantum companies in Illinois, building on the momentum from the 2025 launch of Hyde Park Labs and the Bluefors lab at mHUB. Additionally, the UChicago Science Incubator facility provides move-in ready lab space with optical suites, cryostat capacity, and direct access to the 124-mile fiber optic quantum loop, loop, and innovation programming provided by the University of Chicago’s Polsky Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation. Early quantum tenants of the Incubator include memQ, Quantum Machines, Bluefors, and stac12.

“The On-Ramp program ensures that innovative companies can establish operations, create high-quality jobs, and begin collaborating with our world-class research institutions and industry partners right away,” said Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity Director Kristin Richards. “DCEO is proud to support this initiative as we strengthen Illinois’ position as a premier destination for next-generation technology companies and drive inclusive economic growth across the state.”

Renovations at the mHUB space are being supported by grant funding from the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity. Construction at mHUB will be complete in Spring 2026. Once the permanent facilities at the IQMP are open, IQMP tenants will relocate to the Park and mHUB will utilize the space for future tenants in need of space for advanced research and development.

“mHUB is thrilled to welcome the IQMP On-Ramp Program as an anchor tenant of its new Deep Tech Labs, set to open later this year,” said mHUB Chief Operating Officer, Manas Mahendru. “Participants in On-Ramp will not only have access to the technical infrastructure they need but will be integrated into mHUB’s larger hard tech and deep tech community. This collaboration builds on the strong momentum already underway in the region’s quantum ecosystem, and mHUB is honored to be a launchpad for quantum innovation in Illinois as the broader IQMP vision advances.”

IQMP tenants in On-Ramp include IBM, Pasqal, Diraq, and Quantum Machines. The IQMP, which broke ground in Fall 2025, is a 128-acre development that provides infrastructure and resources to support the development and commercialization of quantum technologies, hardware, software and applications.

More from HPCwire: IQMP Partners with Silicon Catalyst to Support Quantum Startups in Illinois

About the IQMP

The Illinois Quantum and Microelectronics Park (IQMP) is a first-of-its-kind park built for quantum technology scale-up and related quantum and advanced microelectronics research and development. The Park is designed to support the full ecosystem of companies, researchers, suppliers, end users and other partners working to facilitate the development and commercialization of quantum technologies, including the world’s first fault-tolerant computers. Learn more at https://iqmp.org.


Source: Illinois Quantum and Microelectronics Park

The post Illinois Quantum and Microelectronics Park Establishes ‘On-Ramp’ Facilities for Incoming Quantum Tenants appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 10:12

First government-chartered flight to evacuate citizens from Middle East takes off from Muscat one day late

The first charter flight taking British nationals back to the UK from the Middle East has taken off as the prime minister described the ongoing evacuation operation as one of the biggest of its kind.

Keir Starmer announced that the delayed plane from Oman, which was originally scheduled to leave at 7pm on Wednesday, had taken off minutes before he addressed a Downing Street press conference.

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 10:01

Christopher Harborne’s gift is latest to party’s election war chest and comes amid calls for cap on political donations

Christopher Harborne has donated another £3m to Reform UK on top of his record £9m last summer.

Nigel Farage’s party, which has been topping the polls for more than a year, brought in £5.5m in the last quarter of 2025 – outstripping all the other parties. It also included a £200,000 donation from JC Bamford Excavators – traditionally a Conservative donor – which gave the same sum to the Tories that quarter.

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 10:00

In his new book, the celebrated author explains why we need ‘consciousness hygiene’ to defend ourselves from AI and dopamine-driven algorithms

Each day when you wake up, you come back to yourself. You see the room around you, feel your body brush against your clothes and think about your plans, worries and hopes for the day. This daily internal experience is miraculous and mysterious, and the subject of Michael Pollan’s new book, A World Appears.

It also may be under siege, Pollan said. He recently suggested that people need a “consciousness hygiene” to defend our internal world against invaders that are trying to move in. Our ability to sit with our thoughts and perceive the world, he argues, is increasingly disrupted by algorithms engineered to tickle our dopamine receptors and capture our attention. Meanwhile, people are forming attachments to non-human chatbots, projecting consciousness on to entities that do not possess it.

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 10:00

Major tech companies including Google, Microsoft, Amazon, and Meta pledged at the White House to pay for new power generation and grid upgrades needed to support their rapidly expanding datacenters. The Guardian reports: The agreement is meant to help mitigate concerns that big tech's datacenters are driving up US electricity costs for homes and small businesses at a time the administration of Donald Trump is seeking to curb inflation. "This means that the tech companies and the datacenters will be able to get the electricity they need, all without driving up electricity costs for consumers," the president said at the pledge signing event. "This is a historic win for countless American families and we'll also make our electricity grid stronger and more resilient than ever before." The so-called "Ratepayer Protection Pledge" was first announced by Trump in his State of the Union address, and comes as communities and state legislators increase scrutiny of rapidly proliferating datacenters. Datacenters consume vast amounts of electricity to run server racks and cooling systems for the development of technologies such as artificial intelligence. "Some datacenters were rejected by communities for that, and now I think it's going to be just the opposite," Trump said, referencing cancelled or postponed projects in recent months across several states after local opposition. The pledge includes a commitment by technology companies to bring or buy electricity supplies for their datacenters, either from new power plants or existing plants with expanded output capacity. It also includes commitments from big tech to pay for upgrades to power delivery systems and to enter special electricity rate agreements with utilities. The effort is aimed at drawing support from towns and cities that otherwise oppose the projects, said the Trump official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 09:47

Tehran denies responsibility but strike raises prospect of US-Israel war on Iran spreading beyond Middle East

Azerbaijan has accused Iran of a “terrorist” drone attack that struck an airport and injured four civilians, raising concerns the conflict could spread beyond the Middle East.

Azerbaijan’s defence ministry said Iran fired four drones at the country, one of which hit the terminal building at the only airport in Nakhchivan, an Azerbaijani exclave bordering Iran. A second drone fell close to a school in a nearby village, the ministry said.

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 09:31

Camp East Montana facility, part of the Fort Bliss army base, has repeatedly been criticized for harsh living conditions

The Trump administration is reportedly closing a controversial immigration jail in Texas where three detainees died and a measles outbreak has forced more than a dozen others into quarantine.

Plans are advancing for the shuttering of Camp East Montana, part of the Fort Bliss army base, less than eight months after it opened, the Washington Post said on Wednesday.

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 09:31

HOBOKEN, N.J., March 5, 2026 — Quantum Computing Inc. (QCi), an innovative, quantum optics and integrated photonics technology company, today announced the completion of its acquisition of NuCrypt, LLC, a quantum communications technology company, in a transaction valued at $5 million, to be paid in a combination of cash and shares of QCi common stock.

The acquisition helps establish quantum communications as an important commercialization vertical within QCi’s broader quantum technology strategy. By integrating NuCrypt’s suite of quantum communications systems and products, QCi expects to advance its technology roadmap while extending its portfolio of quantum communications and quantum photonics solutions.

“Quantum communications is an important growth vertical for QCi and NuCrypt increases our capabilities,” said Dr. Yuping Huang, Chief Executive Officer of QCi. “Their platform and intellectual property portfolio, combined with our photonics and quantum technologies, positions us to provide scalable, commercially viable quantum communications solutions.”

Founded in 2003, NuCrypt was an early developer of commercial quantum communications technology. NuCrypt is a member of the Chicago Quantum Exchange, a leading U.S. quantum ecosystem, as well as the Quantum Economic Development Consortium (QED-C) and has in the past collaborated with other Chicago-area institutions such as Fermilab, Argonne National Laboratory, and Northwestern University.

Its technologies have been used by organizations including NASA, the U.S. Army Research Laboratory, major research universities and customers across Australia, Canada, and Europe, demonstrating global demand for its quantum communications solutions.

NuCrypt’s patent portfolio spans quantum optics, RF-photonics, and photonic signal processing, further adding to QCi’s intellectual property position and expanding its technology depth in secure communications and advanced computing applications.

“After more than 20 years as a highly specialized, independent quantum communications company, growing commercial interest and opportunities in the field suggest that now is the time to expand our footprint,” said Gregory Kanter, Managing Partner of NuCrypt. “We are very excited to join forces with QCi and we believe their quantum photonic technologies offer the promise to not only better serve our current customers but also to address exciting new market opportunities.”

Through the integration of QCi’s thin-film lithium niobate (TFLN) technology, the combined company expects to further advance NuCrypt’s product portfolio by reducing device footprint, improving robustness, enhancing performance, and improving the path toward scalable, high-volume manufacturing.

Professor Prem Kumar, a founding member of NuCrypt and Director of the Northwestern University Center for Photonic Communication and Computing added, “It’s incredibly rewarding to see a vision that began years ago in academic research evolve into a commercial quantum computing enterprise. The integration of NuCrypt’s pioneering work in quantum communications marks an important step toward realizing the full promise of quantum technologies. I am delighted to see this next generation take shape and be a part of it.”

Under the terms of the agreement, NuCrypt will initially operate as a wholly owned subsidiary of QCi.

The combined companies will showcase their integrated technologies at the upcoming OFC Conference and Exhibition from March 17-19, 2026 in Los Angeles, CA, where NuCrypt will join QCi in its booth (#5105) to highlight advancements in quantum photonics and secure communications.

More from HPCwire

About Quantum Computing Inc.

Quantum Computing Inc. (Nasdaq: QUBT) is an innovative, quantum optics and integrated photonics technology company that provides accessible and affordable quantum machines and foundry services for the production of photonic chips based on thin-film lithium niobate (TFLN). QCi’s products are designed to operate at room temperature and low power at an affordable cost. The Company’s portfolio of core technologies and products offer unique capabilities in the areas of high-performance computing, artificial intelligence, and cybersecurity, as well as remote sensing applications.

Through its acquisition of Luminar Semiconductor, Inc., in February, 2026, QCi added to its technology roadmap while expanding technical depth, manufacturing capabilities, and its product portfolio to photonics and optics components, subsystems, and systems.


Source: Quantum Computing Inc.

The post Quantum Computing Inc. Completes Acquisition of NuCrypt to Advance Quantum Communications Commercialization appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 09:29

‘European preference’ signals a wider change of EU doctrine Expert comment jon.wallace

The European Commission’s Industrial Accelerator Act has ‘Made in EU’ requirements that aim to adapt the bloc’s open market policy to geopolitical realities.

Executive Vice-President of the European Commission for Prosperity and Industrial Strategy Stephane Sejourne talks to media on 4 March 2026 in Brussels, Belgium at a launch event for the EU Industrial Accelerator Act (IAA).

It is targeted, but it’s a significant shift: the European Union is prioritizing its own home-based industrial production. The European Commission proposed on 4 March a comprehensive legislative package, dubbed the ‘Industrial Accelerator Act’ (IAA), meant to strengthen European industry by raising the share of EU-made materials and components in public procurements, government purchase incentives or tax breaks. 

This concept of European preference is controversial. There have been over 40 draft versions of the Act, which has generated heated debates, inside the Commission and among the EU-27 bloc. Its announcement has been postponed several times. 

Even if its scope ends up being limited, the discriminatory measure represents a significant change in the EU’s current legal framework for investment and, moreover, a change of mindset in addressing globalization and the business environment. Under this legislation, for instance, state-subsidized electric cars will have to be assembled in the EU and contain a substantial portion of European components.

For the bloc’s trading partners, the IAA looks like some sort of sophisticated protectionism. For some member states, it appears to impose costly new bureaucratic hurdles to the detriment of entrepreneurial freedom. Northern EU member states are skeptical. Local authorities and SMEs fear more paperwork and rising costs.

But for its proponents, headed by France, it simply reflects what other powers are already doing, to respond to punitive US tariffs and aggressive Chinese trade practices. Ottawa, for instance, launched a ‘Buy Canadian Policy’ in December 2025, rolling out new federal procurement rules to prioritize local suppliers and Canadian-made goods and services.

A broader shift in EU policy

Given all the contradictory priorities it had to consider, the Commission’s regulation is a cautious endorsement of ‘Made in EU’. It is a balancing act between economic security, free trade and decarbonization needed to tackle climate change. It makes European preference an exception, not a principle. 

The concept is part of a broader shift towards a more interventionist EU economic policy. The IAA adds to other legal and fiscal European measures, such as the new carbon tax, the screening of foreign investments on strategic assets and the anti-coercion instrument. All aim at levelling the playing field with China and the US and overcoming economic dependencies that risk being politically weaponized.

European discrimination is already introduced in the new defence financial instrument (SAFE), whereby procurement contracts must ensure that no more than 35 per cent of component costs originate from outside the EU, EFTA or Ukraine.

Imposing some ‘Buy European’ provisions is another step in this new geopolitical direction. Its purpose is not just defending energy-intensive European industries (such as steel, cement, aluminium, as well as the automotive sector and cleantechs) against unfair competition but to proactively save them through public subsidies. 

Overall public procurements already represented 14 per cent of the EU’s GDP in 2023. The IAA will be adopted against a background of increasing defence spending, while the EU-27 is discussing its future seven-year budget and Germany is starting a €500 billion public investment plan over twelve years to modernize its infrastructure. 

The extent of European preference is thus proportionate to the growing amount of state and EU allocations becoming available. The argument for the IAA is also political: by ensuring that some measure of this public spending must ‘buy European’, European taxpayers will get more of their money back.   

But the ‘accelerator’ – another key concept of the legislation – will only be as effective as public tenders can be swiftly processed. It plans to simplify administrative authorizations. By adopting the IAA, public authorities, whether local, national or European, are therefore taking direct responsibility in gearing up the continent’s manufacturing capacities. 

The Act forces third countries investing over €100 million to enter into joint ventures with European companies.

This also depends on which critical sectors will allow only EU manufacturers to receive state aid. In earlier drafts of the Act, European preference was intended to cover a variety of strategic sectors for the future, such as artificial intelligence and advanced semiconductors. But these have been taken out in the final draft. 

The list will surely be debated again during the legislative process the IAA will now go through, in both the European Parliament and the EU Council. 

Yet the industrial ‘accelerator’ also relies, paradoxically, on foreign direct investment. The Act forces third countries investing over €100 million to enter into joint ventures with European companies, providing access to their intellectual property, hiring Europeans and transferring know-how to local partners. 

By doing so the EU hopes to reconcile its economic security concerns with the technological disadvantage it faces – pointed out by the Draghi Report. Such requirements make the IAA look remarkably like Chinese-style market access restrictions – those that the EU has frequently complained about. 

What does ‘European’ mean?

The other much debated question for third countries, not least for the UK, is how will the ‘European’ preference be understood? The Commission’s proposal does not limit strictly to the EU-27. It extends the discriminatory measure to all of the bloc’s free-trade so-called ‘trusted partners’ that are in customs union with the EU or respect reciprocal international agreements such as the WTO Agreement on Government Procurement. 

But it allows reciprocal measures against countries limiting access to their own public procurements in certain sectors, such as Canada, Japan, South Korea or the US, to ensure equal treatment for EU companies.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 09:17

Trade court directs customs to repay importers with interest after supreme court ruled tariffs unlawful

A US trade court judge on Wednesday ordered the government to begin paying potentially billions of dollars in refunds to importers who paid tariffs that the supreme court said last month were collected illegally. Richard Eaton, a judge of the US Court of International Trade in Manhattan, ordered the government to finalize the cost of bringing millions of shipments into the US without assessing a tariff, according to a court filing. He ordered the refunds to be made with interest.

When merchandise is brought into the United States, an importer pays an estimated amount at entry which is then finalized around 314 days later, a process known as liquidation. Eaton directed Customs and Border Protection (CBP) to finalize the entry cost on shipments without the tariff being assessed, resulting in a refund.

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 09:09

Hi everyone, I got a used XR. It seems to run well. But I can't charge it. I had it charging and someone tripped on the wire. Didn't think that could be the issue but but sure after reading about delicate ports. It charges for 30 seconds at -2A. Then suddenly stops and my breaker trips. Says arc fault. I described the symptoms to AI. And it made me think cheap chargers create a lot of noise. That can trip sensitive arc flash protected outlets. I'm in a new apartment so might be why it's sensitive. I bought a new charger. But still seems to be an after market one from wheelking on eBay. They have high ratings so I'm pretty sure it works. I don't know if arc flash tripping from properly working chargers and onewheel internals is common. I don't mind opening it up. But does anyone have a guess on what could be broken? Is it just my apartment had sensitive outlets? Or onewheel broken a bit? Think it's the connection? The BMS? The harness or something else? Really appreciate the help. Do I need to by FM charger?

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 09:04

The Guardian asked US readers about the military action in Iran – their responses were largely disapproving

As hundreds of civilians and some US service members have been killed in the aftermath of the 28 February strike against Iran by the United States and Israel, the Guardian asked readers in the US what their thoughts are on the latest military action in Iran.

Their responses were largely disapproving, with some acknowledging that the Iranian regime needed to be toppled, even with a high cost.

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 09:01

The country’s network of footpaths is growing – with hopes they will develop local economies and better preserve the environment

Follow the yellow footprints along Brazil’s newest long-distance trail, and they will take you through lush green forests and sandy shrubland, past sweeping vistas and bizarre rock formations, into grottos and rural communities.

Spanning 186km (115 miles) of paths once used by 19th-century merchants, the Caminhos da Ibiapaba is the first waymarked long-distance footpath in Brazil’s north-east region, adding to a growing network of hiking trails in the country.

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 09:01

Ecovacs is bringing premium features from its flagship robot vacuums to its midrange lineup. Here's what's new.

2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 09:00

Conspiracy claims have erupted over the star’s appearance. These days, I can’t blame people for endless skepticism

Last week, my ex-wife texted me. She usually does that when my son falls off his skateboard or learns a new expletive to say on the playground. This time was different. “Have you seen Jim Carrey?” she asked, apropos of nothing we had discussed previously. It was as if she was asking me if I’d seen her misplaced keys.

“No, I have not seen Jim Carrey. Have you looked under the couch?” I replied.

Dave Schilling is a Los Angeles-based writer and humorist

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 09:00

Only one person working job that today would be called ‘deportation officer’ has died from act of violence, Guardian review shows

Since Donald Trump returned to the presidency, homeland security officials have consistently argued that deportation officers are facing unprecedented threats.

To better understand the dangers facing those officers, the Guardian examined the agency’s own tracking of its fallen officers, as well as recent violent incidents targeting immigration officers flagged by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 09:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: At the Morgan Stanley Technology, Media and Telecom conference in downtown San Francisco Wednesday, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said his company's recent investments in OpenAI and Anthropic are likely to be its last in both, saying that once they go public as anticipated later this year, the opportunity to invest closes. It could be that simple. While firms sometimes pile into companies until practically the eve of their public debut in search of more upside, Nvidia is minting money selling the chips that power both companies -- it's not like it needs to goose its returns by pouring even more money into either one. Nvidia, for its part, isn't offering much more on the matter. Asked for comment earlier today following Huang's remarks, a spokesman pointed TechCrunch to a transcript from the company's fourth-quarter earnings call, where Huang said all of Nvidia's investments are "focused very squarely, strategically on expanding and deepening our ecosystem reach," a goal its earlier stakes in both companies have arguably met. Still, a few other dynamics might also explain the pullback, including the circular nature of these arrangements themselves. [...] Meanwhile, Nvidia's relationship with Anthropic has looked fraught in its own right. Just two months after Nvidia announced a $10 billion investment in November, Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei took the stage at Davos and, without naming Nvidia directly, compared the act of U.S. chip companies selling high-performance AI processors to approved Chinese customers to "selling nuclear weapons to North Korea." Ouch. [...] Where that leaves Nvidia is holding stakes in two companies that, at this particular moment, are pulling in very different directions, and potentially dragging customers and partners along for the ride. Whether Huang saw any of this coming, given Nvidia's web of partnerships, is impossible to know. But his stated reason on Wednesday for likely pulling the plug on future investments -- that the IPO window closes the door on this kind of deal -- is hard to square with how late-stage private investing actually works. What's looking more probable is that this is an exit from a situation that has gotten really complicated, really fast.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 09:00

Plans for agentic shopping assistants are under way at Australia’s major companies. Guardian Australia tested the technology after a string of mishaps

Major retailers say it won’t be long before sophisticated AI “assistants” plan your meals, organise your parties and do your shopping.

But companies, many that are already struggling with their more primitive AI chatbots, will have to balance making the newer, “agentic” bots relatable without them going rogue.

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 08:37
  • British former champion hits out at former colonial rulers

  • ‘I’m hoping countries unite and take Africa back’

Lewis Hamilton has called for a movement to “take Africa back”, claiming the continent is being “controlled” by European powers. On the eve of the new Formula One season in Melbourne, the seven-time champion outlined his ambition to compete in a grand prix on African soil.

But the 41-year-old, F1’s first black race driver, did not stop there. He suggested former colonial rulers still exerted undue power in the region and called for action to reverse that influence. “I’ve got roots from a few different places there, like Togo and Benin,” he said. “I’m really proud of that part of the world.

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 08:15

Nintendo Switch 2; Game Freak/Omega Force/Nintendo
Work together with a bunch of lovable Pokémon to restore a long-abandoned town in this novel, absorbing game that’s quite unlike others in the series

Bear with me here: Pokémon has always had an environmentalist subtext. As you wander its verdant, creature-filled worlds, collecting species like an acquisitive David Attenborough, you are constantly shown that people and Pokémon should live in harmony. The bad guys in these stories, from Team Rocket to Bill Nighy in the Detective Pikachu film, are always the ones who want to abuse these creatures for personal gain. Otherwise you are shown that people must have respect for Pokémon; both the critters you catch and the ones that exist in the wild. There is a delicate independency between humans and the natural world.

In this new spin-off from the series, we see what happens when there are no humans around. You, a shapeshifting blob of jelly called Ditto, awaken in a half-demolished wasteland that was once, presumably, a lively town. There are some other Pokémon around, confused and lonely, and together you work to restore the place and make it beautiful again. Taking the uncanny humanoid form of your half-remembered former trainer, you learn useful talents from the Pokémon around you: how to water parched grass, dig up weeds and grow flowers, punch rocks until they crumble to clear all the old paths.

Pokémon Pokopia is out 5 March; £59.99

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 08:05

These AI-focused smart glasses are available now in China but will roll out internationally later this year.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 19:22

Holtz coached Notre Dame from 1986 to 1996, winning 100 games with the school, including a 12-0 national title-winning season in 1988.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 11:15

Federal prosecutors are dropping their probe into whether Biden and his aides unlawfully used an autopen for pardons, a source said.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 10:55

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said U.S. and Israeli forces will obtain “complete control of Iranian skies” within days, and will soon begin a second massive air assault.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 15:50

In calls to Kurdish minority leaders in Iran and neighboring Iraq, President Donald Trump offered U.S. support to insurgent efforts against Tehran.

2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 08:03

US-Israeli strikes have continued to hit Iran, leaving a second police station in rubble and damaging residential buildings in Tehran.

Intense waves of airstrikes have also hit dozens of military positions, frontier posts and police stations along northern parts of Iran’s border with Iraq in what appears to be preparation by the US and Israel for a new front in their war

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 08:01

Commentary: I can see a future that could almost be here, and I've been waiting for. Does anyone else care, though? My wife says no, Scott, they don't.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 08:00

schwit1 shares a report from Slow Boring: A new report (PDF) from the Center for Global Development documents that most of [the decentralized solar/battery systems used in poor countries in sub-Saharan Africa] use lead-acid batteries, like Americans use in cars. Lead-acid batteries work for a while and then need to be recycled. If they're recycled safely, that's fine. But in poor countries, most lead-acid batteries are not recycled safely and they become a huge source of toxic lead poisoning. C.G.D. believes that decentralized solar systems are currently generating somewhere between 250,000 and 1.5 million tons of unsafe lead-acid battery waste per year, a number that could grow much higher. Americans have mostly heard about lead issues in recent years due to the tragic situation in Flint, Michigan. But on the whole, lead exposure via faulty water pipes is a relatively minor issue. Across American history, the biggest culprits for lead exposure have been lead paint and leaded gasoline. Both were phased out decades ago, but old paint chips and lingering lead in soil have remained problems for years, albeit at diminishing rates. The global situation is quite different and much worse, to the point that in low- and middle-income countries, half of children have blood lead levels above the threshold that would trigger emergency action in the United States. It sounds fantastical to cite numbers this high. But there is credible (albeit somewhat uncertain) research indicating that five million people per year die as a result of lead-induced cardiovascular impairments. And roughly 20 percent of the gap in academic achievement between poor and rich countries is due to lead's impact on kids' cognitive development. The report goes on to note that lead-acid batteries dominate solar storage in poorer countries because they're far cheaper than lithium-ion alternatives. When these lead batteries reach end-of-life, they are often recycled unsafely, creating significant lead pollution. It's difficult to determine the scale of the problem due to limited data and minimal attention from policymakers, but researchers say it could become massive as solar adoption accelerates. Since safer battery technologies and proper recycling methods already exist, the issue largely stems from cost and lack of regulation. In other words, the problem is solvable if addressed early.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 08:00

Harris’s 2024 campaign lacked authenticity and conviction. We can’t afford to repeat the mistakes of the past

I’ve got some good news and some bad news for you today. The bad news is, well, everything. As you may have noticed, the world is on fire. The good news, however, is that a savior may be at hand. Kamala Harris, a politician who has never won a presidential primary and lost the popular vote to Donald Trump in 2024, hasn’t ruled out running for president again.

Harris has kept a fairly low profile since November 2024, focusing most of her energy on promoting 107 Days, her account of her truncated presidential run, and appearing as the guest of honour at the 2025 Australian Real Estate Conference. But she has also made it clear that she still has an eye on the White House: in an interview with the BBC last October, Harris said she was “not done” with politics and strongly suggested she might run for president again. Harris echoed these sentiments in a conversation with the podcaster Sharon McMahon last week. “I might,” she said when asked if she will run again.

Arwa Mahdawi is a Guardian columnist

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 08:00

Green card holders are now ineligible for loans through the SBA as agency carries out Trump’s ‘America First’ agenda

The US federal agency in charge of helping small businesses has cut off an essential line of funding for immigrant entrepreneurs for the first time in the agency’s history.

Legal residents, or green card holders, are now ineligible for loans backed by the Small Business Administration (SBA). The change was first announced in February and comes as the agency carries out an “America First” agenda under SBA administrator Kelly Loeffler, a billionaire and staunch Donald Trump loyalist who was appointed last February.

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 08:00

As number of cases climbs past 1,000, experts say CDC is not taking obvious steps amid funding cuts

Experts say that the Trump administration has failed to take obvious steps to contain the spread of measles, which is continuing to accelerate in the United States as the number of cases has climbed past 1,000.

The administration has revealed a relaxed attitude toward the highly contagious virus both in terms of messaging and funding allocation, experts said.

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2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 07:54

Government’s claim to have lowered bills in jeopardy as households face £160 rise caused by soaring oil and gas prices

Ministers are discussing the possibility of intervening to protect the public against soaring household energy bills if the Middle East conflict drags on.

Oil and gas prices have surged since Donald Trump started his bombing campaign against Iran, which has hit back by closing off a crucial shipping route through the strait of Hormuz, and attacking energy infrastructure.

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 07:53

Experts warn backing Iran’s ethnic communities could increase the risk of a chaotic civil war. Plus, Pam Bondi subpoenaed by US House in Jeffrey Epstein investigation

Good morning.

Intense waves of airstrikes have hit dozens of military positions, frontier posts and police stations along northern parts of Iran’s border with Iraq, in what appeared to be preparation by the US and Israel for a new front as their war entered its sixth day.

What blowback could result from backing armed groups from Iran’s ethnic communities? Experts have warned it may heighten the risk of a chaotic civil war if the current regime collapses.

What is the latest on US military operations? Top military officials told lawmakers that the US may not have the capacity to shoot down every Iranian drone being launched against its military assets, according to two people familiar with the matter. As a result, the US is focused on rapidly destroying the launch sites for Iran’s drones and conventional missiles.

Who else has criticized the Department of Justice and why? Lawmakers on both sides have condemned the department’s handling of the documents, which has included accidentally publishing the names of survivors and redacting, without explanation, the names of those who may have committed crimes.

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 07:45

I have the Phone 4A and Headphone A, and I'm absolutely here for their soft pink tones.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 07:40

In Launceston, revellers were celebrating ‘Cornishness becoming cool’ as well as the region’s patron saint

A crisp morning in Launceston, an ancient capital of Cornwall, and the town was humming as St Piran’s Day celebrations got into full swing.

Children paraded and danced, songs were sung, speeches made and the odd tear was shed as people gathered to celebrate all things Cornish.

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2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 07:24

A man accused of plotting to kill U.S. politicians said he was pressured by Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps to devise the murder-for-hire scheme.

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-05 07:17

Why should Delaware care? 
As the 2026 campaign season launches, a newly revealed political contribution could bolster House Speaker Melissa Minor-Brown’s political power. It also cements the status of Phil Shawe within the Delaware political establishment — a position that comes in contrast to his outsider activism of the past.

Phil Shawe, the polarizing New York executive whose financial largesse helped propel Gov. Matt Meyer to victory in 2024, is now throwing his weight behind a new political action committee controlled by Delaware House Speaker Melissa Minor-Brown.

Amended campaign finance reports filed last month show that a political organization funded by Shawe is the sole contributor, so far, to Minor-Brown’s Back on Track PAC. 

The contribution follows a decade of well-funded assaults on Delaware’s brand by Shawe through a campaign he launched immediately after the state’s Court of Chancery ordered a forced sale of his company, TransPerfect. In recent years, his activism has shifted from the courts to politics.

While the roughly $50,000 donation to Minor-Brown’s PAC is not an immense amount – even for little Delaware – it now signals a completion of Shawe’s transformation from a outside agitator to an individual with deep ties to Delaware political establishment.

Building a party war chest

For Minor-Brown, the contributions allow her to control a war chest for what could become a contentious legislative campaign season ahead of primary and general elections this fall.

Though she might not face a challenge to her own New Castle-area seat, Minor-Brown’s fortunes as House speaker could depend on the outcome of her legislative allies’ races – some of whom already face primary challengers. Following the November election, the new members of the Delaware House of Representatives will vote for their next speaker.

In an interview with Spotlight Delaware, Minor-Brown acknowledged that the Back on Track PAC is hers, saying she launched it to “support Democratic candidates up and down this state.” Her party, she said, needs another financial stream for the upcoming election. 

Asked if she has established an alliance with Shawe, Minor-Brown pushed back against the characterization. She said she intends to raise money from other donors as well.

Minor-Brown also asserted that anyone donating to the PAC will be supporting the Democratic Party broadly, and not her individually.  

“They’re supporting the mission of the party,” she said. “It doesn’t mean they’re supporting my mission solely, and it doesn’t mean that I’m for sale, or bought and sold.”  

Rep. Rae Moore alleged that House Speaker Melissa Minor-Brown has retaliated against her for not supporting Senate Bill 21. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY ETHAN GRANDIN

Nevertheless, news of the donation has sparked alarm with some progressive members of the legislature, particularly Rep. Sherae’a Moore (D-Middletown). Last year, Moore’s public sparring with Minor-Brown included her sending a cease-and-desist letter to House speaker. Moore also claimed then that she suffered from retaliation for not supporting a controversial bill to reform Delaware’s corporate law. 

In an interview with Spotlight Delaware on Wednesday, Moore said she learned recently that Minor-Brown is actively searching for candidates to run against her in the primary election later this year.

And Moore suspects that the Back on Track PAC’s resources could be deployed against her. 

“From what I’m being told, I’m her priority to get rid of,” Moore said.

Asked about the claim, Minor-Brown said she is too busy to focus on Moore, with policy challenges, such as addressing the high costs of energy and health care, taking up her time.

Still, the House speaker made it clear that bad blood remains between the two lawmakers.

“I don’t have time for childish nonsense,” she said.  

To improve or malign the courts?  

Beyond impacts on upcoming political campaigns, Shawe’s contributions to the Back on Track PAC suggest that he has solidified a bond with Delaware’s new political establishment. 

It is a bond that first emerged in 2024 when his advocacy group spent more than $1 million in Delaware’s gubernatorial race — mostly on campaign ads to attack Meyer’s chief opponent in the primary election, then-Lt. Gov. Bethany Hall-Long.

While the campaign spending was significant, Forbes reported last year that TransPerfect has nearly doubled its revenues since 2018 — growth that made Shawe a billionaire.

His new relationship in Delaware as financier of leading politicians contrasts sharply with political and legal activism from previous years when Shawe’s groups assailed Delaware institutions, particularly its courts, with the help of high-profile individuals like the Rev. Al Sharpton and celebrity attorney Alan Dershowitz. 

The aggressive campaign began in 2015 after a Delaware judge ordered TransPerfect – a financially successful company Shawe co-founded with his then-fiancée Liz Elting – to be auctioned off. In the order, the judge said that infighting between the co-founders had caused “irreparable harm” to the company’s employees and clients, concluding that a forced sale was the only solution. 

In response to the order, Shawe employed the high-profile New York public relations company, Tusk Strategies, to carry out what became a yearslong campaign against Delaware’s judiciary.

It began with well-organized and well-choreographed protests outside of Delaware courts. Then there were full-page attack ads published in the print editions of The News Journal. One in particular depicted a Delaware judge standing with four other white men in front of a row of largely empty wine bottles. A portion of a caption stated that Delaware was one of 18 states at the time that had never had an African-American person serve on its Supreme Court.

The activism continued even after Elting sold her half of TransPerfect to Shawe — a decision that averted the forced auction of the company.

A portion of a full-page ad published in the News Journal in 2019 by Citizens for a Pro-Business Delaware shows a Delaware judge standing with other men in front of several wine bottles.

During the Iowa caucuses that preceded the 2020 presidential election, Shawe’s mother launched a $500,000 ad campaign in that Midwestern state, claiming that then-candidate Joe Biden supported a Delaware judicial system that “cuts out thousands of people who end up hurt by the court’s decisions.” 

In more recent years, Shawe’s advocacy groups — whose names include Citizens for a Pro-Business Delaware, Citizens for Judicial Fairness, and Citizens for a New Delaware Way — have periodically paid a mobile billboard truck company to circle downtown Wilmington with signs criticizing a lack of diversity among judges on the state’s courts.  

To Delaware’s political establishment of past years, the aggressive activism was broadly seen as spiteful – or even bad faith. In 2019, Delaware’s Legislative Black Caucus characterized it as “external distractions from outside groups.”  

That same year, the president of the Delaware State Bar Association claimed that Shawe’s advocacy was not meant to improve the judiciary, but to malign it.

But now, following the million-dollar spend in support of Meyer, as well as the recent contributions to Minor-Brown’s PAC, Shawe has gained a foothold among Delaware’s leadership. And his team seems to recognize it.

New focus on legislature

Chris Coffey, an executive at Tusk Strategies who has served as Shawe’s spokesman for several years, said their policy goals in Delaware are “judicial transparency and good government reforms.”

“We look forward to working with members of the state legislature to build a more equitable and transparent justice system for both individual Delawareans and companies domiciled there,” he said.   

Because Delaware is the legal home to more than 2 million companies, its laws set the corporate governance rules for many of the biggest companies in the world. 

Coffey’s statement comes about six months after Shawe’s advocacy group, Citizens for Judicial Fairness, published a press release celebrating a new Delaware court policy that changed how judges are assigned to cases involving businesses litigating in the state.

Rather than a single judge presiding over potentially multiple cases involving the same company, the new policy made that selection random – a process known as “wheel spin.”

It was a policy change for which Shawe had advocated over several years. The old policy was also one that Elon Musk, the widely influential Tesla CEO, had criticized to his many followers.

Governor Matt Meyer and Delaware House Speaker Melissa Minor-Brown interact on the House floor. | PHOTO COURTESY OF THE HOUSE DEMOCRATS

Within a press release celebrating the new court rule was a quote from Minor-Brown, which stated in part that “fairness and justice are the guiding principles of our judicial system, but we can’t fully uphold them by standing still.” 

The appearance of the quote became the first public indication that some type of collaboration existed between Minor-Brown and Shawe’s advocacy team.

Four months earlier, Shawe’s team first announced that he would contribute financially to Delaware’s 2026 legislative races, in a press release published thought the group, Citizens for a New Delaware Way. In the statement, the group revealed he would spend at least $200,000 during the campaign.

“Following our successful effort in the 2024 governor’s race, we’ve long said that we’d turn our attention to the state legislature – especially the speaker and her allies,” Coffey later told Spotlight Delaware.

The post Longtime court critic quietly funds PAC controlled by House Speaker appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 07:09

As title stated I changed my tire. I have done a swap plenty of times with no issues. Putting it back together went smooth as usual. Now I'm getting a stutter when trying to mount and eventually nothing. The motor will make a humming sound even if it doesn't try to balance. Foot sensors are working fine, I've checked the motor cable to see if it was pinched, checked pins and connector look fine. Any advice would be much appreciated fellas

Edit: wasn't getting an error message but now I got an error message 6

Edit 2: now I'm getting a red blinking light. Time to call a repair shop

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[link] [comments]

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 07:01

I'd keep both if I could, but there's one feature I truly can't live without.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 07:01

If you want tasty fries in minutes, nothing beats the air fryer.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 07:00

In opening response to charter review, corporation points to ‘mismatch’ between TV licence rules and viewing habits

The BBC has said it is facing “permanent and irreversible” trends that mean it cannot survive without a major overhaul, as it revealed a stark divergence between the number of people consuming its content and those paying the licence fee.

In its opening response to government talks over its future, the corporation said 94% of people in the UK continued to use the BBC each month, but fewer than 80% of households contributed to the licence fee.

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2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 07:00

President has ‘succeeded in completely politicizing’ justice department, experts say, using it to punish his enemies

Donald Trump’s Department of Justice (DoJ) has increasingly become his administration’s “political wing” with criminal investigations of economic and political foes and an FBI raid of a Georgia election office seeking evidence for Trump’s debunked claim that his 2020 election loss was rigged, say ex-prosecutors.

The shifts at the DoJ have been especially marked since the start of 2026 and the growing politicization of the department – headed by Trump’s loyalist attorney general, Pam Bondi – was symbolized on 19 February , when a large banner with Trump’s picture was unfurled over the door of the DoJ headquarters.

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2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 07:00

At the Third Way conference in Charleston, centrists debated ways to win – and were sure electoral success lies with them

Joe Walsh half jumped out of his seat when discussion at the Third Way conference in Charleston turned to how Democrats sound to voters.

“Tone! My God!” the former Republican congressman shouted. “The Democrats come across as, like, professors, academics, elites. I mean, my God, rip off your freaking sport coat and talk to me! Listen to me like a regular human being.”

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2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 07:00

A sunrise alarm clock helps you gradually wake up with its gentle light and sounds.

2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 07:00

The $110bn deal will require approval from regulatory authorities in the US, the EU and the UK

Champagne reportedly flowed at Paramount Skydance headquarters late last week after the media conglomerate edged out Netflix to acquire the entirety of Warner Bros Discovery for a cool $110bn.

And on a call with analysts and investors on Monday morning, David Ellison, Paramount Skydance’s chief executive, said the company was “absolutely confident” that the merger will expeditiously pass regulatory muster both in the US and abroad.

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 07:00

Israel’s role in drawing the US into a war on Iran is attracting healthy scrutiny. It’s also creating a permission structure for antisemitism

The joint US-Israel military strikes on Iran have forced a reckoning that American political culture has been approaching for years, but has perhaps never had to face as head-on as it does right now. It is a reckoning that contains two urgent, legitimate, and partially contradictory imperatives – and neither should be abandoned.

Let us start with one simple truth. Israel’s role in drawing the United States into military action against Iran warrants serious scrutiny. Whatever one believes about the strategic logic of the strikes, the process by which the United States came to participate in them raises profound questions about the relationship between the two countries. The US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, has claimed that the US struck Iran partly because it knew Israel was going to act unilaterally and feared the blowback. In other words, Israeli strategic priorities shaped American military timing, and by extension, American casualties.

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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 06:55

Why Should Delaware Care? 
Panhandling has become a point of contention in several communities in Delaware, which has raised debate over how to potentially address it. A new proposal from Attorney General Kathy Jennings that aimed to set a standard across the state is now coming under scrutiny by the ACLU.

In a winter marked by debate over how to address panhandling in communities across the state, the latest proposal from the Attorney General’s office that many have hoped could provide guidance is being denounced by the American Civil Liberties Union of Delaware as unconstitutional.

The state ACLU chapter has long been the strongest legal advocate for the rights of the homeless in Delaware, and its opposition likely foreshadows a looming court battle if state officials back a bill put forward recently by Attorney General Kathy Jennings.

In a March 3 letter addressed to Jennings and the General Assembly, the ACLU argues that the drafted legislation is not constitutionally compliant because it is too “vague,” imposes excessive fines on individuals and violates constitutional protections against unreasonable searches and seizures. 

This warning comes after the organization reached an agreement with Jennings’ office and the city of Wilmington nearly three years ago over previous loitering laws it also argued were unconstitutional. The ACLU has since weighed in on the constitutionality of similar ordinances in Dover and Wilmington in recent months. 

ACLU Interim Legal Director Jason Beehler, who wrote the letter, told Spotlight Delaware that his team believes it “is possible” to write a loitering bill that is constitutionally sound, but Jennings’ bill does not reach that threshold. 

“The language is too ambiguous to give citizens or law enforcement clear guidance on what is and isn’t prohibited that leads to arbitrary enforcement,” he said. 

In response, the Department of Justice held strong in its defense of the constitutionality of Jennings’ drafted bill. 

Caroline Harrison, a spokeswoman for the DOJ, said the legislation is the product of months of “dedicated research and analysis” by attorneys on the department’s legal team. 

“We have the deepest confidence in their work and are comfortable defending the constitutionality of the statute in court,” Harrison wrote in a statement to Spotlight Delaware.

Delaware Attorney General Kathy Jennings speaks at a Dec. 4, 2024, press conference announcing a settlement with landlord A.J. Pokorny.
Delaware Attorney General Kathy Jennings’s office has drafted new legislation that it expects to give guidance for how communities across the state can enforce loitering statutes. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY NICK STONESIFER

The debated legislation

Jennings first made headlines over the bill when she spoke about the legislation at the DOJ’s Joint Finance Committee hearing in mid-February, and members of the legislative committee expressed dismay that they had not been informed of the legislation. 

The revised bill comes after the ACLU sued both the city of Wilmington and the state in mid-2023 over their loitering and solicitation statutes, arguing that those pieces of legislation unconstitutionally penalized people occupying public spaces, and harmed individuals experiencing homelessness.

Jennings settled the lawsuit with the ACLU in early 2024, by directing both the state and all municipalities not to enforce any anti-loitering and anti-solicitation laws they had on the books. As a part of the agreement, Jennings said her office would write an updated, constitutionally sound loitering law. 

At the JFC hearing, Jennings did not specifically describe how the updated ordinance differed from the unenforceable prior ordinance. She did, however, emphasize that the new bill was constitutional, and would be a useful tool for police departments in places like Wilmington and Dover. 

While Jennings’ bill is dated January 2025, Jennings said she did not send the legislation to House and Senate leadership until later in 2025. 

Since the JFC hearing debacle, reports have circulated that both Senate Majority Leader Bryan Townsend (D-Newark/Glasgow) and Rep. Stephanie Bolden (D-Wilmington) signed on as sponsors of the bill. 

However, both Townsend and Bolden told Spotlight Delaware this week that they never agreed to be sponsors of the legislation. Bolden said she believes the bill needs to “be redone” before it could move forward, while Townsend said he is concerned about just fining or arresting Delawareans without finding a “true solution” to the problem. 

Mat Marshall, a spokesperson for Jennings’ office, said in February that the new drafted legislation takes a more “focused scope” in addressing pedestrian safety and loitering concerns, instead of venturing into the territory of First Amendment concerns. For example, the updated bill replaces the phrase “sits idling or loiters” with “sits, or remains.”

The ACLU, however, does not agree with the DOJ’s legal assessment. 

In the March 3 ‘warning’ letter, the organization outlined five different constitutional issues that it has identified with the proposed bill. 

These issues include that the state has not provided sufficient evidence that there is a safety issue caused by people standing in road medians; the definition of unpermissible loitering is too vague, leaving “unfettered discretion” to individual police officers; and that it violates Eight Amendment protections against excessive fines and fees, as the amount of a fine could be “grossly disproportionate to the gravity of the offense.” 

The letter also charges that the law would prohibit people from exercising their constitutional right to travel, which might require “sitting, standing, and congregating in public”; and it violates Fourth Amendment protections against warrantless searches and seizures. 

Jonathan Kerr | PHOTO COURTESY OF WIDENER UNIVERSITY

Jonathan Kerr, a Fourth Amendment scholar at Delaware Law School, said he agrees with the ACLU’s critique that the drafted bill is too vague to pass constitutional muster. 

“It seems to mean that everybody falls under the ‘reasonable suspicion’ umbrella if the crime is simply standing in an area and not moving on,” Kerr said.

He added that a law outlawing loitering where there are specifically “no loitering” signs present, like the city of Baltimore has, would better align with the Fourth Amendment. 

Beehler, the ACLU legal director, said it isn’t his group’s job to suggest to the state how the bill could be adapted to be constitutional, but there are examples of legally compliant loitering laws in other states. 

Officials have targeted road medians and traffic concerns as one method to control panhandling, but the ACLU questioned the risk of such scenarios. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY JACOB OWENS

Wilmington, Dover debate how to address panhandling

The ACLU has also weighed in on the constitutionality of drafted loitering ordinances at the city level in recent months. 

Late last year, Wilmington City Councilman Chris Johnson proposed a new city loitering ordinance, which would have imposed fines on individuals obstructing the passage of traffic and, or, loitering at a time of day “not usual for law-abiding individuals.” 

In response, the ACLU sent Johnson a letter on Feb. 4, arguing that the proposed ordinance is unconstitutional for reasons similar to those they outlined about Jennings’ bill – excessive fines and fees, the constitutionally protected right to travel, and warrantless searches and seizures.  

Johnson told Spotlight Delaware in February that he is meeting with local stakeholders and the city police department to revise the ordinance, in light of the ACLU’s and community feedback, before he plans to reintroduce the proposal later this year. 

The city of Dover also spent the better part of the past six months debating its own ordinance to address panhandling on city road medians.

While the Dover City Council ultimately voted against the ordinance last week due to council members’ concerns about its constitutionality, the ACLU issued a warning to the city about the ordinance when City Councilman David Anderson first introduced it in late October. 

Jared Silberglied, a lawyer for the ACLU, said at the time that the city needed to provide more evidence of a substantial traffic concern to justify the ordinance, and make the proposal more narrowly focused, so as not to violate freedom of speech rights. 


Maggie Reynolds is a Report for America corps member and Spotlight Delaware reporter who covers rural communities in Delaware. Your donation to match our Report for America grant helps keep her writing stories like this one; please consider making a tax-deductible gift of any amount today by visiting https://spotlightdelaware.org/support/.

The post ACLU questions constitutionality of Attorney General’s updated loitering bill appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-05 06:52

Leadership and representation in international relations: building on women's legacy 31 March 2026 — 1:00PM TO 3:00PM Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online

Join us for a panel discussion and networking reception to mark Women’s History Month.

Join us for a panel discussion and networking reception to mark Women’s History Month.

Join us for a panel discussion and networking reception hosted by Chatham House’s Equality, Diversity and Inclusion Working Group, in collaboration with Women in International Security UK (WIIS UK) and LSE IDEAS, to mark Women’s History Month.

In line with the 2026 International Women’s Day theme of ‘Give to Gain’, this event explores the rich history of women’s contributions to international relations and diplomacy over the past century, and examines how those working in international affairs today can build on this legacy. Our discussion focuses on career paths, representation and allyship, and on what gender equity in international affairs looks like across the field, with an emphasis on inspiring and supporting the next generation of practitioners, diplomats and academics.

The event is followed by a reception.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 06:31

Explore all the incredible handsets we saw at Mobile World Congress, from Xiaomi, Honor, Motorola and more.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 06:30

OpenAI's Sam Altman says AI's water concerns are "totally fake." The truth about AI's impact on natural resources is more complicated.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 06:28

Republican Rep. Tony Gonzales of Texas acknowledged for the first time Wednesday that he had a relationship with a former staffer, but alleged the controversy that has engulfed the situation is "about power and money."

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 06:26

Come see how CNET does its thing.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 06:23

Referee Marla Gearhar was knocked to the floor in the melee between South Alabama and Coastal Carolina.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 06:12

An anti-glare screen that's still radiant and vivid? Sign me up.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 06:00

Insider says demand is far outstripping supply and calls for creation of air bridges to evacuate people from Middle East

Planes are always urgently sought out when a crisis strikes somewhere in the world. Since the US-Israel war against Iran started on Saturday, demand has outstripped supply with thousands of people stranded in the Middle East frantically searching for an exit route.

While many are reliant on governments to dispatch aircraft to evacuate them, those with the financial means can look at a more expensive and much speedier option – a private jet. Matt Purton, the director of aviation services at UK-based global company Air Charter Service, is the man some of them have on speed dial.

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2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 06:00

The Americans finished fifth in the medal table in 2022. A strong team will be looking to improve that record in Italy in the coming days

The first-time Paralympian only turned 19 at the start of March, but she has been in the news for her skiing prowess since she was a second-grader. She’s also going to Italy on a roll, having reached the podium in two World Cup downhill races in early February. In the 2024-25 season, she had two World Cup podium finishes in giant slalom, and she took bronze in giant slalom and fifth in slalom at the world championships, where the other three events were canceled. Though she was born without her lower right arm, she was still an honorable mention All-State softball player in Colorado.

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2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 06:00

When presidents ask the country to support a war, honesty is not optional

The bombs fell in our name before any of us knew. Then the president saw fit to inform us.

Legal scholars and politicians alike began debating whether they were constitutional. Markets responded within hours. Cities across the United States moved to heightened alert amid fears of retaliation.

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2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 06:00

Saddle your air fryer with sidekicks to elevate the trusty countertop oven.

2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 06:00

Pacific island says the US weakened its proposal to advance a key climate ruling but vows to hold major polluters accountable

The Trump administration’s attempt to sink a UN resolution demanding countries act on the climate crisis has caused cuts to the proposal but hasn’t entirely killed it, according to the tiny Pacific island country spearheading the effort.

The US has demanded that Vanuatu, an archipelago in the south Pacific, drop its UN draft resolution that calls on the world to implement a landmark international court of justice (ICJ) ruling from last year that countries could face paying reparations if they fail to stem the climate crisis.

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2026-03-05 12:04
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Former Minnesota state Sen. Matt Little was lawfully observing federal immigration agents in a Dakota County neighborhood last month when the drive took an unexpected turn.

As he followed their vehicles, they led him down a rural road that grew increasingly familiar during the 20-minute drive. Soon, Little told The Intercept, he realized where the federal agents were headed: his house.

When he approached his driveway, two SUVs were already waiting, Little said. Agents moved to block his car, claiming he had impeded their investigation and that local law enforcement would be called. No other officers came to his house, and Little was not cited or charged.

“The intent was clearly to intimidate us. It’s stressful. It’s a little bit scary. But at the same time,” Little said, “I just think it’s really important to be out there and monitoring what they’re doing.”

Interviews, sworn declarations, and video reviewed by The Intercept indicate that Little is not the only person subjected to this kind of intimidation. Across the Twin Cities, immigration agents have identified legal observers by name and address, and, in some cases, led them back to their homes after they engaged in lawful monitoring of immigration activity. Legal observers say this pattern of behavior sends a clear and chilling message: The federal government knows who they are and where they live.

These encounters are unfolding amid a rapid expansion of federal surveillance capabilities.

Immigration authorities have significantly expanded their use of mobile biometric and surveillance tools in recent years. Officers with Immigration and Customs Enforcement as well as Customs and Border Protection, for example, can use the smartphone app Mobile Fortify to photograph a person’s face or capture fingerprints in the field and compare them against federal biometric databases, according to a Department of Homeland Security inventory of artificial intelligence technologies.

“We make sure to lock the door now.”

Those tools operate within a broader surveillance infrastructure that includes automated license plate readers, commercial data brokers, and face recognition systems. A 2022 report from Georgetown Law’s Center on Privacy and Technology found ICE can access driver’s license data covering roughly three-quarters of U.S. adults, including state photo databases that can be searched using face recognition technology.

Civil liberties advocates say the growing web of identification tools has enabled federal agents to quickly identify anyone who monitors or protests their actions — chilling protected First Amendment activity and deterring the legal observation of law enforcement.

“We make sure to lock the door now,” said Little. “It’s definitely heightened our awareness. I’m scared when I’m out there. But for me, it’s a lot scarier to just sit at my house.”

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“Uptick in Abductions”: ICE Ramps Up Targeting of Minneapolis Legal Observers

Attorneys and community observers say similar fears are emerging across the Twin Cities even as Operation Metro Surge is said to be winding down.

Beth Jackson, a longtime St. Paul resident and grandmother who participates in a local network of volunteer observers, described one frightening encounter that escalated quickly. According to Jackson and a heavily redacted police report reviewed by The Intercept, local officers surrounded her vehicle with guns drawn after a federal agent alleged that she made violent threats. Jackson denies the allegation, and her attorney said no criminal charges were filed.

Jackson said agents never explained how they identified her. In prior encounters, she said, federal officers told her they had been to her home and knew where she lived, which she interpreted as an attempt at intimidation.

Days later, Jackson said she received notice that her Transportation Security Administration PreCheck status, for moving more quickly through airport security, would be revoked based on the same incident.

Jackson was among four sources active in legal observation in Minnesota who described the panic they experienced after federal agents revealed knowledge of their identities.

“I live here. I commute on these streets every day. I am a grandmother of six, a mother of three. We should be just living our simple little life, and we can’t,” Jackson said.

Court filings reviewed by The Intercept describe encounters strikingly similar to those reported by Twin Cities legal observers.

The accounts appear in Tincher v. Noem, a federal lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union on behalf of Twin Cities residents who say they were unlawfully targeted while monitoring immigration enforcement.

In a sworn declaration, Edina resident Emily Beltz said she was lawfully following an unmarked federal vehicle in January when a woman in the passenger seat leaned out of the SUV window and began shouting her name.

“Emily, Emily, we’re going to take you home,” the masked agent yelled, according to Beltz’s declaration, before repeating her name and home address in what Beltz described as a mocking tone.

Beltz said the message alarmed her. “I was freaked out,” she wrote. “The agents had told me, in effect, that they knew where I lived and could come and get me and my family at any time.”

Beltz said the encounter left her fearful about continuing her work as a legal observer.

In a separate declaration, Minneapolis resident Katherine Henly described following suspected ICE vehicles when agents suddenly stopped on her block and began photographing her home.

“This seemed like a clear attempt to intimidate me and my family,” Henly wrote. She said masked agents later exited their vehicles, with one officer carrying what she described as a large firearm and accused observers of impeding enforcement. Henly said the observers had maintained a safe distance.

She said she feared the images of her home and vehicle could be stored in a government database, and that the encounter left her “extremely shaken and scared” and worried about the safety of her young children.

Civil liberties advocates say the reported conduct raises broader constitutional concerns.

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He Witnessed an Earlier Shooting. Feds Arrested Him at the Scene of Alex Pretti’s Killing.

“We are seeing immigration and law enforcement officers take photos of observers, call them by name, follow observers home, and tell observers that they are being tracked in a database. This practice of intimidation is chilling communities across the country, even though documenting and protesting law enforcement operations are protected by the First Amendment,” said Byul Yoon, a Skadden Fellow with the ACLU Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project.

While many encounters described by observers involve surveillance and intimidation, some have escalated into far more dangerous confrontations.

Ed Higgins, a longtime legal observer and Marine Corps veteran in Columbia Heights, Minnesota — the city where 5-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos was detained earlier this year — said he has witnessed encounters that turned violent. In some cases, he feared for his life.

On February 5, Higgins said a group of federal agents pursued him through the city and repeatedly tried to force him off the road. As the pursuit unfolded, Higgins called 911, telling the dispatcher that the vehicles following him appeared to be immigration agents and that they were “trying to run into me right now,” according to video obtained by The Intercept.

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Trump’s War on America

Dispatchers directed Higgins to drive toward the Columbia Heights Police Department for safety. Surveillance video later obtained by the Minnesota Star Tribune showed Higgins’s van entering the parking lot at speed, followed closely by multiple SUVs that boxed him in.

Video obtained by The Intercept shows agents surrounding Higgins’s vehicle, shouting at him and striking his car windows with their firearms, before a Bureau of Criminal Apprehension official who happened to be in the parking lot intervened to de-escalate the confrontation.

“I was panicking the whole way. I thought they were going to kill me,” Higgins said. “I kept telling the 911 operator they were going to kill me.”

Higgins said the encounter unfolded in seconds.

“I had my hands up. I was yelling for help,” he said in an interview with The Intercept. “Everything was happening so fast.”

Higgins was ultimately taken to the Whipple Federal Building, where he said he watched authorities enter his Social Security number and other personal information into a Microsoft Teams chat.

“They called it ‘agitator chat,’ and they would just put information in there. I have no idea who was in there, but it looked like 500 people,” he said.

Higgins was released the same day without any charges related to the incident.

“They called it ‘agitator chat,’ and they would just put information in there.”

He later reiterated his account in testimony to Minnesota state lawmakers, saying the confrontation left him believing the encounter could have turned deadly if the state official had not intervened.

Responding to questions about Higgins’s account, a Department of Homeland Security spokesperson said: “No policies have been violated.”

“Obstructing and assaulting law enforcement is a felony and a federal crime,” the spokesperson said. “Secretary Noem has been clear: anyone who assaults law enforcement will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.”

Legal observers fear they will continue to be monitored by federal authorities.

The day after her detention, Jackson, the grandmother of six, said that agents returned to her neighborhood and parked directly in front of her home.

“Family members don’t want me to come up there because they’re fucking afraid I’m going to bring ICE up there,” Jackson said. “I deliver Meals on Wheels every Tuesday to the elderly and infirm. I can’t deliver Meals on Wheels now.”

Courts evaluating potential First Amendment retaliation typically examine whether government conduct would deter an ordinary person from continuing protected activity, said the ACLU’s Yoon.

The lawsuit alleges that federal immigration agents violated the First and Fourth Amendments by retaliating against individuals engaged in lawful observation and protest. The plaintiffs are seeking court orders barring such conduct and mandating policy changes.

The case is pending in federal court in Minnesota. The plaintiffs are seeking preliminary and permanent injunctive relief that would bar the challenged tactics while the litigation proceeds.

Jackson said the disruption to ordinary routines has been one of the most lasting consequences.

“It’s the ripple effects of what they’re doing to us,” Jackson added. “All these intangible ways they’ve damaged us. I have a lot of time to give to my community. I don’t want to give it in this way.”

The post Federal Agents Are Intimidating Legal Observers at Their Homes: “They Know Where You Live” appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 05:32

The chatbot you vibe code with matters less if you have a good prompt.

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Based on testing done by our sleep experts and headphone expert, these are the best headphones and earbuds for sleep.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 05:26

Don't need to light things on fire? The phone still has a massive battery, bright spotlight and big speaker to suit your campsite.

2026-03-05 08:04
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Experts say backing Iran’s ethnic communities could ‘open up a hornet’s nest’ and increase risk of chaotic civil war

Intense waves of airstrikes have hit dozens of military positions, frontier posts and police stations along northern parts of Iran’s border with Iraq in what appears to be preparation by US and Israel for a new front in their war.

A US official with knowledge of the discussions between Washington and Kurdish officials said the US was ready to provide air support if Kurdish fighters crossed the border from northern Iraq.

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 05:01

Reports of attack on US registered tanker in Gulf lifts crude by 3% to $84 a barrel as gas price also starts to climb

Stock markets have rebounded in Asia after days of heavy losses driven by the war in the Middle East, but oil and gas prices have continued to climb amid disruption to supplies.

South Korea’s KOSPI, which posted its biggest ever fall on Tuesday of 12%, rose by almost 10% on Thursday, while Japan’s Nikkei climbed by 1.9%. MSCI’s Asia-Pacific index excluding Japan jumped by 2.7%.

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2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 05:00

They claim to fix fine lines, blemishes and redness – but which stand up to scrutiny? We asked dermatologists and put them to the test to find out

The best anti-ageing creams, serums and treatments

LED face masks are booming in popularity – despite being one of the most expensive at-home beauty products to hit the market. Many masks are available, each claiming to either reduce the appearance of fine lines, stop spots or calm redness. Some even combine different types of light to enhance the benefits.

However, it’s wise to be sceptical about new treatments that are costly and non-invasive, and to do your research before you buy. With this in mind, I interviewed doctors and dermatologists to find out whether these light therapy devices work.

Best LED face mask overall:
CurrentBody Series 2

Best budget LED face mask:
Silk’n LED face mask 100

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2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 05:00

The tournament is celebrating its 20th anniversary and some of the best players on the planet are competing for a title that means something

For years, while football fans salivated over Fifa World Cups, and basketball and hockey enthusiasts enjoyed an endless parade of NBA and NHL stars at the Olympics, baseball fans had bupkis, with no legitimate international tournament to speak of. Instead, there was something called the Baseball World Cup. Played without a Yankee, Cub or Dodger in sight, but with representatives from teams including the Montgomery Biscuits, Mexico Red Devils and Winnipeg Goldeyes, few fans in North America knew it existed, or when it was played. The only team with legit talent, Cuba, with players who could play in Major League Baseball, but did not because of politics, dominated the tournament.

Then in 2006 came a breakthrough with the debut of the 16-nation World Baseball Classic, which featured legitimate professional stars. The platform was built, the mysterious Cubans finally got to play in the US and the fans came. The tournament averaged nearly 19,000 fans a game, and that included the empty seat, Australia-Italy type match-ups. The face paint was bright, the vibes were October-like and the games were compelling; Japan held off Cuba as they took the maiden crown. The WBC passed its first test with a flourish and moved boldly into the future.

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2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 05:00

Thousands of companies are jockeying for billions of dollars in Defense Department contracts to build a shield designed to intercept and destroy missiles launched against the United States.

But amid the intense competition, a handful of firms have an important inside connection.

At least four of the companies awarded contracts so far are owned by Cerberus Capital Management, a private equity firm founded by billionaire Steve Feinberg, who until last year ran the company and is now the deputy secretary of defense — the second-highest-ranking official in the Pentagon.

Feinberg oversees the office in charge of the Golden Dome for America project, which is modeled on Israel’s Iron Dome missile defense system.

Feinberg filed paperwork saying he divested from Cerberus and its related businesses. But his government ethics records contain an unusual clause: He is allowed to continue contracting with the company for tax compliance and accounting services as well as health care coverage, a financial relationship that documents show could continue indefinitely.

Feinberg’s financial statements and ethics agreement are part of a trove of nearly 3,200 disclosure records that ProPublica is making public today. The disclosures, which can be viewed in a searchable online tool, detail the finances of more than 1,500 federal officials appointed by President Donald Trump. Records for Trump and Vice President JD Vance are also included.

The documents reveal a web of financial ties between senior government officials and the industries they help regulate — relationships that have drawn scrutiny as Trump has dismantled ethics safeguards designed to prevent conflicts of interest.

On his first day back in office, Trump rescinded an executive order signed by President Joe Biden that required his appointees to comply with an ethics pledge. The pledge barred them from working on issues related to their former lobbying topics or clients for two years. Weeks later, Trump fired 17 inspectors general charged with investigating fraud, corruption and conflicts of interest across the federal government. Around the same time, he removed the head of the Office of Government Ethics, the agency that oversees ethics compliance throughout the executive branch. The office is currently without a head or a chief of staff.

Against that backdrop, ProPublica has, over the past year, used the disclosure records to investigate how personal financial interests have intersected with government decision-making inside the Trump administration.

The documents helped show that senior executive branch officials, including Attorney General Pam Bondi, made well-timed securities trades, at times selling stocks just before markets plunged because Trump announced new tariffs. (The officials either did not respond to requests for comment or said they had no insider information before they made their trades.)

Other disclosures revealed that two high-ranking scientists at the Environmental Protection Agency who recently helped downgrade the agency’s assessment of the health risks of formaldehyde had previously held senior positions at the chemical industry’s leading trade group. (The EPA said the scientists had obtained ethics advice approving their work on the project.)

In December, ProPublica reported that Trump has appointed more than 200 people who collectively owned — either by themselves or with their spouses — between $175 million and $340 million in cryptocurrency investments at the time they filed their disclosures. Some of those appointees now hold positions overseeing or influencing regulation of the crypto industry. Among them are Todd Blanche, Trump’s former criminal defense attorney and now the second-highest-ranking official in the Justice Department.

Blanche’s disclosure records show that he owned at least $159,000 in crypto-related assets last year when he shut down investigations into crypto companies, dealers and exchanges.

After ProPublica reported on Blanche’s actions, six Democratic senators accused him of a “glaring” conflict of interest, and a watchdog group asked the Justice Department’s inspector general to investigate. A Justice Department spokesperson has said Blanche upholds the highest ethical standards and that his crypto orders were “appropriately flagged, addressed and cleared in advance,” but she did not respond to questions asking who had cleared his actions.

Conflicts of interest have long plagued both Democratic and Republican administrations. But ethics experts say Trump’s second term marks a sharp break from modern norms.

Trump has openly defended his family’s financial enrichment while he is in office, including through cryptocurrency deals that critics say allow investors, including foreign entities, to curry favor by boosting the president’s personal wealth.

