Luigi Mangione appeared in a Manhattan courtroom Friday in the state's case against him for the murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.
As the 2026 Milan Cortina Winter Olympics begin, all eyes are on teams from around the globe proudly donning their countries' uniforms for the opening ceremony, including Team USA in outfits designed by Ralph Lauren.
ALICIA PEMBROOKE
Staff Reporter
The Young Democratic Socialists of America (YDSA) chapter at the university wrapped its first action week on Oct. 25 — a coordinated effort with the goal of encouraging administrative support for international students and utilizing democratic student power. Through a phone zap, a debate watch party, an open mic and a public presentation of demands, members said the week could not be ignored.
The university’s YDSA chapter was revived last year after its last president graduated in 2018. Nithila Christosam, a psychology and sociology double major, happened to meet members of Delaware’s Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) at a tabling event and decided to reinvigorate the university’s chapter.
“I don’t really know what it was,” Christosam said. “It [was] just an impulsive, ‘Oh, I could do that, easy,’ and so I did.”
She then began the process of rebuilding the chapter from the bottom up — reestablishing the group’s structure and defining its purpose. Over time, YDSA became a hub for left-leaning students to gather, learn and eventually organize around shared goals.
For Christosam, the work has always been urgent and personal.
“I’m the daughter of immigrants, and the American dream is something that is very relevant to my life,” Christosam said. “I’ve never been super patriotic, but you grow up on the idea that America is this revolutionary place. And you have the responsibility to speak up for yourselves and for your community.”
That sense of duty escalated last April, when eight university-sponsored international students had their visas revoked in a controversial move by the U.S Department of Homeland Security (DHS). The incident occurred amongst a national trend of universities’ international students facing sudden visa terminations amid federal immigration crackdowns.
“It will happen again, and it will, unfortunately, probably be worse,” Jessica Brady, a core organizer in YDSA said.
That urgency set the tone for the start of action week. First up was a phone zap, a strategic action that involved rapid and repeated calls to university administrators.
“Phone zaps bring attention to staff and administrators and make it hard for them to ignore us,” Xavier Flaiz, another core organizer and junior majoring in biochemistry and sociology, said. “It was good. We always had people manning the phones.”
But even with constant pressure, the administration remained silent, according to Flaiz.
“We haven’t really gotten any big response,” Flaiz said.
For many in YDSA, that silence has become routine. Members say conversations with administrators often happen behind closed doors, with little transparency or accountability.
“It’s one thing to make people feel safe, it’s another to make sure they actually are,” Brady said, who is also a double major in political science and history.
Despite this, organizers shifted toward community-building events to maintain momentum. Midweek, YDSA hosted a debate watch party for Zohran Mamdani, now mayor of New York City. Mamdani’s campaign and openly socialist ideals have become influential among young organizers.
“The turnout was huge,” Flaiz said. “The energy was great. Lots of fun. We were raffling off little handmade Zohrans.”
The plush Mamdani dolls, made by YDSA members ahead of the event, became a symbol of the group’s personality — politically engaged and creative. They have since been spotted at flea markets as part of YDSA’s fundraising and community outreach goals.
“Having something fun and hopeful where you can just mingle and talk to a lot of people is really good to bring in new members,” Flaiz said.
The goal of the watch party was to offer a low-pressure entry point for students who might feel intimidated by political spaces or general body meetings.
“We want to get people excited about YDSA, and we want to give people hope,” Flaiz said. “A lot of people walk around campus, they see these issues, and they hear about students having their visas revoked and they’re like, ‘Wow, that sucks. But what could I ever do about that?’”
For Hope Berg, a junior computer science major, the watch parties offered a counterbalance to the emotional weight of the week.
“Seeing people turn out gave me hope,” Berg said. “There are people on campus who aren’t just YDSA who actually care about international students.”
The watch party also contributed directly to action week’s momentum by inspiring attendance for the following events. Students who had never been to a YDSA meeting before showed up for the presentation of demands and open mic later in the week, with plans to attend future meetings.
Action week’s momentum culminated in a public presentation of demands that members described as the most powerful moment.
“We left 450 petitions on the steps of Hullihen so they literally couldn’t ignore us,” Christosam said.
The event featured speakers from HOLA, the university’s Hispanic/Latinx registered student organization (RSO) and the Delaware Coalition for Immigrant Justice (DCIJ), amplifying stories of affected international students.
“It was great to see all these community members come together,” Flaiz said. “It showed how well YDSA can organize when everyone takes on a little bit of the burden.”
Following the presentation of demands, the community-building aspect of YDSA continued with the open mic. Much like the Mamdani watch parties, attendees were able to perform, share stories, socialize and fundraise.
Members stressed that the fight is not isolated to one community.
“It’s about if international students can have their rights taken away, then it means anyone can have their rights taken away.” Berg said.
YDSA organizers also highlighted that the campaign continues. The chapter plans to build on the week’s successes with organizer training, skill-building workshops, outreach events and national conventions.
The group sees these efforts as part of a larger movement to advocate for student rights, democratic participation and campus accountability.
“As long as you’re coming in with good intentions and a will to make a change, we’re here for you, and we hope that you’ll be here for us and all the people we’re trying to protect,” Berg said.
Action week offered participants a chance to connect with others and explore ways to get involved on campus.
“If you’ve been feeling hopeless and you as an individual can’t do anything to change the way this campus or nation is headed,” Flaiz said “Then I think it’d be a great chance to do something by joining YDSA.”
Gamers across the world can now recreate drone strikes in Ukraine from the comfort of their own home, with this newly released game.
Sonny Jurgensen's strong arm, keen wit and affable personality made him one of the most beloved figures in Washington football history.
Officials, MPs and other insiders recall a need for clarity and Blair-era frisson before election – even if Sue Gray was wary
A general election was on the horizon and Peter Mandelson was everywhere. “He didn’t have a desk but he would dip in and out on big issues; he was always there for advice,” recalled a former Labour official of the party’s run-up to the campaign in 2024.
“He would be in and out of the Loto [leader of the opposition] office in Westminster, picking people off individually, ‘We need to chat and do this’, sort of thing.”
Continue reading...Tim Scott, the only Black Republican senator in Congress, had condemned the racist video; Hakeem Jeffries and Chuck Schumer call Trump ‘vile, unhinged and malignant bottom feeder’
Top Democrats in Congress have condemned Donald Trump for sharing a racist video of Barack and Michelle Obama that depicts them as apes.
Hakeem Jeffries, the House minority leader, called the president a “vile, unhinged and malignant bottom feeder”. He noted that the Obamas were “brilliant, compassionate and patriotic Americans” who “represent the best of this country”.
Continue reading...Properties in London and Wiltshire targeted by officers investigating alleged leaks to late child sex offender
Police are searching two properties connected to Peter Mandelson, as part of an investigation into claims that he passed market-sensitive information to Jeffrey Epstein.
A Metropolitan police statement, which did not name Mandelson, said searches were taking place in north London and Wiltshire. Mandelson has been living in a rented property in Wiltshire since being sacked as ambassador to the US over his links to the late convicted child sex offender.
Continue reading...The police said they were carrying out search warrants at two addresses, one in Wiltshire and another in north London
Nearly 60,000 unauthorised migrants and convicted criminals have been removed or deported from the UK since Labour took office, the Home Office has said.
The announcement came amid claims that the government was promoting “harmful stereotypes” by equating migration with criminality.
Continue reading...Researchers at ETH Zurich and the Paul Scherrer Institute have demonstrated how quantum operations between superconducting qubits can be performed while correcting for bit-flip errors.
Feb. 6, 2026 — Quantum computers hold great promise for exciting applications in the future, but for now they keep presenting physicists and engineers with a series of challenges and conundrums. One of them relates to decoherence and the errors that result from it: bit flips and phase flips. Such errors mean that the logical unit of a quantum computer, the qubit, can suddenly and unpredictably change its state from ‘0’ to ‘1’, or that the relative phase of a superposition state can jump from positive to negative.

Ilya Besedin and Michael Kerschbaum in one of the group’s laboratories at Hönggerberg. Photo credit: Kilian Kessler/D-PHYS/ETH Zurich.
These errors can be held at bay by building a logical qubit out of many physical qubits and constantly applying error correction protocols. This approach takes care of storing the quantum information relatively safely over time. However, at some point it becomes necessary to exit storage mode and do something useful with the qubit – like applying a quantum gate, which is the building block of quantum algorithms.
The research group led by ETH Zurich D-PHYS Professor Andreas Wallraff, in collaboration with the Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI) and the theory team of Professor Markus Müller at RWTH Aachen University and Forschungszentrum Jülich, has now demonstrated a technique that makes it possible to perform a quantum operation between superconducting logical qubits while correcting for potential errors occurring during the operation. The researchers have just published their results in Nature Physics.
Quantum error correction is very different from classical error correction. For the latter, it’s possible to make several identical copies of a bit and read them out after a while: if a bit flip occurred, a majority vote reveals which bit most likely flipped and its original value can be restored. “With qubits, things are a lot more complicated,” says Dr Ilya Besedin, postdoctoral researcher in Wallraff’s group and co-leading author of the study together with PhD student Michael Kerschbaum. One complication is that quantum information cannot simply be copied or ‘cloned’: instead, one must create entangled states of several qubits. To make things even trickier, phase-flip errors – which do not exist in classical computation – also need to be fixed.
Error Correction with Surface Codes
One way to ensure that bit- and phase-flip errors are corrected is to use so-called surface codes. In these codes, the state of a qubit is stored in several physical data qubits. Error correction is achieved by measuring repeatedly the quantum states of so-called stabilizers, which make up the logical qubit together with data qubits. Stabilizers are measured using extra qubits that are connected to data qubits in such a way that reading them out reveals any changes – in bit value (Z-type stabilizer) or phase (X-type stabilizer) – occurring between measurements, thus enabling their correction. Data qubits, on the other hand, are never read out: they store the error-corrected qubit state.
The situation changes when one wants to perform a quantum logical operation, such as a controlled-NOT gate, between two logical qubits. In particular, one must also correct for any errors occurring during the operation. “Performing a logical operation in this fault-tolerant way would be relatively easy if we could move our qubits around and connect them arbitrarily to each other,” says Kerschbaum. In two-dimensional arrays of superconducting qubits, however, each qubit is fixed in space, and only physical qubits that are spatially close to each other are connected and can interact with one another.
Splitting the Square
“Lattice surgery is a way of dealing with this constraint,” said Kerschbaum. In their experiment, he and his colleagues initially performed error correction on a single logical qubit that was encoded by seventeen physical qubits. The data qubits and the stabilizers were arranged in a roughly square shape. For a few cycles, the researchers read out the stabilizers every 1.66 microseconds, performing bit-flip and phase-flip error correction.
When the time for surgery came, three data qubits along the middle of the square were read out, effectively splitting the surface-code square into two halves. Additionally, the readout of the X-type stabilizers was halted. “The end result of this operation was that we had two logical qubits entangled with each other,” explains Besedin. During the surgery, bit-flip errors were corrected; afterwards, bit-flip error correction could continue on the two resulting halves. This operation isn’t yet a quantum controlled-NOT gate, but it can be turned into one through a series of such splits together with merging operations.
“One could say that the lattice surgery operation is the operation, and all the others can be constructed from it,” said Besedin. “To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time lattice surgery has been performed on superconducting qubits, and we still have some way to go.”
For instance, 41 physical qubits would be required to make the splitting operation on one logical qubit stable against phase flips too. Nonetheless, this demonstration of lattice surgery on superconducting qubits marks an important step towards the ambitious goal of building useful quantum computers with thousands of qubits.
Reference
Besedin, I., Kerschbaum, M. et al. Realizing lattice surgery on two distance-three repetition codes with superconducting qubits. Nat. Phys. (2026). DOI:10.1038/s41567-025-03090-6
Further reading
Krinner, S. et al. Realizing repeated quantum error correction in a distance-three surface code. Nature 605, 669-674 (2022). DOI:10.1038/s41586-022-04566-8
Links
Press release by Forschungszentrum Jülich: in German and English
Source: Oliver Morsch, ETH
The post ETH Zurich: Researchers Demonstrate Error-Corrected Quantum Operations Using Lattice Surgery appeared first on HPCwire.
• Milano Cortina Games to be opened on Friday evening
• Schedule | Results | Medal table | Briefing | Email Tanya
Lindsey Vonn inspected the Olympic downhill course with other racers early this morning as she prepared to take part in the opening training session despite tearing the ACL in her left knee a week ago.
The 41-year-old Vonn is planning to compete at the Milan Cortina Games with a large brace covering her injured knee.
Continue reading...An anonymous reader shares a report: KPMG, one of the world's largest auditors of public and private companies, negotiated lower fees from its own accountant by arguing that AI will make it cheaper to do the work, according to people familiar with the matter. The Big Four firm told its auditor, Grant Thornton UK, it should pass on cost savings from the rollout of AI and threatened to find a new accountant if it did not agree to a significant fee reduction, the people said. The discussions last year came amid an industry-wide debate about the impact of new technology on audit firms' business and traditional pricing models. Firms have invested heavily in AI to speed up the planning of audits and automate routine tasks, but it is not yet clear if this will generate savings that are passed on to clients. Grant Thornton is auditor to KPMG International, the UK-based umbrella organisation that co-ordinates the work of KPMG's independent, locally owned partnerships around the world. Talks with Grant Thornton were led by Michaela Peisger, a longtime audit partner and executive from KPMG's German member firm, who became KPMG International's chief financial officer at the beginning of 2025.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The footage is included in a video that promotes false claims that the 2020 presidential election was rigged against Mr. Trump.
Trump also demanded Dulles airport be given his name in exchange for funding NY-NJ tunnel and subway extension
Donald Trump has told the Senate’s top Democrat, Chuck Schumer, that he will unfreeze funds for major infrastructure projects in New York City if he supports renaming Dulles international airport and Penn Station after him.
The demand, which was first reported on Thursday by Punchbowl News, comes after the president in October halted $18bn in funding for a major subway line expansion in New York City as well as a new rail tunnel connecting the city to New Jersey. The funding freeze was announced on the first day of a 43-day government shutdown in which Schumer, who represents New York, played a major role.
Continue reading...The company says its 2026 release window remains intact, but final prices and dates are still in flux.
I have a Pint with 300miles, this is probably low mileage rigth. Both the front and rear ligth are not turning on despite having the sun icon (on) in the ow app. Is there any of you guys that had this happening. Any help would be appreciate
Thanks in advance :)
Indirect talks end with agreement to maintain diplomatic path and possible continuation in coming days, officials say
Indirect talks between Iran and the US on the future of Iran’s nuclear programme ended on Friday with a broad agreement to maintain a diplomatic path, possibly with further talks in the coming days, according to statements from Iran and the Omani hosts.
The relieved Iranian foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, described the eight hours of meetings as a “good start” conducted in a good atmosphere. He added that the continuance of talks depended on consultations in Washington and Tehran, but said Iran had underlined that any dialogue required refraining from threats.
Continue reading...
Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, a potential Democratic presidential candidate, recently wrote about her accomplishments as she enters her final year leading the state.
"Our approach has led to some pretty remarkable results," Whitmer wrote in a Feb. 2 Substack entry. "Free pre-K, community college, and school meals for all. Fewer families living in poverty."
Her statement taps into Americans’ concerns about affordability, which could be a key issue for voters in the midterm elections, including a competitive U.S. Senate contest in Michigan. President Donald Trump’s pledge to reduce prices for groceries, cars and other items is Stalled on our MAGA-Meter, which tracks his campaign promises.
Michigan’s poverty rate declined during Whitmer’s tenure. The drop mirrored national trends, and most of the decline began under her predecessor. Whitmer’s spokesperson pointed to anti-poverty measures during her tenure as the reason for the decline. Experts said poverty rates are affected by numerous factors, not only one governor’s policies.
Whitmer was referring to a decline in the state’s poverty rate compared with what she inherited from her predecessor, Republican Gov. Rick Snyder, Whitmer’s political strategist told PolitiFact.
In 2011, when Snyder took office, about 17% of Michigan residents lived in poverty. It peaked at 17.5% in 2012, then fell to 14% during Snyder’s final year in office in 2018, according to U.S. Census Bureau data analyzed by KFF, a nonpartisan health policy think tank.
During Whitmer’s tenure, which began in 2019, the rate hovered between 13.1% and 13.5% in 2024, the most recent year available. (There is no 2020 data because of the coronavirus pandemic’s significant data collection disruptions.)
The official U.S. Census Bureau poverty measure totals a household's income and compares it with a threshold for the household's size and age composition, Kristin S. Seefeldt, a University of Michigan social work associate professor, said. If the household’s income is below that threshold the household is considered to be living in poverty. Many experts say the threshold is outdated, but it’s still widely used.
The U.S. Census Bureau's nationwide poverty threshold for a family of two adults and one child was $25,249 in 2024.
Rates are often the most useful measure of changes because they take into account population changes. However, in sheer numbers, there were more people living in poverty in Michigan (and the nation) in 2024 than 2019. In Michigan, there were about 1.28 million in poverty in 2019 and 1.34 million in 2024.
However, a comparison of poverty rates under two governors doesn’t provide a full picture.
Michigan’s declining poverty rate under both Whitmer and Snyder matches a national trend. The national poverty rate was 15.9% in 2011 and declined most years, ending at 12.1% in 2024.
During economic downturns, Michigan tends to get hit harder and experience longer recessions than even neighboring states, mainly because of its transition from a manufacturing-based economy to a service-based economy, said Nicholas Hess and Patrick Schaefer at the Michigan League for Public Policy, a nonprofit policy institute. That typically puts the state’s poverty rate higher than the national average.
There is usually a lag between the end of a recession and a drop in the poverty rate.
"One could argue that due to the Great Recession (of 2008 and 2009) the Snyder administration was at a much different starting point," Seefeldt said. "Or, one might say that Snyder didn't do enough to bring down poverty rates as the economy recovered. But the trend data alone don't let us say either definitively."
Charles L. Ballard, a Michigan State University economics professor emeritus, said poverty measures should be taken with several grains of salt.
"The really big story of the Michigan economy is the longer-term story of Michigan’s economy losing ground relative to the national average," Ballard said. "This is strongly associated with the decline of manufacturing in general, and the auto sector in particular."
Whitmer hasn’t reversed that decline, Ballard said, but neither did her predecessors, Republican or Democrat.
Whitmer’s spokesperson pointed to the governor’s actions during her administration to help low-income people, including quintupling the earned income tax credit; expanding pre-K for all; expanding affordable childcare; investing in Rx Kids, a children’s prescription program, in the latest state budget; securing free school breakfast and lunch; and ending state taxes on tips and overtime.
Many of the actions Whitmer cited stem from bills that passed the legislature from 2023 to 2025.
"I'd argue it's really too soon to see the effect of most of these changes in any dataset," Seefeldt said. "We know that the types of changes she's put in place matter for the well-being of families with low income. But the official poverty numbers by themselves aren't ‘proof’ that the changes have resulted in lower poverty rates during her administration."
The official poverty measure looks only at pre-tax income, which means that impact from some of these measures — such as expanding the earned income tax credit or rolling back the retirement tax — aren’t reflected in the statistic, Seefeldt said. Official measures also don’t consider expenses such as child care.
Another way the Census Bureau seeks to quantify poverty is by using a "supplemental poverty measure," which takes into account additional factors not included in the basic poverty measure, including government benefits such as food assistance, tax credits and accounts for expenses such as housing and medical costs.
Michigan’s supplemental poverty measure decreased between 2023 and 2024. That aligns with the expansion of the state’s earned income tax credit, the experts at the Michigan League for Public Policy said.
Whitmer said her tenure as governor has led to "fewer families living in poverty" in Michigan.
The poverty rate under Whitmer is lower than it was under her predecessor. In 2011, when Snyder took office, about 17% of residents lived in poverty; that fell to 14% in 2018. During Whitmer’s tenure, the rate has ranged from 13.1% to 13.5%.
Whitmer’s statement omits that the drop mirrored national trends; that Michigan’s rate is higher than the national average; and that the sheer number of people living in poverty increased from 2019 to 2024. Poverty rates are influenced by multiple factors, not a governor’s policies alone.
The statement is partially accurate but leaves out important information. We rate it Half True.
Chief Correspondent Louis Jacobson contributed to this fact-check.
| A few years ago I popped on here to gauge interest in fully planned and guided Onewheel trips. The support was so positive that even FM decided to hop on the train lol WELL WE'RE STILL HERE AND WE'RE STILL DOIN IT, GANG. The first 3 riders we hosted were guys who saw my original post here on reddit, and took a leap of faith. Since then, we've had riders from Florida, Kentucky, Tennessee, California, Nevada, even Spain and France fly out for our adventures. Every single one had a blast, and several are coming back this year to do it again. In 2026, MaDventures will be running 4 Premium Small Group Trips - each including airport pickup and drop off, meals, accommodation, guided rides with professional guides, meetups with pro riders, and the option to rent a board and gear or send us your own - each in epic, beautiful spots, at super affordable prices. All skill levels welcome! We'd be honored to have you join us on a super rad Onewheel adventure. It's been so much fun working on this over the past few years, and we've only gotten better. If you're interested or want to learn more, shoot an email to [madventuresexperts@gmail.com](mailto:madventuresexperts@gmail.com) We'll be appearing as sponsors at Stokebird, Shredfest, and Lemonade Float Fest, so come find us and say whats up! Also, please check out my website - it's taken 2 years of Canva memberships and button mashing to get it to this level https://madventuresonewheel.my.canva.site/ [link] [comments] |
Ice dance duo give US early lead in the team event
Alysa Liu places second in women’s short program
Vance and Rubio in attendance for opening session
The United States seized early control of the Olympic figure skating team event after Friday’s opening day on the southern outskirts of Milan, powered by a world’s best score this season from Madison Chock and Evan Bates.
The three-time world champions, together on skates since 2011 and married since 2024, set the marker with 91.06 points for their program to music by The Guess Who and Lenny Kravitz, earning the maximum 10 points for an American team entering the Winter Games on a tailwind of hype.
Chock and Bates, nearly unbeatable since finishing fourth in the individual ice dance event at the Beijing Games four years ago, skated with the precision and polish that have defined their rise to the top of the sport.
| These things are a beautiful [link] [comments] |
Obsbot calls the Tiny 3 and Tiny 3 Lite pan-tilt-zoom webcams "Tiny Titans." It's not wrong.
German newspaper Bild reported in January that some ski jumpers have been injecting their penises with hyaluronic acid ahead of the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics -- the theory being that temporarily enlarged genitalia would yield looser-fitting suits when measured by 3D scanners, and those looser suits could act like sails to produce longer jumps. A study published last October in the scientific journal Frontiers found that a 2cm suit change translated to an extra 5.8 metres in jump distance. No specific athletes have been accused. The World Anti-Doping Agency said Thursday it would investigate if presented with evidence, noting its powers extend to banning practices that violate the "spirit of sport." The claims arrive as ski jumping already faces scrutiny -- two Norwegian coaches and an equipment manager received 18-month bans in January for illegally manipulating suit stitching.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
A library in rural Alaska needed help providing free Wi-Fi and getting kids to read. A children’s museum in Washington wanted to expand its Little Science Lab. And a World War I museum in Missouri had a raft of historic documents it needed to digitize. They received funding from a little-known federal agency before the Trump administration unsuccessfully tried to dismantle it last year.
The Institute of Museum and Library Services is now accepting applications for its 2026 grant cycle. But this time, it has unusually specific criteria.
In cover letters accompanying the applications, the institute said it “particularly welcomes” projects that align with President Donald Trump’s vision for America.
These would include those that foster an appreciation for the country “through uplifting and positive narratives,” the agency writes, citing an executive order that attacks the Smithsonian Institution for its “divisive, race-centered ideology.” (Trump has said the museum focused too much on “how bad slavery was.”) The agency also points to an executive order calling for the end of “the anti-Christian weaponization of government” and one titled Making Federal Architecture Beautiful Again.
The solicitation marks a stark departure for the agency, whose guidelines were previously apolitical and focused on merit.
Former agency leaders from both political parties, as well as those of library, historical and museum associations, expressed concern that funded projects could encourage a more constrained or distorted view of American history. Some also feared that by accepting grants, institutions would open themselves up to scrutiny and control, like the administration’s wide-ranging audit of Smithsonian exhibits “to assess tone, historical framing and alignment with American ideals.”
The new guidelines are “chilling,” said Giovanna Urist, who served as a senior program officer at the agency from 2021 to 2023. “I think that we just need to look at what’s happening with the Smithsonian to know that the administration has a very specific goal in mind when it comes to controlling the voice of organizations and museums across the country.”
An agency spokesperson told ProPublica it is not unusual for the institute to publish directors’ letters with grant applications, and that this one informs readers “about this Administration’s thematic emphases in the semi-quincentennial year.” He did not comment on criticisms that those letters insert political themes into a historically nonpartisan program.
“Under President Trump’s leadership, IMLS is working to revitalize our cultural institutions, urging less traditional applicants to consider working with us, and to promote civic pride and a deep sense of belonging among all Americans,” he said, adding that any institution that “meets programmatic requirements and goals” outlined in the funding opportunity “will receive all due consideration and undergo peer review.”
The spokesperson did not say how alignment with Trump’s executive orders would be weighed in the selection process or address concerns about the administration’s intrusion into funded institutions.
Established in 1996, the institute is the only dedicated source of federal support for libraries and one of the primary federal funders of museums and archives. Its long-running grant programs promote community engagement and public access to information, while bolstering institutions’ ability to care for collections and prepare for disasters. One grant, named after former first lady Laura Bush, helps recruit and train library professionals.
Last March, Trump attempted to eliminate the agency through an executive order and fired director Cyndee Landrum, a career library professional. Attorneys general from 21 states and the American Library Association sued the Trump administration to block it from dismantling the agency; the courts have halted the efforts for now.
To head the agency, the administration appointed Deputy Secretary of Labor Keith E. Sonderling, who does not appear to have prior professional experience in museums or libraries. (An institute spokesperson didn’t comment on concerns ProPublica passed along about this.) In a press release announcing his appointment as acting director, Sonderling said, “We will revitalize IMLS and restore focus on patriotism, ensuring we preserve our country’s core values, promote American exceptionalism and cultivate love of country in future generations.”
Ten days later, he put nearly all of the agency’s 75 employees on administrative leave, fired the board and rescinded some previously awarded grants.
The grants were reinstated under court order in December, and the agency is now accepting applications for 13 grants whose awards range from $5,000 to $1 million. According to Grants.gov, the agency now expects to award nearly 600 grants totaling more than $78 million.
ProPublica spoke with directors who ran the agency under every previous presidential administration dating back to Barack Obama’s. Though each era brought different priorities, they said, those changes were implemented with input from the field — not by encouraging applicants to align their work with a president’s worldview. With the new guidelines, they said, the administration is signaling a preference for certain types of projects and narratives.
Crosby Kemper III, a lifelong conservative Republican appointed by Trump to lead the agency in 2019, stayed on into President Joe Biden’s term. While he was not a fan of the former president’s emphasis on diversity, equity and inclusion and feels that the library and museum fields needed a course correction from their natural lean to the left, he believes that what is coming out of the current Trump administration is not helpful.
“All these Trump executive orders — and I mean all of them — are just extensions of his own animus towards anybody who disagrees with him and his outsized ego,” said Kemper, who called the orders “nonsense” and the grant guidelines “horrific.” “It’s clear the administration wants a whitewashed story, if you’ll pardon the pun there. And that’s wrong.”
Leaders of the American Historical Association, the American Library Association and the American Alliance of Museums warned that changes to the agency’s grant language and recent funding actions have led to uncertainty across the field.
Among questions raised: Would the government revoke grants it had already awarded, as it did last year? Would accepting the money open up institutions to broader investigations, like the 52 universities scrutinized over their DEI practices? The institute spokesperson did not comment on either of those questions. Sarah Weicksel, the American Historical Association’s executive director, said institutions are even worried about how they would be perceived if they took the funds. “They’re wondering, is accepting the grant a sign that they accept the executive orders that have been laid out here?”
Questions also remain about whether enough staff is left to process the applications properly. The agency’s $112 million budget for this year is roughly a third of the funding it has received in recent years. The agency did not answer a question about its current staffing, but in its most recent Congressional Budget Justification document, it requested support for 13 full-time employees. Former agency officials said that number is low, but that they trusted the remaining staffers to choose quality projects and, in the words of Kemper, “do the right thing.”
But staffers are only part of the process. Typically, each grant application is reviewed by volunteer library and museum experts. Susan Hildreth, who led the agency from 2011 to 2015, questions the lack of information about the current process on the agency’s website. “I couldn’t find it anywhere in the documentation,” she said. The institute spokesperson said the grant process remains the same as previous years.
Opinion polls consistently find that libraries and museums are among the most trusted public institutions in the country by Americans across the political spectrum, and Urist said they are trusted because of their independence. “When the federal government puts its thumb on that scale, it threatens the trustworthiness of these community anchors.”
Weicksel said it’s important for the public to know how the administration is aiming to shape institutions essential to the nation’s culture and ability to understand itself and its past. Patty Gerstenblith, distinguished research professor of Law at DePaul University, agreed, saying that the administration’s actions raise serious First Amendment concerns.
“Certainly at a minimum,” Gerstenblith said, “people should know that the government is using its funding as a way of essentially coercing a different presentation of American history.”
The post Grant Guidelines for Libraries and Museums Take “Chilling” Political Turn Under Trump appeared first on ProPublica.
This blog is now closed, you can read more on this story here
Hundreds of protesters gathered in Milan on Friday to oppose the presence of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents and the closure of schools and streets in the city ahead of the opening ceremony of the Milano Cortina Winter Games.
Reuters reported that protesters – mostly students with signs reading “ICE out” – assembled in Piazzale Leonardo da Vinci, in front of a building of the Politecnico University in the eastern part of the city.
Continue reading...UK’s research funding body says best scientists are taking posts overseas due to lack of job stability at home
Hundreds of early career researchers have warned the UK will lose a generation of scientists after the announcement of significant cuts to physics projects and research facilities.
Scientists working in particle physics, astronomy and nuclear physics have been told their grants will be cut by nearly a third, with project leaders asked to report back on how their research would fare with cuts up to 60%.
Continue reading...Noel Gallagher and Harry Styles lead way, and sales of jeans in general rise faster than wider fashion market
The UK was one of Levi’s fastest-growing markets last year as British trend leaders from Harry Styles to Noel Gallagher and Grime Gran were spotted in the brand’s kit.
Lucia Marcuzzo, the managing director of the European operations at the US company famous for its denim jeans, said the revival of 1990s trends had boosted sales of its classic 501s. New trends such as baggy jeans and cinch styles, which can be adjusted around the waist, had also helped, as denim has found its way back into wardrobes.
Continue reading...The negotiations over Tehran’s nuclear capabilities come against a backdrop of deadly protests inside Iran and a buildup of U.S. military assets in the region.
This blog is now closed, you can read more on this story here
It is the first time the US and Iran have sat down for face-to-face negotiations since June last year, when Israel launched attacks on Iran that sparked a war marked by tit-for-tat airstrikes, with the US also joining the fray. It effectively ended the US-Iran talks that were held in the weeks prior to the conflict aimed at reaching a nuclear peace agreement.
More recently, Donald Trump has been threatening to strike Iran for more than a month and just last week warned that an “armada” of US warships had reached the Persian Gulf. This recent clash began after Trump said he would strike Iran if it killed protesters during mass antigovernment demonstrations that swept the country last month. Human rights groups say thousands of people were killed during the brutal government crackdown on those protests.
Continue reading...A new look for a futuristic foldable PJ.
Deputy director of Russia’s military intelligence agency shot several times in the stairwell of his apartment
A top Russian military official who plays a major role in the country’s intelligence services has been taken to hospital after being shot in Moscow, state media has reported.
Lt Gen Vladimir Alekseyev was shot several times on the stairwell of his apartment on Friday by an unknown gunman in the north-west of the city and is in critical condition, according to reports.
Continue reading...A crypto startup founded by Trump’s family signed a huge deal with the UAE president’s brother. Where’s the political fallout?
Days before Donald Trump returned to office in January 2025, an investment firm controlled by a senior member of the United Arab Emirates royal family secretly signed a deal to pay $500m to buy almost half of a cryptocurrency startup founded by the Trump family. Under any other president, such an arrangement, which was revealed this past weekend by the Wall Street Journal, would cause a political earthquake in Washington. There would be demands for an investigation by Congress, televised hearings and months of damage control.
But this latest example of corruption involving Trump and his family business hardly made a blip over the past few days, relegated to a passing headline in a relentless news cycle often dominated by Trump’s actions and statements.
Continue reading...Billie Eilish and Biebers wore ‘ICE out’ pins at the Grammys, as more and more celebrities find their political voices
The red carpet is being used increasingly as a platform for protest – and one accessory in particular has become key: the pin badge.
At Sunday night’s Grammy awards, stars including Hailey and Justin Bieber and Billie Eilish wore black and white pins that read “ICE out”, a condemnation of the recent actions of the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
Continue reading...Police investigating whether blast that injured at least 169 at Friday prayers in Islamabad was suicide attack
An explosion has ripped through a Shia mosque on the outskirts of Pakistan’s capital during Friday prayers, killing 31 people and injuring at least 169 others, according to officials. Police said they were investigating whether the attack was carried out by a suicide bomber.
There were fears the death toll from the blast at the Khadija al-Kubra mosque in Islamabad could rise as some of the injured were reported to be in a critical condition. Television footage and social media images showed police and residents transporting the injured to nearby hospitals.
Continue reading...Africa Aware: Financing Africa’s development Audio thilton.drupal
In this episode, guests discuss solutions to Africa’s debt challenges, innovative financing mechanisms, and strategies for ensuring long-term economic sustainability and growth.
The IMF’s economic outlook for Africa in 2026 points to an average GDP growth rate of 4.3 per cent – making it the fastest-growing region globally. In practice, however, per capita growth is far lower and various factors like persistent debt issues and a decline in official development assistance jeopardise this positive outlook.
In this episode, guests Mavis Owusu-Gyamfi and Admassu Tadesse explore strategies to ensure sustained economic growth matching the promising outlook for the continent. They discuss untapped policy actions to spur economic transformation as well as the role of regional financial institutions to meet the needs of African countries shaping their development agendas.
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.
GRENOBLE, France and SHERBROOKE, Quebec, Feb. 6, 2026 — Quobly, a French pioneer in silicon-based quantum computing, has announced the opening of its Canadian subsidiary in Sherbrooke, Quebec. This strategic expansion aims to reinforce the company’s research capabilities, technology integration, and industrial partnerships in North America, within a region recognized for its excellence in quantum technologies.
Sherbrooke was chosen for its unique concentration of expertise in silicon spin qubits, advanced manufacturing and packaging technologies, and cryogenic infrastructure, key elements for the industrial-scale deployment of quantum processors.
Quobly will draw on the expertise of the Université de Sherbrooke and its Institut Quantique, particularly in quantum engineering training and research, as well as the infrastructures and technological platforms of the C2MI (Centre de collaboration MiQro Innovation).
The company also joins DistriQ, Quebec’s quantum innovation hub, which fosters synergies between academic research, technological development, and the training of industrial actors and end users.
This expansion will enable Quobly to develop structured collaborations around silicon quantum processor integration, cryo-electronics interfaces, and hardware-software co-design, in connection with Canadian academic, industrial, and applied partners, particularly within Montreal’s software and application ecosystem, recognized for its expertise in advanced computing and quantum technologies.
Accelerating the Execution of Quobly’s Industrial Roadmap
The opening of the Canadian subsidiary is a part of Quobly’s global strategy to industrialize silicon-based quantum computing, leveraging complementary ecosystems to those developed in Europe. It contributes to the company’s 2032 industrial roadmap, aiming to develop a fault-tolerant universal quantum computer with large-scale quantum processors capable of executing circuits of very high complexity.
Presence in North America will also strengthen interactions with high-performance computing (HPC), advanced electronics, and industrial quantum applications, in a context of accelerating hybrid approaches combining classical and quantum computing.
Growing the Team in Canada
Quobly, which currently employs over 80 people in Europe, plans to establish a local team in Canada and recruit around ten engineers and researchers over the next two to three years to support R&D activities, the integration of quantum technologies, and collaborative projects with academic and industrial partners.
“Sherbrooke offers an exceptional scientific and technological environment, perfectly aligned with our approach to silicon-based quantum computing,” said Maud Vinet, CEO and co-founder of Quobly. “This expansion allows us to strengthen our integration capabilities and accelerate the execution of our industrial roadmap in close collaboration with world-class partners.”
“Quobly’s arrival in Sherbrooke confirms the international attractiveness of Quebec’s quantum ecosystem,” said DistriQ CEO Michel Pioro-Ladrière. “It strengthens our positioning in industrial quantum technologies and advanced semiconductors.”
Hubert Bolduc, president of Investissement Quebec International, commented: “Quobly’s establishment in Quebec highlights the attractiveness of the ecosystem and our collective ability to support international companies as they transition from fundamental research to the industrialization of quantum technologies. Through its actions and those of the innovation zones, Investissement Quebec International actively contributes to structuring and promoting Quebec’s quantum ecosystem. The DistriQ innovation zone brings together a critical mass of academic, industrial and entrepreneurial players, and we are delighted to see Quobly’s expertise join this community”.
Strengthening Europe’s Quantum Technology Ecosystem
By combining semiconductor manufacturing expertise with advanced materials analysis, this collaboration contributes to the development of a robust European quantum industrial base. It demonstrates how cross-border partnerships between research organizations and industry leaders can help overcome technical bottlenecks and advance the industrialization of next-generation quantum processors.
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About Quobly
Quobly is a pioneer in quantum microelectronics, developing silicon-based quantum chips using proven semiconductor manufacturing processes. Founded in 2022 in Grenoble, France, the company builds on over 15 years of collaborative research between world-class institutions CEA-Leti and CNRS, combining expertise in quantum physics and microelectronics. Co-founded by Maud Vinet, Ph.D. in quantum physics, author of 300+ papers and 70+ patents, and Tristan Meunier, a leading expert in semiconductor quantum engineering trained under Nobel laureate Serge Haroche, Quobly bridges science and industry to make quantum computing scalable and manufacturable.
The company has a strategic partnership with STMicroelectronics to accelerate the industrialization of its silicon quantum chips. In 2023, Quobly raised €19 million, a record European seed round for a quantum hardware startup, followed in 2025 by €21 million to advance its Q100T program, a key step toward fault-tolerant quantum computing. Quobly has offices in France, Singapore, and Canada.
Source: Quobly
The post Quobly Launches Canadian Subsidiary in Sherbrooke, Strengthening North American Presence appeared first on HPCwire.
Feb. 6, 2026 — The 2nd International Workshop on Energy Efficiency with Sustainable Performance (EESP) will take place on June 26 at the ISC High Performance in Hamburg and is aimed at providing a framework for exchanging practical approaches, ideas, and techniques for energy efficiency when working with artificial intelligence and modern high-performance computer (HPC) setups.
Call for Papers
Anyone interested in the topic of energy efficiency and the event is warmly invited to send in their submissions by the deadline on March 1.
Your ideas will find a diverse and knowledgeable audience of system designers, operators, application developers, and researchers actively shaping energy-aware HPC and AI infrastructures. Submissions will be part of the ISC proceedings in Springer’s Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) series and have a chance to win the best paper award, which will also be invited to publish extended versions in the International Journal of High Performance Computing Applications (IJHPCA).
The workshop is organized by General Chair Ayesha Afzal and her program co-chairs Natalie Bates/EE HPC WG, USA, Hatem Ltaief/KAUST, Saudi Arabia, and Bronis de Supinski/LLNL, USA.
Keynote Speech
The workshop will feature computer scientist Dr. John Gustafson, a pioneer in HPC and the mind behind Gustafson’s Law, as keynote speaker. He will be presenting the topic “Every Bit Counts: Posit Computing for Energy-Efficient HPC and AI,” providing a forward-looking perspective on numerical representations and their role in enabling sustainable exascale and AI systems.
Find out more about the workshop objectives, the submission guidelines, and a full abstract of the keynote speech at the official EESP page.
ISC High Performance 2026, June 22–26
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.
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Source: Erlangen National High-Performance Computing Center
The post ISC 2026: EESP Workshop Invites Papers on Sustainable AI and HPC Systems appeared first on HPCwire.
Don't miss cauldrons being lit in two different cities as Milan and Cortina are set aglow this year.
From a £149 John Lewis version to LA’s gorpcore take, the ‘good intention’ bag is intended to look good but hold more
It’s not a multi-thousand pound handbag from Hermès that best captures the new era of It bags, but a £149 tote from John Lewis.
Launched this season, it’s deeper (45cm) and taller (33cm) than your average handbag, and comes loaded with good intentions. It’s able to hold your packed lunch, flask and book, as well – at a push – as your gym kit. The high street retailer is calling it the Intentional tote bag.
Continue reading...Disappearance of 84-year-old Nancy Guthrie from her home in Arizona is being investigated as kidnapping
The search for Nancy Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of NBC’s Today show anchor Savannah Guthrie entered its sixth day on Friday in Arizona, as authorities said they believe that she is still alive.
“She’s out there, we’re gonna find her, we have to,” said Chris Nanos, Arizona’s Pima county sheriff, in an interview with ABC’s Good Morning America show on Friday morning. “Pray – just pray,” he said.
Continue reading...After weeks of breakup talk, the Bucks and their superstar stayed together. The Knicks and Timberwolves, meanwhile, made smart additions
It’s hard to match the absolute insanity that was the 2024-25 NBA trade deadline, and to the majority of the league’s credit, teams didn’t really try. But there was still some notable movement ahead of Thursday’s 3pm EST deadline – to varying degrees of success. Let’s do the early assessment of who came out on top, and who left us scratching our heads.
Continue reading...TikTok's endless scroll of irresistible content, tailored for each person's tastes by a well-honed algorithm, has helped the service become one of the world's most popular apps. Now European Union regulators say those same features that made TikTok so successful are likely illegal. From a report: On Friday, the regulators released a preliminary decision that TikTok's infinite scroll, auto-play features and recommendation algorithm amount to an "addictive design" that violated European Union laws for online safety. The service poses potential harm to the "physical and mental well-being" of users, including minors and vulnerable adults, the European Commission, the 27-nation bloc's executive branch, said in a statement. The findings suggest TikTok must overhaul the core features that made it a global phenomenon, or risk major fines. European officials said it was the first time that a legal standard for social media addictiveness had been applied anywhere in the world. "TikTok needs to change the basic design of its service," the European Commission said in a statement.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Nintendo’s monster-collecting franchise was pilloried as a ‘pestilential Ponzi scheme’ in the 90s. But as its celebrates its 30th birthday, it now stands as a powerful example of video games’ ability to connect people
When I was 11, it was my dream to compete in the Pokémon World Championships, held in Sydney in 2000. I’d come across it in a magazine, and then earnestly set about training teams of creatures, transferring them between my Pokémon Red Game Boy cartridge and the 3D arenas of Pokémon Stadium on the Nintendo 64. I never made it as a player but I did finally achieve this dream on my 26th birthday, when I went to Washington DC to cover the world championships as a journalist. I was deeply moved. Presided over by a giant inflatable Pikachu hanging from the ceiling, the competitors and spectators were united in an unselfconscious love for these games, with their colourful menageries and heartfelt messaging about trust, friendship and hard work.
It is emotional to see the winners lift their trophies after a tense final round of battles, as overwhelmed by their success as any sportsperson. But it’s the pride that the smaller competitors’ parents show in their mini champions that really gets to me. During the first wave of Pokémania in the late 90s, Pokémon was viewed with suspicion by most adults. Now that the first generation of Pokémaniacs have grown up, even becoming parents ourselves, we see it for what it is: an imaginative, challenging and really rather wholesome series of games that rewards every hour that children devote to it.
Continue reading...In clip amplifying false claim that Trump won 2020 election, the Obamas’ faces are superimposed on bodies of apes
Fury erupted early on Friday after Donald Trump posted a racist video that depicts Barack and Michelle Obama as apes.
The clip appeared during one of the 79-year-old US president’s increasingly frequent late-night posting sprees to his Truth Social account, and shows the laughing faces of the former president and first lady superimposed on the bodies of primates in a jungle setting, bobbing to the song The Lion Sleeps Tonight.
Continue reading...PC; Edmund McMillen and Tyler Glaiel
This mischievous roguelike escapade featuring utterly fiendish felines is compelling, and impressively tasteless
You know that old saying about cats having nine lives? Well, as far as Mewgenics is concerned, you can forget it – and you can also forget the idea that a game about cats has to be in any way cute. These kitties are red in tooth and claw, prone to strange mutations, and strictly limited to just the one life, which often ends swiftly and brutally.
Such is the nature of roguelike, a format that has spawned some of the biggest indie hits of the past 20 years. In these games, failure is permanent; dying sends you back not to the last checkpoint but back to the beginning, the game reshuffling its elements into a new shape for your next run. And so it goes in Mewgenics. You gather a party of four felines and send them out on a questing journey, from which they return victorious or not at all.
Continue reading...Feb. 6, 2026 — Boris Kiefer, New Mexico State University physics professor, is a co-principal investigator on a project to turn fundamental quantum science into practical technologies that could potentially enable new kinds of computing for certain problems and reduce the high energy costs associated with other quantum hardware systems.