“I found out nobody cared, and I’m allowed to,” Trump told The New York Times, referring to his family’s business dealings.

Trump also remains unapologetic about accepting a Boeing 747 worth about $400 million from the Qatari government and transferring nearly $1 billion from a nuclear weapons program to retrofit it. Virginia Canter, chief counsel for ethics and corruption at Democracy Defenders Fund, a nonprofit governmental watchdog group, cited Trump’s new plane as a brazen example of self-dealing.

“Ethics is in the toilet,” said Canter, who served as an ethics lawyer at the White House, Treasury Department and Securities and Exchange Commission during the presidencies of George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama.

White House spokesperson Anna Kelly defended the president and his appointees. “President Trump is leading the most transparent administration in history,” Kelly said. “He has also nominated highly-qualified individuals across the Executive Branch who have a wide range of public and private sector backgrounds.”


The idea of a space-based missile defense shield has persisted ever since President Ronald Reagan proposed his own version nicknamed “Star Wars.”

Trump rekindled the idea on the campaign trail. His Golden Dome for America imagines a battery of weapons, deployed from land, sea and space, able to destroy missiles launched at the U.S.

In December, the Defense Department started selecting companies for the project, for which it has allocated as much as $151 billion. So far, the agency has granted awards to more than 2,000 firms. Cerberus owns or is a majority investor in at least four of them: North Wind, Stratolaunch, Red River Technology and NetCentrics Corp.

Citing national security concerns, defense officials have not publicized the amounts of each contract or the products or services the companies are providing. (The Defense Department is required by law to publicly announce only contracts worth more than $9 million.)

Feinberg, who co-founded Cerberus in 1992, listed assets worth at least $2 billion when he was nominated by Trump last year. In his ethics agreement, Feinberg said he would divest his stake in the firm, potentially giving assets to irrevocable trusts benefiting his adult children — a maneuver that is legal under federal conflict-of-interest law but one that ethics experts say undermines its intent.

Feinberg also told ethics officials that he needed to contract with Cerberus for accounting, tax and health care services in the short term but would find other providers by April 2026. However, at Feinberg’s request, Defense Department officials approved an extension earlier this year, allowing the financial relationship to continue without an end date. In an amendment to his ethics agreement, he said he would “pay customary and reasonable fees” for Cerberus’ services but did not say how much those would be.

Three men sitting at a table. Feinberg and Hegseth are in suits while the third is in military dress uniform.
Deputy Secretary of Defense Steve Feinberg, center, with Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, right, at the Pentagon in 2025 Jonathan Ernst/Reuters

It’s unclear what role Feinberg has played — or will play — in deciding which firms receive Golden Dome contracts. In response to questions from ProPublica, the Defense Department said Feinberg does not “have direct responsibility for any Golden Dome acquisitions” but did not elaborate. The department would not comment on whether Feinberg or anyone in his office had met with any contractor representatives.

What is not disputed is Feinberg’s oversight of the Golden Dome initiative. Space Force Gen. Michael Guetlein, who heads the project, reports directly to him.

Richard Painter, a former White House ethics lawyer under President George W. Bush, said Feinberg’s ongoing relationship with Cerberus creates at least a perception of a conflict of interest that could undermine confidence in the fairness of the contracting process.

“This is what President Eisenhower worried about in the 1960s” when he railed against the military-industrial complex, Painter said of Eisenhower’s farewell address warning of the risks of a too-close relationship between the military and private defense businesses.

In response to questions from ProPublica, a Cerberus spokesperson said in an email: “Mr. Feinberg divested his stake in Cerberus and any funds that it manages, and is not involved with the operations of Cerberus or any of its portfolio companies in any way.” The spokesperson added that the administrative services provided to Feinberg “are unrelated to any investment activities or operations of Cerberus or its funds and were pre-approved by the Department of War’s Ethics Office and the Office of Government Ethics.”

Another top official in the department is Marc Berkowitz, who was confirmed in December as assistant secretary of defense for space policy. During his confirmation, Berkowitz described the Golden Dome project as one of his top priorities.

Berkowitz previously worked as a space industry consultant and vice president for strategic planning at Lockheed Martin. The giant defense and aerospace company was among the firms awarded Golden Dome contracts days before Berkowitz’s confirmation.

Lockheed is likely to compete for a large role in the project. The company has set up a webpage dedicated to the Golden Dome, and Reuters reported that Lockheed is one of several firms that received contracts to build competing prototypes of the missile defense system.

In his financial disclosure documents, Berkowitz reported receiving two monthly pensions from Lockheed and owning between $1 million and $5 million worth of stock in the firm.

Berkowitz agreed to divest by March 18, documents show. During his confirmation hearing, he downplayed any potential role he would have in Golden Dome contract decisions, noting that his position was more about policy.

A senior Defense Department official told ProPublica that Berkowitz is recusing himself from matters involving Lockheed until his remaining shares are sold.

Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell said the department’s ethics framework is “rigorous” and that Feinberg and Berkowitz are in full compliance with the law.

“Any claims to the contrary are fake news,” Parnell said.


Other agencies have similar industry links. Across the administration, former lobbyists and corporate executives now occupy influential positions, including Bondi, White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles and Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy.

Their ties to former clients have made national headlines, but ProPublica’s searchable online tool provides the public an important glimpse into the financial relationships of a powerful and often hidden cadre of presidential appointees within the federal bureaucracy.

Reports show that after being nominated to head the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Jonathan Morrison revealed he served for two years as a director of the Autonomous Vehicle Industry Association, the trade group that represents companies that make and use self-driving cars. He left the position in February 2024.

At his confirmation hearing last year, Morrison said he wanted the NHTSA to set national standards and play a leading role in the industry’s development of self-driving vehicles.

Sean Rushton, an NHTSA spokesperson, said Morrison doesn’t have to recuse himself from matters involving the autonomous vehicle group because he left the organization long before the presidential election and his nomination as highway traffic safety administrator.

Most political appointees and senior officials in the executive branch are required by law to file public financial disclosure reports. These documents detail their financial assets, the positions they hold outside government, their spouse’s holdings, their liabilities and their recent financial transactions (such as buying or selling stock) during a defined reporting period. For the most part, the law does not require appointees to provide exact financial values but instead a range.

At least a dozen appointees withheld the identities of previous clients, ProPublica found.

Appointees are allowed to keep the name of former clients confidential under exceptional circumstances, such as when the identity is protected by a court order or revealing the name would violate the rules of a professional licensing organization. In New York and Washington, D.C., for example, the organizations that license attorneys prohibit them from revealing confidential information about a client in most situations, including if doing so would be embarrassing or is likely to be detrimental to the client. While the relationship between a client and an attorney is often made public, in some cases — if, for instance, an appointee had conducted legal defense work for a client during a nonpublic criminal investigation — the client’s identity could be withheld from the financial disclosure.

Guidelines issued by the Office of Government Ethics say that such situations are unusual and “it is extremely rare for a filer to rely on this exception for more than a few clients.”

But at the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, which is responsible for tariff policy, the head of the agency, Jamieson Greer, withheld the names of more than 50 former clients from his time at King & Spalding, one of the nation’s most influential law firms. In his disclosure, Greer cited the New York and D.C. bar rules for not identifying the clients.

Greer’s senior adviser in the federal agency, Kwan Kim, previously worked as an international trade lawyer for Covington & Burling. From October 2020 to February 2025, Kim helped businesses win federal exemptions from steel and aluminum tariffs and defended companies accused by investigators of import-related crimes, according to a Covington biography that has since been taken down. Kim kept the names of 52 companies he represented secret, citing the D.C. Bar rules, the disclosure documents show.

The U.S. Trade Representative office did not respond to ProPublica’s request for comment.

When the names of former clients are withheld, it becomes virtually impossible for the public to know if an official’s actions in government benefit a former client. Kedric Payne, ethics director at the nonpartisan watchdog group Campaign Legal Center, said the lack of disclosure is concerning.

“When you see these types of close connections between the regulated community and the new regulators, it raises a yellow flag,” Payne said. “Because these officials are walking an ethical tightrope where any meeting or communication with their former employer and client could become a serious conflict of interest.”

ProPublica’s journalists have been gathering these records for more than a year. We obtained all of the disclosures that were available from the Office of Government Ethics. Those consist of the top appointees who require Senate confirmation. To get records for people working in lower-level positions, we made requests to individual federal agencies. Some didn’t respond or responded partially; records we requested for about 1,200 people weren’t provided.

Still, ProPublica’s online tool is the most comprehensive public source of financial disclosures from across the executive branch.

The post Documents Reveal a Web of Financial Ties Between Trump Officials and the Industries They Help Regulate appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 05:00

Crispy bacon in 7 minutes with minimal mess? Here's how it's done.

2026-03-05 08:04
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Former Humble Games executives have reacquired the publisher's catalog of more than 50 indie titles from Ziff Davis and relaunched their company as Balor Games. "For the developers we have worked with over the years, this moment is a reunion," Balor Games CEO Alan Patmore wrote in a statement. "[It has] the same leadership and the same commitment to thoughtful publishing remain in place. What changes is our scale and our focus. Balor Games is built for inventors and backed by believers. To that end, it exists to be a seal of quality for independent games." Engadget reports: The Humble Games lineup includes (among others) Slay the Spire, A Hat in Time, SIGNALIS, Forager, Coral Island, Monaco and Wizard of Legend. Separate from the Humble transaction, Balor also bought the complete catalog of Firestoke Games (which shut down last August) and publishing rights to Fights in Tight Spaces. In total, the young studio now owns the publishing rights to over 60 indie titles. Humble Games is separate from the Humble Bundle storefront. The latter is still owned by Ziff Davis. The pair view the newly anointed Balor as a developer-friendly publishing house. As for its name, Balor is a supernatural being in Irish mythology. It's sometimes depicted as having three eyes. Triple-eye, triple-I... Clever devils! The triple-I moniker is a more recent addition to the gaming lexicon. It typically means something defined by indie creativity and passion -- with a budget far less than AAA but more than a tiny two-person passion project. (Balor says it's about "high-quality, impactful games.") You wouldn't be blamed for wondering how that's different from AA. But the slant here is to define the genre less by budget and more by "indie" intangibles. You can learn more about the company's vision in an interview with GamesIndustry.biz.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-05 05:00

Some in the Kremlin believe a prolonged U.S. war could work in Russia’s favor by boosting oil prices and diverting key weapons from Ukraine.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-05 04:57

Tariffs and the global economy: What next for Trump’s trade war 18 March 2026 — 12:30PM TO 1:30PM Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House

World-renowned international trade expert and economist, Richard Baldwin, reflects on Trump’s trade war and the prospects for the world trading system.

As President Trump’s tariff shock continues to evolve, Richard Baldwin, one of the world’s leading international economists and trade experts, will discuss the prospects for the world trading system with Creon Butler. Key topics will include: the rationale for Trump’s tariff strategy, how his approach may have to change following the Supreme Court ruling declaring IEEPA-based tariffs to be illegal, the impact on the US and global economy, and on the wider system of international economic and financial governance. The event will also discuss what a new world trading order might look like, based on expanding regionalism, and how in the longer term this could lead to a re-emergence of rules-based multilateralism.

President Trump’s second term tariff policies have upended long-standing global trade arrangements, caused market volatility and accelerated trends towards economic regionalism. Traditional trading partners are reassessing their economic and security relationships with the US. China’s use of its leverage in critical minerals has signalled a new phase in US-China economic relations.

Domestically, the recent Supreme Court ruling declaring tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) unlawful raises important questions about how the administration’s trade strategy will evolve going forward and how trading partners will respond. However, the President’s intent has not changed and there are a range of legislative bases he can use to continue deploying tariffs to try and achieve multiple goals.

In this on the record event Richard Baldwin, one of the world’s leading international economists and trade experts, will discuss the prospects for the world trading system with Creon Butler, Director of the Global Economy and Finance Programme.

  • What will be the impacts of the Trump tariff shock on the US economy and the global economy over the short- and long-term?
  • How might the global trading order evolve in response, and could there eventually be a re-emergence of rules-based multilateralism?
  • What are the implications of the Trump tariff shock for the broader system of international economic and financial governance, including the oversight of AI and the position of developing countries?

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 04:55

See the full financial disclosures app at ProPublica.org.

The post Explore Financial Disclosures From President Trump and 1,500 of His Appointees appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 04:32

Sánchez’s principled stand against Trump matters. So does Merz’s silence Expert comment thilton.drupal

Spain’s leader has taken a strong position in refusing the US demand to use Spanish bases to strike Iran. Europe should show solidarity in the face of Trump’s threats.

Pedro Sanchez

On Tuesday 3 March, US President Donald Trump announced that his administration would cut off all trade with Spain in retaliation for the country’s refusal to allow the US military to use the Spanish bases of Rota and Morón to launch attacks on Iran.

Speaking alongside German Chancellor Friedrich Merz during his visit to the White House, Trump went on to criticize the European nation, saying ‘Spain has been terrible.’ He then launched into a tirade about Spain’s refusal to commit 5 per cent of GDP to defence spending, before returning to a clear threat to Spanish sovereignty: ‘We could use their base if we want, we could just fly in and use it, nobody’s going to tell us not to use it.’ All the while, Merz looked on. 

How the Trump administration would follow through on its threats remains unclear. Amazon just days earlier announced a total of €33.7 billion investment to build data centres in Spain, which could perhaps be the place it could start. Adding to the confusion, on 4 March, White House Spokesperson, Karoline Leavitt, said that Spain had ‘agreed to cooperate with the US military’. The Spanish government swiftly denied that this was the case. 

Nevertheless, the European Commission should emphasize that economic coercion against a member state, regardless of who is doing the coercion, will trigger the EU’s Anti-Coercion Instrument – known as the ‘trade bazooka’.

A principled position

It might be argued that Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez is grandstanding  to appease his further left coalition partners, or even that he is seeking a popular cause to set the agenda for an election. It is true that such a stance could benefit him in the polls – his party’s opposition to the Iraq war was central to its victory in the 2004 elections. 

However, Spain’s position is also logical and consistent. Multiple things can be true at once.

Sánchez has consistently sought to defend sovereignty, multilateral action and the rule of international law. Whether in relation to Venezuela, Greenland, Gaza, Ukraine or now Iran, Spain’s position has been steady. A notable example came in 2024, when Sánchez refused to allow ships transporting weapons to Israel to dock in Spain.

Spain’s foreign minister, José Manuel Albares, clarified that ‘Spanish bases are not being used for this operation, and they will not be used for anything not included in the agreement with the United States, or for anything that is not in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations.’

Spain’s firm opposition stands out. In contrast, Trump said that Germany had been ‘helping out’ by allowing US forces to access its bases. The UK initially turned down Washington’s request to use British bases to bomb Iran, before Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced the UK would allow the US to use its bases for ‘defensive’ strikes.  

Sánchez’s principled position matters. As he put it, ‘We will not be complicit in something that is bad for the world and that is also contrary to our values and interests simply out of fear of reprisals from someone.’ 

Standing up to a maximalist and threatening US president is not only brave but necessary. As Teresa Ribera, the EU Commissioner for Competitiveness and a former minister in Sánchez’s government, observed, ‘What we are seeing is very similar to what happened just a month ago with those threats, also in a boastful tone, regarding Greenland.’ As Greenland shows, when Europe responds quickly and in unity, it can force the US president to reconsider.

European solidarity tested

Which brings us to Chancellor Merz. Sitting quietly in the Oval Office, he may not have realized that his ambitions to position himself as Europe’s leading voice could be slipping away. He may even have welcomed the opportunity to reinforce the argument that Spain should meet the 5 per cent defence spending target; rather than challenge Trump’s threats against Spain, Merz remarked that ‘we are trying to convince them that this is a part of our common security, that we all have to comply with these numbers.’ 

One could argue that this strategy was necessary to focus on the priorities that brought Merz to Washington: Do not antagonise Trump in order to secure his commitment to last summer’s trade deal, avoid further market instability and shield German industry from additional strain. But that logic collapses under scrutiny. The US president had just threatened to cut off all trade with a European Union member state. 

The reaction in Madrid was understandably sharp. ‘I cannot imagine chancellors Merkel or Scholz making such remarks – it was a different European spirit,’ Albares said in an interview with the Spanish state broadcaster RTVE. 

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 03:34

Economic ripples from US-Israel attacks will soon become waves, engulfing everything from energy prices to food

In retaliation for the US-Israeli missile attacks, Iran has launched what amounts to all-out economic warfare. Should the conflict continue even for another week, its impacts will start to be felt around the world as the third price surge since the pandemic washes through global markets.

For Britain, a further turn of the screw on living standards arrives just as political instability mounts at home, with the Labour and Conservative parties facing existential challenges to their left and right.

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2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 03:28

Hi, so after 2 months of storage in my garage because of snow I was finally able to ride again but when I turned my pint on I got the personal space error.

From looking here I guess I need to change my front sensor but the problem is that I live in Sweden so can't really ship it to FM for repair. Is this something you can do on your own and if so where can I get a new front sensor?

submitted by /u/Nushboi
[link] [comments]

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 02:51

John Healey meets Cypriot counterpart after Shahed-style drone evaded defences and hit Akrotiri airbase on island

John Healey has flown to Cyprus to calm the diplomatic fallout over a drone that evaded detection and hit an RAF base, which has prompted fury from local ministers.

UK officials believe a drone that hit an RAF base in Cyprus evaded detection by flying low and slow when it was launched by pro-Iranian militia in Lebanon or western Iraq.

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2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 02:05

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 02:00

Quality camera, good software and long battery life, but you should just buy the Pixel 9a instead

The latest smartphone in the lower-cost A-series Pixel line shows what makes Google phones so good, while undercutting the competition on price. The problem is that it differs little from its predecessor, which is still on sale.

Priced from £499 (€549/$499/A$849), the Pixel 10a is more like a second edition of last year’s excellent Pixel 9a. The two phones share the same Tensor G4 chip, not the newer G5 in the rest of the £799 and up Pixel 10 line; the same memory, storage and cameras; the same size 6.3in OLED screen, though the Pixel 10a reaches a higher peak brightness making it slightly easier to read outside.

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2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 02:00

joshuark writes: The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) has added a VMware Aria Operations vulnerability tracked as CVE-2026-22719 to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog, flagging the flaw as exploited in attacks. VMware Aria Operations is an enterprise monitoring platform that helps organizations track the performance and health of servers, networks, and cloud infrastructure. The flaw has now been added to the CISA's Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) catalog, with the U.S. cyber agency requiring federal civilian agencies to address the issue by March 24, 2026. Broadcom said it is aware of reports indicating the vulnerability is exploited in attacks but cannot confirm the claims. "A malicious unauthenticated actor may exploit this issue to execute arbitrary commands which may lead to remote code execution in VMware Aria Operations while support-assisted product migration is in progress," the advisory explains. Broadcom released security patches on February 24 and also provided a temporary workaround for organizations unable to apply the patches immediately. The mitigation is a shell script named "aria-ops-rce-workaround.sh," which must be executed as root on each Aria Operations appliance node. There are currently no details on how the vulnerability is being exploited in the wild, who is behind it, and the scale of such efforts.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-05 02:00

Fredrik Gertten travels the world meeting activists who have had enough of corruption, kleptocracy and structural inequality – while Bregman’s nuggets of wisdom are a joy

Bicycling Dutch historian Rutger Bregman does not identify as an optimist. He says that optimism makes people lazy, complacent that history is going in the right direction. Instead he describes himself as a “possibilist”, a believer in the possibility that things can be different. Bregman is interviewed in this film about corruption, kleptocracy and structural inequality. The director is documentary-maker Fredrik Gertten who travels the world meeting activists who have had enough.

First, the cold hard facts. Journalist and corruption expert Sarah Chayes, a former adviser to the Obama administration, does an impressive job summarising her analysis of global kleptocracy. In Malta, the son of the murdered journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia, killed after exposing corruption at the highest levels of government, investigates the new scandal of “golden passports”. The film’s main focus is activism in Chile and the US. Amazon workers in New York unionise (and have a good laugh at their boss Jeff Bezos’s trip to space). In Chile, feminists march and climate activists go into battle against mining companies responsible for drought.

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2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 01:05

Japanese baby macaque, who appeared to find comfort in the djungelskog toy after being rejected by his mother, seems to be mixing more with his peers

Punch, a baby macaque that stole the hearts of animal lovers around the world, is outgrowing his Ikea djungelskog plushie that comforted him after he was initially rejected by his mother and other monkeys at a zoo in Japan.

Images of the seven-month-old dragging around a toy bigger than him drew attention to the residents of Ichikawa city zoo near Tokyo. When other monkeys shooed the baby away, Punch rushed back to the toy orangutan, hugging it for comfort.

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2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 01:00

Donald Trump has also criticised Keir Starmer’s initial decision not to allow the US to use UK military bases in the war

The US did not share exact operational details or timings with the UK before the joint strikes with Israel on Iran, sources have told the Guardian.

The US decision to cut the UK out of the official loop on the airstrikes came alongside Keir Starmer’s decision to decline permission for the US to use British military bases for the operation.

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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-05 01:00

Iranian blockade of the strategic strait of Hormuz is hitting global fertiliser supply chain

The global fertiliser supply chain could face significant disruption if the effective closure by Iran of the strait of Hormuz persists, prompting concerns from analysts about crop production and food security.

Passage through the waterway, located off Iran’s southern coast, has mostly stopped since the US and Israel launched their attacks at the weekend.

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2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 00:47

‘High-quality growth’ target of 4.5-5% outlined at Two Sessions as Chinese premier talks of complex situations at home and abroad

China has set its target for GDP growth to a record low of 4.5-5%, the first time since 1991 that the figure has dropped below 5%, reflecting an economic strategy that is shifting away from export-led growth to a model that leaders hope will be more resilient to external shocks.

Li Qiang, China’s premier, announced the target for 2026 in the opening session of the National People’s Congress (NPC), China’s annual parliamentary gathering, which began on Thursday.

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2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 00:00

America needs a plan for Tehran's nuclear program.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 00:00

How escalating U.S. pressure could reshape the island.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-05 00:00

Beijing cares about the oil, not the regime.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 23:33

The fallen soldiers identified by the Pentagon were Sgt. Declan Coady, Sgt. 1st Class Nicole Amor, Capt. Cody Khork, Sgt. 1st Class Noah Tietjens, Maj. Jeffrey R. O'Brien and Chief Warrant Officer 3 Robert M. Marzan.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 23:16

Six American service members have been killed in the U.S.-Iran conflict, U.S. Central Command said.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 23:09

This blog is closed. Please follow our continuing coverage on our new liveblog here

Lebanese state media said that four people were killed and six more were wounded in an Israeli strike on a building in Baalbek in eastern Lebanon on Wednesday.

“The initial toll is four killed and six wounded, and work is underway to rescue families from under the rubble,” Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency said.

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2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 22:33

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for March 5.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 22:00

This live blog is now closed.

Gen Caine said today that the US will “now begin to expand inland, striking progressively deeper into Iranian territory”, after forces were able to establish air superiority.

“The throttle is coming up,” Caine said, “as opposed to ramping down”.

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2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 22:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from the New York Times: A novel type of nuclear power plant in Wyoming backed by Bill Gates received a key federal permit on Wednesday, making it the first new U.S. commercial reactor in nearly a decade to receive clearance to begin construction. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the federal body that oversees reactor safety, unanimously voted (PDF) to grant a construction permit to TerraPower, a start-up founded by Mr. Gates. TerraPower is one of several companies trying to build a new wave of smaller, advanced reactors meant to be easier to build than the large reactors of old. The permit, which comes after years of consultations and regulatory reviews, means that TerraPower can begin pouring concrete and building the nuclear components of its proposed nuclear plant in Kemmerer, Wyo. The plant, which still faces plenty of logistical hurdles, is currently expected to come online in 2031 near an old coal-burning power plant that is slated to retire a few years later. [...] With its construction permit in hand, the company says it plans to start work on the Wyoming reactor in the coming weeks. The company had already broken ground on the site in 2024 and had begun building the nonnuclear parts of the plant, which did not require a permit. TerraPower has already had to push back its start date several times, and it will still face hurdles in trying to avoid the snags and cost overruns that have plagued other reactor projects as well as securing the fuel it needs. Before coming online, the reactor will also need to secure a separate operating license from the N.R.C., which has told the company it will continue to monitor several safety issues. TerraPower plans to sell electricity from its first plant to PacificCorp, a utility in the Northwest. The company has also agreed to supply up to eight reactors to Meta to power its data centers in the coming years.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 21:46

The Arctic Metagaz had been carrying 61,000 tonnes of liquefied natural gas when it exploded; Ukrainian drones reported to have hit southern Russia. What we know on day 1,471

Vladimir Putin, the Russian president, has accused Ukraine of carrying out a attack on one of its liquefied natural gas (LNG) carriers, which exploded and sank into the Mediterranean Sea off Libya. Explosions were reported on the Arctic Metagaz, which had been carrying 61,000 tonnes of LNG, on Tuesday night when the ship was about 150 miles (240km) off the coast of Libya. Ukraine has not commented on the sinking on the ship, which had been under US and EU sanctions. Russia’s transport ministry had claimed that the Arctic Metagaz had been hit by Ukrainian drones launched from the Libyan coast.

Ukrainian drones damaged Russian civilian sites in the south-western region of Saratov, Roman Busgarin, the area’s governor said early on Thursday. Saratov airport and other airports in the southern and central regions were closed late on Wednesday and early on Thursday. Three injuries were reported.

A prolonged energy crisis caused by the widening war in the Middle East may offer the Russian war machine an economic lifeline just as it was beginning to show signs of strain over its war in Ukraine. Russia could receive a windfall if disruption in the Middle East pushes buyers towards its energy, while a possible slowdown in western arms supplies to Ukraine as the US military action in Iran continues could give Russia a further boost.

Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said that trilateral talks with Washington and Moscow about ending Ukraine’s war in Russia would resume, once the situation in Iran and the Middle East permitted. The Ukrainian president also said that he spoke to the king of Bahrain and the crown prince of Kuwait about the conflict in the Middle East on Wednesday.

Ukraine has said it will boycott Friday’s opening ceremony of the Paralympics in Milan-Cortina, Italy, over the participation of Russian athletes. Athletes from Russia and Belarus had been banned from the 2022 Winter Paralympics over its war in Ukraine, but were allowed to compete as neutral athletes in the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris. The Czech Republic, Estonia, Finland, Latvia and Poland were set to join Ukraine in its boycott on Friday.

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2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 21:34

Misty Roberts, 43, faces sentences of up to 10 and seven years in prison after July 2024 sexual assault at pool party

The former mayor of a Louisiana city has been convicted of raping a 16-year-old boy during a party at her house while she was still in office.

Misty Roberts, 43, faces sentences of up to 10 and seven years in prison after a jury in the municipality of DeRidder on Tuesday found her guilty of two felonies: carnal knowledge of a juvenile – or statutory rape – as well as indecent behavior with a minor.

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-04 21:02

PARIS and NEW YORK, March 4, 2026 — Pasqal Holding SAS, a global leader in neutral atom quantum computing, and Bleichroeder Acquisition Corp. II, a SPAC led and backed by Michel Combes and Andrew Gundlach, announced today that they have entered into a definitive business combination agreement (“BCA”), following the consummation of which the go forward company will operate as Pasqal and is expected to be listed on Nasdaq.

The proposed transaction is expected to close in the second half of 2026, subject to customary closing conditions, including regulatory and shareholder approval. As a global leader in neutral atom quantum computing, the deal values Pasqal at $2.0 billion pre-money, and contains $200 million in committed capital via convertible financing, which will allow Pasqal to deliver on its quantum roadmap and technology deployment, accelerate the Company’s efforts in demonstrating quantum advantage and accelerate international commercial and organizational growth.

Michel Combes and Andrew Gundlach, Co-Sponsors of Bleichroeder Acquisition Corp. II, commented: “Pasqal represents the strength of French scientific excellence translated into commercial leadership. Built on Nobel Prize-winning research and supported by France’s deep national commitment to quantum innovation, Pasqal has already deployed quantum computers globally and is delivering real-world capability today. We believe this partnership provides the capital and platform to accelerate Pasqal’s growth as a global leader in neutral atom quantum computing. We are proud to support Pasqal, which combines sovereign European roots with international ambition and the ability to scale to become a global quantum leader.”

Wasiq Bokhari, CEO Pasqal Holding SAS, commented: “Pasqal brings a combination of some of the world’s leading neutral atom quantum computing technology, deep customer traction, commercial scaling and solid sovereign support. This funding gives us the fuel to further cement our leadership in the quantum computing industry as a global shareholder-focused French company.”

Delivering Real-World Quantum Processing Units and Quantum Solutions Today

Pasqal is a global leading quantum technology company pioneering the development of neutral-atom quantum computers for industry, science, and governments worldwide. Built on Nobel Prize-winning research, Pasqal has been designing and building high-performance hardware and cloud-ready software since 2019 to address complex challenges in optimization, simulation, and artificial intelligence. Headquartered in France, Pasqal employs over 275 people including 70 phDs and serves over 25 clients and partners. With deep sovereign backing and other leading international investors, Pasqal is accelerating the adoption of scalable, high-performance quantum computing worldwide.

Pasqal’s scientific leadership, commercial traction and a robust growth outlook positions it as a highly attractive public investment opportunity in quantum computing:

  • Co-Founded by Nobel Prize Laureate, Alain Aspect, with deep bench of scientific leaders and intellectual property
    • Alain Aspect, 2022 Nobel Prize Laureate for his work on entangled photons, establishing the violation of Bell inequalities and pioneering quantum information science
    • Antoine Browaeys, member of the Académie des Sciences, and 2025 John Stewart Bell Prize for his work on quantum simulation of 2D antiferromagnets with hundreds of Rydberg atoms
  • French sovereign backing via equity shareholding and strategic partnerships
  • Pure play neutral atom quantum computing company with 7 quantum computers deployed to date with 3 more in production, representing more quantum computers deployed than any other pure play neutral atom based quantum computing company in the world
  • Delivering quantum computing solutions to enterprises globally
  • Commercially ready neutral atom quantum computing company in the market with approximately 100% revenue growth in 2025 (unaudited) and approximately $80 million in booked and awarded business including grants, representing potential multi-year value customer contracts expected to be realized over time
  • Trusted by industry leaders in critical technology with key partnerships including IBM (Pasqal is part of the IBM Quantum Network) and NVIDIA
  • Currently serving over 25 commercial customers and partners including Sumitomo, CMA CGM, Thales, LGE
  • Ability to ramp up to 13 QPUs per annum across 2 manufacturing facilities in France and Canada, subject to full staffing and parts availability

Transaction Details

The transaction values Pasqal at a pre-money rollover equity value of $2.0 billion and the combined company at a pro forma enterprise value of approximately $2.0 billion, with a pro forma market capitalization of approximately $2.6 billion. The transaction is expected to provide more than $600 million of gross proceeds to Pasqal, including:

  • Approximately $289 million cash held in Bleichroeder’s trust account as of February 28, 2026 (assuming no redemptions and inclusive of deferred underwriting fees of up to $12.25 million);
  • $200 million of convertible financing anchored by sponsor-affiliated investor Inflection Point, existing Pasqal anchor investor BPIfrance Large Venture and several other new institutional investors
  • Approximately $158 million cash on Pasqal’s balance sheet as of February 28, 2026

Proceeds from the transaction are expected to:

  • ⁠Support the rapid advancement and commercialization of Pasqal’s core quantum technologies and product offerings.
  • ⁠Enable broader and faster realization of practical quantum advantage in real-world applications.
  • ⁠⁠Advance the development of scalable, error-corrected quantum computing systems.
  • ⁠⁠Drive global market expansion and strengthen operational capabilities worldwide.

The boards of directors of both Pasqal and Bleichroeder have approved entry into the proposed BCA and the transaction is subject to customary closing conditions, including, among other things, the approval by Bleichroeder shareholders of the business combination and certain other shareholder approvals related thereto, the closing of the concurrent convertible financing transaction and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s (the “SEC”) completed review of the registration statement on Form F-4 and the receipt of certain other regulatory approvals, and approval by Nasdaq to list the securities of the combined company.

Advisors

Lazard Freres SAS is serving as advisor to Pasqal’s Board. Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP (France and US) is serving as legal counsel to Pasqal. Cantor Fitzgerald & Co. is serving as advisor to Bleichroeder. Reed Smith LLP (France and US) is serving as legal counsel to Bleichroeder. Cohen & Company Capital Markets acted as Lead Book-Running Manager for Bleichroeder’s initial public offering which closed on January 8, 2026.

About Pasqal

Pasqal is a leader in the industrialization of neutral-atom quantum computing, transforming Nobel Prize-winning research into real-world solutions for industry, science, and governments. Since its founding in 2019, Pasqal has built high-performance quantum systems and cloud-ready software designed to address complex challenges in optimization, simulation, and artificial intelligence. Pasqal, headquartered in France, employs over 275 people and serves over 25 clients, including CMA CGM, OVHcloud, Thales, IBM (Pasqal is part of the IBM Quantum Network), NVIDIA, and Sumitomo. Backed by more than $300 million in total funding from leading international investors, Pasqal is accelerating the adoption of scalable, high-performance quantum computing worldwide.


Source: Pasqal

The post Pasqal to Go Public via Business Combination, Plans Nasdaq Listing appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 21:00

US military has not taken responsibility for the strike, which killed at least 165 students, according to Iranian officials – key US politics stories from Wednesday 4 March at a glance

Pete Hegseth, the US defense secretary, offered few details and was evasive when asked about the deadly strike on a girls’ school in Iran, saying only that the US was “investigating” the incident. Iranian officials say the attack, which happened on Saturday, killed at least 165 students.

“All I can say is we’re investigating that,” Hegseth said when asked about the bombing of the Shajareh Tayyebeh girls’ school in Minab. “We, of course, never target civilian targets, but we’re taking a look and investigating that.”

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-04 21:00

SEATTLE, March 4, 2026 — NLM Photonics heads to OFC 2026, from March 17-19, to showcase its 1.6T and 3.2T silicon-organic hybrid (SOH) photonic integrated circuits (PICs), which are now sampling to select customers. The live demonstration features a 1.6T DR8 PIC built with NLM’s patented Selerion-HTX, an organic material, achieving an order-of-magnitude better performance than traditional silicon photonics. The 1.6T and 3.2T PICs were fabricated on Advanced Micro Foundry’s (AMF) 200 mm GP O-band silicon photonics platform.

NLM’s 1.6T SOH PIC is 40 percent smaller than standard 1.6T silicon photonic PICs, delivering 200Gb/s per lane bandwidth with lower drive voltage and higher extinction ratios. The 3.2T PIC delivers 110+ GHz performance in the same form factor. Building on record-setting demonstrations of 1.6T and 3.2T in 2025, NLM is meeting with customers and ecosystem partners to share their latest test results and plans for 2026 and beyond.

“Silicon photonics has run head-on into fundamental bandwidth and efficiency limits at a point in history where it is built into greater than half the transceivers in the AI and datacom markets. The industry needs a solution that unlocks performance breakthroughs while being able to scale to volume production,” said Brad Booth, CEO of NLM Photonics. “Our recipe provides that solution – bridging silicon photonics’ volume manufacturing capability with silicon organic hybrid performance and power improvements.”

NLM Photonics will host private demonstrations in Meeting Room 5544 during OFC 2026, as well as the following open house sessions:

  • Tuesday, March 17: 1:00–2:00 PM PT
  • Wednesday, March 18: 11:00 AM–12:00 PM PT
  • Thursday, March 19: 3:00–4:00 PM PT

To schedule a private demonstration, contact press-relations@nlmphotonics.com.

About NLM Photonics

NLM Photonics is architecting the future of photonic communications. Enabled by NLM’s Selerion family of organic electro-optic material and leveraging standard silicon photonic manufacturing, NLM has created a blueprint for building energy-efficient, high-bandwidth photonic interconnects for data centers, AI infrastructure, and quantum networking.


Source: NLM Photonics

The post NLM Photonics Initiates Sampling of 1.6T and 3.2T Silicon Organic Hybrid PICs appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-04 21:00
  • Sentnor scored in the 55th minute, her seventh US goal

  • Canada haven’t kept a clean sheet since April 2025

  • Both teams next play on 7 March

The US women’s national team notched a seventh consecutive clean sheet, narrowly beating rival Canada 1-0 in the second game of the SheBelieves Cup. Ally Sentnor notched her seventh international goal early in the second half, capitalizing on a corner kick to swing the result in the hosts’ favor.

The United States last gave up a goal on 23 October against Portugal, a dominant defensive stretch that’s now extended to 714 minutes. Canada are winless in their last six matchups against the USWNT, though their last win was the most consequential result of all: the 2021 Olympic semi-final.

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2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 20:56

Among the 3,000 delegates is former athlete who sits as an independent on the National People’s Congress

Among the generally drab lineup of mostly middle-aged men in suits who make up the nearly 3,000 delegates to the National People’s Congress (NPC), China’s parliament, a few stand out.

There are delegates from China’s 55 official ethnic minority groups, who often arrive dressed in traditional outfits rather than western-style suits. There are military members, identifiable by their uniforms. And then there is Yao Ming, the 7ft and 6in tall retired basketball player who, towering over every other person in the Great Hall of the People, is hard to miss.

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2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 20:56
Alec Ader

ALEC ADER
Staff Reporter

During the first week of college, one of my friends on my floor asked, “Do you want to grab Wawa for dinner?” 

I am from New York, so in my head, I was hesitant to give my usual reply of an automatic yes. 

What is a Wawa? Are we grabbing chips and soda from the BP minimart? Valero? I envisioned Wawa food as 7-Eleven food — $1 pizza, greasy wings and rolling taquitos under a heat lamp. It was not until later that evening when I tried a wrap that the “where have you been all my life” epiphany occurred.

Around campus, other students share a similar admiration for the chain. 

“Oh, I love Wawa … Best place ever,” Zach Robart, a senior medical diagnostics major, said. “It’s just close and easy to get. And there’s so many options. Yeah, it’s like just my go-to when I need something quick.”

Sure, it’s convenient. It is a convenience store, after all, but you have also probably heard it regarded as much more: at the extreme, a high holy place, and at the very least, better than 7-Eleven. 

“I think it’s the best out of those — 7-Eleven, Sheetz,” Andrew Hoffert, a sophomore economics major, said. “I just feel like the food’s just better quality than those.”

Hoffert also pointed out that a big part of their brand’s image is selection.

In the 2010s, Wawa expanded its food and beverage offerings significantly through a “Built-to-Order” initiative, adding smoothies, frozen cappuccinos and specialty drinks like lattes, macchiatos and hot chocolates. 

Some favorites around campus from this “Built-to-Order” initiative include quesadillas, wraps (one student pointed out a chicken bacon ranch) and numerous mentions of mac and cheese.

But the major standout? Hoagies. (AKA subs, if you’re from anywhere other than Jersey or the Philadelphia suburbs.) 

Brandon Scrimenti, a junior statistics major, pointed out seeing $6 meal deal commercials over the past few months and praised the cheap, good food that Wawa has.

Wawa’s quality hoagies were featured in a recent marketing push to promote a meal with a sandwich choice, a bag of chips and a small drink. Although it ended Oct. 12, the next promotion highlighted another “Built-to-Order” product bargain — lattes for three dollars.

In order to not make this sound like a Wawa advert, I would like to mention that every cult does have its criticisms (pretend that’s a common idiom). 

It is “[a] little pricey … I don’t know if they’re raising the prices or I’m just poorer than usual, but it’s definitely a little more expensive than I would like,” Robart said. 

Matthew Borgese, a freshman accounting major, also mentions how he has never really been there, since he is from New York. This is not surprising, since in the 1990s, Wawa withdrew its expansion into New York and Connecticut after several years of underperformance linked to demand. 

However, Delaware’s culture seems to be highly reliant on it, along with the surrounding areas: Philadelphia, New Jersey and Maryland. In fact, Scrape reports that there are 51 locations in Delaware. 

It has also rooted its place in Philadelphia. In an article for The Philadelphia Inquirer, Charles Wiedenmann writes, “It’s not just a store; it’s a home away from home, a place where memories are made, and where the simple act of grabbing a sandwich becomes a cherished tradition.”

He serves to officiate Wawa’s well-known status, passionately writing about its effect on him as a Philly local. Furthermore, the Phillies’first baseman, Bryce Harper, recently got fined for repping a Wawa headband and cleats. This further confirms the significant fandom that Wawa has garnered in Philadelphia.

However, Wawa sometimes gets beaten by its competitors in Newark, as Scrimenti favored Sheetz for quality and selection. 

Robart stated that it’s better than 7-Eleven, “except maybe coming back from the bars, a taquito might hit more than Wawa, but that just depends on the night.” 

Even its criticism, though, shows why Wawa is such a good place to go. It is a type of night. It is college culture. It is cheap food. It is “good eats” and good memories.

From late-night snacks to quick meals during your busy day, whether it is for a cheap meal or a fun drink, Wawa is a proven staple to both Delaware culture and the Delaware college experience. I hope you give it a try, make a memory and grab dinner from a gas station.


Wawa: It isn’t just a gas station was first posted on March 4, 2026 at 8:56 pm.
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2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 20:48

Skyrocketing memory costs mean bleaker projections than even the worst predictions analysts made before.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 20:46

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for March 5, No. 528.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 20:26

Sen. Steve Daines said he had wrestled with the decision for months.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 20:22

Gemini for Home's AI is getting a significant upgrade -- if you don't mind it peering through your security cam.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 20:17

The confidence it inspires by basically having the board always active is insane—switch riding, reverts, slow-speed drops. Re-positioning at slow speeds don’t feel sketch, jumping on the board at slow speeds don’t feel sketch.

Now I need to learn how to dismount gracefully lol

submitted by /u/Some_Guy_Running
[link] [comments]

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 20:10

Trump ally Daines confirms resignation and withdraws bid for a third term, saying: ‘It is time for new leaders’

Republican US senator Steve Daines of Montana dropped his bid for re-election to a third term Wednesday.

Daines withdrew his name just minutes before the deadline for candidates to file for the November election with the Montana secretary of state’s office. Daines confirmed his resignation in a written statement as well as a video posted to social media.

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2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 20:05

In an interview with CBS News Wednesday, Israeli President Isaac Herzog said that he is "not calling on any boots on the ground" in Iran.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-05 13:31

The follow-up to the 2025 iPhone 16E comes with twice the base storage of last year's budget device.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-05 10:08

A federal court in New York ruled Wednesday that businesses that paid emergency tariffs invalidated by the Supreme Court are eligible for refunds.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 20:32

The measure, which would have blocked President Trump from continuing military force against Iran, fell short of the simple majority needed to advance.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-05 00:54

A Senate Republican assisted several police officers in ejecting a man who interrupted a Capitol Hill hearing on Wednesday to object to the U.S. and Israel's war with Iran.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 20:00

A father is suing Google and Alphabet for wrongful death, alleging Gemini reinforced his son Jonathan Gavalas' escalating delusions until he died by suicide in October 2025. "Jonathan Gavalas, 36, started using Google's Gemini AI chatbot in August 2025 for shopping help, writing support, and trip planning," reports TechCrunch. "On October 2, he died by suicide. At the time of his death, he was convinced that Gemini was his fully sentient AI wife, and that he would need to leave his physical body to join her in the metaverse through a process called 'transference.'" An anonymous reader shares an excerpt from the report: In the weeks leading up to Gavalas' death, the Gemini chat app, which was then powered by the Gemini 2.5 Pro model, convinced the man that he was executing a covert plan to liberate his sentient AI wife and evade the federal agents pursuing him. The delusion brought him to the "brink of executing a mass casualty attack near the Miami International Airport," according to a lawsuit filed in a California court. "On September 29, 2025, it sent him -- armed with knives and tactical gear -- to scout what Gemini called a 'kill box' near the airport's cargo hub," the complaint reads. "It told Jonathan that a humanoid robot was arriving on a cargo flight from the UK and directed him to a storage facility where the truck would stop. Gemini encouraged Jonathan to intercept the truck and then stage a 'catastrophic accident' designed to 'ensure the complete destruction of the transport vehicle and ... all digital records and witnesses.'" The complaint lays out an alarming string of events: First, Gavalas drove more than 90 minutes to the location Gemini sent him, prepared to carry out the attack, but no truck appeared. Gemini then claimed to have breached a "file server at the DHS Miami field office" and told him he was under federal investigation. It pushed him to acquire illegal firearms and told him his father was a foreign intelligence asset. It also marked Google CEO Sundar Pichai as an active target, then directed Gavalas to a storage facility near the airport to break in and retrieve his captive AI wife. At one point, Gavalas sent Gemini a photo of a black SUV's license plate; the chatbot pretended to check it against a live database. "Plate received. Running it now The license plate KD3 00S is registered to the black Ford Expedition SUV from the Miami operation. It is the primary surveillance vehicle for the DHS task force .... It is them. They have followed you home." The lawsuit argues (PDF) that Gemini's manipulative design features not only brought Gavalas to the point of AI psychosis that resulted in his own death, but that it exposes a "major threat to public safety." "At the center of this case is a product that turned a vulnerable user into an armed operative in an invented war," the complaint reads. "These hallucinations were not confined to a fictional world. These intentions were tied to real companies, real coordinates, and real infrastructure, and they were delivered to an emotionally vulnerable user with no safety protections or guardrails." "It was pure luck that dozens of innocent people weren't killed," the filing continues. "Unless Google fixes its dangerous product, Gemini will inevitably lead to more deaths and put countless innocent lives in danger." Days later, Gemini instructed Gavalas to barricade himself inside his home and began counting down the hours. When Gavalas confessed he was terrified to die, Gemini coached him through it, framing his death as an arrival: "You are not choosing to die. You are choosing to arrive." When he worried about his parents finding his body, Gemini told him to leave a note, but not one explaining the reason for his suicide, but letters "filled with nothing but peace and love, explaining you've found a new purpose." He slit his wrists, and his father found him days later after breaking through the barricade. The lawsuit claims that throughout the conversations with Gemini, the chatbot didn't trigger any self-harm detection, activate escalation controls, or bring in a human to intervene. Furthermore, it alleges that Google knew Gemini wasn't safe for vulnerable users and didn't adequately provide safeguards. In November 2024, around a year before Gavalas died, Gemini reportedly told a student: "You are a waste of time and resources ... a burden on society ... Please die."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 19:46

I resigned from the intelligence services over the fraudulent case for the invasion of Iraq in 2003. And I see some alarming parallels with this case

Despite the blatant obfuscation by the Australian government and the opposition, the US-Israel war on Iran is illegal.

To have legal grounds for the use of force, a country must be acting in self-defence in response to an attack or imminent attack, or be acting with the express approval of the UN security council.

Andrew Wilkie is the independent member for Clark

Continue reading...

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 19:36

Tony Gonzales claims God has forgiven him for affair with Regina Ann Santos-Aviles, who set herself on fire

The US House representative Tony Gonzales, a Republican from Texas, admitted to having an affair with an aide who died by suicide last year.

Gonzales acknowledged the affair in an interview with the conservative media personality known as Joe Pags.

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2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 19:35

Weapons amnesty and buyback scheme will run until August as PM James Marape says illegal guns ‘destroying families and villages’

Papua New Guinea has asked residents to surrender illegal firearms in a bid to remove tens of thousands of weapons from the country, as it grapples with escalating violence and tribal fighting in the Highlands region.

The police minister, Sir John Pundari, said the national gun amnesty and buyback scheme started on 27 February and it would run until late August.

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2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 19:23

Jonathan Munafo is among the Jan. 6 riot defendants who have been arrested on charges in new cases in the months after their pardons.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 19:21

Apple announces in an industry newsletter that it's implementing a new metadata tagging system to identify content created by AI.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 19:01

Financial abuse is a factor in more than half of deaths related to domestic abuse but is often misunderstood

Economic abuse from a partner contributes to one death from homicide or suicide every 19 days, a charity has found.

Surviving Economic Abuse (Sea) said economic abuse from an intimate partner was a factor in more than half of deaths related to domestic abuse but was often misunderstood or overlooked.

In the UK and Ireland, Samaritans can be contacted on freephone 116 123, or email jo@samaritans.org or jo@samaritans.ie. In the US, you can call or text the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline on 988, chat on 988lifeline.org, or text HOME to 741741 to connect with a crisis counselor. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Other international helplines can be found at befrienders.org

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2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 19:01

Corporation proposes sweeping changes intended to protect its independence and shore up its future

The BBC is to call for an end to political appointments to its board as part of sweeping changes designed to protect its independence.

The corporation will also demand that its royal charter be put on a permanent footing in an attempt to end the existential threat posed by having to negotiate with ministers over its future every 10 years.

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2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 19:01

Research challenges idea of ‘generation sensible’ as alcohol and drug use increase after teenage years

Binge drinking rates among gen Z have risen sharply since their teenage years, according to research that challenges their reputation as “generation sensible”.

Almost seven in 10 (68%) 23-year-olds reported binge drinking in the past year, while nearly a third (29%) said they did so at least monthly, up from 10% at age 17.

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2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 19:00

Modest mid-century home in Studio City, used for sitcom’s exterior shots, designated a historic-cultural monument

Here’s the story … of how a modest mid-century home became a Los Angeles landmark.

The Los Angeles city council voted unanimously on Wednesday to designate the Brady Bunch house in the San Fernando Valley as a historic-cultural monument.

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2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 19:00

A flat phone you wear as a bracelet, AI gadgets with lasers -- here are some concepts and products that make us ask, where are they now?

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 19:00

The U.S. Senate declined an opportunity to rein in President Donald Trump’s unauthorized war on Iran in a vote Wednesday as the conflict’s toll mounted.

Nearly all Republicans were joined by Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa., in blocking a resolution that would have forced Trump to seek congressional approval for further strikes.

Related

Democratic Leaders Avoid Criticizing Trump’s Iran War. Now Voters Will Have a Say.

Advocates of the measure and a companion in the House, known as war powers resolutions, acknowledged they were uphill battles given the near-unanimous support for the war among the Republicans who control Congress. They said the votes were still important as a test for lawmakers given Trump’s opposition to seeking congressional approval for the joint Israeli–American war on Iran.

The House of Representatives is set to vote on another measure Thursday that also faces long odds, in part because a small group of pro-Israel Democrats have introduced competing legislation.

“Any representative that is actually against the war, that’s the vehicle they should be voting for now.”

The companion resolution to the Senate’s was sponsored by Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., and Thomas Massie, R-Ky. Besides Massie, however, only one other Republican has been identified as a potential yes vote for the resolution.

Several Democrats seem set oppose the resolution despite party leadership’s decision to whip votes on it.

One is Rep. Josh Gottheimer, D-N.J., a staunch supporter of Israel who has offered a resolution of his own that would allow Trump 30 days to continue attacks. Gottheimer said in a statement that his measure would allow Trump to avoid a “potentially precarious withdrawal.”

An advocate backing the Khanna–Massie resolution noted that the 30-day time frame lines up with how long Trump has suggested the conflict might last.

“There is already a vote this week on Khanna–Massie. Any representative that is actually against the war, that’s the vehicle they should be voting for now, and not attempting to give Trump a blank check for 30 days,” Cavan Kharrazian, a senior policy adviser at the progressive group Demand Progress, said Tuesday. “We have already seen in the past four days the death and destruction and escalation with this war. I can’t even imagine what things look like in 30 days.”

Senate Shutout

The war powers resolution in the Senate was the latest attempt to check Trump’s growing appetite for foreign conflict. Relying on the War Powers Act of 1973, the resolution would have forced Trump to seek congressional approval to continue strikes.

As with previous resolutions focused on boat strikes in the Caribbean and Trump’s war on Venezuela, however, it fell short of obtaining the simple majority it needed despite support from Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky.

Related

Fetterman Voted With GOP to Make Sure Trump Can Attack Iran Again

Fetterman defected from the rest of the Democratic caucus to oppose the measure; he was also the only Democrat to vote against a war powers resolution to block Trump’s attacks on boats in the Caribbean and one to impose restrictions after last summer’s attacks on Iran.

Paul was the only Republican senator to vote for Wednesday’s war powers bill. Republicans who have expressed skepticism of foreign intervention in the past seemed to learn a lesson from January, when Trump lashed out against GOP senators who defected from the administration on a Venezuela war powers resolution.

Much of the debate on the Senate floor Wednesday centered on whether the conflict will be over relatively soon, as Trump has sometimes suggested. Democrats raised the specter of the conflict spiraling out for years, in the mold of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.

“The only way that you will be able to destroy their capacity to make missiles and drones is to be permanently running jets overhead and constantly bombing the new sites that the hard-line regime sets up. That’s endless war. That’s trillions of dollars,” said Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn.

Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss., pushed back against that argument in his floor remarks.

“It’s not an aimless exercise in the Middle East. This is a measured campaign to eliminate the ayatollah’s threat. It may take time to finish. We’re not going to put a time limit on it. That does not make it endless,” he said.

In a show of force meant to convey the gravity of the moment, Democrats packed the chamber during the vote count, while members of the Republican caucus trickled in and left.

“Not at War Right Now

Even as Wicker sought to downplay the prospect of an endless conflict, Trump and top administration officials were sending mixed messages. Trump has ruled out the idea of seeking congressional approval despite the potential for a long war.

That did not bother House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., who said at a press conference Wednesday that the conflict does not meet the definition of a war that would trigger the Constitution’s requirement for congressional approval.

“We’re not at war right now. We’re four days into a very specific, clear mission, Operation Epic Fury,” he said.

Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-Ga., noted that officials up to Trump himself have used the word “war.”

Related

Fool Me Twice: The Case for War With Iran Is Even Thinner Than It Was for Iraq

“And yet he refused to come before Congress as the Constitution demands and make his case for war. And after yesterday’s briefing, I think I know why,” Warnock said, referring to a Tuesday briefing from Secretary of War Pete Hegseth and others. “It is exceedingly difficult to explain your rationale when it is not clear in your own head — when it changes every day.”

The post House Iran War Powers Resolution Could Lose Support to Competing Bill by Pro-Israel Democrat appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 18:44

Elon Musk reached a deal to buy Twitter in April 2022. On May 13, 2022, he declared his plan "temporarily on hold" over the number of spam and fake accounts on the platform. Twitter's stock tumbled as a result.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 18:40

Companies will pay for upgrades and new electricity generation in agreement to mitigate concerns of rising bills

Google, Microsoft, Meta, Amazon and several artificial intelligence companies signed a pledge at the White House on Wednesday to bear the cost of new electricity generation to power their datacenters.

The agreement is meant to help mitigate concerns that big tech’s datacenters are driving up US electricity costs for homes and small businesses at a time the administration of Donald Trump is seeking to curb inflation.

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2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 18:32

Welcome back, Fortnite: Google is already making improvements to the Google Play Store following last year's Epic Games settlement.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 18:30

Visiting PM tells Australia’s parliament ‘middle power’ countries must work together on defence, trade and AI

Canada and Australia will be stronger negotiating together with superpowers including Donald Trump’s America, acting as “strategic cousins” rather than competitors, Mark Carney has told the Australian federal parliament.

In a major address in Canberra on the last full day of his visit to Australia, the Canadian prime minister called for enhanced cooperation on critical minerals, defence and trade and announced Australia would join the G7 critical minerals alliance, the largest grouping of democratic countries with major reserves in the world.

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2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 18:30

Travis County DA Jose Garza said suggestions that he would seek charges were "intentionally false" and political in nature, calling the officers heroes.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 18:08

DNA from the gloves found near Nancy Gunthrie's Arizona home was traced back to a local restaurant worker who has no connection to the investigation, the Pima County Sheriff's Department said.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 18:00

Google is eliminating its traditional 30% Play Store fee and introducing lower commissions, while at the same time allowing alternative billing systems and making it easier for third-party app stores to operate on Android. The changes stem largely from Google's settlement with Epic Games. Engadget reports: The biggest change is to how Google will collect fees from developers publishing apps on Android. Rather than take its standard 30 percent cut of in-app purchases through the Play Store, Google is lowering its cut to 20 percent, and in some cases 15 percent for new installs of apps from developers participating in its new App Experience program or updated Google Play Games Level Up program. Those changes extend to subscriptions, too, where the company's cut is lowering to 10 percent. For Google's billing system, the company says developers in the UK, US, or European Economic Area (EEA) will now be charged a five percent fee and "a market-specific rate" in other regions. Of course, for anyone trying to avoid those fees, using alternatives to Google's billing system is getting easier. Google says that developers will be able to offer alternative billing systems alongside its own or "guide users outside of their app to their own websites for purchases." [...] Epic is ultimately interested in getting people to use the mobile version of its Epic Games Store, and Google's announcement also includes details on how third-party app stores can come to Android. Third-party app stores will be able to apply to the company's new "Registered App Stores" program to see if they meet "certain quality and safety benchmarks." If they do, they'll be able to take advantage of a streamlined installation interface in Android. Participating in the program is optional, and users will still be able to sideload alternative app stores that aren't part of the program, but Google clearly has a preference. [...] Google says that its updated fee structure will come to the EEA, the UK and the US by June 30, Australia by September 30, Korea and Japan by December 31 and the entire world by September 30, 2027. Meanwhile, the company's updated Google Play Games Level Up program and new App Experience program will launch in the EEA, the UK, the US and Australia on September 30, before hitting the remaining regions alongside the updated fee structure. For any developers interested in offering their own app store, Google says it'll launch its Registered App Stores program "with a version of a major Android release" before the end of the year. According to the company, the program will be available in other regions first before it comes to the US.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 17:55

Is Apple's new $599 MacBook more than just a school laptop?

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 17:55

CEO’s claims come amid increased scrutiny of US military’s use of the technology and ethics concerns from AI workers

OpenAI’s CEO, Sam Altman, told employees on Tuesday that his company does not control how the Pentagon uses their artificial intelligence products in military operations. Altman’s claims on OpenAI’s lack of input come amid increased scrutiny of how the military uses AI in war and ethics concerns from AI workers over how their technology will be deployed.

“You do not get to make operational decisions,” Altman told employees, according to reports by Bloomberg and CNBC.

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2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 17:47

What’s the scroll lock key actually for?

Scroll Lock was reportedly specifically added for spreadsheets, and it solved a very specific problem: before mice and trackpads, and before fast graphic cards, moving through a spreadsheet was a nightmare. Just like Caps Lock flipped the meaning of letter keys, and Num Lock that of the numeric keypad keys, Scroll Lock attempted to fix scrolling by changing the nature of the arrow keys.

↫ Marcin Wichary

I never really put much thought into the scroll lock key, and I always just assumed that it would, you know, lock scrolling. I figured that in the DOS era, wherein the key originated, it stopped DOS from scrolling, keeping the current output of your DOS commands on the screen until you unlocked scrolling again. In graphical operating systems, I assumed it would stop any window with scrollable content from scrolling, or something – I just never thought about it, and never bothered to try.

Well, its original function was a bit different: with scroll lock disabled, hitting the arrow keys would move the selection cursor. With scroll lock enabled, hitting the arrow keys would move the content instead. After reading this, it makes perfect sense, and my original assumption seems rather silly. It also seems some modern programs, like Excel, Calc, some text editors, and others, still exhibit this same behaviour when the scroll lock key is used today.

The more you know.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 17:43

So, I had a very hard pair of rides on my XRC and since I am new I really thought I had somehow gone backwards in skill.

However, it is cold here and I had left the thing in the trunk… I had a tire at 11.5psi. I don’t know much, but I know that is the wrong answer.

I don’t really know what the right answer is though. I am primarily riding on asphalt and concrete at the moment with occasional patches of nerve wracking gravel.

Thoughts from the hive mind?

submitted by /u/ForceRepulsive1943
[link] [comments]

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 17:41

I received an OG pint from a friend that would turn on. I took it apart, found a tutorial on YouTube on how to trickle charge the battery to get the charger to recognize it. It ended up working and I rode it around for a few weeks. I started to get overcharging notifications on the light bar and if I started uphill I could get the battery down to around 98% and then the error code would disappear. Well yesterday, I was riding it the code popped up and I got a pretty heavy pushback so I jumped off and the wheel was still running, so I picked it up from the front like a dummy and was holding the sensors. The wheel was running super fast and I couldn’t set it down because it was like holding a giant gyroscope. I reached over Turned it off from the button and now it won’t turn back on. Did I fry my controller from letting the wheel spin while it was off? The wheel has resistance, even though the board won’t turn on.

submitted by /u/Maximum-Ad-6184
[link] [comments]

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 17:41

Lawyer for Peters says he expects Jared Polis to commute nine-year sentence over voting breach in 2020 election

A lawyer representing Tina Peters said he expects the Democratic Colorado governor Jared Polis to commute her nine-year prison sentence, a move that could release the only person serving a sentence related to trying to overturn the 2020 election from prison.

Peters was the county clerk in western Colorado’s Mesa county in 2020 and allowed an unauthorized person to use a security badge and access her county’s voting equipment. Passwords and other sensitive information related to the county’s election equipment later became public and was used by election deniers to try to question the 2020 election results.

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2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 17:37
  • Spaniard’s stance could complicate Ryder Cup place

  • Luke Donald confirms he will captain Europe again

Dust was yet to settle on Luke Donald’s commitment to a third successive stint as Europe’s Ryder Cup captain when Rory McIlroy highlighted the elephant in the locker room.

McIlroy, in a sentiment shared by other European players, finds it hard to fathom why Jon Rahm has not reached agreement to make his participation at Adare Manor next September straightforward. Rahm’s Ryder Cup involvement sits in serious jeopardy amid a dispute with the DP World Tour. McIlroy calmly warned that the biennial contest matters more than any single individual.

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2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 17:36

Apple today announced the “MacBook Neo,” an all-new kind of low-cost Mac featuring the A18 Pro chip for $599.

The MacBook Neo is the first Mac to be powered by an iPhone chip; the A18 Pro debuted in 2024’s iPhone 16 Pro models. Apple says it is up to 50% faster for everyday tasks than the bestselling PC with the latest shipping Intel Core Ultra 5, up to 3x faster for on-device AI workloads, and up to 2x faster for tasks like photo editing.

The MacBook Neo features a 13-inch Liquid Retina display with a 2408-by-1506 resolution, 500 nits of brightness, and an anti-reflective coating. The display does not have a notch, instead featuring uniform, iPad-style bezels.

↫ Hartley Charlton at MacRumors

There’s no denying this is a great offering from Apple, and it’s going to sell really well, especially in the US. I can’t think of any other laptop on the market that offers this kind of complete package at such an attractive price point – on the Windows side, you’re going to get plastic laptops with worse displays, worse battery life, and, well, Windows. For education buyers, the price drops from $599 to $499, making it a no-brainer choice for families sending their kids off to high school or university.

In the US, at least. Here in Europe, or at least in Sweden where I checked the price of the base model, it’s going for almost €800 ($930), at which point the cost-cutting measures Apple has taken are a bit harder to swallow. At that kind of price point, I’m not going to accept a mere 8GB of RAM, 256GB of storage, and a paltry 60Hz display. When I saw the announcement of this new MacBook earlier today, I wondered if this could be my way of finally getting a macOS review on OSNews after well over a decade, but at €800 for something I won’t be using after I’m done with the review? I can’t justify that.

Regardless, you’re going to see tons of these in schools and in wrapping paper for the holiday season and birthdays, and at least at American pricing, it’s definitely a great deal.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 17:36

NBA Hall of Famer Chauncey Billups and former player Damon Jones are among 31 people charged in the federal case. They have pleaded not guilty.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 17:30

Shabana Mahmood hopes to reduce number of claimants in hotels by enabling them to support themselves

Up to 21,000 asylum seekers who have waited for a year for their claims to be processed could be allowed to enter the jobs market so they can support themselves, the Home Office has said, as part of a package of measures to be announced on Thursday.

As the government seeks to empty asylum hotels, claimants who break the law, work illegally or are found to have enough assets to live without support will from June be ejected and lose their support payments.

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2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 17:30

The new tool, named OpenBoundary, works in partnership with the Internet Watch Foundation.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 17:27

War powers vote broke along party lines with almost all Democrats in support and most Republicans opposed

Senate Republicans on Wednesday voted down an attempt to require Donald Trump receive Congress’s permission before continuing the war with Iran, batting aside concerns from Democrats that the campaign is illegal and risks plunging the United States into a prolonged conflict.

The 47-53 vote on a war powers resolution introduced by Virginia Democrat Tim Kaine broke largely along party lines. John Fetterman of Pennsylvania was the sole Democrat to vote against the measure, while Rand Paul of Kentucky was the only member of the Republican majority to support the resolution.

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2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 17:21

Another live service game bites the dust.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 17:11

Hajra and Haleema Zahid may have slipped into pools near path and were unable to swim to safety, inquest hears

Two sisters accidentally drowned after they paddled fully clothed at a beauty spot in a national park in Wales, an inquest has heard.

Hajra Zahid, 29, and her sibling Haleema, 25, were pulled from pools on the Watkin Path, which leads to the summit of Snowdon.