Boris Kiefer, NMSU physics professor, and Melissa Coronado Arrieta, physics master’s student, are working on a Quantum Computing Applications of Photonics project to turn fundamental quantum science into practical tech. The project, led out of the University of New Mexico, was selected by the NSF National Quantum Virtual Laboratory to receive a two-year, $4 million grant. Photo credit: Sarah Kimmerly, NMSU.
The project led by the University of New Mexico is called “Quantum Computing Applications of Photonics (QCAP).” It is among four selected by the National Science Foundation National Quantum Virtual Laboratory (NSF NQVL) to receive a two-year, $4 million grant.
“The QCAP has tremendous potential,” Kiefer said. “I’m happy we were selected and that I’m part of a team that wants to make these transformations. Hopefully we get to a place where New Mexico can make a real difference in the quantum field.”
“This project will lead to innovation and the advancement of technology, which I am thrilled to be a part of,” said Melissa Coronado Arrieta, a physics master’s student working with Kiefer. “It has the potential to completely revolutionize computing as we know it and I’m excited to witness it.”
The collaboration brings together universities, national laboratories and the private sector. In addition to NMSU and UNM, the quantum photonics group includes the University of Virginia and the University of Maryland, with additional technical expertise from Sandia National Laboratories, Los Alamos National Laboratory and National Institute of Standards and Technology. Together, they’ll use the design phase of the program to define requirements for the quantum computing system, validate key components and map out ideas and targets for early applications of this technology.
“Because of the strangeness of the quantum rules, we might be able to do certain types of problems faster than with any classical computer,” said Kiefer, who is also one of two theoreticians on the project. “We’re talking about transformational changes. It is a fascinating journey to think about what light can do.”
Coronado Arrieta is working to bridge the algorithms and hardware on the project. She connects computing needs to engineering specifications, helping identify algorithms that can reliably run on QCAP-designed devices.
“My experience working on this project has been challenging, rewarding and exciting,” Coronado Arrieta said. “It pushes me to be better both personally and academically, since the topic is complex and counterintuitive at times. The potential this project has makes me excited for the future of science and my career.”
In many of today’s quantum computing platforms, the processor chip may be small, but the surrounding cryogenic infrastructure is not. Systems based on superconducting qubits, for example, typically operate at millikelvin temperatures inside dilution refrigerators, alongside extensive control and readout hardware.
“In many cryogenic quantum platforms, a large fraction of the operating cost is refrigeration,” Kiefer said. “This is where photons have a significant advantage.”
Because photonic qubits can be generated and manipulated without millikelvin cooling, the project can redirect effort from maintaining extreme cryogenic conditions toward tighter integration, higher stability, and better-performing hardware, while refining the algorithms and control software that run the system.
Beyond computing, photonic quantum technologies can also deliver near-term tools that plug into today’s security infrastructure. One such application is the ability to generate quantum random numbers.
“If you can generate random numbers that are truly unpredictable, it dramatically strengthens security,” Kiefer said.
Quantum random number generation relies on the inherently probabilistic nature of quantum measurements to produce high-quality random numbers. Implementing this capability into current systems could strengthen cryptographic key generation, providing more resilient security for financial transactions, satellite communications and other critical infrastructure.
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Source: New Mexico State University
The post NMSU Participates in NSF-Backed Quantum Photonics Project Led by University of New Mexico appeared first on HPCwire.
Portugal’s far-right Chega party has said vote should be delayed as state of calamity declared in 69 areas
Heavy rains and strong winds continued to batter parts of Spain and Portugal on Friday, causing at least two deaths, forcing the evacuation of more than 7,000 people and prompting calls to postpone the second-round of Portugal’s presidential election.
Storm Leonardo, which has lashed the Iberian peninsula this week, has led the Portuguese government to extend the current state of calamity in 69 municipalities until the middle of February.
Continue reading...Lt. Gen. Vladimir Alekseyev, the deputy head of the GRU, Russia’s main foreign military intelligence agency, was targeted at his home in Moscow, officials said.
Feb. 6, 2026 — The Dark Energy Survey (DES) recently published results that combine all six years of data collected from weak lensing and galaxy clustering probes – a first for the international collaboration that is mapping hundreds of millions of galaxies, detecting thousands of supernovae and analyzing patterns of cosmic structure that could reveal what is accelerating the expansion of the universe.

DES scientists surveyed a wide area of the sky from 2013 to 2019 using an extremely sensitive 570-megapixel digital camera built at Fermilab, the DECam. Credit: Reidar Hahn, Fermilab.
The Center for AstroPhysical Surveys (CAPS) led end-to-end data processing and archival for DES using the DES Data Management System at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications. NCSA operated the data management and computing infrastructure that processed, quality-controlled and served the full DES imaging and catalog data set, enabling the creation of science-ready sky maps and cosmological measurements.
“Dark energy and the universe’s accelerating expansion sit at the boundary between what we can measure precisely and what we can explain,” said CAPS Director Joaquin Vieira. “Pinning down what is driving that acceleration would reshape our understanding of the universe’s fate and force revisions to the deepest laws that describe space, time and matter.
“The latest results from the Dark Energy Survey were enabled by CAPS leadership and NCSA’s data management and computing backbone.”
This new analysis from DES narrows the controls in modeling the behavior of the universe thanks to combining the data from four different probes: baryon acoustic oscillations, type-Ia supernovae, galaxy clusters and weak gravitational lensing. Scientists hope to use this research to explore various other models for phenomena in the universe, including dark energy and alternative gravity.
“The latest DES release emphasizes that the new constraints are tighter than prior DES analyses while remaining broadly consistent with earlier DES results,” Vieira said. “It frames the methodology as a template for next-generation surveys such as the U.S. National Science Foundation and Department of Energy’s Vera C. Rubin Observatory Legacy Survey of Space and Time.”
CAPS connects data infrastructure expertise at NCSA to astrophysics teams at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and supports the people and workflows that turn survey-scale data into science results. NCSA is a founding partner of the DES project, along with Fermilab and NOIRLab.
Find out more about the DES news in the announcement from Fermilab.
Source: Andrew Helregel, NCSA
The post NCSA, CAPS Power Dark Energy Survey’s Most Comprehensive Expansion History Analysis appeared first on HPCwire.
Experts identify potentially serious breaches over treatment of people and call for ‘one in, one out’ scheme to end
The UN has called on the UK and France to halt the controversial “one in, one out” asylum system, warning there could be “serious violations of international human rights law”.
Nine experts, including seven special rapporteurs, wrote a 20-page letter to Downing Street and Paris on 8 December 2025 outlining detailed concerns about potential breaches of human rights they had identified in the scheme. They gave the two governments 60 days to respond and on Friday published their letter.
Continue reading...The launch of the next $600 iPhone might not follow last year's playbook.
I was recently presented the opportunity to buy something called a One Wheel XR Growler on FB Marketplace. I am brand new to the one wheel community haven’t heard of that model on the website. What am I even looking at, and what should I know about it as a first time buyer? Any help is appreciated.
Rodney Esser, 86, spent most of his life on or near the Wisconsin land where the school sits. He got his job as a part of the land sale in 1964.
Spain and Portugal hit with torrential rain while flash floods in Morocco force more than 100,000 people to evacuate
The Iberian peninsula has been placed under severe weather alerts as Storm Leonardo continues to batter parts of Spain and Portugal with torrential rain and strong winds.
Since Tuesday, the slow-moving system has brought widespread disruption, flooding and evacuations. In Grazalema, in southern Spain, more than 700mm of rain has fallen since Wednesday, roughly equivalent to the country’s average annual rainfall.
Continue reading...Turning Point USA is plotting its own half-time show in defiance of Bad Bunny – but one of TV’s Blackest programs already perfected the alt-cast in 1992
When the NFL announced Puerto Rican superstar Bad Bunny as this year’s Super Bowl half-time show headliner, it walked right into a culture war. Right-wing critics raged over the musician’s gender-nonconforming style, Spanish-language music and anti-Maga politics. Donald Trump, after saying he had never heard of Bad Bunny, called the headlining choice “absolutely ridiculous”.
In response, Erika Kirk and her Turning Point USA conservative advocacy group turned the controversy into its own counter-programming event: the All-American Halftime Show. After its Nashville-heavy lineup, led by Kid Rock, was announced on Monday, vice-president JD Vance was first among conservatives to enthusiastically spread the word.
Continue reading...The Barbz have built a parasocial relationship with the rapper – in some cases to their own detriment
Nicki Minaj is back doing PR for Donald Trump, and it’s messier than ever. Last week, she appeared at a treasury department summit in Washington DC to show support for Trump accounts, a new kind of investment account designed to “provide eligible American children with tax-advantaged investment accounts courtesy of President Donald J. Trump”, according to a government website.
The most disappointing part of the rapper’s recent turn toward Maga, though, is how her stans – a significant portion of whom are Black and queer – are responding. After the summit, Minaj’s followers defended her online and even helped push Trump’s agenda. “In a society full of hate and division, supporting Nicki Minaj is reminding people to see past political differences and see the human in one another,” one supporter wrote. Oh brother. Minaj is a perfect example of the cult of celebrity, the dangers of modern fan culture and how celebrity worship can intersect with politics in truly dangerous ways.
Tayo Bero is a Guardian US columnist
Continue reading...Using a VPN on your Android device can help you keep your online activity private, stream geo-restricted content and bypass throttling from anywhere.
Commentary: I know exactly what Samsung needs to do to make its next Ultra phone better than ever.
A simple factory error in China has created a viral sensation, with millions in Asia welcoming the Year of the Horse with a frown.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov accused Ukraine of trying to "disrupt the negotiation process" searching for an end to the war.
Ben Wegg-Prosser resigns from Global Counsel as emails show Epstein’s help was sought in setting up the company
A former No 10 aide has quit as chief executive of the influential lobbying firm he co-founded with Peter Mandelson following revelations from the Jeffrey Epstein files.
Ben Wegg-Prosser stepped down on Friday as the head of Global Counsel after emails revealed the extent to which he and Mandselson had involved the convicted child sex offender when they were setting up the company in 2010.
Continue reading...Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news
Silver is also looking very volatile.
The spot price of silver tumbled by 19% yesterday, hot on the heels of its 27% plunge on 30 January.
Continue reading...We want to hear how the fall in cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and ether are impacting people
Bitcoin sank to its lowest value in more than a year this week, faling to $63,000 on Thursday, about half its all-time peak of $126,000 in October 2025
It’s part of a wider shock to crypto prices. The second-largest cryptocurrency, ether, has faced losses of more than 30% this year alone.
Continue reading...Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney has announced a sweeping plan to shore up the country's auto industry and accelerate its electric vehicle transition, the latest in a series of moves to reduce Canada's deep economic dependence on the United States as American tariffs continue to batter the sector. The plan includes financial incentives for carmakers to invest in Canada, a new tariff credit scheme for manufacturers like General Motors and Toyota, and the reintroduction of EV buyer rebates. Canada will also enact stricter vehicle emissions standards and has set a goal of EVs comprising 90% of car sales by 2040. Carney at the same time scrapped a 2023 EV sales mandate introduced by former PM Justin Trudeau that automakers had called too costly. The announcements follow a deal last month with China to ease tariffs on Chinese EVs and an agreement with South Korea to encourage Korean car manufacturing in Canada. Roughly 90% of Canadian-made vehicles are exported to the US, and thousands of auto workers have lost their jobs since Trump imposed 25% tariffs on Canadian cars and parts last year.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Officials say a suicide bomber blew himself up at the gates of a Shiite mosque in Islamabad, killing dozens of people during Friday prayers.
Team USA star skier Lindsey Vonn takes part in her first training session at the Winter Olympics, battling a serious injury two days before her first event.
Charles "Sonny" Burton was convicted as an accomplice in the shooting death of Doug Battle, a customer who was killed during a robbery of an auto parts store.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Last month, Gov. Matt Meyer proposed a nearly $7 billion dollar package for the 2027 fiscal year that included fee increases on businesses that make up the state lucrative corporate franchise. While it remains to be seen just how much of Meyer’s proposal will be kept intact by the legislature, lawmakers on Wednesday appeared supportive of the measures which help to defray taxes for residents.
Delaware’s golden goose will likely become even more lucrative later this year.
Gov. Matt Meyer’s proposed budget includes increases in the annual fees paid by limited liability companies and other types of Delaware businesses that are not corporations. It also calls for an increase in the fees to other businesses that seek expedited services from the state.
The increases would result in an extra $81 million to the state’s General Fund during the next fiscal year, which begins July 1. The $2 billion corporate franchise system in Delaware, which largely serves out-of-state businesses with legal services, is a major driver for the state’s lower cumulative tax burden on residents.
During a budget hearing with lawmakers Wednesday, Secretary of State Charuni Patibanda-Sanchez said the annual fee increases are targeted at “alternative entities,” such as LLCs, general partnerships, and limited partnerships. Those businesses typically account for more than 75% of the more than two million Delaware companies that exist.
Currently, owners of LLCs pay $300 a year to keep the entity active within Delaware’s system – a fee that hasn’t changed in a decade. The Meyer administration is proposing to increase the fee by about $50.