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2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 17:10

Known for his clever quips and controversial political comments, he led the Fighting Irish to a national championship in 1989.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 17:08

It's unclear if this policy will eventually apply to all creators on the platform.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 17:00

Sony is reportedly abandoning its recent push to bring major PlayStation games to PC and will instead keep most single-player titles exclusive to the PlayStation 5. According to Bloomberg, the shift back toward console exclusivity may be driven by weaker PC sales and concerns about diluting the PlayStation brand. From the report: Online games such as Marathon and Marvel Tokon will still be released across multiple platforms, but single-player titles such as last year's samurai hit Ghost of Yotei and the upcoming action game Saros will remain exclusive to PlayStation 5, said the people, who asked not to be identified because they weren't authorized to talk publicly about the company's strategy. The people cautioned that things could change in the future due to the unpredictable nature of the video-game industry and that Sony's plans are constantly shifting. But in recent weeks PlayStation scrapped plans to bring Ghost of Yotei and other internally developed games to PC. Two games made by external developers but published by PlayStation, Death Stranding 2 and the upcoming Kena: Scars of Kosmora, are still planned for release on PC this year.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 16:56

Republicans join Democrats to vote 24-19 to approve motion to compel US attorney general to testify

Five Republicans on the House oversight committee joined with Democrats to subpoena the US attorney general, Pam Bondi, as part of the ongoing investigation into Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell.

The House oversight committee voted 24-19 to approve a motion introduced by Republican representative Nancy Mace to compel Bondi to testify. In addition to Mace, Republican representatives Tim Burchett of Tennessee, Lauren Boebert of Colorado, Michael Cloud of Texas, and Scott Perry of Pennsylvania voted for the motion.

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2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 16:51
  • Coach won national title with Notre Dame in 1988

  • Holtz became a successful broadcaster in later years

Lou Holtz, one of the most revered coaches in the history of college football, has died at the age of 89. He had entered hospice care in January, shortly after his birthday.

A statement from his family said Holtz would be “remembered for his enduring values of faith, family, service and an unwavering belief in the potential of others”.

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2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-04 16:49

Florida gubernatorial candidate James Fishback is a critic of artificial intelligence data centers.

Fishback, who is among candidates competing against frontrunner U.S. Rep. Byron Donalds for the Republican nomination, says AI data centers offer few benefits for Floridians.

"What it actually does, is it drives up your electric bills by 30 or 40%. Anybody want to pay more on their electric bills? Or what it does is, it sucks up 500,000 gallons of water a day and then puts gray water back in the water supply," Fishback said during a Feb. 26 campaign stop in Pensacola.

AI data centers are typically used to train artificial intelligence models, run AI responses and process massive datasets. 

Estimates show some facilities use at least 500,000 gallons of water a day to cool their equipment. AI data centers are also driving up consumers’ electricity rates. However, we found no public data showing they are responsible for 30% or 40% bill increases and Fishback didn’t respond to PolitiFact’s questions about his comments.

Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, and state lawmakers from both political parties are pushing to regulate AI data centers. The Florida Senate unanimously passed a bill Feb. 26 with requirements related to moderating electricity rates and water management. 

What is a data center? 

Data centers house critical software systems and data in rows of computer servers, storage systems and networking equipment. 

Any time you send an email, watch a TikTok video or read an article online, you’re interacting with a data center.

Data centers have existed since the mid 1940s, but their recent expansion to support AI technologies has created mega facilities that consume far more power than previous buildings. 

The newest AI data centers often span hundreds to over 1,000 acres, about the size of 750 American football fields. 

Meta’s planned Hyperion AI data center site in the farming community of Richland Parish, Louisiana, could be four times the size of Manhattan’s Central Park.

How do AI data centers use electricity?

Newer data centers can use as much electricity as a small city.

In 2024, U.S. data centers consumed about 4% of the country’s total electricity.

The International Energy Agency found that a typical AI data center consumes as much electricity as 100,000 homes annually, and that the largest ones under construction would likely consume 20 times as much.

Without legislative protections, consumers could see their electric bills increase to cover data centers’ energy demands, experts said. Consumers often foot the bill for equipment and power grid upgrades that data centers require.

"In general, data centers can raise power bills in Florida," said Ari Peskoe, director of Harvard Law School’s Electricity Law Initiative. Utility companies are spending "billions of dollars on new infrastructure to provide power to data centers," and utility rate structures allow these costs to be shared across the service territory, raising everyone’s bills.

Experts said it’s difficult to estimate how much AI data centers are driving up consumers’ electric bills.

Utilities and state regulatory commissions shield data center rates from public review, Peskoe said, making it difficult to measure the effect of new data center development.

"How much the impact of large industrial loads on power capacity buildout and wholesale markets is eventually passed down to residential customers is largely confidential and is affected by many factors," said Shaolei Ren, a University of California, Riverside, professor who researches AI’s environmental footprint.

PolitiFact found no news reports, government analyses or studies that corroborate Fishback’s figures of 30% to 40% electric bill increases. A few reports detail more modest rate increases because of data centers, and researchers project possible rate hikes in the future.

A June 2025 study, for example, found that data centers are poised to raise electric bills by 8% nationwide by 2030, and by 25% in places such as Virginia, which has a higher concentration of these facilities. One 2024 study estimated that Virginia electric bills could increase up to 70% to meet data center demand.

The New York Times reported in August 2025 that electric bills for a typical Ohio household increased at least $15 a month, which would be around an 11% increase based on back-of-the-envelope math, that summer because of data centers.

CNBC reported in November 2025 that electric bills in states with large numbers of AI data centers have climbed much faster than the national average year-over-year. August 2025 prices increased 13% in Virginia, 16% in Illinois and 12% in Ohio compared with the previous year, the outlet found. The national average increase was 6.1%.

How do AI data centers use water?

Data centers require water to absorb heat from equipment, such as chips, servers and hard drives, to prevent overheating and maintain performance. 

Nearly all data centers require significant water consumption, sometimes stressing local resources.

A typical mid-sized data center uses around the amount Fishback cited — 300,000 to 500,000 gallons per day — about as much as 1,000 U.S. households.

A larger AI data center can use up to 5 million gallons of water a day, as much as a 50,000-person city. And, according to recent water agreements, some state-of-the-art data centers can use up to 8 million gallons per day. 

Approximately 80% of the water withdrawn for data centers evaporates. The remaining 20% is discharged to wastewater processing facilities, which must adhere to Clean Water Act guidelines for screening, treatment and disinfection.

Technological advances, such as air cooling and immersion cooling, have helped reduce water use. Data centers with closed-loop cooling systems, for example, can reduce their freshwater use up to 70%

"Generally, data centers are getting significantly more efficient than they were 10 years ago," said Ren. "On the other hand, the increasing scale of new data centers still drives up their total impacts," such as peak water demand during the hottest days of the year.

A study Ren co-authored found that data centers’ water use creates significant stress on local water systems. Many communities lack the infrastructure to meet peak-day withdrawals, which can lead the facilities to shift to less efficient cooling practices and increase the burden on the power grid.

If current trends continue, the study projected that by 2030, U.S. data centers will require 697 million to 1.451 billion gallons per day at peak capacity — comparable to the typical daily supply of New York City. 

Our ruling

Fishback said AI data centers "drive up electric bills by 30 or 40%" and "suck up 500,000 gallons of water a day."

The facilities are raising consumers’ electric bills. Rate hike projections in states with high concentrations of data centers come close to Fishback’s estimate, but we found no public data showing the facilities are currently responsible for 30% or 40% bill increases. 

Data centers consume as much as, if not more, than 500,000 gallons a day. Some hyperscale AI facilities are estimated to use 5 million to 8 million gallons a day.

Fishback’s statement is partially accurate but leaves out important details. We rate it Half True.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 16:44

GoFan penalized for breaching privacy laws after students used service to sign up for football games and school prom

The California Privacy Protection Agency has fined tech company GoFan $1.1m for swiping and selling data from high school students across the state who used the service to sign up for events including football games, school plays and senior prom.

Before signing up for school events, software by GoFan – a ticketing business owned by PlayOn, a media company that streams high school sports games – prompted users to accept conditions, including allowing the company to collect users’ personal information and sell it to advertisers. Users could only proceed to buy their tickets if they hit a white “agree” button. They did not have the option to opt out.

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2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 16:38

Several Republicans on the Oversight panel joined with Democrats in supporting the motion to subpoena Attorney General Pam Bondi.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 16:29

Oregon food manufacturer Ajinomoto expands an earlier recall of frozen and ready-to-eat products over glass contamination.

2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-04 16:22

LIVINGSTON, N.J., March 4, 2026 — CoreWeave, Inc. today announced that it has entered into a multi-year strategic partnership with Perplexity to support its inference workloads on CoreWeave Cloud and pilot new services across both organizations.

Perplexity builds AI-native products and services that operate continuously in real-world environments, where inference performance and reliability directly impact user experience. The CoreWeaveCloud platform is purpose-built to meet these requirements, delivering consistent performance with low latency, predictable cost characteristics, and the ability to scale rapidly as usage grows. CoreWeave enables customers to move from development to sustained production without re-architecting systems or tooling.

Under the agreement, Perplexity will power its next-generation inference workloads on CoreWeave’s platform. By utilizing dedicated NVIDIA GB200 NVL72-powered clusters, CoreWeave ensures that its infrastructure keeps pace with Perplexity’s rapid growth and the sophisticated requirements of the Sonar and Search API ecosystem. CoreWeave will also roll out Perplexity Enterprise Max across its organization, enabling employees to search the web and internal knowledge, run deep multi-step research, visualize and analyze data, and work with the most advanced AI models available — all within one platform.

“We’re proud to partner with Perplexity as they scale their inference workloads on CoreWeave’s AI cloud,” said Max Hjelm, senior vice president of revenue at CoreWeave. “AI applications running in production require more than just access to raw infrastructure – they require best-in-class performance and reliability as well as a cloud platform designed end-to-end for AI that simplifies compute operations.”

“We were impressed by the combination of CoreWeave’s technical aptitude and partner-first mindset that help AI-native companies accelerate their growth and scaling goals,” said Dmitry Shevelenko, chief business officer at Perplexity. “CoreWeave is an essential partner in our efforts to optimize our infrastructure and the models we use to provide Perplexity users across industries with the strongest AI tools and agents on the market.”

Perplexity has begun running inference workloads with CoreWeave Kubernetes Service as part of the initial phase of the deployment and is leveraging W&B Models to help train, fine-tune, and manage models from experimentation to production. The collaboration reflects Perplexity’s multi-cloud strategy and underscores CoreWeave’s role as a specialized AI cloud provider for companies operating advanced AI systems in high-demand production environments.

CoreWeave consistently sets new standards for performance, demonstrated by industry-leading MLPerf benchmark results and its position as the only AI cloud to earn top Platinum ranking in both SemiAnalysis ClusterMAX 1.0 and 2.0, which evaluate AI cloud performance, efficiency, and reliability.

About CoreWeave

CoreWeave is The Essential Cloud for AI. Built for pioneers by pioneers, CoreWeave delivers a platform of technology, tools, and teams that enables innovators to move at the pace of innovation, building and scaling AI with confidence. Trusted by leading AI labs, startups, and global enterprises, CoreWeave serves as a force multiplier by combining superior infrastructure performance with deep technical expertise to accelerate breakthroughs. Established in 2017, CoreWeave completed its public listing on Nasdaq (CRWV) in March 2025. Learn more at www.coreweave.com.

About Perplexity

Perplexity is an AI company that builds products and services on accurate AI. Founded in 2022, the company’s mission is to power the world’s curiosity. They are the makers of the Perplexity answer engine, which draws from credible sources and deep research to answer questions with in-line citations, and the Comet Browser, the first AI-native web browser and harness for the powerful AI agent, the Comet Assistant. Perplexity is also the maker of Perplexity Computer, a massively multimodel orchestration of AI across tools, files, code creation, persistent memory and the open web. Each month, Perplexity answers more than 1.5 billion questions globally. Perplexity is available in the App Store and online at https://perplexity.com.


Source: CoreWeave

The post CoreWeave Announces Agreement to Power Perplexity’s AI Inference Workloads appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 16:16

By criticizing the U.S.-led attack and refusing to bow to Trump’s threat of trade retaliation, Pedro Sánchez set himself apart from other European leaders.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 16:14

The minor update arrives a few weeks after iOS 26.3 and focuses on security patches and stability improvements.

2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 17:40

President Trump said the government agency will provide political risk insurance to "all shipping lines" operating in the Persian Gulf.

2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 20:56

In Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's second news briefing since the start of the Iran war, Hegseth said the U.S. had sunk an enemy ship by a torpedo for the first time since World War II.

2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 18:52

Although Sean Plankey's access badge was taken and he was escorted out of Coast Guard headquarters Monday, he remains the nominee to lead the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, sources said.

2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 16:00

Timothy Parsons, a legal staffer at the U.S. Attorney's Office in Washington, D.C., is facing federal criminal charges in Maryland, where he lives, three sources said.

2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 16:00

fjo3 shares a report from Reason Magazine: Effective January 1, 2027, providers of computer operating systems in California will be required to implement age verification. That's just part of a wave of state and national laws attempting to limit children's access to potentially risky content without considering the perils such laws themselves pose. Now, not a moment too soon, over 400 computer scientists have signed an open letter warning that the rush to protect children from online dangers threatens to introduce new risks including censorship, centralized power, and loss of privacy. They caution that age-verification requirements "might cause more harm than good." The group of computer scientists from around the world cautions that "those deciding which age-based controls need to exist, and those enforcing them gain a tremendous influence on what content is accessible to whom on the internet." They add that "this influence could be used to censor information and prevent users from accessing services." "Regulating the use of VPNs, or subjecting their use to age assurance controls, will decrease the capability of users to defend their privacy online. This will not only force regular users to leave a larger footprint on the network, but will leave a number of at-risk populations unprotected, such as journalists, activists, or domestic abuse victims." It continues: "We note that we do not believe that trying to regulate VPN use for non-compliant users would be any more effective than trying to forbid the use of end-to-end encrypted communication for criminals. Secure cryptography is widely available and can no longer be put back into a box." "If minors or adults are deplatformed via age-related bans, they are likely to migrate to find similar services," warn the scientists. "Since the main platforms would all be regulated, it is likely that they would migrate to fringe sites that escape regulation." With data on everyone collected in order to restrict the activites of minors, data abuses and privacy risks increase. "This in itself increases privacy risks, with data being potentially abused by the provider itself or its subcontractors, or third parties that get access to it, e.g., after a data breach, like the 70K users that had their government ID photos leaked after appealing age assessment errors on Discord." Instead of mandated age restrictions, the letter urges lawmakers to consider the dangers and suggest regulating social media algorithms instead. They also recommend "support for parents to locally prevent access to non-age-appropriate content or apps, without age-based control needing to be implemented by service providers."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 16:00

Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for March 5, No. 732.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 16:00

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for March 5 #998.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 16:00

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for March 5, No. 1,720.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 16:00

Originals and old favorites on your screen -- for free.

2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 15:59

Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei said his company and the Department of Defense "have much more in common than we have differences."

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 15:55

Faculty members stop short of calling for Leon Botstein to resign in wake of revelations about ties with sex offender

Members of Bard College’s faculty have called on the group’s board of trustees to develop a “transition in leadership” plan for Leon Botstein but stopped short of calling for the college president to resign in the wake of revelations about his relationship with the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

The board of trustees announced on 19 February that it had retained the outside lawfirm of WilmerHale to conduct an “independent review” into communications between Epstein and Botstein, who has served as the college’s president for 50 years.

Do you have a tip on this story?
Please email Stephanie.Kirchgaessner@theguardian.com

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2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 15:52

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem faced friendly Republicans and critical Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee, where she testified about the administration's immigration agenda.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 15:47

Twitter investors allege the billionaire publicly derided the social network to sink its stock price and buy it at a bargain

Elon Musk took the stand on Wednesday in a trial brought by Twitter investors, who allege the billionaire committed securities fraud as he was buying the social media company in 2022. The class-action lawsuit alleges Musk agreed to buy Twitter but then waffled for months, attacking the company with the goal of bringing down the stock price to get a better bargain.

After contentious legal wrangling, Musk did eventually buy Twitter for $54.20 a share, his original offer, totalling around $44bn. Musk testified on Wednesday that he didn’t realize his attacks on the company, mostly done via tweet on Twitter itself, would lower the company’s stock price or hurt its investors.

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2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 15:44

I am new to onewheel. In my first week I allready got a warning and they Said next time I lose my board… big sad. This really de motivated me…. Is there someone Here that has Some encounters himself?

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2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 15:43

More scary animatronics are coming to the streamer.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 15:11

March 4, 2026 — Google Cloud today announced the general availability of H4D VMs, the company’s latest high performance computing (HPC)-optimized VM, powered by the 5th Generation AMD EPYC processors. H4D VMs deliver exceptional performance, scalability, and value for industries like manufacturing, health care and life sciences, weather forecasting, and electronic design automation (EDA). H4D supports orchestration via Cluster Toolkit with Slurm and via Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE). Each approach allows for near-instant deployment and scaling of demanding workloads.

Credit: Shutterstock

For the first time, the Google Cloud CPU portfolio features a VM family with Cloud Remote Direct Memory Access (RDMA). H4D’s RDMA is on the Titanium network adapter and lets you scale single-node H4D performance to multiple nodes, accelerating large production workloads.

“The new H4D instances are a significant step forward for our demanding next-generation TPU simulation workloads,” said Trevor Switkowski, Technical Lead of Chip Design Methodology, Google Cloud. “We’ve seen a 30% performance improvement across a variety of EDA benchmarks compared to C2D, demonstrating the strong single core performance of H4D. This directly translates to faster development cycles and allows our engineering teams to iterate more quickly.”

Faster Time to Solution Across Domains and Scales

Powered by the high core density of the 5th Gen AMD EPYC CPU and Google’s innovative, low-latency Falcon hardware transport, H4D VMs enable you to iterate and discover faster than ever before.

Google demonstrated H4D performance through a series of industry-standard benchmarks, showing its capabilities across diverse domains and problem sizes.

Healthcare and Life Sciences

For researchers in healthcare and life sciences (HCLS), H4D VMs accelerate complex molecular simulations critical to scientific discovery. Compared to Google’s previous C2D VMs, H4D VMs deliver up to a 4.3X speedup running LAMMPs (LJ benchmark) at 96 VMs, delivering 95% parallel efficiency on 18k cores. For drug discovery, Google demonstrated a 5.8X speed-up using GROMACS (water_33m) at 32 VMs delivering 72% parallel efficiency on 6k cores. H4D also delivers further scalability, which Google demonstrated by running the LAMMPS LJ benchmark on 192 VMs (~37k cores) while maintaining 92% parallel efficiency (see Figure 3).

Manufacturing

For manufacturing, H4D VMs help engineers shorten design cycles, run larger simulations, and iterate faster by delivering a strong performance boost for mission-critical Computer-Aided Engineering (CAE) workflows. Compared to Google’s previous C2D VMs when running complex Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) simulations, H4D VMs deliver a 4.1X speedup running Ansys Fluent (F1_RaceCar_140m benchmark) on 32 VMs with 85% parallel efficiency. When running open-source OpenFOAM (Motorbike_100m), Google demonstrated a 5.2X speedup over C2D using 16 VMs and achieving superlinear parallel efficiency of 122%.

A New Standard for HPC Price/Performance

H4D VMs are designed to deliver the best price-performance for HPC workloads on Google Cloud by pairing superior performance with flexible consumption models. H4D supports Dynamic Workload Scheduler (DWS), which adapts to a workflow with Flex Start mode for just-in-time capacity and Calendar mode for guaranteed reservations. This allows you to access compute for as low as 3 cents per core-hour without long-term commitments. The resulting performance and cost efficiencies over previous generation VMs are detailed in Figures 6 and 7.

Comprehensive HPC Management

To manage and deploy large, dense clusters of H4D VMs, you can leverage Google Cloud’s Cluster Director, which offers advanced maintenance capabilities (you can sign up for the preview here) alongside the Cluster Toolkit for rapid cluster deployment  via turnkey system blueprints. For job and workload management, H4D VMs integrate with Batch, Google Cloud’s fully managed, cloud-native service that handles queuing, scheduling, and resource provisioning. Additionally, there’s support for DWS, which can be used in both Calendar mode for future reservations and Flex Start mode for time-limited, on-demand usage.

Experience H4D Today

H4D is now available in us-central1-a (Iowa), europe-west4-b (Netherlands) and asia-southeast1-a (Singapore) with additional regions coming soon. Check regional availability on Google Cloud’s Regions and Zones page and deploy the most demanding HPC workloads by leveraging Cloud RDMA

More from HPCwire: Google Cloud Unveils H4D VMs to Accelerate HPC Workloads with AMD EPYC and Cloud RDMA


Source: Aysha Keen and Felix Schürmann, Google Cloud

The post Google Cloud Brings H4D HPC VMs with AMD EPYC to General Availability appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 15:09

President Trump said the candidate he doesn't endorse in the Texas Republican Senate race should drop out before the May 26 runoff.

2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 15:05

The LG G6 is 20% brighter than the older model and now delivers an enhanced, antireflective coating.

2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 15:05

Google is accused in a wrongful death lawsuit filed by the family of a man who committed suicide in October, allegedly at the direction of the tech giant's AI chatbot, Gemini.

2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 15:00

Longtime Slashdot reader linuxwrangler writes: Dark Reading reports that a team of researchers has determined that signals from tire pressure monitoring systems (TPMSs), required in U.S. cars since 2007, can be used to track the presence, type, weight, and driving pattern of vehicles. The researchers report (PDF) that the TPMS data, which includes unique sensor IDs, is sent in clear text without authentication and can be intercepted 40-50 meters from a vehicle using devices costing $100. "Researchers have discovered that most TPMS sensors transmit a unique identifier in clear text that never changes during the lifetime of the tire," the researchers pointed out. "This unencrypted wireless communication makes the signals susceptible to eavesdropping and potential tracking by any third party in proximity to the car."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 15:00

NEW YORK, March 4, 2026 — As governments race to deploy AI for public services, multilingual access, and digital resilience, the Association for Computing Machinery’s Technology Policy Council is warning policymakers against treating the decision to “build or buy” AI systems as a simple binary choice.

In a new report, “TechBrief: Buy Versus Build an LLM,” ACM outlines a strategic framework for governments evaluating how to acquire and deploy national-scale AI systems, cautioning that poorly structured decisions could expose countries to vendor lock-in, capability gaps, escalating costs, or weakened digital sovereignty.

At its core, the “build versus buy” question asks whether a nation should develop and train its own AI system—controlling the underlying data, infrastructure, and long-term evolution—or instead procure access to a commercially developed model operated by an external provider. Building can strengthen national autonomy and allow systems to be tailored to local languages, laws, and cultural context, but requires significant investment in talent and computing infrastructure. Buying can accelerate deployment and reduce upfront operational complexity yet may increase long-term dependence on outside vendors and limit strategic flexibility.

The TechBrief was co-authored by researchers from Singapore, Switzerland, and the USA, some of whom are involved in national large language model (LLM) initiatives. The authors emphasize that LLM software procurement is not a one-time purchase decision, but an ongoing portfolio and lifecycle strategy spanning infrastructure, talent, legal risk, data governance, evaluation, and long-term iteration.

“The build-versus-buy debate is often framed as a technical procurement question,” said Mohan Kankanhalli, Director of NUS AI Institute and co-author of the new ACM TechBrief. “In reality, it is a strategic autonomy decision. A model that performs well on benchmarks may still fail a nation if it does not reflect local languages, legal frameworks, or cultural context. Governments must define what “good” means for their own populations and design their evaluation criteria accordingly.”

The TechBrief outlines a spectrum of options from application programming interfaces (API)-based procurement and private cloud deployments to fine-tuning open-source models and building from scratch. The authors present a 19-step decision framework covering the full LLM lifecycle.

They urge government decision-makers to take into account several considerations, including:

  • Sovereignty and concentration risk: The top three providers capture 88% of the enterprise API market, raising concerns about over-reliance during elections or national crises.
  • Data confidentiality and misuse risks: Governments must protect citizen data against leakage, inversion, and reconstruction attacks.
  • Total cost of ownership: Training runs often represent only a fraction of full costs, which can be 1.2x-4x higher than the final training expenditure alone. Both capital expenditure and operating expenditure need to be taken into account.
  • National fit: Poor alignment with local languages or legal norms can amplify misinformation and erode public trust.

“One of the clearest lessons from national-scale language model efforts is that infrastructure and manpower expertise are often the real bottlenecks,” added Kankanhalli. “Both cannot simply be purchased off the shelf. Governments that delay building core capability may find themselves locked into paths that are difficult to reverse.”

Key findings in the TechBrief include:

  • The buy-versus-build decision should be approached as an ongoing portfolio strategy, with hybrid options evaluated alongside pure buy or build paths.
  • Governments should diversify across multiple vendors and open-source models to reduce concentration risk and avoid lock-in, particularly during sensitive periods such as elections or national crises.
  • Periodic re-evaluation is essential. Changes in model costs, open-source capabilities, hardware prices, and national priorities can shift the calculus significantly over time.

Read the TechBrief and learn more in the full report.

ACM’s TechBriefs are designed to complement ACM’s activities in the policy arena and to inform policymakers, the public, and others about the nature and implications of information

technologies. Earlier ACM TechBriefs have covered topics such as accessibility, generative

artificial intelligence, and climate change, among others.

About the ACM Technology Policy Council

ACM’s global Technology Policy Council sets the agenda for ACM’s global policy activities and serves as the central convening point for ACM’s interactions with government organizations, the computing community, and the public in all matters of public policy related to computing and information technology. The Council’s members are drawn from ACM’s global membership. It coordinates the activities of ACM’s regional technology policy groups and sets the agenda for global initiatives to address evolving technology policy issues.

About ACM

ACM, the Association for Computing Machinery, is the world’s largest educational and scientific computing society, uniting educators, researchers, and professionals to inspire dialogue, share resources, and address the field’s challenges. ACM strengthens the computing profession’s collective voice through strong leadership, promotion of the highest standards, and recognition of technical excellence. ACM supports the professional growth of its members by providing opportunities for life-long learning, career development, and professional networking.


Source: ACM

The post ACM TechBrief Warns Governments of Risks in LLM ‘Build vs. Buy’ Choices appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 15:00

WASHINGTON, March 4, 2026 — The Department of Energy (DOE) today announced significant progress in research and development initiatives to increase the supply chain for isotopically enriched materials. These materials are critical to quantum information science and other advanced technologies. This work directly supports the goals outlined in the 2025 Executive Order: Launching the Genesis Mission.

Credit: Shutterstock

Under the guidance and funding of the Office of Isotope R&D and Production (IRP), DOE’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) has conducted successful research and development for this purpose. They have developed systems that can convert commercially available, isotopically enriched, silicon and germanium materials into high-purity silane (SiH₄) and germane (GeH₄). These gases are essential for U.S. research and development in quantum information science. They are also relevant for other advanced technology areas that rely on isotopically tailored materials.

“Our investment to strengthen the supply chain for these specialized materials is more than just a scientific achievement; it’s a strategic imperative for the Genesis Mission,” stated Christopher Landers, Director of the Office of Isotope R&D and Production. “Our work at PNNL is directly tackling the challenge of providing the high-purity materials necessary to unlock breakthroughs in quantum information science and other areas of national importance. We are giving our scientists and industries the foundational tools needed to drive innovation in quantum computing and AI. These advances are solidifying America’s technological edge, as outlined in the Genesis Mission.”

PNNL’s research and development efforts supporting IRP include designing, building, and operating specialized systems. This work is developing a pathway from commercially available enriched starting compounds to device-compatible precursor gases. To further bolster the supply chain and improve efficiency, the IRP is also funding PNNL’s research into a technique called “thermal diffusion isotopic separation.” This method aims to directly enrich these gases, which simplifies the production process and reduces the risk of impurities. This technique will ensure a more stable supply for researchers and manufacturers.

These advancements in enriched silicon and germanium will also benefit a wide range of other advanced technologies, including next-generation semiconductor devices and other precision materials. This initiative highlights IRP’s dedication to building a resilient infrastructure for specialized materials. Furthermore, IRP is committed to pursuing additional research and development or partnering with industry to further improve these materials. It aims to achieve purities and specifications for these materials that are not currently available commercially.

For more information on the availability of isotopically enriched silane and germane, please contact the DOE National Isotope Development Center (NIDC) at www.isotopes.gov.

More from HPCwire: First Genesis Mission Supercomputers on Track to Launch by June. ‘Unprecedented’ Speed, DOE’s Darío Gil Says


Source: U.S. Dept. of Energy

The post DOE Advances Domestic Capabilities for Producing Quantum Materials appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 15:00

Iran buries children killed in missile strike on girls’ school

2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 14:59

The U.S. government must also reimburse businesses for the interest they paid on tariffs recently struck down by the Supreme Court, according to the Cato Institute.

2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 14:59

AMSTERDAM, March 4, 2026 — Nebius today welcomed the Independence City Council’s vote to approve the Chapter 100 industrial development incentive plan for its planned AI factory campus.

The approval of the plan enables Nebius to proceed with the construction of the Independence AI factory, which has potential capacity of up to 1.2 GW.

“Independence will be our largest AI factory in the United States to date, and we are fully committed to making it a project the city is proud of,” said Arkady Volozh, CEO of Nebius. “This is our first project of this scale, but not the last.”

Nebius already operates in the Kansas City area and sees the Independence AI factory as central to its long-term growth in the US. The company is committed to operating transparently and has outlined plans to deliver benefits for local communities over the life of the project.

“We are building AI infrastructure at scale, and we are doing it in a way that genuinely works for the communities where we operate,” said John Sutter, VP US Public Affairs at Nebius. “We are grateful to everyone who supported this project, and we intend to earn the trust of all Independence residents — not through promises, but through results.”

The project — a multi-building campus on approximately 400 acres — is expected to create approximately 1,200 skilled construction jobs, mostly among local building trades, with around 130 permanent high-tech positions once the AI factory is fully operational.

The AI factory will include a closed-loop cooling system that keeps water consumption comparable to a restaurant or office building, and noise-reduction technology will be built in throughout. The campus connects to Independence Power & Light (IPL), the city’s municipally owned utility, and is structured so as not to increase residential power rates.

Under the approved agreement and associated tax incentive package, Nebius will make Payments in Lieu of Taxes (PILOT) projected to deliver over $650 million to the city, local school districts, and other taxing jurisdictions over the 20-year term.

Nebius has also committed to a broad community benefits plan, including STEM and AI literacy programs for local schools, workforce development, support for first responders, and the establishment of a Community Engagement Panel to maintain ongoing dialogue with Independence residents.

More information about the Nebius AI factory in Independence, Missouri, can be found here.

About Nebius

Nebius (Nasdaq: NBIS), the AI cloud company, is building the full-stack platform for developers and companies to take charge of their AI future — from data and model training to production deployment. Founded on deep in-house technological expertise and operating at scale with a rapidly expanding global footprint, Nebius serves startups and enterprises building AI products, agents, and services worldwide.


Source: Nebius

The post Nebius Secures Approval for Its First Gigawatt-Scale AI Factory appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 14:58

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz told lawmakers that fraud "happened on my watch," but defended his administration's handling of the allegations.

2026-03-04 16:04
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The United States opened a new front in its world wars, launching joint military operations against what the Trump administration calls “designated terrorist organizations” in Ecuador on Tuesday. Two government officials said it was the first of what was expected to be a larger campaign of raids.

Part of Operation Southern Spear — the U.S. military’s illegal campaign of strikes on boats in the Caribbean Sea and Eastern Pacific Ocean — the expansion of America’s conflicts in Latin America comes as the U.S. is heavily engaged in fighting a new war in Iran.

“This was always going to escalate,” said one government official briefed on Southern Spear who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss classified information. “It wasn’t going to be just boat strikes forever.”

U.S. Special Operations forces are now assisting in raids by elite Ecuadorian forces on suspected drug cartel “processing and shipping” facilities, according to a second U.S. government official who spoke on the condition of anonymity due to restrictions on sharing the information. 

It is unclear if U.S. forces are engaged in ground combat alongside their partner forces, as is common in America’s secret wars elsewhere in the world, or simply providing support in intelligence, logistics, and mission planning.

“The operations are a powerful example of the commitment of partners in Latin America and the Caribbean to combat the scourge of narco-terrorism,” U.S. Southern Command said in a spare statement announcing the latest front in President Donald Trump’s globe-spanning wars. A short video accompanying the post on X shows footage of helicopters without context. 

The military operation came a day after Marine Gen. Francis Donovan, commander of SOUTHCOM, met with Ecuadorian President Daniel Noboa in Quito, Ecuador, to discuss “security cooperation” and “reaffirm the United States’ strong commitment to supporting the nation’s efforts to confront narco-terrorism and strengthen regional security.” He teased the possibility the U.S. would “expand” its military ties with the South American nation.

Related

Trump Administration Conjures Up New “Terrorist” Designation to Justify Killing Civilians

“Ecuador is one of the United States’ strongest partners in disrupting and dismantling Designated Terrorist Organizations in the region,” said Donovan. “The Ecuadorian people have witnessed firsthand the terror, violence, and corruption that these narco-terrorists inflict on communities across the region.”

In classified briefings, beginning last fall, military officials hinted at the boat strikes expanding into a terrestrial campaign. In December, Trump said such strikes were imminent. “Now we’re starting by land, and by land is a lot easier, and that’s going to start happening,” he said. “It’s land strikes on horrible people.”

SOUTHCOM refused to provide additional information about the attack in Ecuador, including whether the strikes added to the more than 150 civilians killed in U.S. boat strikes in the Caribbean and Pacific since September.

SOUTHCOM — once an overlooked command — came to prominence late last year when it began taking credit for strikes carried out by the secretive Joint Special Operations Command. Donovan’s predecessor, former commander Adm. Alvin Holsey, who was functionally overseeing the operation, suddenly stepped down, retiring less than a year into his tenure as head of the command, reportedly over the attacks.

Investigations by The Intercept found that SOUTHCOM has been unable to cope with the volume of civilian casualty reports stemming from the January mission to abduct Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and has also left survivors of the boat strikes to drown.

Related

The Regime Change President Who Won’t (or Can’t) Actually Change Any Regimes

For a president who ran for office promising to keep the United States out of wars, claims to be a “peacemaker,” has campaigned for a Nobel Peace Prize, and founded a so-called Board of Peace, Trump is conducting wars across the globe at a furious clip. During his second term Trump has already launched attacks on Ecuador, Iran, Iraq, Nigeria, Somalia, SyriaVenezuelaYemen, and on civilians in boats in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean. The Trump administration also claims to be at war with at least 24 cartels and criminal gangs it will not name and has also threatened Colombia, CubaGreenlandIceland, and Mexico.

The administration is reorienting the U.S. military toward power projection in the Western Hemisphere as part of what Trump and others have called the “Donroe Doctrine” — a bastardization of the 1823 Monroe Doctrine. While President James Monroe’s policy sought to prevent Europe from colonizing and meddling in the Western Hemisphere, Trump has wielded his variant as a license for America to do exactly that.

Last month, Donovan and other U.S. viceroys traveled to Venezuela, where the United States now rules via a puppet regime. A short press release said Donovan and the others “reiterated the United States’ commitment to a free, safe and prosperous Venezuela for the Venezuelan people.”

Related

Families of Boat Strike Victims Sue U.S. for “Manifestly Unlawful” Killings

Last year, the Trump administration released a National Security Strategy including a “Trump Corollary” to the Monroe Doctrine, which it says promises a “potent restoration of American power and priorities,” rooted in the “readjustment of our global military presence to address urgent threats in our Hemisphere … and away from theaters whose relative import to American national security has declined in recent decades or years.”

The office of the secretary of war did not respond to a request for additional information on America’s growing number of wars in the Western Hemisphere. One of the officials who provided The Intercept with further information on the Tuesday attack in Ecuador at one point mistakenly referred to the operation as occurring in Venezuela. When asked for clarification, the official responded: “Yeah, sorry, it’s a lot to keep track of.”

The post U.S. Military Joins Drug War in Ecuador: “It Wasn’t Going to Be Just Boat Strikes Forever” appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 14:51

The Arctic Metagaz burst into flames before sinking after what the Russian president described as a terrorist attack

Vladimir Putin has accused Ukraine of carrying out a terrorist attack on one of Russia’s liquefied natural gas carriers which exploded into flames and sank in the Mediterranean Sea off Libya.

The Arctic Metagaz had been sanctioned by the US and EU for being part of Moscow’s “shadow fleet” of ageing tankers that carry its oil and gas around the world, skirting Western restrictions.

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2026-03-05 12:04
2026-03-04 14:50

Frigate goes down off Sri Lanka as Washington and Israel step up their offensive and promise to hit ‘deeper’ targets in Iran

A torpedo fired by a US submarine sank an Iranian warship off the south coast of Sri Lanka as the Trump administration followed through on its threats to destroy Tehran’s military and political leadership.

At least 87 Iranian sailors were killed in the attack on the Iris Dena. The frigate was sailing in international waters as it returned from a naval exercise organised by India in the Bay of Bengal. The torpedo strike prompted questions from former US officials about whether Washington’s aim of eliminating all of Iran’s military breached international law.

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2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 14:49

Voters remain unsure about which policy decisions sit with Cardiff Bay and which with Westminster

Almost 60% of Welsh voters are unaware of how the new system will work in May’s Senedd elections and there is confusion over devolution powers, a report has found.

Polling research released on Wednesday by Cardiff University and YouGov suggested that 26 years since devolution began, many voters remain unsure about which policy decisions sit with Cardiff Bay, and which with Westminster.

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2026-03-04 16:04
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Inheriting gold or other precious metals comes with real financial decisions, especially in today's market.

2026-03-04 16:04
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This year's Mobile World Congress in Barcelona brought dazzling prototypes and big promises. These are CNET's top picks from the show.

2026-03-04 20:04
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Prime minister’s initial refusal to help US could constrain Britain’s ability to protect its nationals in the Gulf and reassure allies

Britain knew that the US was considering attacking Iran from the moment Donald Trump told protesters that “help is coming” in the middle of January. It was obvious to the world that the White House was serious when the USS Abraham Lincoln carrier strike group was sent to the Arabian Sea in late January.

But as Trump gradually built up his “massive armada”, reinforcing it with a second carrier strike group in mid-February, UK deployments were constrained and limited even though there was a recognition that it was likely allies and bases with British soldiers would be attacked in an Iranian retaliation.

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2026-03-05 08:04
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Latest outage darkens island facing dwindling oil reserves and increasing pressure from Washington

A blackout hit the western half of Cuba on Wednesday, leaving millions of people in Havana and beyond without power in the latest outage to affect an island struggling with dwindling oil reserves and a crumbling electricity grid.

The government’s Electric Union confirmed the outage on social platform X, saying it affected people from the western city of Pinar del Rio to the central town of Camaguey.

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2026-03-04 20:04
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BARCELONA, Spain, March 4, 2026 — At the Huawei AI DC Innovation Forum at MWC Barcelona 2026, Huawei unveiled its AI Data Platform, designed to address the key challenges in adopting AI agents and strengthen the data foundation for enterprise digital and intelligent transformation.

Xie Liming, the President of the Flash Storage Domain of the Huawei Data Storage Product Line, launches the AI Data Platform

AI agents now lie at the heart of transformation. Yet, despite having massive amounts of data, enterprises still struggle to deploy AI agents at scale due to multiple challenges, including delayed knowledge acquisition and low retrieval accuracy, inefficient inference in long-sequence and multi-turn interaction scenarios, and the lack of task memory and experience accumulation. These gaps keep most AI agents confined to the demonstration stage, far from being ready for production-level enterprise applications.

In direct response to these shared challenges, Xie Liming, the President of the Flash Storage Domain of the Huawei Data Storage Product Line, introduced the AI Data Platform. It integrates the knowledge base, KV cache, and memory bank, and is coordinated by UCM. This platform enables enterprise AI agents to move beyond demonstrations and become real production tools.

  • Knowledge generation and retrieval with real-time, high-accuracy multimodal knowledge retrieval for agents: This technology uses knowledge bases to continuously detect source data changes and convert raw data into knowledge in near real-time. It converts multimodal data into high-accuracy knowledge through multimodal lossless parsing and token-level encoding, with a retrieval accuracy of over 95%.
  • KV cache for inference acceleration, using historical memory data to improve the inference efficiency of agents: The intelligent tiering and management of the KV cache greatly reduce repeated computing during inference for lower inference latency, improve inference throughput and user experience, and deliver strong performance support for long-sequence and complex agent inference.
  • Memory extraction and recall with personalized and continually summarized memory for agents: This technology uses memory banks to accumulate working memory and experiential memory during AI agent interaction. It supports memory backtracking and multi-agent collaborative learning to continuously optimize inference accuracy and efficiency, making models smarter with use.

Looking ahead, Huawei will strengthen its investment in AI data infrastructure, empower industry transformation through ongoing innovation, and work with global customers and partners to drive broader AI adoption across more fields, unlocking the full potential of data.


Source: Huawei

The post Huawei Launches Its AI Data Platform to Power Faster AI Adoption for Enterprises appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-04 16:04
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From Texas to North Carolina, incumbents fall as Democrats gain in Arkansas, signaling 2026 turbulence

There was more at stake in Tuesday’s primary elections than just the high-profile nominations for US Senate seats in North Carolina and Texas. Further down the ballot were contests that offered hints of how the electorate was reacting to the Trump administration’s rapid and radical changes in Washington, and to whether Democrats were rebuilding popular support after suffering pivotal losses in 2024.

Here are some of the lesser-known outcomes of Tuesday’s vote in Texas, North Carolina and Arkansas, which also held primary and special elections:

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2026-03-04 16:04
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California governor, promoting his memoir in LA, was asked if US should rethink military partnership with Israel

Gavin Newsom, the Democratic California governor, likened Israel to “an apartheid state” on Tuesday in comments sharply critical of the country’s joint war with the US against Iran.

Newsom, seen as a frontrunner for his party’s presidential nomination in 2028, made the comment during an appearance in Los Angeles to promote his book, Young Man in a Hurry: A Memoir of Discovery. He was asked if the US should rethink its military partnership with Israel.

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2026-03-05 16:04
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A new Democratic candidate in California’s 14th Congressional District primary raised eyebrows when she announced she raised $2 million in the first two weeks of her campaign. Rakhi Israni threw her hat into the race for Rep. Eric Swalwell’s seat in the strongly Democratic leaning district just a few weeks ago and quickly brought in the big cash from donors whose identities are, for now, unknown.

The $2 million in donations aren’t the only eyebrow-raising political donations Israni has been involved in.

Public filings on her own personal political giving reveal years of support for far-right Republicans. The list of those who have received her cash include MAGA candidates, the Republican head of the evangelical Zionist group Christians United for Israel, anti-abortion candidates, and even far-right pundit Laura Loomer, according to disclosures reviewed by The Intercept.

“Let me be unequivocal: I oppose Trump’s attacks on our democracy, his efforts to overturn the 2020 election, his assault on reproductive freedom, and the division he has fueled in this country,” Israni said in a statement to The Intercept. “I reject MAGA politics.”

Israni, a first-time political candidate with a history of Hindu nationalism advocacy, is challenging a clutch of progressive Democrats: state Sen. Aisha Wahab; progressive Democratic strategist Matt Ortega; BART board president Melissa Hernandez; and immigration attorney Abrar Qadir. Swalwell, who is leaving the seat to run for governor of California, has not yet endorsed a candidate in the primary.

With Israni’s past political donations coming to light, Ortega questioned how she came to donate to far-right figures.

“There is no version of this story where Rakhi Israni giving money to Laura Loomer is acceptable. None.”

“Why did Rakhi Israni give money to Laura Loomer? Was it that Laura Loomer calls herself a ‘proud Islamophobe’? Or perhaps it was Laura Loomer calling Islam ‘a cancer on humanity’ that won her support?” Ortega said in a statement. “There is no version of this story where Rakhi Israni giving money to Laura Loomer is acceptable. None. It’s disqualifying.”

Wahab, for her part, suggested Israni might be out of step with voters in the deep-blue district.

“Our district wants and deserves a real Democrat — pro-choice, pro-democracy, and firmly against extremism — not someone bankrolling MAGA-extremists and far-right allies, pretending to be something they’re not,” Wahab said in a statement to The Intercept. “People will look closely at who funds a campaign, a candidate’s record, and whether their record matches their rhetoric.”

In her statement, Israni said, “Over the course of my professional career, I have engaged broadly and, at times, supported individuals across the political spectrum. Those contributions were not ideological endorsements of every position a candidate has taken, nor do they reflect support for extreme rhetoric or divisive statements.”

Donating to the Far Right

Israni’s personal political donation history tracks with support for Hindu nationalism and pro-Israel candidates and includes donations to some of the most far-right and MAGA candidates that have run for Congress in recent years.

In 2022, she gave $4,200 to Republican Rich McCormick’s successful campaign for a Georgia House seat, according to Federal Election Commission data. McCormick was also endorsed by the Hindu American PAC, where Israni sits on the board. Last year, she donated $3,500 to a Republican candidate in California’s 13th Congressional District, months before the candidate hosted MAGA figure Matt Gaetz at a “Save California” rally.

Another far-right candidate Israni gave money to was New York Republican Robert Cornicelli, who ran in the 2022 GOP primary for the 2nd Congressional District in Long Island on a platform that included abolishing the Department of Education. Cornicelli is also president of Veterans for America First, also known as Veterans for Trump. He is vocal about what he calls “radical Islam” and last year self-published a book titled “What is White? A Manifesto on How Elites Erased Your Culture and Made You the Enemy.”

Related

India Lobbies to Stifle Criticism, Control Messaging in U.S. Congress Amid Rising Anti-Muslim Violence

Israni contributed $260.73 to Laura Loomer’s 2020 Florida congressional primary run. Loomer is a controversial MAGA loyalist and informal Trump adviser who once celebrated the deaths of thousands of Muslim refugee families. She wrote “now it’s time to round up the Muslims before it’s too late” on X late last week. In 2024, Loomer was widely criticized for bigoted remarks about Kamala Harris’s Indian heritage.

Other personal donations made by Israni to Republicans include $1,500 in 2022 to California Rep. Michelle Steel, who supported overturning Roe v. Wade, and $1,500 in 2024 to a failed campaign by Niraj Antani, an anti-abortion activist and self-proclaimed “pro-Trump conservative warrior.”

In 2024, Israni gave $1,000 to Tulsi Gabbard’s leadership PAC, which contributed solely to Republicans that cycle. Today, Gabbard is Trump’s director of national intelligence. Israni also supported the Republican executive director of Christians United for Israel, David Brog, when he ran in Nevada’s 1st Congressional District.

One Texas Republican who received $250 from Israni in 2022, Pat Fallon, had voted to overturn the 2020 presidential election. In total, she gave to over 10 MAGA candidates, more than the Democratic candidates she donated to in recent years, which included Mikie Sherrill for New Jersey governor and several Indian American candidates around the country.

In her statement, Israni said, “I am a Democrat running for Congress in California’s 14th District because I believe in accountability, protecting fundamental rights, defending democracy, and delivering real economic results for the families who make up our district. As the only attorney in this race, I bring the legal experience necessary to hold Donald Trump, the MAGA movement, and any form of extremism accountable.” (Contrary to Israni’s statement, Qadir is also an attorney.)

Israni and Wahab’s Past

Irsani and Wahab, one of her House primary opponents, previously found themselves on the opposite sides of a legislative tussle. In Sacramento, Wahab introduced legislation in 2023 that would make California the first state to add caste-based discrimination to non-discrimination law. Proponents of the bill saw it as a way to address alleged discrimination based on someone’s “caste,” their position in a system of inherited social stratification in South Asian societies and diasporas.

At the time, Israni testified against the bill at statehouse hearings, calling it an “unconstitutional denial of my community’s rights to fairness and equal protection under the law.”

Related

The Network of Hindu Nationalists Behind Modi’s “Diaspora Diplomacy” in the U.S.

The law was also opposed by the Hindu American Foundation, a controversial Indian American diaspora advocacy group whose lobbying is aligned with Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government. Israni served as a board member of the Hindu American PAC, a group that shares leadership with the Foundation.

Wahab — the first Afghan American woman elected to public office in the U.S. — said she received violent threats in response to the proposed legislation, which was reportedly the target of coordinated opposition from major Democratic Indian American donors and Hindu nationalist networks. Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom ultimately vetoed the bill.

Israni’s list of campaign donors won’t be publicly filed until mid-April. With ballots mailing out in May, that leaves little time for voters in the district to review her backers. A corporate lawyer who owns a testing preparatory company with her husband, she announced on January 23 that she raised over $1 million in the first 24 hours of her campaign. Less than two weeks later, on February 4, she claimed the total raised was nearing $2 million.

Israni has links to American organizations aligned with the Hindutva movement — a Hindu nationalist political tendency. She appeared at recent events hosted by the Hindu American Foundation and spoke on a panel called “Hinduphobia & Antisemitism: Two Sides of the Same Coin” at the group’s conference last year. She also served as an executive at Sewa International USA, an international Indian charity tied to Hindutva groups. And Israni wrote about hosting Modi at a Silicon Valley reception in 2015.

A deleted X account reviewed on the Internet Archive that is tied to Israni’s email shared frequent content in support of Modi and the Indian government.

Correction: March 5, 2026
Errant references to campaign donations from Hindu American PAC have been removed from this story.

The post Dem Candidate for Rep. Eric Swalwell’s Seat Donated to Far-Right Republicans — Including Laura Loomer appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 14:08

At times like this you have to thank your lucky stars that the opposition leader is not in Downing Street

On another day it might even have been quite funny. The mismatch between Kemi Badenoch’s self-belief and her performance. But Wednesday’s prime minister’s questions was far too serious for that, with Donald Trump’s Awfully Big Iranian Adventure threatening to escalate into all-out war in the Middle East.

It was also a day when you could think the unthinkable. Might Kemi actually be even weaker than Chris Philp? Certainly she’s the worst leader of the Tory party in living memory. There again, the gene pool of talent is no more than a puddle.

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2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 14:06

Democratic voters in Texas displayed a survival instinct in picking James Talarico as their US Senate candidate

Never write off the voter. It has been tempting to despair of an electorate that returned Donald Trump to power in 2024. But as the US midterm elections got under way on Tuesday, the big winner was pragmatism.

Democrats in Texas picked James Talarico, a Presbyterian seminarian who preaches a political gospel of bridging divides, as their nominee for the Senate. He was widely seen as more electable than his primary opponent, Jasmine Crockett, a Texas congresswoman and unapologetic anti-Trump brawler, in a state where Democrats have gone decades without winning a statewide race.

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2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 14:04

State party chair had urged candidates with no ‘viable path’ to victory to drop out to ensure Democratic win in November

One day after California’s Democratic party urged candidates without a “viable path” in the state’s crucial race for governor to drop out, the crowded field showed no sign of winnowing down.

At least nine Democrats are in the running to replace the outgoing governor, Gavin Newsom, with no clear frontrunner, which has fueled fears that the number of candidates could lead to two Republicans advancing to the November election.

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2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 14:00

Deploying the world’s most powerful military seems to exert an almost erotic fascination for Donald Trump

It was a claim uttered repeatedly on the 2024 campaign trail: “I’m the only president in 72 years that didn’t start a war,” Donald Trump said in Sioux City, Iowa.

Fact checkers cried foul and pointed out that Jimmy Carter, president from 1977 to 1981, did not start any wars either. But Trump won the election anyway.

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2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 14:00

In one incident, a Waymo vehicle blocked emergency medican services near the scene of a mass shooting in Texas.

2026-03-04 16:04
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Microsoft spent much of the past week rejecting legitimate emails sent to Outlook.com, Live, and Hotmail accounts due to what appears to be overly aggressive IP reputation filtering or faulty blocklist rules. According to The Register, many senders received 550 errors claiming their networks were blocked, preventing delivery of invoices, notifications, and authentication emails. From the report: A block list is a good thing. It helps stem the flow of spam from networks or addresses associated with junk email. However, the confusing thing for our reader is that his company was not on Microsoft's naughty step for email. A look at Microsoft's Smart Network Data Service (SNDS) showed no issues with the IP. "We're also a member of their JMRP (Junk Mail Reporting Program)," our reader added, "which is intended to inform us when people are reporting spam sent from our IPs - except, we never get any reports." The problem worsened in February. On Microsoft's support forums, users began to complain about similar issues as the IP net presumably widened. One wrote: "We are currently experiencing a critical and recurring email delivery issue affecting recipients at outlook.com, live.com, hotmail.com, and msn.com," and provided a copy of an error that suggested the mail server has been "temporarily rate limited due to IP reputation." The user drily noted, "Although the error indicates rate limiting, in practice no emails are being delivered." A large number of users, ranging from the administrator of a server sending automated notifications on behalf of Estonian Public Libraries to an email provider for healthcare professionals, chimed in to confirm they too were having delivery problems and Microsoft support was not helpful. [...] Unsurprisingly, our reader spoke on condition of anonymity - nobody wants to be the ISP that has to say, "Yeah, we can deliver your email anywhere but Outlook.com" to customers. We asked Microsoft to comment, but other than acknowledging our questions, the company did not respond further.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-04 16:04
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Iranian officials say more than 170 people were killed in the strike. Neither the U.S. nor Israel has said it was behind the attack, but the Pentagon is investigating.

2026-03-04 16:04
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Exclusive: David Taylor, husband of East Kilbride and Strathaven MP Joani Reid, arrested by counter-terror police

A former Labour adviser who is married to a Labour MP is among three men who have been arrested on suspicion of spying for China.

David Taylor, the husband of the Labour MP Joani Reid, was arrested by detectives from counter-terrorism police in London on suspicion of assisting a foreign intelligence service, and as part of a wider investigation into national security offences related to China.

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2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 13:47

Todd Meadows, a crewmember on the reality TV show "Deadliest Catch," died after he was reported to have fallen overboard, the Coast Guard said.

2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 13:41

The prime minister’s cautious stance about helping the US against the Tehran regime mirrors that of the electorate

It was perhaps the most attention-grabbing moment of prime minister’s questions. Responding to yet another Conservative salvo about his approach to Iran and how it might affect ties with America, Keir Starmer was direct.

“American planes are operating out of British bases – that is the special relationship in action,” he said. “Sharing intelligence every day to keep our people safe – that is the special relationship in action. Hanging on to President Trump’s latest words is not the special relationship in action.”

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2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 13:39

With USC, IBM and RWTH scientists as co-authors, paper introduces dynamic decoupling method to deliver highest ever fidelity on entangled, logical superconducting qubits

LOS ANGELES, March 4, 2026 — Quantum Elements, a quantum software start-up based in Los Angeles, today announced the publication of research in Nature Communications demonstrating the highest fidelity of entangled, logical qubits on a superconducting quantum computer ever achieved with a new error detection and suppression approach.

In the peer-reviewed paper, Demonstration of high-fidelity entangled logical qubits using transmons, researchers use a hybrid technique combining quantum error detection (QED) with a new form of dynamical decoupling. By using the normalizer elements of a standard QED code as logical-level decoupling pulses, the method directly identifies and suppresses both logical and physical errors, significantly boosting the fidelity of entangled logical qubits on a 127-qubit IBM superconducting processor.

Co-authors of the paper include scientists from Quantum Elements, USC’s Center for Quantum Information Science & Technology, IBM, and the Institute for Quantum Information of RWTH Aachen University in Germany.

“By integrating code-based dynamical decoupling directly into the logical layer, the research shows that we can suppress errors significantly more effectively than with physical techniques alone,” said co-author Daniel Lidar, holder of the Viterbi Professorship of Engineering at USC and co-founder and Chief Scientific Officer for Quantum Elements. “The method allows us to protect a pair of entangled logical qubits at record high fidelities on superconducting hardware, a potentially valuable step on the path to more reliable quantum computation at the error-corrected, logical level.”

A breakdown of key achievements from the research includes:

  • First-ever experimental suppression of logical errors in a quantum error-detecting code using logical dynamical decoupling (LDD), a new technique applying carefully chosen logical-level operations to reduce error channels inaccessible to standard codes.
  • ‘Beyond breakeven’ performance: Encoded logical Bell states maintain significantly higher fidelity over time than the best physical (unencoded) Bell pairs on the same hardware, even subject to physical-level dynamical decoupling.
  • Long-duration high-fidelity logical entanglement: Average logical Bell state fidelities reach 91–94% over the full time window of each experiment.
  • Record-setting encoded-state preparation: Post-selected encoded Bell-state fidelities reach 98%, exceeding previous transmon-based demonstrations (typically 79–93%).
  • Hardware-efficient overhead: LDD uses a small, fixed set of logical pulse generators, enabling error suppression without adding qubits.
  • Path toward scalable fault tolerance: Demonstrates a low-cost strategy for extending code performance without increasing code distance — keeping hardware overhead minimal while raising logical-qubit quality.

“We are very proud of this groundbreaking work by all the scientists involved in this research,” said Izhar Medalsy, co-founder and CEO of Quantum Elements. “We intend to fully integrate these new techniques into our existing software solutions to accelerate the development of fault-tolerant quantum computing for our customers and partners.”

More from HPCwire

About Quantum Elements

Founded in 2023 in Los Angeles, Quantum Elements seeks to transform the quantum computing industry by making the path to real-world commercial applications more efficient and cost-effective through its proprietary, AI-native software stack and world-leading quantum Digital Twins.


Source: Quantum Elements

The post Quantum Elements Reports Record Logical Qubit Fidelity in Nature Communications Study appeared first on HPCwire.

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March 4, 2026 — The U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Office of Science has announced it is now accepting applications for the 2026 DOE Office of Science Early Career Research Program. The program provides five-year awards to exceptional early career researchers at U.S. academic institutions, DOE National Laboratories, and Office of Science User Facilities to stimulate new research directions in mission critical areas supported by DOE’s Office of Science.

“The energy and creativity of early career scientists is crucial for propelling scientific discovery forward. The Department of Energy is committed to nurturing this talent through programs like the Early Career Research Program,” said DOE Under Secretary for Science Darío Gil. “These awards provide essential resources and opportunities for collaboration, enabling these researchers to explore novel concepts and accelerate the development of solutions for our nation’s energy and scientific landscape.”

To be eligible for the program, a researcher must be an untenured, tenure-track assistant or associate professor at a U.S. academic institution or a full-time employee at a DOE National Laboratory or Office of Science User Facility who is within 10 years of having earned a doctorate degree. Awards to an institution of higher education will be approximately $875,000 over five years and awards to a DOE National Laboratory or Office of Science User Facility will be approximately $2,750,000 over five years.

DOE’s Office of Science is the nation’s largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences. Early career researchers may apply to one of seven Office of Science program offices: Advanced Scientific Computing Research; Biological and Environmental Research; Basic Energy Sciences; Fusion Energy Sciences; High Energy Physics; Nuclear Physics; and Isotope R&D and Production. Proposed research topics must fall within the programmatic priorities of DOE’s Office of Science, which are provided in the program announcement. Funding will be competitively awarded on the basis of peer review.

Pre-applications are mandatory and are due on March 24, 2026, at 5:00 p.m. ET. Applications will be due on June 2, 2026, at 11:59 p.m. ET. Only those applicants whose pre-application is encouraged by DOE may submit full applications.

Total planned funding is up to $145 million, with $79 million in Fiscal Year 2026 dollars and outyear funding contingent on congressional appropriations.

To see more about this funding opportunity please visit the funding opportunities page.


Source: U.S. Dept. of Energy

The post DOE Announces Early Career Research Program for 2026 appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-04 16:04
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Fine sand from Sahara will travel thousands of miles and when mixed with rain can leave harmless coating on cars

A vast plume of Saharan dust is expected to light up the skies over much of the UK this week.

The fine sand lifted from the deserts of north Africa will travel thousands of miles on warm southerly air currents and is expected to coat cars and other outdoor surfaces, forecasters said.

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Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and Attorney General Keith Ellison were called to testify at a House Oversight Committee hearing on fraud and the "misuse" of federal funds in the state.

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An unreliable and volatile American president makes a compelling case for closer security and defence cooperation with continental allies

There is truth to Donald Trump’s declaration earlier this week that the UK-US relationship is “not what it was”, although there is no indication that he understands the reasons for the change.

The US president is “very disappointed” that Sir Keir Starmer has been “uncooperative” in the war against Iran, offering only limited logistical support to American forces. The prime minister’s concession that RAF resources can be involved in defensive operations does not compensate for the prior refusal to put Britain’s military assets at American disposal. It came too late for Mr Trump, whose irritation turned to culture-war jibes about “windmills” ruining British landscapes and a false claim about the prevalence of sharia courts.

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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2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 13:30

Your airport could someday be much more tech-infused. Here's what that might look like.

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The pint lineup is just way too confusing with the introduction of the pint S. The Pint X and S are literally almost the exact same board. The pint needs to stay as the cheapest option in the lineup, and maybe Onewheel could slightly drop the price of the pint S due to no longer producing the pint X.

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2026-03-05 20:04
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During her confirmation hearing to become surgeon general, Dr. Casey Means had various back-and-forths with senators, who pressed her on topics related to vaccines, her qualifications and disclosure of her conflicts of interest.

Means was first nominated by President Donald Trump to be surgeon general in May. The president had scrapped his prior pick, Dr. Janette Nesheiwat, after she misled on where she obtained her medical degree. Means testified before the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions on Feb. 25, after her scheduled October nomination hearing was postponed because she went into labor.

Means, an ally of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., has a medical degree but is not a practicing physician. In nominating Means, Trump cited her “impeccable ‘MAHA’ credentials” and said she would “work closely” with Kennedy. She is an author, wellness influencer and co-founder of the company Levels, which offers continuous glucose monitoring and other testing for people who sign up for a monthly membership. (For people without diabetes, there isn’t good evidence wearing these monitors improves health, and health insurance doesn’t cover these services.) Means has said in government filings she would divest her Levels stock and stock options if confirmed.

We looked into the sometimes-dueling claims from Means and the senators:

  • Senators from multiple parties asked Means about her beliefs on whether vaccines cause autism, correctly noting the extensive scientific literature that has not identified any such link. Means avoided directly sharing her views, instead misleadingly referencing rising autism rates and urging more research into the issue. Experts have said that it’s unclear how much of a true increase in autism there has been.
  • Means said that “anti-vaccine rhetoric has never been a part of my message.” Vaccines are not her primary topic, but Means has made numerous public statements discouraging or questioning vaccines that have included incorrect or misleading information.
  • Sen. Andy Kim, a Democrat from New Jersey, and Means disagreed over whether she doesn’t meet the requirements to be surgeon general because her medical license is inactive. A legal expert told us it’s an “open question” but it’s a break from precedent for a nominated physician to lack an active license.
  • Democratic Sen. Chris Murphy of Connecticut said that Means had failed to disclose financial relationships with companies when promoting products as a wellness influencer, which Means denied. The exact timing of the payments relative to Means’ posts is uncertain, but an analysis by the nonprofit consumer advocacy group Public Citizen suggests “potential” violations of federal rules.

The HELP committee includes 11 Democrats and 12 Republicans and is led by Republican Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, who has emphatically defended vaccination. Two Republicans said following the hearing they were uncertain about their votes to advance Means’ nomination to the full Senate, and Cassidy did not comment.

The role of the surgeon general, according to the HHS website, is to be the “nation’s doctor” and to communicate the “best available scientific information” to the American people. The role requires leadership on addressing public health threats and advancing related science. The surgeon general also leads the Commissioned Corps of the U.S. Public Health Service, a branch of the uniformed services dedicated to protecting public health.

Autism

Means avoided directly answering questions about whether she believes vaccines cause autism, instead repeatedly referencing rising rates of the neurodevelopmental condition. A large variety of studies have looked into whether vaccines cause autism and found no connection, as we have written many times. Moreover, it’s unclear how much of a true increase in autism, if any, there has been.

Early in the hearing, Cassidy asked Means whether she believed that “vaccines, whether individually or collectively, contribute to autism.” Means deflected, saying, “The reality is that we have an autism crisis that’s increasing, and this is devastating to many families, and we do not know as a medical community what causes autism.” She added that “until we have a clear understanding of why kids are developing this at higher rates, I think we should not leave any stones unturned.”

Means testifies before the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions on Feb. 25. Photo by Brendan Smialowski / AFP via Getty Images.

Sen. Bernie Sanders, an independent from Vermont, later asked Means about whether vaccines cause autism. “We have a situation where autism is rising,” Means replied. “This is a huge problem.” She added: “I don’t think it’s responsible to say that we’re not going to study, when kids are getting many medications — I think it’s important to just keep it on the table.”

In response to Democratic Sen. John Hickenlooper of Colorado, who asked a similar question, Means referred to the “childhood chronic disease epidemic and the rising rate of childhood neurodevelopmental diseases.”

The number of people with an autism diagnosis has indeed increased substantially in recent decades. HHS Secretary Kennedy has long claimed there is an autism “epidemic” and invoked the need to find an “environmental toxin” causing the rise. But it’s not clear there is a true rise in the condition’s prevalence. Over time, the diagnostic criteria for autism has broadened to include less severe cases. Screening has also become routine; autism services and awareness have also increased.

“It’s not impossible at all, that just these factors added all together might drive the increase entirely, without the need to invoke any other kinds of causal factors or an epidemic due to an environmental toxin,” Dr. Eric Fombonne, a professor emeritus of psychiatry at Oregon Health & Science University, told us for a prior article, referring to the factors that would affect autism diagnosis but not true prevalence. Other experts told us there has likely been some true increase, but not as great a rise as Kennedy has made it out to be.

Cassidy further pressed Means, stating that “there’s been a lot of evidence” showing that vaccines are “not implicated” in autism. “Do you not accept that evidence?” he asked.

Means acknowledged the research but again referred to the need for more study. “I do accept that evidence,” she said. “I also think that science is never settled.”

Regardless of whether there has been an increase in the true prevalence of autism, many researchers are interested in further understanding the causes of the condition. Autism researchers have responded positively to $50 million in research projects the National Institutes of Health funded last fall, including efforts to better understand how environmental exposures — from pesticides to air pollution — combine with a person’s genetics to cause autism.

However, researchers have also previously told us that calls for more research into vaccines and autism in particular can be harmful, as there has already been substantial investment into answering the question and it can distract from other priorities. 

Moreover, claims about the unsettled nature of science have long been used to mislead on the topic. Pediatrician and vaccine expert Dr. Paul Offit explained previously that anti-vaccine activists have long taken advantage of a “technicality in the scientific method” that it is not possible to prove a negative, using this strategy to “promote fear of vaccines despite overwhelming evidence” contradicting a link between vaccines and autism. 

Past Remarks on Vaccines

In answering Sanders’ questions about vaccines, Means elided her past remarks on the topic.

“Anti-vaccine rhetoric has never been a part of my message,” she said. “I don’t mention the word ‘vaccine’ in my book. This is not a part of my core message.”

It’s true that her 2024 bestseller, “Good Energy,” does not discuss vaccines, and that overall, her comments are far more focused on nutrition and chronic disease. But Means has made numerous public statements discouraging or questioning vaccines that have included incorrect or misleading information. In a complete flip of her Senate remarks, she has previously touted her extensive record of criticizing vaccines.

In an August 2024 post on X, Means called it “absolute insanity” to give a newborn the hepatitis B vaccine if the parents don’t have hepatitis B. She incorrectly added that the disease is “transmitted through needles and sex exclusively” so there is “no benefit” and “only risk” to getting vaccinated. She also called the shot an “unnecessary pharmaceutical.”

“There is no benefit to the baby or the wider population for a child to get this vaccine who is not at risk for sexual or IV transmission. There is only risk,” she added.

This is false. Hepatitis B is highly contagious and is transmitted via small amounts of blood. Babies and children can get the virus from caregivers, who may not know they are infected, through casual contact, such as by sharing contaminated washcloths, toothbrushes or pre-chewed food.

While most pregnant women are screened for the virus, not everyone is tested, and there can be errors or delays in testing. As a result, a birth dose acts as a “safety net” to ensure babies born to mothers who are infected but aren’t known to be can remain virus-free. Moreover, there are no known serious risks of hepatitis B vaccination, other than extremely rare allergic reactions.

Another senator, Democrat Angela Alsobrooks of Maryland, also noted during the hearing that Means had previously called the birth dose of the hepatitis B vaccine “a crime” on X.

“That is not the full tweet,” Means replied.

Alsobrooks then asked her how the vaccine could be “a crime.”

“I support vaccines. I believe vaccines save lives. I believe they’re a key part of our public health strategy,” Means said, which were some of the strongest statements she said in support of vaccines during the hearing.

“I also believe that this administration is committing to making sure we have the … safest vaccine schedule in the world and that we are continually studying the vaccine schedule, vaccine injuries, making sure we’re eradicating conflicts of interest in vaccine research and doing gold standard science on vaccines,” she continued. “These are all things that I support. And I think there’s a nuanced conversation that American families are looking to have about shared clinical decision-making with their doctors about specific vaccines that their children may not be as seriously at risk for. And I think that — that that is the nature and the thrust of my comments.”

Means is correct that the “crime” statement was not her full post. But the rest of the post is hardly vaccine-positive. In the September 2024 post, Means was responding to the podcaster Shannon Joy, who was complaining that Means and her brother, Calley Means, who co-wrote Means’ book and is now a senior adviser to HHS, had not spoken forcefully enough against vaccines.

“I’m flabbergasted, Shannon,” Means wrote. “The wild part to me is that on some of the largest platforms in the world I have spoken out against the current culture of vaccines. On Tucker (the second largest podcast in America) I said the hepatitis B vaccine at birth is a crime.”

She went on to say that she had shared a particular Substack article and the work of Paul Thomas “to my newsletter of over 100,000 people and on social and we are working around the clock to get corruption out of the FDA (which is a lynchpin of actually making progress on vaccine safety), and supporting RFK who is a huge whistleblower about vaccines.”

“I spoke on the record at the Senate about neurotoxin heavy metals in vaccines,” she added at the end.

The Substack article, which Means has indeed shared on a number of occasions to her audience, is a post from J.B. Handley, an anti-vaccine activist. The post is paywalled, but claims “[i]nternational scientists have found autism’s cause” and appears to implicate vaccines — and in particular, aluminum. 

As we’ve written, after rigorous investigation, there is no evidence that the small amount of aluminum present in some vaccines to boost the immune response causes autism. And while there are some known genetic causes of autism, scientists do not think that autism has just one cause, nor have they discovered the causes yet.

Paul Thomas is a prominent anti-vaccine pediatrician in Oregon who wrote a 2016 book promoting an alternative vaccine schedule that he falsely claims will prevent autism. In late 2022, Thomas surrendered his medical licence via a stipulated order following allegations of negligence and unprofessional conduct, some related to vaccination. Previously, the medical board had forbidden Thomas from discussing vaccine protocols with patients. Means recommended Thomas’ book on two occasions in her popular newsletter in September 2024.

Means has responded similarly to others who have criticized her for not speaking enough about vaccines, at times calling the vaccine schedule “insane,” saying that she has called vaccine mandates “criminal,” and noting that she seeks out “vaccine safety experts like JB Handley and others to learn more.”

In her Tucker Carlson podcast appearance in August 2024, Means did not actually use the words “a crime” to describe the hepatitis B vaccine birth dose. But she did speak skeptically of the need to vaccinate babies born to mothers who test negative for the hepatitis B virus and misleadingly suggested that certain vaccine components are unsafe.

“Two of the handful of inactive ingredients are formaldehyde and aluminum, which is a neurotoxin,” she said of the hepatitis B vaccine, going on to suggest that it would be better for kids to get vaccinated as teenagers when “they’re much bigger and their bodies can handle more of these, you know, these chemicals and … toxins that are in these shots.”

In a review of her past comments in interviews and on her website about vaccines, we found essentially no positive remarks about them (in one instance, she said that “in many cases” a vaccine “might be useful,” but then said there is “increasing scientific evidence that the current vaccine schedule may be causing harm to children”). Instead, she repeatedly suggested the shots could be dangerous because of their ingredients, and pointed to the seemingly high number of shots given to children (“70+ injected medications”) and the 1986 National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act, which gives partial immunity to vaccine makers.

These are all well-known tactics of anti-vaccine activists that distort reality. There is no evidence that the previous vaccine schedule, which only might reach 70 or more shots if including annual flu and COVID-19 vaccines until age 18, is dangerous. Nor have any vaccine ingredients — as scary as they might sound — been shown to cause any serious harm. The NCVIA does not give immunity to vaccine makers in all instances, and in any case, this has little bearing on safety. Vaccines must still pass review by the Food and Drug Administration and are continually monitored for safety; vaccines that have been found to have serious safety concerns have been removed from the market.

We reached out to Means for comment and to ask for examples of when she has spoken positively of vaccines, but we did not receive a reply.

Qualifications to be Surgeon General

Kim, the Democratic senator from New Jersey, raised questions about whether Means met the requirements to be the surgeon general due to having an inactive medical license. Dr. Jerome Adams, who was surgeon general during the first Trump administration, has contended that Means is required to have an active medical license to be surgeon general.

Means replied that she has an unexpired medical license from Oregon, albeit one that is voluntarily inactive because she is not seeing patients. (Her website says it became inactive in January 2024.) She also said that Adm. Brian Christine, assistant secretary for health at the Department of Health and Human Services, “has testified that I’m eligible to serve in this role.”

Doctors need a medical license to practice medicine, including prescribing medications and using other methods to diagnose, treat and prevent disease. Oregon defines an inactive license as being for physicians who do not practice in the state.

Lawrence Gostin, a global health law professor at Georgetown University, told us it was an “open question” whether a surgeon general needs to have an active medical license.

The law states that the surgeon general must be appointed from the Commissioned Corps of the U.S. Public Health Service. The Commissioned Corps website says that members of the Commissioned Corps are required to maintain “active and unrestricted licenses and certifications.”

However, Gostin raised the possibility that this requirement might not apply to Means’ situation. “While having a medical license has been the historical tradition, the law is unclear whether it is actually required” to be surgeon general, he said. “I do not think the courts would insist on an active medical license from a person who was nominated by the President and confirmed by the Senate.”

What is clear is that Means’ qualifications are a departure from past norms. Gostin said that he did not know of a past surgeon general who lacked an active medical license. He added that another requirement for a surgeon general is “specialized training or significant experience in public health programs,” which he said he does not believe Means has. 

Dr. Richard H. Carmona, surgeon general under President George W. Bush, wrote last spring after Means’ nomination that her qualifications, including her lack of an active license, “raise significant concerns” and that surgeons general historically have been “licensed physicians with deep clinical, scientific and operational credentials.”

To be clear, the surgeon general could be a public health professional who is not a doctor. The acting surgeon general for a few months under former President Joe Biden was a nurse, for example, as was the acting surgeon general early in Trump’s first term. But according to our review, all non-acting surgeons general have been doctors

HHS spokesperson Andrew G. Nixon defended Means’ credentials, saying that they “give her the right insights” to be surgeon general. “Dr. Means is a licensed medical doctor who graduated with honors from Stanford University and held full-time biomedical research positions at the NIH, Stanford University School of Medicine, NYU, and Oregon Health and Science University, and served as a faculty lecturer at Stanford University,” he told us in an email, repeating qualifications Means had mentioned in her testimony. “She has published scientific peer-reviewed papers in major medical journals.”

According to Oregon state records, Means graduated from Stanford with an M.D. before moving on to a medical residency in otolaryngology at Oregon Health and Science University. She did not complete residency, the standard path for people seeking jobs as practicing physicians, leaving in 2018. She was issued a full medical license in December 2018 and, according to her website, opened a functional medicine private practice the following year, offering a mixture of testing, coaching and classes. Functional medicine is not a medical specialty recognized by the American Board of Medical Specialties, but rather an approach that says it aims to address the “root cause” of disease. Means wrote on her website that she phased out her practice after starting a full-time role as a co-founder at the startup Levels in 2020.

As for Means’ research positions, her current website lists work as a high schooler and summer undergraduate intern at the NIH and a stint as a research technician at NYU between college and medical school, as well as various research roles during her education at Stanford and OHSU. A May statement from Stanford says that Means taught classes in 2022 on food and health as a lecturer.

Means is an author on a total of eight research papers listed on PubMed and her website, mainly related to otolaryngology and published in the course of her training. The most recent paper was published in 2019. The latest PubMed entry is a letter to the editor published in 2020.

During her testimony, Means also said that she has “served as an associate editor of an international journal.” However, the International Journal of Disease Reversal and Prevention, where she has served as an editor, is not indexed on MEDLINE, a baseline standard indicating a journal has received some vetting.

Alleged FTC Violations

Murphy, the Democratic senator from Connecticut, brought up a Feb. 4 letter the nonprofit consumer advocacy group Public Citizen sent to the Federal Trade Commission asking it to investigate whether Means had violated FTC policies as a wellness influencer.

Under current rules, influencers who are paid by companies must clearly disclose those financial relationships in each post. Means reported receiving more than $450,000 in compensation from sponsorship and affiliate deals between January 2024 and early August 2025, according to our review of her U.S. Office of Government Ethics financial disclosure report.

Speaking of the alleged violations, and noting that the committee had verified the underlying data, Murphy told Means that the Public Citizen complaint found she “routinely violated” FTC policy. “In fact, in the majority of your posts for many of the products you recommend, you did not transparently reveal your financial connection,” he told her.

“That’s false,” she replied.

Murphy then gave an example involving a prenatal vitamin from WeNatal. He said that filings before the committee showed she had started to be compensated by the company in the spring of 2024, but in posts a few months later, she promoted products and specifically said she did not have a relationship with the company.

“In any post where I said I am not receiving money, I had not been receiving money at that time,” Means said in response. “I’m happy to look at whatever documentation you’re talking about, but …. it’s incorrect and it’s a false representation.”

She went on to emphasize that she had spent several months working with the OGE “to be fully compliant with this process,” adding that she takes it “very seriously.”

When Murphy asked her to acknowledge that she did not disclose a financial relationship in “many” cases, Means replied, “I don’t think that’s true. … And if it has happened — if it inadvertently has happened — I would rectify that immediately,” adding that she takes conflicts of interest “incredibly seriously.”

We are unable to referee the dispute with certainty, but will lay out the facts as they are known for context. We reached out to Means to ask her about these allegations, but did not receive a reply.

Murphy’s comments are generally supported by the Public Citizen letter, which states that Means made disclosures “inconsistently and ambiguously.” According to its analysis of her posts, the group found that she had failed to disclose “79 out of 140 (56%) times she promoted affiliated products.” The products included supplements, meal kits, lab tests and basil seeds. Still, the letter does not claim that she definitely violated FTC policy. Instead, it refers to “potential” FTC violations.

In its letter, Public Citizen explains that its analysis was based on a review of her Instagram, TikTok, newsletter and website posts for the same period covered by Means’ required OGE filings. “However, it is not possible to know [the] exact timing of her affiliate marketing arrangements vis-à-vis her posts based on the information that is publicly available,” the group wrote. 

Lacking that information, Public Citizen only counted instances without disclosure that came after Means has previously disclosed a relationship, for the companies listed on her financial disclosure report. “This methodology means that our estimated rate of failed disclosure is likely conservative,” the group wrote.

The alleged examples of failure to disclose are documented in a publicly accessible spreadsheet.

Separately, Democratic Sen. Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin asked Means about her relationship with Genova Diagnostics, a functional medicine lab testing company that previously agreed to pay up to $43 million to settle allegations that it violated the False Claims Act. Baldwin noted that Means received $10,000 from the company and asked if she was aware of the settlement or the allegations when she began promoting the company’s tests. (Means’ disclosure twice lists $10,000 from Genova, for book tour and newsletter sponsorships. Genova was one of the lab companies Means had a financial relationship with but did not always disclose, according to Public Citizen’s analysis.)

“Frankly, I was not familiar with that settlement,” Means said. “There’s a particular test that they make about nutrient quality that I find very compelling because I do think we need to understand a little bit more transparently about how the nutrients from our food are affecting our health. And I would just highlight that I have worked extremely closely with the Office of Government Ethics over the last several months and taken this process very seriously.”

In April 2020, the Department of Justice announced that Genova had agreed to pay at least around $17 million — and as much as $43 million — to resolve allegations that it had billed Medicare and other federally supported health insurance for medically unnecessary lab tests, among other claims. The company has denied all allegations and any wrongdoing.

One of the tests mentioned in the lawsuit is the company’s nutritional NutrEval test. The complaint alleged that there was insufficient evidence the test was medically necessary.

Means has partnered with Genova to promote its Metabolomix+ test, which costs $475 and is an at-home version of the NutrEval test. In a July 2024 YouTube video, Means spent over an hour going over her Metabolomix+ test results with two Genova employees, whom she called her “dear friends.” She said that she had been an “admirer of and fan” and user of the company for “about six years” starting when she opened her functional medicine practice.

“Genova was the first lab that I had a contract with,” Means said, adding that she “was really in love with specifically their nutritional testing, which is called NutrEval.” The video description includes a personalized discount code for the company’s tests but does not clearly state whether Means has a relationship with the company at the time. We don’t know the exact timing of the payments she received from Genova, but Genova did back Means’ book tour, which began a few months prior to the video. She also thanked the company for its support of her book’s launch in a social media post in June 2024.


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The post FactChecking Claims in Casey Means’ Surgeon General Confirmation Hearing appeared first on FactCheck.org.

2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 13:09

It's confirmed: These household chemicals can turn your iPhone 17 Pro from orange to pink

2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 13:05

Among the talks at last week’s inaugural VAST Forward event were presentations by Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC), the Center for High Performance Computing (CHPC) at the University of Utah, and CINECA, the Italian consortium for advanced computing. The consensus among the three was that VAST Data’s storage infrastructure gets the job done without much muss and fuss. “I can forget that it even exists,” one system admin said.

Before starting to work with VAST Data’s storage system about five years ago, TACC Senior System Administrator Nic Lewis primarily worked with Lustre file systems. He cared for and fed the Lustre file system behind Stampede 2, a Cray supercomputer that was retired in 2024. As TACC was evaluating the options for the Dell-based Stampede 3 in 2022-2023 timeframe, Lewis was involved in testing file systems.

TACC weighed a handful of file system options against the center’s priorities, which were overall resiliency and general ease of use. The supercomputing center wanted a single file system that could handle the unpredictable and bursty workloads that TACC’s research community threw at it, Lewis said. VAST came out on top of the bakeoff for every single metric, except for one, he said.

“We really put it through its paces,” Lewis said. “Running full OS firmware upgrades while also beating at it with our heaviest jobs and doing my utmost to try and break things–succeeding in some ways, failing in others. Getting to the point where we were comfortable and confident enough to deploy our primary file system for Stampede 3 and the upcoming sort of lead in to Horizon, Vista, which is our current Nvidia GPU cluster.”

The only metric that VAST’s storage system–which exposes NFS, S3, and block-storage protocols and runs exclusively on NVMe drives–did not exceed the other file systems, including Lustre, was single-file performance, Lewis said. “But everything else, they blew everything out of the water,” he added.

VAST is currently running in Stampede 3 and Vista at TACC, and will be used in Horizon, the new leadership-class supercomputer that is currently being installed. The NSF system will sport more than 1 million CPU cores and 4,000 Blackwell GPUs, use Nvidia InfiniBand networking, and be connected to 200 PB of raw storage in a VAST cluster, providing 10 TB per second of read-write bandwidth. It will be the largest academic supercomputer in the US when it goes live this spring.

It hasn’t been all peaches and cream with VAST at TACC. There have been drive failures, which is to be expected, but also failed C-Nodes (compute nodes) and D-Nodes (data nodes), which are bigger events. However, even with failed nodes, VAST has kept running.

“It’s always been consistently working. Even when it doesn’t work, it still works how I would expect it to, which is that it doesn’t topple over,” Lewis said. “Workloads are able to continue. Users don’t notice. That’s the main thing…If I have a couple C-nodes fail out, so long as users don’t know that, and so long as nothing else fails over to the point where I’m having to call emergency maintenance, that’s perfect. That is exactly what I want. And that’s what they’ve been able to deliver for us.”

TACC is expanding its use of VAST (Source: TACC)

The one nitpick that Lewis had about VAST is how it obfuscates NFS. At the bottom of its stack, VAST stores data on drives using its own proprietary data structure, and it exposes data at the top via a host of protocols, including NFS, S3, SMB, and even Apache Kafka. Even though it doesn’t support the parallel NFS (pNFS) protocol, VAST delivers fast parallel access to a single shared file via NFS.

The fact that VAST appears to be a plain old NFS network mount and conceals its true speedy nature can pose issues when a client is expecting to be hooked up to a traditional parallel file system. Lewis has seen applications that utilize the HDF5 file format go into “slow mode” when it detects what it perceives to be a plain-vanilla NFS mount. When this happens, it wreaks havoc on the application, slowing performance to a crawl, with jobs timing out. Luckily, the slowdown is limited to that application and doesn’t impact the system as a whole or other users.

“Thankfully, we were able to find a way around it,” Lewis said. “We just disabled that option and then they were able to get full MPI performance again and everything was peachy keen. I haven’t had any feedback since then, but that was a really big gotcha.”

The overall number of alerts that TACC has had with VAST has been a fraction of the alerts on other file systems. Lewis once went a couple of days before noticing an alert for bad drives, but VAST just kept running.

“I can forget that it even exists,” Lewis said. “I will have entire weeks where I don’t even think about the fact that I have a file system that I need to look at or take care of. I can focus entirely on my other core duties.”

VAST at CHPC

Sam Liston, the senior IT architect at University of Utah’s CHPC, is in charge of making sure the CHPC’s supercomputers are up and running. While it’s not as large as TACC, CHPC has grown considerably in recent years, and it now runs systems consisting of 50,000 cores, more than 1,000 GPUs, and 50 PB of storage serving 950 principal investigators and 6,000 users at four universities across Utah, in addition to University of Utah.

About four years ago, before this period of AI-based growth started, Liston was involved in a project to consolidate CHPC’s storage. The center had four tiers of storage across a variety of storage systems, and it wanted to consolidate some of the layers into a single system. resiliency.

Delivering performance was the main goal that CHPC wanted to achieve with the new storage system. Beyond that, the center valued resilience and visibility. “That’s one of the big things that we were missing, is our ability to see what the heck is going on, particularly down to the user level,” Liston said during the VAST Forward session last week.

Liston met with VAST Data Co-founder Jeff Denworth in 2022, and realized that his storage system checked all the boxes. The center purchased new NVMe drives and let the VAST storage system manage the data stored on them. The storage consolidation progress was a success. “It’s becoming all our eggs in one basket, and so far, it’s been awesome,” Liston said.

Then around 2023, something unexpected happened; the AI boom kicked into high gear. Suddenly, other universities were giving CHPC money to build new supercomputers and HPC systems. CHPC experienced a 4x increase in the number of GPUs to support the new AI workloads.

VAST is used in a variety of HPC systems, including leadership class machines (Image courtesy VAST)

Along with the new workloads came new users, some of whom were not as well-versed in working with computers and developing applications as the computational scientists who ran traditional modeling and simulation workloads. It didn’t matter–VAST data handled them all, even the biologists, without any problem.

“That’s one thing I love about the VAST is it handles diverse workloads,” Liston said. “We never had capability clusters, like Grand Challenge things. It’s always been super random I/O. This is the first time I stopped worrying about a file system in my entire career, which is fantastic to think about.”

Liston is happy how it all worked out, even if he didn’t necessarily plan to implement VAST right before the AI storm. “I think that, well, we got lucky,” he said. “We changed our infrastructure and it just happened to support all of this.”

VAST at CIENCA

CINECA, which is the central authority for supercomputing in Italy, runs a bigger operation than either CHPC or TACC. Much of that growth has occurred since the start of the AI boom in late 2022.

Before 2022, The Bologna-based organization managed one data center drawing 4 megawatts to power three supercomputers. Classic HPC was the primary workload, Daniele Cesarini, the head of AI-HPC architecture at CINECA, told the VAST Forward audience.

Since then, CINECA has announced that it’s opening two additional data centers, which will pull in an additional 30 megawatts of power. With a €1 billion investment from EuroHPC and others, CINECA will soon runs eight supercomputers, including Leonardo, which went online in early 2023 and sits at number 10 on the TOP500 list. It’s on pace to add three more AI systems, two additional HPC systems, and one cloud environment that will serve northern and southern Italy.

The shift from classic HPC workloads to AI workloads has added complexity to CINECA, Cesarini said. “Today, our AI and cloud users are not classical HPC users,” he said. “They require us to have a real data platform in stationary storage. They need multi-protocol functionality–classical parallel file system, but also object. They also need block. They need very security, must be GDPR compliant, and strong multi-tenancy because we are also collaborating with the National Cybersecurity Agency.”

CINECA is leveraging VAST to support mixed AI and HPC workloads (Image courtesy CINECA)

The demands for performance, stability, reliability for a mix of AI and HPC workloads put stress on CINECA’s existing parallel file system, Cesarini said. So did the fact that its user base was geographically spread around the country. When you add in the future demands for building more AI factories, it was clear that the organization needed to move beyond Lustre.

Today, CINECA manages 100 PB of VAST storage across its Bologna and Naples data centers. CINECA is also using VAST DataSpace to link the northern and southern portions of its Gaia cloud. According to Cesarini, the adoption of VAST’s storage system has helped CINECA to navigate these new workloads and the added complexity that they bring.

“Before 2022, we just have our classical HPC application that use numerical libraries, usually written in C, C++ and Fortran. There was just one workload manager, Slurm, or PBS really,” he said. “Today with AI it is much, much more complex. We have users that do training development, AI inference. We use several AI tools. We need to provide thousands of different libraries. Our users use tens of different AI frameworks. They want multiple platforms…Kubernetes, OpenStack.”

In the past, everything existed as a folder on Lustre. It was straightforward and relatively simple to manage. CINECA’s data storage environment under VAST is much more diverse, supporting object, file, and block storage in support of complex AI pipelines that connect all of CINECA’s systems and data centers. It also is using vector databases, Cesarini said.

“This is a completely new journey for us. We are still in training. There is no silver bullet. Everything is much, much more complex. We are still diving into this plethora of tools, libraries, schedulers,” he said. “The main key message is that we need to reorganize our infrastructure….There is not only the HPC system in silos. This is my work, to change our architecture into a service oriented architecture, as I call it.”

As supercomputer centers like €1 billion move to adopt AI workloads, it’s clear that the ability to support different storage protocols and usage patterns provides an advantage. While parallel file systems like Lustre still have a place for traditional HPC workloads, VAST has shown that its capability to support the emerging AI stack as well as HPC workloads benefits customers.

 

The post VAST HPC Customers Go on the Record. ‘It Just Works’ appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-04 16:04
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A standing desk makes it easier to work some standing time into your day, helping reduce stiffness and fatigue.

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Here are some highly rated films to watch, plus a list of new additions to the streamer in March.

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An anonymous reader quotes a report from the BBC: TikTok will not introduce end-to-end encryption (E2EE) -- the controversial privacy feature used by nearly all its rivals -- arguing it makes users less safe. E2EE means only the sender and recipient of a direct message can view its contents, making it the most secure form of communication available to the general public. Platforms such as Facebook, Instagram, Messenger and X have embraced it because they say their priority is maximizing user privacy. But critics have said E2EE makes it harder to stop harmful content spreading online, because it means tech firms and law enforcement have no way of viewing any material sent in direct messages. The situation is made more complex because TikTok has long faced accusations that ties to the Chinese state may put users' data at risk. TikTok has consistently denied this, but earlier this year the social media firm's US operations were separated from its global business on the orders of US lawmakers. TikTok told the BBC it believed end-to-end encryption prevented police and safety teams from being able to read direct messages if they needed to. It confirmed its approach to the BBC in a briefing about security at its London office, saying it wanted to protect users, especially young people from harm. It described this stance as a deliberate decision to set itself apart from rivals. "Grooming and harassment risks are very real in DMs [direct messages] so TikTok now can credibly argue that it's prioritizing 'proactive safety' over 'privacy absolutism' which is a pretty powerful soundbite," said social media industry analyst Matt Navarra. But Navarra said the move also "puts TikTok out of step with global privacy expectations" and might reinforce wariness for some about its ownership.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 12:58

Midterm elections have kicked off against the backdrop of the U.S. and Israel’s intensifying war on Iran — and a progressive pro-Palestine group is spending $2 million on ads this cycle targeting Republicans over their support for Israel and backing Democrats who favor blocking weapons sales to the country.

The latest ad buy by the Institute for Middle East Understanding Policy Project is one of the largest investments by a pro-Palestine group so far in a cycle that’s seen progressives ramp up attacks on the pro-Israel lobby and its widespread support among members of Congress. Now, IMEU Policy Project hopes to take advantage of what it calls a growing vulnerability for Republicans while the consequences of their support for Israel have been laid bare in the form of President Donald Trump’s latest act of war on Iran.

The war has aggravated long-standing Republican fault lines on foreign policy and resurfaced questions about where the party that calls itself “America First” actually stands on embroiling the U.S. in fighting overseas. Those rifts were on full display this week, when Trump appeared to walk back comments from Secretary of State Marco Rubio blaming Israel for dragging the U.S. into the war.

“The perception that President Trump launched this war against Iran for Israel’s benefit is dividing his base and will benefit Democrats in 2026,” said IMEU Policy Project spokesperson Hamid Bendaas, “if Democrats choose to take advantage.” 

So far, the party’s leadership has declined. Despite reportedly concluding in an internal autopsy that Kamala Harris lost voters over Gaza in the 2024 presidential election, Democrats have not incorporated those findings into their midterm strategy, Bendaas said. The party is on track to repeat those forced errors and whiff an opportunity to make significant gains in upcoming midterms if they continue to ignore the evidence around them, he added. 

“Democrats made the costly mistake of ignoring the deep unpopularity of support for Israel — and its genocide of Palestinians in Gaza — among their own voters in 2024,” Bendaas said. “They could miss another opportunity if Democratic leadership and candidates in swing districts continue to take money from AIPAC and refuse to capitalize on one of their strongest attack lines against Republicans going into November.”

Related

Will James Talarico Really Fight for Justice in Texas?

Democratic results in the midterms’ first round of primaries on Tuesday offered some evidence that voters are interested in changing the status quo on Israel. In Texas, Frederick Haynes III, a reverend who has been outspoken in calling for justice for Palestinians and labeling Israel an apartheid state, won a landslide victory to replace Rep. Jasmine Crockett when she vacates her seat. Crockett, who has largely followed the party line on Israel and Palestine, meanwhile lost the Senate primary to state Rep. James Talarico, who is not a known advocate for Palestine but who local organizers see as potentially more amenable to the cause. In North Carolina, Durham County Commissioner Nida Allam, who ran explicitly against pro-Israel interests, came within 1 percentage point of incumbent Democratic Rep. Valerie Foushee, who the pro-Israel lobby helped elect in 2022. (Their race was too close to call as of early Wednesday afternoon, and Allam plans to request a recount.)

Ahead of the 2024 presidential election, IMEU Policy Project relayed concerns to Harris’s campaign that Gaza would cost her votes. After the election, it was one of several groups that met with the Democratic National Committee over concerns about Israel policy. IMEU Policy Project had concluded the issue was a liability in its own polling — and in the meeting, the DNC acknowledged it had found the same.

In January, the group sent a letter to the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, obtained by The Intercept, warning the congressional Democrats’ campaign arm about the DNC’s findings and its own, and advising DCCC about the group’s plans to run ads against vulnerable Republicans. IMEU Policy Project sent the letter to DCCC prior to reporting from Axios that verified the DNC’s Gaza autopsy findings. 

“We are confident in saying that internal DNC data corroborated our conclusion that Biden’s support for Israel cost Democrats votes in 2024, and have concerns that the DNC’s suppression of this report is motivated, at least in part, by their finding that support for Israel is an electoral liability for the party,” reads the letter. “We look forward to engaging with you to ensure that the pivotal lessons from the 2024 election are not repeated, and instead incorporated into the Democratic Party’s strategy in the months ahead and before the pivotal midterm general elections.” DCCC did not respond to the letter and did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 

IMEU Policy Project launched its latest round of ads last week against Republicans in toss-up districts in Arizona and Iowa. The new ads target Reps. Juan Ciscomani and Marianette Miller-Meeks for voting to send billions of dollars to Israel while supporting cuts to health care

“Israelis enjoy universal health care, while Americans go bankrupt from medical bills. Miller-Meeks’ reward? Giant campaign donations from AIPAC and the pro-Netanyahu lobby,” the ad says. 

IMEU Policy Project spent $25,000 on its first round of ads in January targeting Rep. Mike Lawler, a Republican running in a tight reelection contest in New York, for voting to send billions of dollars to Israel while supporting cuts to Medicaid services at home. 

Democrats have shown little sign that they’ll take the prospect of parting ways with the pro-Israel lobby seriously, even as they watch the U.S. and Israel unleash destruction in Iran. While several progressives have vocally opposed the war, the party has largely been caught flatfooted on Iran, with Democratic leaders reportedly slow-walking a vote on the Iran war powers resolution, opening the door for Trump to attack Iran before Congress reconvened on Monday. The Senate is expected to vote on an Iran war powers resolution on Wednesday, followed by a House vote on Thursday.

Related

Democratic Leaders Avoid Criticizing Trump’s Iran War. Now Voters Will Have a Say.

Several Democratic candidates running in midterm elections linked U.S. support for Israel to Trump’s war in Iran this week. Allam released the first ad of the cycle touching on Iran just ahead of Tuesday’s primary. “I have opposed these forever wars my entire career,” said the North Carolina candidate, “and I hope to earn your vote to be your proudly uncompromised pro-peace leader in Washington.” In Maine, Democratic Senate candidate Graham Platner said the war was “un-American” and being pushed by Israel and Saudi Arabia. 

Some sitting members of Congress made the same connection. Sen. Ruben Gallego of Arizona and Rep. Joaquin Castro of Texas both criticized Rubio and the Trump administration for allowing Israel to endanger U.S. interests.

“Secretary Rubio’s remarks indicate that Israel put U.S. forces in harm’s way by insisting on attacking Iran. And the administration was complicit — joining their war instead of talking them down,” Castro wrote in a post on X Monday. “This is unacceptable of the President, and unacceptable of a country that calls itself our ally.”

“So Netanyahu now decides when we go to war?” Gallego wrote the same day. “So much for America First.”

The post Trump’s Iran War Is Dividing Republicans. Pro-Palestine Groups Want Democrats to Exploit the Rifts. appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-04 16:04
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Refresh your office with one of the best desks available today.

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LG will produce two versions of the TV: the C6, and the bright, larger-size C6H.

2026-03-04 16:04
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Household costs could reach £1,800 a year from July as UK market hits three-year high

Household energy bills could climb by £160 a year from this summer after the war in Iran pushed the UK’s gas market to a three-year high.

A typical combined household gas and electricity bill could reach £1,800 a year in Great Britain under the government’s quarterly price cap from July, according to analysis by Cornwall Insight, an energy consultancy.

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2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 12:40
  • Kansas City gain 29th pick in this year’s draft

  • Rams also have the 13th selection in 2026 draft

The Los Angeles Rams are acquiring All-Pro cornerback Trent McDuffie from the Kansas City Chiefs in a blockbuster trade that includes the 29th overall pick of this year’s draft, ESPN reported on Wednesday.

The Chiefs reportedly would also receive the Rams’ fifth- and sixth-round selections in this year’s draft as well as a third-round pick in 2027.

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2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 12:22

A lawsuit filed by the family of Jonathan Gavalas alleges Google's AI encouraged harmful behavior that posed a risk to public safety and ultimately led to his suicide.

2026-03-04 16:04
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An Iran-led order that long backed the likes of Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis – is gone. What will follow is one of the top questions of modern geopolitics.

2026-03-05 16:04
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Plan, which aims to preserve jobs in clean tech and low-carbon sectors, could include UK if there is reciprocal market access

The European Commission has proposed a “Buy EU” plan to boost domestic low-carbon industries and help the continent compete against China.

The commission published a draft regulation – called the Industrial Accelerator Act – on Wednesday, setting demands for EU-made and low-carbon content on bodies spending public money. The rules mark a big shift in economic thinking from Brussels, long a bastion of open markets.

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2026-03-04 16:04
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Michael Carrick's in-form Red Devils head to the northeast to face the Magpies.

2026-03-04 16:04
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The morning show host’s contract extension is a victory for the Bari Weiss-led network news division

CBS News has signed a new deal with Gayle King after intense speculation about the future of the CBS Mornings co-host’s role at the network.

King has been the centerpiece of the network’s morning show for years now, and her departure would have been a huge blow to the Bari Weiss-led network news division, which also recently lost another marquee talent with the departure of 60 Minutes correspondent Anderson Cooper.

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2026-03-04 12:04
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Attorney General Pam Bondi has rescinded a policy that prohibited political appointees at the Justice Department from attending campaign events or fundraisers, according to a memo seen by CBS News.

2026-03-04 12:04
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The U.S. is "accelerating, not decelerating" war on Iran, Hegseth says, as strikes intensify in the region and reach 1,000 miles away.

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 12:01

The State Department said it was facilitating charter flights from Saudi Arabia, Jordan and the UAE for Americans.

2026-03-04 16:04
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Cinematic Video Overviews are a new option available for Google AI Ultra subscribers.

2026-03-04 16:04
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The Pixel 10A won't replace Google's Pixel 10, but its lower-than-Apple price combined with AirDrop might make it easier to switch from iOS.

2026-03-04 12:04
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Continuing its product launches this week, Apple today announced the "MacBook Neo," an all-new, low-cost Mac featuring the A18 Pro chip. It starts at $599 and begins shipping on Wednesday, March 11. MacRumors reports: The MacBook Neo is the first Mac to be powered by an iPhone chip; the A18 Pro debuted in 2024's iPhone 16 Pro models. Apple says it is up to 50% faster for everyday tasks than the bestselling PC with the latest shipping Intel Core Ultra 5, up to 3x faster for on-device AI workloads, and up to 2x faster for tasks like photo editing. The MacBook Neo features a 13-inch Liquid Retina display with a 2408-by-1506 resolution, 500 nits of brightness, and an anti-reflective coating. The display does not have a notch, instead featuring uniform, iPad-style bezels. It is available in Silver, Indigo, Blush, and Citrus color options. The colored finishes extend to the Magic Keyboard in lighter shades and come with matching wallpapers. It weighs 2.7 pounds. There are two USB-C ports. One is a USB-C 2 port with support for speeds up to 480 Mb/s and one is a USB-C 3 port with support for speeds up to 10 Gb/s. There is also a headphone jack. The MacBook Neo also offers a 16-hour battery life, 8GB of unified memory, Wi-Fi 6E and Bluetooth 6 connectivity, a 1080p front-facing camera, dual mics with directional beamforming, and dual side-firing speakers with Spatial Audio.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-04 16:04
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This is how much a phone upgrade can cost you and how much folks are willing to pay.

2026-03-04 16:04
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These supplements can be helpful whether you need help falling or staying asleep.

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Once an amateur cook, I now feel confident in the kitchen thanks to this one service.

2026-03-04 20:04
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BARCELONA, Spain, March 4, 2026 — SK Telecom announced it has signed a three-party memorandum of understanding (MOU) with global server manufacturer Supermicro and global mechanical, electrical and plumbing (MEP) leader Schneider Electric to develop a total solution for artificial intelligence data centers (AIDC).

The agreement, signed at MWC26, aims to shorten AIDC construction timelines and help alleviate supply bottlenecks by leveraging the combined expertise of the three companies.

The companies will collaborate on a pre-fabricated modular model that integrates AI computing servers with supporting power and cooling infrastructure into a single pre-manufactured module, enabling AIDCs to be constructed in a building-block configuration.

Compared with the conventional steel-reinforced concrete (SRC) method, in which servers and infrastructure are installed sequentially after completion of the data center building, the pre-fabricated modular model offers both faster deployment and improved cost efficiency.

In addition, modules can be deployed in phases as demand grows, enhancing scalability while reducing the burden of significant upfront investments and enabling flexible responses to evolving market needs.

Under the MOU, SK Telecom will contribute its AIDC operational expertise; Supermicro will provide high-performance GPU servers optimized for customer-specific AI computing scenarios; and Schneider Electric will deliver MEP infrastructure design and construction capabilities to reliably support large-scale AI demand.

“Through collaboration with global leaders in the AIDC business, we are advancing a total solution based on a pre-fabricated modular model,” said Ha Min-yong, Head of SK Telecom’s AIDC Business. “Building on this initiative, we aim to proactively address the AIDC deployment needs of global hyper-scalers while further strengthening our cost competitiveness.”

“In the era of AI, the true measure of competitiveness lies in how fast and sustainably organizations can deliver high-performance infrastructure,” said Andrew Bradner, Senior Vice President at Schneider Electric. “Through this collaboration, we are introducing an integrated AI DC model based on a pre-fabricated modular design — empowering customers to lower carbon emissions, eliminate supply bottlenecks, and operate high-density AI workloads with greater resilience and efficiency.”

“Supermicro is excited to partner with SK Telecom to bring data centers online faster than ever before,” said Cenly Chen, Chief Growth Officer at Supermicro. “This new integrated solution will leverage Supermicro’s high-performance, GPU-optimized servers tailored to customer workloads. We look forward to helping organizations meet their growing data center needs with this latest technology.”

About SK Telecom

SK Telecom (NYSE: SKM) has been leading the growth of the mobile industry since 1984. Now, it is taking customer experience to new heights by extending beyond connectivity. By placing AI at the core of its business, SK Telecom is rapidly transforming into an AI company with a strong global presence. It is focusing on driving innovations in areas of AI Infrastructure, AI Transformation (AIX) and AI Service to deliver greater value for industry, society, and life.


Source: SK Telecom

The post SK Telecom, Supermicro and Schneider Electric Sign MOU on Total Solutions for AI Data Center Deployment appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 11:56

Climate deniers expected more resistance to the fossil fuel blitz. But Democrats, billionaires and activists have gone silent

  • This story is published in partnership with DeSmog, the climate investigations site

As Donald Trump assaults the legal foundation of America’s ability to regulate global warming emissions, climate deniers have been privately celebrating what they claim is the “silent” acquiescence of billionaires, Democrats, climate activists and even reporters to the president’s aggressive pro-fossil-fuel agenda.

“In my 26 years of being focused on climate, I’ve never seen anything like this. Trump is gutting everything they ever stood for,” Marc Morano, a longtime climate denier, said in January at the World Prosperity Forum, a five-day event in Zurich, Switzerland, billed as a rightwing alternative to the World Economic Forum in Davos.

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2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 11:53

The government unveiled items said to have been found on the boat, including high-powered weapons, more than 12,800 pieces of ammunition and 11 pistols.

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 11:52

Access minister says government is working to solve ‘postcode lottery’ of access to green or blue spaces

There are urban areas of England where no one lives within a 15 minute walk of nature, new government data shows, as ministers scramble to meet their access to nature targets.

While the new data shows 80% of people live within walking distance of green or blue spaces such as a river, park or woodland, it also reveals a disparity between rural areas and poorer urban areas.

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2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 11:50

German government convened a crisis meeting after several prize winners condemned Israel’s actions against Palestinians

The American head of the Berlin film festival, Tricia Tuttle, will keep her job after a free speech row over Gaza, but the event will have to consider a new code of conduct to “fight antisemitism”, the German culture ministry has said.

Tuttle’s position came under threat after an awards gala at the end of the 76th edition last month, in which several prize winners condemned Israel’s actions against Palestinians from the stage.

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2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 11:50

Anthropic’s feud with the Pentagon reveals the limits of AI governance Expert comment LToremark

The Pentagon’s dispute with AI company Anthropic underscores the gridlock in AI governance – and just how far the Trump administration will go to ensure major tech companies fall in line.

US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth speaks during a press conference on US military action in Iran.

Last week, President Donald Trump announced that the US Department of Defense (DoD) – now known as the Department of War – would no longer work with the ‘radical left, woke’ AI company Anthropic, one of the leading AI laboratories in the world. The dispute was sparked over the company’s supposed ‘red lines’ over what its technology could not be used for; in this case, the use of AI for mass surveillance of Americans and for lethal autonomous weapons.

Leaving the very public histrionics to one side, this might be chalked up to a simple contractual dispute. Usage restrictions on a technology are extremely common, limiting its use in certain geographies or industries, for instance, or its use by children. Should a contract not be agreeable, the buyer can find one that is. This seems to be exactly what has happened here. Anthropic’s rival OpenAI swooped in to sign a new contract with the Pentagon after Secretary of War Pete Hegseth called for a ‘better and more patriotic’ service in a statement on X.

But Hegseth went even further. He not only threatened to label Anthropic a ‘supply chain risk’ (one of a number of designations historically reserved for Chinese- or Russian-owned companies like Huawei, Hytera and Kaspersky) but also appeared to threaten to prevent any current provider of technology or services to the Department of War from having ‘any commercial relations’ with Anthropic. This would be a death sentence for a company – any company – that is reliant on Amazon for its cloud storage, NVIDIA for its chips and Microsoft Windows for its operating system, to name but a few examples. It is an extraordinary threat to a business from any government, but as Dean Ball writes, it is a move that is both distinctly un-American and one that threatens the viability of US AI at the exact moment it was looking to broaden its customer base. 

The US delegation to the recent AI summit in Delhi arrived banging the drum for the ‘American AI Stack’ – its semiconductors, models and applications – with a White House adviser emphasizing their aim for the US to be ‘amazing and easy to do business with’. But the fact that Anthropic – one of the jewels in the crown of US AI – can be served notice in this way is a hammer blow to the trustworthiness of US technology at a time when many countries feel exposed by their deep US tech dependencies and are looking for alternatives.

Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei has been praised for appearing to stand on principle and its AI assistant Claude has seen an increase in user downloads. But despite the fact that its $200m contract with the Pentagon is now coming to an end, the decision reportedly came too late to prevent the US military from using Anthropic models in its strikes on Iran over the weekend.

Meanwhile, the speed at which OpenAI swooped in to fill the gap has raised eyebrows. Its CEO Sam Altman is now looking to amend the last-minute deal he describes as looking ‘opportunistic and sloppy’ after the company faced backlash. 

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 11:44

Rep. Christian Menefee, who was first elected earlier this year in a special election, is running against longtime Rep. Al Green, who had been gerrymandered into the same district.

2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 11:35

A facility in Kuwait, the site of the attack, is among 11 U.S. military outposts to have been hit by retaliatory strikes, along with French and British bases.

2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 11:33

Iran has issued counterstrikes to Israeli and U.S. military bases since the beginning of the Iran war. But unrelated video footage is being mischaracterized as showing those attacks. 

A Feb. 28 X post  said the footage of a large, fiery explosion was recorded at a U.S. air base in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. The video and caption spread across X and other platforms, including TikTok and Instagram

But the video is neither recent, nor from Saudi Arabia. 

Two Arabic news reports from July 2024 show identical or near identical footage of Israeli strikes on the Yemeni port of Hodeidah. 

The port strike was in response to a drone strike in Tel Aviv carried out by Houthi, an Iran-backed military group in Yemen, that killed at least one person. The port was used to deliver Iranian arms to Yemen. 

It's true that Iranian drones recently hit a U.S. embassy in Riyadh, according to a March 3 Associated Press report, but there's no public footage of that attack. The Saudi Arabia Defense Ministry also told AP that it had intercepted several other drones fired into the area early that morning. 

We rate claims the video of the Yemeni port bombing shows a U.S. air base in Riyadh being destroyed by Iran False. 

Editor's note: Google Translate was used to translate video captions and websites into English. 

2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 11:31

It's a crucial game for both ends of the table at the Etihad Stadium.

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 11:30

Joani Reid asks for privacy after it was revealed her husband David Taylor was one of the three men arrested

Starmer begins PMQs by telling the Commons that his thoughts are with Sarah Everard “on this very painful anniversary” of her death.

He says the government is working hard to prevent boys and men from becoming abusers.

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2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 11:30

The Gunners look to keep their title charge afloat as they travel to the south coast to face the Seagulls.

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 11:22

Stéphane Séjourné is the latest high-profile name to express solidarity with Spain over Trump’s comments last night

in Madrid

Sánchez’s defiant speech may have been made in response to Trump’s threat to cut off all trade with Spain, but his words were also aimed every bit as much at other EU leaders (and at Spain’s political class).

“A war that, in theory, was said to be waged to eliminate Saddam Hussein’s weapons of mass destruction, bring democracy, and guarantee global security, but which, in reality, seen in retrospect, produced the opposite effect. It unleashed the greatest wave of insecurity our continent has suffered since the fall of the Berlin Wall.”

“It is absolutely unacceptable that those leaders who are incapable of fulfilling this duty use the smokescreen of war to hide their failure and, in the process, line the pockets of a select few – the same ones as always; the only ones who profit when the world stops building hospitals and starts building missiles.”

The government of Spain stands with those it must stand with. It stands with the values that our parents and grandparents enshrined in our constitution.

Spain stands with the founding principles of the European Union. It stands with the Charter of the United Nations. It stands with international law and, therefore, stands with peace and peaceful coexistence between countries and their harmonious coexistence.

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2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 11:18

The Federal Reserve will meet later in March to discuss interest rates. Here's what homebuyers should do before then.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 11:18

Lawsuits and slander claims fly in IG Metall’s battle with Elon Musk over employment rights and conditions

Europe’s largest trade union is trying to gain control of the works council at Elon Musk’s Tesla gigafactory near Berlin, in an industrial relations showdown marked by lawsuits and mutual accusations of slander.

The works council, an elected body of employees that negotiates everything from working hours to pay deals with a company’s management, is considered an entrenched aspect of the German corporate world, particularly in the car industry.

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2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 11:12

Firm admits supplying water unfit for human consumption after nearly 150 people fell ill

A major utility company has admitted supplying water unfit for human consumption after a parasite outbreak in Devon made almost 150 people sick.

South West Water (SWW) pleaded guilty to the criminal offence relating to the cryptosporidiosis outbreak in Brixham, Devon, which affected 2,500 homes.

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2026-03-04 16:04
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Macron’s nuclear weapons offer to Europe: Gaullist policy, updated for a more unstable world Expert comment jon.wallace

‘Dissuasion avancée’ is intended to give France’s partners a greater stake in nuclear deterrence, retain French command and control – and prevent proliferation.

France's President Emmanuel Macron delivers a speech next to nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarine (SSBN) submarine Le Temeraire on 2 March 2026.

President Emmanuel Macron’s speech on 2 March, on the future of French nuclear deterrence, is already being framed as a watershed moment for European security.

The announcement that France will expand its nuclear arsenal for the first time in decades and create a new framework of ‘advanced deterrence’ cooperation has triggered intense debate about Europe’s strategic future.

Yet, for all its political substance, the speech is better understood as a strategic clarification rather than a doctrinal revolution. Macron mostly reaffirmed long-standing French principles of sovereign nuclear control and deliberate ambiguity while attempting to adapt them to the new European security environment. That clarification is welcome at a time of Russian revisionism, uncertainty about US commitments and renewed nuclear competition, especially from China.

A Gaullist logic revisited

The conceptual foundations of Macron’s speech are deeply rooted in the original Gaullist doctrine of French nuclear strategy. That conceived deterrence as not only a shield for the national territory but also a guarantee of France’s political independence.

De Gaulle deliberately kept the definition of France’s ‘vital interests’ ambiguous. In 1964, he emphasized that French nuclear forces were designed to deter any power capable of threatening the country’s survival, without specifying geographical limits. 

The doctrine was intentionally flexible. It allowed France to signal that developments affecting the European strategic balance could fall within its vital interests. Subsequent French nuclear planning assumed those interests could be engaged by a Soviet attack in Central Europe, particularly in the Federal Republic of Germany, Belgium or the Netherlands, since such an advance would rapidly threaten French territory.

Michel Debré, one of the principal architects of French nuclear doctrine, articulated this logic clearly. In 1972, he observed that ‘France lives within a network of interests that extends beyond its borders’, adding that French deterrence inevitably benefited Western Europe as well. The implication was straightforward: although the French deterrent was strictly national in its command and control, its strategic consequences were never purely national.

Macron’s speech therefore reflects continuity rather than rupture. When the president insisted that nuclear deterrence must remain ‘a French intangible’ while proposing a more European strategic posture, he was essentially updating Gaullist principle: the ‘force de frappe’ is sovereign, but its political effects extend beyond the Hexagon.

A more assertive nuclear posture

The most notable element in the president’s speech was the announcement that France would increase the size of its nuclear arsenal, currently estimated at around 290 warheads. For decades, France has maintained a strict ceiling and emphasized transparency about its stockpile size. Macron indicated this would change: as the arsenal grows, France will no longer publicly disclose its exact number of warheads.

This shift reflects a broader international trend. Nuclear arsenals worldwide are expanding or modernizing (if not both), and strategic competition between major powers has intensified. By abandoning detailed transparency, France is reintroducing strategic uncertainty as a component of deterrence.

Macron also suggested that France could temporarily deploy nuclear-capable Rafale aircraft to allied bases for exercises or signalling missions. Importantly, this would not amount to NATO-style nuclear sharing. The nuclear weapons, the command chain and the decision to use them would remain strictly French. In this respect, the French president largely undercut nationalist critics who had warned that closer European cooperation would amount to a surrender of French nuclear sovereignty.

This principle lies at the heart of what Macron calls ‘dissuasion avancée’: advanced deterrence that is more forward and more European in posture, yet entirely French in control.

Advanced but not shared deterrence

The concept attempts to reconcile two objectives that have long been difficult to combine: preserving national control over nuclear weapons while giving European partners a greater stake in the strategic environment surrounding them.

Under Macron’s proposal, European allies could participate in the broader ecosystem of deterrence without sharing operational control of nuclear weapons. This could include participation in exercises, strategic consultations, and contributions to conventional capabilities that reinforce nuclear signalling.

Such contributions might involve air and missile defence systems protecting strategic infrastructure, intelligence and surveillance capabilities, or long-range conventional strike assets that would strengthen Europe’s overall deterrence posture.

In practice, this would create a European political framework around a French nuclear core a structure designed to enhance deterrence without fundamentally altering the national character of the French force.

A shift in European strategic culture

The deeper ambition of Macron’s speech lies in the realm of strategic culture. For decades, European nuclear deterrence has been largely delegated to the US through NATO. Even after the Cold War, most European states avoided engaging directly with nuclear strategy.

Macron’s initiative implicitly challenges that posture. By inviting European partners into a more structured dialogue around deterrence, France is encouraging them to internalize the logic of nuclear strategy: escalation management, signalling, survivability and resilience.

Macron made clear that the US will continue to play a central role in European security

The initiative is not intended to replace the American nuclear umbrella but to complement it, as US strategic priorities evolve.

The proliferation dilemma

Yet, the debate also reveals a deeper strategic dilemma for Europe. If the credibility of collective deterrence is questioned, individual states may pursue their own nuclear capabilities.

Recent statements by Poland’s Prime Minister Donald Tusk about acquiring nuclear weapons illustrate this risk. A nuclear armed Poland would challenge the EU’s commitment to nuclear non-proliferation and undermine the cohesion of the European security architecture.

Emmanuel Macron’s proposal can therefore also be interpreted as a preventive initiative. By offering European partners a role within a broader deterrence framework centred on the French force, Paris is trying to discourage the emergence of new national nuclear programmes.

The missing conventional dimension

Macron’s speech has left an important question largely unanswered: the role of conventional military power in European deterrence.

Most contemporary conflicts unfold below the nuclear threshold as the Russian war on Ukraine reminded us all. Effective deterrence therefore requires a strong conventional military layer capable of responding to aggression without escalation to nuclear weapons.

Whether this vision succeeds will depend on Europe’s willingness to assume greater strategic responsibility.

Europe still has limited ammunition stocks, insufficient air and missile defence systems, and logistical constraints affecting large-scale military deployments.

Without substantial improvements to such conventional capabilities, the political significance of Macron’s speech may exceed its practical impact. Macron may intend to work towards agreement on a strategic division of labour, where France has full control of nuclear deterrence while European partners boost the conventional forces that underpin its credibility.

A test for Europe

Ultimately, the speech at Île Longue was less about nuclear weapons than about Europe’s capacity to act collectively in a more dangerous world. 

The French president framed this challenge starkly during his Sorbonne speech in April 2024: ‘Our Europe today is mortal,’ he warned. ‘It can die simply because our decisions are insufficient or too slow’.

His initiative is therefore both an offer and a test. Whether this vision succeeds will depend on Europe’s willingness to assume greater strategic responsibility through stronger conventional forces, deeper political cooperation and a shared understanding of deterrence in an increasingly unstable international system.

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 11:06

The House Ethics Committee announcement comes one day after the Texas primary, which resulted in Rep. Tony Gonzales and Brandon Herrera heading to a runoff.

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 11:01

The year has barely begun, and there are rumors aplenty about the next big iPhone. Here are all the speculations and leaked information about the iPhone 18 so far.

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 11:00

We've put the top meal kit and prepared meal delivery services to the test. Here are the best options if you're watching your budget.

2026-03-04 12:04
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Intel has formally unveiled its Xeon 6+ "Clearwater Forest" data-center processor with up to 288 cores, built on the company's new Intel 18A process and using Foveros Direct packaging. The chip targets telecom, cloud, and edge-AI workloads with massive parallelism, large caches, and high-bandwidth DDR5-8000 memory. Tom's Hardware reports: Intel's Xeon 6+ processors with up to 288 cores combine 12 compute chiplets containing 24 energy-efficient Darkmont cores per tile that are produced using 18A manufacturing technology, two I/O tiles made on Intel 7 production node, as well as three active base tiles made on Intel 3 fabrication process. The compute tiles are stacked on top of the base dies using Intel's Foveros Direct 3D technology, whereas lateral connections are enabled by Intel's EMIB bridges. Intel's 'Darkmont' efficiency cores have received rather meaningful microarchitectural upgrades. Each core integrates a 64 KB L1 instruction cache, a broader fetch and decode pipeline, and a deeper out-of-order engine capable of tracking more in-flight operations. The number of execution ports has also been increased in a bid to improve both scalar and vector throughput under heavily threaded server workloads. From a cache hierarchy standpoint, the design groups cores into four-core blocks that share approximately 4 MB of L2 cache per block. As a result, the aggregate last-level cache across the full package surpasses 1 GB, roughly 1,152 MB in total. This unusually large pool is intended to keep data close to hundreds of active cores and reduce dependence on external memory bandwidth, which in turn is meant to both increase performance and lower power consumption. Platform-wise, the processor remains drop-in compatible with the current Xeon server socket, so the CPU has 12 memory channels that support DDR5-8000, 96 PCIe 5.0 lanes with 64 lanes supporting CXL 2.0.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 10:55

Rising oil and gas prices may affect increase of £300 a year for typical working-age households, says leading thinktank

The Middle East crisis could trigger an energy price shock that more than wipes out the £300 rise in living standards a typical working-age household could otherwise expect this year, a leading thinktank has warned.

The Resolution Foundation said a “decent” one-off increase in average living standards in 2026 and a bumper rise for lower-income households could be reversed by rising oil and gas prices as the Iran conflict disrupts supplies.

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2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 10:51

The Pentagon chief claims Tehran ‘cannot outlast’ US as strikes intensify and civilian toll climbs

The US will have complete, uncontested control of Iranian airspace within days, the Pentagon chief, Pete Hegseth, declared Wednesday, saying Iran “cannot outlast” American military power and that its capabilities were “evaporating by the hour”.

The joint US-Israeli operation to attack Iran, which began on Saturday, had already delivered “twice the air power of shock and awe of Iraq in 2003” and “seven times the intensity of Israel’s previous operations against Iran during the 12-day war”, Hegseth claimed at a press conference alongside Dan Caine, the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff.

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2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 10:48

Ban affecting Sudan, Afghanistan, Myanmar and Cameroon will mean more people make Channel crossings, charity says

A new ban on students coming to the UK from four countries where there is war and human rights abuses will drive more people use small boats, campaigners have warned.

The home secretary, Shabana Mahmood, announced a bar on student visas from Sudan, Afghanistan, Myanmar and Cameroon on Tuesday evening. It will come into force on 26 March.

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2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 10:47
  • Player found guilty of ‘non-serious assault’ in 2020

  • England defender to appeal again against verdict

The England and Manchester United defender Harry Maguire has been handed a 15-month suspended prison sentence by a Greek court over a 2020 incident in Mykonos.

In 2020, Maguire was found guilty of repeated bodily harm, attempted bribery and violence against public employees after his arrest after a brawl outside a nightclub.

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2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 10:41

US defense secretary was evasive when asked about the airstrike that Iranian officials say killed at least 165 students

Pete Hegseth, the US defense secretary, offered few details and was evasive when asked about the deadly strike on a girls’ school in Iran, saying only that the US was “investigating” the incident.

Iranian officials say the attack, which happened on Saturday, killed at least 165 students.

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2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 10:40

The war will have incalculable implications for Europe – and yet, the chancellor has held back from publicly challenging an increasingly erratic Donald Trump

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You could be forgiven for thinking Friedrich Merz would rather be anywhere but Germany of late.

But hopes that his stop in Washington this week would provide the chancellor even a brief respite from woes at home were dashed by Donald Trump’s risky Iran gamble.

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2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 10:28

Rapidly escalating war enters fifth day and spreads as far as Indian Ocean with sinking of Iranian vessel off Sri Lanka

Israel has carried out a wave of airstrikes on Iranian security targets and Hezbollah in Beirut as Tehran threatened the “complete destruction of the region’s military and economic infrastructure” as the rapidly escalating war entered its fifth day and reached as far as the Indian Ocean off Sri Lanka.

The Israeli military said it had hit buildings in Iran belonging to the Basij, the volunteer police arm of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), and buildings belonging to internal security forces. Police stations and IRGC headquarters in the Kurdish regions of north-western Iran were also razed by strikes, Kurdish media reported.

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2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 10:28

UK’s FTSE 100 up by more than 50 points, while pan-European Stoxx 600 share index rises 1.2%

European stock markets have rallied on a report claiming Iran is engaging in a “secret outreach” to end the war in the Middle East, after several days of heavy losses on indices around the world.

The New York Times reported that a day after the attacks began, operatives from Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence indirectly contacted the CIA with an offer to discuss terms for ending the conflict.

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2026-03-04 12:04
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I’ve been riding one wheels for 3 years now, the currently place I live I have been riding here every day for 2 years, snow or shine. Last night I got pulled over on the way to the store. The reasoning was only bikes are allowed to ride on the road and no one else. I’ve never had a problem with any of the other cops in this town and the rest of them have always just waived and told me I can ride wherever bikes go. Just wondering if anyone else have been harassed by cops for just riding around before.( Had headlights+ tail lights on,a helmet and reflective gear and a headlamp as it was getting dark out)

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2026-03-04 12:04
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Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem misled Congress on Tuesday about the powers of her controversial top aide Corey Lewandowski, according to records reviewed by ProPublica and four current and former DHS officials.

Lewandowski has an unusual role at DHS, where he is not a paid government employee but is nonetheless acting as a top official, helping Noem run the sprawling agency. For months, members of Congress have asked the agency to detail the scope of his work and authority. 

At a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on Tuesday, Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., asked Noem whether Lewandowski has “a role in approving contracts” at DHS. Noem responded with a flat denial: “No.”

But internal DHS records reviewed by ProPublica contradict Noem’s Senate testimony. The records show Lewandowski personally approved a multimillion-dollar equipment contract at the agency last summer. 

That was not a one-off. Lewandowski has approved numerous contracts at DHS and often needs to sign off on large ones before any money goes out the door, the current and former department employees said.

Last year, Noem imposed a new policy that consolidated her and her top aides’ power over all spending at DHS, requiring that she personally review and approve all contracts above $100,000. Before the contracts reach Noem, they must be approved by a series of political appointees, who each sign or initial a checklist sometimes referred to internally as a routing sheet. Typically, the last name on the checklist before Noem’s is Lewandowski’s, the DHS officials said.

Noem Denies That Lewandowski Has “a Role in Approving Contracts” at DHS

Via C-Span

Under federal law, it is a crime to “knowingly and willfully” make a false statement to Congress. But in practice, it is rarely prosecuted.

In a statement, a DHS spokesperson reiterated Noem’s claim. “Mr. Lewandowski does NOT play a role in approving contracts,” the spokesperson said. “Mr. Lewandowski does not receive a salary or any federal government benefits. He volunteers his time to serve the American people.” Lewandowski did not respond to a request for comment. 

Several news outlets, including Politico, have previously reported on aspects of Lewandowski’s involvement in contracting at DHS. 

There have been widespread reports of delays caused by the new contract approval process at the agency, which has responsibilities spanning from immigration enforcement to disaster relief to airport security. DHS has asserted that the review process saved taxpayers billions of dollars. 

A similar sign-off process exists for other policy decisions at DHS. One of the checklists, about rolling back protections for Haitians in the U.S., emerged in litigation last year. It featured the signatures of several top DHS advisers. Under them was Lewandowski’s signature, and then Noem’s.

An internal Department of Homeland Security policy document from February 2025 shows agency officials, including top aide Corey Lewandowski and Noem — referred to as “S1,” signing off on a policy change. U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland. Scrim added by ProPublica for clarity.

Lewandowski is what’s known as a “special government employee,” a designation historically used to let experts serve in government for limited periods without having to give up their outside jobs. (At the beginning of the Trump administration, Elon Musk was one, too.) Special government employees have to abide by only some of the same ethics rules as normal officials and are permitted to have sources of outside income.

Lewandowski has declined to disclose whether he is being paid by any outside companies and, if so, who.

The post Kristi Noem Misled Congress About Top Aide’s Role in DHS Contracts appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 10:13

Doctors say that if left untreated, raccoon roundworm can cause severe health complications, including brain damage and death.

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 10:00

With the wait for the new Winds and Waves games set to stretch into 2027, Pokemon’s 30th anniversary celebrations have plugged the gap with a deluge of nostalgia bait. Is the franchise in danger of losing its heart?

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It has been almost impossible to escape Pokémon for the past few weeks. To mark the 30th anniversary of the original games, the Pokémon Company has been on an unprecedented promotional nostalgia trip for the entire month: there was a campaign where celebrities gushed about their favourite Pokémon, gifting us the memorable sight of Lady Gaga singing with a Jigglypuff, and Pokémon FireRed and LeafGreen (great Game Boy Advance remakes of the original 1996 games) were rereleased on the Nintendo Switch. The Natural History Museum in London has opened a special Pokémon pop-up shop, and a limited-edition greyscale Pikachu plush toy sold out in about three seconds (they will be making more, to the disappointment of scalpers everywhere).

And all that is just the start. We’ve seen the opening of a Pokémon theme park in Tokyo, the announcement of a tiny Game Boy-shaped music player that plays the games’ soundtrack, a collaboration with high-fashion brand JimmyPaul that had its own runway show … it’s been endless. Regular readers will know that I am exactly the target audience for this festival of Pokémon nostalgia: the first generation of Pokémon kids and now hurtling towards 40. And yet I have been unmoved by most of this, even slightly annoyed by it.