Fees paid by such businesses contribute to an outsized amount of money that the Delaware Division of Corporation sends each year to the state’s General Fund, which pays for everyday government operations, such as schools.
Last year, that figure was a hefty $2.1 billion, Patibanda-Sanchez told lawmakers on Wedensday.
“I am really happy to report, after one year, we still are the corporate capital of the world,” she said.
The secretary of state’s comments come a year after Tesla CEO Elon Musk led a vocal campaign that called on business leaders to reincorporate their companies out of Delaware. While several high-profile companies, such as Coinbase and Dropbox, followed the call, others that threatened to, such as Meta, have remained in the state.
Most of the millions of companies that are domiciled in Delaware — from Meta to shell LLCs — do not have a physical presence in the state. Instead, they maintain a legal presence, through a third-party registered agent, that subjects them to Delaware ‘s corporate laws.
Asked by State Sen. Eric Buckson (D-Dover South) whether Delaware suffered a loss last year of “big fish” companies, Patibanda-Sanchez said there are now more large corporations that pay a hefty franchise tax of $250,000 to Delaware, than there were last year.
Later in the budget hearing, State Sen. Darius Brown (D-Wilmington) asked Patibanda-Sanchez whether Delaware should increase business fees even more. In response, the secretary of state said she did not want to increase costs on LLCs, noting that it is the entity type that several small business owners chose to operate under.
“The other fees absolutely we can discuss more,” she said during the hearing. “Again, we don’t like to shock our customers. We have 2.2 million of them.”
The fee increases for LLCs and other smaller companies are part of Meyer’s $6.9 billion budget proposal. During a press conference to unveil the proposal last month, Meyer and his staff said the budget includes what he called “targeted” cuts that would dig the state out of a roughly $500 million deficit caused by the inflationary pressures from health care spending and employee salaries.
Meyer’s budget also includes a handful of revenue increases, such as upward bumps in the state’s cigarette tax and in the business fees.
The post Delaware could increase fees on its $2B corporate franchise appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Every model of Apple Watch got an update this year, but how are they different? We look at all the specs.
Kennedy later said the purpose of his trip had nothing to do with vaccines. US embassy and UN staff at the time said otherwise, emails show
Over two days of questioning during his Senate confirmation hearings last year, Robert F Kennedy Jr repeated the same answer.
He said the closely scrutinized trip he took to Samoa in 2019, which came ahead of a devastating measles outbreak, had “nothing to do with vaccines”.
Continue reading...What Nouri al-Maliki’s prime minister bid tells us about Iraq Expert comment thilton.drupal
The surprise return of the controversial former leader has revealed that Iraq is still a US–Iran battleground.
On 27 January, US President Donald Trump surprised many with a blunt warning on social media: if Iraq reinstated the veteran politician Nouri al-Maliki as prime minister, the US would withdraw its support.
The public threat exposed a reality of foreign influence in Iraq that the country’s leaders insist they have left behind. Despite their claims of renewed sovereignty, marked by the end of the US troop presence and the UN mission last year, Iraq remains a battleground for US–Iran rivalry.
When that contest intensifies, Iraq’s fragility is quickly exposed. This time, even as Tehran grappled with mounting domestic and regional pressures, it showed little sign of strategic fatigue, reacting swiftly to promote its preferred candidate in Baghdad.
Meanwhile Washington, which had appeared to be distracted on Iraq under a president prone to spectacle over strategy, has since scrambled to oppose al-Maliki and Iran’s influence.
Al-Maliki’s re-emergence as a prime-ministerial candidate caught almost all Iraqi political actors off guard. He served as prime minister from 2006 to 2014, but had not since been seen as a viable candidate to return. Yet despite holding no formal office for more than a decade, al-Maliki has remained one of Iraq’s most influential political brokers, in a system where power is often exercised informally rather than through official institutions.
Al-Maliki was in office when Iraq lost nearly a third of its territory to the Islamic State in 2014, a collapse that ultimately forced his resignation. Many Iraqi and international observers trace ISIS’s rise to the sectarian policies his government was accused of pursuing against Sunni Arab communities in north-western Iraq. At the time, opposition to his return was underscored by a letter from Iraq’s Shia highest clerical authority in Najaf, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani.
Since regime change, Iraq’s elites have often favoured prime minister candidates who are weak, consensus figures, acceptable to all sides because they pose little threat to any of them.
Following the November 2025 Iraqi elections, this was the expected outcome of the country’s long post-election government formation process. But in a sudden and unexpected turn in January 2026, al-Maliki emerged as a frontrunner after being endorsed by parts (but not all) of the ruling Shia Coordination Framework, within which al-Maliki divides opinion. While his candidacy remains unlikely to succeed, it threatens to upend convention and mark the return of a strong partisan prime minister.
Al-Maliki’s potential return also reflects Iran’s enduring influence in Iraq, even as Tehran faces mounting pressures at home and across the region.
Since leaving office, al-Maliki has kept close relations with Iran. Among his final acts as prime minister in 2014 was the formalization of the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), an umbrella organization of armed groups. Several of these groups, including Kataeb Hezbollah, maintain strong ties to Tehran.
The proliferation of these armed groups has made someone like al-Maliki particularly valuable to Iran as it seeks to exert influence over a fragmented security landscape in Iraq. This is especially the case since the 2020 US assassination of Iranian general Qassem Soleimani and PMF leader Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis in Baghdad, which removed two key power brokers who had attempted to maintain cohesion over the growing constellation of armed groups.
For Tehran, Iraq is the most strategically valuable of the various conflict arenas where its influence and allied networks have eroded since 7 October 2023. Iraq, which shares a long border with Iran, serves as a critical security buffer closely entwined with Iran’s own domestic stability. At a time when Tehran is battered by sanctions, Iraq also functions as an economic lifeline, offering access to trade, hard currency and channels through which sanctioned goods can still circulate.
For these reasons, Iran cannot tolerate prolonged uncertainty or instability in Baghdad. This explains Tehran’s backing of al-Maliki. He is a trusted figure able to impose order on a system that Iran can no longer afford to leave in the hands of a weak, transitional leader who would need to learn the ropes.
Washington, by contrast, had largely allowed Iraq slip down its list of priorities. Working through the US Special Envoy to the Middle East, Steve Witkoff, the Trump administration directed its efforts on other areas including Israel-Palestine, Iran, Syria, Lebanon, and Yemen.
Amid a reduced focus on Iraq, in October 2025 the Trump administration appointed a close ally of President Trump, Mark Savaya, to serve as the US envoy to Baghdad. Savaya was still being orientated into the role and had not yet visited Baghdad since being appointed, leaving a vacuum of US presence, both during and after the November elections.
Once it emerged that al-Maliki was a frontrunner to return as prime minister in the post-election government formation talks, Washington moved to re-engage. According to Reuters reports citing unnamed sources, Savaya was sidelined (reports that he initially denied) and Tom Barrack, the US Ambassador to Turkey and Special Envoy for Syria, added Iraq to his portfolio. Barrack and other US officials made a flurry of calls to senior Iraqi leaders to reiterate their opposition to ‘a government installed by Iran’, in reference to al-Maliki’s candidacy.
This episode has underscored a sobering reality for many Iraqis. The country has enjoyed relative calm in comparison to neighbouring states engulfed in conflict since 7 October. But this stability remains precarious. It rests on fragile foundations and a political system that is still fragmented and exposed to external influences.
Iran, for its part, has shown it retains the capacity to react quickly and shape outcomes in Iraq. As one senior Iraqi official told me: ‘Iran is not just one person – the supreme leader. It is a state of institutions. And those institutions are present in Iraq, as if nothing has changed.’
Washington, too, revealed the persistence of its leverage. For many Iraqis, the fact that a single social media post by a US president could recalibrate the political process was a stark reminder that their country lacks full sovereignty, notwithstanding official claims to the contrary.
Al-Maliki’s candidacy now appears unlikely to survive this convergence of internal and foreign pressures. Yet for Iraq’s fragile stability to endure, the government formation process must move swiftly, avoiding another year-long paralysis that followed previous elections.
The next government will also have to confront its lack of full sovereignty, while continuing to keep Iraq insulated from the regional wars still raging around it. Failure to do so would expose the country to a series of mounting crises.
Most prominent is the fallout from a renewed US–Iran confrontation. Any existential threat to the Islamic Republic would inevitably reverberate across Iraq, overwhelming a political system ill-equipped to manage the fallout.
Founding of diplomatic outposts in Nuuk comes after US made efforts to secure control of Arctic island
Canada and France are to open diplomatic consulates in the capital of Greenland on Friday, showing support for their Nato ally Denmark and the Arctic island after US efforts to secure control of the semi-autonomous Danish territory.
Canada’s foreign minister, Anita Anand, was travelling to Nuuk to inaugurate the consulate, which officials say also could help boost cooperation on issues such as the climate crisis and Inuit rights. She was joined by Canada’s Indigenous governor general, Mary Simon.
Continue reading...At its new Stone Mountain, Georgia, facility, Roomba-like robots shuffle between stacks, another adds shipping labels while another arranges packages in pallets
One of the reasons Amazon is spending billions on robots? They don’t need bathroom breaks. Arriving a few minutes early to the public tour of Amazon’s hi-tech Stone Mountain, Georgia, warehouse, my request to visit the restroom was met with a resounding no from the security guard in the main lobby.
Between the main doors and the entrance security gate, I paced and paced after being told I would have to wait for the tour guide to collect me and other guests for a tour of the 640,000-sq-ft, four-story warehouse.
Continue reading...In Santa Clara, California, where nearly half of residents are born outside US, fear builds as game approaches
This weekend, tens of thousands of people will make their way to the Bay Area city of Santa Clara, ready to celebrate a weekend at the Super Bowl.
Beneath the jubilant mood, some residents and officials have been grappling with the possibility of ICE enforcement operations during the game, and taking steps to prepare.
Continue reading...Preliminary EU ruling says app shifts brains of users into ‘autopilot mode’, with concerns for children and vulnerable adults
TikTok could be forced into changes to make the app less addictive to users after the EU indicated the platform had breached the bloc’s digital safety rules.
The EU’s executive arm said in a preliminary ruling that the popular app had infringed the Digital Services Act (DSA) due to its “addictive design”.
Continue reading...After years in a skiing rut, using Carv on my recent ski trip has reignited my passion for the sport and instilled a belief that I can actually improve.
Savannah's Guthrie's mom, Nancy Guthrie, went missing over the weekend, and authorities have still not identified a possible suspect or person of interest.
Luxury plane owned by Florida property tycoon has twice flown Palestinian men from Arizona to Tel Aviv, Guardian investigation shows. Plus, Democratic senator calls for national strike if Trump interferes with midterms
Good morning.
Palestinians arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) were deported to the West Bank on a private jet owned by an ally of Donald Trump, a Guardian investigation revealed on Thursday.
Has Dezer’s jet been used for deportations before? Yes. According to Human Rights First, it made four “removal flights”, to Kenya, Liberia, Guinea and Eswatini, starting last October.
How has he responded? In an email, Dezer told the Guardian he was “never privy to the names” of those who travelled on his jet when it was privately chartered by Journey, or the purpose of the flight. “The only thing I’m notified about is the dates of use,” he said.
What does each side want? Washington wants to expand the negotiations to cover Iran’s ballistic missiles, support for the region’s armed groups and “treatment of their own people”, the US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, has said. Tehran is seeking assurances that the US is not using the talks as a smokescreen to impose regime change.
Continue reading...The Seahawks and Patriots are the last teams standing this season. The championship is likely to be decided by the smallest margins
The Seattle Seahawks’ run game came alive during the second half of the season and postseason. But it’s still the passing game that makes the offense sing. Almost all of that flows through Smith-Njigba.
Continue reading...Fascism feeds on the arbitrary killings that have long plagued the US. Ending the horror starts with abolishing ICE
In a recent Saturday Night Live episode, when asked about Minneapolis, one of the white hosts intones: “Well, the first word that comes to mind is unprecedented. You’ve got federal officers roaming the streets just pulling people out of their cars based on how they look. This just doesn’t happen in America.” The joke is, of course, that “this” has been happening forever, but to Black people in America. Now that it is happening to others, and particularly now that white protesters are being killed in the streets, it is suddenly a national emergency.
In his 1955 work Discourse on Colonialism, Aimé Césaire, the French poet and politician, argues that fascism was the result of bringing to bear on domestic populations the tactics European countries used on their colonial subjects in Africa. This is what has been called in the literature the “imperial boomerang thesis”. As many have been pointing out on social media and elsewhere, if we think of the US Black American population as an internally colonized population, then you can see what is happening on the streets of Minneapolis as a manifestation of the imperial boomerang thesis.
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The word “terrorist” wasn’t coined on September 11, 2001, but the defining event of the early 21st century ushered it in as the United States’ go-to term for demonizing outsiders and dissenters alike. The so-called “war on terror” transformed the way the U.S. wields power at home and abroad, enabling mass surveillance and a crackdown on the right to free speech. It became reflexive for the U.S. to disparage immigrants and protesters as supporters of terrorism.
President Donald Trump has embraced this model and manipulated it for his own ends, as author Spencer Ackerman points out. The Trump administration often peddles spurious accusations of terrorism against the targets of its immigration raids.
“There’s nothing about any of their action that’s remotely anything at all like terrorism,” Ackerman says. “But that is the fire in which ICE, CBP, and the Department of Homeland Security was forged. You are going to find this in its DNA.”
This week on the Intercept Briefing, host Jordan Uhl speaks with Ackerman, a leading expert on the concept of terrorism and its weaponization by the state. Ackerman’s 2021 book, “Reign of Terror, How the 9/11 Era Destabilized America and Produced Trump,” traces the legal and cultural evolution of the last 25 years, and how the boomerang has come back home.
“Before 9/11, not only was there no ICE, there wasn’t really much in the way of a robust internal mechanism for finding and deporting people who were in the country illegally. When it did exist, it was for people who were serious criminals, traffickers, and so on,” says Ackerman. Now, he says, the contemporary terrorism paradigm has transformed immigration enforcement into something “operating like a death squad.”
“What we are seeing on the streets of Minneapolis is what ICE has done to the undocumented for a very long time,” he says. “And now we’re seeing this happen to white people on the streets of Minneapolis for little more than filming ICE.” With the recent killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti, “I worry that a tremendous amount of our political system is geared toward either, on the Republican side, rationalizing it, justifying it, or on the Democratic side, pretending as if this is some kind of abuse that can be exceptionalized, rather than something that has to do with this 25-year history of coalescing immigration enforcement in the context of counterterrorism.”
As Democrats in Congress struggle to leverage DHS funding for changes to ICE policy — like a ban on face masks for ICE agents, an idea on which they’ve already softened — Ackerman says the parallels with the early 2000s are clear.
“We can’t move in reformist directions when the thing talked about being reformed laughs at killing Americans,” advises Ackerman. “Reformist politics under two Democratic administrations got us to where we are now. These are accommodationist politics, and the thing being accommodated wants to kill you.”
Listen to the full conversation of The Intercept Briefing on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen.
Jordan Uhl: Welcome to The Intercept Briefing. I’m Jordan Uhl.
If you didn’t recognize the voices, 2026 might not sound so different from the years following 2001.
George W. Bush: We are on the offense against the terrorists on every battlefront, and we’ll accept nothing less than complete victory.
Donald Trump: These are paid terrorists, OK? These are paid agitators.
Dick Cheney: Terrorists remain determined and dangerous.
Kristi Noem: It was an act of domestic terrorism.
JD Vance: We’re not going to give in to terrorism on this. And that’s exactly what’s happening.
John Ashcroft: America has grown stronger and safer in the face of terrorism.
JU: In the wake of the September 11 attacks, the so-called war on terror transformed the way the United States enforced its laws and its priorities, both at home and abroad. The label “terrorist” became a catchall for a wide range of actors, and dissent against the Bush administration was often disparaged as support for terrorism. The USA PATRIOT Act codified a reduction in civil liberties in the name of protecting freedom.
Bush: As of today, we’re changing the laws governing information sharing. And as importantly, we’re changing the culture of our various agencies that fight terrorism. Countering and investigating terrorist activity is the number one priority for both law enforcement and intelligence agencies.
JU: The day he put his signature on the Patriot Act, President George W. Bush laid out how those new priorities would include a focus on immigrants.
Bush: The government will have wider latitude in deporting known terrorists and their supporters.
JU: It was largely an era of political consensus. Both major parties lined up to support the Patriot Act and other legislation giving greater legal latitude to the government, from local police all the way up to the president. But even then, there were plenty of warnings that these powers would be abused and stretched far beyond their intended goals.
Supporters argued that there were backstops, like congressional oversight and international law, basic human decency and strategic restraint. But President Trump ignored and shattered so many of those long-standing norms. A glaring example is on display in the streets of U.S. cities right now.
ICE was a post-9/11 creation as part of the new Department of Homeland Security. In his book “Reign of Terror: How the 9/11 Era Destabilized America and Produced Trump,” author Spencer Ackerman traces the legal and cultural evolution of the last 25 years and how the boomerang has come back home.
Ackerman has reported from Iraq, Afghanistan, and many U.S. bases. He’s won a Pulitzer Prize and National Magazine Award, and currently writes for Zeteo and his own website, Forever Wars. Spencer, welcome to the Intercept Briefing.
Spencer Ackerman: Thanks for having me back, Jordan.
JU: So we’re talking 25 years now since 9/11. Many of our listeners — as well as working journalists, and even many people working on Capitol Hill right now — don’t have any living memory of that time. So can you start off by bringing us back to the days and weeks after September 11? President George W. Bush essentially had carte blanche to pass laws and change policy based on the notion that he was making Americans safer; that we had to clamp down and, in some cases, give up some of our freedoms to ensure security. With hindsight, what were the most significant aspects of the newly born war on terror that have a clear through line to today?
SA: Well, one that we saw just this week really take prominence is the Patriot Act, which among other things, enabled law enforcement to more seamlessly get “third-party records,” as they’re called — basically, customer accounts of records kept by some kind of service provider, financial records, internet records, and so on — without a judge’s signature or a finding of probable cause. It occurs instead through something called an administrative subpoena that the Patriot Act supercharged.
And we’re seeing just this week, there was a very good piece in the Washington Post laying out the exponential growth in administrative subpoenas being used by DHS in order to get records that would otherwise require a court order to collect.
Now, when the Patriot Act passed, the idea was that this would be the FBI surreptitiously collecting information that would prevent terrorism and uncover active links to terror networks and so forth. There’s not really much of a record of it having done that — certainly not a public one. But it definitely didn’t envision what DHS is doing, which is harassing critics of ICE.
Now, a ton of critics at the time, when the war on terror was coalescing, recognized and stated that this was going to be where the war on terror led. That it was going to become a war on dissent, that it was going to criminalize a tremendous amount of both politics in general but also resistance to itself — that we’re really seeing coalesce.
For the purposes of what we’re tracking, what we also saw after 9/11, is a complete sea change in how America conducted its immigration affairs. Something that I think people probably don’t remember is that before 9/11, not only was there no ICE, there wasn’t really much in the way of a robust internal mechanism for finding and deporting people who were in the country illegally. When it did exist, it was for people who were like serious criminals, traffickers, and so on.
The Department of Homeland Security gets created after Bush’s attorney general, John Ashcroft, pretty much takes over immigration enforcement because ICE’s predecessor, Immigration and Naturalization Services, https://theintercept.com/2026/01/16/trump-abolish-ice-renee-good-jonathan-ross/is under his purview. And what he starts doing is using it to round up immigrants — not just Muslim immigrants, although there was an immediate outcry for a clamp-down on Muslim immigration, certainly. But it was a way of shoe-horning a gestating border hysteria on the far right that 9/11 gave a kind of new security context and accordingly opportunity to pursue.
Even then, the Bush administration did not wish to create a kind of agglutination agency that would kind of stick together all sorts of domestic security functions. That took the active intervention of moderate Democrats and some moderate Republicans, who were able to basically checkmate Bush over his concerns about such an agency being kind of too large for, you know, extent conservative perceptions of government using his own logic of counterterrorism. And there is really no way for Bush to argue himself out of that. So instead he accommodated himself to it.
But even then, ICE, when it starts, has only 2,700 agents. By 2008, that becomes 5,000. ICE’s budget until in something like 2016 was $6 billion. For a while in the intervening decade, it’s hovered around $10 billion. Trump has now made it $85 billion.
This is an enterprise that operated fundamentally — well, I shouldn’t say fundamentally different. I don’t want to suggest that the INS was a benign agency, or that immigrant Americans didn’t fear INS, much as they would come to fear ICE. Just that there were constraints, both legal, budgetary, and from a political perspective, cultural, that constrained interior immigration enforcement. That doesn’t exist anymore. We have seen instead — to finish answering your question in a very long-winded way — a counterterrorism context transforms, in ways both direct and structural, the apparatus of American immigration to something that today is coalescing into something that I think we can see fairly clearly is on its way, if it’s not there already, into operating like a death squad.
JU: One thing we saw right away post-9/11 was the demonization of Arabs, Muslims, South Asians, or anyone remotely resembling any of those categories. What kind of connection can we make between the rhetoric and actions of that era with how otherization and fear is being wielded these days against immigrants and other populations?
SA: I see it as a rather straight line. The early years of the war on terror proved something that politicians, particularly in the Republican Party, but also in the Democratic Party, have been sort of chasing ever since to recover its potency — like chasing a high. And that’s that the politics of counterterrorism in the early 2000s — really persistent throughout, but especially in the early 2000s — completely deterred opposition, silenced dissent, and intimidated resistance. And it worked. It worked for a really long time. Eventually, it ceased working as well. But the fact that it worked can’t be overstated. Because politicians afterward, particularly when there has been no criminal liability or even significant political liability for the atrocities that result, accordingly seek to do what works. And this works extremely well.
“The politics of counterterrorism in the early 2000s … completely deterred opposition, silenced dissent, and intimidated resistance. And it worked.”
In a broad sense, one of the things that the war on terror did in particular to Muslims in this country was redefine terrorism away from being something that people throughout history have done across cultures, into “terrorism” is something that a certain kind of people are, and usually only them. That when people who do not look or worship like Muslims utilize violence for political purposes — that becomes defined as “counterterrorism.”
So there is a really, really firm connection in how we have seen not only the targets of ICE’s raids, since the Trump administration returned to power, be described as terrorists. But now people like Marimar Martinez in Chicago, Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minnesota, when they’re shot — and in the case of Good and Pretti, killed — by ICE, ICE and the broader political structure calls them terrorists.
They have the first-mover communication choice of basically daring journalists, politicians, whomever to prove that they weren’t in fact terrorists. There’s nothing about any of their action that’s remotely anything at all like terrorism. But that is the fire in which ICE, CBP, and the Department of Homeland Security was forged. You are going to find this in its DNA.
JU: As you wrote in your book, “Trump had learned the foremost lesson of 9/11: The terrorists were whomever you say they were.” And I’m curious about this seemingly expansive scope of this label. You’ve written about how the “terrorist” label has predominantly been used against people of color, while white people like Timothy McVeigh get different treatment, both linguistically and legally.
Do you think what we’re seeing in the Twin Cities is a significant development — the government calling white activists “terrorists” —and these are white people who present as average middle class, not so-called anarchists or “antifa.” Is this, in your mind, a significant shift in how the term “terrorist” is wielded and will be wielded?
SA: Yes, absolutely. Minnesota is kind of the next stanza in the [Martin] Niemöller poem. The poem about, “First they came for…”
ICE and CBP have a very long history of acting lawlessly. The conditions of ICE prisons, many of which are operated as for-profit enterprises with detainees being paid a dollar a day, have often been shown to be both violent and deeply neglectful. I have a friend who contracted Covid at the ICE detention center in Batavia, New York, for instance.
So what we are seeing on the streets of Minneapolis is what ICE has done to the undocumented for a very long time. What we saw in places like Portland in 2020, where, certainly in Portland, CBP tactical units, known as BORTAC, opened fire with less-lethal rounds on protesters outside the Hatfield building. That was what they were willing to do — similarly, lawlessly stuffing people into unmarked vans for detention and so forth — to people deemed enemies of the Trump administration.
And now we’re seeing this happen to white people on the streets of Minneapolis for little more than filming ICE. In Renee Good’s case, for possibly, slightly inconveniencing ICE vehicularly. And then, trying to comply with a contradictory order to get out of the way and then stay put, get outta the car, you know? And then with Alex Pretti — helping a woman up.
What we’re seeing is something we can’t turn away from, and I worry that a tremendous amount of our political system is geared toward either, on the Republican side, rationalizing it, justifying it, or on the Democratic side, pretending as if this is some kind of abuse that can be exceptionalized, rather than something that has to do with this 25-year history of coalescing immigration enforcement in the context of counterterrorism.
[Break]
JU: In some cities, we see different relationships between local law enforcement and federal agencies, and that’s been a contentious issue going back to the Joint Terrorism Task Forces enlisted during the height of the so-called war on terror. Now we hear more about the 287(g) agreements that are focused on giving immigration enforcement powers to local officers. Collaboration by city and county law enforcement agencies often depends on who’s in charge and sometimes local community influence. How has this idea transformed local law enforcement over the past 25 years — situating local police and sheriffs as partners in fighting a war, essentially?
SA: First, in the literal sense, it deputizes local police into an immigration function. And the implications of that are both profound and subtle. Being undocumented in this country is a civil offense, not a criminal offense. And it’s a misdemeanor, it’s not a felony. So being undocumented in this country now all of a sudden becomes “law enforcement-related.” It becomes a matter that is quickly understood in a kind of everyday person’s sense of association as something that is being done by cops.
And so cops are going after criminals. They’re not going after someone who overstayed a work visa. The person who overstayed a work visa is presumed to have done so because they’re criminal. That is a profound shift that nativists 30 years ago could only have as the apple of their eye. That’s now normal in this country.
Beyond that, beyond the kind of mimetic and cultural functions there, what the Department of Homeland Security’s relationship with local police over the vast majority of DHS’s existence was a patron-client relationship. There’s always been a lot of focus, and not inappropriately, on the [1033] Pentagon program that takes decommissioned military equipment and gives them to law enforcement. Appropriately so.
“ There is not very much terrorism in the United States of America of the sort that DHS was created to redress.”
DHS’s grant programs to local law enforcement have always dwarfed them, in terms of budgetary capability. There is not very much terrorism in the United States of America of the sort that DHS was created to redress. However, DHS had a budget to give out to local law enforcement, you know, cop shops, that applied for grant money that it would have to disperse.
The overall point is not only was DHS for such a long time a supplier of equipment that cops did not need for terrorism, but could find a whole lot of value out of when using against their existing tasks — which means, in a lot of cases, against the people it polices. But also, it accustomed police shops to look at DHS as a source of support that didn’t have to go through existing and potentially contentious budgetary processes locally that municipal, small-d democratic functions have power to effect. It’s not the most potent power. I’m telling you this from New York City where the NYPD has for a very long time been considered pretty much untouchable. But nevertheless, this is a more friction-free funding path than troublesome city councils.
JU: And to continue this line of thought on weaponry, it’s one thing to have a heavily armed Border Patrol if they legitimately believe they may encounter a “violent drug cartel.” But the images we’re seeing of immigration agents in residential U.S. neighborhoods with body armor and advanced weaponry brings to mind the militarization of local police and federal agencies that’s taken place since 9/11.
You talked about the equipment, you’ve talked about the vehicles. There are local police departments with MRAPs. Across the board, top-down from federal agencies down to local, it feels like a war that’s literally everywhere. What’s been the arc of that evolution?
SA: Markets for advanced military technology get spurred on by overseas war. Eventually, those wars draw down beyond the funding capabilities of those different technological production lines. Those different technological production lines will seek out derivative markets that they can use to keep making money. That has been local law enforcement, but before that, it’s been DHS.
Starting around the first Obama administration, DHS, particularly for the border, starts buying up a drone fleet. Then it starts buying up really powerful military-grade camera suites that had previously been developed for protecting U.S. bases in Iraq and Afghanistan. DHS buys this stuff. It provides funding for — as we were just talking about — local police agencies to eventually start buying other stuff that DHS has.
There’s no Gray Eagle-sized drone in police custody in the country yet. But we’ll talk in 10 more years, and we’ll see about that. DHS provides funding to get similar technologies, related technologies, and then it pushes what it currently has beyond the border into the interior of the country.
We should also mention that the border after 9/11 changes in important ways, where DHS — this is for the last 15 years at least been policy at CBP — the border is anywhere within 100 miles of a port of entry or exit. So if you’ve wondered, why is the Border Patrol in, you know, Charlotte, North Carolina, or Chicago or Minneapolis — that’s why. Because your sense of the border intuitively is not the U.S. government’s definition of the border.
Eventually we see this stuff move into the interior of the United States. The roundups, which had been there since at least 2005, become more ambitious, and they become, with the 287(g) program, involving local law enforcement as well as the Department of Homeland Security — and now increasingly toward critics of DHS itself.
I want to say one more thing about this. When we look at what ICE and CBP deploy with, in all of the cities that we’ve seen them invest since the second Trump administration — a common denominator has been they’re all wearing plate carriers. The stuff that says like police, ICE, and so forth, you know, the ballistic chest protection that they wear around them.
Marimar Martinez legally had a gun. She didn’t draw it; she kept it holstered in her car. They called her a domestic terrorist. Her hands were on the steering wheel when ICE shot her.
“ICE and CBP are posturing as if they are the ones under the threat, not that they are the threat themselves.”
Alex Pretti famously had a gun, not that he drew it on CBP. When they shot him, six of them shot this man who is completely not in any position to be threatening them. ICE and CBP are posturing as if they are the ones under the threat, not that they are the threat themselves.
All of this social media footage-ready imagery that they’ve been collecting and disseminating is what we should understand as a psy-op on the American people to make it think that these are a valorous Praetorian Guard that puts itself in danger constantly. Instead, they are the ones inflicting the danger on Americans, undocumented or citizens.
JU: Now we talked about this evolution — part of that is an expansive or unchecked legal infrastructure and framework that allows this. Over the past two decades-plus, were there moments when that infrastructure could have been dialed back or unraveled? Times when Trump wasn’t president? Did that happen to any extent? And if not, why not?
SA: There are many reasons to be deeply upset at the way the Obama and Biden administrations treated the institutions of the war on terror that they inherited. But really chief among them is the way that they embraced the existing structures of homeland security for use against immigrants.
Obama — famously the deporter in chief, always under pressure from his right to deport more. Obama famously makes the massive miscalculation that if he can just, you know, bolster resources for border protection, then he can buy goodwill on the right. This was just an epic political miscalculation that really everyone could have seen coming, and many did.
Biden — 4.4 million deportations on his watch; Trump left office the first time at 1.5 million. After everything that we saw the Trump administration do the first time around, in particular with child separation, with raising the number of people in ICE custody to something like 50,000 a day — I don’t know if they’ve gotten back to that, if they’ve exceeded that by now or not. But I remember reporting on it at the time that it was in 2020, it had gotten up to, maybe a little before the pandemic, something like 50,000 a day. It was really astonishing.
But Biden famously tells his donors ahead of the election that they’re not gonna seek fundamental change. And I think that by the time the Biden administration takes office, the Democratic Party had successfully marginalized the voices that were calling, not just for pursuing once again, comprehensive immigration reform — which of course is stifled by the Republicans again and again and again — but to abolish ICE.
I think right now we are at, you know, years before a Democrat could theoretically take power. But we’re starting to see Democratic politicians go down the same very dangerous road along the politics of security that they’ve played not just during the Biden administration or the first Trump administration, but throughout the war on terror.
“Unless the nativist concept of the need for an interior deportation force is confronted root and branch, we are going to continue to see exactly what we are seeing.”
And they’re doing it with ICE now, which is we’re starting to hear people say things like, “This is not immigration enforcement.” It’s true. This is not what I think many people think of as immigration enforcement. But immigration enforcement is how we got to this point. And unless the nativist concept of the need for an interior deportation force is confronted root and branch, we are going to continue to see exactly what we are seeing. Not as a form of stasis, but as a form of ICE and CBP completing their transformation into a death squad.
And I use a very scary term because this is a very scary moment. But we also need to be really clear about what we are seeing ICE do and behave as. You mentioned it’s unwillingness to follow the law. In Minnesota, a judge found just before January of 2026 expired, around 100 violations of court orders about immigration and how ICE needed to behave, in just that month. How many gleeful videos do we have to see on our phone of ICE people telling Minnesotans to “fuck around and find out”? Beyond even just the actual murders and shootings — but the way that the CBP officers applauded after shooting Alex Pretti? The way Jonathan Ross, who murdered Renee Good, called her a “fucking bitch” after doing so? This is not something that can be reformed. The best time to abolish ICE was 2003. The second best time is today.
Every single moment that we refrain from doing this, that Democratic politicians as well as Republican ones try and push it back to the margins of political discourse, is another day closer to the time that they’re going to shoot you, that they’re going to deport someone you love, and on and on and on.
“This is not something that can be reformed.”
JU: There’s a sinister delight that we see time and time again from federal agents beyond the comments or behavior after both of those Minnesotans were killed. But we’ve seen many other videos of them wielding those incidents to other observers as threats. And to your point, that’s not something that you can fix with a sensitivity training. That is something ingrained in the culture. And I’m curious what could be done? It doesn’t seem like there’s a critical mass of Democrats willing to do that. Maybe there is and or maybe we might get to one, but that’s down the road. And you of course have the challenge of the current Supreme Court composition not wanting to challenge anything that Trump is doing meaningfully. So realistically, what can people hope for or work towards in terms of turning this imperial boomerang around?
SA: First, the answer to how you stop the war on terror is not easy, but it is simple. And that’s organize. Force your politicians in an abolitionist direction; oust them when they won’t go in that direction. Organize so you can build power amongst like-minded people in your area, in order to produce that function. It’s awful that that’s where we kind of have to start from, but our leaders will not do this on their own.
Outside of that I would look to efforts that the Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner is building toward, in which he’s been talking about, however long it takes, prosecuting ICE and CBP agents for violating relevant local laws. And one of the main lessons of the war on terror is that without legal consequence for one era’s atrocity, the next is foreordained.
So until ICE killers and CBP kidnappers alike go to prison, we can expect them to continue their behavior. This is why JD Vance and Stephen Miller have started deceitfully talking about absolute immunity for ICE after they killed Renee Good.
“Until ICE killers and CBP kidnappers alike go to prison, we can expect them to continue their behavior.”
Krasner has been hinting that there is a kind of impromptu coalition of like-minded district attorneys and perhaps state attorneys general that are seeking to go in this direction. That will either act as a deterrent, or it won’t. Here in New York, the attorney general, Letitia James, announced that she’s going to start sending observers from her office out on ICE-related operations in and around the state. That carries with it a suggestion of prosecutorial intervention. I think that’s going to be a crucial step. But it’s a step that is going to have to come in supplement, with people finding political outlets for an explosion in popularity — justifiably so, in my opinion — for abolishing ICE.
We can’t move in reformist directions when the thing talked about being reformed laughs at killing Americans. This is something that has to be uprooted and replaced, or just simply not replaced at all, if we don’t think certain functions that they perform are legitimate functions, which I think is a very, you know, reasonable conclusion. Reformist politics under two Democratic administrations got us to where we are now. These are accommodationist politics, and the thing being accommodated wants to kill you.
JU: My final question for you, Spencer, is where does this go over the next three years if nothing happens? If there is no restraint, if there is no change, if there is no reform. That is certainly an uphill fight. Nothing could potentially happen until at least after midterms, but we’ve seen Trump’s priorities laid out in places like Project 2025, and I can’t imagine this is their end game. So if left untouched, where does this go over the next three years?
SA: We’ve been seeing reporting from Ken Klippenstein and others about how ICE is accessing existing, widely revealing, databases of Americans’ information, building others. We saw in the beginning of the Trump administration, the massive data-snatching grabs involving DOGE that have also accumulated a tremendous amount of revealing information on Americans. This is also, I would suggest, the predictable course of the surveillance state after 9/11. These massive and revealing data sets will go into ICE custody, probably through tools purchased from Palantir, to get an ever more refined picture of terrorism in the United States. Except by terrorism, they mean you and me. They will mean people that they can consider internal dissenters, critics, obstacles to the continued operations of ICE, and like-minded allied federal agencies.
“It might not be long before we see a drone strike in an American city. And I can’t stop thinking about that.”
This, I think, is probably coming sooner than three years. Not to sound alarmist, but the current trajectory of this is really, really ominous. And that is an extremely realistic possibility. Your friend and mine, Derek Davison of the American Prestige podcast https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/american-prestige/id1574741668a couple months ago, was predicting that it might not be long before we see a drone strike in an American city. And I can’t stop thinking about that. And I wish I could say I found that an outlandish possibility. But the crucial framework for that was laid when the Obama administration decided that they could execute an American citizen, Anwar al-Awlaki, without any kind of criminal process, let alone a conviction, because it would be too inconvenient to send a team of CIA operatives to kidnap him.
It won’t be long, I think — as long as that Chekov’s president remains blessed by the Office of Legal Counsel in the Department of Justice — before we start seeing that applied on American soil. And those are some places that I think are realistic possibilities for what we might see unless this apparatus is aggressively dismantled.
JU: That is absolutely chilling. And in some way, I’m at a loss for words, just something that I never thought we might encounter. But that is a situation we seem to be finding ourselves in. Spencer, as always, I appreciate your insight, your analysis, and thank you so much for joining me on The Intercept Briefing.
SA: Thank you, Jordan.
JU: That does it for this episode.
This episode was produced by Andrew Stelzer. Laura Flynn is our supervising producer. Sumi Aggarwal is our executive producer. 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.
If you want to support our work, you can go to theintercept.com/join. Your donation, no matter the amount, makes a real difference. If you haven’t already, please subscribe to The Intercept Briefing wherever you listen to podcasts. And leave us a rating or a review, it helps other listeners to find us.
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Until next time, I’m Jordan Uhl.
The post “Terrorist”: How ICE Weaponized 9/11’s Scarlet Letter appeared first on The Intercept.
New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani has criticized landlords and vowed to freeze what tenants in rent-stabilized apartments pay monthly.
Pressure is mounting on British Prime Minister Keir Starmer over his decision to appoint Epstein associate Peter Mandelson as U.K. ambassador in Washington.
Bitcoin has fallen roughly 44% from its October peak, and while the drawdown isn't crypto's deepest ever on a percentage basis, Bloomberg's Odd Lots newsletter lays out a case that this is the industry's worst winter yet. The macro backdrop was supposed to favor Bitcoin: public confidence in the dollar is shaky, the Trump administration has been crypto-friendly, and fiat currencies are under perceived stress globally. Yet gold, not Bitcoin, has been the safe haven of choice. The "we're so early" narrative is dead -- crypto ETFs exist, barriers to entry are zero, and the online community that once rallied holders through downturns has largely hollowed out. Institutional adoption arrived but hasn't lifted existing tokens like ETH or SOL; Wall Street cares about stablecoins and tokenization, not the coins themselves. AI is pulling both talent and miners toward data centers. Quantum computing advances threaten Bitcoin's encryption. And MicroStrategy and other Bitcoin treasury companies, once steady buyers during the bull run, are now large holders who may eventually become forced sellers.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Data shows 29 hybrid and 98 diesel cars also sold, while the figure for battery electric vehicles was more than 2,000
Just seven new petrol cars were sold in Norway last month, data shows.
The country, which is the frontrunner in the uptake of electric vehicles, shifted a record low number of new fossil-fuel cars in January, information from the Norwegian Road Traffic Information Council (OFV) reveals.
Continue reading...The Department of Defense has quietly signed a $210 million deal to buy advanced cluster shells from one of Israel’s state-owned arms companies, marking unusually large new commitments to a class of weapons and an Israeli defense establishment both widely condemned for their indiscriminate killing of civilians.
The deal, signed in September and not previously reported, is the department’s largest contract to purchase weapons from an Israeli company in available records, according to an online federal database that covers the last 18 years. In a reversal of the more commonly seen direction for weapons transfers between the countries — in which the U.S. sends its weapons to Israel — the U.S. will pay the Israeli weapons firm Tomer over a period of three years to produce a new 155mm munition. The shells are designed to replace decades-old and often defective cluster shells that left live explosives scattered across Vietnam, Laos, Iraq, and other nations.
The terror of cluster weapons persists long after the guns that fired them have quieted, as civilians return to fields, forests, and settlements laced with bomblets that can explode years later without warning.
“The footprint of the injuries of these weapons is so horrifying,” said Alma Taslidžan, advocacy manager for the aid organization Humanity & Inclusion, which pushes to ban cluster munitions. She recalled speaking with a 17-year-old boy who found an unexploded cluster bomblet in his neighbor’s garden in the aftermath of the Bosnian War.
“He said he played with it for quite a while. Suddenly it exploded. It blew up both of his hands; it blew away part of his face as well,” she said.
Known as the XM1208 munition, America’s new cluster shells are designed to have a dud rate — or risk of failure to explode — of less than 1 percent. They rely on more complex fuses and self-destruct features to reduce long-term danger to civilians, according to army procurement documents and weapons experts. But researchers say those low failure rates in testing do not reflect real-world performance, and advocates argue that cluster weapons’ battlefield effectiveness cannot justify their humanitarian costs.
“They are inherently indiscriminate,” said Brian Castner, an Amnesty International weapons investigator and former U.S. Air Force explosive ordnance disposal officer. “There’s not a way to use them responsibly, in that you can’t control where they land, and with this high dud rate you can’t control the effect on the civilian population afterwards.”
The Cluster Munition Monitor has documented more than 24,800 cluster munition injuries and deaths since the 1960s, three-quarters from unexploded remnants. In 2024, cluster munitions killed at least 314 civilians, the majority of them in Ukraine.
Both the XM1208 and the deal to buy them are atypical. The DOD awarded the contract without public competition under a “public interest” exception to federal contracting law, using recent amendments that loosened rules for awarding no-bid defense contracts involving Ukraine, Taiwan, and Israel.
“I found this to be rather unusual,” said Julia Gledhill, a military contracting researcher for the Stimson Center, a Washington-based foreign policy think tank. “I have not seen something like this before — a sole source contract to a foreign military contractor for $200 million.”
“I have not seen something like this before — a sole source contract to a foreign military contractor for $200 million.”
Federal agencies are legally required to create a “determination and findings” document justifying the award of a no-bid contract, which can be requested from the agencies under public records law. The Army has not yet responded to a Freedom of Information Act request for that documentation.
Tomer did not respond to a request for comment. Asked about the new munition’s failure rate, U.S. Army public affairs officer Shahin Uddin wrote it has “has undergone all required testing to ensure it meets all performance requirements, including compliance with the DoD Cluster Munition Policy.”
The Pentagon’s efforts to field the XM1208 comes against the backdrop of the Russia–Ukraine war, where both sides have blanketed battlefields with older cluster munitions — including some given to Ukraine by the Biden administration. Some Eastern European countries have considered withdrawing from the Convention on Cluster Munitions amid fears of conflict with Russia, and in 2024, Lithuania became the first country to abandon the treaty.
As a result, Castner said, “Both the cluster munitions convention and the anti-personnel land mine convention are under threat.”
But major military powers — like Russia, China, Israel, India, Pakistan, and the United States — have never signed the Convention on Cluster Munitions, which bans its 112 member states from using or producing those weapons. Rather than sign the 2008 pact, the U.S. enacted a policy that year to stop using its old, failure-prone cluster munitions by 2019 and develop new weapons with a dud rate of less than 1 percent.
Progress was slow, and in 2017, the U.S. weakened its policy to allow continued use of older cluster bombs until it had sufficient stockpiles of safer models. That year, the U.S. military began testing the M999 cluster munition: a new shell developed by another state-owned Israeli arms company, IMI Systems.
“The U.S. wants all options,” said William Hartung, an arms industry researcher with the Quincy Center for Responsible Statecraft. “One of their arguments was it’s good if you’re in a close-packed artillery situation — a ground war. It clears more of an area.”
During its 2006 war in Lebanon, Israel drew international criticism for using cluster bombs, and IMI promised a new weapon that would lower collateral damage — both to civilians and Israel’s flagging global reputation. In 2018, IMI Systems was acquired by Elbit Systems, a privately owned Israeli defense contractor which has faced recent boycotts for arming Israel’s forces in Gaza and the West Bank.
After backlash from investors in countries that had signed the convention, Elbit canceled production of the M999 and pledged not to build any cluster weapons.
But the M999 program did not stay dead. The Israeli government established a new state-owned arms company, Tomer, in 2018, with no limitations on cluster weapon production. The U.S. Army then adopted the M999 as its new cluster shell for artillery, renaming it the XM1208. According to a 2024 army munitions publication, the XM1208 is designed to release nine bomblets which then detonate in the air, each containing 1,200 pieces of tungsten shrapnel.
That same document lists Elbit as a production partner for the XM1208, despite the company’s pledge to abide by the cluster convention. Elbit did not immediately return a request for comment, and the Army did not respond to an inquiry about whether Elbit was working on the munition.
Business at Tomer has been booming, due to both the genocide in Gaza and foreign arms sales, according to the Israeli tech news site Calcalist. It recorded $173 million in sales last year, making the DOD’s $210 million contract a massive windfall compared to its historical revenue. Tomer pays the Israeli government a 50 percent dividend on its profit, Calcalist reported.
The XM1208 is designed with multiple fail-safe fuses to reduce dud rates, according to U.S. Army documents published online. But little is known about how it actually performs in the field. Last year, The Guardian published photos showing an expended M999 shell in Lebanon, suggesting Israel had used the weapon in its recent attacks on Hezbollah. But there is currently no public data on its real-world failure rate, said N.R. Jenzen-Jones, director of the munitions analysis firm Armament Research Services.
Real-world dud rates are generally much higher than those found in controlled testing, which does not account for battlefield conditions like soft soil or older, degraded fuses, said Taslidžan, of Humanity & Inclusion. The manufacturer of Israel’s M85 cluster munition, which includes a self-destruct feature to reduce long-term risk to civilians, touted a “hazardous dud” rate of less than 0.1 percent. But researchers with Norwegian People’s Aid who analyzed the aftermath of M85 strikes from the 2006 war in Lebanon found that about 10 percent failed to explode.
And even if the XM1208 meets its 1 percent failure rate target, it would still be inhumane, said Taslidžan, leaving large numbers of lethal duds behind.
“That’s why the Convention on Cluster Munitions bans these weapons as a class,” she said. “The area effects and residual contamination are fundamentally incompatible with protecting civilians.”
The post Pentagon Makes Largest Known Arms Purchase from Israel — For Banned Cluster Weapons appeared first on The Intercept.
Labour Together allegedly hired company to look at Sunday Times and Guardian reporters after article about donations
A thinktank previously run by a Labour minister and the prime minister’s chief of staff is alleged to have paid a PR firm to investigate journalists who were looking into its funding.
Labour Together, once run by Morgan McSweeney and then by Josh Simons, now a Cabinet Office minister, hired APCO Worldwide to investigate journalists from the Guardian, the Sunday Times and other outlets and to identify their sources, according to claims in the Substack publication Democracy for Sale.
Continue reading...Puerto Rican rapper to follow Grammy victory and anti-ICE speech with show on most-watched US TV event of the year
Just a week after receiving the Grammy award for Album of the Year, the Puerto Rican rapper Bad Bunny will take on the US’s most watched concert of the year when he performs at the Super Bowl this Sunday.
The artist born Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio took home the music academy’s top honor for 2025’s Debí Tirar Más Fotos, a politically minded record infused with Puerto Rican music and culture. The album became the first Spanish-language work to take home the prize, beating out competition from Kendrick Lamar, Lady Gaga and Justin Bieber.
Continue reading...No more eyeballing your espresso shots. Here's what an expert suggests for making the perfect puck.
A Houston doctor has been indicted on charges of falsifying medical records for five patients, making them ineligible to receive a liver transplant, federal prosecutors say.
Macmillan announces new instalment of popular Julia Donaldson tale featuring illustrations by Axel Scheffler
The Gruffalo family is to expand after the publisher of the popular children’s stories announced a long-awaited third book about the beloved monster.
The new tale, Gruffalo Granny, will be published on 10 September, Macmillan announced.
Continue reading...Cubans, once fast-tracked to US residency, now find themselves targets of Trump’s immigration crackdown
When Rosaly Estévez “self-deported” from Miami to Havana last November, US immigration officers bid farewell by removing her ankle monitor. The 32-year-old had been told she was about to be detained, so she left with her three-year-old son, Dylan, a US citizen.
Heidy Sánchez, 43, wasn’t given a choice. She was forcibly removed from Florida last April but, worrying about Cuba’s failing healthcare system, she left her two-year-old daughter, Kaylin, behind with her American husband, Carlos.
Continue reading...Senators introduced legislation on Thursday that would require prescription drug labels to identify where the medication was made, adding momentum to a yearslong campaign to bring more transparency to the often elusive generic drug industry.
At a hearing last week, members of the Senate Special Committee on Aging criticized manufacturers for routinely concealing the locations of their drugmaking plants as well as the suppliers that provide key ingredients. ProPublica described this lack of transparency — and how it was enabled by the Food and Drug Administration — in a series of stories that found the agency had quietly allowed troubled foreign drugmakers to continue selling generic medication to unsuspecting Americans.
The Clear Labels Act, introduced by committee chair Rick Scott, R-Fla., and ranking member Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., is meant to help patients, doctors and pharmacists know more about the drugs they use and prescribe. Current labels often list only a distributor or repackager of a medication and sometimes provide no information at all. The proposal calls for labels to disclose the original manufacturer as well as the suppliers that produced their key ingredients. Sens. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., and Katie Britt, R-Ala., also signed on to the proposed legislation.
“Every American deserves honesty and transparency about what they are putting into their bodies,” Scott said. “It is wholly irresponsible that we’re living in the dark when it comes to where our medicines are made.”
ProPublica had to file public records requests and sue the FDA in federal court to obtain information about where generic drugs are made and whether government inspectors had flagged those factories for safety or quality concerns. ProPublica ultimately created a first-of-its-kind tool that empowers consumers to find the information themselves.
Ninety percent of the prescriptions in the United States are for generics, many of them manufactured overseas. For patients and their doctors, identifying where medication was made and the safety records of those factories had been nearly impossible until now.
Rx Inspector, the tool ProPublica introduced late last year, includes factory location information and inspection histories when available for nearly 40,000 generic drug products. Doctors, patients and researchers say they are already using it to better understand where medication comes from and to find more information when a generic causes unexplained health problems.
The Clear Labels Act would require manufacturing location information on packaging for brand-name drugs as well as generics.
Ohio State University professor John Gray, who testified at the hearing, suggested that packaging could include a QR code linking to the data on a website. Gray is working to assign quality scores to specific versions of generic drugs and said the code would allow patients and doctors to easily find those scores while researching medication and their manufacturers.
“Low-quality drugs have human consequences,” Gray said.
Gray said he is using Rx Inspector to fuel his work, which is funded by the Department of Defense. The tool, he said, “allows you to find out where … your drug is made easily.”
The push for more transparency comes on the heels of a bipartisan investigative report that Scott and Gillibrand released last year, calling for sweeping changes in the FDA’s oversight of the generic drug industry. Among other things, the senators asked the FDA to alert hospitals and other group purchasers when foreign drugmakers with serious safety and quality failures are given a special pass to send their products to the United States.
Since 2013, ProPublica found, the FDA allowed more than 20 troubled overseas factories, mostly in India, to continue to send certain medications to the U.S. even after those facilities were banned because of concerns about contamination and other breaches. The agency didn’t actively track whether the imported drugs were harming users and kept the practice largely hidden from the public and Congress.
The lawmakers also called on the FDA to conduct more drug testing. The agency doesn’t routinely assess generic drugs once they are on the market, even if they come from factories with quality and safety violations. ProPublica recently tested several versions of three of the most widely prescribed generics in the United States and found that two had irregularities that could risk the health of consumers.
At the hearing last week, the committee’s fourth on generic drugs in recent months, lawmakers and witnesses said knowing more about where drugs are made is an essential first step to improving drug quality. For years, pharmacists and members of Congress have pushed for more transparency to help patients and doctors make informed decisions about health care.
“Everyone deserves to know where their medications are coming from,” said University of Utah Hospital pharmacist Erin Fox, who has advocated for more information.
Fox and others also said they support a drug-quality rating system, which would allow hospitals and government agencies to assess generic drugs based on quality and not just price.
“You never go to the supermarket and buy the lowest price, most bruised fruit or go on Amazon and buy the one-star product because it’s cheaper,” said Dr. Kevin Schulman, a professor of medicine and health policy at Stanford University. “And yet that’s the generic drug market, and that’s 90% of the prescriptions that we write as physicians. And that’s just not tolerable.”
A spokesperson for the trade group for brand-name drugmakers said in a statement to ProPublica that the industry would “welcome conversations about how to strengthen the biopharmaceutical supply chain.” The generic drug lobbying group said that additional labeling requirements would impose “significant costs in exchange for limited returns,” and that drug manufacturers already disclose country of origin information under U.S. Customs and Border Protection rules.
The post The Clear Labels Act Would Change What You Know About Your Prescription Medication appeared first on ProPublica.
Cute fluffy AI-powered “pets” are providing emotional companionship to an increasing number of lonely, tired Chinese — and a digital ear for tech giants.
Justice Department files show that Jeffrey Epstein sought help from a Russian official after claiming a woman from Moscow was blackmailing “powerful businessmen” in New York.
Scores of claims are expected to arise out of the Trump administration’s crackdown on illegal immigration. Experts say suing the government will be tough.
Their ‘pro-family’ rhetoric is a cynical and hollow sham
Of the 3,800 children and infants taken into immigration custody between January and October of 2025, a majority – 2,600 – were detained by ICE officers. That means that the children, as young as one or two years old, were not arrested at the border or legal ports of entry, where asylum seekers frequently present themselves to border officers, but inside the country.
That means that those children were not new arrivals seeking help; they were kids going about their daily lives in the US, often with legal status. They were children like Liam Conejo Ramos, aged five, who was snatched from his driveway after school by immigration agents while wearing a blue bunny hat to keep him warm in the Minnesota cold. They are children like one student, a 17-year-old from Liam’s school district in Minnesota, who was taken from their car, or the other child, a 10-year-old girl in the fourth grade, who was taken alongside her mother; or the two other boys, brothers in the second and fifth grades, who were delivered by school officials to an ICE detention center after their mother was arrested and taken there. She had called the school to ask them to bring her boys to her in the prison; there was no one else to take care of them.
Continue reading...
Why Should Delaware Care?
The Trump administration is suing Delaware in an attempt to obtain the addresses, driver’s license numbers and partial Social Security numbers for thousands of Delawareans. Delaware is one of more than 20 states being sued by the Trump administration for voter data, which advocates say represents a federal overreach that may dissuade Delawareans from voting.
Delaware immigrant advocacy groups asked a judge to dismiss a federal lawsuit brought forth by the Trump administration demanding state election officials turn over sensitive voter information to the federal government.
The organizations filed motions to intervene and to dismiss the ongoing case between the U.S. Department of Justice and the Delaware Department of Elections on Wednesday. The American Civil Liberties Union of Delaware, La Esperanza, the Latin American Community Center and the Delaware Coalition Against Domestic Violence all asked to join the case and dismiss the lawsuit.
“Immigrant citizens are at risk of wrongful targeting for immigration enforcement when the federal government has their data,” said Maria Matos, president and CEO of the Latin American Community Center, in a written statement to the court.
The U.S. Department of Justice first filed the lawsuit against Delaware Elections Commissioner Anthony Albence in December as the administration sought to obtain sensitive voter information, such as driver’s license numbers, residential addresses and partial Social Security numbers, for thousands of Delaware residents.
The organizations’ leaders argued in court filings that sharing the sensitive information would deter eligible Latino and immigrant residents from voting and heighten anxieties about how their information is being shared with other federal agencies.
Disclosure of the information also would be “disastrous” for domestic violence survivor safety, privacy and confidence, Sue Ryan, executive director of the Delaware Coalition Against Domestic Violence, said in a written statement to the court.
The Department of Justice has argued that it needs the detailed information to ensure that ineligible people are kept off voter rolls and that only U.S. citizens are voting. The request for voters’ information comes amid President Donald Trump’s insistence that the 2020 election was stolen from him due to widespread voter fraud.
“Accurate voter rolls are the cornerstone of fair and free elections, and too many states have fallen into a pattern of noncompliance with basic voter roll maintenance,” said Attorney General Pamela Bondi in a written news release when the DOJ announced Delaware’s lawsuit.
When reached for comment, the DOJ referred Spotlight Delaware to Bondi’s written comments made in December.
Since last May, the DOJ has demanded that nearly every state hand over detailed voter information. The agency has sued over 20 states and Washington, D.C., for not complying with its demands.
At least 11 states – mostly Republican-led – have provided or agreed to pass along their full statewide voter registration lists, according to the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University’s Law School, an organization tracking the requests.
Delaware Elections Commissioner Anthony Albence declined to comment on the lawsuit, as the department does not comment on any pending litigation, a spokesperson said.
Red Clay School Board member Jose Matthews also joined the organizations’ petition to join the case and dismiss the lawsuit. Two other Delaware residents, including a Widener University law school professor, previously joined the lawsuit due to worries that the Trump administration would retaliate against them for their views if their private voter information was shared.
The December lawsuit stemmed from back-and-forth letters between the U.S. Department of Justice’s Voting Rights Division and the Delaware Department of Elections, arguing over how much information to share.
The DOJ sent the first letter to Albence in July 2025, asking for voter data that included names, birth dates, addresses, political party affiliations, voting history and legislative district information.
The federal government also requested driver’s license numbers or the last four digits of Social Security numbers alongside all information pertaining to non-citizens and convicted felons who have been ruled ineligible to vote since November 2022.
In September, Albence formally refused to provide the detailed voter information to the DOJ, according to court records. To date, Delaware has only provided data that excludes the more sensitive, non-public information.
“Absent appropriate protections, Delawareans’ information could be compromised or misused, or Delawareans could be deterred from exercising their First Amendment rights to register to vote, to affiliate with a party, and to vote,” Albence wrote in a September letter.
In his denial, Albence cited Delaware state law that protects private information as an impediment to the federal government’s wishes, noting that he is prohibited from sharing it even within the state government.
On Wednesday, the federal judge overseeing the case granted the organizations’ motion to intervene in the case. The judge has made no ruling on the motion to dismiss.
The post Immigrant advocates move to dismiss Trump’s voter data lawsuit appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Draghi wants real decision-making power in Europe, not a federal Big Bang Expert comment sfarrell.drupa…
Competitiveness is not enough. The former president of the European Central Bank’s call for ‘pragmatic federalism’ would require Europe to strengthen its decision-making process if it wants to weigh in as a fully-fledged power. This will need bolder coalitions of the willing.
The metaphor remains painfully true: Europe is an economic giant but a political dwarf.
Mario Draghi stressed how this imbalance has become unbearable in a short but sharp speech delivered at the Catholic University of Leuven on 2 February. The Italian economist and politician did not mince his words in pointing out the only path that, in his view, would enable Europe to grow politically: that of ‘pragmatic federalism.’
With this formula – which he had laid out in an earlier speech on 24 October last year in Oviedo, Spain – Draghi adds an institutional dimension to his much- vaunted 2024 report on European competitiveness.
It is not enough for Europe to catch up with its Chinese and American rivals in terms of productivity and technology, he says. It must also strengthen its institutional framework to be considered a world power.
Where it has stuck to loose, classic intergovernmental cooperation, such as in defence and diplomacy, it hardly impresses Washington or Beijing.
‘This model does not produce power,’ Draghi laments: ‘A group of states that coordinates remains a group of states, each with a veto, each with a separate calculus.’
According to the former Italian prime minister, the power games at play in today’s world require Europe to make a qualitative leap in integration. A federal leap is what it takes.
Would the European bloc be ready for such a bold move? Draghi is right to raise the issue of the EU’s governance and to call for renewed integration to face a more chaotic and brutal world order.
But using the controversial word federalism is always sensitive in European politics. His statement in favour of ‘moving from a confederation to a federation’ risks just nurturing a quasi-theological debate on the very nature of the European Union.
Many EU member states, such as Italy, Germany, Spain or Belgium, are federal in their own ways. But letting Europe itself become federal is another story. In a centralized state such as France, any federalist terminology is even taboo. The far right rejects it completely. President Emmanuel Macron has always been careful not to refer to federalism when visioning Europe.
It is worth, though, not reducing Draghi’s speech to this F word. Just as the term ‘constitution’ in 2005 diverted attention from the purpose of a treaty that was essentially codifying existing European legal texts, the term ‘federalism’ can unnecessarily inflame, divide, and polarize, when its ‘pragmatic’ nature should draw just as much attention.
As former president of the European Central Bank, the euro is the best example of the kind of ‘pragmatic federalism’ that Draghi aims for. ‘Those who were willing to do so took the lead, set up common institutions with real authority and, thanks to this joint commitment, forged a solidarity deeper than any treaty could have prescribed,’ he said of the single currency in his speech in Leuven. Through its exclusive competence, its unquestioned independence and the respect it commands, the ECB acts de facto as a federal body but without being explicitly designated as such – unlike its American counterpart, the Fed.
The same federal understatement could apply to all areas where the EU has exclusive competence, as on international trade or on fisheries. Europe has always built itself in this constructive ambiguity. Former Commission President Jacques Delors coined the term ‘federation of nation states’ to define the EU, like an oxymoron.
At a time when radical right movements are surging, European leaders are wary about tackling institutional issues head-on and embarking on any deep reform of the EU. Since the Lisbon Treaty of 2009, the task has been deemed too laborious and uncertain to be taken up politically. In the wake of the successive serious crises that have shaken the Union (debt crisis, migration crisis, Brexit, Covid), the bloc has preferred to react with emergency measures rather than come up with an overall plan.
That is not what Mario Draghi is proposing. He suggests no grand institutional overhaul. His plan is no federal Big Bang, as he acknowledged in his speech in Oviedo: ‘A true federation would require political conditions that do not exist today.’
Instead, he aims pragmatically at some immediate initiatives for true integration in areas such as defence, industrial policy, taxation or foreign affairs, for states willing to do so. If necessary outside the Union, and without other members preventing them from doing so, but leaving them the choice of joining later.
Draghi’s federalistic approach comes down to the kind experienced through the Schengen Agreement on free movement, which started among five countries in 1985 and was first legally established outside the EU. Yet this time, it is about competences as stark as defence.
Besides its federal wording, Draghi’s proposal is welcome for three reasons. First, because in Europe’s attempt to move from a peace project to a power project, it cannot avoid further deepening in strategic areas, let alone defence.
Another Labour MP says Morgan McSweeney should go as Harriet Harman says PM left looking ‘weak, naive and gullible’
Keir Starmer was facing renewed calls to sack his most senior adviser on Friday as Downing Street braced itself for another round of leadership speculation when the files relating to Peter Mandelson’s appointment as US ambassador are published.
The Labour MP for Stroud, Simon Opher, added his voice to those calling for the departure of Starmer’s chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, who was instrumental in the decision to appoint Mandelson despite concerns about his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein.
Continue reading...In honor of American Heart Month, now is a good time to schedule your next doctor's appointment for a heart disease screening.
The CIA has shut down The World Factbook, one of its oldest and most recognizable public-facing intelligence publications, ending a run that began as a classified reference document in 1962 and evolved into a freely accessible digital resource that drew millions of views each year. The agency offered no explanation for the decision. Originally titled The National Basic Intelligence Factbook, the publication first went unclassified in 1971, was renamed a decade later, and moved online at CIA.gov in 1997. It served researchers, news organizations, teachers, students and international travelers. The site hosted more than 5,000 copyright-free photographs, some donated by CIA officers from their personal travel. Every page now redirects to a farewell announcement.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
AI content for scams can be targeted at individuals and ‘produced by pretty much anybody’, researchers say
Deepfake fraud has gone “industrial”, an analysis published by AI experts has said.
Tools to create tailored, even personalised, scams – leveraging, for example, deepfake videos of Swedish journalists or the president of Cyprus – are no longer niche, but inexpensive and easy to deploy at scale, said the analysis from the AI Incident Database.
Continue reading...A Los Angeles Fire Department spokesperson said the crash at a 99 Ranch Market in Westwood is currently being investigated as an accident.
Files suggest David Stern was Jeffrey Epstein’s ‘man in the palace’, passing messages to the former prince until 2019
Jeffrey Epstein wanted his 26-year-old Belarusian girlfriend, Karyna Shuliak, and her friend, Jen, to have a good time in London – and he knew just who to ask.
“Karyna – my girlfriend, and Jen, the tall girl who you’ve met will be London Tues and Wed,” the 63-year-old disgraced financier apparently wrote in April 2016 to an aide to the then Prince Andrew. “They have never been there before. If you are around, I’d appreciate any help you can give them.”
Continue reading...I have had a broken board for quite some time now after some mods I made on it, and even with a working footpad, vesc tool only displays 0.3 volts on each side of the footpad. It won't activate because of this and I am not sure why this is happening. I changed my wheel, bumpers, fenders, and rails during my modifications. Any ideas on what could be going wrong are greatly appreciated!
A wartime boom in Russia has given way to sluggish growth, tax hikes and squeezed public services. Will it affect the conflict in Ukraine?
Western leaders were bullish when they imposed sanctions on Russia after the invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
“The Russian economy is on track to be cut in half,” said the then US president, Joe Biden, in March, a month into the war.
Continue reading...Los Angeles Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford was named the NFL MVP, just edging out four other candidates that included New England Patriots quarterback Drake Maye and Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen, last year's MVP.
Google's Quick Share-AirDrop interoperability, which has been exclusive to the Pixel 10 series since its surprise launch last year, is headed to a much broader set of Android devices in 2026. Eric Kay, Google's Vice President of Engineering for the Android platform, confirmed the expansion during a press briefing at the company's Taipei office, saying Google is "working with our partners to expand it into the rest of the ecosystem" and that announcements are coming "very soon." Nothing is the only OEM to have publicly confirmed it's working on support, though Qualcomm has also hinted at enabling the feature on Snapdragon-powered phones.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Regional rivalry will raise tensions far beyond the Gulf.
In wake of Donald Trump’s call for Republicans to ‘take over’ voting, senator Ruben Gallego urges citizens to take a stand and give the ‘ultimate response’
The Democratic senator Ruben Gallego has proposed that, should Donald Trump try to sabotage the midterm elections, Americans should respond with a general strike that would “grind the country to a halt”.
Earlier this week the US president called for Republicans to “take over” and “nationalise” voting in at least 15 unspecified locations, repeating his false claims that elections are plagued by widespread fraud.
Continue reading...Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for Feb. 6
Death toll from Washington’s campaign on alleged drug traffickers now at least 128
The US military on Thursday said it killed two alleged drug traffickers in a strike on a boat in the eastern Pacific, bringing the death toll from Washington’s campaign to at least 128.
“Intelligence confirmed the vessel was transiting along known narco-trafficking routes in the Eastern Pacific and was engaged in narco-trafficking operations,” the US Southern Command said in a post on X. It said “no US military forces were harmed” in the operation.
Continue reading...Residents of New Zealand capital advised not to enter the water, collect seafood or walk their dogs on local beaches after wastewater plant failure
A sewage leak in New Zealand’s capital Wellington has been described by local authorities as an “environmental disaster,” with repairs to the city’s wastewater treatment plant expected to take months.
Residents of Wellington have been advised not to enter the water, collect seafood or even walk their dogs on local beaches.
Continue reading...Dozens of people have died, including two Australians, as record-breaking snowfall blankets the north
Dozens of people have died in Japan after record-breaking snowfall blanketed northern regions of the country, while officials warned that warmer temperatures could trigger a new wave of accidents.
Authorities said 35 people had died in snow-related incidents across Japan since 20 January, with almost 400 injured, 126 of them seriously. Most of the deaths were among people who fell while trying to clear snow from their roofs or around their homes.
Continue reading...The U.S. military struck an alleged drug-carrying boat in the Pacific on Thursday, marking the 38th vessel to be struck over the last five months and the second this year.
In a video posted on social media, he further implored the people holding Nancy Guthrie to send proof they had her
TV host Savannah Guthrie’s brother on Thursday renewed the family’s plea for their mother’s kidnapper to contact them, hours after an Arizona sheriff said investigators don’t have proof Nancy Guthrie is alive, but believe “she’s still out there”.
“Whoever is out there holding our mother, we want to hear from you. We haven’t heard anything directly,” Camron Guthrie said in a video statement posted on Instagram.
Continue reading...This live blog is now closed.
Amid the various winding comments throughout Trump’s speech today, he said that the Department of Education will officially issue its new guidance to protect the right to prayer in public schools today.
“Now the Democrats will sue us, but we’ll win it,” Trump said, eliciting some laughs from the audience at the National Prayer Breakfast. “They’ll sue us. They sue us for everything. I’m the most sued human being in history.”
Continue reading... | I didn’t like my charger cord laying in the floor so I bought a $10 clothesline reel. Painted black and of course painted a skull on it. [link] [comments] |
When marine biologist Océane Attlan saw the tiny Braun’s wrasse, it was like ‘recognising a familiar face, but you can’t put a name on it’
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The chances of encountering the rare reef fish were so far-fetched, it took marine biologist Océane Attlan a few seconds to clock what she was seeing.
“All of a sudden I saw this fish. You know when you recognise a familiar face, but you can’t put a name on it. That’s the feeling I had,” she said.
Continue reading...Verdict could influence more than 3,000 similar cases against ride-hailing company
A federal jury in Phoenix ordered Uber on Thursday to pay $8.5m after finding the company liable in a lawsuit brought by a woman who said she was sexually assaulted by a driver. The verdict could influence thousands of similar cases against the ride-hailing company.
The case, brought by plaintiff Jaylynn Dean, was the first trial of more than 3,000 similar lawsuits against Uber that have been consolidated in US federal court. So-called bellwether trials are used to test legal theories and help gauge the value of claims for possible settlements. The jury found that the driver was an agent of Uber, holding the company responsible for his actions. They awarded Dean $8.5m in compensatory damages but declined to award punitive damages. Attorneys for Dean had sought more than $140m in damages.
Continue reading... | The ground didn't have any mud showing as lroad past the fire hydrant. My tire immediately sunk and shot tmud all over me. [link] [comments] |
The country’s first female PM is the object of a personality cult revolving around everything from her outfits and snacks to her favourite pink pen
Just eight months ago, Japan’s ruling party appeared to have reached the edge of the electoral abyss. It had lost a parliamentary majority for the second time in 15 months; its MPs were implicated in a long-running slush fund scandal; the then prime minister, Shigeru Ishiba, was the target of factional plotting.
But as voters prepare to brave freezing temperatures in this Sunday’s lower house elections, the Liberal Democratic party (LDP) is expected to pull off a momentous victory. And the party’s recovery from the disappointment of last year is largely down to one woman.
Continue reading...The European Commission is preparing to trial a communications platform built on Matrix, the open source messaging protocol already used by the French government, German healthcare providers and European armed forces, as a sovereign backup to Microsoft Teams. Signal currently serves as the backup tool but has proven too inflexible for an organization the Commission's size, it said. The Matrix-based solution could also eventually connect the Commission to other EU bodies like the Parliament.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Savannah Guthrie's brother, Camron Guthrie, issued a plea Thursday for the return of their mother, Nancy Guthrie, saying in a video to the possible abductor, "We want to talk to you."
Bad Bunny says he wants to bring his culture to his 2026 Super Bowl halftime show Sunday.
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for Feb. 6, No. 705.
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for Feb. 6, No. 971.
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for Feb. 6, No. 501.
The Trump administration launched its new TrumpRx direct-to-consumer prescription drug listing site late Thursday, part of a push to offer medication at steep discounts.
Starlink says it may also share personal data with partners to help it "develop AI-enabled tools that improve your customer experience.”
Emails appear to show Mountbatten-Windsor attempting to introduce Epstein to UAE crown prince via foreign affairs minister
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor vouched for Jeffrey Epstein during a UK state visit to the United Arab Emirates with Queen Elizabeth II in 2010, according to newly released emails.
The email was sent from “The Duke” to Epstein on 24 November of that year, with the subject listed as “Abdullah” – an apparent reference to the UAE foreign affairs minister, Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan.
Continue reading...Some spouses obtained military identification cards for Chinese nationals, court documents alleged.
Authorities respond to reports of crash at 99 Ranch Market after victims, some trapped under vehicle, die at scene
Three people were killed and six others were hurt after a car driver collided with a bicyclist and then slammed into a grocery store on Thursday afternoon in Los Angeles, authorities said.
The crash was reported shortly after noon at a 99 Ranch Market in the city’s Westwood neighborhood, according Los Angeles fire department spokesperson Lyndsey Lantz.
Continue reading...In a video message, Savannah Guthrie and her siblings sought to tell their mother's possible abductor – or abductors – that they are "ready to talk."
Tech giant reports $213bn in revenue after its founder, who owns the Post, lays off a third of newspaper’s employees
Amazon announced plans to spend $200bn on artificial intelligence and robotics this year, the latest tech giant to vow fresh enormous investments in the artificial intelligence arms race.
The news of the investment comes one day after the Washington Post, owned by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, announced it was cutting approximately a third of employees.
Continue reading...Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for Feb. 6, No. 1,693.
While labels list dozens of possible risks only four are supported by evidence, say researchers
Almost all side-effects listed for statins are not caused by the drugs, according to the world’s most comprehensive review of evidence.
Other than the well-known risks around muscle pain and diabetes, only four of 66 other statin side-effects listed on labels – liver test changes, minor liver abnormalities, urine changes and tissue swelling – are supported by evidence. And the risks are very small, according to the systematic review and meta-analysis published in the Lancet.
Continue reading...A federal court in California has ruled that YouTube creators who use stream-ripping tools to download clips for reaction and commentary videos may face liability under the DMCA's anti-circumvention provisions -- a decision that could reshape how one of the platform's most popular content genres operates. U.S. Magistrate Judge Virginia K. DeMarchi of the Northern District of California denied a motion to dismiss in Cordova v. Huneault, a creator-versus-creator dispute, finding that YouTube's "rolling cipher" technology qualifies as an access control measure under section 1201(a) even though the underlying videos are freely viewable by the public. The distinction matters because it separates the act of watching a video from the act of downloading it. The defense had argued that no ripping tools were actually used and that screen recording could account for the copied footage. Judge DeMarchi allowed the claim to proceed to discovery regardless, noting that the plaintiff had adequately pled the circumvention allegation. The ruling opens a legal avenue beyond standard copyright infringement for creators who want to go after rivals. Reaction channels have long leaned on fair use as a blanket defense, but plaintiff's attorney Randall S. Newman told TorrentFreak that circumventing copy protections under section 1201 is a separate violation unaffected by any fair use finding.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
I've tested dozens of iPhone 17, iPhone 17 Pro and iPhone Air cases. Here are my current top picks, complete with mini reviews of each case.
Colin Demarco was arrested in January, months after he was seen in a Ring camera image at Vought's door, wearing a surgical mask and gloves.
Stop letting that box of tangled charging cables and ancient flip phones from 2012 live rent-free in your closet.
Indiana Jones and the Great Circle: The Order of Giants is among the available new titles.
Severe lack of public defenders has meant people charged with crimes have been routinely unable to fight their cases
The Oregon supreme court has ruled that a large number of criminal cases across the state must be dismissed due to a severe shortage of public defenders, a major decision that attorneys say will impact more than 1,400 pending cases.
The problem has been years in the making and has become a significant constitutional crisis, as people charged with crimes are routinely unable to fight their cases as they wait weeks, months or sometimes years for the state to appoint them lawyers. The attorney shortage – due in part to the increasing difficulty of recruiting attorneys for the low-salary, high-caseload jobs – has meant that people have had cases hanging over them for extended periods of time, impacting their housing, employment and families, advocates say.
Continue reading...Three collaborative projects aim to streamline AI deployment in nuclear facilities.
Feb. 5, 2026 — Artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming industries. The U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory is using this technology to improve nuclear safety and efficiency.

The Mechanisms Engineering Test Loop (METL) facility where Parameter-Free Reasoning Operator for Automated Identification and Diagnosis (PRO-AID) was successfully tested. Image credit: Jason Creps/ANL.
To ensure AI systems can be properly deployed in regulated environments, Argonne is advancing projects that are reshaping how regulation addresses cutting-edge technologies.
Three main projects are advancing this work:
These efforts emphasize both the innovative technologies under development and the broader impact on regulatory frameworks and safety measures.
Simulating AI Safety for Nuclear Regulation
Argonne researchers are working with the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) to explore how AI can be used in the nuclear industry. These AI tools have the potential to make operations more efficient, lower costs and improve safety. For example, AI could help predict when equipment needs maintenance, create better models for complex systems and optimize how facilities operate.
The researchers are testing an AI system at an experimental facility and putting it through a full regulatory review to see how it measures up to safety standards. This project helps connect the fast pace of AI development with the rules and safeguards needed to make sure these technologies can be used safely and securely in critical areas like the nuclear industry.
By developing tools and knowledge needed to evaluate and regulate AI technologies, Argonne is preparing the industry for the future.
Automating Licensing with AI-driven Protocols
Through a partnership with DOE’s Office of Nuclear Energy, Argonne is creating the Regulatory Context Protocol (RCP) to streamline the licensing process for advanced nuclear reactors. It automates applicant-regulator communication using AI agents that represent both the nuclear facility and the regulator. The RCP is designed to reduce delays in regulatory workflows, improve information quality and ensure compliance with NRC standards.
“The traditional licensing process can be a significant bottleneck for deploying advanced nuclear technology,” said Akshay Dave, manager of intelligent systems group and project lead. “With the RCP, we’re essentially creating a digital express lane for regulatory communication. By using AI to structure and automate this dialogue, we can dramatically reduce timelines and get nuclear energy onto the grid faster.”
By reducing delays in regulatory communication, the RCP will help meet accelerated licensing timelines. This ensures that advanced nuclear reactors can be deployed more quickly.
Advancing Fault Detection with Physics-Based AI
Argonne has also developed Parameter-Free Reasoning Operator for Automated Identification and Diagnosis (PRO-AID). PRO-AID is a physics-based AI tool that uses “digital twins” or virtual copies of nuclear power plant systems to identify unusual behavior in real-time. By integrating physical principles rather than relying on data alone, PRO-AID can spot faults such as sensor bias and cooling failures early.
PRO-AID was successfully tested in Argonne’s Mechanisms Engineering Test Loop (METL) facility. The tool’s real-time monitoring allows operators to fix issues before they cause downtime. These initiatives are vital steps toward ensuring that AI technologies can be successfully and safely integrated into the nuclear industry.
Impact on the Nuclear Industry
“By proactively identifying the relevant regulatory frameworks, we are advancing innovation while reinforcing public trust in the safety and reliability of these technologies,” said Rick Vilim, Argonne senior nuclear engineer.
Argonne’s work represents a critical intersection of innovation and regulation. Elements from these projects will help the nuclear industry embrace the potential of AI. These efforts are paving the way for safer, smarter and more cost-effective nuclear technologies.
From streamlining regulatory processes with the RCP to enhancing fault diagnostics with PRO-AID, Argonne is setting a standard for how emerging technologies can be responsibly integrated into high-stakes industries.
Source: Marguerite Huber, Argonne National Laboratory
The post Argonne Helps Nuclear Industry Embrace AI to Speed Up Licensing and Reduce Delays appeared first on HPCwire.
Super Bowl LX will feature an ad to promote Trump Accounts, a new investment plan to help eligible families save money for their kids.
Feb. 5, 2026 — Satellites and spacecraft in the vast region between the earth and moon and just beyond — called cislunar space — are crucial for space exploration, scientific advancement and national security. But figuring out where exactly to put them into a stable orbit can be a huge, computationally expensive challenge.

One of one million cislunar orbits calculated by researchers at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. The moon’s orbit is shown in light gray. The spacecraft follows the colored path over the six-year simulation period. (Graphic: Dan Herchek, note moon and earth not to scale.)
In an open-access database and with publicly available code, researchers at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) have simulated and published one million orbits in cislunar space. The effort, enabled by supercomputing resources at the Laboratory, provides valuable data that can be used to plan missions, predict how small perturbations might change orbits and monitor space traffic.
To begin, the Space Situational Awareness Python package takes in a range of initial conditions for an orbit, like how elliptical and tilted the orbit is and how far it gets from the earth.
“The point of it was to not assume anything about what types of orbits we want,” said author and LLNL scientist Travis Yeager. “We tried to go into it pretending we knew nothing about this space.”
From each starting point with a set position and velocity, the simulation steps forward in time in discrete chunks. Because this is an N-body problem involving the earth, moon, sun, radiative forces and the spacecraft, the complex interactions among all components mean there is no exact solution for the system’s evolution.
“If you want to know where a satellite is in a week, there’s no equation that can actually tell you where it’s going to be,” said Yeager. “You have to step forward a little bit at a time.”
When considering the gravitational forces from the earth and moon, the authors also accounted for differences across each body.
“The Earth is not a point source. It is actually blobby. There is lower gravity over Canada than there is over the Atlantic Ocean,” said Yeager. “If we didn’t account for blobbiness within the earth for GPS satellites, we couldn’t have GPS down to a meter level. You wouldn’t even know what road you’re driving on.”
To generate all one million orbits with six-year lifetimes, it took 1.6 million CPU hours — equivalent to more than 182 years on a single computer. Once they worked through the process, the team ran their simulations in just three days on LLNL’s Quartz and Ruby supercomputers.
“The interesting thing about our code is that it is parallelizable, whereas other commercial codes are not,” said author and LLNL scientist Denvir Higgins. “We can spread jobs across nodes.”
Of the resulting orbits, 54% remained stable for at least one year and 9.7% for six years. But even the unstable orbits in this open database can provide valuable information.
“From a data-science point of view, this is an interesting data set. When you have a million orbits, you can get a really rich analysis using machine learning applications,” said Higgins. “You can try to predict the lifetime of the orbit, try to predict stability or try to do anomaly detection to see if an orbit is moving in a strange way.”
By analyzing the orbital data, researchers may be able to identify the “busiest intersections,” or the most useful positions for a satellite to monitor and direct traffic. This could be especially useful as countries continue to launch satellites without world-wide coordination.
The team aims to tackle some of these questions themselves, but they emphasized that the publicly available code and data allow others to launch in alongside them.
This data was created under work funded by a Laboratory Directed Research and Development project.
Source: LLNL
The post LLNL: Simulations and Supercomputing Calculate 1M Orbits in Cislunar Space appeared first on HPCwire.
World’s most prominent cryptocurrency peaked at $126,000 in October 2025, only to see its value slump steeply
Bitcoin’s price sank to $63,000 on Thursday, its lowest level in more than a year, and half its all-time peak of $126,000, reached in October 2025. A months-long dip in cryptocurrency prices has tanked shares of companies that have increasingly invested in bitcoin, exacerbating broader stock market jitters.
Bitcoin rode a high during Donald Trump’s ascent to the presidency in 2024 and throughout 2025; its price steadily increased as the president made one industry-friendly move after another. Crypto’s largest currency hit $100,000 for the first time in December 2024 and even rose to a record high of $126,210.50 on 6 October, according to Coinbase. But bitcoin’s valuation has dipped over the last few months, falling especially hard in January and the start of February.
Continue reading...Featuring an unlikely animal friendship, the commercial boasts enough patriotic iconography to verge on self-parody
Three years after its sister brand, Bud Light, faced a rightwing boycott over a transgender spokesperson, Budweiser’s new Super Bowl ad, American Icons, contains absolutely nothing that could be mistaken for social progress. Instead, it features an unlikely friendship between two animals whose blood runs red, white and blue: a bald eagle and a Clydesdale horse, the Budweiser icon. An adorable foal trots out of a barn, and the viewer is injected with a single minute of American iconography so pure that it would make Lee Greenwood nauseous.
The horse meets a struggling baby bird who gets caught in the rain, prompting the horse to stand over the bird as a roof. The pair become pals and grow up together, the bird riding on the horse’s back as it grows larger. It falls off a few times, but, like George Washington at Valley Forge, it never gives up. Finally, the horse jumps over a log while the bird spreads its wings above, and we get a slow-motion image of something like Pegasus. We realize the bird, now fully grown, is a majestic bald eagle, taking to the sky as Lynyrd Skynyrd’s Free Bird reaches its climax. Two farmers look on while drinking Budweiser, as the words “Made of America” appear on the screen. “You crying?” one asks. “The sun’s in my eyes,” says the other.
Continue reading...A U.S. official called the deal a by-product of ongoing efforts to end the Ukraine war. It came as a key nuclear treaty between Washington and Moscow expired.
Hello, I have a Pint X that I’m thinking about throwing the Extended WTF rails on. Do I NEED a PintV/ Avaspark kit, or does the stock controller allow re leveling (not sure if shaping will let me re level). Only other option I have is Rewheeling an OG Pint controller and swapping it into my Pint X, but I have no clue how it’ll affect the ride or if I need to do anything with the BMS, or what BMS to use even.
Need some help before I f.ck something up.
Also what tires can I use? Pint and XR tires? Pint X motor and hub.
For footpads the halos look mighty nice at 10”.
Thanks.
Nearly two weeks after a catastrophic ice storm rocked northeast Mississippi, still 25,000 customers are without power as of Thursday.
Q: Is it true that ICE agents are financially rewarded for the number of people taken into custody?
A: The Department of Homeland Security has said there is no such policy, and an immigration think tank told us it is unaware of any payments per arrest. The Wall Street Journal reported that agents “are rewarded for making arrests” but didn’t say how they are rewarded. Immigration and Customs Enforcement quickly scrapped a proposed program to pay bonuses to speed up deportations.
We’ve received several questions from readers about whether Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents get a bonus for each person they arrest. One reader asked if agents are paid $1,500 for each immigrant they arrest. Versions of this claim have circulated on social media, with some posts pointing to a Wall Street Journal article that said ICE officers were “under pressure” to meet a daily nationwide arrest goal and were “rewarded for making arrests.” Some have interpreted this to mean a financial bonus.