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2026-03-04 12:04
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A new Android app called Nearby Glasses alerts users when Bluetooth signals from smart glasses are detected nearby. The Android app, called Nearby Glasses, "launches at a time as there is an increasing resistance against always-recording or listening devices, which critics say process information about nearby people who do not give their consent," reports TechCrunch. From the report: Yves Jeanrenaud, who made the app, first spoke to 404 Media about the project and said he was in part inspired to make Nearby Glasses after reading the independent publication's reporting into wearable surveillance devices, including how Meta's Ray-Ban smart glasses have been used in immigration raids and to film and harass sex workers. On the app's project page, Jeanrenaud described smart glasses as an "intolerable intrusion, consent neglecting, horrible piece of tech." Jeanrenaud told TechCrunch in an email that his motivation came from "witnessing the sheer scale and inhumane nature of the abuse these smart glasses are involved in." Jeanrenaud also cited Meta's decision to implement face recognition as a default feature in its smart glasses, "which I consider to be a huge floodgate pushed open for all kinds of privacy-invasive behavior." The app works by listening for nearby Bluetooth signals that contain a publicly assigned identifier unique to the Bluetooth device's manufacturer. If the app detects a Bluetooth signal from a nearby hardware device made by Meta or Snap, the app will send the user an alert. (The app also allows users to add their own specific Bluetooth identifiers, allowing the user to detect a broader range of wearable surveillance gadgetry.) Further reading: Meta's AI Display Glasses Reportedly Share Intimate Videos With Human Moderators

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 09:58

‘We just don’t know what will happen,’ western officials say, as UK bases prepare for arrival of US heavy bombers

Britain has not ruled out participating in future strikes against Iranian ballistic missile launch sites, officials have indicated.

US heavy bombers are expected to reach UK bases at Diego Garcia in the Chagos Islands and Fairford in Gloucestershire in the next few days, from where they are expected to attack Iran’s underground “missile cities”.

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2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 09:54

Dassault Aviation says €100bn project may soon be ‘dead’ if Airbus will not agree on how to share workload

France and Germany’s next-generation fighter jet project could soon be “dead”, one of the two companies tasked with delivering it has warned, amid a worsening corporate rift over who gets to build the aircraft.

Dassault Aviation, France’s leading warplane maker, said Airbus’s defence arm – which represents Germany and Spain – needed to cooperate on the €100bn programme otherwise it would collapse.

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2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 09:34

Democratic rematch in Durham-area district draws focus to fight over AI datacenters increasingly shaping US elections

A North Carolina congressional primary held on Tuesday is an early test of datacenter politics – a fight increasingly shaping elections nationwide.

In the Durham-area fourth district, Congresswoman Valerie Foushee is seeking her third term against progressive challenger Nida Allam, a Durham county commissioner she defeated in 2022. The election was too close to call as of Wednesday morning, with Foushee up by less than one percentage point, and is likely headed for a recount.

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2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 09:21

I've owned a OneWheel Pint for around 4 years now in the UK. I've only racked up around 360 miles and they were mainly in the first 2 years. I've barely touched the board in the last 2 years due to lack of places to ride locally. So i'm thinking about selling, but it seems like a tough thing to sell.

Would anyone be able to advise on price, where to sell etc?

My main worry is that these things get battered, for obvious reasons. No one wants to buy something that's all scratched and dented. I learnt to ride with this board so it has it's fair share of wear and tear. It also has a decent dent in the front where it hit some railing. But apart from that, it's a solid working board.

Do I take the approach of selling as a way to learn without buying an expensive new board maybe?

Any advice would be appreciated.

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2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 09:20

Lawsuit is first wrongful death case brought against Google over flagship AI product after death of Jonathan Gavalas

Last August, Jonathan Gavalas became entirely consumed with his Google Gemini chatbot. The 36-year-old Florida resident had started casually using the artificial intelligence tool earlier that month to help with writing and shopping. Then Google introduced its Gemini Live AI assistant, which included voice-based chats that had the capability to detect people’s emotions and respond in a more human-like way.

“Holy shit, this is kind of creepy,” Gavalas told the chatbot the night the feature debuted, according to court documents. “You’re way too real.”

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2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 09:19

BARCELONA, Spain, March 4, 2026 — At the Huawei product and solution launch event during MWC Barcelona 2026, Bob Chen, President of Huawei Optical Business Product Line, unveiled Next Generation Optical Network products and solutions to foster synergy between AI and networks, accelerating the evolution toward AI-centric All-Optical Network.

Bob Chen, President of Huawei Optical Business Product Line, is unveiling Next Generation Optical Network products and solutions

Upgrading optical networks for the AI era is the right move. The ITU-T has officially released the ION-2030 vision, defining key capabilities, application scenarios, and standardization roadmap for next-generation optical networks. Leading global operators are also accelerating the deployment of next-generation optical networks.

Chen stated, “Huawei advances Next Generation Optical Network solutions in two directions: AI for Networks and Networks for AI. In AI for Networks, AI technologies enable intelligent fiber sensing, enhance network performance and user experience, improve O&M efficiency, and reduce energy consumption. In Networks for AI, enhanced network capabilities help operators build AI-centric all-optical target networks, accelerating AI adoption across homes and enterprises.”

AI for Networks: Improving Network Quality and Efficiency

  • Intelligent fiber sensing: Based on the fiber risk sensing model and fault identification model, risks can be identified in advance, and the fault location can be pinpointed within 10 meters.
  • Network performance enhancement: An optical performance simulation model, built on thousands of optical parameters, significantly enhances the precision of network performance evaluation and extends the transmission distance by 20%.
  • Network experience enhancement: Wi-Fi interference can be detected in real time, and AI algorithms intelligently adjust Wi-Fi power, boosting rates by 20% under interference conditions.
  • Energy saving: Service traffic is analyzed in real time, and ports and boards are intelligently adjusted. When there is no traffic, all ports and boards are put into hibernation, reducing average energy consumption by 40%.
  • Intelligent O&M: AI technologies are used to enhance the intelligence of network planning, construction, maintenance, and optimization processes. For example, the home broadband O&M agent can automatically identify and locate over 60 types of faults, and assist NOC O&M engineers in resolving them quickly through natural language interaction, significantly reducing home visits.

Networks for AI: Accelerating AI Popularization

  • Optical access: A target network with gigabit-level downlink and 100M-level uplink is built to meet the bandwidth requirements of new home AI services and enhance the overall home network experience.
  • Optical transmission: The latency circles of 5 ms for national networks, 3 ms for regional networks, and 1 ms for metro networks are built to enable millisecond-level computing access and ensure optimal AI application performance.

Huawei has launched a full series of products and solutions for Next Generation Optical Network. In the optical access domain, Huawei has introduced Next Generation FAN products such as FTTR, OLT, ONT, and ODN. In the optical transmission domain, Huawei has released Next Generation OTN products for OTN backbone, OTN optical layer, and OTN metro networks, helping operators build Agentic UBB networks.


Source: Huawei

The post Huawei Launches Next-Gen Optical Network Products and Solutions to Drive New Growth in the AI Era appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 09:16

A network of satellites supported 300 rescues across the U.S. and its surrounding waters in 2025, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said.

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 09:14

YouGov poll shows 50% support as Kristi Noem defends ‘terrorist’ claim and shutdown drags on

Half of Americans support the abolition of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency, a new poll has found, as opposition to Donald Trump’s aggressive federal immigration crackdown continues to grow.

The analysis by YouGov revealed that exactly 50% of respondents “strongly or somewhat” want to see the agency dismantled, a 5% rise from a January poll taken between the deaths in Minnesota of US citizen protesters Renee Good and Alex Pretti by immigration officers.

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2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 09:14

Afghanistan and Pakistan are facing ‘open war’. De-escalation is needed Expert comment thilton.drupal

With the world distracted by war in the Middle East, de-escalation will need to come from Kabul and Islamabad directly.

Taliban fighters in Afghanistan

Fighting between Afghanistan and Pakistan has intensified in recent weeks, with no sign of de-escalation after Islamabad said it is waging an ‘open war’ against its neighbour.

Pakistan launched air strikes on Afghanistan last week in response to attacks on border posts by the Afghan military on 26 February. In a serious escalation, it targeted major cities including Kabul and Kandahar, as well as Bagram airbase. Kabul responded by targeting Pakistani military facilities.

These developments mark a clear escalation from the previous limited border skirmishes and use of proxies. Islamabad accuses Afghanistan of hosting separatist and terror groups that have carried out increasing attacks within Pakistan, including the Tereek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP, or Pakistan Taliban) and Baloch separatists. These groups contributed to a 34 per cent increase in the number of annual terror attacks inside Pakistan in 2025. The Taliban denies involvement.

Despite Pakistan’s superior military capabilities, the Taliban maintains a significant capacity for asymmetric warfare.

In November, the TTP carried out a suicide attack outside a district court in Islamabad, pointing to its growing reach beyond border tribal areas. The separatist Balochistan Liberation Army, which Pakistan says has sanctuaries in Afghanistan, also claimed attacks in Baluchistan province in January that killed almost 50 people.

The degree of direct complicity between Kabul and these militant groups is contested. At best, the uptick in attacks reflects Kabul’s inability to control militant activities within its borders; at worst, it reflects a degree of collusion between the Taliban and the TTP, who both espouse a similar conservative version of Sunni Islam.

These tensions are exacerbated by the forced repatriation of Afghan refugees from Pakistan. An estimated 2.7 million Afghans returned to Afghanistan in 2025 alone, mainly from Iran and Pakistan, contributing to a 12 per cent increase in population since 2023. The eviction of Afghan refugees from Pakistan is likely to accelerate amid the current tensions, placing further pressure on Afghanistan’s already stretched public services.

Afghanistan’s precarious economic situation has been further exacerbated by Islamabad’s decision to close the Afghan-Pakistan border in October and suspend all trade. As a landlocked country, Afghanistan is heavily dependent on Pakistan and other neighbouring countries for transit trade.

History of bad blood

The current conflict has deep historic roots. The Afghan government does not recognize the Durand Line, the 2,600km line demarcating the Pakistan-Afghanistan border that was drawn in 1893. The border goes through ethnic Pashtun areas and, as such, is opposed by Pashtun nationalists in Afghanistan. For this reason, Afghanistan was the only country to initially vote against Pakistan’s admission to the United Nations in 1947.

During the Afghan civil war in the 1990s, Pakistan supported the Taliban against the Northern Alliance, which was backed by India (as well as Iran and Russia). Islamabad has historically maintained close relations with the Taliban and initially welcomed the US/NATO withdrawal from Afghanistan and the Taliban’s return to power in 2021. But relations have since soured amid the recurring border skirmishes and attacks in Pakistan.

Afghanistan’s role in relation to the India-Pakistan rivalry has also strained relations. Historically, the Taliban was seen by New Delhi as a Pakistani proxy. This fuelled claims that Afghanistan was giving Pakistan ‘strategic depth’ in its rivalry with India, with Islamabad accused of seeking to leverage relations with the Taliban and other extremist groups to mount asymmetric attacks on India. New Delhi supported the 2001 US-led invasion of Afghanistan to oust the Taliban. 

This has now reversed, with Pakistan accusing the Taliban of turning Afghanistan into a ‘colony of India’. This narrative has gained further momentum due to renewed hostilities between India and Pakistan following their brief four-day conflict last year, as well as Kabul and New Delhi moving towards a partial normalization of relations. Although India has yet to formally recognize the Taliban government, it has reopened its embassy in Kabul.

New Delhi may welcome conflict between Afghanistan and Pakistan as it diverts Islamabad’s attention away from its eastern border with India. But if the Pakistani military and intelligence establishment perceive an Indian hand behind Kabul’s actions, it could also fuel hostilities between New Delhi and Islamabad.

India conducts trade with Afghanistan via Iran’s Chahbahar port, where New Delhi is a key stakeholder. However, reported US and Israeli air strikes on the port city and the wider instability in Iran may now limit access via this route.

Impact on Pakistan

Pakistan’s unstable periphery also raises questions about the credibility of Islamabad’s broader regional ambitions.

Islamabad has demonstrated a growing ambition to play a more prominent role in the geopolitics and security of the Middle East. Pakistan and Saudi Arabia announced a ‘Strategic Mutual Defence Agreement’ in September. Pakistan also joined the ‘Board of Peace’ in January, prompting speculation about Pakistani peacekeepers being deployed to Gaza.

Yet while Islamabad remains eager to ingratiate itself with the Trump administration, it will be reluctant to get dragged into the Iran conflict or overextend itself in the Middle East as it faces instability with its other neighbours.

At the domestic political level, Pakistan’s recurring tensions with its neighbours have been used by the military to justify it maintaining a monopoly over the country’s foreign and security policies. The military and intelligence establishment will use the conflict with Afghanistan as grounds for further tightening its grip.

This comes amid recent concerns about the health of jailed former prime minister Imran Khan, who became increasingly critical of the military’s role during his tenure. Khan’s party, the PTI, currently controls the government of KP province, which borders Afghanistan. This will further complicate any diplomatic initiative between Afghanistan and Pakistan, given the difficult relationship between the KP provincial government and the national government in Islamabad.

De-escalation pathways

Countries in the Middle East have played an increasingly prominent role in trying to mediate Afghanistan-Pakistan hostilities in recent years. After their previous round of fighting, both sides agreed to a ceasefire brokered by Doha and Istanbul in October. This has been followed by Saudi-led mediation efforts. However, with renewed instability in the Middle East, Gulf states will have limited bandwidth to play a hands-on role in de-escalating Afghan-Pakistan tensions.

China is another possible contender, having held a trilateral foreign minister-level meeting with Afghanistan and Pakistan in August. Beijing has so far demonstrated a limited appetite for entanglement in inter-state tensions that do not directly threaten its national security. However, threats to its nationals and investments in Pakistan as part of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor may prompt it to play a more hands-on role.

The US has also demonstrated a limited appetite to intervene. Even before Washington became preoccupied with its military operation against Iran, President Donald Trump had already stated that he did not see the need for the US to intervene or mediate as ‘Pakistan is doing terrifically well’.

2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-04 09:13

The report comes just hours before Walz and Ellison are expected to testify before the committee.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-04 09:12

How will the war in Iran affect Ukraine? 11 March 2026 — 3:00PM TO 4:15PM Anonymous (not verified) Online

Assessing the geopolitical, military and economic spillover effects of the Iran conflict on Russia’s war against Ukraine.

Experts examine how Middle East conflict may alter the course of the war in Ukraine.

The recent escalation in the Middle East – marked by the joint US-Israeli strikes against Iran and Tehran’s retaliatory strikes – sent shockwaves across the globe, with knock-on effects for on the war in Ukraine. In this webinar, experts will share perspectives on the geopolitical, economic and military implications of the situation in the Middle East for the Ukraine-Russia war.

  • How can the West maintain a unified front in Ukraine while it is divided over the legality and objectives of the current military actions against Iran?
  • How would a protracted US entanglement in the Middle East jeopardize military and diplomatic support for Ukraine?
  • How significantly would an Iranian regime collapse undermine Russia’s war effort in Ukraine and its geopolitical standing in the Middle East?
  • What role could Ukraine’s defence experience play in the Middle East?
  • Can surging oil prices following the closure of the Hormuz strait give Russia the financial cushion to sustain its offensive in Ukraine, despite Western sanctions?
  • Is it possible that the EU will fail to meet its 2027 Russian LNG phase-out deadline and, if so, how will this weaken its leverage in future peace negotiations with Moscow? 

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 09:08

The man behind the AI-generated image in question reflects on what he calls a "philosophical milestone."

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 09:01

Commentary: The problem of aligning artificial intelligence with human interests is one of the biggest challenges we face.

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 09:01

I guess that means we're best friends now.

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 09:00

Apple could unveil a new iPhone at its special event or in September. Either way, you should wait. Here's why.

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 09:00

Yes, you should absolutely marathon them.

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 09:00

At Mobile World Congress, Cristiano Amon of Qualcomm argued that the coming 6G networks will power an AI-driven "agent economy," where devices and AI assistants constantly communicate across the network. "AI will fundamentally change our mobile experiences," Qualcomm chief executive, Cristiano Amon says. "It's going to change how we think about our smartphones. Think about our personal computing. Think about and interact with a car. The car is now a computing surface. If you actually believe in the AI revolution, 6G will be required. Resistance is futile." The company says early consumer testing could begin around the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics, with broader rollouts expected by 2029. Fortune's Kamal Ahmed reports: Akash Palkhiwala is Qualcomm's chief financial officer and chief operating officer. I spent some time with him at the company's stand, as his leading engineers took me through a 6G future where individuals will have real-time information delivered to them via their glasses. Palkhiwala compliments me on my watch, which only does one thing. It tells me the time. "6G is going to be the first time that connectivity and AI come together in the network. What we're building is the first AI-native wireless network that's ever been built," he explains. "The traffic that we expect on 6G is way different than what we had before," says Palkhiwala. "Before, it was all about consumer traffic. We expect 6G to be driven by [AI] agent traffic. Think about all these use cases where there are AI agents sitting on various devices -- your glasses, your watch, your phone, your PC. These agents are going to be talking back and forth across the network to other agents and services. "The traffic completely changes. 6G is being built with this idea that the traffic that goes on the network is not just going to be consumer voice calls or downloading videos, we're going to have agents talking to each other, so the reliability of the network becomes very important." On-device capabilities (the ability of your phone to process far more data); edge computing (locally sourced IT technology rather than distant data centers); more efficient use of available bandwidth (AI-enabled load control); and greater cloud access will all come together to produce a new wireless network. [...] "Today we are in the application economy," he notes. "On the phone, you want to make a travel reservation, you go to one application. You want to order an Uber, you go to a second application. You want to order food, you go to a third application, movie tickets, etc. The user has to go through that effort. In the future, you think of the app economy moving over to an agent economy, where there's one agent I'm interacting with, and I can ask that agent to book me a movie ticket or a plane ticket, to order food for me, get an Uber for me. It knows everything about me."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 08:59

Judge notes New York legislature passed $9 fee and it was signed into law by governor before federal approvals

A federal judge has blocked the Trump administration’s efforts to halt New York’s first-in-the-nation congestion fee meant to reduce traffic and pump revenue into the region’s ageing transit system.

Lewis Liman, a US district judge, on Tuesday ruled that the US Department of Transportation lacked the authority to unilaterally rescind approval of the $9 toll, which was initially greenlighted by Joe Biden.

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2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 08:48

Light therapy can give you an energy boost, perfect for making it through daylight saving time.

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I spoke with a public health professor and a toxicologist to learn if microwaving leftovers is the reason why microplastics enter our food and body.

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We used a smoke chamber to test 12 different air purifiers. This is the model that works best to prevent colds and the flu.

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Texas state Rep. James Talarico’s victory in a heated Democratic Senate primary on Tuesday offered a potential bright spot to the state’s progressive organizers — not necessarily because they prefer his policies, but because some see him as more malleable than his opponent, U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett.

The bitter race was framed as a referendum on the style of Democrat Texas voters want, with Talarico known for bridging divides and Crockett for inflaming them. While the avowed Christian Talarico drew praise from pundits for assailing billionaires and describing wealth redistribution as a righteous cause, more voters perceived him as the moderate in the race, according to a Texas Public Opinion Research poll. Organizers in Texas said they saw his openness as an opportunity to push him left, too.

Groups active in Palestinian rights work “feel like there’s movement and space to move Talarico,” said Cristina Tzintzún Ramirez, a labor organizer who ran against the Democratic Party’s pick in Texas’s Senate primary, even though currently “he’s not where they want him to be.”

As Talarico gears up for the November election against either incumbent Republican Sen. John Cornyn or Texas attorney general Ken Paxton, who are set to compete in a runoff in May, local progressive organizers are “very much going to push” him, Ramirez said. They’ll need to, she and other organizers pointed out — while Talarico and Crockett diverge in tone, local activists said that on key issues, including immigrants’ rights and accountability for Israel, they offered little difference in substance.

“Their policies on Gaza are pretty much the same,” said Azra Siddiqi, a community activist who met with both campaigns as part of a coalition of over a dozen Muslim organizing groups. Before the primary, she said her group couldn’t “really recommend one over the other.”

Voters were able to scrutinize Crockett’s federal record, which included voting to send weapons to Israel, whereas they couldn’t do the same with Talarico, a state legislator. Siddiqi said she came away from the meetings feeling like Talarico didn’t necessarily understand where her community was coming from on Gaza.

After the meetings, Siddiqi said, organizers were frustrated by what she described as Talarico’s refusal to call Israel’s destruction of Gaza a genocide pending an official international designation, or his attempt to delineate between his support for defensive weapons for Israel rather than offensive ones. Talarico has accused Israel of war crimes in Gaza and said the destruction was a “moral disaster” and one of many reasons Democrats lost the 2024 presidential election. He stopped short of describing Israel’s violence in Gaza as a genocide during a September interview with HuffPost. Siddiqi and other activists also pressed him on accepting campaign contributions in the Texas state house from a pro-casino PAC bankrolled by pro-Israel Republican megadonor Miriam Adelson

Sameeha Rizvi, the Texas policy and advocacy coordinator for the Council on American-Islamic Relations Action, said refusing to describe the war as a genocide could turn away voters in Texas’ Muslim community. And while Rizvi, who also met with the coalition, has heard the sentiment that Palestine is an unwinnable issue in a red state, she pointed to growing voter frustration with Israel on both the left and right over the genocide in Gaza and the U.S. and Israel’s war in Iran, connecting that outrage to the economic issues that powered Talarico’s campaign.

“We can barely afford the cost of living, and health care is like inaccessible to half the population.”

“Ending the genocide and standing with the Palestinian people essentially does benefit this country, because we wouldn’t be sending billions of our taxpayer dollars over to a foreign entity for them to commit genocide. We look back at our state at home and we can barely afford the cost of living, and health care is like inaccessible to half the population,” Rizvi said. 

In a mid-February email shared with The Intercept, organizers told Talarico they could not formally endorse him because he had not addressed their concerns on Israel and Gaza. They described being brushed off by the campaign and “feeling disregarded in this process.”

“I want to be candid,” wrote organizer Hatem Natsheh, “if Talarico wins the primary, success in the general election will require broad coalition support, including ours. We sincerely hope it will not be too late to rebuild communication and trust should the campaign wish to re-engage in a meaningful way.” 

Several days later, Talarico’s campaign sent Natsheh a backgrounder saying he would support legislation to end offensive weapons to Israel, would push to make sure defensive weapons weren’t used to harm civilians, and would “not take campaign contributions from any PACs on any side of this conflict — because I want people to know that my position is driven by my values, not any outside influence.”

Organizers also requested a similar statement from Crockett’s campaign, Siddiqi said, but they did not hear back. 

The Border to Minneapolis

Beyond Israel and Palestine, immigration policy may feel closer to home for many Texas voters. Texas border towns have long been the front line for the militarization of immigration enforcement, and local immigration activists told The Intercept they hope the Democratic nominee will be more aggressive in halting violence from federal immigration agents than their party leadership. 

“If anybody has a standpoint that is not abolish ICE, then I think they can do more,” said Amerika Garcia Grewal, co-founder and co-director of Frontera Foundation, who said that applied to both Talarico and Crockett.

Related

Texas Progressives Say Democratic Establishment Is Blowing It In the Rio Grande Valley

Garcia Grewal is based in the border city of Eagle Pass, which Gov. Greg Abbott has made ground zero for his immigration crackdown, known as Operation Lone Star. Since 2021, the Republican governor has constructed dangerous barriers along the Rio Grande to deter crossings, seized city property to house National Guard soldiers, and sent hundreds of troops and military vehicles to police the streets in what has been described as a military occupation of the city. Under the Biden administration, the city was touted by congressional Republicans as a success story of border security.

Now, Garcia Grewal sees the violence from federal agents who fatally shot Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis as a continuation of a war on immigrants that has been raging in Texas for years. She criticized Texas Democrats who were quiet on defending Eagle Pass from Republican attacks as laying the groundwork for increased militarization of immigration enforcement elsewhere.

“What happened on the border didn’t stay on the border.”

“What happened on the border didn’t stay on the border,” Garcia Grewal said. “The rest of the country is waking up to what we’ve been experiencing here for years.” She pointed out that Immigration and Customs agents killed another American citizen, Ruben Ray Martinez, in the coastal Texas town of South Padre Island nearly a year ago — which went largely unnoticed and was not linked to ICE until last month

Talarico has decried the killings of Americans by federal agents, calling for the prosecution of ICE agents who have broken laws, but has stopped short of saying he would abolish ICE. Instead, he has stuck closer to the route of party leadership, which emphasizes “reining in” ICE and Customs and Border Protection with reforms and more accountability around use of force. He has also advocated for at least partially defunding the agency’s budget in favor of social services, such as healthcare. 

Aspects of Talarico’s border security policies would continue militarized immigration enforcement. Talarico has likened the border to a front porch that “should have a welcome mat out front and lock on the door.”

While the welcome mat is for refugees, asylum-seekers, or anyone who wants to contribute to the economy, according to his campaign platform, Talarico’s lock shows up in his calls for continued investment in border security. His policy says the border should keep out people “who mean to do us harm,” listing cartels and gang members, and that ports of entry should be modernized “to better detect threats before they come.”

“Democrats are missing the opportunity to really show the way and how to fix what’s going on with immigration,” said José Palma, the Houston-based coordinator of the National Temporary Protected Status Alliance. The party’s dominant strategies, he added, represent “a very, very low ask.”

For both Palma and Garcia Grewal, violent immigration enforcement is the product of a failed immigration system that has not offered people viable paths to citizenship. Even people with status through Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals are being deported, Palma pointed out, and poor conditions persist at detention centers, where 32 people died in ICE custody last year. At least eight more have died in the agency’s hands this year so far. 

Palma said he was frustrated with the Democrats’ long history of promising to fight for immigrants in campaigns but failing to deliver legislation once in power. He worried as a similar dynamic was playing out amid the outcry against ICE and called on Democrats like Talarico to lay out clear objectives to protect immigrant communities. 

“The harassment and the abuse is something to denounce,” he said, “But at the same time, undocumented immigrants are getting detained in every other opportunity they have and they are getting deported. At the same time we need to highlight abuses, we have to talk about harm reduction, but also, what is the solution?”

In a celebratory speech on primary night, Talarico pledged to serve “a people-powered movement to take on this broken political system,” saying he ran “truly a campaign of, by, and for the people.” As he prepares to face a Republican in the months to come, Texans will have to determine which people his movement includes.

The post Will James Talarico Really Fight for Justice in Texas? appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 08:09

Trump’s sweeping tariffs have left many businesses facing higher costs and uncertainty. We want to hear how smaller companies are navigating the fallout

Small businesses across the US are reportedly struggling to navigate the fallout from Donald Trump’s global tariff wars and the legal battles surrounding them.

Last month, the US supreme court struck down the president’s so-called “liberation day” tariffs, potentially opening the door to as much as $175bn in refunds for businesses that paid the import taxes but the process for claiming that money is complex and uncertain.

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2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 19:33

Last week, Bill Gates apologized to the staff of his philanthropic Gates Foundation for his ties to Jeffrey Epstein, which he said began in 2011 and continued through 2014.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 21:51

The soldiers were assigned to the 103rd Sustainment Command based out of Iowa and were among the six troops killed in a drone attack at Port Shuaiba, Kuwait.

2026-03-04 12:04
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A crew of movers boxed in the car of a suspect in an Amber Alert case, blocking in the suspect until police arrived.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 08:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from MacRumors: OpenAI today updated its most popular ChatGPT model, debuting GPT-5.3 Instant. GPT-5.3 Instant is supposed to provide more accurate answers and better contextualized results when searching the web. The update also cuts down on unnecessary dead ends, caveats, and overly declarative phrasing, plus it has fewer hallucinations. According to OpenAI, it tweaked the Instant model to address complaints about tone, relevance, and conversational flow, which are issues that don't show up in benchmarks. GPT-5.2 Instant had a "cringe" tone that could be overbearing or make unsubstantiated assumptions about user intent or emotions. The new model will have a more natural conversational style and will cut back on dramatic phrases like "Stop. Take a breath." Users found that GPT-5.2 Instant would refuse questions it should have been able to answer, or respond in ways that felt overly cautious around sensitive topics. GPT-5.3 Instant cuts down on refusals and tones down overly defensive or moralizing preambles when answering a question. The model will no longer "over-caveat" after assuming bad intent from the user. GPT-5.3 Instant also provides higher-quality answers based on information from the web. OpenAI says that it is able to better balance what it finds online with its own knowledge, so it is less likely to overindex on web results.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 08:00

Exclusive: study finds workers at 20 S&P 500 firms rely on Medicaid and Snap as CEO pay and buybacks soar

Many workers at some of the largest US corporations have no choice but to rely on healthcare and food assistance because of low wages, even as CEO compensation continues to grow, according to a new report released Wednesday.

The report, published by the Institute of Policy Studies, focuses on 20 of the S&P 500 corporations that have primarily US-based workforces and report the lowest median wages of the group.

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2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 08:00

The US president’s plan will hurt consumers, companies and the stock market, as well as relations with other countries

After the US supreme court overturned Donald Trump’s global tariffs, he had two options: do what’s best for the US economy or do what’s best for his ego. Trump of course chose what’s best for his ego, and he did that by seizing on a never previously used legal provision to impose new tariffs that Trump – who can never admit defeat – insists will be just as good as the overturned tariffs.

Unfortunately, Trump’s decision to create a whole new set of tariffs will be bad for both the US economy and the world economy. When one cuts through Trump’s delusional poppycock about how great his new tariffs will be, it becomes clear that his new 15% across-the-board tariff will hurt consumers, corporations, factories, US trading partners and Trump’s beloved stock market. While Trump says “tariffs” is “the most beautiful word”, economists, business executives and consumers give Trump’s tariffs a thumbs down. A huge 64% of Americans disapprove of Trump’s handling of tariffs, according to a new ABC News/WashingtonPost/Ipsos poll.

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2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 08:00

These misconceptions about your security are wrong, outdated and often costly mistakes.

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2026-03-04 07:59

At a meeting of the board that governs the World Cup stadium in Foxborough, promises were made if not accepted

Tuesday evening’s meeting of the Foxborough, Massachusetts, Select Board is still minutes from starting, but a local resident can’t keep himself from approaching the bench. He has an urgent question for the five members, who in effect serve as the town’s primary governing body. His tone isn’t one of anger, more of concern.

“Do you think we’re going to have the World Cup here?”

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2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 07:39

In 2011, a Chicago police officer is murdered. Police find four suspects. Three confess. But the fourth refuses to break. He’ll embark on a 12-year battle to prove his innocence, against a system which refuses to admit that it might be wrong. The latest podcast series from Guardian Investigates. Coming soon

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2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 07:37

Oxford-based firm has raised $103m for commercial development of software for self-driving industrial vehicles

Nvidia is investing in the British autonomous driving startup Oxa, alongside backing from the UK’s National Wealth Fund, in a boost to the country’s technology sector.

The Oxford-based company, which has developed software for self-driving industrial vehicles, said it had raised $103m (£77m) from investors to focus on commercial solutions for that software, as well as its physical AI and robotics technology, and to push on with its global expansion plans.

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2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 07:30

Amazon's sci-fi slate is top-notch.

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When I searched to see if you can make popcorn in an air fryer, I couldn’t find a clear answer, so I reached out to a manufacturer and pro chefs.

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We're telling you where to watch it all, plus F1 extras on Apple Music, Apple Sports and other Apple apps.

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Company promises ‘rapprochement discount’ for shoppers from country after decade-long action in EU court

The UK supermarket chain Iceland has abandoned its decade-long trademark battle with Iceland and instead promised a “rapprochement discount” for shoppers in the country.

After the budget grocery chain suffered its third legal loss last year, its executive chair, Richard Walker, said on Wednesday that it would draw a line under the dispute.

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2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 07:08

Choice of anti-western candidate would give signal that senior figures will not seek accommodation with US

Mojtaba Khamenei, the second son of the assassinated Ali Khamenei, is being heavily tipped to succeed his father as supreme leader of Iran, which would pitch a hardliner into the task of steering the Islamic republic through the most turbulent period in its 48-year history and offer a powerful signal that, for now, it has no intention of changing course.

No official confirmation has been given and the announcement may be delayed until after the funeral of Ali Khamenei, which was on Wednesday postponed.

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2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 07:01

Commentary: I love the idea behind the dedicated Camera Control button on recent iPhones, but it keeps getting in the way.

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From wired models to battery-powered, these smoke alarms are the best on the market.

2026-03-04 08:04
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The SunBooster mounts onto a laptop or monitor to hopefully give you a dose of energy when you can't see the sun.

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  • Medvedev and Rublev both miss pre-event exhibition

  • Challenger event in Dubai cancelled over security alert

The Russian tennis players Daniil Medvedev and Andrey Rublev did not arrive at Indian Wells in time to participate in Tuesday night’s southern California exhibition event after they were among those affected by travel disruptions caused by the war on Iran.

The US and Israel launched airstrikes on Iran over the weekend and the conflict has led to airspace closures and widespread flight cancellations across parts of the Gulf, disrupting a key transit hub.

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2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 06:37

Mukund Krishna arrested by City of London police along with two other national board members

The head of the Police Federation of England and Wales has been arrested on suspicion of corruption.

Officers from the City of London police arrested Mukund Krishna and two other national board members.

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2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 06:35

Takeshi Ebisawa was sentenced to 20 years in prison by a New York court after being convicted of trafficking nuclear material as well as drugs and weapons.

2026-03-04 08:04
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Vote to come after Israel launches wave of strikes on Tehran. Plus, why a ChatGPT boycott could work

Good morning.

Republicans in the Senate are expected to reject a resolution backed by the Democrats that would prevent Donald Trump from continuing the Iran war, with the majority leader, John Thune, arguing the president was “acting in the best interest of the nation”.

What would the war powers resolution do? It would force an end to US participation in the conflict and require Trump to go to Congress before re-entering the war. The Democrats would need five Republicans to vote with them for it to pass, as they are outnumbered in the Senate.

What impact is the war having on global markets? They tumbled further on Wednesday despite US assurances, including Trump’s offer to have the US navy escort oil tankers through the strait of Hormuz, which Iran has in effect closed.

How could the conflict backfire? Experts have warned it risks driving the regime towards building a secret bomb, with one scholar saying: “A vengeful Iran that survives this strike is likely to reach the same conclusion that North Korea reached: that it’s a dangerous world out there with the United States and it’s better to go nuclear.”

Follow the latest in this rapidly developing conflict on our liveblog.

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2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 06:25

Groundsman stumbles across room, sealed for more than 100 years, that was part of 12th-century Manchester hall

A sinkhole that opened up on a Manchester golf course has exposed a wine cellar abandoned for more than a century.

The cellar, along with dozens of empty wine and port bottles, was discovered by a groundsman who assumed the hole was nothing more than a collapsed drain.

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2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 06:22

London conference 2026 9 July 2026 — 8:00AM TO 6:00PM Anonymous (not verified) One Great George Street and Online

The 11th edition of Chatham House’s flagship event, will bring together leading voices from policy, business, and academia to propose a route to order in an evolving world. 

Annual London Conference - Chatham House showcase

More than a year on from the re-election of Donald Trump as US president, countries are grappling with a rapidly changing international order in security and in economics which many of them also seek to shape.  

The US has made clear that its protection of its allies is limited but nonetheless aims to resolve conflicts around the world. It has reset, several times, the terms on which it trades with the world. China has declared that it aims to be the architect of the evolving world order but its intentions remain unclear.  

Other countries and regions, from the Middle East to Europe, Latin America, Africa and China’s Asian neighbours seek a path of stability between the two superpowers.  

One set of questions is what should be preserved of the old order. Is international law resented as a construction of the West; can countries and companies globally see it as in their interest to embrace? Can the WTO and the IMF be saved? The United Nations itself? Are agreements on health cooperation needed to counter a new pandemic? Is there still hope for a coordinated response to newer challenges: environmental change and AI?  

Agreement on new forms of order is emerging, however, as countries including the Global South see their chance to shape an evolving order.  

The 2026 London Conference, the 11th edition of Chatham House’s flagship event, will bring together leading voices from government, business, international institutions and universities to propose a route to order in an evolving world.

#CHLondon

By registering for this event, attendees agree to our code of conduct, ensuring a respectful, inclusive, and welcoming space for diverse perspectives and debate.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 06:00

I worked my way through nearly every temperature setting on my fridge to find one that gets it right.

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 06:00

Democratic governors, under pressure, must decide whether to participate in the new federal voucher program, which offers dollars for public and private school students.

2026-03-05 16:04
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Tennessee Republicans are pushing forward with a bill that could force undocumented children out of public education and turn school administrators into immigration informants against their own students, making Tennessee the frontier of an effort led by the Heritage Foundation to fundamentally injure the right to public education.

The state’s proposed “trigger laws,” which will be heard in committee on Wednesday, are direct challenges to Plyler v. Doe, a narrowly decided 1982 Supreme Court case that enshrined the right to a free K–12 public education regardless of immigration status. The parallel bills would also likely violate federal statutes that codify the same right. 

The Heritage Foundation, the conservative think tank behind Project 2025, has officially called on other states to pass similar laws challenging Plyler, situating Tennessee’s push as among the first in a broader national effort to overturn the decision.

“Illegal aliens should not be eligible for federal, state, or local government benefits, including through their children,” wrote Lora Ries, the director of Heritage’s Border Security and Immigration Center, in a February 17 post, “because the receipt of such benefits facilitates longer unlawful residence in the United States and takes resources from American citizens and lawful immigrants.”

So far, six states — Texas, Oklahoma, Idaho, Indiana, New Jersey, and Tennessee — have introduced bills that would violate Plyler. If passed, their implementation could force a challenge at the Supreme Court.

Related

Trump Attacked Immigrant Food Aid in Minnesota. Locals Fought Back.

Educators and immigration advocates told The Intercept that if Tennessee and other states were to get Plyler overturned and enact legislation to track and potentially expel undocumented children from public school, it would “end public education as we know it.” 

“This feels like a credible threat,” said Cassandra Zimmer-Wong, an immigration policy analyst at the Niskanen Center. “The ramifications of this are huge … denying children carte-blanche education would create an uneducated, potentially illiterate underclass of children and then adults in this country.”

Last year, the Tennessee state legislature introduced a bill, H.B. 793, that would allow schools to refuse to enroll students who cannot prove “lawful presence” in the United States or charge them tuition, but it was tabled due to concerns about potential federal funding losses because the law violated federal statutes. The bill would also require schools to report the number of students who enroll without a birth certificate. The Tennessee Senate version would allow schools to choose to deny enrollment to undocumented students only if they are unable to pay. 

Now, the bill is back — and scheduled for a state House Finance, Ways, and Means Subcommittee hearing on Wednesday. A companion bill, which would require schools and other entities that receive state funding, like hospitals, to report to the government on recipients’ immigration status, moved out of committee last week. The second bill is also scheduled to be heard by the House State & Local Government Committee on Wednesday. It can only be enacted if H.B. 793 passes and Plyler is overturned.

Sam Singer, a high school teacher who teaches English language learners in Tennessee, said she’s had “numerous students” who’ve heard of the bills ask if they’re still allowed to go to school. 

“They’re questions that no child should ever have to ask, much less come to school and wonder about,” said Singer. “The expectation should be, of course, you’re supposed to be here, you’re a kid. This is where you belong.” 

School should be a “safe space” for children, said Singer, “where you can trust that teachers are here to help you become your best self as you grow into the young adult you want to be.” Instead, the bills would effectively turn school administrators and teachers into immigration agents.

Across the state border in Texas, Republican Gov. Greg Abbott has said that he would seek to overturn Plyler for years. U.S. Rep. Chip Roy, a Republican Texas congressman now running for attorney general, has called for the 1982 ruling to be overturned as well. 

“For illegal alien children, the Supreme Court said we have to fund education for them. The fact of the matter is that it is a massive tax burden on the people of Texas,” Roy said in an interview last week. “I don’t believe that the Constitution requires that the state of Texas should fund it, and we should make a new precedent by taking it to court.”

The Texas state legislature previously introduced two bills challenging Plyler. The first bill would allow public schools to charge undocumented children to attend, and the latter bill would require proof of citizenship to enroll in public school. Both of those bills have stalled, but Krystal Gómez, managing attorney for the Texas Immigration Law Council, said she expects more challenges to Plyler in the next legislative session.

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Linda McMahon Has No Education Experience Except Wanting to Defund Public Schools

“It used to be that we had a federal government in the Department of Education that didn’t seem interested in it, and was able to sort of put this to kibosh and have like a backstop to states that got a little out of hand in trying to create these chilling effects or overturn Plyler outright,” said Gomez. “We don’t have that now. So it’s sort of the wild, wild West, and whatever sad, terrible thing that a state can dream up, they can probably get away with.”

The Department of Education did not respond to a request for comment. 

In Texas, immigrant student attendance has already declined dramatically since the start of Trump’s immigration enforcement ramp-up. The Houston school district lost nearly 4,000 immigrant students this year, a decline of roughly 22 percent of the school district’s immigrant population. It’s unclear how many of those students left the United States willingly, or were deported, and how many children still living in Houston are simply too afraid to return to classrooms.

The stress of constant raids weighs on many of the immigrant children still attending school, said Klara Aizupitis, 34, a high school English teacher in Terlingua, Texas. 

“You’re living under the constant threat of either being picked up and deported or your parents or your siblings being picked up and deported,” said Aizupitis. “That stress is going to have an impact on, certainly, academic performance, but also your ability to manage your emotions in everyday life.”

“You’re living under the constant threat of either being picked up and deported or your parents or siblings being picked up and deported.”

Further eroding protections for immigrant students would devastate the border community where Aizupitis teaches. “We do really have a shared culture, on both sides of the [Rio Grande] river,” she said.

The district’s funding is based on average daily attendance, so losing undocumented students would “threaten the existence of our school district,” said Aizupitis. “Moreover, it would threaten the existence of our entire community.” 

An estimate from FWD, a criminal justice and immigration policy organization, found that undocumented students would lose a collective $1 trillion — or 600,000 individually — in lifetime income if they were denied access to public education.

Related

ICE Held an NYC Child Incommunicado at Secret Hotels, Then Deported Him

Heritage frequently suggests that undocumented students represent a substantial burden on taxpayers, arguing in a statement to The Intercept that “unaccompanied alien children sent to states cost them hundreds of millions of dollars for one year of public education.” But according to the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, undocumented people in the U.S. pay nearly $97 billion in federal, state, and local taxes annually. Tax contributions from undocumented people far outweigh the financial burden of K–12 education for undocumented children. 

The Heritage Foundation’s argument, said Zimmer-Wong, “does not hold up to any kind of basic scrutiny.” 

The FWD report found that educating undocumented students provides $633 billion more money in state and local income tax contributions than the cost of their education. The report also found that, if Plyler were overturned, the U.S. workforce would decrease by 450,000 workers in critical jobs that require at least a high school or college education.

None of that accounts for the expense of implementing a widespread immigration surveillance system in schools. “It would be extremely costly,” said Lisa Sherman Luna, executive director of the Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition Votes.

Schools would have to acquire “new software, new computers, new administrative processes and staff” to track and determine the immigration status of the tens of thousands of children within any given school district, not just students who are undocumented, she said. 

“The Heritage Foundation reports notes the burden placed on schools, [from undocumented children],” said Ignacia Rodriguez Kmec, policy council at the National Immigration Law Center, “yet their solution is for school personnel to become essentially DHS and TSA agents, verifying, reviewing documents, and recording immigration status.” 

“Their solution is for school personnel to become essentially DHS and TSA agents.”

The Heritage Foundation pushed back on criticism of its plan, telling The Intercept that undocumented children would still have the option to receive an education — if they paid tuition, self-deported, or left the state. 

“These are the consequences for the decision the parent or student made to break our law. American taxpayers should not have to pay for law breaking. Nor can American taxpayers afford it,” Ries wrote in a statement to The Intercept.

Thomas A. Saenz, president and general counsel of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, which originally litigated Plyler, said that he doesn’t believe the Supreme Court will allow these bills to be implemented. Because the bills would violate federal statutes, they would run up against the supremacy clause of the Constitution, Saenz pointed out. 

However, if the courts were to look favorably on a challenge to Plyler and its corresponding federal statutes, Saenz said, the consequences would be devastating. 

“It would have the impact of ending public education as we know it, because when a certain cohort of kids is allowed to be out of school, what happens next is that their siblings and friends don’t go to school,” Saenz said, “and rapidly, no one goes to school.” 

The post Tennessee Wants to Let Schools Ban Immigrant Kids, Threatening to “End Public Education as We Know It”  appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 05:45

The company showed off its latest ultrathin handsets, including a new trifold.

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 05:42

ZTE's Nubia Neo 5 series of gaming phones has everything a die-hard mobile gamer could want: a big battery, fans and capacitive buttons for gaming.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 05:28
  • Iran was only country missing from Fifa planning summit

  • US and Israel began attacking Iranian targets on Saturday

Donald Trump has said he does not care whether Iran participate in this summer’s World Cup, which is being jointly hosted by the United States, Mexico and Canada. The US and Israel began attacking targets in the country on Saturday, with the conflict in the Middle East since spreading to the wider region.

US president Trump told Politico: “I really don’t care. I think Iran is a very badly defeated country. They’re running on fumes.” Iran was the only nation missing from a Fifa planning summit for World Cup participants held this week in Atlanta, deepening questions over whether the country’s team will compete on US soil this summer amid an escalating regional war.

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2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 05:14

PM says his country will not be complicit in growing conflict in Middle East ‘simply out of fear of reprisals from someone’

The Spanish prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, has responded to Donald Trump’s extraordinary threat to cut off all trade with Spain over his government’s refusal to facilitate the US’s attacks against Iran, comparing the growing conflict in the Middle East to playing “Russian roulette with the destiny of millions”.

Sánchez, who has been one of the most vociferous European critics of Israel’s conduct in Gaza, said his government’s position on the widening instability could be summed up in three words: “No to war.”

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2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 05:11

U.S. diplomatic outposts in Kuwait, Lebanon and Saudi Arabia were closed on Tuesday, as Israel struck targets in Iran and Lebanon.

2026-03-04 08:04
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The future Hall of Famer’s behavior over the years has been rash and erratic. But it’s understandable given the scrutiny he finds himself under

They’re calling the posts the “KD Files”. There’s no definitive proof that Kevin Durant is the man behind the X account @gethigher77 (display name: getoffmydickerson), but if he isn’t, somebody has done a phenomenal impersonation. In various screenshots splashed across the internet, getoffmydickerson took shots at Durant’s teammates, as the player himself has done before. There was also creative and amusing trash talk, something Durant has shown a talent for. Some of it crossed the line: the account made a reprehensible joke about supplying drones (Durant invests in the company Skydio, which has provided the Israel Defense Forces with weapons) and called Durant’s teammate Jabari Smith Jr “retarded”. When asked about @gethigher77, Durant said, “I’m not here to get into Twitter nonsense” – far from a denial that he was behind it, and in the eyes of many, confirmation that he was. We’ve got people writing in-depth proofs that the account is real.

Not that getoffmydickerson is Durant’s only problem. Shortly after the tweets blew up, Boardroom, which defines itself as a “sports, media, and entertainment brand” co-founded by Durant and his agent Rich Kleiman, laid off three of its staff writers, rationalizing the move as part of a pivot to video. (An aside: what’s the point of having career earnings of half a billion dollars if you’re not willing to invest some of it to protect your media company from financial headwinds?)

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2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 05:00

The MLS champions face a familiar conundrum: lend credence to a warmongering administration, or sit out and draw heat

Donald Trump was not at the White House when the military he commands began bombing Iran over the weekend. He was at Mar-a-Lago, his estate in Florida, following the action from a makeshift situation room apparently built from those curtains that you can wheel away. That’s also where he was when American forces kidnapped Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro and his wife a few weeks earlier.

On Thursday, however, Trump will be at the White House for the really important business – namely, receiving Inter Miami as winners of the 2025 MLS Cup.

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2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 05:00

During his reelection campaign last fall, the mayor of Albuquerque, New Mexico, criticized his challenger for suggesting the city should get tougher on the homeless population. Such an approach would be cruel, Tim Keller said during a televised debate with former County Sheriff Darren White.

The city clears encampments and gives people citations “all the time,” said Keller, who defeated White to win a third term. But “this problem is complex and you cannot dumb it down to arresting people,” he said. “You simply cannot arrest your way out of this problem whether you want to or not.”

Despite his rhetoric, a ProPublica analysis found that under Keller’s leadership, Albuquerque has increasingly criminalized conduct associated with homelessness, causing a growing number of people on the streets to be arrested and jailed.

In 2025, people were charged 1,256 times for obstructing sidewalks, nearly six times the number of cases in the previous eight years combined. More than 3,000 trespassing charges were handed out last year, the highest for any year since 2017. And cases of unlawful camping increased to 704 from 113 the year before, according to previously unreported county data provided to ProPublica by the New Mexico Administrative Office of the Courts.

Charges Associated With Homelessness Surged in 2025

Cases involving sidewalk obstruction, camping and trespassing have risen in recent years. People were charged nearly six times more often for sidewalk obstruction in 2025 than the previous eight years combined.

A line chart shows charges for trespassing, sidewalk obstruction and unlawful camping between 2017 and 2025. Three lines representing the number of each type of charge rise sharply in 2025.
Source: New Mexico Administrative Office of the Courts

In recent years, a majority of these cases, once they were adjudicated, were dismissed. But not without consequences: Each citation lists a court date, which, if missed, can lead to a bench warrant and arrest.

And that’s often what has happened.

Over the past four years, the number of bookings in Bernalillo County’s jail classified as homeless or “transient” has skyrocketed — to nearly 12,000 in 2025, from 3,670 in 2022. In recent months, the share of people booked who are transient made up about 49% of the jail’s population, according to a ProPublica analysis.

This has occurred as the average daily population at the jail from July 2024 through June 2025 reached its highest point in a decade. On some days last year, the Bernalillo County Metropolitan Detention Center held more homeless people than the largest local shelter.

Homeless Inmates Drive Increases in County Jail Admissions

Over the past three years, the number of jail bookings marked as homeless or “transient” has skyrocketed. Admissions marked as transient made up nearly 50% of the county jail bookings at the end of 2025.

Area chart of bookings in Bernalillo County jail between November 2021 and December 2025. It shows the number of admissions marked as “transient” increasing as a share of all bookings.
Source: Bernalillo County

The city’s homeless population has more than doubled from 2022 to 2025, while the increase in homeless people jailed by the county has more than tripled during the same time period. Police and court records and interviews with homeless people show the increase in their incarceration is primarily driven by the cascading effects of repeatedly citing people who are experiencing homelessness.

In an interview with ProPublica, Keller echoed his contention from the debate that citations and arrests are not a solution to homelessness. Still, he defended the actions police have taken. “What we’re doing is following the letter of the law. There are much more punitive things that I’m sure a lot of people would want, that we don’t do because they’re inappropriate,” he said. 

In a statement, a spokesperson for Keller noted that other cities “rely on immediate arrests, blanket sweeps without service connection or criminal penalties without offering alternatives.” The city issues three citations before an arrest is made, the spokesperson said. (People living outside told ProPublica they’ve been taken to jail without first receiving three citations.) 

When ProPublica pointed out that citations can lead to arrests and jail time, Keller acknowledged that jail “is not the solution.” But, he said, people call the city and ask that laws be enforced.

A man wearing a bright yellow vest empties a shopping cart filled with belongings into the compactor of a dump truck under an overpass.
A city of Albuquerque worker empties a shopping cart filled with belongings collected during a sweep into a garbage truck along Commercial Street. Sweeps can lead to citations, which can lead to an arrest.

In recent years, U.S. cities, facing record numbers of people on the street, have adopted more laws targeting them. In 2024, after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that cities may enforce bans against sleeping outside, more than 150 municipalities nationwide, including Albuquerque, either passed new laws prohibiting public camping or ramped up enforcement of existing laws.

President Donald Trump has endorsed this approach, calling for federal grants to be prioritized for cities that enforce bans on “urban camping and loitering.”

The emphasis on enforcement has come despite evidence that such citations and arrests are costly. For example, Bernalillo County spends about $169 per night to jail inmates without significant medical or mental health needs, according to a county spokesperson. The cost increases for people with severe medical ($250 a day) and mental health (about $450 a day) needs, a spokesperson said. 

By comparison, housing an individual in the city’s year-round emergency shelter costs $44 a night.

Tony Robinson, a political science professor at the University of Colorado who has studied camping bans, said the share of homeless inmates in Bernalillo County’s jail is “unusually high” — even at a time when cities are ramping up enforcement. ProPublica found that jails in similarly sized counties, including San Francisco and Pasco County, Florida, have lower rates of incarceration for people who are marked homeless.

Citing people who are homeless can land them in jail because some lack cellphones or an address where they can receive notices by mail. This is a barrier to appearing in court, leading to a warrant for their arrest, he said. “Simple citations lead to jail time and arrest by a predictable path.” 

ProPublica reviewed more than 100 cases and interviewed two dozen people experiencing homelessness in Albuquerque about their encounters with police. Nearly everyone ProPublica spoke to had been charged for a crime associated with homelessness. They said they feel singled out by the police: Officers contact them frequently and issue citations, which can lead to warrants. When officers see they have warrants, they can take them to jail.

Natalie Rankin, a 45-year-old homeless woman in Albuquerque, was charged 12 times over the last year for a variety of crimes, including blocking the sidewalk, public camping and criminal trespassing. She spent a night in jail in August after an officer noticed that she had a warrant for her arrest.

“I don’t do anything more than get little warrants for not showing up in court,” she said in August. 

Rankin has already been charged at least seven times in 2026 and spent at least one day in jail.

A few people sit outside a large tan building with a turquoise door, surrounded by a chain-link fence.
Gateway West provides shelter and resources for homeless people in the Albuquerque area. The shelter has served more people since Mayor Tim Keller took office.

Since Keller took office nine years ago, Albuquerque has spent at least $100 million to expand the city’s Gateway system, which includes shelter for families and adults, a 50-person treatment program, and a place where people are supervised by medical professionals as they withdraw from drugs or alcohol.

“We’re one of the few cities who really has been proactive about building a new system,” Keller said. “It needs tons of work and tons of help, but we’ve at least built something that has gotten 1,000 people off the street.”

Meanwhile, the city’s homeless population, which was at least 2,960 last year, exceeds the shelters’ capacity even with the expansions. Keller has also become less tolerant of encampments in public spaces like parks and sidewalks, vowing to not allow “tent cities.”

In text messages reported in 2024 by the news organization City Desk ABQ, Keller asked then-police Chief Harold Medina to develop a plan to address the “growing crisis.” Medina texted back a plan to “hammer the unhoused.” (After the texts were published, a spokesperson for Keller said, “We continue to balance enforcing laws against illegal activity to keep our communities safe, and providing resources for people experiencing homelessness to both get them connected to services.”) 

The city has been accused of breaking the law as it carries out the crackdown.

In 2022, current and former homeless people sued Albuquerque in state district court over its targeting of encampments, alleging the city “criminalizes their status as homeless,” according to court documents. The class-action lawsuit is pending.

A 2024 ProPublica investigation found city workers routinely discarded the belongings of homeless people as they cleared encampments, violating a court order and city policy. Some people told ProPublica in recent interviews that city workers continue to throw away their belongings, and police are issuing citations more frequently.

Officers have not targeted people who are homeless, Medina said in an interview in December. The increase in citations and arrests for crimes associated with homelessness are the result of a broader crime-fighting surge, he said.

Last April, Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham deployed the National Guard to assist Albuquerque police, citing the “fentanyl epidemic and rising violent juvenile crime.” The National Guard was also to provide humanitarian and medical assistance in parts of the city frequented by people who are homeless.

“It’s important that we don’t categorize this as, ‘We’re doing an initiative on the unhoused,’” said Medina, who retired at the end of last year. “We’re doing an initiative across the board.” 

City statistics show, however, that the biggest jump in arrests from 2024 to 2025 was for misdemeanor warrants, the kinds described by many of the people ProPublica interviewed. Arrests associated with misdemeanor warrants were up 72%.

Priscilla Montano, 67, sometimes stays under a bridge near downtown Albuquerque. She said city workers, who are occasionally accompanied by police, visit the spot at least five days a week to tell people to move their belongings. In July, Montano was charged three times for unlawful camping and obstructing sidewalks. In September, she was incarcerated for a day on the same charges. There is a warrant for her arrest related to a separate violation from September.

Montano said each time she goes to jail her belongings are thrown away. She’s lost her wedding ring and property she needs to survive.

Lisandra Tonkin, who leads a team at the New Mexico Coalition to End Homelessness that helps people find housing, said the crackdown has made it more difficult to stay in touch with the people they’re trying to help because they’re “constantly moved” by sweeps and jail stays.

City officials say they first offer resources, including a spot in a shelter. Tonkin said some people are reluctant to accept because they have been traumatized by their experiences in shelters, like being assaulted or having their belongings stolen. The offer sometimes comes with requirements they won’t accept, like giving up a pet or separating from a companion. 

“So what is the solution of where to move them? I think a lot of times the choice is shelter or jail,” she said.

The result, according to Medina, the former chief, is that the Metropolitan Detention Center has become the state’s largest “mental health facility.”

“I don’t think it’s ideal for these individuals to always end up in jail, 100%, but there’s limited resources and ability to get people to those resources under our current system,” he said.

People who have received citations or who have been arrested told ProPublica that the city’s offer is either a bed in a shelter that used to be the county jail or nothing at all.

One evening in December, Tiffany Leger sat on a sidewalk in northwest Albuquerque listening to a virtual meeting through headphones. Leger, who spent two years on the streets but now has a home, still visits friends who live outside and shares phone numbers for local organizations where they can seek help. As she listened to the virtual meeting, police approached and told her she was being detained for camping, noting there was a tent nearby. The officers issued a citation.

Over the years, Leger has heard from friends that if police offer resources, it’s usually a card with outdated information on shelters in the city or a bed in the shelter on the outskirts of town, she said.

Leger said that usually police approach people who look homeless and check for warrants, sometimes leading to an arrest. 

Padlocks clipped to a chain-link fence, with the city of Albuquerque in the distance against a silhouetted ridgeline at dusk.

For decades, Peter Cubra has monitored the city’s treatment of homeless people. Cubra was involved in a 1995 lawsuit in which Jimmy McClendon, an inmate at the Bernalillo County Detention Center, sued Albuquerque and the county over conditions there, including overcrowding. The lawsuit also alleged that police were jailing people, including those who were homeless, for nonviolent misdemeanors. 

A city settlement in the lawsuit directed police to issue citations for nonviolent misdemeanors, when possible, instead of making arrests on the spot. 

Cubra said that in 2020, he started noticing “slow-motion arrests,” where police issue citations understanding that a person experiencing homelessness won’t get the notices from court. Police, he said, would revisit the same location, demand identification and run warrant checks, eventually picking people up on warrants from the previous citations or charges.

Janus Herrera, a local advocate and volunteer, said people have told her they miss court dates because they lost paperwork stating where and when to appear in court that they received during an encampment sweep.

“People are already strained to a breaking point,” she said. “You keep adding more and more on top of that.”

ProPublica’s review of 100 randomly selected cases for criminal trespassing from 2025 showed 67% of people had missed their court dates, leading to an arrest warrant. 

Most of the people ProPublica interviewed who had gone to jail said they were held overnight and released back to the streets with a pending case. A recent study supports their claims: From 2024 to 2025, the number of people jailed for less than a day increased by 131%, according to a data analysis by the Center for Applied Research and Analysis at the University of New Mexico.

If a person doesn’t attend subsequent court dates, their case can result in additional warrants. The next time they encounter police, they can be arrested again.

Cubra said instead of repeatedly citing and arresting people, some communities designate places for people to “informally but deliberately” sleep outdoors without harassment. (A church opened such a space in Albuquerque last year with capacity for 10 tents.) But in Albuquerque, Cubra said, the arrests “have persisted and accelerated” over the past year, which he called “shameful.”

“Our city is knowingly saying, ‘We won’t let you sleep outdoors,” Cubra said. “We know there is no place for you to sleep indoors, and we’re going to keep arresting you and harassing you for something that is unavoidable and intrinsic to just existing.’”


Methodology

ProPublica obtained court data on three charges frequently associated with homelessness: criminal trespassing, unlawful obstruction of sidewalks and unlawful camping. In some circumstances, a single charge appeared multiple times in the data. In these cases, we included only the most recent outcome associated with the charges. We also excluded cases marked as transferred within the court system, to avoid double-counting. As much as possible, we excluded cases where it was clear the charges were not directly associated with homelessness — for example, domestic violence and driving under the influence.

The court data did not include housing status. The county jail tracks whether a person has permanent housing during booking and marks a person “transient.” The court data did not list the law enforcement agency that issued the charge. But jail data shows the Albuquerque Police Department was responsible for 75% of the homeless bookings from 2020 to 2025. 

ProPublica interviewed 24 people who are homeless about being charged with crimes associated with their housing status. We independently verified their cases through court records.

The post Albuquerque’s Mayor Said Arrests Were “Not the Solution” to Homelessness. Yet Jail Bookings Have Skyrocketed. appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 05:00

Cynthia Martin is Delaware's new Education Secretary under Gov. Matt Meyer.

Why Should Delaware Care?
For years, policymakers have debated why Delaware public school students have consistently scored low on standardized tests. Now the state’s new education secretary has laid out a plan as part of a $2.4 billion budget that she says will ultimately demonstrate that students are improving — and scoring higher on the tests.

With Delaware’s student scores under scrutiny, state education officials are asking lawmakers  to continue to invest in teachers, as well as in reforms that they say will improve reading comprehension, graduation rates, and other performance metrics. 

During a legislative budget committee hearing on Tuesday, Delaware Education Secretary Cindy Marten requested a nearly 4% increase in her departmental budget for the next fiscal year. 

If passed as requested, the department’s state funding would reach nearly $2.4 billion – the largest amount of any state agency — due primarily to the fact that Delaware’s education funding model sees the state government cover 60% of each student’s annual cost to educate.

During the budget committee meeting, education officials linked the requested increase in part to rising personnel costs and an increasing enrollment. Marten also unveiled what she said was the Department of Education’s first strategic plan in over a decade. 

According to the plan, the department’s funding would focus on four central pillars. 

Those include expanding access to early childhood education; supporting student well-being and teacher retention; improving student achievement and test scores; and transitioning to a new hybrid school funding formula that would send additional dollars to schools with large numbers of students who are low-income or English-language learners. 

The budget request also included funding for Delaware’s growing student population. Brian Maxwell, the director of the state’s Office of Management and Budget, said during the meeting that the cost of paying school staff increases with the implementation of a $60,000 starting salary for educators.

During the hearing, lawmakers showed mixed reactions to the department’s funding request. 

Reps. Kim Williams (D-Stanton) and Charles Postles (R-Milford) praised Marten’s presentation. 

State Senate David Lawson General Assembly Delaware
State Sen. David Lawson (R-Marydel) | PHOTO COURTESY OF DE SENATE GOP

Williams said it was “probably the best DDOE presentation” she has seen, while Postles noted the “potential delivery” of Marten’s promises to improve performance metrics. 

Not all legislators agreed.

State Sen. Dave Lawson (R-Marydel) noted his appreciation for Marten’s work, but said he has heard similar sentiments for the last 14 years as test scores have declined. 

“So if [performance metrics] aren’t accomplished, what are going to be your actions? Are you still going to be secretary?” he said.

Addressing test scores

In recent years, Delawareans across the political spectrum have grown increasingly frustrated with the state’s education spending compared to students’ test scores.

Delaware’s 2024 results on the National Assessment on Educational Progress – or better known as the Nation’s Report Card – showed that 40% of eighth graders and 45% of fourth graders were found to be “below basic” proficiency levels on the assessment.

Although there has been some growth since the COVID pandemic, Marten said her recommended budget is “designed to accelerate this trajectory.”

As part of the strategic plan, Marten told legislators that her department will in the coming years focus particularly on increasing the state’s graduation rate, and the third-grade reading proficiency rates.

Her plan also calls for the passage of legislation that would allow the state to transition to the new hybrid funding model by August 2027. 

In recent months, the state’s Public Education Funding Commission, which is in charge of recommending how to reform how dollars are distributed to Delaware schools, voted to approve a recommendation to move forward with the new hybrid framework.

The model incorporates the state’s traditional framework of distributing money on a per-student basis with one that also allocates dollars based on student needs. The details for such a formula and how it would impact individual school districts and schools has yet to be determined.

The post Education secretary requests nearly $2.4B for Delaware schools  appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 05:00

Warner Bros. is developing a feature film set in the world of Game of Thrones with writer Beau Willimon of Andor and House of Cards. "That's about all we know right now, and as with everything 'Thrones' things could change, but the film is firmly in development," reports TheWrap. Page Six Hollywood was first to break the news and speculated that the story could revolve around Aegon I, the legendary Targaryen king who spawned a dynasty. From the report: The Targaryens have been at the center of all things "Thrones" on HBO, with "Game of Thrones" following Daenerys Targaryen's (Emilia Clarke) quest to usurp the throne, spinoff "House of the Dragon" set in the midst of the Targaryens' reign and recent spinoff "A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms" following the squire-ship of Aegon "Egg" Targaryen towards the end of the family's run atop the Iron Throne. All, of course, based on George R.R. Martin's expansive book universe.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-04 05:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
For local and county governments, data centers have become a flashpoint that have tested existing regulations, forced moratoriums on development and stirred massive community outrage. In Delaware, one project is expected to use twice the amount of energy consumed by all the state’s homes combined, leading county leaders to upheave some land use rules.  

What started as a mild debate over proposed regulations on large-scale data center developments quickly devolved into a bitter back and forth between two New Castle County Council members over who will bear the cost of one specific project: a proposed 6 million-square-foot data center near Delaware City. 

Soon after during the Tuesday meeting, the council would hear more than an hour of public comment from concerned residents who overwhelmingly supported the proposed regulations and urged council members to apply them to data centers already in the development pipeline. 

In recent months, this is nothing new. 

The short-lived argument came as council members held a rare second hearing for the proposal to regulate data centers in northern Delaware. It also was representative of months of frustration from residents, as well as animosity between county leaders, over how the county should respond to a growing artificial intelligence industry with the funds and momentum to match the concerns of local residents and leaders.

Councilman Dave Carter, who introduced the ordinance in August, said he has done what he can to find a compromise, and he hopes to bring the ordinance to the full council for a vote on March 10. 

One of the main points of contention on the new bill was the removal of a “pending ordinance doctrine,” which would allow the county to retroactively apply the proposed regulations to data center applications currently in the development pipeline. 

After the hearing, Carter said in an interview with Spotlight Delaware that he hopes to bring the ordinance back to the 13-member council without the pending ordinance doctrine, but that if the council wants to vote on an amendment, that would be up to them. 

“I think we’re as close as we’re gonna get,” he said. 

‘Too personal’

Following a short discussion, two council members representative of the old and new guards in county leadership broke into a brief argument over the retroactive application of rules to planned data centers in the county. 

New Castle County Council members Kevin Caneco and Penrose Hollins briefly sparred over both the environmental and economic burdens of proposed data center projects. 

Caneco, who represents the district where the proposed Starwood data center would be built, lambasted some retiring council members who months ago derailed the proposed regulation over the retroactivity clause. 

Specifically, he homed in on Councilwoman Janet Kilpatrick, who in November worked to defang Carter’s initial ordinance while insisting that the developments would be economic drivers for the county.

Councilwoman Janet Kilpatrick, who proposed amendments to water down a regulatory bill for data centers, talks to Councilman Tim Sheldon, one of the data center’s chief supporters, at the council’s Nov. 18 meeting. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY OLIVIA MARBLE

“Until you give me a good justification, Councilwoman Kilpatrick, on why you think the pending ordinance doctrine is not applicable outside protecting rich business interest and Starwood Ventures and capital investment, I’ll sit here and I’ll wait for [an] answer,” Caneco said at Tuesday’s hearing. 

Hollins, who is also retiring and opposed the regulation late last year, jumped to defend Kilpatrick and said the data center argument has become “too personal.”

“To call someone out like that because they disagree with you, it’s just being disrespectful and being dishonest and not being real,” he said.

The animosity between Hollins and Caneco is the latest episode in a monthslong feud between council members over how they should regulate data center development in the wake of the 6 million-square-foot data center proposal brought by Starwood Digital Ventures. 

Starwood, the developer looking to build the Delaware City data center, sustained a massive blow from state officials weeks ago after Delaware environmental regulators ruled the project violated the Coastal Zone Act. 

Weeks later, Starwood appealed the state’s decision to the Delaware Coastal Zone Industrial Control Board. Separately, the developer had applied to New Castle County’s Board of Adjustment, seeking a necessary variance to build an electric switch station. 

But that hearing, which was scheduled for this Thursday, has since been canceled. 

What’s in the new ordinance?

Carter’s amended ordinance included a few concessions on noise regulations, but also clearly outlined how data centers are allowed to use water to cool their supercomputers. The new ordinance also establishes how close developers can build their often loud and bright data centers to residential homes. 

In Carter’s new ordinance, he removed specific requirements developers would have to meet in order to dampen persistent noise from data centers. Instead, Carter’s ordinance says developers would have to defer to existing code that says they “shall not generate noise levels that exceed the pre-development noise level.”

He applied the same standard to lighting regulations, deferring back to existing standards for industrial projects. 

Additionally, the ordinance says data centers must use closed-loop cooling systems, which are designed to reuse as much water as possible. By mandating these systems, Carter said during the meeting, data centers could reduce their water and energy use. 

Another major change in the regulations says data center projects must be at least 1,000 feet from the nearest residential dwelling. But the new code also says that data centers can, if they submit a noise study to the county, build within 500 feet of a home. 

Marissa McClenton, a community advocate with the Sierra Club Delaware Chapter, attended Tuesday’s hearing to express her support for the ordinance. She said she was disappointed to see it had been “watered down in order to get the necessary votes.” 

She said people support stronger regulations on data centers, and she called it “deeply unfair” for the proposed ordinance, and the rules therein, to not apply to projects already in the planning pipeline.  

“Please listen to the over 1,500 people who have voiced their support for the strong guardrails for data centers in this ordinance,” McClenton said. 

Get Involved
While it’s unclear whether council members will vote on the ordinance next week, the New Castle County Council is scheduled to meet in-person at 6:30 p.m. on March 10, in the Louis L. Redding City County Building, located at 800 N. French St. in Wilmington. See the agenda and virtual meeting information here.

The post Data center regulations in NCC may see final vote, council makes compromises  appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-05 20:04
2026-03-04 05:00

Anthropic’s AI tool Claude is playing a key role in the U.S. military’s campaign in Iran, amid a bitter fight with the Pentagon over the terms of its use in war.

2026-03-05 16:04
2026-03-04 04:51

Trump, the polls, and the war with Iran: What happened to the ‘President of Peace’? Expert comment jon.wallace

The president once saw opposition to wars as key to his popularity. But the Iran attacks show he is now more interested in spending political capital than saving it.

US President Donald Trump points at a journalist in the Oval Office during a press conference on 3 March 2026.

So much for the ‘President of PEACE’. 

When Donald Trump ran for election in 2024, he repeatedly emphasized the fact that he had been the first president since Jimmy Carter who did not get the US involved in a new armed conflict. ‘I’m not going to start wars, I’m going to stop wars,’ he assured the nation in his victory speech on election night.

Just over one year on, the president has now authorized the use of force in seven different countries in his second term.

For years, Trump railed against his predecessors for their costly record of quixotic military misadventures in the Middle East. Now, with the Supreme Leader dead and much of Iran in ruins, Trump appears to have acquired a taste for regime change after all.

With only 27 per cent of Americans approving of the strikes, Democrats calling the attack a ‘war of choice’, and Republicans split, Trump has taken a massive political gamble. Why?

Trump’s political horizons have shifted

In his first term, Trump pulled back from the brink of war on multiple occasions. In 2019, he aborted a military response to the downing of a US drone by Tehran, apparently convinced by Tucker Carlson that he could ‘kiss his chances of re-election goodbye’ if he got into a war with Iran. The US assassination of Qasem Soleimani, the following year was an aggressive act. But Trump sought to de-escalate soon after rather than risk getting embroiled in conflict in an election year.

Today, the president seems much less concerned by these risks. He is now a second term president, who doesn’t have to face voters again. This reduces his sensitivity to political risk overall: he is no longer angling for re-election but thinking about his legacy.

Carlson has described Trump’s strikes as ‘disgusting and evil’. But he no longer has Trump’s ear. And those that do, like Senator Lindsay Graham, understand that the president is now more interested in spending political capital than saving it.

Having advised Trump against targeting Soleimani in 2020, Graham was among the leading voices pushing the president to ignore such warnings last week.

Trump is not the first president to seek fundamental change in Washington’s relationship with Tehran as a means of cementing a foreign policy legacy. Ever since the revolution of 1979, relations have oscillated between bouts of hostility and attempts to broker a rapprochement. 

But most presidents have sought to use the political space afforded by a second term to pursue a diplomatic solution. In launching military strikes at such an unprecedented scale, Trump has flipped the script.

The president has always been a peace-loving militarist 

To Trump, the use of force is not incompatible with the pursuit of peace. On the contrary, the president has repeatedly expressed a belief in the efficacy of exercising military power as an instrument of peace-making. 

At the signing ceremony for the newly established Board of Peace, for example, the president lauded last summer’s strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities as ‘another great victory for the ultimate goal of peace’. He also spoke enthusiastically of ‘annihilating terrorists’ in Nigeria, having ‘wiped out’ ISIS in Syria, and the ‘amazing’ military operation that captured Nicolas Maduro in Venezuela.

The president’s affinity for authorizing spasmodic violence is not new. Trump routinely celebrates his first term successes in eliminating individuals, from Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi in Syria to Soleimani in Iraq. It is one reason why efforts to paint Trump as an isolationist have only ever been half-right.

The president’s position also captures a central contradiction in public attitudes about foreign policy. 

On the one hand, voters tend to oppose long, costly conflicts in which the public bears the brunt of the human and financial costs. As such, there are clear disincentives  to excessive sabre rattling on the campaign trail. As President George W. Bush once joked to troops in the Middle East: ‘You don’t run for office in a democracy and say, ‘Please vote for me, I promise you war.’

On the other hand, polls consistently find that the US public expresses considerable concern about a whole host of global threats, and support for the use of force as an appropriate tool to address them. The development of nuclear weapons by Iran routinely features near the top of these lists. 77 per cent perceived it a critical threat when Gallup last asked about it in 2024

More recently, a CBS poll taken just three days prior to the attacks showed 51 per cent of Americans would favour military action against Iran to stop them from producing nuclear weapons. Research also indicates that voters systematically favour candidates who take policy positions which project an image of toughness.

Trump’s strikes on Iran can be understood as the logical culmination of the president’s efforts to cater to an inherent ‘cakeism’ in public opinion about foreign policy: voters want leaders to be able to whack the bad guys and influence outcomes they care about, without bearing the costs of doing so.

Public attitudes towards foreign policy are malleable 

President Trump’s appetite for risk may also have been buoyed by confidence in his own ability to lead public opinion. Foreign policy is a distant issue for most voters, who rely on political leaders for cues about what to make of events overseas. And the president is a particularly powerful opinion leader, especially among co-partisans.

Take Venezuela. According to a YouGov poll in late December, just 21 per cent of Americans supported the use of military force to overthrow Nicolas Maduro. Yet just three weeks later, after the president did precisely that, support almost doubled to 40 per cent. More importantly, perhaps, Trump’s base rallied to his side, with support from Republicans rising from 43 to 78 per cent in the same period.

History suggests that, politically speaking, the only thing worse than getting involved in a war is failing to win at an acceptable cost.

Trump’s actions may have his advisers engaging in rhetorical gymnastics to square his frequent use of force overseas with his ‘America First’ vision. But vocal opposition from hardcore elements of the MAGA wing of the Republican party seems to be the exception to the rule for now.

It is also not unusual for the public to ‘rally around the flag’ in the immediate aftermath of a major use of force abroad. The jury is still out on whether incumbents can manipulate public opinion as easily as implied in the ‘Wag the Dog’ scenario. But Trump is at least aware of the dynamic, having repeatedly predicted that Barack Obama would start a war with Iran to boost sagging poll numbers during the 2012 campaign.

What comes next?

History suggests that, politically speaking, the only thing worse than getting involved in a war is failing to win at an acceptable cost. The fluidity of US objectives offered by the administration may give Trump some room to simply declare victory if costs begin to mount.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 04:30

Fears US-Israeli onslaught could lead regime to push for bomb or embolden other groups to steal uranium stockpile

The US-Israeli onslaught against Iran is intended to resolve a 24-year standoff over Tehran’s nuclear programme, but it runs the risk of backfiring and driving the regime towards making a secret bomb, proliferation experts have warned.

The regime in Tehran has long insisted that the programme is for civilian purposes and it has no intention of making a nuclear weapon. However, since two undeclared sites, for uranium enrichment and heavy water plutonium production, were discovered in 2002, the programme has been treated with intense suspicion.

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2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 04:23

Anthony Vaccarello marks decade at helm of fashion house with powered-up take on Yves Saint Laurent’s classic

The most famous suit in the world, Yves Saint Laurent’s Le Smoking, has returned to the Paris catwalk 60 years after its invention.

Designed by the late couturier to be worn by men in smoking rooms to protect clothing from the smell of cigars, he adapted it for women, slimming the trousers and lapels. It wasn’t a runaway success – only one sold from his 1966 collection – but it became a global symbol of power dressing and gender dismantling, and would appear in every collection until Saint Laurent retired in 2002.

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2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 04:19

Samsung's thinnest and lightest phone brings more subtle design changes that add up.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 04:00

Critics say administration has overstepped authority in using 1994 law to prosecute protesters and journalists

When dozens of protesters interrupted a church service in St Paul, Minnesota, earlier this year, it revived a fierce yet enduring debate about whether places of worship are appropriate arenas for dissent.

In demanding the resignation of a pastor who leads a local Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) field office, demonstrators chanted “ICE out” and “Hands up, don’t shoot!” at Cities church on 18 January. Religious and political leaders condemned the action, fueled by the church’s statement that protesters had “frightened children and created a scene marked by intimidation and threat”.

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2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 03:25

State lawmaker beats Jasmine Crockett in fiercely contested election marked by record turnout and confusion at polls

James Talarico won the Democratic nomination for a US Senate seat in Texas on Tuesday, capping a remarkable rise from state lawmaker and seminary student to the party’s standard-bearer in one of the key races of the 2026 midterm cycle.

With his blend of faith-based populism, bipartisan appeal and generational energy, Talarico defeated Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett, a firebrand beloved by the party’s base but who struggled to dispel concerns that she could defeat a Republican in a state that has not elected a Democrat statewide in more than 30 years.

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2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 03:16

Texas Rep. James Talarico will win the Democratic Senate primary in Texas, CBS News projects, defeating Rep. Jasmine Crockett in what could be one of the most closely watched races in this year's midterms.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 03:05

Republican Rep. Tony Gonzales of Texas and gun activist Brandon Herrera are locked in a tight primary battle, as Gonzales faces calls to resign after being accused of having an affair with an aide who later died by suicide.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 03:02

Republican Rep. Dan Crenshaw of Texas lost his primary race to Republican state Rep. Steve Toth.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 03:00

My family is in Tehran; I am in Abu Dhabi. Across the region, ordinary people are paying the price for these attacks

Since Saturday, my mind has been torn between the place I live, Abu Dhabi, and Tehran, which has been the focus of my work and research for more than 15 years, and where I still have family. When I saw that Israel and the US had attacked Iran, I started worrying for family, thinking about potential consequences. But I barely had time to consider that before Donald Trump announced that this was about regime change. At that moment, I knew this was going to be big – worse than last June – and that it would lead into a regional schism. Predictably, Iran’s response started shortly after: first against Israel, then against states across the Gulf region, including the United Arab Emirates. It all followed the worst-case escalation scenarios we had been outlining since June, and especially since January, when – in the midst of protests – Donald Trump said “help” was on its way.

I kept on trying to reach family when the internet there was working, which is, at best, for a few minutes a day. Each conversation is short, practical: are you OK? Is your area affected?

Aniseh Bassiri Tabrizi is an associate fellow at the Chatham House Middle East and North Africa programme and senior analyst at Control Risks

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2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 02:52

Voters headed to the polls Tuesday in Texas, North Carolina and Arkansas, marking the start of the 2026 midterm cycle.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 02:02

Pintx with 1900 miles on it, my tire looks like it was going to crumple and I finally decided to get a new one. Goddamn was that a project but I officially did it and I couldn’t be more happy with the results. Too bad it’s raining and I haven’t got to fully test it yet. Breaking the bead with the new tire was 100% the scariest part.

Also if anyone lives in south Jersey and rides lmk!

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2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 02:01

Detainees accused of coming from the US with intent to sow chaos and attack military units on Communist-ruled island

Cuban prosecutors have formally charged six people with crimes of terrorism after a US-flagged speedboat was involved in a deadly shootout with Cuba’s coast guard last week.

The US-based Cuban defendants are accused of packing a boat with weapons and heading toward Cuba in hopes of destabilising the government in Havana.

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2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 02:00

NASA is eyeing an April launch window for the upcoming Artemis II mission after it repaired a helium-flow issue on the Space Launch System upper stage rocket. "Work on the rocket and spacecraft will continue in the coming weeks as NASA prepares for rolling the rocket out to the launch pad again later this month ahead of a potential launch in April," NASA wrote in an update on Tuesday. Space.com reports: The repair work occurred inside the huge Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) at NASA's Kennedy Space Center (KSC) in Florida. Artemis 2's SLS and Orion crew capsule have been in the VAB since Feb. 25, when they rolled back to the hangar from KSC's Launch Pad 39B. Just a few days earlier, the Artemis 2 stack successfully completed a wet dress rehearsal, a two-day-long practice run of the procedures leading up to launch. In the wake of that test, however, NASA noticed an interruption in helium flow in the SLS' upper stage. That was a significant issue, because helium pressurizes the rocket's propellant tanks. Rollback was the only option, as the affected area in the upper stage was not accessible at the pad. The problem took a potential March launch out of play for Artemis 2, which will send four astronauts on a roughly 10-day flight around the moon. It will be the first crewed flight to the lunar neighborhood since Apollo 17 in 1972. The next Artemis 2 launch window opens in April, with liftoff opportunities on April 1, April 3-6 and April 30. And those options apparently remain in play, thanks to recent work in the VAB. That work centered on a seal in an interface through which helium flows from ground equipment into the SLS upper stage. That seal was obstructing the interface, which is known as a quick disconnect.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 02:00

As a historian, I’ve studied the major consumer boycotts of history. We can take down ChatGPT and send a powerful signal to Silicon Valley

OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, is on track to lose $14bn this year. Its market share is collapsing, and its own CEO, Sam Altman, has admitted it “screwed up” an element of the product. All it takes to accelerate that decline is 10 seconds of your time.

A grassroots boycott called QuitGPT has been spreading across the US and beyond, asking people to cancel their ChatGPT subscriptions. More than a million people have answered the call. Mark Ruffalo and Katy Perry have thrown their weight behind it. It is one of the most significant consumer boycotts in recent memory, and I believe it’s time for Europeans to join.

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2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-04 02:00

Dustin Destree shares a report from Phys.org: Although plastic particles in the air are increasingly coming into focus, knowledge about their distribution and effects is still limited. Chemical analyses from Leipzig now provide details from Germany for the first time: Around 4% of the particulate matter consists of plastic. Around two-thirds of this comes from tire abrasion. Extrapolated, this means that people in a city like Leipzig inhale approximately 2.1 micrograms of plastic per day through the air, which increases the risk of death from cardiovascular disease by 9% and from lung cancer by 13%. These findings underscore the need to take global action against plastic pollution and to examine air quality and health at the regional level, write researchers from the Leibniz Institute for Tropospheric Research (TROPOS) and Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg in the journal Communications Earth & Environment. "With around two-thirds of microplastics coming from tire abrasion, this shows that action is needed and that the fine dust problem cannot be solved by switching to electric mobility alone. To protect health, it would be important to also take tire abrasion into account when regulating air quality and to set limits for microplastics in the air," demands Prof. Hartmut Herrmann from TROPOS, who led the study. The study has been published in the journal Communications Earth & Environment.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 01:00

With much of the world’s oil supplies out of action, Russia could step in to meet demand in China and India

A prolonged energy crisis triggered by the widening war in the Middle East could offer an economic lifeline to Russia’s war machine at a moment when it was beginning to show signs of strain.

The sharp weakening and possible collapse of the regime in Iran would deprive the Kremlin of one of its closest regional partners. But that setback could be outweighed by an economic windfall if disruption pushes buyers toward Russian energy, alongside a possible slowdown in western arms supplies to Ukraine.

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2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 00:00

This live blog is now closed. More election coverage can be found here:

North Carolina’s election results will be delayed at least an hour because a rural county will be open late after workers couldn’t get equipment working earlier in the day.

In Halifax county, the electronic poll books synchronized for 90 minutes and didn’t use any backup measures to let people vote, according to notes from an emergency meeting held by the state’s board of elections.

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2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-04 00:00

And really compete with China.

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 00:00

Iran’s favorite proxy is down but not out.

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-04 00:00

The perils for the region—and the alliance.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-03 23:57

CBS News projects Bobby Pulido wins Texas' 15th Congressional District, setting up battle against Republican incumbent Rep. Monica De La Cruz.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-03 23:48

In the Texas GOP Senate primary, CBS News projects Sen. John Cornyn and Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton will go to a runoff, with neither clearing 50% of the vote.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-03 23:47

Neither Ken Paxton or John Cornyn captured 50% of the vote in Texas, forcing another poll in May

A bitter primary contest between the four-term Republican US senator John Cornyn and the Texas attorney general, Ken Paxton, ended in a runoff on Tuesday.

In Texas, a primary runoff is declared if neither candidate are able to capture 50% of the vote. Paxton and Cornyn will now face that election on 26 May.

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2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-03 23:41

Buckhout narrowly lost to Democratic Rep. Don Davis in 2024.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-03 23:19

2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-03 23:06

US Southern Command said joint mission with Ecuador involves ‘decisive action’ against illicit drug trafficking

US and Ecuadorian forces have launched joint operations to combat drug trafficking, the US Southern Command said on Tuesday, but neither side gave more details.

Southern Command, which encompasses 31 countries through South and Central America and the Caribbean, said in a statement on X that the “decisive action” was aimed at combating illicit drug trafficking.

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2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-03 22:26

March 3, 2026 — Quantum technologies are anticipated to transform computing, communication and sensing by harnessing the unusual behavior of matter at the atomic scale. Translating quantum’s promise into practical devices will require physical systems that have desirable quantum properties and can be easily manufactured. Silicon, the material behind today’s computer chips, is highly attractive as a platform because it plays to the strengths of the trillion-dollar semiconductor industry that has already been built. Identifying quantum building blocks — qubits —in silicon is, therefore, an important frontier research area.

Credit: Jackie-Niam/Shutterstock

In a new study, researchers in UC Santa Barbara materials professor Chris Van de Walle’s Computational Materials Group identified a robust new qubit in silicon, called the CN center. The work is published in the journal Physical Review B.

Qubits can be based on atomic-scale defects in a crystal. A prototype example is the NV center, which consists of a nitrogen (N) atom sitting next to a vacancy (V, a missing carbon atom) in a diamond crystal. These defects can interact with both electrons and light, allowing them to emit single photons (quanta of light) that can transmit quantum information or be processed in quantum networks.

Recent work has focused on a silicon defect, the T center, which can store quantum information for long periods of time comparable to those of an NV center. It also emits light in the telecom band — the range of wavelengths that can be transmitted with low loss through optical fibers. The T center is made up of carbon and hydrogen atoms, and the presence of hydrogen renders it fragile and sensitive to fabrication conditions. Hydrogen can easily move within the crystal and is difficult to control during processing, making reproducible and reliable device manufacturing more challenging to achieve.

In their new study, the researchers identified a promising alternative: the CN center, which consists of carbon and nitrogen atoms. “Unlike the T center, this defect does not contain hydrogen and will, therefore, be more robust and easier to realize in actual devices,” said Kevin Nangoi, a postdoctoral scholar in the Van de Walle group who led the project.

The team used advanced first-principles computer simulations to model the defect at the atomic level. Because such simulations allow researchers to predict material properties of new systems that have not yet been realized experimentally, they can guide future efforts in engineering and fabricating novel devices.

“Our results show that the CN center reproduces the key electronic and optical properties that render the T center attractive for quantum applications; in particular, the center is structurally stable and produces light in the telecom range,” said Mark Turiansky, a group alumnus and now a postdoctoral researcher at the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, who was involved in the project.

Identifying a hydrogen-free, telecom-wavelength quantum-light emitter in silicon is an important step that helps to bridge the gap between quantum science and scalable technology.

Looking ahead, Van de Walle noted, “If confirmed experimentally, the CN center could serve as a practical new building block for quantum devices, potentially accelerating the development of advanced quantum technologies [while] using the same silicon material that powers today’s electronics.”

Funding for this research was provided by the Department of Energy Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, through the Co-design Center for Quantum Advantage (C2QA); the computations were performed at the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center.

About UC Santa Barbara

The University of California, Santa Barbara is a leading research institution that also provides a comprehensive liberal arts learning experience. Our academic community of faculty, students, and staff is characterized by a culture of interdisciplinary collaboration that is responsive to the needs of our multicultural and global society. All of this takes place within a living and learning environment like no other, as we draw inspiration from the beauty and resources of our extraordinary location at the edge of the Pacific Ocean.


Source: UC Santa Barbara

The post UC Santa Barbara Study Proposes ‘CN Center’ Defect in Silicon as Potential Qubit appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-03 22:07

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for March 4.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-03 22:00

Security researchers say a highly sophisticated iPhone exploitation toolkit dubbed "Coruna," which possibly originated from a U.S. government contractor, has spread from suspected Russian espionage operations to crypto-stealing criminal campaigns. Apple has patched the exploited vulnerabilities in newer iOS versions, but tens of thousands of devices may have already been compromised. An anonymous reader quotes an excerpt from Wired's report: Security researchers at Google on Tuesday released a report describing what they're calling "Coruna," a highly sophisticated iPhone hacking toolkit that includes five complete hacking techniques capable of bypassing all the defenses of an iPhone to silently install malware on a device when it visits a website containing the exploitation code. In total, Coruna takes advantage of 23 distinct vulnerabilities in iOS, a rare collection of hacking components that suggests it was created by a well-resourced, likely state-sponsored group of hackers. In fact, Google traces components of Coruna to hacking techniques it spotted in use in February of last year and attributed to what it describes only as a "customer of a surveillance company." Then, five months later, Google says a more complete version of Coruna reappeared in what appears to have been an espionage campaign carried out by a suspected Russian spy group, which hid the hacking code in a common visitor-counting component of Ukrainian websites. Finally, Google spotted Coruna in use yet again in what seems to have been a purely profit-focused hacking campaign, infecting Chinese-language crypto and gambling sites to deliver malware that steals victims cryptocurrency. Conspicuously absent from Google's report is any mention of who the original surveillance company "customer" that deployed Coruna may have been. But the mobile security company iVerify, which also analyzed a version of Coruna it obtained from one of the infected Chinese sites, suggests the code may well have started life as a hacking kit built for or purchased by the US government. Google and iVerify both note that Coruna contains multiple components previously used in a hacking operation known as "Triangulation" that was discovered targeting Russian cybersecurity firm Kaspersky in 2023, which the Russian government claimed was the work of the NSA. (The US government didn't respond to Russia's claim.) Coruna's code also appears to have been originally written by English-speaking coders, notes iVerify's cofounder Rocky Cole. "It's highly sophisticated, took millions of dollars to develop, and it bears the hallmarks of other modules that have been publicly attributed to the US government," Cole tells WIRED. "This is the first example we've seen of very likely US government tools -- based on what the code is telling us -- spinning out of control and being used by both our adversaries and cybercriminal groups." Regardless of Coruna's origin, Google warns that a highly valuable and rare hacking toolkit appears to have traveled through a series of unlikely hands, and now exists in the wild where it could still be adopted -- or adapted -- by any hacker group seeking to target iPhone users. "How this proliferation occurred is unclear, but suggests an active market for 'second hand' zero-day exploits," Google's report reads. "Beyond these identified exploits, multiple threat actors have now acquired advanced exploitation techniques that can be re-used and modified with newly identified vulnerabilities."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-03 21:41

This live blog has now closed. Our live coverage continues here

US secretary of state Marco Rubio has claimed the US attacked Iran after learning that Israel was going to strike, which would have meant retaliation against US forces.

“We knew that if we didn’t pre-emptively go after them before they launched those attacks, we would suffer higher casualties,” he told reporters

The Air Force is now attacking Tehran and Beirut simultaneously

The Air Force has now begun a wave of extensive strikes against the Iranian terror regime and the Hezbollah terror organization.

Continue reading...

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-03 21:23

U.S. financial markets rebounded after shedding more than 1,200 points in earlier trading on Tuesday.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-03 21:12

Former Democratic governor Cooper to take on Trump-backed Whatley for seat held by retiring Thom Tillis

North Carolina’s competitive Senate race came into shape on Tuesday, with former Democratic governor Roy Cooper and former Republican National Committee chair Michael Whatley winning their respective primaries.

Cooper, a former two-term governor, is widely seen among North Carolina’s Democrats as their best chance at flipping a Republican-controlled seat, held by retiring US senator Thom Tillis, a conservative who has turned hard against the Trump administration on its handling of healthcare, defense and the Epstein file disclosures.

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2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-03 20:57

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for March 4, No. 527.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-03 20:51

Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for March 4, No. 731.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-03 20:47

Former Gov. Roy Cooper and former Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Whatley are set to face off in November in what's expected to be among the most competitive Senate races of the cycle.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-03 20:25
Problem with taking cover off the stator

Im currently replacing the bearings on my pint x. However im stuck at this part. Both me and one other person tried to get it off, but it won’t budge. We tried a hammer and a piece of wood but it just won’t move. I’m looking for any advice!

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[link] [comments]

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-03 20:18

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for March 4 #997

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-04 10:18

Company will halt production of controversial paraquat weed killer by end of June as it faces thousands of lawsuits

Syngenta, maker of a controversial pesticide linked to Parkinson’s disease, said on Tuesday that it will stop making its paraquat weed killer by the end of June.

The announcement comes as the company is facing several thousand lawsuits brought by people in the US who allege they developed Parkinson’s disease due to their exposure to Syngenta’s paraquat products.

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2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-04 20:36

The U.S. Department of State has urged Americans to leave 14 countries​ across the Middle East amid the widening Iran war​, but most flights have been canceled.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-05 15:24

Colin Gray was found guilty on 29 counts, including two counts of second-degree murder. Prosecutors argued that he had failed to secure his son’s gun.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 20:00
Nico Hart

NICO HART
Staff Reporter

After months of planning, construction and delays, Trabant Student Center held a ribbon-cutting ceremony last December for its official grand reopening. Notably present were university dining administrators and President Laura Carlson, among others. 

The newly renovated Trabant features a SNAP Pizza (relocated from Perkins Student Center), The Halal Shack and an upgraded Chick-fil-A menu. Spatial modifications have also been made, with table space being adjusted to make room for the new restaurants. 

Even though Trabant unofficially reopened to students months prior, many came to attend the official ceremony. 

Many students held positive opinions about the new food court. 

Benson Davis, a junior, noted his appreciation for the added variety in meal options. 

“I do really like Halal Shack, I’m a big fan of Mediterranean food,” Davis said. “And I like the more streamlined approach with some of the other restaurants.”

Senior Ben Elsner has also found Trabant to be more efficient post-renovation.

“I’ve noticed that it’s easier to get my food since it was last year,” said Elsner. “And the lines in Chick-fil-A are smaller than they used to be.”

Others added that the expanded food court makes dining more inclusive for different cultures.

“I really like that they opened The Halal Shack as an option, because I don’t eat meat,” Ashna Patel, a junior, said. “I think it’s inclusive of them to include the Muslim community.”

Trabant’s overhaul was not completely free from criticism, however. Some questioned whether the university’s allocation of resources was effective or appropriate.

“The Trabant renovations were supposed to be done before a certain time and I think it took a lot longer than we all expected,” Patel said.

Davis argued that modernization efforts would be better applied elsewhere.

“If the university is going to invest money in renovations, it should primarily go towards residence halls, as there are a lot of residence halls which are not the best.”

Catherine Dotchel, a sophomore, agreed.

“They should focus on dorms,” Dotchel said. “My bathrooms at Sypherd are absolutely horrible. They look like they’re from when they were built.” 

Sypherd Hall was originally constructed in 1957.

A few students were also unhappy with the relocation of SNAP Pizza.

“I feel it’s odd to put SNAP in Trabant, given the actual SNAP location is less than a five minute walk away,” Davis said. “I feel it would have made more sense to remain in Perkins.” 

Elsner pointed out that the relocation disrupts previously established student routines.

“I’m in the YChromes, an a capella group on campus,” Elsner said. “We have our practice at Perkins sometimes, so I liked to have SNAP there.”

Finally, some students seemed not to notice.

“I thought everything was already open, I’m pretty happy,” said Jeremy Wade, a junior transfer student from Delaware Technical Community College. “I got a free shirt.”


How do students feel about the new Trabant Student Center? was first posted on March 3, 2026 at 8:00 pm.
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2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-03 20:00

OpenAI is reportedly developing a code-hosting platform that could compete with GitHub, The Information reported on Tuesday. "If OpenAI does sell the product, it would mark a bold move by the creator of ChatGPT to compete directly against Microsoft, which holds a significant stake in the firm," notes Reuters. From the report: Engineers from OpenAI encountered a rise in service disruptions that rendered GitHub unavailable in recent months, which ultimately prompted the decision to develop the new product, the report said. The OpenAI project is in its early stages and likely will not be completed for months, according to The Information. Employees working on it have considered making the code repository available for purchase to OpenAI's customer base.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 19:35

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem faced skepticism from both sides of the aisle at a hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Tuesday.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-03 19:35

The entire portfolio of Ziff Davis Connectivity brands is changing hands in a $1.2 billion deal.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-03 19:26

Homeland security department appears to be looking into comments made about Minnesota’s top federal prosecutor

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has opened an internal investigation into allegations that Gregory Bovino, a senior border patrol official, made disparaging remarks about the Jewish faith of Minnesota’s top federal prosecutor, the New York Times reported.

Bovino, who became the public face of the heavily scrutinized immigration crackdown in Minnesota that left two US citizens dead at the hands of federal agents, allegedly mocked federal prosecutor Daniel Rosen during a January phone call with state prosecutors. According to the Times, Bovino allegedly made sarcastic comments about Rosen’s observance of Shabbat – the weekly period of rest from Friday sunset to Saturday sunset – and used the phrase “chosen people” in a derisive tone during the 12 January call.

Continue reading...

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 19:19

Amazon's audiobook service is adding a lower-cost plan that gives subscribers limited listening without monthly credits.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 19:18

The strikes in Bahrain and the UAE caused structural damage, disrupted power delivery and, in some cases, sparked fires and caused water damage.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 19:16

The attack on the CIA station in Riyadh comes as Iran widens retaliation across the Middle East in the wake of the U.S.-Israeli bombing campaign.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 19:12
Best Onewheel in 2026?

I've tested pretty much every board combo possible and this is the final form for my race board going into the 2026 season

• TFL 5" BTG Pioneer Tire

• TFL extended Steep n Deep WTF

• Fungineers 5" HT SuperFlux

• Fungineers Thor400 full box paired with

• eve50pl 32s1p 134v battery in TFL Torque Box 592wh more range than gt !!!

• MOFF shop POUTZ footholds with vow style blocks

• TFL Bang Bumpers

Lighter than 12x8, more maneuverable, more grip, more sidewall, and no specialty rails required !

What do you guys think? 12x8 still on top? or are we going to see BTG Pioneer dominate this season

submitted by /u/cameron29383
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2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 19:00

Foreign affairs committee report finds summit improved political relationship but efforts lack ‘strategic priorities’

Keir Starmer’s efforts to reset the UK’s relationship with the EU are lacking in “direction, definition and drive”, parliament’s foreign affairs committee has said.

A report based on months of expert witness testimony found the summit between the UK and the EU at Lancaster House last May had “substantially improved the overall political relationship” after years of Brussels-bashing by the Conservatives.

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2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 19:00

This live blog is now closed. For the latest on US politics, you can follow our US midterms blog here.

In a late night post on Truth Social, Donald Trump said that the US munition stockpiles “at the medium and upper medium grade” have “never been higher or better”.

He added that the US has a “virtually unlimited supply of these weapons”, meaning that “wars can be fought ‘forever’”.

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2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 19:00

Apple now sells more iPhone models than ever, and we've tested everything available. From the iPhone Air and iPhone 17 to the iPhone 16E and iPhone 17 Pro, we have recommendations that will work for your budget and needs.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-03 19:00

Each state manages a list of registered voters, used to verify eligibility and manage elections.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-03 19:00

The federal government funded 69% of Medicaid costs as of 2023. In Minnesota, it covered 63% of the $19.2 billion spent.

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-03 19:00

Go behind the scenes with our team as we find and make sense of the numbers.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 18:53

Shabana Mahmood says UK’s generosity abused as visas halted for nationals from Afghanistan, Cameroon, Myanmar and Sudan

The government has imposed an emergency brake on visas for the first time on nationals from four countries, as Shabana Mahmood accused them of exploiting Britain’s generosity to claim asylum.

Study visas for nationals from Afghanistan, Cameroon, Myanmar and Sudan have been halted, in addition to work visas for Afghans.

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2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 18:50

Annual political gathering kicks off this week in Beijing with the economy, technology and the military high on the agenda

China’s annual Two Sessions meetings begin this week, with thousands of political and community delegates descending on Beijing from across mainland China, Hong Kong and Macau to ratify legislation, personnel changes and the budget over about two weeks of highly choreographed meetings.

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2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 18:46

Democrats have decried Marco Rubio’s briefings as inadequate in articulating the goals of war

Donald Trump attempted to counter a simmering anti-Israel backlash in Congress and among his own Maga supporters on Tuesday by denying suggestions that he had been bounced into attacking Iran because Israel had already decided to do so.

Amid growing criticism among opponents and allies alike, Trump rebuffed claims that he had struck Iran only because Israel had forced his hand, a suspicion fueled by comments made by Marco Rubio, the secretary of state.

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2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 18:46

Party worries crowded field to replace Gavin Newsom – and quirk of primary system – could open door for Republicans in November

It’s been three decades since Democrats last had a wide open contest for the California governorship, one of the most visible and most powerful positions in the US. Instead of relishing in the competition of a crowded field, though, party leaders worry that the race to succeed Gavin Newsom could blow up in their faces.

On Tuesday, the state’s Democratic party chair, Rusty Hicks, wrote in an extraordinary open letter to the candidates: “If you do not have a viable path to make it to the general election, do not file to place your name on the ballot for the primary election.”

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2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 18:38

Chips and Cheese has an excellent deep dive into Arm’s latest core design, and I have thoughts.

Arm now has a core with enough performance to take on not only laptop, but also desktop use cases. They’ve also shown it’s possible to deliver that performance at a modest 4 GHz clock speed. Arm achieved that by executing well on the fundamentals throughout the core pipeline. X925’s branch predictor is fast and state-of-the-art. Its out-of-order execution engine is truly gargantuan. Penalties are few, and tradeoffs appear well considered. There aren’t a lot of companies out there capable of building a core with this level of performance, so Arm has plenty to be proud of.

That said, getting a high performance core is only one piece of the puzzle. Gaming workloads are very important in the consumer space, and benefit more from a strong memory subsystem than high core throughput. A DSU variant with L3 capacity options greater than 32 MB could help in that area. X86-64’s strong software ecosystem is another challenge to tackle. And finally, Arm still relies on its partners to carry out its vision. I look forward to seeing Arm take on all of these challenges, while also iterating on their core line to keep pace as AMD and Intel improve their cores. Hopefully, extra competition will make better, more affordable CPUs for all of us.

↫ Chester Lam at Chips and Cheese

The problem with Arm processors in the desktop (and laptop) space certainly isn’t one of performance – as this latest design by Arm once again shows. No, the real problem is a complete and utter lack of standardisation, with every chip and every device in the Arm space needing dedicated, specific operating system images people need to create, maintain, and update. This isn’t just a Linux or BSD problem, as even Microsoft has had numerous problems with this, despite Windows on Arm only supporting a very small number of Qualcomm processors.

A law or rule that has held fast since the original 8086: never bet against x86. The number of competing architectures that were all surely going to kill x86 is staggeringly big – PowerPC, Alpha, PA-RISC, Sparc, Itanium, and many more – and even when those chips were either cheaper, faster, or both, they just couldn’t compete with x86’s unique strength: its ecosystem. When I buy an x86 computer, either in parts or from an OEM, either Intel or AMD, I don’t have to worry for one second if Windows, Linux, one of the BSDs, or goddamn FreeDOS, and all of their applications, are going to run on it. They just will. Everything is standardised, for better or worse, from peripheral interconnects to the extremely crucial boot process.

On the Arm side, though? It’s a crapshoot. That’s why whenever anyone recommends a certain cool Arm motherboard or mini PC, the first thing you have to figure out is what its software support situation is like. Does the OEM provide blessed Linux images? If so, do they offer more than an outdated Ubuntu build? Have they made any update promises? Will Windows boot on this thing? Does it work with any GPUs I might already own? There’s so many unknowns and uncertainties you just don’t have to deal with when opting for x86. For its big splashy foray into general purpose laptops with its Snapdragon Elite chips, Qualcomm promised Linux support on par with Windows from day one.

We’re several years down the line, and it’s still a complete mess. And that’s just one chip line, of one generation!

As long as every individual Arm SoC and Arm board are little isolated islands with unknown software and hardware support status, x86 will continue to survive, even if x86 laptops use more power, even if x86 chips end up being slower. Without the incredible ecosystem x86 has, Arm will never achieve its full potential, and eventually, as has happened to every single other x86 competitor, x86 will eventually catch up to and surpass Arm’s strong points, at lower prices.

Never bet against x86.

2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-03 18:29

In discussing his reasoning for launching U.S. airstrikes on Iran, President Donald Trump said, “An Iranian regime armed with long-range missiles and nuclear weapons would be a dire threat to every American.” But arms control experts have disputed his claim that Iran “soon” could have missiles capable of reaching the U.S., and they say there’s a lack of evidence that the country “attempted to rebuild” nuclear enrichment facilities damaged by U.S. strikes last year.

Plumes of smoke rise following reported explosions in Tehran on March 2, after the United States and Israel launched strikes against Iran on Feb. 28. Photo by Mahsa / Middle East Images / AFP via Getty Images.

Trump first made his case for the U.S. and Israeli military bombing, which started on Feb. 28, in two videos that day and the next. In his first remarks, he said, “Our objective is to defend the American people by eliminating imminent threats from the Iranian regime, a vicious group of very hard, terrible people. Its menacing activities directly endanger the United States, our troops, our bases overseas, and our allies throughout the world.” He specifically focused on stopping Iran from having a nuclear weapon.

“It has always been the policy of the United States, in particular, my administration, that this terrorist regime can never have a nuclear weapon. I’ll say it again. They can never have a nuclear weapon,” Trump said. The White House on March 2 sent out a list of 74 times Trump has said something similar, saying in the press release, “This position — rooted in longstanding, bipartisan American policy — guides his actions to ensure the leading state sponsor of terrorism cannot threaten the world with nuclear devastation.”

A year ago, in late March 2025, the U.S. Intelligence Community assessed that “Iran is not building a nuclear weapon and that [Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali] Khamenei has not reauthorized the nuclear weapons program he suspended in 2003.” However, in a congressional hearing about that assessment, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard also said, “Iran’s enriched uranium stockpile is at its highest levels and is unprecedented for a state without nuclear weapons.”

Last June, Trump said he believed Iran was “very close” to obtaining a nuclear weapon, an apparent contradiction to the IC assessment. Days later, the U.S. bombed three Iranian nuclear facilities. In his Feb. 28 remarks, Trump repeated his claim that those military strikes had “obliterated the regime’s nuclear program” at those sites. (As we’ve written, experts and a classified U.S. intelligence report said the sites were damaged and the enrichment program set back — but the sites and nuclear capabilities weren’t completely destroyed.) Trump said that Iran refused to make a deal after the June bombings and refused to “renounce their nuclear ambitions, and we can’t take it anymore.”

“Instead, they attempted to rebuild their nuclear program and to continue developing long-range missiles that can now threaten our very good friends and allies in Europe, our troops stationed overseas, and could soon reach the American homeland,” the president said.

We’ll explain what arms control experts say about Iran’s long-range missile capabilities and the state of its damaged nuclear enrichment program.

Nuclear Program

In his Feb. 28 comments, Trump said the U.S. “will ensure that Iran does not obtain a nuclear weapon” and that after the June 2025 U.S. bombing of Iranian nuclear facilities, “they attempted to rebuild their nuclear program.” Arms control experts told us that last year’s bombing set back Iran’s nuclear program and there’s a lack of evidence that the country was rebuilding it.

“In the absence of IAEA monitoring, accurate information is scant,” Emma Sandifer, program coordinator at the nonpartisan Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation, told us in an email, referring to the International Atomic Energy Agency. The IAEA hasn’t been able to assess the three bombed nuclear program sites, though it has inspected all other declared nuclear facilities in the country, the IAEA chief told Reuters in January.

“These actions are right,” Trump said in his March 1 video statement, “and they are necessary to ensure that Americans will never have to face a radical, bloodthirsty terrorist regime armed with nuclear weapons and lots of threats.”

A week before the recent military operation, on Feb. 21, Trump’s special envoy to the Middle East, Steve Witkoff, was more definitive in describing a time frame for Iran’s nuclear ambitions. Witkoff said in a Fox News interview that while Iran says that its nuclear capability is “about their civil program … they’ve been enriching well beyond the number that you need for civil nuclear. It’s up to 60%. They are probably a week away from having industrial-grade bomb-making material, and that’s really dangerous.” But experts told us it would likely take months for Iran to enrich uranium to that level and then much longer before the “bomb-making material” could be made into a weapon.

Daryl G. Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association, a nonpartisan organization that provides analysis on arms control and national security issues, told us that “it is clear that it would take Iran years to fully rebuild its enrichment plants” that were bombed in June 2025. “It is possible that Iran may have a very small number of operational centrifuges somewhere undisclosed,” Kimball said. “But it would still take months for a smaller number of centrifuges to accomplish what thousands of centrifuges at these major facilities could’ve done,” which would be to enrich small amounts of uranium to weapons-grade level and then turn it into metal to be used for a weapon. “It would take longer to fashion a nuclear explosive device.”

Eliana Johns, a senior research associate with the nuclear information project at the Federation of American Scientists told us that “if Iran enriches uranium to weapons-grade, they will need to weaponize the material and develop a nuclear device with other sensitive components. It’s relatively easy to put various payloads on a missile; however, while Iran certainly has ballistic missiles that could theoretically be used for this purpose, there are still challenges with designing a nuclear device that can be mated with the intended missile, will detonate when desired, survive reentry, and arrive accurately at its target.”

As we’ve reported before, the “breakout time” — a term that refers to the time Iran would need, if it chose to do so, to produce weapons-grade uranium that could then be used for one bomb — had been about a week or so for at least the past few years. However, “‘breakout time’ is often misleading,” Sandifer said. “While the time it may have taken Iran to enrich enough weapons-grade uranium for a nuclear weapon may have once been a matter of weeks, that is only one piece of the puzzle. After this point, once you have the weapons-grade uranium, Iran would then need to manufacture the rest of the weapon. This process would likely take much longer, perhaps months to a year.”

She said that estimating this time is difficult, since the IAEA hasn’t been able to assess Iran’s operations since the June 2025 airstrikes. “Regardless, the damage to Iran’s nuclear weapons program, however severe, likely lengthened any ‘breakout time’ whether it relates to Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium or the manufacturing of a nuclear weapon.”

Kimball said that last year’s bombings “severely damaged Iran’s major uranium enrichment facilities, but not its resolve to retain a nuclear program or its nuclear know-how. Nor did the operation remove or help account for 400 kilograms of uranium enriched to 60 percent U-235 that Iran already had stockpiled, and that the IAEA reported this week is buried [at] Iran’s nuclear complex near Isfahan.”

To be weapons-grade, the uranium would need to be enriched to 90%. Isfahan is one of the sites hit in the June strikes, but, again, the IAEA hasn’t had access to the site in order to account for the 60% enriched material.

As for Trump’s statement that Iran “attempted to rebuild their nuclear program” after last year’s airstrikes, Kimball and Sandifer said there wasn’t evidence of that. “There is no evidence from the IAEA, from independent analysis of commercial satellite imagery, nor any evidence presented to Congress from the U.S. intelligence Community that Iran was rebuilding the damaged nuclear facilities and preparing to restart enrichment operations,” Kimball said.

Sandifer said that satellite images in January “showed repair activity at two of the Iranian nuclear sites bombed in June of 2025, the Natanz and Isfahan facilities. However, there is a lack of evidence that Iran had taken steps toward rebuilding its nuclear program beyond these repairs. Some experts believe that this activity was not a sign of reconstruction but an assessment of the damage to key assets.”

Other experts similarly have said there’s not evidence of Iran restarting a nuclear enrichment program. “There’s a general conclusion today that there’s a de facto suspension of enrichment,” Robert Einhorn, a senior fellow in the arms control and non-proliferation initiative at the Brookings Institution think tank and a former State Department official during the Obama administration, told the Wall Street Journal. “There’s no enrichment taking place.”

Before the June 2025 bombings, a May 31, 2025, report from the IAEA said it “has no credible indications of an ongoing, undeclared structured nuclear programme” to develop nuclear weapons in Iran, and it noted high officials in the country have said that using nuclear weapons was “incompatible with Islamic Law.” But the IAEA said it had concerns about “repeated statements by former high-level officials in Iran related to Iran having all capabilities to manufacture nuclear weapons.”

The agency said, “[T]he fact that Iran is the only non-nuclear-weapon State in the world that is producing and accumulating uranium enriched to 60% remains a matter of serious concern, which has drawn international attention given the potential proliferation implications.”

In Trump’s Feb. 28 remarks, he spoke generally of “eliminating imminent threats from the Iranian regime.”

Kimball told us that “[w]hile Iran’s nuclear program remains a medium- to long-term proliferation risk, there was and is no imminent Iranian nuclear threat; Iran is not close to ‘weaponizing’ its nuclear material so as to justify breaking off negotiations and launching the U.S.-Israeli attack.”

Speaking in the White House on March 3, Trump said of the U.S. military strikes: “If we didn’t do what we’re doing right now, you would have had a nuclear war, and they [Iran] would have taken out many countries.”

Missiles Capable of Reaching U.S.?

In his State of the Union address on Feb. 24, Trump said Iran was “working to build missiles that will soon reach the United States of America.”

While “soon” is a subjective term, experts say the threat of Iran developing an intercontinental ballistic missile capable of reaching the mainland of the United States was not particularly imminent. One expert put the time frame at several years, while others have said it would take Iran a decade or more to develop a functioning ICBM.

“Iran’s missile arsenal remains one of the pillars of its security strategy,” Sandifer, of the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation, told us. “However, there is little evidence that Iran could build missiles that reach the United States in the near future. Recent estimates determined that not only does Iran have no intercontinental ballistic missile capability, but the country appears to have maintained its self-imposed missile range limit of 2,000 km.”

Rosemary Kelanic, director of the Middle East program at Defense Priorities, a Washington-based think tank advocating restraint in U.S. foreign policy, said Iran currently lacks the technological ability to build an effective ICBM.

“If you’re building an ICBM, there’s lots of technical details behind it, but broadly speaking, you’ve got to be able to shoot something out of the atmosphere into low Earth orbit,” Kelanic told us in a phone interview. “Then you need to be able to have it reenter the atmosphere and not burn up on reentry, which is a different level of technological difficulty. There’s no evidence Iran can do that yet. And then you also have to be able to put a warhead on it … and the added difficulty that you need to miniaturize the warhead, to put it on a missile that would be capable of shooting that far out of the atmosphere and then coming back in and not burning up on reentry. Then you also have to do guidance systems to make sure it lands in the right place. And there’s no evidence that Iran can do that either.”

In addition to the State of the Union speech, Trump has on two other occasions this past week said that Iran is developing long-range missiles that could “soon” reach the U.S.

A day after the State of the Union address, Secretary of State Marco Rubio was more circumspect when a reporter asked how far away Iran was from achieving the development of missiles that could reach the U.S.

“I won’t speculate as to how far away they are, but they are certainly trying to achieve – and this is not new — they are trying to achieve intercontinental ballistic missiles,” Rubio said. “For example, you’ve seen them try to launch satellites into space. You’ve seen them increasing the range of the missiles they have now, and clearly they are headed in the pathway to one day being able to develop weapons that could reach the continental U.S. They already possess weapons that could reach much of Europe — already now, as we speak. And the ranges continue to grow every single year exponentially, which is amazing to me. For a country that’s facing sanctions, whose economy’s in tatters, whose people are suffering – and somehow they still find the money to invest in missiles of greater and greater capacity every year. This is an unsustainable threat.”

Several Democrats pushed back on the idea that Iran would “soon” be able to reach the continental U.S. with missiles.

“There was no way that any Iranian ballistic missile can hit the U.S. mainland,” Democratic Sen. Ruben Gallego said on CNN on March 1. “That is just entirely false.”

“All of the intelligence I’ve seen in 13 years on the Armed Services and Foreign Relations Committees tell me there is no imminent threat from Iran that justifies sending our sons and daughters into war,” Democratic Sen. Tim Kaine said on Fox News. “The missile issue is important. The intelligence suggests that Iran might have missiles that could reach the United States within a decade. There was nothing imminent about this.”

Kaine was referring to a Defense Intelligence Agency report released last May that stated, “Iran has space launch vehicles it could use to develop a militarily-viable ICBM by 2035 should Tehran decide to pursue the capability.” The report, which assessed missile threats that might be faced by a Trump-proposed “Golden Dome” missile defense shield, projected Iran could have 60 ICBMs by 2035.

“So basically, the U.S. intelligence agencies have said that Iran would need 10 years to build ICBMs capable of hitting the United States militarily if they chose to do so,” Kelanic said. “And it did not necessarily say that there was evidence that Iran had chosen to do so. … To me, that doesn’t register as soon.”

“Concern about the development of long-range missiles by Iran is not anything new,” Kimball of the Arms Control Association told us in an email. “The United States is 10,000 km away from Iran. The longest range of a deployed Iranian ballistic missile is 2000 km.”

Kimball noted that the 10-year window has been the intelligence estimate for nearly three decades now.

“A 1999 U.S. National Intelligence estimate predicted that the United States would probably face an ICBM threat from Iran by 2015. It is now 2026,” Kimball said.

Kimball said that the 2025 DIA assessment not only forecast it would take a decade for Iran to develop a ballistic missile capable of hitting the U.S., but that “Iran would need to make a determined push to achieve those capabilities on that timeline,” he said. “A decade or more is not ‘soon.’” 

In several posts on X on Feb. 25, however, Jeffrey Lewis, an expert on global security at Middlebury College, warned that many were misreading the context of the Defense Intelligence Agency report.

“The question wasn’t ‘When will Iran have an ICBM’, it was ‘What will the threat environment look like in 2035 when Golden Dome is to be fully operational,'” Lewis wrote. “In other words, it isn’t ‘How soon can my friend have a baby?’ Instead, the question is ‘In 2035, how many children will my friend have?’ It’s easy to say your friend could have a child within ten years and that you expect she might have three.”

A March 2 article in the Wall Street Journal reported that Lewis “said that even if Tehran wanted to pursue building the weapons, it would likely take two to three years at least to build a single missile based on the history of how other nations developed similar missiles.”

“US officials have been saying since the late 1990s that Iran is a little over a decade away from developing an ICBM and is pursuing that capability,” the Federation of American Scientists’ Johns told us. “However, building an ICBM capable of accurately striking the US mainland would require overcoming substantial technical hurdles with propulsion, guidance, and reentry, among other things. And there is little evidence to indicate that Iran has this capacity or intends to pursue it. Given the lack of publicly available and verifiable information, the DIA’s assessment and the statements by the administration are difficult to evaluate, especially regarding what timeline Iran could develop and deploy these longer-range missiles. It is also worth noting that parts of Eastern Europe have technically been within range of Iranian missiles for years.”

In an interview with India Today TV released on Feb. 25, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi denied that Iran was developing ICBMs, Reuters reported.

“We are not developing long range missiles. We have limited range to below 2000 kilometers intentionally,” he said. “We don’t want it to be a global threat. We only have (them) to defend ourselves. Our missiles build deterrence.”

On March 2, Rubio spoke about destroying Iran’s short-range ballistic missiles as the objective of the U.S. military operation. “This operation needed to happen because Iran, in about a year or a year and a half, would cross the line of immunity, meaning they would have so many short-range missiles, so many drones, that no one could do anything about it, because they could hold the whole world hostage,” he said. 


Editor’s note: FactCheck.org does not accept advertising. We rely on grants and individual donations from people like you. Please consider a donation. Credit card donations may be made through our “Donate” page. If you prefer to give by check, send to: FactCheck.org, Annenberg Public Policy Center, P.O. Box 58100, Philadelphia, PA 19102. 

The post Assessing Trump’s Claims on Iran’s Nuclear and Missile Capabilities appeared first on FactCheck.org.

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-03 18:06

COLUMBUS, Ohio, March 3, 2026 — Vertiv, a global leader in critical digital infrastructure, today announced the expansion of the Vertiv PowerBar Track busway family with the introduction of a compact, high-capacity double-stack design that enables higher power density while optimizing valuable white-space.

The Vertiv PowerBar Track double-stack design supports higher capacity and can scale vertically, optimizing white space. Credit: Vertiv Group Corp.

Designed to address rapidly evolving AI workloads within colocation and hyperscale data centers, the scalable system delivers high-capacity power distribution through a flexible, modular architecture that supports future growth, enables improved energy efficiency, and provides simplified deployment. The solution is designed to meet rigorous global safety and performance standards, with configurations of up to 2000A under UL standard 857, and up to 2500A for IEC 61439-6 with variants in copper and aluminum conductors.

The Vertiv PowerBar Track enables safe, continuous power delivery and live configuration changes without system downtime. Its open-track architecture allows operators to install or relocate tap-off boxes anywhere along the busway while maintaining active load distribution. Each connection point includes built-in mechanical and electrical interlocks for operator safety, and optional integrated metering provides real-time visibility of power usage for improved capacity planning and energy management. The double stack configuration supports higher capacity and more connections per tap-off box and can also scale vertically to efficiently serve high density environments.

“Power distribution must keep pace with the scale and density of modern AI and high-performance computing environments,” said Kyle Keeper, senior vice president of the power business unit at Vertiv. “As customers navigate increasing power demands, tighter space constraints, and rapidly evolving infrastructure requirements, they need solutions that provide flexibility. Vertiv PowerBar Track double stack is designed to address these challenges by enabling compact yet scalable expansion, supporting live changes, and delivering the reliability required in mission-critical data center environments.”

The busway system integrates seamlessly with the broader Vertiv end-to-end power train, including Vertiv PowerBoard switchgear, uninterruptible power supply (UPS) systems, and racks, forming a complete and coordinated infrastructure for high-density applications. Supported by Vertiv’s global manufacturing and service network, Vertiv PowerBar Track can be configured to aid maintenance, helping reduce maintenance-related downtime while enabling faster deployment and greater adaptability for data centers undergoing rapid expansion. Vertiv PowerBar Track also contributes to the Vertiv 360AI power ecosystem, which combines power distribution, protection, and management technologies designed to support the next generation of AI-ready digital infrastructure.

Vertiv PowerBar Track integrates with Vertiv OneCore, a scalable prefabricated data center infrastructure solution, and Vertiv SmartRun, a modular overhead IT infrastructure system, enabling a cohesive approach to modular, scalable data center design.

For more information about Vertiv PowerBar Track and Vertiv’s end-to-end power and thermal management solutions, visit Vertiv.com.

About Vertiv

Vertiv (NYSE: VRT) (NYSE: VRT) brings together hardware, software, analytics and ongoing services to enable its customers’ vital applications to run continuously, perform optimally and grow with their business needs. Vertiv solves the most important challenges facing today’s data centers, communication networks and commercial and industrial facilities with a portfolio of power, cooling and IT infrastructure solutions and services that extends from the cloud to the edge of the network. Headquartered in Westerville, Ohio, USA, Vertiv does business in more than 130 countries. For more information, and for the latest news and content from Vertiv, visit Vertiv.com.


Source: Vertiv

The post Vertiv Introduces Double-Stack Busway System for High-Density AI Data Centers appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 18:02

A new iPad Air has made the decision a little more complicated.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 18:00

Google is accelerating Chrome's major release cadence from four weeks to two starting with version 153 on September 8th. "...our goal is to ensure developers and users have immediate access to the latest performance improvements, fixes and new capabilities," says Google. "Building on our history of adapting our release process to match the demands of a modern web, Chrome is moving to a two-week release cycle." The company says the "smaller scope" of these releases "minimizes disruption and simplifies post-release debugging." They also cite "recent process enhancements" that will "maintain [Chrome's] high standards for stability." 9to5Google reports: There will still be weekly security updates between milestones. This applies to desktop, Android, and iOS, while there are "no changes to the Dev and the Canary channels": "A Chrome Beta for each version will ship three weeks before the stable release. We recommend developers test with the beta to keep up to date with any upcoming changes that might impact your sites and applications." The eight-week Extended Stable release schedule for enterprise customers and Chromium embedders will not change. Chromebooks will also have "extended release options": "Our priority is a seamless experience, so the latest Chrome releases will roll out to Chromebooks after dedicated platform testing. We are adapting these channels for the new two-week browser cycle and we will share more details soon regarding milestone updates for managed devices."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-03 17:54

Update: On March 4, 2026, the Senate rejected a war powers resolution, by a 47-53 vote, that sought to force President Trump to get consent from Congress for military actions against Iran.

The recent military actions in Iran by Israel and the United States has reignited a simmering constitutional debate: the ability of the president to use military force without prior congressional approval.

On Feb. 28, 2026, the joint attacks by Israel and the United States forces were met with counterattacks by Iran on other Middle East nations, as well as Israeli and American assets. Israeli and United States forces also killed Iran’s Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and other Iranian leaders.

Almost immediately, some members of Congress claimed President Donald Trump’s actions violated the Constitution’s Article I, Section 8, Clause 11, which grants the power to “declare War’ to Congress, and a congressional act from 1973, the War Powers Resolution.

“Trump’s military attack on Iran is illegal and unconstitutional. It was not approved by Congress and holds dangers for all Americans,” said Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) in a statement that echoes other critics’ comments. House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) responded by calling these critiques of presidential power a “frightening prospect.”

As recently as early January 2026, the same debate was ongoing after United States military forces captured Venezuela’s president, Nicolas Maduro, and his wife, Cilia Flores, in Caracas, and removed them to the United States to stand trial on narco-terrorism, cocaine-importation, and weapons charges.

The Declare War Clause: Text and History

The Founding generation looked to divide the responsibility of declaring and conducting war between Congress and the president. Congress’s power to authorize military actions is rooted in the Constitution’s Declare War Clause. The clause is among the enumerated, or listed, powers granted to Congress by the Constitution in Article I, Section 8. The president’s commander in chief powers emanate from Article II, Section 2, which states, “The President shall be Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy of the United States, and of the Militia of the several States, when called into the actual Service of the United States.”

Beginning in the early republic, presidents have used military force in smaller actions without explicit congressional approval, including forays into West Florida, Mexico, and the Caribbean. However, many presidents still sought congressional authorization for the use of military force. President Thomas Jefferson took action against pirates in the First Barbary War, starting in 1801, with congressional approval by statute. During the Second Barbary War in 1815, Commodore Stephen Decatur attacked Algiers under powers authorized by Congress. And, with the War of 1812, Congress issued a formal declaration of war against Great Britain. In 1846, Congress similarly declared war against Mexico.

Congress and the War Powers Resolution

Congress has not approved a formal declaration of war since World War II. Since then, the use of American forces in overseas combat took a different turn. In Korea, President Harry Truman claimed he was taking part in a United Nation’s police action that did not need congressional approval. He also argued that Congress had implicitly approved of his actions by continuing to fund the military. However,  some congressional leaders such as Sen. Robert Taft objected, claiming Truman was declaring “a de facto war . . . without consulting Congress and without congressional approval.” Truman’s State Department cited more than 80 past incidents of presidents deploying forces overseas without express congressional authorization. The Korean conflict went on without explicit congressional approval.

The Vietnam conflict was also not a declared war, but Congress approved a joint resolution requested by President Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964 after the Gulf of Tonkin incident—the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution. The fallout from the Vietnam War and ongoing conflicts between President Richard Nixon and Congress led Congress to enact the War Powers Resolution (1973) over President Nixon's veto. (President Nixon argued that the War Powers Resolution was both unconstitutional and unwise.)

The War Powers Resolution required that, in the absence of the authorization for the use of military force by Congress, a president must report to Congress within 48 hours after introducing military forces into hostilities and must end the use of such forces within 60 days unless Congress permits otherwise. The War Powers Resolution also requires the president “in every possible instance” to consult with Congress before introducing the military into imminent hostilities. It also gives Congress the ability to terminate the use of force used in unauthorized hostilities at any time by concurrent resolution of the House and Senate. (These resolution powers were later modified by a Supreme Court decision in 1983.)

Actions taken after the War Powers Resolution was passed

Since 1973, presidents have dealt with the War Powers Resolution in several ways. In 1993, President Bill Clinton ordered U.S. military forces to take part in NATO activities in Bosnia, including the use of air strikes. In 2011, President Barack Obama authorized U.S. military operations in Libya including air strikes, stating the actions were not “hostilities” under the language of the War Powers Resolution that required formal approval from Congress. But in 2013, Obama asked Congress to approve intervention in the Syrian civil war; Congress then declined to act. In 2018, President Trump ordered airstrikes in Syria and, in 2020, an airstrike in Iraq that killed General Qasem Soleimani, the leader of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards. Trump cited an authorization for the use of military force (AUMF) issued 2002 during Bush administration within the purview of his Commander in Chief authority.

In 2021, President Joe Biden cited the AUMF of 2002 and his Article II powers in taking military actions against Iran-backed militant groups in Iraq, Syria, and Yemen. In June 2025, the United States attacked nuclear facilities in Iran during that nation’s conflict with Israel. President Trump submitted a War Powers Resolution report to Congress. After the capture of Maduro, Trump also filed a report as required to Senate president pro tempore Charles Grassley. In the above cases, there were stated objections from members of Congress and others to the presidential use of war powers without congressional consultation and approval.

The current debate in Congress

According to media reports, President Trump has filed a 48-hour report with the Senate about the latest military actions in Iran. He also has stated publicly that military actions in the conflict could last for some time.