The Department of Homeland Security and ICE didn’t respond to our multiple inquiries asking whether agents receive a bonus payment for each arrest. However, a DHS spokesperson told Snopes, which wrote about these claims, that “this policy has never and never was in effect.”
The Migration Policy Institute, a nonpartisan think tank, also told us it wasn’t aware of any per-arrest bonus structure. Michelle Mittelstadt, MPI’s director of communications and public affairs, said, “We do not believe these claims regarding bonuses for arrests are accurate. ICE and its parent agency, DHS, have never indicated that they would set up a bonus payment structure rewarding personnel per arrest.”
In August, the New York Times reported on an ICE proposal to pay bonuses for quicker deportations — but it was canceled before it started and didn’t pertain to arrests. According to the Times, an internal ICE email proposed “cash bonuses to agents for deporting people quickly, an incentive meant to motivate the staff to speed up President Trump’s mass deportation campaign. Less than four hours later, the agency abruptly canceled what was supposed to be a 30-day pilot program.”
The Times reported that documents it reviewed called for $100 and $200 bonuses for each immigrant deported within one or two weeks of arrest. But a subsequent email to ICE field offices from Liana J. Castano, an ICE field operations official, told staff to “PLEASE DISREGARD” the program, the newspaper reported.
As we said, some social media posts about arrest bonuses have pointed to a Jan. 17 Wall Street Journal article. The article about immigration enforcement in Minneapolis said that “officers here and elsewhere are under pressure from daily arrest quotas that leadership has set at 3,000 a day across the country—the number it would take to reach one million arrests in a year, according to ICE officials familiar with the matter. Though ICE has never come close to meeting that daily goal, officers are rewarded for making arrests, even if the immigrants they take in are later released.”
The administration has publicly acknowledged the 3,000 arrest goal. In May, senior White House adviser Stephen Miller said on Fox News that the administration was “looking to set a goal of a minimum of 3,000 arrests for ICE every day and President Trump is going to keep pushing to get that number up higher each and every single day.”
It’s unclear from the Wall Street Journal article how officers are “rewarded for making arrests”; the story says nothing about financial payments and doesn’t offer any more explanation about these rewards. We reached out to the Journal reporters for clarification, but we did not receive a response.
We also didn’t get a response from DHS or ICE when we asked for comment on the Journal’s article.
Some, including Minnesota Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar, posted that ICE was “rewarding” agents, an accurate summary of that article. Others interpreted this as a “bonus.” For instance, David J. Bier, the director of immigration studies at the libertarian Cato Institute, posted part of the article on X and said, “ICE agents get bonuses when they make wrongful arrests of US citizens.” Democratic Sen. Ruben Gallego, of Arizona, shared Bier’s post and said, “Mistakenly arrest a US citizen? You get a big fat bonus.”
Beyond these interpretations of the Journal’s article, we were unable to find evidence regarding claims about per-arrest bonuses. Bier told us the Journal story was the only information he had. Gallego’s office hasn’t responded to our inquiry.
Snopes reported that some of its readers appeared to misconstrue the daily 3,000 arrest goal with a “$3,000 bonus for each arrest,” as some readers asked about.
According to DHS press releases, there is a signing bonus of up to $50,000 for new ICE hires. But that’s a recruitment and retention incentive, and there’s no indication it is tied to the number of arrests, or deportations for that matter, that an agent performs.
The Republicans’ 2025 budget bill, called the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, provided $858 million for the signing bonuses, which, the legislation says, would be for new agents, officers or attorneys who agree to serve for five years or those already working for ICE who agree to stay with the agency for two more years.
Last year, DHS announced incentive funding to state and local law enforcement agencies that partner with ICE to arrest immigrants living in the country illegally. Beginning Oct. 1, DHS said that participating agencies would receive reimbursement for trained officers’ salaries and benefits along with quarterly performance-based bonuses. These monetary awards range from $500 to $1,000 per “eligible task force officer,” depending on “the successful location of illegal aliens provided by ICE and overall assistance to further ICE’s mission to Defend the Homeland.”
But that quarterly bonus program is for state and local police that cooperate with ICE, not a payment per arrest for ICE officers.
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The post ICE Officers and Bonuses appeared first on FactCheck.org.
U.S. District Judge Jerry Blackwell admonished the Trump administration for what he said was a failure to comply with judicial orders, warning it is "not above the law."
Millions of Americans lack access to any type of retirement plan, hampering their ability to save for old age.
Democratic leaders in Congress requested Department of Homeland Security reforms on Wednesday that would leave the agency’s budget untouched — and were immediately rebuffed by the GOP.
The requests, in a joint letter from Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, both New York Democrats, do not attempt to claw back funding for Customs and Border Protection, the parent agency of the Border Patrol, or U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement — the two agencies at the heart of the political firestorm over their violent deployments to American cities.
Instead of cutting funding, Democrats focused on measures such as prohibiting ICE agents from wearing masks or entering homes without a warrant. Sen. Brian Schatz, D- Hawaii, the Democratic deputy whip, on Wednesday described the requests as “reasonable reforms that are 70-30 propositions with the public.”
“The urgency of the moment is about stopping the violence.”
That did not win them any points with congressional Republicans, who dismissed the reforms out of hand.
Progressives in the Senate, meanwhile, had not only become more strident in their rhetoric about ICE, they also called for clawing back increased ICE spending passed as part of President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill. Though some of these Democrats are sticking by their more robust demands, they nonetheless avoided criticizing their party leadership over the request for more limited reforms.
“The urgency of the moment is about stopping the violence,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., told The Intercept. “If it were up to me, we would be rewriting the whole immigration laws and policies. But right now, we’ve got to get some constraints in place so that roving bands of ICE agents stop terrorizing American communities. That is our first priority.”
Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., the ranking member on the Homeland Security Appropriations Subcommittee, took a similar line, setting aside his stronger demands of ICE.
“I have a much longer list of things that I want to change in the Department of Homeland Security,” he said, “but we are trying to put a targeted list of reforms that will end the abuse on the table so that we can get something done.”
Schumer and Jeffries’s demand list has significant overlap with previous calls from progressive members of Congress such as Rep. Greg Casar, D-Texas, and Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt.
The progressives made their demands soon after the January 24 killing of nurse Alex Pretti in Minneapolis, which derailed a full-year funding bill for DHS and led to a brief shutdown of several government departments. The House voted to end the shutdown Tuesday by approving full-year appropriations for other departments while temporarily funding DHS through a new February 13 deadline.
The Democratic leaders unveiled their official list of demands ahead of the deadline on Wednesday, calling for ending indiscriminate arrests, prohibiting masking, requiring ICE and CBP officer identification, protecting sensitive locations such as churches and schools, halting racial profiling, upholding use of force standards, preserving the ability of states and cities to prosecute DHS misconduct, and requiring the use of body cameras when interacting with the public. (Schumer and Jeffries immediately began watering down one of their clearest demands, suggesting in public comments that they might allow agents to wear masks in some circumstances.)
The biggest split between what Schumer and Jeffries proposed and what more progressive Democrats requested was a reduction of spending on ICE and CBP.
Those agencies received $75 billion and $64 billion, respectively, in last year’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act to be spent through 2029. That money came on top of the amounts already available to the agencies through their annual appropriations.
Clawing that money back has been a top priority for advocates, who note that it has been used to supercharge hiring and spending on surveillance technology.
“These demands MUST include cuts in funding,” Heidi Altman, the vice president of policy at the National Immigration Law Center, said in an email last week. “The money pays for the violence. It has to stop.”
Last month, Sanders proposed an amendment to the DHS appropriations bill that would have redirected the additional ICE funding to Medicaid, which he estimated would prevent 700,000 Americans from losing their health care.
Sanders’s amendment drew the support of every Senate Democrat and two Republicans, but it failed on a 49–51 vote.
“Passing new laws is no assurance to me whatsoever that they are not going to continue this lawlessness.”
In negotiations with the White House, Schumer is likely to be able to offer the potential support of only a fraction of his caucus for a full-year appropriations bill for DHS.
Some Democrats in Congress have already ruled out the idea that they will vote for any more funding.
“When you have a reckless and out of control agency that is unwilling to follow the law, passing new laws is no assurance to me whatsoever that they are not going to continue this lawlessness,” Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., told The Intercept.
Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., have shown no willingness to negotiate on key Democratic requests, Booker said.
“There’s a lot of things I know my caucus would support, but clearly the speaker and the leader are not even interested in having those kinds of conversations,” he said, “even though most of their base thinks what’s happening with this agency is unacceptable.”
Democratic leadership figures like Schatz have described the latest demands as an attempt at reaching consensus.
“They are not a Democratic wish list. We are simply asking that ICE not be held to a different standard than every other law enforcement organization in the country — state, county, and federal,” he told reporters Wednesday.
The requests fell with a thud with Republican leaders, however. Johnson has already ruled out banning masks and requiring warrants.
Sen. Katie Britt, R-Ala., the lead GOP negotiator, called the demands “a ridiculous Christmas list of demands for the press.”
Republicans have already floated the idea of another short-term extension of DHS funding to allow further negotiations.
The post Senate Dems Who Pushed Meatier ICE Reform Shy Away From Criticizing Schumer’s Softer Package appeared first on The Intercept.
Shabana Mahmood insists deportations will rise, as Labour government is accused of promoting ‘harmful stereotypes’ of migrants
Nearly 60,000 unauthorised migrants and convicted criminals have been removed or deported from the UK since Labour took office, the Home Office has said.
The announcement came amid claims that the government was promoting “harmful stereotypes” by equating migration with criminality.
Continue reading...Anonymous insider alleges director of national intelligence withheld classified information for political reasons
The Republican leaders of the House and Senate intelligence committees have rejected a top-secret complaint from an anonymous government insider alleging that Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence, withheld classified information for political reasons.
The responses this week from Senator Tom Cotton and Congressman Rick Crawford mean the complaint is unlikely to proceed further, though Democratic lawmakers who also have seen the document said they continue to question why it took Gabbard’s office eight months to refer the complaint to Congress as required by law.
Continue reading...I nominate this for the “Most Expected News Of The Decade” award.
Today, The Tech Oversight Project published a new report spotlighting newly unsealed documents in the 2026 social media addiction trials. The documents provide smoking-gun evidence that Meta, Google, Snap, and TikTok all purposefully designed their social media products to addict children and teens with no regard for known harms to their wellbeing, and how that mass youth addiction was core to the companies’ business models. The documents contain internal discussions among company employees, presentations from internal meetings, expert testimony, and evidence of Big Tech coordination with tech-funded groups, including the National Parent Teachers Association (PTA) and Family Online Safety Institute (FOSI), in attempts to control the narrative in response to concerned parents.
↫ The Tech Oversight Project
Modern social media companies are not entirely different from tobacco companies. They and everyone else know full well just how dangerous social media is, and how being addicted to it has disastrous consequences for the people involved. Tobacco companies, too, knew how dangerous smoking was decades before the general population was aware, and yet they kept pushing cigarettes, even to kids, deaths be damned. In fact, they’re still doing the same thing today with “vapes”, and we’re kind of letting it happen all over again.
Social media is directly responsible for genocides, extreme polarisation, the spread of endless amounts of lies causing parents to harm their children, mass generation of child pornography, and much, much more. All of this is not a coincidence, mere side-effects, unintended consequences – social media are designed and optimised specifically to achieve these goals, like cigarettes and now “vapes” are designed specifically to be as addictive as possible. The people responsible – social media companies, their executives, their employees – need to face justice, answer for what they’ve done, and face the legal consequences.
Of course, that’s not going to happen. Billionaires and their megacorporations are untouchable, too big to fail, too closely tied to especially the current regime in the US. I don’t think social media bans for people under 16 are the answer, since they tend to come with onerous and invasive online identity checks and because they cut vulnerable people off from their support networks, but it’s clear we need to do something.
Mark Francis Ford has been held without bail for five months after authorities arrested him in Indiana
A man accused of molesting a disabled boy whom he met while working as a Roman Catholic priest in New Orleans has been indicted on child rape charges, according to authorities.
Grand jurors seated in New Orleans’ state criminal courthouse on Thursday handed up a nine-count indictment against Mark Francis Ford, nearly five months after authorities arrested him and jailed him without bail. The document charges Ford, 64, with aggravated rape of a child; raping a person suffering from a physical disability preventing resistance; two counts of molesting a juvenile; another three of indecent behavior with a minor; and kidnapping.
Continue reading...Intel announced this week that it’s working with SoftBank subsidiary SAIMEMORY to commercialize Z-Angle Memory (ZAM), an advanced type of DRAM that stacks memory modules vertically. While ZAM chips aren’t expected to become available for at least three years, they could eventually replace the high-bandwidth memory (HBM) that is in such high demand today thanks to the AI boom.
Memory bandwidth is currently a major bottleneck in AI processing, as organizations seek to move ever greater chunks of data from memory into GPUs and back into memory. Chipmakers like Nvidia and AMD are putting hundreds of gigabytes worth of HBM on their GPU dies to help alleviate that bottleneck. However, surging HBM demand has led to a global shortage in NAND stocks, pushing up the price of RAM modules and NVMe storage and leading to supply chain shortages.
ZAM is a new memory technology that could potentially rewrite the rules of DRAM. Like HBM, ZAM memory technology utilizes vertical stacking along the Z-axis (hence the name Z-Angle). However, it promises 2x to 3x the capacity of HBM and higher bandwidths at a fraction of the energy and cost.
Intel’s agreement with SAIMEMORY calls for the two companies to leverage the foundational technology and expertise that Intel developed as part of the Next Generation DRAM Bonding (NGDB) program.

A cross-section of an NGDB test assembly showing the novel architecture of Intel’s ZAM technology (Image courtesy Intel)
The NGDB program is part of the Advanced Memory Technology (AMT) project, the Department of Energy and National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) initiative that brought vendors like Intel, SK Hynix, and SoftBank together with DOE government labs to develop new memory technologies, including ZAM, HBM, Compute Express Link (CXL), and non-volatile memory, like magnetic random access memory (MRAM).
The NGDB program is currently in its third year with Intel and the “Tri-Lab,” or Sandia National Laboratory, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, and Los Alamos National Laboratory. Years one and two were dedicated to research and development, while the third year will focus on productization.
In January, Sandia shared the progress that the Tri-Lab has made with a “novel stacking approach” as part of the NGBD project. Specifically, the lab showed how it vertically bonded eight memory wafers to a base wafer using an alternative “via-in-one” construct.
“Intel’s Next-Generation DRAM Bonding initiative has demonstrated a novel memory architecture and revolutionary assembly methodology that significantly increases DRAM performance, reduces power consumption, and optimizes memory costs,” Joshua Fryman, CTO of Intel Government Technologies, stated in the Sandia progress update. “Standard memory architectures aren’t meeting AI needs, so NGDB defined a whole new approach to accelerate us through the next decade.”
Gwen Voskuilen, principal member of technical staff at Sandia, said the Intel breakthrough is “an exciting technology that we anticipate will lead to a wider adoption of higher bandwidth memories in systems that are currently unable to take advantage of high bandwidth memory due to its limited capacity and power constraints.”

A memory tester probe card as part of Intel’s NGDB R&D program (Image courtesy Intel)
“The demonstration confirms that the NGDB technologies can be combined to yield a highly performant memory with high-volume manufacturing,” he added.
SoftBank reportedly is investing ¥3 billion (about $19 million at current exchange rates) in SAIMEMORY to develop ZAM with Intel. SAIMEMORY has reportedly said that it expects to create a ZAM prototype by 2027, with commercialization in 2029.
If that timeline plays out, it will be a boon for next-generation AI systems. However, it won’t come soon enough to relieve the current supply chain crunch due to surging HBM demand, which isn’t expected to abate for years.
Meanwhile, the ZAM program further strengthens the strategic technology partnership between the US and Japan. Last week, DOE Under Secretary for Science Dario Gil travelled to the SCA/HPCAsia 2026 conference in Osaka, Japan, to cement the expanded partnership between Argonne National Lab, Nvidia, RIKEN, and Fujitsu. Gil is in charge of Genesis Mission, the DOE’s initiative to accelerate progress in scientific discovery and engineering through AI.
Developing new memory technologies, such as ZAM, to replace or augment existing HBM aligns closely with Genesis Mission goals.
“The transition from AMT to ZAM strengthens trusted U.S. and Japan technology partnerships and accelerates the path from national laboratory research to global deployment,” Intel’s Sanam Masroor, the director of global strategic partnerships, wrote in a February 2 blog post.
The post What is Z-Angle Memory and Why Is Intel Developing It? appeared first on HPCwire.
NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman has announced that astronauts on the upcoming Crew-12 and Artemis II missions will be allowed to carry iPhones and other modern smartphones into orbit and to the Moon -- a reversal of long-standing agency rules that had left crews relying on a 2016 Nikon DSLR and decade-old GoPros for the historic lunar flyby. Isaacman framed the move as part of a broader push to challenge what he called bloated qualification requirements, where hardware approvals get mired in radiation characterization, battery thermal tests, outgassing reviews and vibration testing. "That operational urgency will serve NASA well as we pursue the highest-value science and research in orbit and on the lunar surface," he wrote.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
One jewelry company is looking to offset surging silver prices by plating its pieces with an even more precious metal.
LOUISVILLE, Colo., Feb. 5, 2026 — Infleqtion, a global leader in quantum sensing and quantum computing powered by neutral-atom technology, announced that its quantum software team, together with collaborators at the University of Chicago (UChicago) and Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), has been selected to advance to Phase 3 of the Wellcome Leap Quantum for Bio (Q4Bio) Challenge, a global program focused on demonstrating quantum-enabled solutions for human health. The news comes as Infleqtion prepares to go public through a merger with Churchill Capital Corp X.
“Phase 3 allows us to test quantum-enabled biomarker discovery end to end,” said Pranav Gokhale, CTO, Infleqtion. “We’re applying our hybrid quantum–classical workflow to real oncology data and evaluating whether quantum methods can improve feature selection on today’s hardware, not in simulations.”
Biomarker discovery, identifying molecular, genetic, or image-based features that help diagnose cancer, guide treatment, or predict patient response, requires analyzing high-dimensional, multimodal clinical datasets. Traditional tools often struggle to capture subtle or higher-order interactions across these data types. The Wellcome Leap Q4Bio program targets this challenge directly, supporting teams working to demonstrate quantum-enabled methods for human health within the next five years.
“This project only works because clinicians, biologists, and quantum scientists are designing the solution together,” added Gokhale. “That collaboration ensures the algorithms address genuine clinical needs while remaining implementable on near-term quantum hardware.”
Across Phases 1 and 2, the Infleqtion-led team built a hybrid quantum–classical workflow designed to handle the complexity of modern biomedical data. The approach combines organized preprocessing of DNA, RNA, and pathology image features with a higher-order optimization method that can capture interactions often missed by traditional techniques. The team also developed Hyper-RQAOA, a quantum routine tailored to current and near-term hardware that leverages parameter transfer techniques to greatly improve efficiency. Together, these components provide a practical way to test quantum-enabled feature selection on datasets that matter in real clinical settings.
Phase 3 transitions the effort from controlled simulations to experiments on real quantum processors. To succeed, teams must show meaningful performance on current devices and demonstrate how their methods will scale to the next generation of quantum systems. Infleqtion’s team will use this stage to tackle a more complex clinical question: forecasting treatment response in head-and-neck cancer using a curated cohort from UChicago. The goal is to determine whether quantum-in-the-loop analysis can reveal small, clinically useful biomarker sets that support precision oncology decisions.
Today’s announcement follows the release of the team’s flagship research paper, Toward Quantum-Enabled Biomarker Discovery: An Outlook from Q4Bio, now available on arXiv.
For more information, including technical details, publications, and collaboration opportunities, visit Infleqtion.com.
About Infleqtion
Infleqtion is a global leader in quantum sensing and quantum computing, powered by neutral-atom technology. Infleqtion designs and builds quantum computers, precision sensors, and quantum software for governments, enterprises, and research institutions. Infleqtion’s commercial portfolio includes quantum computers as well as quantum RF systems, quantum clocks, and inertial navigation solutions. Infleqtion is the partner of choice for governments and commercial customers seeking cutting-edge quantum capabilities. Infleqtion announced in September 2025 it plans to go public via a merger with Churchill X (NASDAQ: CCCX).
The post Infleqtion Accelerates Quantum for Oncology as Q4Bio Challenge Enters Phase 3 appeared first on HPCwire.
While last year's Pixel 9A went on sale in April, the latest in Google's cheaper A series will be coming this month.
Investigators have no proof that the missing mother of "Today" show host Savannah Guthrie is still alive but are holding out hope she is "still out there," the sheriff said.
President Donald Trump said Thursday that he hoped to replace New START with a modernized treaty that could “last long into the future.”
SAN FRANCISCO and LONDON, Feb. 5, 2026 — Armada and Nscale have signed a letter of intent (LOI) to deliver both large-scale and edge AI infrastructure for public sector and enterprise customers worldwide. Nscale is a European-headquartered AI infrastructure builder bringing online some of the largest supercomputer clusters globally – with a full-stack platform spanning power, data centers, compute, and software. San Francisco-based Armada delivers real-time distributed intelligence through its leading modular data centers (Galleons) and proprietary Armada Edge Platform (AEP). Together they can deliver sovereign solutions, both at scale and at the edge.
This collaboration aims to bring full-stack edge AI technology offerings directly to multiple sites around the globe. With access to land and power at these sites, Armada and Nscale intend to deliver solutions that include modular data center infrastructure, GPU compute capacity, application software, and customer support to end customers in the private and public sectors.
Nscale and Armada together combine rapidly deployable, turnkey infrastructure with large-scale sovereign cloud deployments, empowering customers to maintain sovereign compute environments anywhere in the world. Enterprises and governments can now establish secure, compliant AI infrastructure in locations where existing infrastructure doesn’t exist, and far faster than full data center builds.
The solution enables a hub-and-spoke model. Large-scale data centers from Nscale provide superior unit economics and foundational capacity. Armada’s turnkey deployments, like Leviathan, its megawatt Galleon, extend sovereign capabilities to new geographies at the edge.
“There is increasing demand from enterprises and governments for operational AI, and meeting that need requires infrastructure that is scalable, distributed, and ultimately sovereign,” said Josh Payne, Founder and CEO of Nscale. “By working with Armada, we will be able to offer customers a flexible foundation for deploying advanced AI workloads wherever they need to operate, without compromising performance, security, or control.”
“As AI adoption accelerates, organizations need infrastructure that can reach beyond centralized clusters, on Earth and even beyond,” said Dan Wright, Co-Founder and CEO of Armada. “One of Armada’s key differentiators is that we enable sovereign AI, with speed and scale. Partnering with Nscale allows us to extend our modular AI infrastructure into new global markets, supporting customers who require sovereign, high-performance compute.”
Together, Armada and Nscale intend to establish a repeatable model for deploying AI infrastructure globally. By uniting large-scale sovereign cloud services, modular compute, and distributed operations, this will enable organizations to accelerate AI adoption while maintaining security, compliance, and performance at scale.
More from HPCwire
About Armada
Armada is a full-stack edge infrastructure company delivering compute, storage, connectivity, and AI/ML capabilities to the most remote and rugged industrial environments on Earth. From energy to defense, Armada enables organizations to operate at the edge—without compromise.
About Nscale
Nscale is building the global hyperscaler engineered for AI infrastructure. Through vertically integrated AI solutions and modular, first-principles data center design across Europe and North America, Nscale delivers the compute foundation for enterprise AI training, fine-tuning, and inference at scale.
Source: Armada
The post Armada and Nscale Outline Plans for Global Sovereign AI Data Center Network appeared first on HPCwire.
The carrier is positioning the Better Value plan for families, but this limited time deal has some strings attached.
The owner of a bowling alley in a small South Carolina city refused to integrate in the 1960s. It spurred peaceful protests until tensions erupted into what's now known as the "Orangeburg Massacre."
Umar Bio Salihu, 53, the local head of Woro in Kwara state, says gunmen ‘just came in and started shooting’
The traditional chief of a village in western Nigeria where jihadists massacred residents earlier this week has recounted a night of terror during which the attackers killed two of his sons and kidnapped his wife and three daughters.
Umar Bio Salihu, the 53-year-old chief of Woro, a small, Muslim-majority village in Kwara state, said that at about 5pm on Tuesday the gunmen “just came in and started shooting”.
Continue reading...Feb. 5, 2026 — Great things can come from failure when it comes to geology.
The Midcontinent rift formed about 1.1 billion years ago and runs smack in the middle of the United States at the Great Lakes. The rift failed to completely rupture, and had it succeeded it would have torn North America apart. Under immense pressure from receding tectonic plates, the weakened lithosphere instead created a basin in the crust eventually filled by Lake Superior, and it also exposed a 3000-km-long band of deeply buried igneous and sedimentary rocks.

Supercomputer simulations by University of Memphis scientists are revealing new details about geological rift failure — insights that could inform geothermal energy, rare earth mineral exploration, and more. Image of the Great Crack and surrounding lava flows along Kīlaueaʻs lower SW Rift Zone. Courtesy of the USGS.
Long a mystery, the details of rift failure are becoming clearer thanks to U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) ACCESS-allocated supercomputer simulations on the Texas Advanced Computer Center’s (TACC) Stampede3 system by a pair of University of Memphis scientists. Their findings could help understand rift failure in other parts of the world with applications in renewable geothermal energy, rare earth minerals, and more.
“Our main finding is that we can understand the rift systems losing driving forces in terms of three parameters: how much the driving force is reduced, how fast it is reduced, and how mature the rift is when it starts losing its driving force,” said Kuruvitage Chameera Silva, a PhD student at The University of Memphis. He co-published a study in Nature Scientific Reports (October 2025) with his advisor Eunseo Choi, who leads the Geodynamics Research Group at the Center for Earthquake Research and Information.
“By running numerous numerical models while varying those three parameters, we could map out exactly when continental extension continues to full breakup, and when it fails,” Choi added.
“The NSF ACCESS program plays a vital role in making supercomputing resources broadly available to researchers across the United States,” Silva said. “These supercomputer allocations provided me, as a student researcher, with the high performance computing resources necessary to conduct the high-resolution continental rifting simulations central to this study, work that would have been impossible on local machines.”

Figure (a) Designed time dependent boundary traction depth integrated tractions for model. (b) Modeled slab dynamics. (c) Half extensional velocities for two models; CT model accelerates towards continental breakup (CB). (d) Model evolution at different time stamps. Credit: DOI: 10.1038/s41598-025-19691-3.
Supercomputing Continental Rifts
The scientists used TACC’s Stampede3 supercomputer to simulate what happens when a tectonic plate is pulled from the sides. Rather than prescribing a fixed velocity, they applied more realistic force boundary conditions that evolve over the millions of years modeled. They also used HPC resources at The University of Memphis Computational Infrastructure for Geodynamics.
The numerical models were made using the geodynamic code ASPECT that accounted for both the driving forces of the pulling that stretches the rift zone and the gravitational energy gradient; and the resisting forces of lithospheric cooling, rift strength, and mantle drag.
“This is the first study that successfully implemented the force boundary driven continental extension models in the ASPECT code,” Silva said.
ASPECT developers helped the team simulate the tensional tectonic settings, where each 2D model needed 128 cores or about three nodes to run over a period of two days to get a model simulation time of 20 million years. The published manuscript has 23 models.
“The Stampede3 supercomputer proved to be an excellent platform for this work, and ASPECT is well tested on its architecture. The installation was straightforward, and the system delivered strong parallel performance with reasonable queue times,” Silva said. “This allowed me to run model suites, parameter sweeps, and complex rheology efficiently, greatly accelerating the pace of the research.”
Beyond raw computing power, the NSF ACCESS initiative also helped Silva develop essential HPC skills including writing SLURM scripts, managing parallel workloads, and optimizing large-scale simulations. “The clear documentation and user support ensured I could focus on scientific objectives rather than technical obstacles,” he added.
Below the Surface
As a tectonic plate stretches, it becomes thinner and weaker. If the driving force is not enough to stretch the lithosphere, it cools and thickens. Whether a rift keeps spreading eventually splitting a continent apart or stops in the middle of making one main valley depends on the competition between the weakening forces and strengthening forces. The rift’s fate is determined by how quickly the plate weakens compared to how strongly it’s still being pulled apart.
A significant reduction in driving force stops rifting and results in no continental breakup; and with a small reduction, rifting is affected little, proceeding to continental breakup. A surprise in the study results, however, was that when the driving force decreases very slowly, it will have enough time to mature the rift, promoting continental breakup. Also, the more mature a rift gets, the weaker it becomes. Thus, a continental rift is more likely to complete breakup if it starts losing the driving force at a sufficiently late stage of shifting.
This new research helps the larger scientific community by connecting deep Earth dynamics with surface evolution in a quantitative, testable way. It shows how changes in stress, heat, and lithospheric structure lead to the diverse rift behaviors we see around the world — from successful ocean-forming rifts to long-lived failed rifts.
“Supercomputers let us ‘see’ processes inside the Earth that we can never observe directly, deep underground and over millions of years,” Silva said. “By recreating them in high-resolution simulations, we can test ideas, explore what-if scenarios, and better understand natural hazards and how continents evolve.”
Source: Jorge Salazar, TACC
The post TACC Simulations Shed New Light on Why Continental Rifts Fail appeared first on HPCwire.
Amid officials’ concern about vocal crowd reactions against the US, the vice-president’s visit to a hockey game felt closer to theater than geopolitics
Several thousand spectators who turned up for a Thursday afternoon hockey game in Milan’s western suburbs may have gotten a sneak preview of the 2028 Republican ticket when US vice-president JD Vance and secretary of state Marco Rubio attended the United States women’s Olympic opener. With one hockey game already postponed because of norovirus, Olympic organizers could have been forgiven for hoping to avoid any other sudden waves of nausea inside the secondary rink across town.
Vance is in Italy to lead the official US delegation at Friday’s opening ceremony, joined by second lady Usha Vance, Rubio and billionaire Tilman Fertitta, the US ambassador to Italy and owner of the NBA’s Houston Rockets. The group watched Thursday’s game from the second and third rows at center ice behind the scorer’s table alongside Olympic gold medal-winning hockey sisters Jocelyne Lamoureux-Davidson and Monique Lamoureux-Morando.
Continue reading...Interest rates on money market accounts remain competitive. Here's how much a $40,000 account can earn in 2026.
Freaky robots get their drink on, a furniture designer turns to AI for a website, and more.
Feb. 5, 2026 — As part of its Quantum Computing Access at NERSC (QCAN) program, the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC) at Lawrence Berkeley National Lab (Berkeley Lab) is seeking project proposals to conduct research using neutral atom quantum processors from QuEra Computing, including Aquila (analog) and Gemini (gate-based) systems. (Detailed specifications can be found at the bottom of each platform’s web page.)

Gemini gate-based neutral-atom computer at the AIST G-QuAT facility in Japan. Image credit: QuEra Computing.
Quantum computing platforms offer unique advantages for challenging problems critical to DOE’s mission in energy systems, materials science, and fundamental physics research. By providing researchers with access to this emerging technology, NERSC aims to accelerate scientific discovery in this space.
Awards
Up to six projects will be chosen between the Aquila and Gemini platforms. Work is expected to commence in April 2026, with a preliminary, three-month Stage A aimed at demonstrating the potential for quantum hardware runs. To complete this preliminary stage, Aquila teams will receive up to 12.5 QPU-hours of initial hardware access, while Gemini teams will focus on simulation and workflow development without hardware access.
Teams that successfully demonstrate potential for quantum hardware runs during Stage A will proceed to Stage B of the program and will receive their full allocation to complete their research projects. In the unlikely case that a team does not advance to Stage B, surplus hours will be redistributed to advancing teams.
During Stage B, Aquila teams are eligible for up to an additional 25 QPU-hours each, and Gemini teams up to 10 QPU-hours each. (Aquila is typically capable of 3 shots/sec, while Gemini is typically capable of 1 shot/sec.)
All projects will be completed by the end of 2026.
Eligibility
This is an open call. Proposals from all areas of quantum information science are welcome. Applicants do not have to be current NERSC users. However, because NERSC is a Department of Energy Office of Science national user facility for open scientific research, all research results must be published in open scientific journals or presented in open forums.
Requirements
To be successful, a project must have a clearly defined scope aligned with the DOE Office of Science mission. Topics encouraged include, but are not limited to, materials science, chemistry, high-energy physics, scientific simulation, and computational workflows relevant to HPC-integrated quantum computing. Successful applications will demonstrate the ability to commit sufficient worker hours to complete the project, ideally the equivalent of at least one full-time employee (FTE).
Selected projects must target one quantum processor, either Aquila or Gemini, and team members must complete the mandatory training before starting their project.
Additionally, teams will be required to plan their work according to the following schedule:
Selected teams must complete QuEra’s qbook training course to confirm participation. Selected teams that fail to fulfill the training requirement in a timely manner will be placed on a waitlist.
Teams are expected to actively participate in office hours and provide regular project status updates.
Export Controls
Proposed work must be open and fundamental research intended for publication. The use of NERSC and Berkeley Lab resources to store, manipulate, or remotely access information, software, or data that may affect the legal or security status of NERSC or Berkeley Lab or that requires additional controls require prior written approval from Berkeley Lab, which may be withheld at Berkeley Lab’s sole discretion. Such materials include, but are not limited to, export-controlled software or technical data, e.g. under EAR (Export Administration Regulations) or ITAR (International Traffic in Arms Regulations), personally identifiable information or health information (including data covered by HIPAA, the Health Information Portability and Accountability Act), and information subject to “Controlled Unclassified Information” (CUI) designation or similar governmental restrictions.
Selection Criteria
Submissions will be evaluated on the following criteria:
Online applications are currently being accepted through February 28, 2026. Apply here.
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Source: NERSC
The post NERSC Issues 2026 Call for Proposals for Neutral Atom-Based Quantum Computing appeared first on HPCwire.
Amid warnings McSweeney’s survival would leave his position ‘untenable’, PM apologises to Epstein’s victims for appointing Mandelson as US ambassador
Downing Street has defied calls to remove Keir Starmer’s most senior aide, insisting Morgan McSweeney retains the prime minister’s confidence, as frustration grows over a wait for documents on Peter Mandelson, which some fear could last for weeks.
Amid warnings from Labour backbenchers that McSweeney’s survival would leave Starmer’s position “untenable”, Starmer apologised to victims of Jeffrey Epstein for appointing Mandelson, a close friend of the convicted child sex offender, as US ambassador.
Continue reading...Hannah and Daniel Neeleman's Ballerina Farm has stopped selling raw milk produced by its Utah farm.
Shifting explanations of Gabbard’s presence at election center intensifies scrutiny of role she played in operation
Donald Trump on Thursday offered a new and shifting account of why Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence, was present last week at an FBI raid of an election center in Georgia, saying she went at the urging of the attorney general Pam Bondi.
“She took a lot of heat two days ago because she went in at Pam’s insistence,” the US president said at the National Prayer Breakfast, a high-profile event of political and religious leaders. “She went in and she looked at votes that wanted to be checked out from Georgia.”
Continue reading...Just curious if we expect new OW FM products in early spring or what and when that release schedule looks like. Part of me wants the Xl, but not without a fender or any of the goods.
Do we expect new products from what we have learned with that device?
Here's a behind-the-scenes look at the many gadgets and systems powering the big game.
Employers cut more than 108,000 jobs in January, the highest total for that month since 2009, new data shows.
Elon Musk told podcast host Dwarkesh Patel and Stripe co-founder John Collison that space will become the most economically compelling location for AI data centers in less than 36 months, a prediction rooted not in some exotic technical breakthrough but in the basic math of electricity supply: chip output is growing exponentially, and electrical output outside China is essentially flat. Solar panels in orbit generate roughly five times the power they do on the ground because there is no day-night cycle, no cloud cover, no atmospheric loss, and no atmosphere-related energy reduction. The system economics are even more favorable because space-based operations eliminate the need for batteries entirely, making the effective cost roughly 10 times cheaper than terrestrial solar, Musk said. The terrestrial bottleneck is already real. Musk said powering 330,000 Nvidia GB300 chips -- once you account for networking hardware, storage, peak cooling on the hottest day of the year, and reserve margin for generator servicing -- requires roughly a gigawatt at the generation level. Gas turbines are sold out through 2030, and the limiting factor is the casting of turbine vanes and blades, a process handled by just three companies worldwide. Five years from now, Musk predicted, SpaceX will launch and operate more AI compute annually than the cumulative total on Earth, expecting at least a few hundred gigawatts per year in space. Patel estimated that 100 gigawatts alone would require on the order of 10,000 Starship launches per year, a figure Musk affirmed. SpaceX is gearing up for 10,000 launches a year, Musk said, and possibly 20,000 to 30,000.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
In ski jumping, a small difference in suit size can make a significant difference in an athlete's performance.
President Trump told NBC News he didn't know why Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard was at the search of the Georgia county's elections office.
US president says deal, which he previously described as act of ‘great stupidity’, was ‘best’ PM could make
Donald Trump has watered down his criticism of the UK’s plan to hand the Chagos Islands back to Mauritius, saying the deal was the “best” Keir Starmer could make.
The US president had described ceding sovereignty of the British Indian Ocean Territory, which includes the Diego Garcia military base, as an “act of great stupidity” only last month. He also claimed the deal was one of many “national security reasons” why the US should acquire Greenland.
Continue reading...Square Enix revisits another Dragon Quest game with a remake that improves graphics, quickens the pace and adds plenty of quality-of-life upgrades.
Vodafone also reviewing its contract with Global Counsel after revelations of former minister’s links to Jeffrey Epstein
Barclays has reportedly cut ties with the lobbying firm co-founded by Peter Mandelson, after intense scrutiny of the founders’ dealings with the late child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Vodafone has also said it is reviewing its contract for public affairs services with Global Counsel, which Mandelson co-founded in 2010 after Labour lost the general election.
Continue reading...Party says it will not back funding bill without reforms on – among other things – masks, ID and judicial warrants
Following the fatal shootings of American citizens Renee Good and Alex Pretti by federal agents in Minneapolis last month, Democrats have refused to support long-term funding for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) unless Republicans agree to reforms on the tactics of federal agents carrying out Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown.
“The American people rightfully expect their elected representatives to take action to rein in ICE and ensure no more lives are lost,” the Senate minority leader, Chuck Schumer, and his House counterpart, Hakeem Jeffries, wrote on Wednesday night in a letter issuing 10 formal demands to GOP leadership in order to avert a 13 February lapse in funding for the department, which oversees Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the US Border Patrol.
Continue reading...Anger at former US ambassador Peter Mandelson’s relations with the child sex offender threatens to topple the prime minister
It was the one scandal that Donald Trump seemed unable to shake. No matter his best efforts to convince his supporter base that there was nothing to see here, the demands for the administration to release every document it had on the child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein only grew.
Yet even after the most shocking revelations in the latest drop about Trump’s inner circle – involving everyone from Elon Musk to the Maga honcho Steve Bannon to the commerce secretary, Howard Lutnick, not to mention Trump himself – so far, it seems, the administration has escaped largely unscathed. Nobody has resigned, nobody has been fired, and certainly there is no sign that the US president is going anywhere.
Continue reading...Trump might not embody Christian values yet is the religious right’s chosen instrument to turn the tide against liberal, godless America
They had come to say a prayer for the father, the son and the holy ghost.
The father was Donald Trump, who, despite sending federal militias to roam Minneapolis, threatening to invade Greenland and telling lies by the dozen, remains the lord and saviour of the religious right.
Continue reading...While the US president’s many mentions in the Esptein files seem to have no consequences, in the UK Starmer could be the first world leader to fall
All around Europe, the political and business elite are facing an inquest on what blinded so many to think it was permissible to consort with a known child sex offender. As the 3m emails and 1,800 photos released on Friday by the US Department of Justice start to percolate across the continent and through to national media, questions about the moral fibre of this elite are starting to be asked at markedly different levels of intensity.
Squirming businessmen, bankers, politicians, royals, academics, tech bros and partners in law firms have become entangled in Jeffrey Epstein’s interlocking circles of money, power and sex. It seems there was no one in a position of power that Epstein was not in email contact with, and that there was little limit to what this networking elite was prepared to do in return for a gift, a contact or an invite to a sexually charged party. Elon Musk was right when in July 2025 he tweeted – only to quickly delete it – that “so many powerful people want that list suppressed”.
Continue reading...Opposition MPs urge Labour to pause public contracts with the US tech firm after attempts to examine deals blocked
Labour should halt public contracts with the US tech company Palantir, opposition politicians have said, amid growing concern at the lack of government transparency over dealings with the company and Peter Mandelson.
Since 2023, Palantir has secured more than £500m in contracts with the NHS and the Ministry of Defence (MoD), while it employed Global Counsel, the lobbying firm founded by Mandelson. Emails released by the US Department of Justice show Mandelson sought help from Jeffrey Epstein to find “rich individuals” as clients.
Continue reading...Although weakened by airstrikes, sanctions and domestic unrest, Tehran is surprisingly bullish before talks with US
When it comes to Iran and Donald Trump, there is so much bluff, backed by military hardware, that the truth rarely makes an appearance.
It appears that a bullish Iran is going into negotiations with the US on Friday adopting maximalist positions that do not seem greatly different to those it adopted in the five rounds of talks before the negotiations were abruptly halted by the surprise Israeli attack on Iran last June.
Continue reading...Lester’s 1990 classic about the wonders of nature wins Guardian Australia poll ahead of Possum Magic in second place
Alison Lester interview: ‘Everything I do looks a bit like a stuffed toy’
Children on their favourite picture book: ‘I also like that the dad cries’
Magic Beach by Alison Lester has won Guardian Australia’s poll to find Australia’s best children’s picture book of all time.
More than 100,000 votes were cast after polling opened on 27 January. Aside from the first day, when Possum Magic by Mem Fox and illustrator Julie Vivas took an early lead, Magic Beach was the most voted for book every other day of the count.
Continue reading...Automattic and the Internet Archive have released a free, open-source WordPress plugin that automatically detects broken outbound links on a site and redirects visitors to archived Wayback Machine copies instead of serving them a 404 error. The Internet Archive Wayback Machine Link Fixer, which launched last fall and is available on WordPress.org, runs in the background scanning posts for dead links, checking for existing archived versions, and requesting new snapshots when none exist. It also archives a site's own posts whenever they are updated. If the original link comes back online, the plugin stops redirecting. Pew Research has found that 38% of the web has disappeared over the past decade, and WordPress powers more than 40% of websites online.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Newly released documents from the Epstein files raise more questions about activity seen on video from the jail the night he died.
Super Bowl LX is three days away, and this is a guide to catch all the action, commercials and Bad Bunny's halftime show.
New rule would strip job safeguards for 50,000 federal employees and change how whistleblowers are protected
The Trump administration is seeking to finalize its overhaul of the federal government’s civil service system through a rule issued this week by the office of personnel management (OPM) to strip job protections from 50,000 civil service employees.
Under the rule, the president would have the authority to fire and hire an estimated 50,000 career federal employees.
Continue reading...Newly unsealed files claim the banker, who has denied any wrongdoing, forced a woman to touch his genitals during a massage before raping her
US prosecutors reviewed allegations of rape and bodily harm against the former Barclays boss and former JP Morgan banker Jes Staley, according to newly unsealed files linked to the child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Multiple documents in the Epstein files cite serious allegations of sexual misconduct against Staley, including that he forced a woman to touch his genitals during a massage before raping her, and left “bloody marks” on the arms of a woman he called “tinkerbell”.
Continue reading...Miguel Díaz‑Canel says Cuba is willing to engage Washington amid the island’s deepening economic crisis
After months of threats from Donald Trump, the president of Cuba, Miguel Díaz-Canel, has said that his government is willing to talk to the United States, just so long as it is “without pressure”.
Standing in front of a life-sized photograph of Fidel Castro carrying a rifle during the 1959 revolution, Díaz-Canel, the 65-year-old president, said on Thursday that his island nation had been subject to an “intense media campaigns of slander, hatred and psychological warfare”.
Continue reading...Cryptocurrency-based prediction market announced it would open store in apparent nod to mayor’s signature policy
Zohran Mamdani made city-operated grocery stores a key pledge of his campaign for mayor of New York City. So when one company seemed to muscle in on the idea this week, apparently as a PR stunt, Mamdani was quick to reply.
Polymarket, the cryptocurrency-based prediction market, announced on Tuesday it would be opening “New York City’s first free grocery store,” seemingly a nod to the mayor’s signature policy. In a statement the firm said it hoped to “empower every New Yorker to achieve food security for good”, and that it had donated $1m to the Food Bank for NYC.
Continue reading...The killing of Saif al-Islam Gaddafi is the end of a political era in Libya Expert comment jon.wallace
Saif al-Islam wielded little influence over the current running of the state. But his presence was still a political and potentially military threat to his rivals.
On Tuesday 3 February, news broke of the killing of Saif al-Islam Gaddafi. Four assailants reportedly entered his compound in the city of Zintan and shot him dead. The events resemble a murder mystery drama.
Rumours abound over the perpetrators of the killing and their motivations. Where does this fit politically – is it connected to negotiations over a new government? Or a dispute over national reconciliation talks? Is this the result of a local feud within the city of Zintan? Or could national players have been involved?
Both the Government of National Unity (GNU) in Tripoli, led by Prime Minister Abdulhamid al-Dabaiba, and the family of Khalifa Haftar, which dominates the east and south of the country, stand to benefit from Saif’s death. But no one has claimed responsibility for the act: doing so could result in potential retribution. So what does the killing say about Libya in 2026? And what are the implications?
Saif al-Islam was the heir apparent of his father, longtime dictator Muammar Gaddafi. He had been at the centre of Libyan politics since the 2000s, when he spearheaded a reform movement to liberalize the Libyan state. That effort was seen as counter to his father’s political philosophy by many of the true believers in the so-called ‘Green’ camp. Some believed that Saif’s programme had undermined the regime and contributed to its demise.
The pivotal moment came for Saif in 2011 when he addressed the nation as the uprising against his father’s rule gathered momentum. Faced with the choice of advocating de-escalation or a call to arms, Saif chose the latter. His words that day have nonetheless reverberated in the minds of Libyans. He predicted a collapse of the Libyan economy, foreign occupation and ‘rivers of blood’.
Even for supporters of the revolution, many elements of Saif’s prophecy have come to pass. Dissatisfaction with the parlous state of the country has led some, who wouldn’t consider themselves supporters of the regime, to sympathize with his plight and to ask: were the choices made in 2011 the right ones?
Reactions to his death ranged, from celebration for the death of a tyrant, to anger that a future national leader had been killed. In this sense, Saif personified the lack of confidence and anxiety Libyans feel for their own futures.
There are also more practical implications emerging from Saif’s death.
Saif al-Islam was the only figure who could coalesce the ‘Green’ constituency – a range of actors from broad pro-Gaddafi communities in cities such as Sirte, Bani Walid and Sebha to former regime-aligned elites in security and government. Their significance as a political force has been a regular source of debate. But there is little dispute that Saif al-Islam is the only figure that could have united them.
With their forces defeated on the ground, Gaddafi’s ‘men of the tent’ went into exile, were imprisoned, or forged new alliances. Both Tripoli and Benghazi-based authorities have long sought to re-integrate former regime political and intelligence figures to court the elite Green constituency. The death of Saif does not really shift these dynamics.
The Greens have continued to undertake some collective action in discussions, most notably over internationally mediated reconciliation efforts. But these are sporadic and have no clear tangible results.
Saif al-Islam’s real threat to his opponents came in the form of his potential to influence, rather than his current influence. After all, at the time of his death he was largely confined to a house in Zintan. In the end, he was not safe even there.
But things were very different in 2021, when Saif’s return to the political scene caused a political earthquake. Rivals feared that Saif could win elections, or at the very least exert meaningful influence over any new government as a kingmaker. His entry into the presidential elections that year was one of the reasons those elections never took place.
Since then, Saif has played no meaningful role in Libyan political life. He had no political infrastructure, nor has he been active in seeking to forge political alliances.
But there was nonetheless a sense that should elections be announced, Saif would re-emerge from the shadows and present a renewed threat. Political opponents would have worried that he might take votes not only from supporters of the former regime, but also those fed up with the current state of affairs. His removal lessens those fears.
A decade ago, the Libyan Arab Armed Forces (LAAF), led by Khalifa Haftar, began outreach to military commanders that fought under the former regime. That was part of a strategy to consolidate control over central and southern Libya.
Pro-Gaddafi constituencies have formed a key part of the LAAF ever since and have been critical to its control of territory. Yet, since the political return of Saif al-Islam in 2021, the Haftars have become fearful that these elements could break away and align with Saif should the opportunity arise.
That threat would likely grow when Khalifa Haftar, the octogenarian family patriarch, dies. His likely successor, son Saddam, may have struggled to compete for loyalty in the face of a challenge from Saif al-Islam.
The LAAF has been reorganizing its forces to place them under the direct control of the Haftar family: a key example is the breakup of the 128 Brigade headed by a pro-Gaddafi family, the Zadmas. The killing of Saif will ease these efforts and likely leave pro-Gaddafi constituencies with a choice of remaining aligned with the Haftars or switching allegiance to the GNU.
Ultimately, Saif’s killing is likely to stoke some retribution from his supporters, particularly if the perpetrators (and their sponsors) are revealed. But this is not likely to shift the balance nationally. Rather it seems like it further entrenches the pattern of consolidation of power within Libya.
It’s no surprise that modern particle detectors create huge amounts of data. Working through all the data is challenging – to say the least. More time, more storage, more computing power.
At DOE’s Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York, researchers are trying a different approach. They are using artificial intelligence to make sense of the data flood as it arrives.
For a long time, experiments followed a basic pattern. Store data in batches, and analyze later. That worked when data volumes were smaller. Now, with today’s particle detectors, that old model is starting to break down. This is why Brookhaven researchers are now using AI and machine learning (ML) to filter and compress signals while experiments are still running.
This is a reminder that the world of physics is gradually moving away from batch analysis and closer to real-time monitoring and analysis. Detectors today produce data torrents. It’s simply no longer feasible to write every data point to storage. Something has to be done. Brookhaven chose to develop and use greater intelligence.
“Our goal is to improve the scientific capability of particle detectors like sPHENIX at RHIC and detectors at future colliders, including the upcoming Electron-Ion Collider (EIC),” said Jin Huang, the principal investigator on the project.

Brookhaven’s sPHENIX particle accelerator (Image courtesy Brookhaven National Lab)
“Right now, RHIC is producing more collision events than we can record in our experiments,” Huang said. “To maximize the physics output from the facility, we need a reliable and innovative way to pack more information into each byte of data recorded so we can eliminate the need for an event selection bias and record more and more collision events.”
What about the architecture behind this? Well, Brookhaven is pushing AI directly into the acquisition pipeline. It’s not relying on traditional triggers that preselect which events to keep. The system applies ML inline to help decide what matters while measurements are still in motion.
This looks remarkably similar to modern streaming data stack. Detectors are like a massive collection of sensor networks. Collisions come in as continuous events, and the neural network inference as inline compression. So the storage gets selective in this way. Compute moves closer to the source. The experiments start to look more like distributed data platforms than traditional lab setups.
A key technical insight comes from sparsity. Not all the data detectors generate are actually particle tracks. Brookhaven’s algorithm exploits this asymmetry.
“Our algorithm can zoom in on the meaningful parts of the picture — the few voxels filled by particle tracks — and do computation only on these values,” said Yi Huang, a computational scientist at Brookhaven and lead author on the paper.

Brookhaven National Laboratory is located in Upton, New York (Image courtesy Brookhaven National Laboratory)
“In this way, sparsity becomes an advantage for us,” she said. “The fewer voxels with meaningful values, the less computation our algorithm needs to do, resulting in faster data processing.”
This development goes beyond just data compression. It is where AI now sits in the scientific stack. The Brookhaven researchers don’t view it as operating downstream as an analytics layer. They consider this as intelligence that has moved upstream into data acquisition itself. You get continuous discovery. Feedback loops and not one-off runs.
This shift forces infrastructure to evolve. Accelerators need tighter integration with instruments. Networks must sustain high-throughput streams. Storage systems must support intentional capture instead of raw retention. Orchestration frameworks increasingly treat experiments like always-on services. The research facilities start to look like AI-native data centers built for continuous operation. This is where hardware and software co-design shapes what is possible.
The implications extend well beyond particle physics. Think of materials science, climate modeling, biological imaging, genomics. They all face similar pressures as sensors grow more powerful and data volumes explode. Brookhaven’s approach is a blueprint for AI-native science, where algorithms help guide what gets stored and studied.
There is also a strategic tradeoff underway – scientists are choosing intelligent loss over raw completeness. AI becomes a gatekeeper of future discovery. This shifts bias from hand-designed triggers to learned models. That introduces new challenges around transparency and validation, but it also unlocks a scale of experimentation that would otherwise be impossible.
The key takeaway from this is that science labs are evolving into continuous discovery platforms. Software architecture still matters as much as hardware design. But what Brookhaven’s work shows is what happens when science embraces real-time data engineering – and we might be seeing more of this from others.
This article first appeared in BigDATAwire. The feature image at the top shows Brookhaven National Laboratory’s Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) (Image courtesy Brookhaven National Laboratory)
The post Brookhaven Embeds AI Directly Into Particle Accelerator Data Pipelines appeared first on HPCwire.
Bezalel Zini accused of role in taking goods into the occupied Palestinian territory during an Israeli blockade
The brother of Israel’s internal security chief has been charged with “assisting the enemy in wartime” for his alleged role in a smuggling network taking cigarettes and other goods into Gaza during an Israeli blockade of the occupied Palestinian territory.
Bezalel Zini was one of more than 10 people charged in relation to the alleged network. His brother, David Zini, is the head of the Shin Bet, the domestic intelligence agency. He was appointed by the prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, last May and began the job in October.
Continue reading...You may soon be able to access every family member's health data in one place.
The AI company's models and apps are already upsetting the software industry. Now here comes Opus 4.6.
Anthropic on Thursday released Claude Opus 4.6, its most capable model yet, at a moment when the company's AI tools have already spooked markets over fears that they are disrupting traditional software development and other sectors. The new model improves on Opus 4.5's coding abilities, the company said -- it plans more carefully, sustains longer agentic tasks, handles larger codebases more reliably, and catches its own mistakes through better debugging. It is also the first Opus-class model to feature a 1M token context window, currently in beta. On GDPval-AA, an independent benchmark measuring performance on knowledge-work tasks in finance, legal and other domains, Opus 4.6 outperformed OpenAI's GPT-5.2 by roughly 144 Elo points. Anthropic also introduced agent teams in Claude Code, allowing multiple agents to work in parallel on tasks like codebase reviews. Pricing remains at $5/$25 per million input/output tokens.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
President condemns ‘environmental and health crime’ as critics say Israel seeks to make southern Lebanon uninhabitable
Lebanon has accused Israel of spraying a herbicide linked to cancer on farmland in the south of the country as a “health crime” that would threaten food security and farmers’ livelihoods.
The country’s president, Joseph Aoun, condemned what he called “an environmental and health crime” and a violation of Lebanese sovereignty, and he vowed to take “all necessary legal and diplomatic measures to confront this aggression”.
Continue reading...The U.S. on Thursday announced the resumption of dialogue with Russia's military, which had been suspended since 2021.
Investigation exposes ‘corrosive’ reach of organized crime in Canada, with links to bribes, drug trade and a murder plot
At least eight current and former Toronto police officers have been arrested following a sweeping investigation that officials say exposed the “corrosive” reach of organized crime into Canada’s largest municipal police service.
Police allege fellow officers accepted bribes, aided drug traffickers, leaked personal information to criminals who then carried out shootings and helped members of organized crime in a plot to murder a corrections officer.
Continue reading...Python will be the fourth officially-supported language in the OpenMP API
BEAVERTON, Ore., Feb. 5, 2026 — The OpenMP Architecture Review Board (ARB) today announced the formation of an OpenMP Python Language Subcommittee to add Python support to version 7.0 of the OpenMP API specification. At the same time, Anaconda, a key contributor to Python’s infrastructure and tooling ecosystem, has joined the OpenMP ARB and will play an important role in the Python integration effort.
Python is one of the most popular programming languages, widely used in application programming across many ecosystems, and the OpenMP API is one of the most used APIs in high-performance computing, embedded systems, and more. Adding Python support to the OpenMP standard will provide Python developers with a new way to express parallelism portably and accelerate Python applications running on CPUs, GPUs, and other accelerators. Technical reports will detail the preliminary integration along the way, with the 7.0 release planned for 2029.
Anaconda brings deep expertise in Python performance optimization and has been instrumental in developing critical infrastructure used throughout the Python community. Trusted by 50 million users and 95% of the Fortune 500, Anaconda provides the foundation for intelligent systems that solve complex, high-value problems. As an OpenMP ARB member, Anaconda will contribute technical leadership and help to ensure that the Python implementation meets the needs of the broader ecosystem.
“Joining the OpenMP ARB lets us bring parallel computing capabilities directly to developers,” said Stanley Seibert, Senior Director of Community Innovation at Anaconda. “By combining OpenMP’s proven standard for high-performance parallel computing with Anaconda’s decade-plus experience in Python performance engineering and compiler technology, we’re committed to ensuring this integration will serve teams building compute-intensive AI and data applications at scale.”
“I’m excited to lead the effort to expand OpenMP support to Python,” said Giorgis Georgakoudis, Chair of the OpenMP Python Language Subcommittee. “I believe the Python community will greatly benefit from OpenMP’s open, portable programming abstractions for performance acceleration. Anaconda’s participation brings invaluable real-world Python experience that will be crucial to our success.”
“Adding Python as a base language to the OpenMP API is a major undertaking,” said Bronis R. de Supinski, Chair of the OpenMP Language Committee. “This exciting direction has already met with enthusiasm from the Python community, and Anaconda’s membership reinforces our commitment to getting this right.”
“Python is a cornerstone of both HPC and AI, offering unmatched productivity and flexibility,” said Michael Klemm, CEO of the OpenMP ARB. “Adding support for Python to the OpenMP API will strengthen this advantage by enabling efficient, portable parallelism across heterogeneous architectures. We’re delighted to welcome Anaconda and look forward to their contributions.”
Companies wishing to participate in our effort are invited to become OpenMP members and join in the ongoing conversation. See information about OpenMP membership at https://www.openmp.org/join.
About OpenMP
The OpenMP Architecture Review Board (ARB) standardizes high-level, directive-based, multi-language parallelism that is performant, productive, and portable. Jointly defined by a group of major hardware and software vendors and research organizations, the OpenMP API is a portable, scalable model that gives programmers an interface for developing parallel applications for platforms including embedded systems, accelerator devices, multicore and shared-memory systems, artificial intelligence systems, and more. For more information, see https://www.openmp.org.
Source: OpenMP
The post OpenMP ARB Launches Python Subcommittee, Welcomes Anaconda as Newest Member appeared first on HPCwire.
Senate Republicans criticized Democrats' list of demands to rein in ICE, further reducing the odds of reaching a deal on DHS funding.
Prosecutors allege that Kyle Wagner, 37, shared social media posts threatening ICE agents.
Lawmakers are warning Americans to beware the many financial scams linked to Super Bowl LX, from fake betting sites to counterfeit tickets.
If you own last year's Apple Watch, is it worth upgrading to the latest model? We compare all the features.
Since 2026 TV models won't come out until spring, now's a good time to save on last year's models.
There will be performances happening throughout the evening.
Some backbenchers blame Pm’s chief of staff for Peter Mandelson’s appointment as ambassador
After the release of a vast tranche of documents and emails that shed further light on the close relationship between Peter Mandelson and Jeffrey Epstein, the government has come under intense pressure to release details about its vetting process before Mandelson’s appointment as US ambassador in December 2024.
Below, we look at how much Keir Starmer knew about Mandelson’s relationship with Epstein, and what vetting process the former peer went through for the top diplomatic job in Washington.
Continue reading...Data from November 2025 was also revised lower amid a softening in labor market conditions at the end of the year
US job openings dropped to the lowest level in more than five years in December and data for the prior month was revised lower amid a softening in labor market conditions at the end of 2025.
Job openings, a measure of labor demand, decreased by 386,000 to 6.542m by the last day of December, the lowest level since September 2020, the labor department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics said in its Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey, or Jolts report, on Thursday.
Continue reading...Back taxes won't automatically disqualify you from a refund, but that doesn't mean you'll see the money, either.
Man misidentified by London supermarket using Facewatch system says: ‘I shouldn’t have to prove I am not a criminal’
A man was ordered to leave a supermarket in London after staff misidentified him using controversial new facial recognition technology.
Warren Rajah was told to abandon his shopping and leave the local store he has been using for a number of years after an “Orwellian” error in a Sainsbury’s in Elephant and Castle, London.
Continue reading...KINGSTON, R.I., Feb. 5, 2026 — Using advanced computer simulations, researchers from the University of Rhode Island’s Graduate School of Oceanography (GSO) have concluded how and why strong ocean currents modify surface waves.

Using a high-performance computer, the research team generated models to show how storm-driven currents affect wave height and dominant wave period. (URI images courtesy of Isaac Ginis)
“Our primary finding is that hurricane-generated ocean currents can substantially reduce both the height and the dominant period of hurricane waves,” said Isaac Ginis, URI professor of oceanography. “The magnitude of wave reduction depends strongly on how accurately ocean currents are predicted. This highlights the importance of using fully coupled wave-ocean models when forecasting hurricane waves.”
Ginis conducted the research with URI Professor Tetsu Hara and Angelos Papandreou, who earned his Ph.D. in oceanography from URI in December 2025. Their results were published in a peer-reviewed article in the Journal of Physical Oceanography in January 2026.
According to Ginis, waves are most strongly reduced by currents on the front right of the storm, where winds, waves and currents are typically strongest.
“On the front-right side of a hurricane, storm-driven currents move in the same direction as the waves,” said Ginis. “This causes the waves to travel more quickly through the high-wind region. Because the waves spend less time being energized by the wind, they do not grow as large as they otherwise would.”
The team’s computer simulations included hurricanes of different sizes, strengths, and forward speeds. Depending on the hurricane characteristics, the simulations revealed that the maximum significant wave height—the average height of the highest one-third of waves—can be reduced by 0.4-2.2 meters, or roughly 1-7 feet, and the dominant wave period can be shortened by about 0.3-1.5 seconds.