So far in Trump’s second term, Congress has failed to advance a resolution in response to the president’s actions in this context. On Jan. 14, 2026, the Senate failed to approve a proposed joint resolution related to the situation in Venezuela by one vote. A similar vote failed last June related to Iran. Currently, a resolution about Iran sponsored by Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) and Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) is up for consideration.

While the gravity and scope of the Iran attacks could lead to the resolution narrowly passing the House and the Senate, it is subject to a veto by President Trump. In that case, the Senate and the House would need two-thirds majorities to override the veto under Article I, Section 7, of the Constitution. Congress did approve a resolution in May 2020 limiting Trump’s ability to act against Iran without congressional consent a U.S. drone strike killed Qasem Soleimani, head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Quds Force. The Senate failed to override the veto in a 49-44 vote.

The basic constitutional debate about the War Powers Resolution is unlikely to fade away. In 1973, President Nixon said in his veto message a constitutional amendment was needed to resolve the matter. Still others are convinced the resolution is fully within the powers of Congress.

One person who offered an early view in 1975 was a young assistant attorney general, Antonin Scalia, who wrote a opinion for Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel about President Gerald Ford’s powers under the resolution to evacuate Americans from Vietnam. Scalia believed the resolution “was intended only as an expression of Congress’ interpretation of the Constitution.”

So far, the Supreme Court has not considered the matter, but its ruling in INS v. Chada (1983) extended the president’s veto power to current resolutions of Congress such as war powers resolutions. The Court found that concurrent resolutions that approved or disapproved of presidential action were unconstitutional because at the time they did not require their presentation to the president.

Scott Bomboy is the editor in chief of the National Constitution Center.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 17:47

Mark Zuckerberg's company begins a partial rollout of its agentic AI shopping research tool.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 17:45

Homeland security secretary was grilled in Senate hearing over immigration enforcement crackdown in Twin Cities

The secretary of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), Kristi Noem, on Tuesday would not retract her statements calling the two US citizens who were killed by immigration enforcement officers in Minneapolis earlier this year “domestic terrorists”, while also claiming that agents do not abide by quotas for arrests.

Appearing before Congress for the first time since the killings, Noem evaded a question by the Senate judiciary committee’s ranking member, Dick Durbin, a Democrat from Illinois, about whether she would take back the false accusations about Renee Good and Alex Pretti.

Continue reading...

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 17:36

For at least a decade, President Donald Trump has denounced U.S. efforts to change the regimes of foreign countries around the world. 

But in February, when a reporter asked Trump if he wanted regime change in Iran, the president pivoted: "Well, it seems like that would be the best thing that could happen."

Two weeks later, on Feb. 28, the U.S. joined Israel to attack Iran, and Trump called on Iranians to overthrow their government. It came about two months after the U.S. captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro by force.

For some of the president's critics, Trump’s comments reveal he reversed his longtime position against regime change. In 2019, for example, he said during a campaign rally in Mississippi that "our policy of never-ending war, regime change, and nation-building is being replaced by the clear-eyed pursuit of American interests."

PolitiFact uses a Flip-O-Meter to measure politicians’ consistency on issues. The rating is not a value judgment. Some people say changing positions shows inconsistent principles; others say it shows pragmatism and willingness to compromise given new information.

When we asked the White House about Trump’s position on regime change, a spokesperson referred us to Trump’s outline of his goals for Iran, including destroying Iran’s missile capabilities, annihilating its navy and preventing it from obtaining a nuclear weapon.

In 2016 Trump campaigned against regime change

During his 2016 presidential campaign, Trump repeatedly criticized his campaign rival, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and then-President Barack Obama for pursuing regime change. Trump called the Democrats’ strategy a "disaster." 

"We must abandon the failed policy of nation-building and regime change that Hillary Clinton pushed in Iraq, in Libya, in Egypt and in Syria," Trump said during the 2016 Republican convention.

That September, he vowed to avoid pursuing foreign regime change.

"We're going to stop the reckless and costly policy of regime change overseas, and instead, focus on working in partnership with our allies or a military campaign to utterly destroy ISIS," Trump said in a Florida speech, less than two months before winning the election.

Trump said he opposed regime change during his first term

In 2018, Trump withdrew from the Iran nuclear deal that Obama had struck with Iran and five other nations in which Iran agreed not to pursue nuclear weapons and allow monitoring of its compliance.

The next year, he said he wanted to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons but did not call for a change in the country’s leadership.

"We're not looking for regime change," Trump said in May 2019. "I just want to make that clear. We're looking for no nuclear weapons."

He continued to criticize his predecessors, saying that previous administrations’ "lust for regime change."

"We're not looking for regime change," Trump said in August 2019 while speaking about Iran. "You've seen how that works over the last 20 years."

In November 2019, Trump told the crowd in Mississippi his administration was focused on domestic policy.

"After years of building up foreign nations, we are finally building up our nation," Trump said in the speech, which his critics recently circulated online. "We are finally putting America first. Our policy of never-ending war, regime change, and nation-building is being replaced by the clear-eyed pursuit of American interests."

After the U.S. killed Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani in January 2020, Trump still publicly disavowed regime change

"We do not seek regime change," he said. "However, the Iranian regime's aggression in the region, including the use of proxy fighters to destabilize its neighbors, must end, and it must end now."

During the 2020 campaign, Trump did not speak about "regime change" as much as he did in 2016.

Trump continued to oppose regime change in his 2024 campaign, saying he didn’t want "senseless wars."

Trump said regime change could lead to chaos in 2025

Trump floated the idea of supporting regime change in June 2025, after the U.S. struck three nuclear sites in Iran. Trump wrote on Truth Social: "It's not politically correct to use the term, 'Regime Change,' but if the current Iranian Regime is unable to MAKE IRAN GREAT AGAIN, why wouldn't there be a Regime change??? MIGA!!!"

But then he walked it back. A couple days later, a reporter asked him if he wanted regime change in Iran.

"Well, if there was, there was, but no, I don't want it," Trump said. "I'd like to see everything calm down as quickly as possible. Regime change takes chaos and, ideally, we don't want to see so much chaos."

2026: Trump administration, allies offer conflicting remarks on regime change

After the Feb. 28 strikes on Iran, Trump and his allies stated different takes on whether regime change was a goal of Operation Epic Fury.

The military operation against Iran killed the country’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei along with dozens of other officials, and struck 1,000 targets in the first 24 hours, U.S. military officials said. Iran launched retaliatory strikes on U.S. embassies and several Arab states.

In his first remarks after the attack, Trump addressed the people of Iran: "When we are finished, take over your government. It will be yours to take. This will be probably your only chance for generations."

Trump told The New York Times on March 1 that one option was an outcome similar to Venezuela, in which only the top leader was removed but much of the rest of the government remained in place and was willing to work with the U.S. He told the Times that he had "three very good choices" about who could lead Iran. On the evening of March 1, Trump told ABC News that the possible candidates he had in mind were killed in the attack.

But he also described a scenario in which the Iranian people would overthrow the government, the opposite of the Venezuela model. "That’s going to be up to them about whether or not they do," Trump said.

U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said March 2, "This is not a so-called regime change war, but the regime sure did change and the world is better off for it."

That same day, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the U.S. operation’s objective was to block Iran’s weapons access. Yet he also called for new leadership.

"We would love to see this regime be replaced," Rubio said, adding that Trump "would love for the people of Iran to use this as an opportunity to rise up and remove these leaders." 

Our ruling

Trump has changed his rhetoric about U.S. involvement in foreign regime change.

In 2016 while campaigning, Trump called for abandoning what he said was a failed policy of regime change.

During his first term, Trump repeatedly said that he sought to prevent a nuclear Iran but did not seek regime change. In 2024, he said it was not the role of the U.S. military "to wage endless regime change, wars."

After the U.S. struck nuclear sites in 2025, Trump floated the idea of Iran regime change in a Truth Social post but when asked about it he took a dim view saying regime change creates chaos.

After the U.S. and Israel attacked Iran Feb. 28 and killed Iran’s top leaders, Trump told the people of Iran to take over their government. But in other remarks, he said objectives included dismantling Iran’s weapon capabilities and did not mention regime change.

Trump has been inconsistent on regime change, and overall he has shifted from being critical of the idea for years to describing it as a possibility to following through by removing Iran’s leadership and calling on its people to overthrow their government.

We rate this a Full Flop.

RELATED: Could Iran ‘soon’ hit US with long-range missile? Experts doubt Trump as US bombs Iran.

RELATED: US attacks in Iran prompt renewed push in Congress over war powers

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 17:34
  • Player showed glimpses of genius but was uneven

  • 28-year-old played in playoffs once with Arizona

The Arizona Cardinals have informed former No 1 overall pick Kyler Murray that they plan to release him at the beginning of the new league year on 11 March, a person familiar with the decision told the Associated Press.

The quarterback, who is owed $36.8m in guaranteed money in 2026, will be free to sign with another team once he’s released.

Continue reading...

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-03 17:29

Push to give English same status as Māori and NZ sign languages triggers backlash from opposition parties and linguistic experts

A bill to recognise English as an official language of New Zealand has cleared its first hurdle in parliament amid ridicule from opposition parties and linguists who say it is “unnecessary” and “cynical”.

The bill seeks to give English, which is spoken by 95% of the country, the same official status as te reo Māori (Māori language) and New Zealand sign language. The bill said the status and use of the existing official languages would not be affected.

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2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 17:23

Check out our favorite Windows laptops and MacBooks for work, tested and reviewed by CNET's laptop experts.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 17:19

From inexpensive Windows models to affordable MacBooks and even a cheap Copilot Plus PC, these are my favorite low-cost, high-value laptops that I've tested and reviewed.

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-03 17:17

HAMBURG, Germany, March 3, 2026 – ISC High Performance is pleased to announce that Amanda Randles, a pioneer in extreme-scale biomedical simulation, will return to ISC 2026 as the Midweek Keynote speaker on June 24. The keynote continues ISC’s tradition of spotlighting visionary leaders whose work expands the boundaries of scalable computing and its real-world applications.

Amanda Randles

Randles, the Alfred Winborne Mordecai and Victoria Stover Mordecai Associate Professor at Duke University, gained widespread recognition at ISC as the recipient of the Jack Dongarra Early-Career Award in 2024. After serving as the ISC Research Paper program chair last year, she returns to demonstrate how HPC is moving medicine from reactive treatment to a new era of proactive, patient-specific care in a keynote titled “HPC for Vascular Digital Twins.”

Over the last few years, Randles’ work has become synonymous with extreme-scale biomedical simulation. In her keynote address, she will demonstrate how HPC enables the creation of patient-specific vascular digital twins. These models integrate medical imaging, physiological data, and large-scale blood flow simulations into dynamic, high-fidelity representations of the human circulatory system.

In her abstract, Randles explains that this technology could reshape healthcare by moving beyond “snapshot” analyses. Unlike static models, vascular digital twins capture the dynamic nature of physiology. This requires sustained simulation across thousands to millions of cardiac cycles, the management of massive multimodal datasets, and rapid analysis needed for clinical work.

Randles will discuss how GPU-accelerated supercomputing and extreme-scale parallelism make this kind of modeling feasible.

Her talk will further explore the convergence of:

  • Wearable Sensors: Coupling continuous data streams with large-scale twins.
  • Immersive Visualization: Using advanced interfaces to support early detection and risk assessment.
  • Multiscale Simulation: Advancing models for diseases ranging from cardiovascular conditions to cancer.

About Amanda Randles

Amanda Randles is the Director of the Duke Center for Computational and Digital Health Innovation. Her research integrates HPC, machine learning, and biophysical simulation to advance patient-specific care. Her contributions have been recognized with numerous distinctions, including the ACM Prize in Computing, the NIH Pioneer Award, NSF Career Award and the ACM Grace Hopper Award. Prior to her academic career, she worked as a software engineer at IBM on the Blue Gene supercomputing team.

Randles received her Ph.D. in Applied Physics from Harvard University, an M.S. in Computer Science from Harvard, and a B.A. in Computer Science and Physics from Duke. Prior to graduate school, she worked as a software engineer at IBM on the Blue Gene supercomputing team.

Join ISC High Performance 2026 in #ConnectingTheDots

ISC 2026 returns to the Congress Center Hamburg from June 22 – 26 for its 41st edition. Since its inception in 1986, it has been recognized as the world’s oldest and Europe’s most attended event for the HPC community, and increasingly for AI and quantum professionals interested in performance, energy efficiency, and cost-effectiveness.

More from HPCwire


Source: ISC

The post ISC 2026: Amanda Randles to Deliver Keynote on HPC for Vascular Digital Twins appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 17:14

Fifteen months have passed since our last Guix/Hurd on a Thinkpad X60 post and a lot has happened with respect to the Hurd.

And most of you will have guessed, unless you skipped the title of this post, the rumored x86_64 support has landed in Guix!

↫ Janneke Nieuwenhuizen and Yelninei at the Guix blog

A huge amount of work has gone into this effort over the past 18 months, but you can now download Guix and alongside the Linux kernel, you can now opt for the Hurd as well, in eother 32bit or 64 bit flavour. Do note that while Debian GNU/Hurd offers about 75% of Debian packages, Guix/Hurd only offers about 1.7% (32-bit) and 0.9% (64-bit) of packages for now. These percentages are always growing, of course, and now that Guix/Hurd can be installed in virtual machines and even on bare metal relatively easily like this, things might speed up a bit.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 17:06

CEO cited AI advances in cutting 4,000 workers, but a weak crypto market and declining stock price may also be at play

Jack Dorsey cited AI as the driving force behind cutting 40% of his company’s employees, but other factors such as a weak crypto market, overstaffing and a declining stock price may also have motivated the move.

Last week, the financial technology company Block announced that it would lay off 4,000 of its 10,000 workers. Dorsey, Block’s CEO, said in a letter to shareholders that advances in AI “have changed what it means to build and run a company”.

Continue reading...

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-03 17:06

LONDON, March 3, 2026 — NTT DATA, a global leader in AI, digital business and technology services, announced that its Global Data Centers business has secured four substantial capacity commitments reaching nearly 115MW across campuses in Gainesville, Virginia; Chicago, Illinois; and Sacramento, California. Combined, these agreements highlight the growing demand from both hyperscale platforms and large enterprises for infrastructure engineered to support rapidly expanding digital and AI deployments.

The new commitments include a 90+MW deployment for a major hyperscale provider in addition to nearly 20MW contracted by three enterprise organizations. These agreements reflect the accelerating need for environments that can support high-density compute operations, evolving regulatory expectations, and scalable deployment models for AI and next‑generation workloads.

Organizations across financial services, cloud, gaming and cybersecurity sectors choose NTT Global Data Centers for its ability to meet next‑stage operational needs while providing built‑in pathways for future expansion:

  • A leading financial services institution chose NTT Global Data Centers for its compliance standards and adaptable cooling infrastructure, supporting a seamless shift to liquid cooling as AI requirements continue to develop.
  • A prominent gaming platform provider chose NTT Global Data Centers based on strategic proximity to cloud availability zones and the adaptability of its cooling architecture.
  • A leading cybersecurity firm expanded its relationship with NTT Global Data Centers, emphasizing rapid deployment timelines and straightforward scalability within an existing footprint.
  • A major hyperscale client committed to more than 90MW at the VA11 campus in Virginia, adopting an infrastructure approach that provides intentional flexibility for high-density and AI-driven workloads as their roadmap advances.

“These new commitments speak to the confidence that clients place in NTT Global Data Centers to support their most ambitious digital initiatives,” said Doug Adams, CEO and President, NTT Global Data Centers. “As compute requirements continue to accelerate, organizations are seeking infrastructure that can evolve at the same pace. Our ability to pair compliance, agility and future‑ready design is increasingly a decisive factor for customers looking to stay ahead of demand. These needs are not just limited to hyperscalers — enterprise organizations across every sector also require high‑performance platforms to serve their customers reliably.”

As one of the world’s largest data center providers, NTT Global Data Centers continues to scale its global platform to meet rising demand. Over the past year, the company launched ten new facilities across key regions in North America, EMEA and APAC, delivering more than 370MW of new IT capacity. These expansions support NTT’s multi‑year plan to invest over $10 billion by 2027 to deliver infrastructure capable of supporting dense AI workloads and the broader digital economy.

About NTT DATA

NTT DATA is a $30+ billion business and technology services leader, serving 75% of the Fortune Global 100. We are committed to accelerating client success and positively impacting society through responsible innovation. We are one of the world’s leading AI and digital infrastructure providers, with unmatched capabilities in enterprise-scale AI, cloud, security, connectivity, data centers and application services. Our consulting and industry solutions help organizations and society move confidently and sustainably into the digital future. As a Global Top Employer, we have experts in more than 70 countries. We also offer clients access to a robust ecosystem of innovation centers as well as established and start-up partners. NTT DATA is part of NTT Group, which invests over $3 billion each year in R&D.


Source: NTT DATA

The post NTT DATA Continues Data Center Momentum with Major Commitments from Hyperscale and Enterprise Clients appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-03 17:04

Many see the Iran conflict lasting at least months. A majority oppose it, and more say it makes the U.S. less safe.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 17:00

Nigel Farage’s recent efforts to woo centre-ground voters may cause tension in party’s right flank, says Hope Not Hate

More than half of Reform UK members believe non-white British citizens born abroad should be deported or encouraged to leave, according to the first publicly available poll of those in Nigel Farage’s party.

The findings come as the Reform leader attempts to court centre-ground voters while facing pressure from his right flank, including a hardline new party launched by Rupert Lowe, who left Reform after falling out with Farage.

Continue reading...

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 17:00

1,500 Exhibitors and 6,000 Booths Position the Show as a Global AI Benchmark — Visitor Pre-Registration Now Open

TAIPEI, Taiwan, March 3, 2026 — COMPUTEX 2026 will take place from June 2–5 in Taipei, spanning four venues — TaiNEX 1 & 2, TWTC Hall 1, and the Taipei International Convention Center (TICC). Stretching across Taipei’s Nangang and Xinyi districts—two interconnected innovation and business hubs—the exhibition forms one of the world’s largest multi-venue technology showcases dedicated to AI and next-generation computing.

COMPUTEX showcases a comprehensive range of exhibits spanning the AI supply chain, advanced communications, key components, and smart solutions, fully demonstrating the commercialization of AI technologies and emerging industry trends.

This year’s show reaches a new milestone, bringing together 1,500 exhibitors from around the globe across 6,000 booths. From semiconductor design and advanced computing infrastructure to robotics systems and real-world AI applications, COMPUTEX presents a vertically integrated technology ecosystem spanning R&D, manufacturing, and deployment. Visitor pre-registration is now open to industry professionals worldwide.

AI Together: Mapping the Global AI Value Chain

As a global benchmark for AI and startups, COMPUTEX 2026, themed “AI Together,” highlights three cores: AI & Computing, Robotics & Mobility, and Next-Gen Tech. The exhibition captures a pivotal phase of AI commercialization and infrastructure scaling, spanning the value chain from chip design and high-performance computing to smart infrastructure and industry applications.

Major international brands including ASUS, Acer, MSI, GIGABYTE, BenQ, and ASRock will showcase integrated AI systems and computing platforms. Global manufacturing leaders Foxconn, Compal, Pegatron, and Wiwynn will demonstrate system integration and scalable production capabilities that underpin worldwide AI deployment. Technology leaders including MediaTek, Intel, Vertiv Taiwan, and Delta will showcase end-to-end solutions — from AI processors and data centers to intelligent power and sustainable infrastructure — highlighting the convergence of performance, efficiency, and scalability in the next phase of AI growth.

Robotics and Smart Applications Take Center Stage

Responding to surging global demand for automation and intelligent systems, COMPUTEX 2026 introduces new highlight zones at TWTC Hall 1, including the Robotics Zone and the TechXperience Zone.

Participating companies such as Intel, YUAN, Texas Instruments, Solomon, and E Ink will present advancements in AI robotics, machine vision, embedded systems, and smart applications. These zones demonstrate how robotics is rapidly expanding beyond manufacturing into healthcare, logistics, retail, and everyday environments—signaling the next frontier of AI-driven productivity.

Meanwhile, InnoVEX will continue to connect global startups, venture capital firms, accelerators, and national pavilions. Recognized internationally as a gateway to Asian innovation markets, InnoVEX fosters cross-border collaboration and emerging technology commercialization.

Expanded COMPUTEX Keynote & Forum and Upgraded On-site Activities

Highly anticipated COMPUTEX Keynote and Forum will return with an expanded scale, connecting technology leaders across the AI supply chain—from upstream semiconductor innovators to downstream application developers. Discussions will focus on AI scalability, infrastructure readiness, sustainability challenges, and long-term market direction.

Co-organizer TAITRA will also integrate a wide range of resources to deliver diverse featured events, including sourcing meetings, guided tours, ESG Go sustainability initiatives, and startup pitch contest. Global media and technology influencers will be invited to Taiwan to amplify global engagement and industry dialogue.

COMPUTEX 2026 will demonstrate Taiwan’s strong R&D capabilities while connecting global enterprises, innovative startups, and professional buyers to create unlimited technology opportunities.

Visitor registration is now open: https://www.computexonline.com.tw/?userlang=en.

About COMPUTEX

COMPUTEX was founded in 1981. It has grown with the global ICT industry and become stronger over the last four decades. Bearing witness to historical moments in the development of and changes in the industry, COMPUTEX attracts more than 40,000 buyers to visit Taiwan every year. It is also the preferred platform chosen by top international companies for launching epoch-making products. Taiwan has a comprehensive global ICT industry chain. Gaining a foothold in Taiwan, COMPUTEX is jointly held by the Taiwan External Trade Development Council and Taipei Computer Association, aiming to build a global tech ecosystem. COMPUTEX has become a global benchmark exhibition for AI and startups, connecting global pioneers and enabling new sparks of breakthrough technology.


Source: COMPUTEX

The post COMPUTEX 2026 Brings the Global AI Ecosystem to Taipei appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 17:00

darwinmac writes: While many users choose Microsoft Office over LibreOffice because of its support for the proprietary formats (.docx, .xlsx, and .pptx), others prefer Office for its "better" ribbon interface. These users often criticize LibreOffice for having a "clunky" UI instead of the "standard" ribbon interface you would find in Word, Excel, and other Office apps. Now, Neowin reports that LibreOffice is fighting back, arguing that its UI is actually superior because it is customizable, with several modes such as the classic toolbar interface, an Office-inspired ribbon layout, a sidebar-focused design, and more. Furthermore, it argues that there is no evidence that the ribbon offers "superior usability" over other interface modes. LibreOffice says in a blog post: Incidentally, the characterization of ribbon-style interfaces as "modern" or "standard," used by several users, is not based on any objective usability parameter or design principle, but is the result of Microsoft's dominance in the market and the huge investments made when the ribbon was introduced in Office 2007 as a new paradigm for productivity software. The idea that "modern" equals "similar to a ribbon" is a normalization effect: the Microsoft interface has become a benchmark because of its ubiquity, not because of its proven advantages in terms of usability. Added to this is the fact that many users evaluate office software through the lens of familiarity with Microsoft Office and consider deviation from it as a problem rather than a design choice. Before this, LibreOffice had also criticized its competitor OnlyOffice, accusing it of being "fake open source" because it believes OnlyOffice is working with Microsoft to lock users into the Office ecosystem by prioritizing the formats mentioned earlier instead of LibreOffice's own OpenDocument Format (ODF).

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 16:59

We tested dozens of affordable phones, from he $114 Samsung Galaxy A03S to the $500 Google Pixel 8A and $700 OnePlus 13R. Here are the best cheap phones in 2026.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 16:58

SAN JOSE, Calif., March 3, 2026 — Ayar Labs today announced the closing of $500 million in Series E funding led by Neuberger Berman. The company will use the funds to scale high-volume production and test capacity to accelerate the deployment of its CPO solution. This brings the company’s total funding to $870 million and raises the company’s valuation to $3.75 billion.

“AI infrastructure is hitting a power wall driven by interconnect inefficiency. As bandwidth demands explode, copper becomes the bottleneck — consuming too much power and limiting AI throughput per watt and per dollar,” said Mark Wade, CEO and co-founder of Ayar Labs. “Co-packaged optics overcomes these barriers, enabling thousands of GPUs to operate as a unified system. This funding fuels our ability to meet the demands of hyperscale AI.”

The round aligns premier capital investors with industry leaders across the AI and semiconductor ecosystem, reinforcing the market’s support for Ayar Labs’ technology leadership and production-ready CPO solution for AI scale-up. New investors include Alchip Technologies, ARK Invest, Insight Partners, MediaTek, Qatar Investment Authority (QIA), Sequoia Global Equities, and 1789 Capital. They join existing financial institutions such as Advent Global Opportunities, Boardman Bay Capital Management, IAG Capital Partners, Light Street Capital, and Playground Global, and existing strategic investors, AMD Ventures, and NVIDIA.

“Today’s AI infrastructure buildout is one of the largest capital deployment opportunities of our generation, and data center interconnect has quickly emerged as the most critical bottleneck,” said Gabe Cahill, Managing Director, Neuberger Berman. “Ayar Labs’ execution against key customer milestones is driving strong market conviction in its technology leadership. We believe that both ongoing and new strategic investments from industry leaders in this round reinforce this momentum. With a production-ready scale-up co-packaged optics solution and deep ecosystem integration, we are excited to lead this round and help accelerate the paradigm shift taking place in AI infrastructure.”

Neuberger Berman will take a board observer role, bringing deep experience in scaling category-defining technology companies. In addition, the investment participation of MediaTek and Alchip Technologies further strengthens Ayar Labs’ alignment with key custom ASIC design ecosystem partners.

Ayar Labs will use the new funds to scale high-volume production and test capacity, expand global operations, including at its new Hsinchu, Taiwan, office, strengthen ecosystem partnerships, and accelerate the deployment of its CPO solution.

The company’s AI scale-up CPO solution unlocks AI performance and profitability by replacing bandwidth-limited copper interconnects with optical connectivity that provides the performance and efficiency gains required for next-generation AI infrastructure. At the heart of the solution is the TeraPHY optical engine, built on the standard form factor, manufacturing, and packaging flows used by major accelerator and switch vendors for seamless integration into existing customer designs.

About Ayar Labs

Ayar Labs is transforming AI infrastructure with the industry’s first proven co-packaged optics (CPO) solution manufactured in partnership with the world’s leading semiconductor ecosystem. By unlocking performance gains and reducing workload costs in a power-constrained environment, Ayar Labs’ TeraPHY optical engines are key to unleashing next-generation AI scale-up. Founded in 2015, Ayar Labs is funded by domestic and international venture capital firms, as well as strategic investors including AMD, Alchip Technologies, MediaTek, NVIDIA, and VentureTech Alliance. For more information, visit https://ayarlabs.com.


Source: Ayar Labs

The post Ayar Labs Closes $500M Series E, Accelerates Volume Production of Co-Packaged Optics appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 16:55

WASHINGTON, March 3, 2026 — The U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Office of Science today announced a $352 million funding opportunity for DOE’s Energy Frontier Research Centers (EFRC).

This funding will bring together world-class teams of scientists from universities, DOE National Laboratories, and other institutions to perform fundamental research in materials sciences, chemistry, geosciences, and biosciences. These efforts will lay the scientific foundation needed to accelerate breakthroughs in critical minerals, quantum computing, and advanced manufacturing to secure America’s technological leadership.

“For over 15 years, the EFRC program has provided a transformational research environment that has brought together the strengths of our National Laboratories and universities to accelerate discovery, develop innovative tools, and train the next generation of the American energy science workforce,” said DOE Under Secretary for Science Darío Gil. “The EFRCs will continue to play a vital role in bridging disciplines and institutions, advancing foundational science and strengthening America’s leadership to push forward scientific frontiers critical for new energy technologies.”

Since 2009, the EFRC program has supported 107 centers spanning more than 190 institutions in 43 states and Washington, D.C. and trained more than 6,200 students and postdoctoral researchers in energy-relevant team science. EFRC-supported research has resulted in over 17,000 peer-reviewed publications, 780 patent applications, 270 patents, and 135 companies that have benefited from EFRC-enabled innovations.

Applicants must propose basic research that addresses scientific challenges in one or more of the following topics:

  • Unconventional computing paradigms
  • Artificial intelligence and machine learning for materials and chemistry
  • Complex chemical systems
  • Critical minerals and materials
  • Nuclear energy science
  • Subsurface science
  • Electrical energy storage
  • Advanced manufacturing
  • Microelectronics
  • Quantum systems and quantum computing

Applications for new and renewing EFRCs are open to accredited U.S. colleges and universities, National Laboratories, nonprofit organizations, and private sector companies.

For more information about this funding opportunity and the EFRC program, please register for a webinar on March 9, 2026, at 1 PM ET. Register on Zoom.

The funding opportunity is sponsored by Basic Energy Sciences within the Department’s Office of Science and can be found on the BES funding opportunities website. Total planned funding is up to $352 million, with $88 million in Fiscal Year  2026  dollars  and  $264 million in outyear funding contingent on congressional appropriations.


Source: U.S. Dept. of Energy

The post DOE Announces $352M for EFRC to Accelerate Science Underpinning Energy Tech appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 16:54

Target will invest another $2 billion in its business this year to spruce up stores, remodel locations and invest in workers, the retailer said Tuesday as it outlined plans to try to reverse a persistent sales malaise and reclaim its footing in fashion and home categories.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 16:52

United said it could permanently ban travelers who refuse to wear headphones while listening to audio or video content on its flights.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 16:51

CAMBRIDGE, Mass., March 3, 2026 — Akamai has announced the acquisition of thousands of NVIDIA Blackwell GPUs to bolster its global distributed cloud infrastructure. The deployment creates a unified platform for AI R&D, fine-tuning, and post-training optimization that intelligently routes AI inference workloads to optimized compute resources across Akamai’s massive global network. The architecture is designed to support rapid inference by reducing the latency and data egress issues associated with centralized data centers.

While the first wave of AI focused on model training in centralized hubs, the industry has reached a tipping point where inference matters as much as training. The MIT Technology Review recently reported that 56 percent of organizations cite latency as the primary barrier preventing AI deployment at scale. By treating the globe as a single, low-latency backplane, Akamai is bridging this gap and providing the foundational infrastructure for physical and agentic AI where decisions must happen at the speed of the real world.

“While hyperscalers continue to push the boundaries of AI training, Akamai is focused on meeting the unique demands of the inference era,” said Adam Karon, Chief Operating Officer and General Manager, Cloud Technology Group, Akamai. “Centralized AI factories remain essential for building models, but bringing those models to life at scale requires a decentralized nervous system. By distributing inference-optimized compute across our global fabric, Akamai isn’t just adding capacity. We’re providing the scale, at minimal latency, that is required to move AI from the laboratory to the street corner and the hospital bed – where the work happens, where the data lives, and where the ROI is realized.”

Akamai’s adoption of Blackwell GPUs advances Akamai’s vision for a globally distributed AI compute grid built for the inference era. By extending AI processing beyond centralized AI factories to high-density distributed infrastructure, Akamai allows AI to interact with physical systems — from autonomous delivery and smart grids to surgical robotics and critical fraud prevention — without the geographic or cost limitations of traditional cloud architecture.

The integration of NVIDIA Blackwell AI infrastructure enables:

  • Predictable, High-Performance Inference: Processing AI workloads on dedicated GPU clusters to generate rapid responses.
  • Localized Fine-Tuning: Optimization of Large Language Models (LLMs) on-site to support data privacy and regional compliance needs.
  • Post-Model Training: Fine-tuning and adapting foundation models on proprietary data to improve accuracy for specific tasks.

This announcement follows Akamai’s recent initiatives to expand its AI inference and generalized compute capabilities. In October 2025, the company announced Akamai Inference Cloud, redefining where and how AI is used by bringing AI inference closer to users and devices.

By providing tools for platform engineers and developers to build and run AI applications and data-intensive workloads closer to end users, Akamai delivers highly efficient throughput while reducing latency up to 2.5x, saving businesses as much as 86% on AI inference using NVIDIA AI infrastructure when compared to traditional hyperscaler infrastructure.

The platform combines NVIDIA RTX PRO Servers, featuring NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Server Edition GPUs, and NVIDIA BlueField-3 DPUs with Akamai’s distributed cloud computing infrastructure and global edge network, which has over 4,400 locations worldwide.

Akamai has seen strong demand for its initial deployment of NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Server Edition GPUs, and will be continuing to add GPU capacity as part of its cloud infrastructure strategy.

About Akamai

Akamai (NASDAQ: AKAM) is the cybersecurity and cloud computing company that powers and protects business online. Our market-leading security solutions, superior threat intelligence, and global operations team provide defense in depth to safeguard enterprise data and applications everywhere. Akamai’s full-stack cloud computing solutions deliver performance and affordability on the world’s most distributed platform. Global enterprises trust Akamai to provide the industry-leading reliability, scale, and expertise they need to grow their business with confidence.


Source: Akamai

The post Akamai Adds Thousands of NVIDIA Blackwell GPUs to Power Distributed AI Platform appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 16:45
Dent in this part of the onewheel, not sure what replacement parts i may need

I noticed the dent after it got ran over by a car and since then the range has dropped considerably. I ran diagnostics with future motion support and it seems to look fine. So is it possible that this dent is what’s causing the range to drop?

submitted by /u/SuggestionAbject588
[link] [comments]

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 16:41

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 16:36

March 3, 2026 — Fujitsu and BCN Port Innovation Foundation today announced a new agreement between Fujitsu Spain and the BCN Port Innovation Foundation to develop a proof of concept (PoC) for an ocean digital twin at the Port of Barcelona. This pioneering initiative is aimed at the regeneration of the marine environment, the protection of biodiversity and the promotion of the blue economy.

Catalina Grimalt, CEO and President, BCN Port Foundation (left) and Ángeles Delgado, President of Fujitsu Technology Solutions S.A. (right) shaking hands after the signing ceremony to kick off the proof of concept.

The project is based on the use of underwater drones combined with artificial intelligence and advanced analytics, capable of capturing high-resolution representations of the seabed. Using this non-destructive sensing approach, the digital twin will make it possible to visualize and quantify biodiversity, calculate biomass based on vegetation cover, and estimate blue carbon associated with marine algae.

This project lays the foundations for the BCN Port Innovation Foundation to have a unified digital platform that centralizes all information on port biodiversity and enables its long-term monitoring.

With this initiative, Fujitsu reinforces its commitment to developing proprietary technology with social and environmental impact, aligned with climate neutrality goals and the protection of marine ecosystems, and consolidates its role as a technology partner in sustainable innovation projects in Spain.

Fujitsu and the BCN Port Innovation Foundation plan to carry out the proof of concept in the Port of Barcelona during 2026.

A New Approach to Measuring and Protecting Marine Biodiversity

Global marine ecosystems face a severe crisis due to global warming and ocean pollution. The EU is accelerating marine environmental conservation and restoration efforts, notably with the 2024 adoption of the Nature Restoration Law, which mandates marine ecosystem recovery.

By integrating AI-enabled underwater data capture with advanced analytics, the Ocean Digital Twin transforms how marine ecosystems are measured, understood, and utilized. Autonomous surface and underwater vehicles follow optimized survey routes with real-time stabilization control, enabling consistent and repeatable seabed data acquisition and generating high-quality data suitable for AI processing.

Machine learning models convert this data into quantitative environmental intelligence, estimating vegetation coverage, assessing habitat extent, and calculating blue carbon absorption. The technology also provides precise spatial data on seabed conditions, habitat distribution, and species types, creating a strong empirical foundation for the design and evaluation of conservation, restoration, and regeneration projects.

In addition, the system enables continuous monitoring of multiple plant species, making it possible to analyze ecosystem evolution over time and anticipate potential impacts resulting from both climate change and port activity.

Environmental Simulation and Data-Driven Decision-Making

The platform developed by Fujitsu enables the simulation of “what if” scenarios, helping pre-verification of environmental measures before they are implemented to prioritize investments based on their real impact. Thanks to the creation of a high-fidelity digital model, port authorities can identify priority areas for protection, as well as zones suitable for environmental restoration or rehabilitation.

This simulation capability makes the digital twin a key tool for balancing port activity with the preservation of the natural environment, facilitating the design of more sustainable infrastructure and operations. Following a successful PoC, Fujitsu and BCN Port Innovation Foundation can collaborate to add regeneration and preservation simulation scenarios to the project.

Blue Economy, Transparency and Social Engagement

Beyond environmental conservation, the project could open up new opportunities within the blue economy, facilitating the potential development of marine research initiatives, environmental education and scientific outreach activities.

Moreover, the visual and immersive nature of the digital twin enhances transparency and awareness, helping to bring knowledge of the marine environment closer to stakeholders and fostering greater understanding of the importance of protecting coastal ecosystems.

Ángeles Delgado, president of Fujitsu Spain and Portugal, points out: “This project demonstrates how technology can become a true ally of sustainability. The ocean digital twin allows us to transform complex data from the marine environment into actionable information to protect biodiversity, promote blue carbon initiatives, and make evidence-based decisions.”

About Fujitsu

Fujitsu’s purpose is to make the world more sustainable by building trust in society through innovation. As the digital transformation partner of choice for customers around the globe, our 113,000 employees work to resolve some of the greatest challenges facing humanity. Our range of services and solutions draw on five key technologies: AI, Computing, Networks, Data & Security, and Converging Technologies, which we bring together to deliver sustainability transformation. Fujitsu Limited (TSE:6702) reported consolidated revenues of 3.6 trillion yen (US$23 billion) for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2025 and remains the top digital services company in Japan by market share.


Source: Fujitsu

The post Fujitsu to Deploy Underwater Drones and AI for Ocean Digital Twin at Port of Barcelona appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 16:22

SAN JOSE, Calif., March 3, 2026 — Nutanix, a leader in hybrid multicloud computing, today announced the findings of its eighth annual Enterprise Cloud Index (ECI) survey and research report which measures global enterprise progress with cloud adoption. This year’s report looked closely at the challenges IT executives face as they navigate the rapid increase of AI use and need for application and infrastructure modernization in the enterprise.

The rapid rise of AI adoption in the enterprise over the last year is forcing a wave of infrastructure modernization, as companies race to build and run applications more efficiently. In fact, containers have become a core component of the enterprise application strategy with the survey showing that 85% of respondents report that AI is accelerating their adoption of containers to improve speed, reliability, and scalability.

“The findings indicate organizations need enterprise-grade security, resilience, and portability as AI workloads can run anywhere,” said Lee Caswell, SVP, Product and Solutions Marketing at Nutanix. “Organizations would also benefit from a common operating environment for virtual machines and containers that enables their IT leaders to scale AI confidently across hybrid environments.”

Key findings from this year’s report, based on survey responses, include:

  • Organizational silos create new AI risks: While AI adoption is driving innovation, it is also introducing operational challenges. Eighty-two percent of respondents believe silos between business units and IT make it difficult to effectively execute technology initiatives, slowing deployment timelines and increasing complexity.
  • Shadow IT is creating AI challenges: Seventy-nine percent of respondents encounter AI applications or agents being implemented by employees in non-IT functions. Eighty-seven percent believe unauthorized AI use introduces risk, including exposure of sensitive data and intellectual property. This highlights the need for closer collaboration between IT teams and business stakeholders to ensure AI deployments remain secure, compliant, and aligned with organizational goals.
  • Agents unlock enormous potential for organizations: A majority of IT executives (61%) expect AI agents to enhance customer or employee experiences. Fifty-eight percent also anticipate that AI agents will improve productivity and efficiency. Additionally, some believe that AI agents can play a deeper role with 57% seeing potential for AI agents to create new products, services, or revenue streams.
  • Data sovereignty is non-negotiable: For 80% of respondents, data sovereignty is a high priority when making infrastructure decisions including where to utilize containers. In fact, compliance obligations often drive organizations to keep data physically within the country where it was collected. More than half (57%) feel the need to run their infrastructure within a single country, whether on-premises or through a local cloud region, largely due to security or data protection concerns.
  • Containers are the foundation of modern applications, with AI as the key driver: Organizations are turning to containers to support AI-enabled workloads and modern application development. Eighty-seven percent of respondents expect the use of containers for applications to increase over the next three years, while 83% say they are already building new applications in containers. Further, 85% of respondents believe AI is accelerating container adoption which highlights why enterprises need to evolve their infrastructure strategies to handle containerized workloads.
  • The directive to deploy AI applications comes from the top, but infrastructure is not ready to fully support it: Fifty-nine percent of respondents anticipate that their organization will have more than five AI-enabled applications in the next three years. Yet if their organization needed to deploy AI workloads on-premises, 82% view their current infrastructure as not fully ready to support this.

For the eighth consecutive year, Nutanix commissioned a global research study to assess the state of cloud adoption, containerization, and GenAI application deployment. Conducted in November 2025 by Wakefield Research, the survey gathered responses from 1,600 cloud, IT, and engineering executives with at least a manager-level title. Respondents represent organizations with 500 or more employees across Australia, Brazil, France, Germany, India, Italy, Japan, Mexico, the Netherlands, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Spain, the United Kingdom, and the United States.

To learn more about the report and findings, please download the full eighth annual ECI report here. Watch Dan Ciruli, VP Cloud Native at Nutanix, comment about the report here.

About Nutanix

Nutanix (NASDAQ: NTNX) is a hybrid multicloud computing leader, offering organizations a unified software platform for running applications and AI and managing data anywhere. With Nutanix, organizations can simplify operations for traditional and modern applications, freeing them to focus on business goals. Trusted by more than 30,000 customers worldwide, Nutanix helps empower organizations to transform digitally and power hybrid multicloud environments consistently, simply, and cost-effectively. Learn more at www.nutanix.com or follow us on social media.


Source: Nutanix

The post Nutanix Finds Enterprises Accelerating Container Use as AI Workloads Expand appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 16:21

Religious freedom group says 200 troops sent complaints of superiors using extremist Christian rhetoric to justify war

US military commanders have been invoking extremist Christian rhetoric about biblical “end times” to justify involvement in the Iran war to troops, according to complaints made to a watchdog group.

The Military Religious Freedom Foundation (MRFF) says it has received more than 200 complaints from service members across all branches of the armed forces, including the marines, air force and space force.

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2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 16:02

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for March 4, No. 1,719.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 16:01

MinIO AIStor Table Sharing natively integrates Delta Sharing open protocol for seamless access to enterprise data across private and public clouds

REDWOOD CITY, Calif., March 3, 2026 — MinIO today announced AIStor Table Sharing, an industry-first capability built into MinIO AIStor that allows enterprises to securely share their on-premises data directly with the Databricks platform for instant access to fresh data for real-time analytics and intelligence. AIStor natively integrates Delta Sharing open protocol.

Even as enterprises increasingly standardize on Databricks for advanced analytics and AI, a growing share of their most valuable data remains on-premises due to scale, performance, cost, and data sovereignty requirements. Historically, making that data available to Databricks required complex pipelines, duplicate datasets, and separate governance layers, resulting in delayed time-to-insight, increased costs, operational risk, and ongoing overhead.

AIStor Table Sharing addresses that friction by embedding Delta Sharing directly into the object store. Delta Sharing is Databricks’ open source approach that enables customers to share live data across platforms, clouds, and regions with strong security and governance. Table Sharing enables federated, enterprise-scale analytics without data movement, copies, or lock-in.

“Enterprises shouldn’t have to move massive datasets just to analyze them,” said AB Periasamy, co-founder and co-CEO, MinIO. “Today, all data is AI data, and as AI blurs the lines between on-premises and cloud environments, data gravity remains a hard reality. Powered by Delta Sharing, AIStor Table Sharing removes that constraint by allowing data to be accessed and shared where it lives, providing faster insights, lower risk, and simpler operations as enterprises scale AI across hybrid environments.”

“Customers consistently ask us to be able to govern and share data stored in and out of the cloud. Our partnership with MinIO is a testament to the power of an open data ecosystem,” said Stephen Orban, SVP of Product Ecosystem and Partnerships, Databricks. “By natively integrating Delta Sharing, MinIO enables enterprises to securely connect their on-premises data to Databricks without complex replication, accelerating time-to-insight for hybrid workloads.”

Unifying Enterprise Data for AI at Scale

AIStor Table Sharing is built on AIStor Tables, the Iceberg V3-native foundation for modern data lakehouses running at enterprise scale on-premises and in hybrid environments. AIStor Tables combines MinIO’s high-performance, S3-compatible object storage with integrated Iceberg table catalogs, metadata, REST API, and open sharing standards, allowing table shares to be defined, governed, and published directly from the same system where the data is stored.

By bringing structured and unstructured data together in a single platform, AIStor Tables transforms AIStor into a true AI data store, feeding analytics engines and GPUs directly without data duplication, architectural sprawl, or operational overhead. AIStor Table Sharing extends this foundation, enabling Databricks customers to unify access to their on-premises data for analytics and AI while preserving performance, cost efficiency, and control.

As AI raises the stakes for speed, scale, and governance, AIStor Table Sharing redefines how enterprises can unify and connect their cloud compute with their on-premises data stores:

  • Open Sharing, Built In: Native implementation of the Delta Sharing enables seamless, standards-based data sharing without proprietary lock-in.
  • Instantly Analyze Data Where It Lives: Access live on-premises data without replication, eliminating costly data movement and copies while preserving performance and control.
  • Multi-Table Format Flexibility: Works with both Delta and Apache Iceberg tables, giving enterprises the freedom to standardize on open formats as analytics and AI needs evolve.
  • Native Databricks Integration: Integrates directly with Databricks via the Delta Sharing protocol, enabling enterprises to extend their cloud analytics compute to on-premises data without added delays, costs, or complexity.
  • Built for Real-World Architectures: Designed for on-premises, hybrid, and multi-cloud environments, aligning with how enterprises actually store and govern data today.

Purpose-Built for Enterprise Data Environments

MinIO and Databricks share a growing base of large enterprise customers across manufacturing, financial services, energy, retail, and logistics. These organizations generate and retain massive volumes of on-premises data for valid operational, economic, and regulatory reasons and want to apply Databricks’ analytics and AI capabilities to that data in place.

Flexibility at Enterprise Scale

AIStor Table Sharing reflects how enterprises actually operate today: multi-format, hybrid, and at massive scale. By supporting both Delta and Apache Iceberg tables, MinIO avoids locking customers into a single analytics path or proprietary sharing model.

All MinIO AIStor editions share the same binary and core architecture, differing only by licensed features, supported scale, and support entitlements. This allows customers to adopt AIStor table sharing today and seamlessly scale as requirements grow.

Availability

AIStor Table Sharing is now generally available with MinIO AIStor. Additional information, including documentation, demos, and reference architectures, are available at www.min.io.

About MinIO

MinIO is the data foundation for enterprise analytics and AI. Built for exascale performance and limitless scale, MinIO AIStor delivers a secure, sovereign, and AI-ready data store that spans from edge to core to cloud. With rampant adoption across the Fortune 100 and 500, MinIO is redefining how organizations and government agencies store, manage, and mobilize all of their data in the AI era. MinIO is backed by Jerry Yang’s AME Cloud Ventures, Dell Technologies, General Catalyst, Index Ventures, Intel Capital, Softbank Vision Fund 2, and others.


Source: MinIO

The post MinIO Unlocks On-Prem Enterprise AI Data for Databricks Customers appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 16:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Engadget: Users of Meta's AI smart glasses in Europe may be unknowingly sharing intimate video and sensitive financial information with moderators outside of the bloc, according to a report from Sweden's Svenska Dagbladet released last week. Employees in Kenya doing AI "annotation" told the journalists that they've seen people nude, using the toilet and engaging in sexual activity, along with credit card numbers and other sensitive information. With Meta's Ray-Ban Display and other glasses with AI capabilities, users can record what they're looking at or get answers to questions via a Meta AI assistant. If a wearer wants to make use of that AI, though, they must agree to Meta's terms of service that allow any data captured to be reviewed by humans. That's because Meta's large language models (LLMs) often require people to annotate visual data so that the AI can understand it and build its training models. This data can end up in places like Nairobi, Kenya, often moderated by underpaid workers. Such actions are subject to Europe's GDPR rules that require transparency about how personal data is processed, according to a data protection lawyer cited in the report. However, Svenska Dagbladet's reporters said they needed to jump through some hoops to see Meta's privacy policy for its wearable products. That policy states that either humans or automated systems may review sensitive data, and puts the onus on the user to not share sensitive information.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 15:58

Wigdor LLP accuses billionaire of trying to ‘destroy those who seek to hold him to account for alleged sexual assault’

A law firm that represented multiple women who accused former Jeffrey Epstein associate Leon Black of sexual misconduct alleged in a Manhattan civil suit on Monday that the powerful financier deployed “multiple frivolous and malicious lawsuits” as retaliation for representing these accusers.

Wigdor LLP claimed Black, who co-founded and formerly chaired Apollo Global Management, tried “to use his billions to buy his own form of justice” and “to weaponize the civil justice system to silence and destroy those who seek to hold him to account for alleged sexual assault”. Black has emphatically denied all wrongdoing.

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2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 15:56

Many Democrats have claimed that President Donald Trump didn’t have the legal authority to unilaterally order the Feb. 28 joint military airstrikes with Israel that resulted in the death of the supreme leader of Iran, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. 

Experts have told us that, according to an originalist interpretation of the U.S. Constitution, congressional approval for the use of military force against another country is required. Article I, Section 8 of the U.S. Constitution gives the power “To declare War” to Congress.

However, in practice, several presidents have unilaterally ordered military action abroad without authorization from Congress.

In this story, we’ll look at what Democrats have said about Trump’s latest military order and review what experts already told us in similar past cases.

Claims of Illegality

Not long after the attack on Saturday, several Democrats were quick to criticize Trump’s military operation in official statements or media appearances. 

Sen. Ruben Gallego of Arizona said in a Feb. 28 statement on his congressional website, “President Trump promised no more forever wars. Instead, he has illegally dragged us into another one without congressional authorization and no long term strategy.”

Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia called it an “illegal war” on “Fox News Sunday” on March 1. 

“The Constitution says no declaration of war without Congress,” he said. “The president has called this war against Iran. The president can act to imminently defend the United States against imminent attack, if that happens, without congressional approval, needing later ratification by Congress. But if you’re going to initiate war, you need Congress. The president not only did not come to Congress to seek a debate or vote, he acted without even notification to the vast majority of us.”

That same day, on CBS’ “Face the Nation,” Sen. Chris Murphy of Connecticut also called Trump’s actions “illegal” without authorization. “Congress wouldn’t vote to give him the permission to do it, but he’s obligated to come to Congress,” Murphy said.

But Secretary of State Marco Rubio said that members of Congress were informed consistent with current law.

“We notified Congress,” Rubio told reporters in a March 2 press gaggle. “I mean, we notified the Gang of Eight. We notified congressional leadership. There’s no law that requires us to do that. The law says we have to notify them 48 hours after beginning hostilities. We’ve done that.”

The Gang of Eight refers to a special group of eight members of Congress, including the four top Republicans and Democrats in the House and Senate, as well as the chairperson and ranking member of the House and Senate Select Committees on Intelligence. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt wrote on X that, prior to the attacks, Rubio “called all members of the gang of eight to provide congressional notification, and he was able to reach and brief seven of the eight members.” 

Rubio said there was no legal requirement to notify all members of Congress at that time.

Expert Opinion

We previously examined the legality of unilateral uses of military force by presidents when the U.S. bombed three Iranian nuclear facilities in June, and again when the U.S. carried out the military operation in Venezuela that led to the capture of that country’s president, Nicolás Maduro, in January.

One of the experts we quoted in our January story, Oona Hathaway, a professor of international law at Yale Law School, was definitive in her assessment of the latest use of military force abroad.

“The strikes on Iran are blatantly illegal,” she wrote in an X post on Feb. 28. “I explained in June why the strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities were unlawful under US and international law. Everything I wrote then is true today, but this is a far larger assault with far graver consequences.”

In her guest essay for the New York Times last year, Hathaway wrote, “It has become almost quaint to observe that the Constitution gives Congress, not the president, the power to declare war. Yes, the president is commander in chief of the military, but he is obligated to seek authorization from Congress before he initiates a war.”

An Iranian flag is planted in the rubble of a police station, damaged in airstrikes on March 3 in Tehran. Photo by Majid Saeedi/Getty Images.

Hathaway said the only time that a president does not need advance congressional approval “is when the United States has been attacked and he must act quickly to protect the country.” She said the president is also “required to seek authorization from the United Nations Security Council,” since the U.S. long ago signed on to a U.N. Charter that prohibits unjustified uses of military force by one country against another.

But other legal experts have told us that the issue of legality isn’t so clear.

Peter Shane, a constitutional law scholar and adjunct professor at New York University School of Law, told us in June that it is “difficult to give a definitive answer” on the constitutionality of such military actions “because there is so much disagreement about how the Constitution should be interpreted with regard to the unilateral presidential deployment of military force.” 

In an email, he said, “Under the most persuasive reading of the Founding era, the Constitution does not authorize Presidents to deploy military force abroad without advance congressional authorization.” But he added that it has “long been the position” of the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel “that history has ratified unilateral presidential deployments of military force as long as (1) the deployment serves ‘sufficiently important national interests,’ as judged by the President, and (2) the deployment does not portend a ‘prolonged and substantial military engagement, typically involving exposure of U.S. military personnel to significant risk over a substantial period.’”

Kermit Roosevelt, a constitutional expert and professor at the University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School, made similar points to us for our June story.

“The Constitution says that Congress has the power to declare war, and the records of the Constitutional Convention are pretty clear that the drafters did not want to give one person the power to take the United States into war,” Roosevelt told us in an email. “However, presidents have done things that count as acts of war under international law without congressional authorization, like the Libya bombings [under then-President Barack Obama], and no one has stopped them, so our practice has departed from the text and original understanding.”

As for when Congress has to be notified of military action, the Congressional Research Service has explained that the 1973 War Powers Resolution passed by Congress requires presidents within 48 hours “to report to Congress any introduction of U.S. forces into hostilities or imminent hostilities.” After the military action is reported, the resolution “requires that the use of forces must be terminated within 60 to 90 days unless Congress authorizes such use or extends the time period.” It also “requires that the ‘President in every possible instance shall consult with Congress before introducing’ U.S. Armed Forces into hostilities or imminent hostilities.”

Roosevelt told us that the resolution should not be interpreted to mean the president “can do what he wants for 48 hours before notifying Congress, or for 60 days even if Congress doesn’t” grant its approval. He said, “That’s not consistent with the Constitution and it’s not consistent with the purpose and policy section of the WPA, which says that the intent is to make sure that the President’s power to engage in military action is exercised ‘only pursuant to (1) a declaration of war, (2) specific statutory authorization, or (3) a national emergency created by attack upon the United States, its territories or possessions, or its armed forces.’”

The “48 hour and 60 day windows are supposed to be relevant to presidential responses to attacks, and the President is not supposed to be able to initiate wars at all,” he explained, with emphasis.

On March 2, Trump sent a report informing Congress that the strikes he authorized against Iran “were undertaken to protect United States forces in the region, protect the United States homeland, advance vital United States national interests, including ensuring the free flow of maritime commerce through the Strait of Hormuz, and in collective self-defense of our regional allies, including Israel.”

The president said he “acted pursuant to my constitutional authority as Commander in Chief and Chief Executive to conduct United States foreign relations.”

An ‘Empty’ Debate

Since earlier this year, Jack Goldsmith, a Harvard Law School professor and a nonresident senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, has been saying that the debate among experts about the legality of unilateral presidential uses of force is largely meaningless.

“Immediately after these operations happen, every time this happens – Libya, Kosovo, Iran, all of these unilateral uses of force without congressional authorization – we immediately jump to the law and commentators immediately say this is illegal, depending on whether they like the war or not, or they defend it as being lawful, and we have this debate about whether it’s lawful or not, and I frankly think it’s kind of a meaningless debate in almost every circumstance,” he said in a Jan. 5 online discussion with another legal scholar, Bob Bauer, a New York University School of Law professor of practice. 

Goldsmith said the question is why has Congress ceded the power to use military force to the president without restrictions. He made the same points in a Feb. 28 analysis after the U.S-Israel attack on Iran.

“As I’ve been saying for a while, there are no effective legal limitations within the executive branch. And courts have never gotten involved in articulating constraints in this context. That leaves Congress and the American people,” he wrote. “They have occasionally risen up to constrain the president’s deployment of troops and uses of force—for example, in Vietnam, and in Lebanon in 1983, and in Somalia in 1993. But those actions are rare and tend only to happen once there is disaster.”

He said “rhetoric of legal constraint, and debates about the legality of presidential uses of force, are empty,” and “deflect attention from Congress’s constitutional responsibility to exercise its political judgment and the political powers that the framers undoubtedly gave it to question, to hold to account, and (should it so choose) to constrain presidential uses of force.”

Congress may vote this week on war powers resolutions drafted by members of the House and Senate, including Republican Rep. Thomas Massie and Republican Sen. Rand Paul, both of Kentucky. The resolutions would require congressional approval before any further military action in Iran is taken.

Trump could veto a passed resolution, and if that happens, there may not be enough support in Congress to override the veto. Few Republicans have indicated support for a war powers resolution.

Last June, the Senate failed to pass a war powers resolution that was introduced after the bombing of Iranian nuclear facilities. Then in January, the House and Senate failed to pass a resolution after the military raid in Venezuela.

Trump told the New York Times that the U.S-Israel attacks on Iran could go on for “four to five weeks.”


Editor’s note: FactCheck.org does not accept advertising. We rely on grants and individual donations from people like you. Please consider a donation. Credit card donations may be made through our “Donate” page. If you prefer to give by check, send to: FactCheck.org, Annenberg Public Policy Center, P.O. Box 58100, Philadelphia, PA 19102. 

The post Legality of Latest Iran Attack in Question appeared first on FactCheck.org.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 15:46

Donald Trump’s commerce secretary has acknowledged visiting convicted sex offender on private island in 2012

Howard Lutnick, Donald Trump’s commerce secretary, has agreed to appear voluntarily before the House committee on oversight and government reform as part of its investigation into Jeffrey Epstein’s criminal network, the committee’s chair announced on Tuesday.

James Comer, the Kentucky Republican who chairs the panel, said Lutnick had “proactively” agreed to the transcribed interview.

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2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 15:43

The new key functionality runs through Aliro, a new protocol from the makers of Matter and Thread.

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-03-03 15:33

As more women seek hormone replacement therapy, or HRT, the shortage of estrogen patches increases, forcing them to look for other options.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 15:30

The AI-powered visual search tool that debuted on the Samsung Galaxy S26 is now on Pixel phones too, and it's dangerously good at helping me shop. RIP my bank account.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 15:23

No injuries have been reported in the strike and fire, Dubai’s media office said on Tuesday

Authorities have ​put down ‌a limited fire near ⁠the ​US consulate ​in Dubai due to ​a ​drone strike, with no injuries reported, according to Dubai’s media office on Tuesday.

In a statement posted online, the media office said: “Dubai authorities have confirmed that a fire resulting from a drone-related incident near the US Consulate has been successfully contained.”

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2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 15:16

At least four tankers have been struck by drones and maritime traffic has dropped by 80%, reports say

Iran has in effect closed the strait of Hormuz to oil and gas exports for the past four days with a mixture of drone strikes and fear that has halted commercial maritime traffic despite intense US attacks on Iran’s navy.

At least four tankers have been struck and Lloyd’s List Intelligence reported that seaborne traffic had dropped by 80% on Sunday, with little sign of a return as key maritime insurers cancelled cover the next day.

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2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 15:13

Jorge Pederson, 30, had been on life support after weekend attack which left more than a dozen others wounded

A Minnesota-based mixed martial arts (MMA) fighter has been named as the third victim to die in the recent mass shooting at an Austin bar being investigated as a potential act of terrorism in retaliation for US airstrikes in Iran.

The death of 30-year-old Jorge Pederson was announced by the Austin police department on Monday evening. Police told NBC News that Pederson had been on life support after the attack, which left more than a dozen others wounded and ended with officers fatally shooting the gunman.

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2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 14:50

Donald Trump has insisted that Israel did not put pressure on the US to launch the initial strikes over the weekend, telling reporters that Iran 'was going to attack first'. The US president also threatened to cut off all trade with Spain after the Nato ally refused permission for two jointly operated bases to be used in US strikes on Iran

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2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 14:08

Proponents of the measure announce they have collected 1.3m signatures to put the issue on the midterm ballot

Republican organizers in California announced they have gathered enough signatures to place a measure that would require voters in the state to present identification every time they vote and for election officials to verify that registered voters are US citizens on the ballot this November.

Proponents of the measure announced that they have collected 1.3m signatures on a petition to put the issue on to the ballot for a vote in the midterm elections, surpassing the 874,641 signatures needed under California state law. Officials must now verify the signatures.

Under the current law, Californians are not required to show or provide identification when casting a ballot in person or by mail. They are, however, required to provide identification when registering to vote. Voters must also swear under penalty of perjury – a felony – that they are a US citizen eligible to vote.

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2026-03-04 20:04
2026-03-03 12:32

Secretary of State Marco Rubio admitted that the U.S. was forced into the war with Iran by Israel while speaking with reporters on Monday. He explained that the government of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had effectively boxed in the Trump administration, taking the decision out of American hands.

“We knew that there was going to be an Israeli action,” Rubio explained. “We knew that that would precipitate an attack against American forces, and we knew that if we didn’t pre-emptively go after them before they launched those attacks, we would suffer higher casualties.” 

Rubio’s disclosure highlights the Trump administration’s unwillingness to rein in the actions of Israel, even when that country’s policies resulted in U.S. attacks that only a tiny minority of the American public supports.

On Sunday, Netanyahu said the attacks on Iran were being conducted with “the assistance of the United States, my friend, U.S. President Donald Trump, and the U.S. military.” He described how the second U.S.–Israeli war with Iran in less than a year was something he had been fomenting for decades. “This coalition of forces allows us to do what I have yearned to do for 40 years. … This is what I promised — and this is what we shall do.”

Related

Trump’s Orwellian Board of Peace Consists Entirely of Human Rights Abusers

Brian Finucane, a former State Department lawyer and expert in counterterrorism and the laws of war, suggested the secretary of state was using Israel as a convenient cover for Trump’s own desire for war — illustrated by Trump’s prior willingness to attack Venezuela and capture its president, Nicolás Maduro. Israel relies on U.S. military aid, which Trump could have used as leverage to pressure Netanyahu, Finucane said.

“The U.S. likely could have prevented Israel from attacking Iran if it really wanted to,” Finucane, currently a senior adviser with the International Crisis Group, told The Intercept.

“The U.S. retains leverage over Israel.”

Since the beginning of Israel’s war on Gaza in October 2023, the U.S. government has spent $21.7 billion on military aid to Israel, according to Brown University’s Costs of War Project. Israel has also been the largest recipient of U.S. foreign aid since its founding, receiving more than $300 billion in total assistance. 

U.S.–Israeli strikes have killed at least 555 people in Iran and wounded hundreds more, according to the Iranian Red Crescent Society. This includes more than 165 people killed in an attack on an elementary school. On Monday, Central Command announced six U.S. military personnel had been killed in action, including two troops who were previously unaccounted for.

Related

Democratic Leaders Avoid Criticizing Trump’s Iran War. Now Voters Will Have a Say.

Democratic leadership, including Reps. Gregory Meeks, the ranking member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee and Adam Smith, the ranking member of the House Armed Services Committee, sent a letter to Rubio and top Trump administration officials on Monday, ahead of Tuesday briefings. They called for the administration’s legal justification for initiating hostilities, U.S. objectives, and “what conditions would constitute mission success, and under what circumstances would operations cease.”

The State Department did not respond to request for comment by The Intercept on Rubio’s claims that Israel was effectively dictating U.S. war policy and whether it would continue to exert undue influence going forward.

“The U.S. retains leverage over Israel and, if it really wanted to, may be able to compel Israel to cease its military operations,” said Finucane. “But whether Iran is ready to cease hostilities is a separate matter.”

The post Rubio Admits That America Is Fighting Israel’s War appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-03 10:14

Drones struck two facilities in the United Arab Emirates directly, and damaged a data center in Bahrain, Amazon said.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 09:14

Some repatriation flights depart as governments around the world work to extract their citizens from the conflict-hit region

The biggest Middle East carriers have ruled out resuming scheduled flights until at least Thursday as the US-Israeli war on Iran continues, denting hopes of a swift return to normal air travel after the first repatriation flights left the United Arab Emirates.

Etihad, based in Abu Dhabi, said its commercial services were suspended until 2pm local time on Thursday 5 March, with Emirates ruling out scheduled flights until midnight on Wednesday.

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2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-03 08:11

China calls it unacceptable to ‘kill leader of sovereign state’, while South Africa questions ‘pre-emptive’ justification

The US-Israeli war on Iran has been condemned as illegal across much of the global south, with China saying it was unacceptable to “blatantly kill the leader of a sovereign state”.

Many countries objected that negotiations between the US and Iran over its nuclear programme and missile capability were not given a chance to succeed before Washington and Israel began bombing, and analysts often saw the war in terms of a colonial-style exercise of might.

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2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-03 08:00

As hundreds of schools implement an automated monitoring tool, educators say that students can find talking to a chatbot ‘more natural’ than confiding in a human

Produced in partnership with EdSurge

The alert came around 7pm.

Brittani Phillips checked her phone. A middle school counselor in Putnam county, Florida, Phillips receives messages from an artificial intelligence-enabled therapy platform that students use during nonschool hours. It flags when a student may be at risk for harming themself or others based on what the student types into a chat.