Researchers produced models to show how currents of varying strengths, moving in different directions impact surface waves.
“While wave height often gets the most attention, wave period is also a key factor in determining how waves affect offshore or nearshore structures, such as oil platforms,” said Ginis.
The simulations required a powerful computer, so the researchers remotely accessed URI’s high-performance computing nodes installed at the Massachusetts Green High Performance Computing Center in Holyoke, Massachusetts. URI formed a partnership with the computing center in 2021.
Ginis is hopeful that the team’s research, which was funded by the National Oceanographic Partnership Program/Office of Naval Research, will be adopted by weather services to more accurately predict waves during hurricanes.
The professor will have an opportunity to discuss potential operational implementation of the team’s findings with NOAA scientists and hurricane forecasters at the American Meteorological Society Conference on Hurricanes and Tropical Meteorology in San Diego on March 30.
“This work has strong potential for operational use because we use the same wave and ocean models—WAVEWATCH III and MOM6—that are already part of the National Weather Service’s HAFS hurricane forecast system,” said Ginis. “Our findings could be incorporated without major changes to existing forecasting tools. Our group has a long history of working with NOAA scientists, and results from our previous studies have already been implemented in operational hurricane models.”
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Source: URI
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Love air fryers but not how they look? Here's my review of the powerful and pretty new Cosori Iconic.
Western Digital this week laid out a roadmap that stretches its 3.5-inch hard drive platform to 14 platters and pairs it with a new vertical-emitting laser for heat-assisted magnetic recording, a combination the company says will push individual drive capacities beyond 140 TB in the 2030s. The vertical laser, developed over six years and already working in WD's labs, emits light straight down onto the disk rather than from the edge, delivering more thermal energy while occupying less vertical space -- enabling areal densities up to 10 TB per platter, up from today's 4 TB, and room for additional platters in the same enclosure. WD's first commercial HAMR drives arrive in late 2026 at 40-44 TB on an 11-platter design, ramping into volume production in 2027. A 12-platter platform follows in 2028 at 60 TB, and WD expects to hit 100 TB by around 2030.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Donald Trump’s former adviser told Epstein in 2019 that he was ‘focused on raising money for Le Pen and Salvini’ before European elections
Dozens of messages contained in the latest tranche of Epstein files lay bare the attempts by Donald Trump’s former chief strategist Steve Bannon to tap Jeffrey Epstein for support and funding to bolster European far-right parties.
The messages mostly date to 2018 and 2019, when Bannon, after being sacked by Trump, regularly visited Europe in his quest to forge a movement in the European parliament uniting ultra-rightwing and Eurosceptic forces from several countries including Italy, Germany, France, Hungary, Poland, Sweden and Austria.
Continue reading...Plus, enjoy a record low on the Roku Smart TV and over 20% off the Samsung Galaxy Watch 8.
Family of Lilia Valutyte, killed by Deividas Skebas in July 2022, say she ‘will always live in our hearts’
A man who stabbed a nine-year-old girl to death in 2022 has been found guilty of her murder.
Deividas Skebas, a 26-year-old Lithuanian man, killed Lilia Valutyte by stabbing her through the heart while the child was playing with a hula hoop outside her mother’s embroidery shop in Boston, Lincolnshire, on 28 July 2022.
Continue reading...Feb. 5, 2026 — Researchers at West Virginia University (WVU) and the University of Chicago Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering have discovered that by adjusting the ratio of elements in a recently discovered material called “iron telluride selenide,” they can switch “exotic” quantum states on and off in materials that are critical for building quantum computers.
Iron telluride selenide is valuable to the scientists and engineers who are trying to make quantum computing a reality because it possesses superconductivity, as well as certain exotic properties.
For quantum computing applications, the elements iron, tellurium and selenium are typically grown in ultra-thin films. The researchers found that by tweaking a chemical recipe and changing the interactions between electrons in the films, they could “tune” those elements, moving them between different quantum phases.
They were also able to reach a highly desirable state called a “topological superconductor.” Topological superconductors are promising for building error-free quantum devices of the future because they are inherently stable and resistant to the noise that affects most quantum materials.
Coauthor Subhasish Mandal, assistant professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy at the WVU Eberly College of Arts and Sciences, explained that today’s most powerful computers hit a wall when tackling certain problems, from designing new drugs to cracking encryption codes. Error-free quantum computers promise to overcome those challenges, but building them requires materials with the exotic properties of topological superconductors, which are difficult to produce.
The research team included University of Chicago collaborators Shuolong Yang, assistant professor of molecular engineering, and graduate student Haoran Lin. Their findings, published in Nature Communications, reveal that as the ratio of tellurium and selenium changes in iron telluride selenide, so do the correlations between different electrons. Changing those ratios serves as a sensitive control knob for engineering exotic quantum phases.
“Iron telluride selenide is a unique material because it brings together all the essential ingredients one would hope for in a platform for topological superconductivity: superconductivity itself, strong spin-orbit coupling, and pronounced electronic correlations,” Mandal said. “This combination makes it an ideal system in which to explore how different quantum effects interact and compete.”
The team noted that overly strong correlations pin electrons in place, while overly weak interactions wash out the material’s topological features. At the right strength, these interactions give rise to topological superconductivity, Mandal said.
Christopher Jacobs, a graduate student in Mandal’s group, turned to advanced computational methods to explain the transition. Jacobs realized that the motion of electrons changed as tellurium concentrations increased, and that those changing electron correlations drove the quantum states and the way electrons behaved on the material’s surface.
“Seeing this delicate balance unfold experimentally was both surprising and illuminating,” said Mandal. “It points to electron correlations as a powerful and previously underappreciated tool for engineering topological quantum matter. And it highlights the fact that quantum materials are not fixed objects — they can be actively tuned by subtle internal interactions.”
Source: UWV
The post WVU and UChicago Researchers Tune Quantum States in Superconducting Material appeared first on HPCwire.
These are the best TVs I’ve reviewed for every budget, including top brands such as LG, Samsung and TCL.
Members of Congress are demanding answers from Meta after it ran advertisements by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement that they say included imagery and music intended to appeal to white nationalists and neo-Nazis.
In a letter sent to Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Reps. Becca Balint, D-Vt., and Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., questioned how the social media company approved an ad campaign from the Department of Homeland Security featuring the song “We’ll Have Our Home Again,” which is popular in neo-Nazi spaces. The lawmakers urged Meta to cease running the ad campaign on its social media platforms and asked whether the company would commit to ending its digital advertising partnership with DHS.
The Intercept was among the first to report ICE’s use of the song in a paid post recruiting for the agency, which published shortly after an ICE agent fatally shot Renee Good in Minneapolis. In their letter, the members of Congress cite The Intercept’s reporting.
The lawmakers also questioned imagery contained in the ads that extremism researchers said echoes far-right “reclamation” narratives long associated with racist violence and accelerationist ideology.
“Businesses are not on the sideline at this moment and it is important they also know how they are contributing to what is happening in Minnesota and across the country,” said Balint. “A lack of change is not neutrality but complicity.”
Meta did not respond to a request for comment. The Department of Homeland Security, which has not responded to the congressional letter, defended its recruitment messaging in a statement to The Intercept.
DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin rejected comparisons between the ads and extremist propaganda, arguing that criticism of the campaign amounted to an attack on patriotic expression.
“By Reps. Becca Balint and Pramila Jayapal’s standards, every American who posts patriotic imagery on the Fourth of July should be cancelled and labeled a Nazi,” McLaughlin said. “Not everything you dislike is ‘Nazi propaganda.’ DHS will continue to use all tools to communicate with the American people and keep them informed on our historic effort to Make America Safe Again.”
McLaughlin also accused critics of “manufacturing outrage” and said the controversy had contributed to a rise in assaults against ICE personnel. “It’s because of garbage like this we’re seeing a 1,300% increase in assaults against our brave men and women of ICE,” she said.
McLaughlin did not provide evidence to support the claim. Similar assertions by the Trump administration about sharp increases in assaults against immigration agents are not reflected in publicly available data.
The most controversial ad in the campaign was a paid DHS recruitment post that published less than two days after the fatal shooting in Minneapolis. It paired immigration enforcement footage with the song “We’ll Have Our Home Again” by Pine Tree Riots. Popular in neo-Nazi online spaces, the song includes lyrics about reclaiming “our home” by “blood or sweat.” In the ad, it played as a cowboy rode a horse with a B-2 Spirit bomber flying overhead.
After publicly rebuking allegations that the song had neo-Nazi ties, DHS later removed the recruitment post from its official Instagram account, according to a review of the page and reporting by other outlets. The department did not announce the deletion or respond to questions about why it was taken down. DHS did not address the song’s documented circulation in white nationalist spaces or its appearance in the manifesto of a 2023 mass shooter.
The Southern Poverty Law Center’s Hatewatch project has separately documented the song’s origins and circulation within organized white nationalist networks. The song was written and performed by Pine Tree Riots, a group affiliated with the Männerbund, which the SPLC has previously identified as a white nationalist organization. Hatewatch also found that the song has circulated widely in extremist online spaces and appeared in recruitment efforts by far-right groups.
Balint and Jayapal framed the controversy as bigger than a single post. They accuse Meta of profiting from a large-scale digital recruitment campaign relying on themes that would stand out to white nationalists. They questioned what safeguards existed to prevent extremist-linked content from appearing in government advertising, and whether recent changes to Meta’s hate-speech policies allowed the company to run the ads.
The letter details the scale of the recruitment push. According to the lawmakers, DHS spent more than $2.8 million on recruitment ads across Facebook and Instagram between March and December of last year, and paid Meta an additional $500,000 beginning in August. During the first three weeks of last fall’s government shutdown, ICE spent $4.5 million on paid media campaigns, the lawmakers write. The letter also cites reporting showing DHS spent more than $1 million over a 90-day period on “self-deportation” ads targeted at users interested in Latin music, Spanish as a second language, and Mexican cuisine.
Balint and Jayapal argue that such spending has been made possible by an influx of funding for ICE. A decade ago, ICE’s annual budget totaled less than $6 billion. Under new federal appropriations enacted last year, the agency has roughly $85 billion at its disposal, making it the highest-funded law enforcement agency in the United States. According to analysts cited by lawmakers, its budget is bigger than all other federal law enforcement agencies combined.
The lawmakers pointed to what they described as a deterioration in internal oversight and hiring standards, including waived age limits, large signing bonuses, and reports of recruits being rushed into the field without adequate training. They argued that the combination of rapid expansion, aggressive recruitment, and weak platform safeguards poses risks to public safety.
“It is important that we scrutinize how that funding is being used, particularly if it is being used to attract certain demographics for hiring while pushing others to the periphery, or out of our society,” Balint said.
The letter asks Meta to disclose the scope and duration of its advertising agreement with DHS, provide any communications related to the recruitment ads, and explain what restrictions apply to paid government content under its policies.
Meta’s Community Standards prohibit content that promotes dehumanizing speech, harmful stereotypes, or calls for exclusion or segregation targeting people based on protected characteristics, including race, ethnicity, national origin, and immigration status.
The policies also state that Meta removes content historically linked to intimidation or offline violence and applies heightened scrutiny during periods of increased tension or recent violence involving targeted groups. The members of Congress questioned whether those standards were enforced consistently for paid government advertising tied to DHS recruitment.
“There are a whole host of safeguards that should be considered,” Balint said. “But at a minimum, they need to abide by their own community guidelines.”
Balint said the inquiry is ongoing and could expand beyond the recruitment campaign itself. “I am certainly going to continue looking into how private groups are profiting off of or contributing to the untenable dynamic with ICE that is putting our communities at risk,” she said.
Since the recruitment campaign became the subject of public scrutiny, DHS and ICE have not made additional posts using the same song, imagery, or music across their official social media accounts.
The post Lawmakers Call on Meta to Stop Running ICE Ad Featuring Neo-Nazi Anthem appeared first on The Intercept.
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US presidential envoy Steve Witkoff said that the US, Ukraine and Russia have agreed to exchange 314 prisoners in “the first such exchange in five months.”
He said:
“This outcome was achieved from peace talks that have been detailed and productive. While significant work remains, steps like this demonstrate that sustained diplomatic engagement is delivering tangible results and advancing efforts to end the war in Ukraine.”
“We may be, in the course of 2026, coming to a point where the whole thing becomes unsustainable, because so much of the Russian economy has been distorted so much by the building up of the war economy at the expense of the civil economy. I think defying the laws of economic gravity can only go on for so long.”
Continue reading...It is not good enough just to criticize Trump. We must offer a positive vision that will improve the lives of Americans
At this difficult moment in American history, it’s imperative that we have the courage to be honest with ourselves.
The United States, once the envy of the world, is now a nation in profound decline. For the sake of our children and future generations, we must reverse that decline and change, in very fundamental ways, the direction of our country.
Continue reading...Former truck driver, now 80, allegedly one of many ‘sniper tourists’ who paid Bosnian Serb soldiers to be allowed fire on city
An elderly Italian man is under investigation as part of an investigation by prosecutors in Milan into individuals who allegedly paid members of the Bosnian Serb army for trips to Sarajevo so they could kill citizens during the four-year siege of the city in the 1990s.
The 80-year-old is being investigated on charges of aggravated murder, a source close to the case told the Guardian. The man, a former truck driver from the northern Italian region of Veneto, is the first suspect to be placed under investigation since the inquiry began in November.
Continue reading...I reviewed Amazon, Hisense, Roku and Samsung TVs under $300 and found one absolute stunner.
CAA’s guidance also including booking sites to enable passengers to make ‘more informed travel decisions’
Airlines and booking firms should give UK customers information about the environmental impact of their flights, the regulator has said.
The Civil Aviation Authority urged booking sites to enable passengers to make “more informed travel decisions” by setting out estimates for carbon emissions for flights landing or taking off from British airports.
Continue reading...Amazon plans to use AI to speed up the process for making movies and TV shows even as Hollywood fears that AI will cut jobs and permanently reshape the industry. From a report: At the Amazon MGM Studio, veteran entertainment executive Albert Cheng is leading a team charged with developing new AI tools that he said will cut costs and streamline the creative process. Amazon plans to launch a closed beta program in March, inviting industry partners to test its AI tools. The company expects to have results to share by May. [...] Amazon is leaning on its cloud computing division, Amazon Web Services, for help and plans to work with multiple large language model providers to give creators a wider array of options for pre- and post-production filmmaking.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Considering a silver investment in today's economic climate? Here's where the price stands as of February 5, 2026.
Russia's customs service says a 2.8-ton chunk of the Aletai meteorite was found in a shipping container, labeled as a garden ornament.
Officials in Reedley, California said they had tried to warn federal authorities about the possibility of similar labs after one was found there in 2023.
Feb. 5, 2026 — SoftBank Corp. announced its wholly owned subsidiary SAIMEMORY Corp. signed a collaborative agreement with Intel Corporation on February 2, 2026 to advance the commercialization of Z-Angle Memory (ZAM), a next-generation memory technology designed for high capacity, high bandwidth and low power consumption.
Established in December 2024, SAIMEMORY is a SoftBank subsidiary conducting research and development to promote the commercialization of next-generation memory technologies. SAIMEMORY will leverage the next-generation memory foundational technologies and technical expertise validated by Intel’s Next Generation DRAM Bonding (NGDB) initiative that was completed under the Advanced Memory Technology (AMT) program managed by the U.S. Department of Energy and National Nuclear Security Administration through the Sandia National Laboratory, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Los Alamos National Laboratory.
With the aim of creating prototypes in the fiscal year ending March 31, 2028 (FY2027) and achieving commercialization in FY2029, SAIMEMORY will advance research and development on innovative memory architectures and manufacturing technologies. Through the utilization of ZAM next-generation memory technology, SAIMEMORY and Intel will work together to enable high-capacity and high-bandwidth data processing, enhanced processing performance and reduced power consumption in data centers and other environments that require the training and inference of large-scale AI models.
SAIMEMORY’s development of next-generation memory technologies represents one of SoftBank’s key initiatives to support next-generation social infrastructure. By collaborating with Intel and other technology partners and research institutions in Japan and abroad, SoftBank will contribute to the creation of advanced, homegrown semiconductor technologies, and to the strengthening of Japan’s global competitiveness.
More from HPCwire: SoftBank Group and Intel Corporation Sign $2B Investment Agreement
About Intel
Intel (Nasdaq: INTC) designs and manufactures advanced semiconductors that connect and power the modern world. Every day, our engineers create new technologies that enhance and shape the future of computing to enable new possibilities for every customer we serve. Learn more at intel.com.
About SoftBank Corp.
Guided by the SoftBank Group’s corporate philosophy, “Information Revolution – Happiness for everyone,” SoftBank Corp. (TOKYO: 9434) operates telecommunications and IT businesses in Japan and globally. Building on its strong business foundation, SoftBank Corp. is expanding into non-telecom fields in line with its “Beyond Carrier” growth strategy while further growing its telecom business by harnessing the power of 5G/6G, IoT, Digital Twin and Non-Terrestrial Network (NTN) solutions, including High Altitude Platform Station (HAPS)-based stratospheric telecommunications. While constructing AI data centers and developing homegrown LLMs specialized for the Japanese language, SoftBank is integrating AI with radio access networks (AI-RAN), with the aim of becoming a provider of next-generation social infrastructure. To learn more, please visit https://www.softbank.jp/en/corp.
Source: SoftBank Corp.
The post SoftBank and Intel Collaborate to Commercialize Next-Gen Memory Tech appeared first on HPCwire.
Today show host Savannah Guthrie and her siblings have published a video statement calling for the safe return of their mother, Nancy Guthrie, 84, reported missing on Sunday. Guthrie said her mother's health was fragile and she needed her medicine to survive. She said she had heard of the reports of a ransom letter and continued: 'We are ready to talk, however we live in a world where voices and images are easily manipulated. We need to know without a doubt that she is alive'
Continue reading...Housing affordability is improving as more homeowners list their properties, according to data from Zillow.
US federal judge issued a preliminary injunction barring warrantless arrests unless there is a likelihood of escape
US immigration agents in Oregon must stop arresting people without warrants unless there is a likelihood of escape, a federal judge ruled on Wednesday.
US district judge Mustafa Kasubhai issued a preliminary injunction in a proposed class-action lawsuit targeting the Department of Homeland Security’s practice of arresting immigrants they happen to come across while conducting ramped-up enforcement operations – which critics have described as “arrest first, justify later”.
Continue reading...Oil, regime change, and what's next in Trump’s MAGA playbook? Independent Thinking podcast Audio sseth.drupal@c…
After the US capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, our analysts discuss where in the Western Hemisphere US President Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio may turn their attention to next.
Host Bronwen Maddox is joined by Laurel Rapp, director of Chatham House’s US and North America Programme, and Dr Christopher Sabatini, Senior Fellow for Latin America. They dissect the so-called ‘Donroe Doctrine’, Marco Rubio’s project to reform Cuba’s regime, Haiti, and why oil is central to the MAGA playbook.
Read Dr Sabatini’s full research paper ‘A roadmap for security and governance reform in Haiti’.
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.
U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff calls Ukraine and Russia's exchange of 314 prisoners "tangible progress," but acknowledges a lot of work left to end the war.
Industry leaders urge EU to tell authorities to stand down entry-exit system controls if needed
Travel industry leaders have called on the European Commission to tell all border authorities to stand down the new entry-exit system (EES) if needed as fears increase of summer disruption.
European airports have warned of a potentially “disastrous” experience for passengers and huge queues unless the biometric controls for foreign visitors are relaxed.
Continue reading...South Crofty site could get $225m funding as US seeks to secure supply of critical metal
Donald Trump has aggressively pursued investment into hi-tech industries in recent months, but the US administration has now set its sights on a more traditional sector: tin mining in Cornwall.
The South Crofty mine, near the village of Pool, could start up again after nearly three decades aided by a potential $225m (£166m) investment from across the Atlantic, creating 300 jobs.
Continue reading...
CHARLOTTE MCQUILLAN
Staff Reporter
The fanfare surrounding the New York City mayoral race has finally slowed down after New Yorkers elected Democratic Socialist and New York State Assemblymember Zohran Mamdani. His campaign succeeded against former Governor Andrew Cuomo and Curtis Sliwa.
Unlike most mayoral races, this race captured the attention of many Americans across the country. The main question is: Why did the New York City mayoral race seem so important?
Dr. David Redlawsk, the chair of the Department of Political Science and International Relations at the university, said there has always been a fascination with New York City in the American imagination.
Not only is it a cultural icon, but it is also a predominant political setting in our nation’s history. Mamdani is a young New Yorker who sits outside of the traditional party perspectives, despite running as a Democrat.
“He still kind of comes from outside, and he was running in a race against the former governor of New York, who had to resign in disgrace,” Redlawsk said. “And I think it just created kind of a context about power, about where it sits, and also about the future.
He went on to say that democratic politics, particularly, have a past of being run by older politicians, and how there is a strong desire for younger faces. Mamdani’s campaign was compelling because he was a young man who came out of nowhere.
Not only is Mamdani the city’s first Muslim and Democratic Socialist mayor, but 75% of the youth voted for him with the highest mayoral voter turnout in New York City since 1969.
“Younger people are less likely to vote in these kinds of elections,” Redlawsk stated. “The campaign that he ran was very much a campaign about a new New York.
“He focused a lot less on the label than on the issues that voters feel, on the day-to-day reality of life for so many people right now.”
A midterm backlash from the Democrats was no surprise for New York, but Mamdani’s election represented both a political and cultural shift toward a different perspective.
Factions within the Republican Party partially fueled Mamdani’s win. His Republican opponent, Curtis Sliwa, was openly opposed to President Trump. Contrarily, his Independent (formerly Democratic) opponent, Andrew Cuomo, had been endorsed by Trump.
“Cuomo was the epitome of a sore loser, in that he lost the primary, but in New York, even if you lose the primary, you can still file as an independent […] And so he also kind of brought that sort of thing; it’s kind of like you already lost. What are you doing here?” Redlawsk said.
Both Cuomo and Sliwa congratulated Mamdani on his win and urged their supporters to give him a chance.
“Within the Democratic Party there’s potential for a new perspective, for a new leadership, and [Mamdani] could be the vanguard of that,” Redlawsk said.
Spotify is planning to let premium subscribers in the U.S. and U.K. buy hardcovers and paperbacks directly through its app starting this spring, partnering with Bookshop.org to handle pricing, inventory and fulfillment. The Swedish streaming company, which entered the audiobook market in 2022, will also introduce a feature called Page Match that lets users scan a page from a physical book or e-reader and jump to the exact spot in the audiobook edition. Spotify will earn an undisclosed affiliate fee on each purchase.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
A leaked pitch to reshape Ethereum’s leadership exposed deep divisions over politics, power and ether’s static price
US crypto developer Danny Ryan submitted a proposal in November 2024 to Vitalik Buterin, the founder and symbolic leader of Ethereum, a prominent blockchain powering the world’s second-largest cryptocurrency. Ryan, who had worked for seven years at the Ethereum Foundation (EF), Ethereum’s de facto governing body, suggested that Ethereum could be on the cusp of an era-defining shift.
Since its founding in 2014, the foundation had prioritized technical upgrades and had avoided centralizing power while its user base was growing, but Ethereum had now grown up, and the cryptocurrency world around it had grown up, too. The EF could now “exercise a stronger voice” without compromising its ethos of decentralization, Ryan said – and he was open to leading that charge if appointed as the foundation’s new executive director.
Continue reading...Explore which states have the highest number of athletes competing for the U.S. Olympic team at the 2026 Winter Games, and search for your own hometown.
SAN SEBASTIAN, Spain, Feb. 5, 2026 — Quantum Motion today announced the opening of its offices in Spain, establishing a permanent base for quantum system development, integration and deployment in the European Union. The new site, which is located in the newly inaugurated nanoGUNE Quantum Tower, supports Quantum Motion’s scale-up of silicon-based quantum computing systems and strengthens the collaboration across Europe’s semiconductor, academic and industrial ecosystems.
The nanoGUNE Quantum Tower was officially inaugurated on February 4th, 2026. The opening ceremony was attended by the president of the Basque Government, Imanol Pradales; the head of the regional government of Gipuzkoa, Eider Mendoza; the mayor of San Sebastian, Jon Insausti; the president and director-general of nanoGUNE, Javier Martínez-Ojinaga and Jose M. Pitarke respectively; the Basque minister of Science, Universities and Innovation; and other representatives from principal institutions, research centers and the European quantum industry.
“Our expansion in Europe demonstrates our continued commitment to global collaborations and partnerships,” said James Palles-Dimmock, CEO of Quantum Motion. “The state-of-the-art technology infrastructure available in the new Quantum Tower and our collaboration with the Basque government, academia and experts at CIC nanoGUNE provide a huge advantage as we advance our ability to deliver commercially useful, silicon-spin quantum systems at scale.”
“The scale and ambition of this project are such that we decided to expand our facilities with the construction of the new Quantum Tower to provide dedicated space to our Quantum Hardware research group and laboratories and to Quantum Motion,” said Jose M. Pitarke, nanoGUNE’s director-general. “We look forward to advancing the future of quantum computing in collaboration with Quantum Motion.”
Quantum Motion and CIC nanoGUNE are jointly collaborating on initiatives focused on delivering fault-tolerant, utility-scale quantum systems in Europe, including:
“The Basque Country has one of the strongest ecosystems globally when it comes to the development of quantum technologies,” said Fernando Gonzalez-Zalba, principal engineer at Quantum Motion and Ikerbasque research professor at CIC nanoGUNE. “We look forward to building the next generation of quantum processing units based on silicon manufactured in industrial 300 mm wafer lines, as well as deploying and servicing systems throughout Europe.”
About CIC nanoGUNE
The Nanoscience Cooperative Research Center (CIC) nanoGUNE, located in the Basque city of San Sebastian, was established with the mission of conducting world-class nanoscience research for the competitive growth of the Basque Country. nanoGUNE is recognized by the Spanish Research Agency as a Maria-de-Maeztu center of excellence.
About Quantum Motion
Quantum Motion develops and deploys full-stack quantum computers manufactured using industry standard 300mm CMOS wafer technology with the goal of delivering commercially viable, utility scale, fault tolerant systems. A key part of this approach is the development of cryoelectronics, integrating qubits with classical control circuits capable of operating at deep cryogenic temperatures, which enables extreme scaling of quantum processors. Fault-tolerant quantum computing will enable the most powerful quantum algorithms, targeting solutions to currently intractable problems in fields as diverse as chemistry, materials science, medicine and artificial intelligence. The company employs over 100 people across the UK, US, Australia and Europe and comprises specialists in quantum theory, hardware and system engineering and software. Learn more at www.quantummotion.com.
Source: Quantum Motion
The post Quantum Motion Expands Global Presence by Opening European Offices in Spain appeared first on HPCwire.
You can buy the S24 Ultra for half the price of the latest model but its performance isn't much different.
New collaboration will establish a quantum-control–enabled center at the IQMP to accelerate and scale fault-tolerant quantum computing
CHICAGO, Feb. 5, 2026 — The Illinois Quantum and Microelectronics Park (IQMP) and the Illinois Economic Development Corporation have announced that Quantum Machines will establish a flagship hub at the Park. Quantum Machines, the leading provider of hybrid control solutions, will operate a state-of-the-art lab at the IQMP, for research and development on a hardware-control co-design approach to align quantum processors, classical infrastructure, and control software. While the Park is under development, Quantum Machines will be situated at the IQMP’s On-Ramp facilities in Chicago. On-Ramp is supported by grant funding from the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity.
“Illinois is building the future of quantum technology, and Quantum Machines’ decision to establish a presence at the Illinois Quantum and Microelectronics Park is further proof that our state is the premier destination for next-generation innovation,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “Quantum Machines is a global leader in quantum control technology, providing the critical systems that enable quantum computers to operate at scale. They will join a growing roster of companies that will be housed at the IQMP and strengthen Illinois’ position as a global leader in this cutting-edge industry.”
Quantum Machines’ platform supports any type of quantum processor, and more than half of the companies developing quantum computers rely on their technology. By harmonizing quantum and classical operations, their hybrid control optimizes performance across hardware and software. Their most advanced controller, OPX1000, will be hosted at the Park, deploying systems comprised of superconducting and spin qubits.
“This collaboration forms part of an ongoing commitment from Quantum Machines to support the regional quantum ecosystem that offers access to world-leading technologies,” said Itamar Sivan, CEO and Co-founder of Quantum Machines. “We are proud to work with the IQMP, which attracts the brightest minds in industry and research, and to continue to grow our collaborations with leading national projects, where our advanced hybrid control solutions will enable the next-generation quantum infrastructure, leveraging classical computing resources at scale.”
Quantum Machines has an existing partnership with Diraq, a future IQMP tenant, to scale silicon-based quantum computers.
“The majority of companies developing quantum computers today utilize Quantum Machines’ technology for their systems, and we are incredibly excited to welcome them as an IQMP tenant,” said Harley Johnson, Executive Director and CEO of the Illinois Quantum and Microelectronics Park. “Quantum Machines’ hybrid control solutions will be an asset to the companies, researchers, and innovators who will be driving discovery on Chicago’s South Side, and we are thrilled they’ve chosen to join the IQMP.”
Quantum Machines is also partnering with the IQMP, Illinois EDC, Chicago Quantum Exchange, and other ecosystem stakeholders on workforce development initiatives to help grow Illinois’ quantum talent pipeline. In addition, QM has selected Chicago as the host city for the 2026 Adaptive Quantum Circuits (AQC) conference, a premier annual event that draws Nobel Prize–winning researchers and leading quantum companies.
“Quantum Machines’ decision to join the Illinois Quantum and Microelectronics Park underscores Illinois’ strong leadership in the quantum sector,” said Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity Director Kristin Richards. “The State is building the infrastructure and partnerships needed to support innovation, create jobs, and ensure Illinois remains a global leader in quantum technologies.”
The IQMP On-Ramp enables future IQMP tenants to leverage the Chicago and Illinois quantum ecosystem before the Park is complete by operating out of a local innovation facility. Quantum Machines will occupy part of the space that includes more than 2,000 square feet of facilities and specialized equipment for quantum, such as cryostats, control electronics, lasers, and optical tables, in addition to technical and programmatic support.
“We are thrilled to welcome a pioneering company like Quantum Machines to Illinois and look forward to the work we can do together to support our mutual goal of advancing quantum technologies,” said Illinois EDC Chief Quantum Officer Preeti Chalsani. “Quantum Machines’ decision to locate here confirms that Illinois provides quantum innovators the resources, network, and talent to grow and to scale.”
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
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.
About Quantum Machines
Quantum Machines (QM) is a global leading provider of quantum control solutions, driving the advancement of quantum computing with its hybrid control approach. By harmonizing quantum and classical operations, hybrid control eliminates friction and optimizes performance across hardware and software, enabling researchers and builders to iterate at speed, resolve setbacks, and bring visionary ideas to life. Its platform supports any type of quantum processor, empowering the industry to scale systems, accelerate breakthroughs, and push the boundaries – previously impossible.
Source: Quantum Machines
The post Quantum Machines to Establish Flagship Hub at the Illinois Quantum and Microelectronics Park appeared first on HPCwire.
Prisoner exchange agreed at most significant contact between Kyiv and Moscow in months, but ‘work remains’
Ukraine and Russia concluded a second day of US-led talks in Abu Dhabi on Thursday without a breakthrough towards ending Europe’s most deadly conflict since the second world war.
The two sides agreed to a reciprocal exchange of 157 prisoners of war each, offering a rare concrete outcome from the discussions.
Continue reading...Owner of local cinema says Amazon is upset at way they marketed movie as some in US say healthy ticket sales are not reflected by empty seats
An independent cinema in Oregon has claimed Amazon pulled screenings of their documentary about Melania Trump in protest at the cinema’s marketing strategy.
As reported by local newspaper the Lake Oswego Review, the general manager of the Lake Theater & Cafe has claimed the corporation cancelled future screenings of Brett Ratner’s authorised study of the first lady after being alerted to promotional pushes such as: “To defeat your enemy. You must know them. Melania” and “Does Melania wear Prada? Find out on Friday!”
Continue reading...Bankers and billionaires are flocking to the city where income tax is zero but critics say it ignores money laundering – and pay disparities are huge
Aidan Doyle was an estate agent in Liverpool before he decamped to Dubai and turned a £30,000 annual income into £500,000 a year and climbing.
Acting as an agent for buyers and sellers, Doyle has seen his commission soar beyond anything he could hope to generate in the UK after just three years in the city, one of seven city-states in the United Arab Emirates.
Continue reading...Malcolm Turnbull says government is ‘engaged in an exercise of denial’, as defence minister insists $368bn deal is ‘full steam ahead’
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Australia’s submarine agency insists the Aukus agreement is progressing “at pace and on schedule”, but skeptics of the $368bn deal argue the chances of the US ever selling promised Virginia-class submarines to Australia are increasingly remote.
The former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull has said the Australian government is engaged “in an exercise of denial” about the parlous state of Aukus’s progress, while the Greens senator David Shoebridge said the deal was a “pantomime”, hopelessly one-sided in America’s favour.
Continue reading...Feb. 5, 2026 — In 2025, the Leibniz Supercomputing Centre (LRZ)—one of Germany’s three national supercomputing centers within the Gauss Centre for Supercomputing (GCS)—successfully established an environmental management system in accordance with the Eco-Management and Audit Scheme (EMAS). The certification confirms the center’s commitment to sustainable operation.
On top of the energy consumed by IT systems at the Leibniz Supercomputing Centre (LRZ), it only needs 23 percent for cooling. This gives the data center a Power Usage Effectiveness (PUE) of 1.23, compared to an average of 1.46 in German data centers. LRZ is similarly economical with water – for one kilowatt-hour (kWh) of cooling output, only 2.3 liters are used in a closed-loop system. A sophisticated water cooling infrastructure in the compute building also eliminates the need for harmful antifreeze chemicals.
While these efforts have been in place to ensure LRZ operates its high-performance computing (HPC) infrastructure as efficiently as possible, they also helped ensure the center would be certified for the first time under the demanding European Eco-Management and Audit Scheme (EMAS) and forms the basis for LRZ being validated as a sustainable organization. Over the past year, the LRZ systematically organized and documented all sustainability-related measures across various areas of work happening at the institution.
“Ideas for operating our data center efficiently are a deeply ingrained part of the LRZ DNA,” said Prof. Helmut Reiser, deputy director of LRZ. “For decades, we have been researching how to make data center operations more efficient. After all, the money we save on electricity and cooling can be invested in computing performance for science. The calls for electric vehicles in our fleet, for the use of electricity from renewable sources, for waste separation, and for many other measures to minimize environmental impact—these have always come primarily from LRZ employees, who bring forward good ideas and initiatives to use resources more sustainably in everyday operations. With EMAS, we have systematically incorporated these goals and developed a comprehensive environmental management system as well as a sustainability strategy for the LRZ from a wide range of individual measures. The EMAS audit confirmed that our ideas and their implementation are excellent.”
Transparency and Sustainability in Research
LRZ environmental management officers Sophia Kranz and Dr. Hiren Gandhi worked closely with LRZ staff and leaders from all departments and work areas for more than a year to compile information and key figures related to the ecological impacts of LRZ activities. For the EMAS certification, additional measuring devices were installed, applicable regulations and laws were reviewed, and—most importantly—existing processes were reconsidered.
Since 2012, LRZ has used only electricity from renewable sources, and since its foundation, it has evaluated strategies for energy-efficient data center operations. In cooperation with technology partners, it developed and continuously improved a direct high-temperature cooling system for high-performance systems. Energy-conscious planning of computing jobs as well as optimization of scientific codes and algorithms also improve the center’s energy balance.
With its EMAS certification – and, even more importantly, the accompanying environmental statement, which explains the measures and documents consumption figures – the LRZ offers transparency to the scientific community and to funding agencies in Germany and Europe, which increasingly require evidence of sustainability and resource-efficient project execution.
Efficient Computing and Use of Waste Heat
In addition, the Energy Efficiency Act (EnEfG), which came into effect at the end of 2023, requires larger data centres to adhere to standards relating to energy efficiency, waste heat usage, the use of electricity from renewable sources, and transparency about their sustainability. The background is the rapidly increasing electricity demand of IT infrastructures, as well as the realization that waste heat from computing systems can be used cost-effectively for heating or by heat-intensive facilities such as swimming pools or greenhouses.
The LRZ’s environmental statement shows that it already meets most of the legal requirements, and work is underway on the remaining ones – such as supplying heat to neighbouring facilities on the research campus.
For more details, please visit the original LRZ press release here.
Source: GCS
The post LRZ Earns EMAS Certification for Sustainable Data Center Operations appeared first on HPCwire.
ExpressAI and ExpressMailGuard give ExpressVPN users more ways to boost their privacy online.
The FBI has been unable to access a Washington Post reporter's seized iPhone because it was in Lockdown Mode, a sometimes overlooked feature that makes iPhones broadly more secure, according to recently filed court records. 404Media: The court record shows what devices and data the FBI was able to ultimately access, and which devices it could not, after raiding the home of the reporter, Hannah Natanson, in January as part of an investigation into leaks of classified information. It also provides rare insight into the apparent effectiveness of Lockdown Mode, or at least how effective it might be before the FBI may try other techniques to access the device. "Because the iPhone was in Lockdown mode, CART could not extract that device," the court record reads, referring to the FBI's Computer Analysis Response Team, a unit focused on performing forensic analyses of seized devices. The document is written by the government, and is opposing the return of Natanson's devices. The FBI raided Natanson's home as part of its investigation into government contractor Aurelio Perez-Lugones, who is charged with, among other things, retention of national defense information. The government believes Perez-Lugones was a source of Natanson's, and provided her with various pieces of classified information. While executing a search warrant for his mobile phone, investigators reviewed Signal messages between Pere-Lugones and the reporter, the Department of Justice previously said.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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Haiti’s vicious circle: Funding is needed to end the violence. But the violence means the funding doesn’t come Expert comment jon.wallace
Beyond restoring security, a push to rebuild Haiti’s society and create jobs is vital to any lasting solution. But who will fund such an effort, as the cycle of violence continues?
Politics in Haiti is a blood sport. The last elected President, Jovenel Moïse, was gunned down by mercenaries in 2021. Since then, the country has descended into rampant gang violence. Thousands have been killed and abducted in the chaos. Criminals control roughly 90 per cent of the capital city, Port-au-Prince. Legal economic activity has nearly ground to a halt.
Now there is serious doubt on whether the country will have a government after 7 February, when its Transitional Presidential Council (TPC) was originally set to dissolve. Internecine battles have broken out over what should follow the Council, and more specifically who can remain in power.
In recent weeks, several TPC members attempted to remove Prime Minister Alix Didier Fils-Aimé in a palace coup. Those same members have put forward plans for a reduced Council that would include – of course – them. There is a real threat that some Council members will mobilize the gangs to coerce other members and the international community. In response, the US has parked a warship and three coast guard cutters off the coast of Haiti.
The upheaval threatens the future of any government in Haiti and the status of the UN’s new Gang Suppression Force (GSF) mission to the crime-ridden country. What can be done to break Haiti’s cycle of disaster?
The TPC was established in April 2024, after gangs prevented interim president Ariel Henri from returning to Haiti.
At the time, Haiti lacked an elected government. It still doesn’t have one. The parliament was dissolved in 2020 when its mandate ended without new elections. The hope was that the TPC, created after Caribbean Community (Caricom) negotiations, could provide transitional government until new democratic elections could be held in late 2025, with a new government seated by 8 February 2026.
Even before the TPC’s recent internal turmoil, political gamesmanship and efforts to protect armed allies and secure access to resources hobbled the transitional authority. The first prime minister, Gary Conille, was forced to resign only six months into his term.
And the Council failed to deliver progress on any coherent policy across any area, most importantly security. From January to November 2025 alone, 8,100 people were killed in the country of 11 million, according to UN Secretary General António Guterres – a 20 per cent increase from 2024. Sexual violence has also spiked in recent years.
In addition to the armada floating just outside Port-au-Prince, the US slapped visa restrictions on five of the members of the TPC jockeying for power in the government. At the end of January, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio reported that he had spoken to Fils-Aimé and ‘emphasized the importance of his continued tenure as Haiti’s prime minister to combat terrorist gangs and stabilize the island’ adding that the TPC ‘must be dissolved by February 7 without corrupt actors…’
Economically too, the power struggles in the interim government have choked off growth. The World Bank estimates that the crisis had in six years cost Haiti nearly $10 billion a year in lost economic activity by 2024. Small and medium enterprises were particularly affected.
The failure to re-establish even a modicum of security has prevented the planned elections. It became conventional wisdom that attempting to convene a popular vote in a country overwhelmed by gangs would likely – either through coercion, campaign support or running their own candidates – formally turn Haiti’s government over to criminals. Now, with the status or form of an interim government after 8 February uncertain, even an updated plan to hold elections in late 2026 looks unrealistic.
The potential absence of a credible Haitian government puts the UN mission at risk. The plan is to deploy an 11,000-strong multi-national force to crack down on gang leaders and recapture territory, including transportation hubs and economic infrastructure. But that requires an effective government counterpart in Haiti.
Even if current dialogues and negotiations can cobble together a governmental authority, it will likely not enjoy broad support among the political elite. As has been the case for decades, corrupt political and business leaders frozen out of power will use gang contacts to sow discontent and chaos – enforcing a street veto on the next government.
The lack of broad acceptance among the political elites (and their followers) and the spectre of politically directed violence will hobble any future government in its greatest – and long overdue – task: purging, reforming and rebuilding Haiti’s security and judicial sectors.
Any viable solution to the security crisis will require not just effective international and domestic military and police action against gang leaders. It also demands a complete overhaul of Haiti’s police, military forces and intelligence services and a fair and speedy court and penitentiary system to ensure justice for victims, many of them women and children. There must be accountability for the brutal crimes being committed every day.
A lack of funding could be fatal to that effort, and to the more traditional community and development efforts necessary to ensure long-term success.
Like many other countries facing security and humanitarian crises, Haiti confronts a declining global budget for development assistance. With the US Agency for Development (USAID) now abolished by the Donald Trump administration and subsequent cuts to development assistance by the UK, Canada and EU, many of the steps needed to follow reducing gang power, such as disarmament and demobilization, will have scant resources.
Founder’s extraordinary intervention has laid bare rising tensions between European governments and tech firms
Spain has accused Pavel Durov of “spreading lies” and seeking to undermine democratic institutions after the Telegram founder used the messaging app to attack government plans to introduce a social media ban for under-16s and to hold tech companies responsible for hateful and harmful content.
Durov’s extraordinary public intervention – which came a day after Elon Musk called Spain’s prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, a “true fascist totalitarian” over the proposed measures – reveals the rapidly escalating tensions between European governments and powerful global technology chiefs.
Continue reading...Together, starring Alison Brie and Dave Franco, is now streaming.
Bank indicates anti-inflation measures in Rachel Reeves’s budget likely to pave way for rate cuts in months ahead
Bank of England policymakers have left interest rates unchanged at 3.75%, but indicated that lower inflation as a result of cost-of-living measures in Rachel Reeves’s budget should pave the way for cuts in the months ahead.
The nine-member monetary policy committee (MPC) voted to leave borrowing costs on hold, despite forecasting weaker growth and lower inflation than at its last quarterly forecast in November.
Continue reading...Savannah Guthrie said she and her family were aware of reports of a ransom note and that they are "ready to talk."
Crews are battling a large fire at Lehigh Valley Hospital in Dickson City, Pennsylvania, Wednesday night.
President Trump said he is directing all federal law enforcement to be at the "complete disposal" of Savannah Guthrie's family as the search continues for her mother, Nancy Guthrie.
The EU’s IRGC terrorist designation marks a major shift on Iran Expert comment thilton.drupal
Europe has realized that engaging Tehran without leverage, interlocutors or credible pathways to change is unsustainable. But it should not abandon Iranians altogether.
The European Union’s decision to designate Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) as a terrorist organization last week marks the end of the EU’s long strategy of engagement with the Islamic Republic.
That strategy began in the early 1990s and endured throughout the crisis over Iran’s nuclear programme that started in late 2002. Over more than three decades, the EU sought to balance pressure with dialogue, preserving diplomatic and economic channels even at moments of acute confrontation.
The IRGC designation therefore represents not merely a policy adjustment, but the collapse of a core assumption in European Iran policy: that sustained engagement could preserve leverage, empower Iranian interlocutors and ultimately moderate Tehran’s behaviour.
Relations between the EU and Iran had already been eroding since 2022. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, launched that year, marked a decisive turning point, as Iran’s provision of drones and military support to Russia placed Tehran directly at odds with a central European security priority.
The death of Mahsa Amini in September 2022 and Tehran’s violent suppression of the ensuing protests further strained ties, exposing the widening gap between the rhetoric of engagement and realities on the ground in Iran.
The failure to revive the nuclear agreement in mid-2023 due to Iran’s rejection of the latest agreed draft made engagement more challenging and removed the last structured framework for cooperation. The triggering of UN snapback sanctions in September 2025, which was led by the E3 (France, Germany and the UK), angered Iran, entrenching mutual mistrust.
Still, until early 2026, few would have expected EU–Iran relations to deteriorate further, let alone reach the point of the IRGC being listed. The move has been debated for years in European capitals, particularly after the US designated the IRGC as a Foreign Terrorist Organization in 2019, and Canada followed suit in 2024.
However, the EU had hesitated until now. Some within Europe saw the listing of the IRGC as a step that would effectively criminalize engagement with large parts of the Iranian state. They also feared retaliation against dual nationals, further escalation in theatres where EU forces operate and the closure of diplomatic off-ramps.
The anticipated effect of designating the IRGC was never behavioural change by the group itself. Instead, the aims were signalling, deterrence and normative clarity – benefits that the EU had long judged insufficient to justify the costs.
This calculus was ultimately shifted by the scale and brutality of Iran’s domestic repression during the early-2026 uprisings.
Mass arrests, executions, internet shutdowns, and the open use of lethal force against demonstrators erased any remaining confidence in gradual change. Unlike previous episodes, the violence could not plausibly be attributed to rogue commanders or security excesses. It reflected a system-wide choice. Security institutions, clerical authorities, and political officials – including figures previously portrayed as reformist or pragmatic – aligned behind the crackdown and publicly framed repression as necessary.
For European policymakers, this alignment destroyed the remaining logic of engagement. Europe found itself with no remaining credible interlocutors to engage with, nor any meaningful distinction between coercive and diplomatic power centres. Refraining from the designation therefore risked legitimizing violence, undermining Europe’s credibility and exposing the EU to accusations of moral complicity. The reputational cost became too high.
The decision to designate the IRGC came after Italy, Spain and France decided to support the measure, having reportedly previously been hesitant. Announcing the decision, the EU’s foreign affairs chief Kaja Kallas attributed the move to the crackdown on protesters in Iran, saying that ‘repression cannot go unanswered.’ The US welcomed the move, while Tehran described it as a ‘major strategic mistake.’
From an operational standpoint, the designation is unlikely to dramatically alter Iran-related business in practice, though it materially raises compliance stakes. Any European company with dealings linked to Iran already faces high sanctions risks and many will already have significant due diligence checks in place.
However, the designation means that companies will need to ensure they check for Iranian counterparties have ownership, control or facilitation links to IRGC-affiliated networks. Enforcement agencies are likely to scrutinize Iran-linked transactions more closely, increasing legal and reputational risk for businesses even where activity is technically permissible.
By designating the IRGC, the EU also creates another legal tool to impose secondary sanctions against businesses and individuals in third countries with ties to the IRGC. The risk for secondary sanctions will therefore also impact non-EU companies with ties to Iran.
Politically, the most immediate consequence is the near-total sidelining of the EU from shaping Iran policy. This is already clear in the US-Iran talks currently scheduled for Friday. A range of countries have been reported as among the potential participants, but none of them are European.
Europe looks set to lose what little influence it retained as a bridge between Tehran and Washington at precisely the moment when decisive choices will be made over Iran’s future. Whether president Trump will decide to pursue negotiations or escalate militarily, Europe will lack the leverage to shape outcomes.
I put Withings’ new BeamO thermometer to the test for several weeks to determine who could benefit from its four-in-one design.
In first-of-its-kind complaint, state accused four fossil fuel majors and US oil lobbying group of climate disinformation
Amid rising concern about global heating and soaring energy costs, Michigan has sued big oil for allegedly fueling both crises – a move experts have hailed as groundbreaking.
In a first-of-its-kind complaint, the state’s attorney general, Dana Nessel, accused four fossil fuel majors and the top US oil lobbying group last month of acting as a “cartel” to stifle the growth of renewable energy and electric vehicles (EVs), while suppressing information about the dangers of the climate crisis. The conduct, the lawsuit alleged, violates federal and state antitrust laws.
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rysler is recalling more than 450,000 vehicles with improperly designed trailer tow modules whose trailer lights may not work and that have trailer brakes that could fail, federal officials say.
PM says he is sorry for believing ‘lies’ told by former Labour minister and that he too is ‘angry and frustrated’
Keir Starmer has attempted to reboot his faltering premiership, apologising for appointing Peter Mandelson as US ambassador and urging his MPs to unite behind him.
The prime minister gave a lengthy speech on Wednesday about community cohesion, but faced a barrage of questions about his leadership after one of his most turbulent days since entering Downing Street.
Continue reading...France's navy seized 4.24 tons of cocaine from a ship in the south Pacific and also intercepted a boat trafficking cocaine in the Caribbean, officials said.
Third-quarter figures reveal 57% fall in profits and firm expects to lose 850,000 broadband users in full financial year
BT lost more than 200,000 broadband customers in the last three months of 2025 and profits fell sharply, mainly linked to its shared ownership of the pay TV broadcaster TNT Sports.
The telecoms company said that in the third quarter of its financial year, 210,000 customers left Openreach, its wholesale broadband network, and that it expected to lose a total of 850,000 broadband customers in its full financial year. That was down from previous guidance of 900,000.
Continue reading...Kalshi, the largest U.S. prediction market, accused a small data startup called Juice Reel of "extortion" after a stock analyst used the company's transaction-level data to argue that prediction market users lose money faster than gamblers on traditional betting apps -- then walked the allegation back hours later. The equity research analyst Jordan Bender at Citizens found that the bottom quarter of prediction market users lost about 28 cents of every dollar wagered in their first three months, compared to roughly 11 cents per dollar on sites like FanDuel and DraftKings. Kalshi's head of communications told Bloomberg the report was "flat-out wrong" and called the data an extortion attempt. Juice Reel CEO Ricky Gold said Kalshi had actually pressured him to tell Bloomberg the data was inaccurate. Kalshi later issued an updated statement saying it continued to dispute the findings but "after further review, we don't believe the intention was extortion." The company did not provide any data to counter the analysis.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Days after Labour’s 2010 defeat former cabinet minister began dogged pursuit of ‘highly paid’ jobs, emails show
Peter Mandelson began seeking advice from the convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein on how to land “highly paid” senior roles with companies including BP and Glencore within days of Labour’s 2010 electoral defeat, emails show.
A flurry of messages, sent in the weeks and months following the collapse of the New Labour project, reveal how Epstein mentored Mandelson as the former cabinet minister touted himself for lucrative jobs at global businesses.
Continue reading...The Netherlands' Queen Maxima wants to contribute to her country's safety, the royal family says, as Europe's defense anxieties deepen.
A police helicopter crashed near the scene of what authorities in Flagstaff, Arizona called "an active officer-involved shooting investigation," according to police in Page, Arizona.
Minute Maid's parent company, Coca-Cola, says it's ending production of its frozen juice concentrates, including orange juice.
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The president’s policies have weakened the US’s competitive position and undermined its alliances to China’s advantage
If Donald Trump’s presidency has any theme (beyond self-promotion), it’s that his “America First” agenda will Make America Great Again. Unfortunately for the American people, if Trump’s maneuvers and machinations have made any nation greater, it’s been China, not the United States.
During Trump’s first term, he treated China as a strategic rival and often talked of checking its rise. His administration complained that China was seeking to “challenge American power” and “erode American security and prosperity”. But during his first year back in the White House, Trump – in governing by whim and impulse with little strategic vision - has done lots to Make China Great Again.
Steven Greenhouse is a journalist and author, focusing on labour and the workplace, as well as economic and legal issues
Continue reading...Experts say Tom Homan’s charge, replacing Greg Bovino’s aggressive tactics, may change the tone, but not the mission
In his clearest attempt yet to “de‑escalate” tensions in Minneapolis, Tom Homan, Donald Trump’s “border czar”, announced on Wednesday that the administration will draw down 700 federal immigration officers as the statewide crackdown continues.
The Twin Cities remain on edge, waiting to see whether the fear will ease.
Continue reading...At least two cases confirmed at detention center for children and their parents in Texas
At least two cases of measles have been confirmed at a major immigration detention center for children and their parents in Texas as cases of the dangerous virus in South Carolina, Arizona, Utah and other US states continue growing and alarming experts.
In January alone, the US saw 25% of the total confirmed in all of last year, and the outbreak shows no sign of slowing as federal officials stay silent on vaccination.
Continue reading...Elizabeth Caisaguano and her mother released from Texas facility hit by measles outbreak. Plus, the Epstein stories you may have missed
Good morning.
A 10-year-old Minnesota girl has been released from US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody after a month in detention in Dilley, Texas, school officials said, one of hundreds of children detained at the facility.
What are the conditions like at the detention center? Federal officials have confirmed that Dilley, which houses families, is now the site of a measles outbreak.
What did the judge say? On Monday, Fred Biery, a federal judge in Texas Western District, issued an order blocking the removal or transfer of Elizabeth and her mother and giving the federal government five days to respond to the family’s release petition. “This didn’t have to happen. … They did everything they were supposed to do and still found themselves detained and separated,” he said.
Brad Karp has resigned as chair of the powerful law firm Paul Weiss after revelations of extensive communications with Epstein.
The documents provide a high level of insight into Epstein’s close relationship with the former Trump adviser Steve Bannon, in which Bannon acted as a mentor for Epstein’s appearances in the media.
The UK prime minister is fighting for his political future amid fury over the appointment of Peter Mandelson as US ambassador despite his friendship with Epstein. Mandelson appeared to leak confidential information to Epstein while a minister.
Bill Gates has said he “regrets” ever knowing Epstein, as his former wife Melinda French Gates alluded to “muck” in their marriage, and said the Microsoft founder has questions to answer.
The release included Epstein’s full “household manual” detailing strict, cult-like requirements for his Florida mansion staff, who were expected to “see nothing, hear nothing, say nothing”.
Continue reading...Writers and theater groups across the country are creating works in response to crackdowns on their communities
On a cool winter night in Los Angeles, dozens gathered to protest against the Trump administration’s attacks on the arts and the recent federal immigration raids in southern California. But these protesters didn’t carry signs or chant in front of a government building – they recited poems such as Antifa Tea Party and Love in Times of Fascism. They performed anti-fascist improv to a small but lively crowd at The Glendale Room, a library-themed theater, as part of the monthly show Unquiet: A Night of Creative Resistance.
“If you’ve got talent or skills as a communicator, you can move people,” Chris Kessler, a writer and poet, said after performing at Unquiet. “I really believe that we need to be moving people toward a stronger sense of collectivism in the face of fascism.”
Continue reading..."Our message is: Wildfire smoke is very dangerous. It is an increasing threat to human health," said a study author.
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The last remaining nuclear treaty between the U.S. and Russia has expired, ending decades of arms control between the two countries with the largest nuclear arsenals.
Seattle’s Aden Durde will be the first British coach to appear in the Super Bowl. He wants to ensure he’s not the last
Midway through the 2023 NFL season, Dallas Cowboys star edge rusher Micah Parsons was frustrated. Asked about the source – a feeling of being held by opponents all the time – Parsons credited his defensive line coach Aden Durde with keeping him in check.
“[Coach Durde] pulled me aside and said, ‘You gotta remember, you’re Micah fucking Parsons,” he recalled. “‘This shit is going to happen. You just gotta keep going. Fuck all the other stuff.’”
Continue reading...The interview, revealed in the latest tranche of Epstein files, was reportedly intended for a sympathetic documentary
Steve Bannon, a one-time adviser to Donald Trump, has long styled himself as a populist nemesis of the global elites. Yet the latest release of Jeffrey Epstein files shows that he exchanged hundreds of friendly texts with the wealthy financier, discussing politics, travel and other topics.
One of the biggest surprises in the files was a bizarre video in which Epstein – who exploited and abused dozens of young girls – is interviewed by Bannon at what appears to be Epstein’s New York home.
Continue reading...Minutes after a federal agent shot and killed a Mexican immigrant in a Chicago suburb last September, a group of police officers stood on the sidewalk trying to figure out the answer to a question of protocol: Who would investigate the shooting?
“Wouldn’t it be state’s, at a minimum?” one Franklin Park officer asked, according to body camera footage.
Chief Mike Witz shook his head. “No, because it’s a federal shooting,” he said. “You’re not going to investigate a federal officer.”
His officers didn’t investigate. In their report, they didn’t even note the names of the two Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents at the scene of Silverio Villegas González’s death. Instead, they deferred to the FBI.
Local law enforcement officials also did not investigate when a Border Patrol agent shot and wounded a U.S. citizen in her car in Chicago less than a month later. Or when an ICE agent in Phoenix shot a Honduran man during a traffic stop later that month.
In fact, local police did not open investigations into six of the 12 shootings by on-duty federal agents that have led to the deaths or injuries of citizens and immigrants since September, a ProPublica analysis found. In three other shooting cases, state or local police said they have opened inquiries, which they called a routine practice in those jurisdictions. And in Minnesota, where ICE and Border Patrol shot and killed two U.S. citizens and injured a Venezuelan man last month, state police have tried to conduct independent investigations only to be thwarted by the Trump administration, which has gone so far as to block officers from a scene, even when they had a judicial warrant.
In almost every instance, President Donald Trump’s administration blamed the injured and dead for the shooting within hours of the incident, raising questions about whether federal officials can fairly and objectively investigate their own. Legal experts and advocates for immigrants say this apparent lack of accountability demands that local authorities step up and exercise their power to investigate and prosecute federal agents who break state laws — from battery to murder.
“Local police and the state have gotten a free pass,” said Craig Futterman, a law professor at the University of Chicago and the co-founder and director of its Civil Rights and Police Accountability Project. “Residents have every right and should be demanding that, ‘Hey, state authorities, police, local police: Protect us. Arrest people who kill us, who batter us, who point guns at us and threaten and assault us without legal cause to do so.’”
It’s usually the opposite scenario: federal authorities coming in to investigate a troubled police department. But local authorities have investigated and charged federal agents in the past. It’s just rare and complicated. The federal supremacy clause in the U.S. Constitution bars local interference with federal law enforcement officers when they act reasonably and within the scope of their duties.
But given the aggressive tactics employed by immigration agents under the Trump administration, Futterman and other legal experts said local police and prosecutors are morally obligated to at least try to hold federal law enforcement officers accountable.
“We’re in an environment right now where ICE officers are blatantly and egregiously violating the Constitution and the law,” said Joanna Schwartz, a law professor at the University of California, Los Angeles. “The federal government has made it very clear that they are not going to do anything to provide any sort of accountability backstop to its officers. Unfortunately, because Congress is not taking any steps to rein ICE officers in, there really is no option other than states protecting their constituents’ rights.”
In a statement, a spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security said that agents are “trained to use the minimum amount of force necessary to resolve dangerous situations to prioritize the safety of the public and our officers.” All use-of-force incidents are properly reported and reviewed by an appropriate law enforcement agency, the spokesperson said.
Immigration agents at the border have long been criticized for use of deadly force and lack of rigorous investigations afterward. But now the same militarized force is on display in major American cities far from the border, where residents are not used to their presence.
The shooting of Alex Pretti in Minneapolis last month — and the federal government’s resistance to a routine local investigation — has prompted Democratic and some Republican officials across the country to call for more accountability. Last week, Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson signed an executive order directing police officers to document alleged illegal activity by federal immigration agents and refer any evidence of felonies to prosecutors.
California’s governor and attorney general issued a reminder to local police of their rights to investigate federal agents. Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes launched a website asking residents to submit evidence of federal agents’ misconduct. And prosecutors from nine jurisdictions around the country announced a new coalition to provide mutual support to law enforcement authorities bringing charges against federal officers.
In Minneapolis, prosecutors say they’re working with state police to investigate in spite of resistance from federal officials. So far, DHS officials have refused to provide evidence or even the names of the agents involved in the January shootings. Prosecutors went so far as to obtain an emergency order to require that federal agencies preserve evidence in the Pretti case. A judge dropped the temporary restraining order on Monday, following assurances from the federal government that it would maintain investigative materials.
The prosecutors said they believe they can still gather enough evidence to make an informed decision about whether to charge the federal agents.
“We get cases submitted to us every day that don’t have all the evidence we would like,” Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty said in an interview. “We would certainly like the gun. We would like the shell casings, that kind of thing. But it’s also not a mystery as to why these people died.”
Even after getting a judicial warrant, investigators from the state’s Bureau of Criminal Apprehension were turned away by federal agents from the Minneapolis intersection where Pretti, 37, was shot and killed. Federal officials also excluded the BCA from the investigation into the death of Renee Good, who was shot and killed in her car two weeks before Pretti.
BCA Superintendent Drew Evans said he’d never seen his officers physically stopped from doing their job by another law enforcement agency. Across the country, he said, state agencies like the BCA routinely investigate deadly force incidents like this one.
“We’re in uncharted territory here,” he said.
Within hours of each killing, Trump officials publicly labeled the dead “domestic terrorists.” DHS Secretary Kristi Noem said Pretti was “brandishing” a gun when he approached the officers, while the Border Patrol’s Gregory Bovino claimed Pretti was planning a “massacre.”
Video footage contradicted the administration’s version of events. Pretti, for instance, never unholstered his gun, which he was legally allowed to carry.
Early last week, Trump sent Bovino and Border Patrol agents away from Minneapolis, and on Wednesday DHS officials said they would pull another 700 agents out of the state — signs the administration may be changing its approach in response to rising criticism. The FBI is now investigating the Pretti shooting, and the Justice Department announced Friday that it had opened a civil rights investigation.
A DOJ spokesperson did not answer questions for this story but referred reporters to a press conference last weekend in which Deputy U.S. Attorney General Todd Blanche said DHS is following its normal investigative protocols in the Pretti shooting.
Meanwhile, the Justice Department has said it has no plans to investigate Good’s shooting.
“We don’t just go out and investigate every time an officer is forced to defend himself against somebody putting his life in danger,” Blanche told Fox News.