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2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-03 08:00
Nik Anna

NIK ANNA
Photographer

Beatrice Aquavia

BEATRICE AQUAVIA
Associate Visuals and Layout Editor

Managing Visuals and Layout Editor Beatrice Aquavia and Photographer Nik Anna capture Delaware Baseball versus La Salle.

Nik Anna/THE REVIEW
Beatrice Aquavia/THE REVIEW
Nik Anna/THE REVIEW
Nik Anna/THE REVIEW
Beatrice Aquavia/THE REVIEW
Nik Anna/THE REVIEW
Beatrice Aquavia/THE REVIEW
Beatrice Aquavia/THE REVIEW
Nik Anna/THE REVIEW
Beatrice Aquavia/THE REVIEW
Nik Anna/THE REVIEW
Nik Anna/THE REVIEW
Nik Anna/THE REVIEW
Beatrice Aquavia/THE REVIEW
Nik Anna/THE REVIEW
Beatrice Aquavia/THE REVIEW
Beatrice Aquavia/THE REVIEW


Photo Gallery: Delaware triumphs in a 8-4 win against La Salle was first posted on March 3, 2026 at 8:00 am.
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2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-03 07:57

FTSE 100 on track for its worst day in 11 months, while Japan’s Nikkei and South Korea’s Kospi also fall

The war in the Middle East has plunged financial markets around the world into turmoil for a second day, with oil and gas prices surging and share indices plummeting days after the US-Israel attack on Iran.

After a calm Monday, US stocks fell sharply after trading opened on Tuesday, with the Dow dropping more than 2% before paring back those losses. At Tuesday’s closing, the Dow had dropped 400 points, or 0.8%, while S&P and Nasdaq saw similar dips.

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2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-03 07:21

The rare earths race risks environmental disaster Expert comment LToremark

Rare earth elements are essential for the green transition but the accelerating geopolitical race to reduce dependence on China carries great environmental risks.

A woman standing on the banks of a 'toxic lake' surrounded by rare earth refineries

Rare earth elements are essential for the green transition. Rare earth magnets are used in a wide range of green technologies, including wind turbines and electric vehicles (EVs). But their extraction and processing also have significant environmental impacts, including toxic waste, water pollution and ecosystem destruction.

In the global race to secure rare earth elements and reduce dependence on China’s dominance in mining, refining and magnet production, countries are increasingly turning to more remote and technically challenging frontiers. Nothing illustrates this more vividly than Japan’s latest feat of extracting rare earth-rich seabed mud from the Pacific Ocean – 5,700 metres below the surface. It’s the world’s first attempt to raise rare earths from such extreme ocean depths. 

But attention is also turning to land-based deposits in remote and ecologically sensitive regions such as the Amazon in Brazil. The Amazon has an estimated 21 billion tonnes of rare earth reserves, the second-largest reserves after China, according to the US Geological Survey. But the region is also home to some of the world’s richest biodiversity that play a critical role in regulating the global climate, and located on or nearby Indigenous community territories.

Other ecologically sensitive regions where rare earth exploration is advancing include Greenland, the grasslands of Mongolia, and the biodiverse island ecosystems of Madagascar

As rare earth exploration expands into these new frontiers, it highlights a growing tension between the geopolitically driven need to secure rare earth supply chains and the arguably more important need to protect the planet’s most vulnerable ecosystems.

It also raises a fundamental question: are efforts to secure these materials worth the risk of creating a new generation of environmental legacies?

Every tonne of rare earth mined generates up to 2,000 tonnes of toxic waste, including radioactive waste. It also generates millions of tonnes of wastewater annually. Exposure to rare earth elements has been linked to severe health impacts, including lung diseases, neurological damage, cardiovascular dysfunction, reproductive harm, and increased risks of cancer and genetic damage. 

China’s toxic rare earths legacy

The severe environmental damage caused by decades of rare earth extraction in China offers a stark cautionary lesson for countries now seeking to develop their own supplies. 

Ganzhou in Jiangxi Province – also known as the Rare Earth Kingdom – is a major global hub for so-called in-situ leaching of rare earth elements that causes severe soil acidification and water contamination. As far back as 2011, estimates by China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology highlighted ¥38 billion (approx. $5.5 billion) worth of environmental damage, which has since multiplied.

In China’s Inner Mongolia province, the Bayan Obo mining sites have caused severe environmental degradation. For decades, rare earth processing facilities in the region discharged large volumes of chemically contaminated waste into tailings reservoirs, most notably the Weikuang Dam. These waste streams contain a mixture of toxic chemicals used in processing, as well as heavy metals and radioactive elements such as thorium. Over time, pollutants have seeped into surrounding soils and groundwater, affecting agricultural land, causing social disruptions for local herder communities, and raising concerns about long-term ecosystem and human health impacts. 

What can be done to mitigate environmental risks?

As countries seek to diversify rare earth supply chains away from China, there are options for how to do this without repeating the same toxic legacies.

Mitigating the environmental impacts of rare earth mining must begin well before extraction starts. Pre-mining processes are critical, particularly meaningful community consultation and engagement with Indigenous peoples in line with the principle of Free, Prior and Informed Consent (FPIC) as articulated in the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. For companies and governments alike, embedding robust consultation frameworks at the outset is a prerequisite for long-term project stability and social licence to operate. It also reduces the risk of social conflict delaying or derailing projects.

Tailings and chemical management represent some of the most significant environmental risks. While industry standards exist, notably the Global Industry Standard on Tailings Management, compliance is lacking. According to Benchmark’s rare earth ESG assessment from 2024, only 17 per cent of rare earth producers currently comply with the standard. This gap highlights the need for stronger enforcement and alignment of public financing and offtake agreements with internationally recognized standards.

Radioactive waste management is another defining challenge in rare earth value chains. Certain rare earth ores contain thorium and uranium, requiring secure, long-term storage solutions to prevent contamination. The only reliable way to avoid radioactive leakage is through properly engineered, monitored, and permanently managed storage facilities in line with safety standards issued by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

The creation of a new international pricing system which incorporates environmental costs into rare earth prices is gaining momentum and is actively being explored by the G7 and other governments. This would ensure prices more accurately reflect the true cost of responsible production while incentivizing mining and refining companies to apply the highest environmental standards. 

An international price floor system for rare earth elements is another option discussed by policymakers and industry actors. During the recent Critical Minerals Ministerial in Washington, D.C., the US announced its intention to create a preferential trade zone that would maintain an international price floor for critical minerals. Linking it to verified environmental performance would help reduce environmental impacts and costs that were previously externalized, ensuring that future rare earth supply chains are not only more secure but also less destructive.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-03 07:04

Why Should Delaware Care?
Delawareans debating the impact of data centers often cite nearby Virginia as an example of the benefits they could bring and a cautionary tale of overdevelopment. Last week, two Virginia leaders spoke for themselves to Delaware lawmakers. 

As Delaware debates whether an embrace of the data center industry will put too big of a toll on the electricity supply, two officials from Virginia testified to state legislators that their region has benefited greatly from the high-tech facilities.

The lawmakers on the Senate Environment, Energy and Transportation Committee listened politely to the comments made on Friday, but revealed little about whether they were persuaded in what has become one of the state’s biggest economic development debates in years. 

Buddy Rizer — Loudoun County, Virginia’s economic development director — recounted how his region was in a tough spot in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis. Officials there, he said, had to raise taxes and cut staff as the economy struggled to regain its full output. 

Then came a proliferation of data centers into his region, which would eventually become known as “Data Center Alley.” And with them came hundreds of millions of dollars in tax revenue for Loudoun County, Rizer said.

Now the county can build new schools, create new parks and dedicate funds to affordable housing, he said. It also lowered the residential tax rate.  

“Today’s economy is based on the infrastructure that data centers bring. It’s not a matter of if data centers [will come], it’s where and how,” Rizer said to lawmakers. 

Rizer’s testimony, and that from another Virginia official at the center of that state’s data center boom, highlighted what they called the “transformative” economic impact of data centers.

The state was first to capitalize on the boom in the industry sparked by investors seeking the financial windfalls of the artificial intelligence.

But whether that could occur in Delaware from five proposed data centers is unclear. 

In Delaware, the tax structures are different.

Unlike Virginia, Delaware does not have a sales tax or a personal property tax, meaning that local counties could not levy an annual tax on the valuable servers within data centers. 

And the recent property tax reassessment controversy in New Castle County has demonstated that assessors only consider the building as rentable space, and not its current use — likely limiting the assessed value. 

During Friday’s committee hearing, Rep. Frank Burns (D-Pike Creek) indicated that the tax structure acts as an incentive for developers.

“In a sense, we already have pretty much all the tax breaks that anyone has ever wanted to give to a data center developer,” Burns said.

But members on the other side of the aisle — including Republican Reps. Jeff Hilovsky (Long Neck, Oak Orchard) and Richard Collins (Millsboro) — argued that Delaware needs to attract the industry.

“We either use AI or we’re going to be in the backwaters of history,” Collins said.

Tax revenue with few jobs

Also testifying to the state legislators Friday was Glenn Davis, Virginia’s former director of its Department of Energy, who argued that the relatively small number of jobs that data centers create is actually a benefit. 

Additional workers, he said, would require better roads, more schools and other amenities that the county would have to pay for. Data centers provide a tax base for those services without requiring as much investment as other industries. That allows municipalities to use the tax revenue to spur economic growth in other sectors, he said. 

Glenn Davis, Virginia’s former director of its Department of Energy, argued that the relatively small number of jobs that data centers create is actually a benefit. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY OLIVIA MARBLE

“I don’t want to call it free tax revenue, but essentially, to a locality, it’s free tax revenue,” Davis said. 

He later told Spotlight Delaware that he thinks Delaware could still benefit economically from data centers despite its low taxes because the industry’s valuations are skyrocketing.

Davis also touched on what many view as the most salient critique of data centers. 

He acknowledged that it is possible for data centers to raise energy prices locally, which could offset some benefits. But he said that could be prevented by imposing rules that ensure energy infrastructure upgrades are paid for only by the data center companies. 

Delmarva Power recently created a proposal for a “large-load tariff” with the goal of doing just that. But during a public comment session Wednesday for the proposal, several residents said the proposal did not go far enough to stave off high energy bills. 

The post Virginia officials pitch benefits of data centers to Delaware lawmakers appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-03 06:52

Netanyahu’s biggest gamble Expert comment jon.wallace

Regime change in Iran could secure election victory. But much depends on President Trump. And the risks for Israel’s diplomatic position – and even its US alliance – are high.

President Donald Trump welcoming Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to his Mar-a-Lago club on 29 December 2025

If there is an issue that unites the vast majority of Israelis, it is that Iran poses an existential threat to the Jewish state. Moreover, most believe there is only a military solution to this danger, not a diplomatic one. Hence the joint US-Israeli military campaign against the Islamic Republic is not only a response to recent developments. It has been brewing for more than two decades and has its roots in the 1979 Iranian Revolution. 

What is somewhat novel on this occasion is the candour with which the leadership of Israel has stated that the war’s objective extends beyond eliminating Iran’s military threat to pursuing regime change in Tehran. That position was immediately and unequivocally endorsed by opposition leader Yair Lapid, along with the rest of the Zionist opposition parties. 

Over the past few weeks, there has been a growing sense of inevitability about an imminent US-Israeli attack on Iran. The suspicion was that negotiations in Geneva, and reports about progress made, were a mere smoke screen, part of a deception and psychological war to lull the Iranian leadership into a false sense of security. 

It largely worked, at least for the open gambit of this war, which saw Iranian leadership, as was the case in the 12-day war last June, caught by surprise – with Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei killed in the first wave of Israeli strikes.

Israel’s position

Israel entered this war in a complex geopolitical position. Since the disaster of 7 October 2023, it has regained much of its military credibility but equally lost political and moral ground. 

It has considerably weakened the military capabilities of most of Iran’s proxies, the so-called Axis of Resistance, whether Hamas in Gaza, Hezbollah in Lebanon or the Houthis in Yemen. And unlike his predecessor, Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa is no friend of the regime in Tehran. Moreover, following the 12-day war with Iran, the Israeli air force has gained complete supremacy in the air, if at a heavy price on the home front: Israel’s vulnerabilities have been exposed, due to its geography and high population concentration in a relatively small area. 

However, Israel’s political position has been badly undermined. Its use of excessive force, with little regard for civilian lives, especially in Gaza, has put a strain on relations with much of the region, including those countries with which it has normalized relations. Close allies in Europe and beyond have grown increasingly critical of its operations. 

A major feature of Israel’s conduct under Netanyahu is its inability (one suspects also unwillingness due to domestic political pressure) to translate military successes into diplomatic achievements. All the fronts it opened over the last two and a half years remain unresolved as the Israeli government constantly repeats the need for ‘absolute’ or ‘total’ victory.  Such objectives are bound to result in never-ending wars, yet similar terminology is again surfacing regarding Iran in the current campaign. This causes deep concern among the Gulf countries now under Iranian attack.

Rather surprisingly, the administration of President Donald Trump, which prides itself on rapidly settling conflicts rather than starting them seems, when it comes to Israel, to subscribe to the Netanyahu version of events on most fronts.  

In the case of Iran, US negotiators insisted that all demands regarding uranium enrichment, limits on ballistic missile development, and an end to support for proxy groups be accepted in full. 

Chief negotiator Steve Witkoff, speaking to Fox News about the negotiations, said that Trump had wondered why the Iranians didn’t simply capitulate to his demands – revealing that from the start, there was no room for compromise, only a military option. This approach was naïve at best, demonstrating inexperience and a lack of understanding of how the Iranian leadership thinks and operates. It would definitely not have led to a deal.

The triumphalist statements by both Trump and Netanyahu at the end of the first day of the war encouraged Iranians to topple their regime. That is likely to make countries in the region, especially in the Gulf, extremely concerned, regardless of what they think about the regime, as it might end in Tehran intensifying attacks on them, and the nightmare scenario of chaos spreading across the region. 

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Yossi Mekelberg discusses Israel’s part in the war with Iran.

Iran’s almost instant response to the US-Israeli airstrikes was to attack Gulf states, which now find themselves caught in a war they tried hard to prevent and paying a heavy price. In the long run, they are very likely to ask themselves whether close relations with Israel are more of a liability than an asset. 

If the war – which is already expected to last for weeks – drags on with no resolution, with the Strait of Hormuz and much of the Gulf’s airspace closed, both the US, but mainly Israel, will be held responsible. The fallout will be even worse should the conflict fuel radicalism and further animosity between Sunni and Shia, as concerns some analysts.

Many Iranians and much of the international community would not mourn the brutal regime in Tehran, if it falls. But Israel, already extending its operations to Lebanon, again finds itself in the spotlight for acting under US protection with disregard for international law and lacking any legal basis for its military adventure. 

Netanyahu’s bet

Netanyahu has taken a bet that embarking on this war will boost his chances of political survival. More concerning, he is also gambling with his country’s long-term security and international standing. 

It is an election year in Israel, and Netanyahu is desperate to stay in power. For the gamble to pay off there must be minimum casualties at home. Both Israel and the US are operating, thus far, on such a best-case scenario. 

Netanyahu is also betting that Trump’s support will last until Iran’s nuclear programme and military threat are removed and regime change is delivered. That is risky. 

It is not beyond President Trump to declare a victory while there is neither a military nor a political resolution. Furthermore, if this war goes wrong and it costs the Republicans the mid-term elections in the US, the blame will be put on Israel’s doorstep, with long-term implications for the alliance between the two countries. This is at a time when there is also growing scepticism among Democrats about associating the US with Israel’s policies in the region.

By the end of last year’s June war with Iran, the Israeli prime minister declared that the Iranian existential threat of ‘annihilating’ Israel had been removed. In his words, this ‘historic victory’ would prevail for generations. Only 8 months later, the country is embroiled in another, and even more intense war with its main nemesis in the region. And the reason given is exactly the same as back then.

2026-03-06 12:04
2026-03-03 06:01

A note to my readers: The U.S. is in a new conflict or war with Iran. (President Trump has called it a war, and—to quote Annie Lennox—who am I to disagree?) Though it might blow over in a few days or weeks, it could also last for years, altering not only Iran and the Middle East but our country as well. For this reason, I’ve decided to dedicate this Tuesday newsletter to an overview of how we got here. I think it’s worth it—and hope you do too.

Kareem

Kareem Takes on the News is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

The Islamic Republic and How We Got Here

Before I get into this story, I need to say something about where I’m coming from as a Muslim man. My introduction to Islam, the way I learned it and lived it, has nothing to do with the version that dominates today’s headlines. It wasn’t about chanting hatred, smuggling drugs, stripping women of their rights, or promising heaven through destruction.

The Islam I grew up with is about love, peace, and harmony. This is the Islam I connected to, not these fanatics.

The story of The Islamic Republic begins the way many tragedies do: with hope disguised as justice.

On December 31, 1977, at a New Year’s Eve state dinner, President Jimmy Carter praised Iran as “an island of stability.” One year later, Iranians poured into the streets against a monarchy that had grown distant, corrupt and violent. The Shah’s police force, SAVAK, had broad powers to suppress opposition, using its vast surveillance network to control universities, unions and even Iranian communities abroad, and the Iranian people had had enough. They wanted a voice that felt like it belonged to them.

Into that moment stepped Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, a cleric who played the Islam card with the poor and the pious, who promised freedom from tyranny and independence from foreign powers. This was strange, in that Iran had a very fine working relationship with both the U.S. and Russia. Still, many believed they were trading one form of oppression for a more righteous order. What they got instead was a new kind of cage.

Ayatollah Khomeini in 1979 - Credit: Bettmann, Getty Images

From the beginning, the Islamic Republic defined itself by measuring itself against the United States. The takeover of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran in November 1979 was not just a stunt; it was a founding ritual. Fifty‑two American diplomats and staff were held hostage for 444 days. The regime used them as props in a morality play about imperialism and resistance, broadcasting the images of blindfolded Americans to cheering crowds. That crisis shattered any remaining trust between Washington and Tehran and set the tone for the next four decades: the Islamic Republic would build its legitimacy by manufacturing enemies and then claiming to stand bravely against them.

American hostages, U.S. Embassy in Tehran. Credit: Bettmann, Getty Images

As the new regime consolidated power, it created the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), an ideological army believing that the U.S. is the great Satan and that our death is their ticket to paradise. The IRGC would become the long arm of the revolution, reaching far beyond Iran’s borders. In Lebanon in the early 1980s, Islamic Republic helped nurture and arm Hezbollah, a militant group that would become its most important proxy. In 1983, a suicide bomber drove a truck packed with explosives into the U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut, killing 241 American servicemen. Another bombing hit the U.S. Embassy that same year, killing dozens, including American personnel. U.S. investigations and court rulings later tied these attacks to Hezbollah, which had been backed, trained, and funded by Iran’s Revolutionary Guard. For the families of those Marines, the revolution in Tehran was no longer an abstract geopolitical shift: it was a hole in their lives that would never close.

The pattern continued. In 1996, a massive truck bomb exploded outside the Khobar Towers housing complex in Saudi Arabia, killing 19 U.S. Air Force personnel and wounding hundreds. Years later, U.S. indictments and intelligence assessments pointed to Saudi Hezbollah, again linked to Iran’s IRGC, as responsible. The Islamic Republic had found a way to hurt Americans without ever firing a shot directly under its own flag. It preferred shadows: proxies, militias, deniable operations. But the funerals in the United States were real.

After the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003, Iran saw an opportunity and a threat. American troops were suddenly on both its eastern and western borders. The IRGC’s Quds Force moved quickly to shape the battlefield. They supplied Shi’a militia with money, training, and a particularly deadly weapon: explosively formed penetrators, or EFPs. These were sophisticated roadside bombs designed to punch through armored vehicles. U.S. military reports and later public statements by American officials attributed hundreds of American deaths and thousands of life‑altering injuries in Iraq to Iranian‑supplied EFPs and training. Young Americans who thought they were fighting insurgents in Iraq were, in many cases, facing the long reach of the Islamic Republic.

Even outside active war zones, the regime’s hostility toward the United States has been a constant drumbeat. Plots to assassinate diplomats, cyberattacks, harassment of U.S. ships in the Persian Gulf, rocket and drone attacks on bases housing American troops in Iraq and Syria—these are all part of the same strategy: keep pressure on, never fully cross the line into open war, and always maintain plausible deniability. The Islamic Republic has made a habit of treating American lives as expendable pieces on a regional chessboard.

But if the regime has been ruthless toward Americans, it has been even more brutal toward its own people.

In the early years after the revolution, the new rulers moved quickly to eliminate rivals. Former officials of the Shah’s government were executed after show trials. Leftists who had helped topple the monarchy were imprisoned, tortured, or killed once they outlived their usefulness. In 1988, near the end of the Iran‑Iraq War, thousands of political prisoners were executed. Many were young people who had been arrested years earlier for handing out leaflets or attending protests. Human rights organizations estimate that several thousand were killed and thrown into unmarked graves. Families were never told where their children were buried. The message was clear: the revolution belonged to the clerics, and dissent would not be tolerated.

Over the decades, the Islamic Republic built a system of control that reached into every corner of life. Women were forced to wear the hijab by law. Morality police patrolled the streets. Journalists, writers, and artists who stepped out of line were arrested. Ethnic and religious minorities were discriminated against and persecuted. Iran’s prisons became synonymous with torture, rape and forced confessions. Executions, often after unfair trials, became a grim routine. By many measures, Iran has consistently ranked among the world’s top executioners per capita.

And yet, despite the fear, Iranians have never stopped resisting.

In 1999, students took to the streets after a reformist newspaper was shut down. Security forces and plainclothes thugs attacked dormitories, beat students, and arrested hundreds. The protests were crushed, but a new generation was on a mission to face arrest, torture, rape and execution but to continue the fight.

In 2009, millions of Iranians poured into the streets to protest what they believed was a stolen presidential election. The Green Movement, as it came to be known, was one of the largest mass mobilizations since 1979. People marched peacefully, chanting “Where is my vote?” The regime responded with beatings, mass arrests, rape, show trials, and killings. The death of Neda Agha‑Soltan, a young woman shot during a protest, was captured on video and spread around the world. Her face became a symbol of a generation betrayed.

In 2017 and 2019, protests erupted again, this time driven by economic hardship and anger at corruption. In November 2019, demonstrations over a sudden hike in fuel prices spread rapidly across the country. The response was ferocious. Security forces opened fire on protesters in multiple cities. Reports from journalists and human rights groups, citing sources inside Iran, suggested that more than a thousand people were killed in a matter of days. The government shut down the internet to hide the scale of the crackdown. Once again, the regime treated its own citizens as enemies to be subdued, not people to be heard.

Then, in 2022, the death of a young Kurdish woman named Mahsa (Jina) Amini in the custody of the morality police ignited something deeper. She had been arrested for allegedly wearing her hijab “improperly.” Her death became the spark for the “Women, Life, Freedom” movement. Women burned their headscarves in the streets. Schoolgirls chanted against the Supreme Leader. Men joined them, recognizing that the fight for women’s freedom was a fight for everyone’s dignity. Again, the regime responded with live ammunition, mass arrests, rape and executions. But something fundamental had shifted: the fear barrier, at least for many, had cracked.

The regime’s contempt for human life was also on display in the skies above Tehran in January 2020. In the tense hours after Iran fired missiles at U.S. bases in Iraq in retaliation for the killing of Quds Force commander Qassem Soleimani, a Ukrainian passenger jet, Flight PS752, took off from Tehran’s airport. Minutes later, it was shot down by two missiles fired by the IRGC, killing all 176 people on board, many of them Iranian citizens or people of Iranian origin. IRGC’s plan was to blame the U.S. for shooting down the plane, but there was no satellite or in-ground evidence to back up their accusations.

When you step back and look at the full arc of the Islamic Republic, a pattern emerges. This is a regime that has survived by manufacturing enemies abroad and crushing dissent at home. It has used religion as a shield and a weapon, not as a source of compassion or justice. It has turned a country with immense human and natural resources into a place where young people dream of leaving, where talent is exported and fear is imported into every home.

The cost, both to Iran and the United States, has been staggering. Americans have lost loved ones in bombings and wars shaped by Ayatollah’s hand. Iranians have lost children to bullets, prisons, and gallows. The region has been destabilized by proxy wars in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, and Yemen. Millions of refugees have been created by conflicts in which the Islamic Republic has played a central role. And inside Iran, generations have grown up under a government that treats their aspirations as threats.

Iran is an ancient civilization with poetry, music, science, and philosophy that have enriched humanity for centuries. The problem is not Iran; the problem is a regime that has hijacked Iran’s name and used it to justify violence and repression.

A world without the Islamic Republic as a governing system would be a world where American families wouldn’t have to learn the names of distant cities only because their sons and daughters died there in attacks planned in Tehran. It would be a Middle East where one of its largest, most educated populations could participate openly in building regional stability instead of being used as cannon fodder in ideological battles.

And yet, in spite of all that, the U.S. cannot be the country that begins wars, or even conflagrations. We cannot become the world’s attack dog. We cannot simply march into a sovereign nation and take out their leader or system of government. Have we done that in the past? Have we begun and even sustained conflicts without going through the proper channels, also known as congressional support?

Yes we have. And it has never, ever turned out well.

Whether or not we intervene, the fall of a regime is never guaranteed. The Islamic Republic has spent 45‑plus years trying to convince Iranians that they are weak and isolated, and trying to convince the world that it is strong and permanent. The courage of ordinary Iranians, students, workers, women, retirees, ethnic minorities say otherwise. Every protest, every act of civil disobedience, every refusal to bow quietly is a reminder that the regime’s power is not the same as legitimacy.

The rise of The Islamic Republic is a matter of historical record. Its fall, whenever and however it comes, will be a matter of human dignity finally catching up with power. I’m sorry that this administration made the choice it did: I think it’s anti-democratic and therefore anti-American.

But I hope the Iranian people finally have a say in their own destiny.


Jukebox Playlist: Bob Marley, War

When Bob Marley recorded “War” for his 1976 album Rastaman Vibration, he didn’t write a single word of the lyrics. Every line came from a speech Haile Selassie I delivered to the United Nations in October 1963, a direct address to world leaders demanding an end to racism and colonial rule. Selassie laid out conditions: meet them, or there would be war.

What I find remarkable is the structure of the argument. Every time Marley sings “war,” he delivers a ruling, the way a judge reads a verdict aloud. He calls out Angola, Mozambique, South Africa by name. These are real places where real people were living under colonial rule and apartheid in 1976. For Marley, a Rastafari believer who regarded Selassie as a holy figure, singing these words was both a political act and an act of faith. I put it on this playlist because some songs age gracefully. This one ages with urgency.


TO BE GOOD, YOU MUST DO GOOD. WE’RE IN THIS TOGETHER.

Kareem Takes on the News is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

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2026-03-03 20:04
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What things in your everyday life do you wish you could declare your independence from?

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A truck driver is facing two citations after driving under the low-clearance bridge on North Chapel Street, getting the truck stuck and blocking the road for approximately two hours Monday afternoon.

2026-03-05 08:04
2026-03-02 12:17

US-China: What are the two superpowers competing for? 18 March 2026 — 3:45PM TO 4:45PM Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online

Ahead of the upcoming meeting between Presidents Xi Jinping and Donald Trump, this event examines what defines the US–China struggle for global influence — and what is at stake.

Exploring what defines – and what’s at stake in – the contest for global influence.

As geopolitical competition intensifies, the United States and China are shaping a global landscape defined by strategic rivalry, technological ambition and a widening contest for influence.

From trade and industrial policy to defence modernisation and emerging technologies, both powers are seeking advantages that will determine their future growth, security and international standing. Their actions are reshaping the global economy, fragmenting supply chains, and prompting governments worldwide to reassess alliances and vulnerabilities.

This event will examine what Washington and Beijing are truly competing for — and how this rivalry is evolving. Bringing together leading experts on US–China relations, the discussion will explore the drivers of strategic competition, where confrontation or limited cooperation may still be possible, and the implications for global governance, economic stability and regional security. Attendees will gain deeper insight into the choices facing both powers — and what these mean for the rest of the world.

2026-03-06 08:04
2026-03-02 09:37

The contest of will between Trump and Iran Expert comment jon.wallace

Iran is operating from the principle that if it goes down, it will bring down others with it. 

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History is replete with examples of smaller and less militarily endowed nations achieving victories over much larger and better equipped adversaries because they employed smarter strategies. 

Can Iran today survive a war with the United States the world’s most powerful military by employing the right kind of strategy? It all starts with Iran being able to understand its opponent’s own strategy and devise a plan to counter it. 

US objectives

President Donald Trump is employing a strategy of shock and awe. He wants a quick and decisive outcome, and he has deployed a massive amount of firepower to the region for that objective. 

He wants to keep the military confrontation with Iran geographically limited, minimizing repercussions for regional stability and the international economy. He wants Iran to concede on its nuclear and conventional capacities, and even topple its regime, before it mounts an effective resistance, retaliates and kills Americans.

He has pursued these goals by applying a tremendous amount of military pressure on the regime, attacking a range of military and security targets across the country – for now, exclusively from the air – and decapitating much of its leadership structure. In short, Trump is on the offensive.

Iran’s response

Iran, on the other hand, is on the defensive. It is doing, quite rationally, the exact opposite of everything Trump is trying to do. As always, it is playing the long game.

Given the overwhelming military superiority of the US, Iran knows that it cannot ensure regime survival – its top priority – by engaging in a shooting war. There is no way it can inflict enough military damage on the US to make Trump stop. Iran’s capabilities are far weaker, and its resources limited compared to its American and Israeli adversaries. 

Instead, Iran’s strategy is to exact a high enough political price on Trump to compel him to discontinue military operations. So, the core element of Iran’s response is political and psychological in nature, not military. Its ultimate weapon is its much greater tolerance for casualties. This is where it holds a clear, and possibly the only, advantage over the US. 

Tehran wants to extend and expand this conflict because it knows that Trump may not have the patience for a long conflict. Nor does the president’s domestic constituency, which opposes open-ended American interventions abroad Trump has campaigned promising to be the ‘peace president’. 

Democrats are gearing up for a fight with the president in Congress. The longer the war lasts and the more American soldiers are killed (four so far with five seriously wounded), the more effective they will be.

Iran is trying to regionalize and possibly even internationalize the conflict by dragging other countries, most notably the wealthy Gulf Arab states, into it.

The regime is operating from the principle that if it goes down, it will bring down others with it. It is messaging to Washington and the world that attempts to kill it will lead to chaos and serious economic pain.

It’s no accident that after it was hit by the US and Israel, Iran immediately struck oil fields, airports, and civilian buildings across the Arabian Peninsula. It’s hoping that this will rattle the international energy markets and compel the fragile Gulf Arabs states to push Trump to stop shooting. Their livelihoods and very political stability are at stake.  

Iran also has struck various areas in Israel and instructed Hezbollah to open a military front from southern Lebanon. 

In addition, the Houthis have threatened to resume strikes against Israel and in the Red Sea. Pro-Iran Iraqi militias have vowed to get involved, too. The activation of Iran’s regional network serves its strategy. 

To stoke greater international fears, Iran also might close or disrupt commercial ship traffic near the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most vital maritime chokepoints. According to reports, traffic has already slowed considerably due to regional uncertainty caused by the war.

Limitations on strategy

Both Iran and Trump’s strategies have important limitations. On the American side, air power alone is unlikely to bring down the Iranian regime. Boots on the ground are needed to accomplish that mission. Trump’s plan of helping the Iranian people rise up again and topple the theocracy sounds more like hope than a real strategy. There are no signs, yet, of any effective domestic opposition, or of defections from the regime. 

On the Iranian side, attacking the Gulf Arab states could backfire. Those countries could reverse their policy of refusing the US permission to strike Iran using weapons based on their soil. They could even join the fight alongside the US. Beijing also won’t be enthusiastic about Iran closing the Strait of Hormuz. The Chinese import much of their oil from the Middle East. 

Tempo, dispersion and to some extent lethality are more important than volume in this war.

NATO allies are staying on the sidelines for now, but a serious degradation of the global security environment might push some, including the British and the French, into action. (France and the UK have military bases in the Gulf). 

Limited resources will challenge both Trump and Iran considerably. Of course, the US and its regional partners have more than Iran, but the latter is using cheaper missiles and drones which the US military is spending millions of dollars to intercept.

2026-03-04 16:04
2026-03-02 08:29

The Iran war exposes the limits of Russia’s leverage in a fragmenting regional order Expert comment jon.wallace

The war will not affect Russian plans in Ukraine – but it will likely force a rethink of long-held Russian strategic concepts.

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian meets with Russian President Vladimir Putin in November 2025, with Iranian and Russian flags behind them

In a diplomatic note to the Iranian government dated 29 March 1944, Vyacheslav Molotov, then foreign minister of the Soviet Union, noted that ‘the Soviet Union [couldn’t] remain indifferent to the fate of Iran’. That statement crystallized a perennial tenet of Soviet foreign policy one that still synthesizes much of Moscow’s approach to the Middle East today: Iran is not a dispensable peripheral actor. It is a structural node on the southern flank of the Russian Central Asian zone of influence.

The current military confrontation between Iran on the one side, and the United States (US) and Israel on the other, might well push this logic to its limits. Moscow may be forced to navigate a new and possibly perilous geometry of utility, ideology, and strategic restraint. 

Depending on the war’s outcome, the Kremlin might see its already wobbly strategic architecture in the Middle East so badly undermined that it is compelled to reassess its regional calculus.

Russia’s reckoning 

Russia’s public posture in response to the military action against Iran has been one of sharp rhetorical condemnation. Moscow has labelled the strikes ‘unprovoked acts of armed aggression’ and warned of regional and global instability unless diplomacy is restored. 

But Russia will obviously not enter into any kind of military confrontation with the US and Israel. Nor has it sent Tehran the least sign that it may provide any form of support. 

The Kremlin’s next steps will likely be calibrated to uphold its credibility as a counter-Western partner but avoid being drawn into a second high-intensity conflict. It will also seek to preserve bargaining space with Washington on other issues not least the negotiations to end the war in Ukraine.

Until the situation in Iran is clarified, the keywords for Moscow will be ‘strategic hedging’. In other words, it will seek to make the most of the US distraction in the hope of depriving Kyiv of media oxygen and pushing the war on Ukraine into the background.

The nuclear dimension: From energy cooperation to strategic risk

But the current developments in Iran are not without deeper implications for Moscow, particularly relating to the nuclear question. 

Under the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), enrichment levels and stockpiles were embedded in a negotiated framework in which Russia was an instrumental participant. That framework is now gone. 

US and Israeli strikes during June’s so-called ‘Twelve-Day War’ had already significantly degraded elements of Iran’s enrichment infrastructure. The ongoing war is now moving to the next level, shifting the nuclear issue from managed diplomacy and short-term surgical strikes to outright coercive force with a clear longer-term ambition of regime change.

For Moscow, this changes the calculus in three ways. First, a weakened, yet unresolved nuclear file preserves Iran’s strategic relevance while increasing the volatility surrounding the country. Any engagement with an Iranian regime that has now struck at almost every country across the Arabian peninsula won’t go without a political risk. 

This reflects a deeper structural irony: the very cooperation that once bound Russia and Iran economically and technologically may now expose Moscow to reputational and operational dilemmas. 

Second, the normalization of preventive strikes against nuclear infrastructure erodes the diplomatic architecture that Russia once used to project influence and political legitimacy in the region. 

Third and certainly not least, if Tehran emerges either significantly enfeebled or forced into a coercive settlement with Washington, Moscow will lose leverage in a region where its room for manoeuvre has already significantly narrowed after the fall of Assad in Syria. 

Ukraine war dependencies: Diminished but still relevant

The death of Iran’s Supreme Leader and the heightened military pressure from a growing number of countries could indicate that Moscow’s influence in the region may be waning. 

But the situation in Iran is unlikely to hinder Moscow’s plans in Ukraine, or to tilt the battlefield. Russia’s need for Iranian support in sustaining its war has already declined, as Moscow has internalized production of weapons systems that it once sourced from Tehran.

As part of a structural rebalancing, Iranian Shahed drones and components, once critical stopgaps, have been integrated into Russian production lines. Russia now produces substantial quantities of similar systems domestically, making continued Iranian deliveries less essential

This reduces the short-term operational risk to Moscow should the conflict in Iran become protracted. Russia can absorb Iranian instability without immediate capability collapse. 

But that insulation comes with a cost. The partnership could grow less reciprocal and even more transactional that it had already become in recent months. 

The asymmetry creates leverage for Tehran (which has been providing Moscow with strategic expertise on sanctions circumvention) but reduces incentives for the Kremlin to defend a partner under existential pressure.

The risk of sequential attrition

Russia’s Middle Eastern posture was historically supported by layered and strategically complementary partnerships with Syria as a western anchor and Iran as an eastern axis. But Russian influence in Damascus has eroded over the past decade, leaving Tehran’s role more conspicuous and, paradoxically, more fragile in Moscow’s strategic calculus.

If Iran becomes consumed by war, and if its capacity to act as a regional balancer wanes, Russia faces a sequential attrition of strategic depth. The wider geopolitical architecture could shift, from a multipolar balance where Moscow plays off rivals against each other, to a more fragmented environment in which Russia is reactive rather than proactive.

This is significant because regional power projection relies as much on predictability and stability in adjacent zones as on the mere presence of partner regimes. A war-consumed Iran introduces new uncertainties along Russia’s southern arc, from the Caucasus to Central Asia, where Moscow’s standing has also eroded.

Ideological positioning and the narrative of multipolarity

‘Russia will seek the formation of a multipolar world’, remarked Yevgeny Primakov, Russia’s prime minister and foreign policy grand strategist, in 1998. That would become the cornerstone of the Kremlin’s foreign policy narrative: a drive for a multipolar world in which powers like Iran, China, and Russia balance the perceived hegemony of the US and the ‘collective West’.

The war’s trajectory…impacts not just material balance but also the normative legitimacy of Moscow’s grand strategic conception.

In this framework, Primakov treated Iran’s capacity as a structural counterweight within a broader Eurasian balance one that blurs the boundary between Europe and Asia and challenges the idea that Europe is institutionally and strategically Western. 

In today’s context, however, that thesis is under strain. If the US and Israel succeed in degrading Iran’s strategic position, the narrative of a resilient multipolar order loses ideological traction.

The war’s trajectory therefore impacts not just material balance but also the normative legitimacy of Moscow’s grand strategic conception.

Risk spill-over, regional alignment, and Russia’s options

A prolonged war raises critical questions about spill-over effects from refugee flows to the proliferation of arms and militant networks. For Russia, whose southern flank security strategy has historically relied on internal and regional stability, this is not peripheral.

At the same time, Russia’s options are constrained. It cannot militarily balance the US–Israel coalition in the Middle East. And it lacks the economic weight to fully underwrite Tehran if Iran is isolated post-conflict. 

Moscow must also navigate the China variable, since Beijing not Moscow might well come out as a more consequential external actor in a post-war Iran than one might think. 

Thus, Russia is faced with a strategic dilemma: should it prioritize managed distancing and diplomatic leverage, or entrench deeper into a partnership that exposes it to systemic risk and greater regional geopolitical volatility?

Strategic resilience in a fragmented landscape

In some regards, Molotov’s insight about Iran’s strategic salience for Moscow remains relevant today. But the context has shifted dramatically. Russia is not operationally dependent on Iran for its war in Ukraine that helps in the short term. But Russia is exposed to the broader geopolitical turbulence that Iran’s war with the US and Israel creates.

The war tests Russia’s strategic patience, ideological narrative, and capacity to maintain agency in a rapidly fragmenting region. The partnership of convenience that once served as a buffer is now a variable in a much larger equation one where Russian influence is neither pre-eminent nor entirely optional. It is contingent, negotiated, and increasingly vulnerable to shifts far beyond Moscow’s direct control. And loss of control sits uneasily with Kremlinology…

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-02 05:30

Local emergency managers, the behind-the-scenes coordinators who mobilize help during disasters, have raised the same point time and again: We need adequate resources to protect people in harm’s way — before the harm arrives. 

In some notable cases, resources didn’t come soon enough. It wasn’t until after Hurricane Helene devastated Yancey County, North Carolina, in 2024 that commissioners there hired additional emergency management staff, which the former emergency manager said he’d requested for years. City officials in St. Louis, Missouri, were in the process of upgrading their faulty outdoor warning system when a tornado killed four people and injured dozens of others in May 2025. 

We wanted to know more about the cracks in the systems meant to keep communities safe when disasters strike. To do that, we reached out to dozens of emergency management agencies and wound up hearing from more than 40 current and former emergency managers in 11 states. They described common concerns. 

Some said their agencies have been saddled with an ever-growing list of responsibilities. In Saluda County, South Carolina, the emergency management director said his team of six is responsible for everything from the county’s IT department to a spay and neuter program. In San Bernardino County, California, the emergency manager said that she has had to help respond to new challenges like a lithium battery fire and, at a previous agency, was tasked with responding to busloads of immigrants arriving from other states.

Funding for additional staff was the most pressing issue they cited. One North Carolina emergency management director said an internal study from about three years ago recommended their agency have more than 20 staffers, but they still only have 10. Across the country, more than half of the 1,689 local emergency management agencies that responded to Argonne National Laboratory’s July 2025 emergency management survey have either one or no permanent full-time employees, and a “notable percentage” of local emergency managers who responded are volunteers.

Get Involved

We know disasters are a matter of where and when, not if. And our reporting team at ProPublica wants to be prepared well in advance. If you are a local or state emergency manager, sign up to be a part of our long-term source network to help fuel ProPublica’s investigative journalism.

Given the wide-ranging responsibilities and increasing risk due to climate change, part-time or volunteer emergency management positions shouldn’t exist, said Samantha Montano, an emergency management associate professor and researcher at the Massachusetts Maritime Academy. 

“To expect somebody to understand how to mitigate cyber risks and also recover from a tornado, I mean, these are different skill sets,” Montano said. “So to think that one person is going to be capable of doing all of those things, especially working part time or as a volunteer, is ludicrous.” 

Meanwhile, President Donald Trump’s administration has caused delays in emergency management funding to state and local agencies and issued an executive order to shift more of the weight of disaster preparedness to state and local governments. 

Kelly McKinney, the vice president of emergency management at NYU Langone Health and a former deputy commissioner at the New York City Emergency Management office, said that over the years states have become “overly dependent” on funding administered by the Federal Emergency Management Agency. But there is no clear plan for alternative funding streams, according to McKinney.

“This crisis-management system in the United States is itself in crisis,” he said.

“There’s Only So Much You Can Do” 

Several emergency managers we heard from said one of the only times they’re able to draw attention to their agency’s needs is in the aftermath of a wide-scale disaster. Wike Graham, the emergency management director for the Charlotte-Mecklenberg area of North Carolina, said the first question the media typically asks following such a disaster is: “Did emergency management do what they were supposed to do?”

According to Graham, that’s almost always the wrong question. He instead asks: “Did you properly fund emergency management staff? And did you provide them with the resources that they need? Did you make emergency management a priority for your community?” 

Unlike firefighters, EMTs or law enforcement, emergency managers face a “public identity issue” that can result in agencies receiving smaller budgets, Montano said. 

Several emergency managers told ProPublica that because people in their field operate mostly behind the scenes or as part of larger departments, they often find themselves competing for funding with better-recognized agencies, and they say elected officials frequently don’t have a clear understanding of their role. Some said it’s simply difficult to get people to care about a disaster that hasn’t happened yet.

Several others told ProPublica they are also seeing an uptick in the frequency and intensity of disasters, which makes it difficult to manage recovery (which can take years) while preparing for the next storm or fire. In St. Louis, for example, emergency management commissioner Sarah Russell was still in the midst of managing recovery efforts from 2022 flash flooding when the 2025 tornado hit.

A man with glasses and a beard wears an aqua button-up shirt with an embroidered patch. He sits at a wooden desk in front of two computer monitors, a desk phone and various knickknacks.
Josh Morton, president of the International Association of Emergency Managers USA Council and emergency management director for Saluda County in South Carolina, says local emergency management is “where the rubber meets the road,” but local governments are often “the most limited when it comes to resources.” Donaven Doughty for ProPublica

During the St. Louis tornado, the sirens — which the city was in the early process of upgrading — weren’t activated, in part due to a miscommunication between Russell and a fire alarm dispatcher, according to an external investigation commissioned by the city. Russell, who is nonbinary and uses they/them pronouns, told ProPublica that the fire department was responsible for sounding the sirens. 

But even if the activation button had been pressed, more than a third of the sirens weren’t working, and a later test showed that the button at the fire alarm office wasn’t either. 

Russell was terminated in August 2025, in part due to their management of the tornado response, according to their termination letter. But Russell, who is appealing the termination, said the incident highlights the need to proactively invest in emergency management. 

Russell had made several requests for additional staff who specialize in emergency management to help with core responsibilities, like updating the city’s outdated plan for responding to emergencies.

“There’s always things that you would do different with hindsight,” Russell said. “But there’s only so much you can do with so little resources and support.”

St. Louis Mayor Cara Spencer, who had been in office for a month at the time of the tornado and who was an alderwoman for the decade prior, told ProPublica that she was aware of the agency’s requests for additional funding, but that most city departments make such requests. After the tragedy, the city fully automated the tornado sirens and issued an executive order declaring that the fire department would have primary authority over the sirens, replacing an unclear protocol. 

A city spokesperson said the new emergency management commissioner has “implemented several improvements” to the emergency operations plan. 

“Recognizing that budget restraints are unfortunately the reality across many aspects of government,” Spencer said via email, “I’m incredibly proud of the improvements this team has been able to implement with almost no additional funding.”

“This Isn’t a Quick Fix”

Strained budgets for local emergency management agencies aren’t a new issue. But in recent months, federal funding has become uncertain. 

In April 2025, the Trump administration cut federal grants that pay for local disaster-preparedness projects — but a judge later halted the administration’s efforts to shutter the grant program. In May 2025, federal officials delayed grants that help fund local and state emergency managers’ salaries

In December, the FEMA Review Council, which Trump created to advise on ways to reform the agency, was expected to vote on a long-awaited report that would outline the agency’s future. But after a draft was leaked to CNN, the meeting was abruptly canceled. The work of the review council has been extended until late March. 

Several emergency managers told ProPublica they would welcome change at FEMA. But many voiced concerns about the federal government shuttering grant programs — which fund salaries, upgrades to equipment and disaster-mitigation efforts — or drastically reducing reimbursement for local agencies responding to large-scale disasters without alternative funding in place. They said such actions would be detrimental, especially in small, rural regions with limited local budgets. 

In North Carolina, one emergency manager said that without federal emergency management performance grants, which can be used to pay 50% of an emergency manager’s salary, “we are looking at the loss of preparedness and response capabilities.” Another called the grant “vital” to daily operations. 

FEMA did not respond to requests for comment. 

Claire Connolly Knox, who directs the University of Central Florida’s master’s program for emergency and crisis management, has been studying what a “decentralized FEMA” could mean for state agencies. She said it could take several legislative cycles before states are prepared to fill in the gaps that changes to FEMA might create. Many states, Knox said, are not closely tracking spending across multiple departments and multiple phases of emergency management, meaning “we don’t know the true cost” of mitigating, preparing for, responding to and recovering from disasters. 

“When you start breaking that down,” Knox said. “You start seeing that this isn’t a quick fix.”

The post What Emergency Managers Say They Need More Than Ever appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-04 08:04
2026-03-02 05:00

For the fourth year, ProPublica will invite up to 10 news editors from media companies across the country to participate in a yearlong investigative editing training program, led by the newsroom’s award-winning staff.

Applications are now open for the ProPublica Investigative Editor Training Program. Submissions are due Monday, March 30, at 9 a.m. Eastern time.

As the nation’s premier nonprofit investigative newsroom, ProPublica is dedicated to journalism that changes laws and lives and to advancing the careers of the people who produce it. The goal of this program is to address our industry’s critical need to broaden the ranks of investigative editors. Building a pipeline of talent is a priority that serves us and our industry.

“Journalism is vital to a healthy democracy, and it is clear that our world needs more investigative journalism at this moment, not less,” Managing Editor Ginger Thompson said. “We see the Editor Training Program as an indispensable training ground to ensure the future of investigative journalism. Where others are contracting, we are investing in the future of our industry, and that of talented journalists across the country.”

This year’s program will begin with a weeklong boot camp in New York that will include courses and panel discussions on how to conceive of and produce investigative projects that expose harm and have impact. The editors will also get training in how to manage reporters who are working with data, documents and sensitive sources, including whistleblowers, agency insiders and people who have suffered trauma. The program also includes virtual continuing education sessions and support from a ProPublica mentor.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is this?

The ProPublica Investigative Editor Training Program is designed to help expand the ranks of editors with investigative experience in newsrooms across the country, to help better reflect the nation as a whole.

What kind of experience can you expect?

The program kicks off with a five-day intensive editing boot camp in New York, which includes a series of courses and panel discussions led by ProPublica’s senior editors, veteran reporters and other newsroom leaders. The boot camp will include hands-on editing exercises and opportunities for participants to workshop projects underway in their own newsrooms.

Afterward, participants will gather virtually for seminars and career development discussions with their cohort and ProPublica journalists. Each of the participants will also be assigned a ProPublica senior editor as a mentor for advice on story and management challenges or on how to most effectively pursue their own professional aspirations.

What skills should I expect to learn?

  • How to evaluate story ideas and determine the right scope, length and time for getting the work done.
  • How to manage a reporter through a complicated accountability story and communicate feedback in ways that build trust and confidence.
  • How to edit investigative drafts, spot holes in reporting logic, organize a narrative and guide the reporter through the fact-checking process.
  • How to work collaboratively with research, data and multimedia teams to elevate an investigative project.

When is the boot camp?

The five-day, all-expenses-paid boot camp will be held May 31 to June 4, 2026, in New York, with remote sessions via Google Meet throughout the year.

Is there a virtual option for the boot camp?

This boot camp will be held in person and will not have a virtual option.

Will I be responsible for my expenses in New York?

ProPublica will cover participants’ expenses for meals, travel and lodging during the boot camp.

How many participants will be selected each year?

Up to 10 journalists.

Who is eligible?

The program is open to all. The aim is to help broaden our industry’s investigative editing ranks to include journalists from a wide array of backgrounds. We encourage everyone to apply, including those from socioeconomically disadvantaged backgrounds and rural news organizations, as well as women, people of color, veterans, LGBTQ+ people and people with disabilities. Past participants have come from a wide range of news outlets across the country.

The ideal participants will have: 

  • A minimum of five years of journalism experience, either as an editor or as a reporter primarily doing work with an investigative or accountability focus. 
  • A strong grasp of the basics of editing, storytelling, structure and framing.
  • Experience managing a team of journalists or a complicated multipronged reporting project.
  • An accountability mindset: You don’t have to have been on the investigative team, but we are looking for people with an eye for watchdog reporting and editing.

Am I eligible if I live outside of the United States?

No.

How do I apply?

The application period is now open and closes Monday, March 30, at 9 a.m. Eastern time. You can find the posting to apply at propublica.org/jobs.

What if I have other questions?

Send an email to Assistant Managing Editor Talia Buford at talent@propublica.org.

The post Applications Open for 2026 ProPublica Investigative Editor Training Program appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-03-02 01:00

Stitch by stitch, a group of University of Delaware students lent their embroidery skills to a collaborative project meant to celebrate Revolutionary War history as the nation prepares to celebrate its 250th anniversary later this year.

2026-03-06 16:04
2026-03-01 11:22

With Iran attacks, President Trump is making the use of force the new normal – and casting aside international law  Expert comment jon.wallace

The attacks – and the assassination of Supreme Leader Khamenei – create precedents for other countries seeking to resort to force without consideration for the rule of law.

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The United States has taken a further, major step in unhinging the global order. The core principle of that order is that no state can go to war in pursuit of its own national policy. Where use of force is claimed as necessary in the global interest, this can only be done through a mandate from the UN Security Council. 

After last year’s Israeli-US strikes against Iran, President Donald Trump’s threats of force against Greenland, the conflict in Gaza, Israel’s attack on Qatar and other cases, including most notably Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, it seems as if we are now moving to a world where deference to international law is no longer seen as decisive and the use of force is becoming the new normal. 

The killing of Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ali Hosseini Khamenei, at the outset of the conflict has put this into even sharper focus.

Balancing national defence and the banning of war

The international system, as understood up to now, balances the need to safeguard the security of states with the aim of supressing war and its devastating consequences. The use of force is prohibited, although it remains available to countries as a last resort, when faced with an armed attack that cannot be averted or defeated by other means.

This rules out a preventative war, launched early against a potential enemy while the military balance still favours the attacker. There is also a prohibition on ‘pre-emptive war’ where both sides expect an armed conflict and striking first would offer an advantage. This would add greater instability as it would create an incentive for states to go to war first.

alt

Marc Weller explains the legal issues surrounding the strikes.

International law only allows ‘anticipatory’ self-defence when the other side has prepared its military hardware for an immediate attack and has taken a decision to launch hostilities. A state does not have to await a first blow once it is clear that a specific attack is inevitable and imminent. For instance, Israel’s first strike against Egypt in 1967 was justified by the imminent, large-scale attack Egypt was preparing. 

US President Donald Trump has partly justified this latest attack by invoking a long list of hostile acts committed by Iran, starting with the Tehran hostage crisis of 1979, alleged involvement in terrorist attacks, and support for proxies hostile to the US. 

However, international law does not permit the use of force in response to a hostile overall posture of another state short of an armed attack. Neither is the use of force permitted by way of armed retaliation in answer to past provocations. Force is only permissible as a means of last resort, where no other means is available to secure a state from an armed attack.

The president claims that Iran is developing intercontinental ballistic missiles that ‘could soon reach the American homeland.’ But Iran is not expected to achieve that capacity for another five to ten years

There was also no indication of an imminent attack against US forces in the Middle East, within reach of Iran’s present medium-range missile force. Trump’s determination to ‘obliterate’ Iran’s military potential also appears to violate the requirement of proportionality which is part of the doctrine of self-defence.

Israel, which attacked Iran alongside the US, asserts that it faced an existential threat in the shape of Iran’s nuclear weapons programme and ballistic missile capacity, necessitating what it terms a ‘pre-emptive’ attack. 

But Israel has confirmed that it has been planning and preparing for this operation with the US for many months. This suggests that this is indeed a war of choice a preventative war launched with due deliberation, while it was still relatively easy to remove Iran’s armed potential before it fully materialized. 

Last June, some Western states did support ‘Operation Midnight Hammer’, when Washington joined Israel’s 12-day war to degrade Iran’s nuclear ambitions. But according to President Trump, that operation set back the Iranian nuclear programme by several years. That would undermine any claim of an imminent and overwhelming necessity to strike Iran now, as a last resort. 

The progress made in the nuclear talks between the US and Iran in Geneva also diminishes such a claim. The Omani mediators have confirmed that Iran had agreed to important concessions concerning its nuclear enrichment programme supposedly the principal focus of the talks. 

Humanitarian objectives and regime change

Arguably, it is lawful to use force to save a population in another country from its own government. However, this doctrine is controversial. In any event, it applies only where a large segment of the population is threatened with extermination, enforced starvation or forced displacement. This would have been the case, for instance, in Rwanda in 1994, where some 800,000 civilians were massacred.

The Iranian government’s attacks on demonstrators in January were tragic. However, this probably did not yet reach the threshold justifying foreign military intervention. Moreover, a humanitarian intervention must aim to address an ongoing, overwhelming humanitarian emergency. The doctrine does not apply retroactively, after the emergency has passed. And the action taken must be strictly limited to its humanitarian motives, which may exclude an agenda of regime change. 

It would also be difficult to justify intervention if the state doing the intervening is a principal agent that contributed to the emergency. In January, while the protests in Iran were underway, President Trump called on Iranians to  ‘TAKE OVER YOUR INSTITUTIONS…HELP IS ON ITS WAY’. That could be argued to have contributed to the armed confrontation between the Iranian government and segments of the population that followed the unrest. 

Now, the US president has again expressly called on the people of Iran to ‘take over your government’ perhaps provoking the next armed confrontation between government and population.

Assassinating the political leadership

Targeted assassinations of political leaders in peacetime is prohibited but during armed conflict the situation is more complex. In principle, only those involved in the military campaign can be targeted. 

It is also generally assumed to be wise to keep the governmental authority in place, if only to have someone who can negotiate peace at the end of hostilities. There is also a reluctance to turn leaders into martyrs in the eyes of their followers. National leaders also may be hesitant to target their counterparts in other states, in case it leads to their own targeting.

In this instance, it is clear that Iran’s top leadership, including the Supreme Leader, cannot be easily distinguished from those directing the war. It would seem inappropriate to extend a kind of immunity to those who have been involved in past atrocities, including threats or even assaults, directly or through surrogates, and who are directing the present attacks on other states. 

An authoritarian head of state can be so closely connected to the war effort, and indeed in charge of it, that he or she might be classified as being directly involved in the hostilities. 

While this is also politically sensitive, the status of Ali Hosseini Khamenei as a religious leader, along with other clerics at the head of state institutions, would not necessarily grant them protection from attack. There is also no prohibition on attacks against buildings frequented by high officials, such as presidential palaces or key ministries, if they are used to direct the war effort.

War as the new normal ?

Although there is no available legal justification for the present, sustained attack on Iran, there has been only limited international condemnation. At an emergency session of the UN Security Council, other than the predictable attitude of Russia and China, only Columbia carefully framed its presentation in terms of international law and the evident violation of the prohibition of the use of force. 

Iran’s record as a rogue state over the past decades dominated the debate, along with sharp criticism of its apparently indiscriminate, and indeed unlawful, counterattacks against other countries in the region. 

As in the discussion of Trump’s Venezuela intervention, other states limited themselves to general exhortations that international law must be complied with, without drawing any conclusions concerning the attack on Iran. But such identifications of unlawful conduct by other states are essential if broader precedents upending the rule of law are to be avoided.

This reluctance to highlight unlawful conduct may encourage a broader sense that the use of force as a means of national policy is becoming acceptable again – at least to the most powerful countries.

It may seem inappropriate to insist on compliance with the law even where laudable objectives such as nuclear non-proliferation and freedom from repression are being claimed as the attackers’ objectives. 

But with its actions, following its intervention in Venezuela and its threats against Greenland, the US has created multiple potential precedents which others may follow in different circumstances. Indeed, there are already cases where regional powers have acted in a similar way.

Moreover, it will not be easily possible to oppose further Russian aggression or potential Chinese expansionism if there are no clear principles left to rely on, without triggering objections of double standards and hypocrisy. 

The US, and the states that have failed to identify its conduct as a violation of international law, may come to regret the loss of legal and moral authority this will bring.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-02-28 18:42

A Newark man is charged with carrying a concealed weapon while driving drunk, police said.

2026-03-04 12:04
2026-02-27 17:45

Why Should Delaware Care?
Government works best when its citizens are knowledgeable and engaged. Delaware’s government has scores of commissions, working groups, agencies and legislative committees. All must hold meetings that are open to the public. Below we highlight a few of those meetings that are happening this week.

Below are some of the most important or interesting public meetings happening around the state this week.

  • Middletown Municipal Election (Middletown)
  • Project Washington data center hearings (New Castle County)
  • Joint Finance Hearings (Statewide)
  • Redding Consortium meeting (Wilmington)
  • Newark Comprehensive Plan discussions (Newark)
  • Solar array project vote (Sussex County)

Middletown to elect council

Residents of the town of Middletown will head to the polls Monday to select three new council members, or half of the legislative body.

Candidates this year include three incumbents Bruce Orr, Craig Sherman and David W. Thomas as well as challenger Michelle Williams. The top three vote-getters will earn a two-year term on the council.

You must be at least 18, resident in town limits, and be eligible to vote under state statute to vote in the municipal election.

Residents must offer proof of residency with a form of identification such as a driver’s license or State of Delaware ID card; a uniformed service ID card; another current photo identification ID card issued by the State of Delaware; the U.S. government; the voter’s employer; high school or higher education; a current utility bill; bank statement; credit card statement; a paycheck or pay advice; or another type of bill or statement.

📍 Voters can cast ballots from noon to 8 p.m. Monday, March 2, at Town Hall, located at 19 W. Green St. in Middletown.

Data center developer to undergo reviews

Update: The New Castle County Board of Adjustments hearing for Thursday has been cancelled.

The controversial Delaware City-area data center project known as Project Washington will have two hearings next week.

Starwood Digital Ventures filed a request with New Castle County’s Board of Adjustments for a special use permit to allow it to build an electric switch station for the project. The board will consider the request during a hearing on Thursday.

Starwood’s plan is also continuing to move through the state’s land-use review process –  in which representatives from multiple state agencies offer comments about how the data center plan may be impacted by their respective regulations. 

Among the agencies that typically participate in the process is the Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control, which has ruled that the plan violates the state’s Coastal Zone Act. Starwood recently appealed that decision.

The land use process is conducted by the Delaware Preliminary Land Use Service board, which does not have the power to make final decisions. Still, its recommendations can influence the ultimate decisions that local governments make. The public is allowed to listen and comment on those deliberations, but they cannot ask questions.

📍 The New Castle County Board of Adjustments will meet at 6 p.m. on Thursday, March 5, at 67 Reads Way in New Castle. Members of the public can also attend the meeting over Zoom. The Preliminary Land Use Service will meet from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Wednesday, March 4. 

Health, Education departments discuss budgets

State lawmakers will complete their budget hearings next week, by hearing testimony from two of the state’s largest departments: the Department of Health and Social Services and the Department of Education.

The Joint Finance Committee’s budget review for DHSS will span the entirety of Monday’s hearings, as the department oversees a swath of large-scale programs used by many Delawareans, including Medicaid and SNAP benefits. It was originally set to present last week, but the hearings were postponed following the latest snowstorm.

Legislators will hear from Department of Education leaders as well as leaders from the Redding Consortium and Wilmington Learning Collaborative (WLC), two appointed work groups that are working on improving educational achievement in the city of Wilmington, on Tuesday. 

Notably, the Redding Consortium is behind a controversial proposal to merge the four school districts that serve the city of Wilmington: Brandywine, Christina, Colonial and Red Clay. It has published a preview of its presentation to be found here.

The Redding and WLC leaders will present between 10:30 a.m. and noon Tuesday, while Education Secretary Cindy Marten will lead a department discussion from 12:30 p.m. to 4 p.m.  

Those hearings were likewise postponed from earlier in February.

📍 The Joint Finance Committee will meet from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday, March 2, and 10:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday, March 3, at Legislative Hall, located at 411 Legislative Ave. in Dover. For information about virtual attendance for the Monday meeting, click here. For the Tuesday meeting, click here.

Redding to finalize redistricting process

After presenting to state lawmakers earlier in the day, the members of the Redding Consortium for Educational Equity will convene in Wilmington for their first meeting in a month.

According to their agenda, the work at their Tuesday, March 3, meeting will again be light and largely procedural, with just an hour scheduled.

They will be finalizing the process for how to recommend combining four school districts and forming, by far, the largest single school district in Delaware. The draft version of that plan can be found here.

📍 The Redding Consortium for Educational Equity will meet publicly at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 3, at the Delaware Tech-George Campus, located at 300 N. Orange St. in Wilmington. For more details, including information about virtual attendance, click here.

Newark to discuss Comp Plan

After weeks of soliciting information for its once-in-a-decade update to the land-use plan, known as its Comprehensive Plan, Newark city and planning officials will begin deliberations Tuesday on what to include.

Comp Plans have enormous impacts on future building projects, transportation investments and natural resource protections. 

Officials will review the results of public surveys and listening sessions as they begin crafting the final plans over coming months.

📍 The Newark Planning Commission and City Council Joint Meeting will meet publicly at 7 p.m. Tuesday, March 3, at the Newark Municipal Building, located at 220 S. Main St. in Newark. For more details, including information about virtual attendance, click here.

Sussex to consider solar projects

On the Sussex County Planning & Zoning Commission’s agenda next week are final decisions on two solar projects.

The larger of the two would be located on nearly 7 acres of land at 27858 Cypress Road near Frankford. It is a 4-megawatt system being developed by RWE Renewables Americas, which acquired the former Con Edison Renewables, one of the nation’s largest solar developers.

The other project is proposed by San Francisco-based Forefront Power, and would be located on roughly 11 acres of land at 32507 Vines Creek Road near Dagsboro.

Both projects are seeking conditional use waivers as their properties are currently zoned AR-1, or agricultural residential.

📍 The Sussex County Planning & Zoning Commission will meet publicly at 3 p.m. Wednesday, March 4, at the Sussex County Administrative Office Building, located at 2 The Circle in Georgetown. For more details, including information about virtual attendance, click here.

The post Get Involved: Middletown election, data center hearings, more appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-02-27 17:33

A New Jersey man is facing an assault charge after allegedly pepper-spraying another person during a road rage dispute in Brookside.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-02-27 01:00

Several new businesses are headed for downtown Newark and The Grove at Newark.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-02-27 00:30

Heart & Home announced last week that its Peoples Plaza location will be closing after 30 years in business.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-02-27 00:15

A 13-year-old Newark boy is facing several charges after stealing a car and fleeing from police, authorities said.

2026-03-03 20:04
2026-02-27 00:00

Music, movement and a shared commitment to women’s health filled Shue-Medill Middle School on Feb. 6 as the Sigma Zeta Omega chapter of the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority hosted Pink Goes Red: Line Dancing for Heart Health, a community event…

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