Police in Franklin Park and Chicago have not explained why they didn’t open their own investigations into the two shootings last fall. In the Franklin Park case, the decision to let the FBI alone investigate the killing of Villegas was made within minutes of the shooting, according to dispatch records.
Villegas, a 38-year-old restaurant cook, was shot as he tried to drive away from ICE agents who had pulled him over. As in Minneapolis, the Trump administration’s narrative of what happened did not match the evidence. DHS claimed that Villegas dragged one of the agents, causing serious injuries. The agent fired “because he feared for his life,” officials said. Police body camera footage released after the shooting showed the agent downplaying his injury as “nothing major.”
At the scene, Franklin Park police officers directed traffic and interviewed a witness, the footage shows. At one point, one officer told his colleague that the police department was “just securing until they get here,” referring to the FBI.
Witz, who was then the police chief but has since retired, could not be reached for comment; the current chief did not respond to interview requests.
A similar situation unfolded in Chicago on Oct. 4 after a Border Patrol agent fired into the vehicle of a woman who federal officials claimed “ambushed” them. Marimar Martinez was charged with assaulting federal agents, though the charges were later dropped.
At the time, the Chicago Police Department said officers had responded to a call about a shooting “to document the incident” and to “maintain safety and traffic control.” When asked last week why it didn’t open an independent inquiry, the department directed ProPublica to its October statement, which made clear the police were “not involved in the incident or its investigation” and directed questions to federal authorities.
As the events in Minneapolis continued to generate criticism nationwide, Chicago’s mayor unveiled his executive order that directed officers to investigate federal immigration agents who break the law and to refer them for criminal prosecution. In a statement, the mayor’s office said the initiative was a response to “the absence of legal repercussions in the wake of the shooting of Marimar Martinez in Chicago and the killings of Silverio Villegas González in Franklin Park and Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis.”
Legal experts said they were not aware of recent examples of Illinois law enforcement agencies investigating an on-duty federal agent, though last month a suburban police department obtained misdemeanor charges against an off-duty ICE agent accused of attacking an activist who was filming him while the agent was pumping gas.
Illinois State Police officials said they would investigate federal agents who were accused of breaking the law if they are asked to do so.
Meanwhile, Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker called on a state accountability commission to examine the roles of key Trump officials in the escalation of aggressive tactics during a monthslong immigration enforcement campaign in Chicago and its suburbs late last year. Pritzker had previously established the commission to gather videos and testimonies about federal agents’ conduct, and to create a public record of what happened. The commission lacks subpoena power but can refer information about potential violations of state law to law enforcement agencies or prosecutors.
“Just imagine if the agents who shot Mr. Villegas González back on Sept. 12 had been publicly disciplined,” Rubén Castillo, a retired federal judge who chairs the commission, said at a hearing Friday. “Maybe, just maybe, the Minnesota shootings would not have occurred, and two people would be alive who are now dead.”
He added: “We will have conversations with those in local law enforcement to suggest prosecutions that should be occurring even as we speak.”

In California, neither the Los Angeles nor Ontario police departments investigated after two men were shot by federal immigration agents in separate October incidents and then accused of assaulting federal officers — despite video evidence and victim statements that conflicted with the accounts officials provided. A federal judge dismissed the case against one man, a Mexican immigrant and popular TikTokker; the other, a U.S. citizen, pleaded not guilty and has a trial scheduled for April.
Police in Phoenix also said they are not investigating the shooting of a man who federal officials say fled immigration agents last October, leaving the case to the FBI and ICE. And local police in Portland, Oregon, are not investigating an incident where federal agents shot at a Venezuelan man who had allegedly hit an unoccupied Border Patrol vehicle with his car in early January, injuring him and his passenger. The man was later charged with assaulting an officer. Unlike in some of the other cases, the Oregon attorney general’s office has opened its own investigation.
In contrast, police in Pima County, Arizona, and Anne Arundel County, Maryland, and the Texas Rangers have all said they opened investigations into recent shootings involving federal immigration officers.
Asking local officials to investigate their federal counterparts does not come without challenges. Police officers and prosecutors are wary of being seen as interfering with federal law enforcement operations. They may be reluctant to damage their already complicated relationships with agencies with whom they sometimes partner.
Then there’s the worry about the political consequences, including the threat of losing federal funding, a dynamic that’s particularly acute under the Trump administration.
“This particular federal government has lobbed all kinds of threats and acted on threats against local authorities and state authorities for failure to cooperate or not do what they want them to do,” said Futterman, the University of Chicago law professor. “It’s a reason in itself not to bite a hand that feeds you.”
Even when local officials open their own investigations into federal agents, there’s no guarantee they can bring the cases to court. Federal agents can claim immunity in response to state charges, legal experts said, and can move their cases to federal court.
That immunity stems from a Supreme Court ruling more than a century ago. During the Civil Rights Movement, that immunity was used when the federal government wanted to protect its law enforcement officers tasked with enforcing then-controversial efforts like desegregation in hostile states.
Now local officials face the opposite challenge: protecting their constituents’ constitutional rights from what they believe is excessive force at the hands of federal officers.
Steve Descano, the commonwealth’s attorney for Fairfax County, Virginia, would be the first to admit that nothing about prosecuting federal agents is easy. During the first Trump administration, Descano brought state manslaughter charges against two U.S. Park Police officers who shot and killed a Virginia man. A federal judge dismissed the case in 2021 and said the officers were entitled to immunity because their actions were necessary and proper.
Still, Descano, who is part of the coalition of prosecutors aiming to hold federal law enforcement accountable, said he believed he and others have a responsibility to do so.
“If they are not willing to take these actions,” he said, “then they are cowards and they are not worthy of their positions.”
The post “You’re Not Going to Investigate a Federal Officer” appeared first on ProPublica.
Wireless security cams are versatile, but you need to think about battery life and mounting options. We tested models to find the best.
The 2026 Winter Olympics are bringing thousands of athletes from around the world together for more than two weeks of competition — and the Games are a gold mine for statistics.
Some of the largest banks in the nation for years have eschewed the business of private prison giants like GEO Group and CoreCivic, the two firms that operate more than half the private carceral facilities in the country, including many U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention centers.
The moves to “debank” the companies, which have been dogged by reports of rights abuses, came after the banks’ reviews of their environmental, social, and governance policies, which included site visits and meeting with civil rights leaders. According to a nonprofit report, the moves by banks, including JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo, cost the prison companies billions in potential financing.
“Private prisons profit purely from locking people up, but the market is not immune to public accountability.”
Now, the private prison firms are fighting back, spending millions on lobbying Congress to pass a law to require that the banks can’t deny their business.
The two prison giants spent millions lobbying for legislation known as the Fair Access to Banking Act, a pending bill that seeks to prevent banks from denying access to institutions or people including those involved in “politically unpopular businesses but that are lawful under Federal law.” A press release marking the bill’s introduction last year said, “The legislation requires that lending and services decisions must be based on impartial, risk-based analysis, not political or reputational favoritism.”
Civil liberties advocates have criticized the legislation.
“Private prisons profit purely from locking people up, but the market is not immune to public accountability,” said Eunice H. Cho, a senior counsel at the American Civil Liberties Union’s National Prison Project who has represented immigration detainees housed in privately operated ICE facilities. “Consumer advocacy is a very important part of the democratic process, including economic boycott and protest against corporations. Banks are sensitive to understanding the risks of doing business with harmful industries.”
“We value the relationships we have with our financial partners,” Ryan Gustin, a spokesperson for CoreCivic, said in a statement. “We also believe all lawful businesses should be treated fairly under the banking system.”
GEO Group did not respond to a request for comment.
Last year, GEO Group spent $3.3 million in lobbying various departments and agencies of the federal government, of which $1.37 million was spent in lobbying the House and the Senate on issues that included the Fair Access to Banking Act, according to federal lobbying disclosures.
Meanwhile, in 2025, CoreCivic spent $3.5 million total on https://lda.senate.gov/filings/public/filing/search/?registrant=®istrant_country=®istrant_ppb_country=&client=CoreCivic&client_state=&client_country=&client_ppb_country=&house_id=&lobbyist=&lobbyist_covered_position=&lobbyist_conviction_disclosure=&lobbyist_conviction_date_range_from=&lobbyist_conviction_date_range_to=&report_period=&report_year=2025&report_dt_posted_from=&report_dt_posted_to=&report_amount_reported_min=&report_amount_reported_max=&report_filing_uuid=&report_house_doc_id=&report_issue_area_description=&affiliated_organization=&affiliated_organization_country=&foreign_entity=&foreign_entity_country=&foreign_entity_ppb_country=&foreign_entity_ownership_percentage_min=&foreign_entity_ownership_percentage_max=&search=search#js_searchFormTitlelobbying, of which $2 million went toward pushing for the legislation, according to the disclosures.
Despite hiring high-profile D.C. firms for their lobbying activities, both prison companies utilized their in-house government relations experts when it came to advocating for the banking legislation, which is moving through the Senate and the House.
In its fourth-quarter lobbying report, GEO Group mentions “S. 401 and H.R. 987, Fair Access to Banking Act; Issues related to the availability of banking services for federal contractors” as one of its lobbying issues. CoreCivic’s lobbying issues in the same quarter also mentioned “Issues pertaining to financial industry practices; H.R. 987/S. 401 – Fair Access to Banking Act.”
GEO Group and CoreCivic have long faced criticisms and lawsuits from https://www.aclu.org/news/immigrants-rights/unchecked-growth-private-prison-corporations-and-immigration-detention-three-years-into-the-biden-administrationrights groups for poor prison conditions, undermining medical needs of detainees, and not doing enough to prevent deaths in their facilities.
In December and January alone, for instance, five of the 11 people who died in ICE custody were housed in detention centers owned and operated by one of the firms, ICE’s press statements show. At least four people died while detained in a GEO Group facility, and one other individual died while detained in a CoreCivic center.
In 2019, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, SunTrust, BNP Paribas, Fifth Third Bancorp, PNC Bank, and Bank of America said that they would no longer provide any new financing to the private prison industry. At the time, the banks reportedly constituted more than 70 percent of the total financing available to the two companies, with many of them having loaned money to either one or both firms.
Many of these Wall Street banks took similar action against gun manufacturers, oil and gas companies, and porn sites, among other industries, in what came to be known as debanking.
The impact was considerable. CoreCivic reportedly had to scramble for finances abroad.
If the new legislation passes, however, the two companies will have access to fresh lines of credit that could help them build new facilities at a faster pace and cash in on a higher demand for ICE detention facilities.
Last July, the federal government approved funding of $45 billion to build new immigration detention centers as part of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.
In its third-quarter earnings report, GEO Group said it had secured four ICE contracts for four new ICE detention facilities totaling about 6,000 beds. CoreCivic also reported receiving contracts for four facilities with over 7,000 beds. Financial statements suggest that the new contracts have boosted the revenue figures of both the companies, who rely heavily on federal contracts to support their bottom lines.
The concerted effort put into lobbying by GEO and CoreCivic has already reaped some success.
President Donald Trump signed an https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/08/guaranteeing-fair-banking-for-all-americans/executive order last August that empowered federal banking regulators, such as the Small Business Administration, to monitor financial institutions that denied services to clients based on “politicized or unlawful debanking action.” Last month, Trump announced he would sue JPMorgan Chase for debanking him over the January 6 riots.
In December, the Treasury Department’s Office of the Comptroller of the Currency published a report that scrutinized nine banks and listed private prisons as being among the sectors affected by debanking. The bureau said that it intends to “hold these banks accountable for any unlawful debanking activities, including by making referrals to the Attorney General.”
In June, even before Trump’s order,https://www.semafor.com/article/06/05/2025/bank-of-america-dropped-private-prison-clients-now-its-taking-them-back Bank of America, which had cut ties with private prisons, reinstated CoreCivic as its client, according to Semafor. A JPMorgan Chase spokesperson said the bank hasn’t changed its policy of freezing out private prisons. Meanwhile, most other banks have been quiet about whether they will change course on financing private prisons. (None of the banks responded to The Intercept’s requests for comment.)
If the Fair Access to Banking Act passes Congress, the banks may not have a choice.
“It has been the worst year for immigration detainees in decades,” said Cho, the ACLU lawyer. “Private prisons have an astronomical amount of funds available to them, and it’s unsurprising they are also looking to protect ways to expand those funds with extra lines of credits available. But for detainees, this can have serious implications.”
The post ICE’s Private Prison Contractors Spent Millions Lobbying to Force Banks to Give Them Loans appeared first on The Intercept.
If US elites can find the courage to speak up, we can still prevent our country from descending into full-blown autocracy
Alex Pretti – an ICU nurse documenting alleged cases of federal immigration agents’ overreach – was killed by federal agents in Minneapolis on 24 January. Just hours later, Minnesotans gathered in their neighborhoods for vigils to mourn his death and demand an end to the federal incursion on their state.
Meanwhile, the CEOs of Apple, Amazon, Zoom and the New York Stock Exchange attended a glitzy screening of the new Melania documentary at the White House, where they munched on popcorn in special commemorative black-and-white boxes and took home Melania-branded cookies.
Continue reading...Cranston report highly critical of systemic failings and missed opportunities around deaths of at least 33 people
Loss of life was avoidable in the worst mass drowning from a small boat crossing in the Channel, a public inquiry has found.
The 454-page report by the former high court judge Sir Ross Cranston is highly critical of failings around the deaths of at least 24 men, seven women and two children in November 2021, four of whom are still missing.
Continue reading...FBI and Venezuela’s intelligence agency also reportedly arrest billionaire media mogul Raúl Gorrín at same address
A close and powerful associate of the deposed Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro has reportedly been detained during a joint operation by Venezuela’s intelligence agency and the FBI.
Alex Saab, a wealthy Colombian-Venezuelan businessman long considered Maduro’s frontman, was removed from his position in Venezuela’s government a fortnight after US forces captured his ally on 3 January. In the early hours of Wednesday, the 54-year-old was reportedly detained by members of the Bolivarian national intelligence service (Sebin) at a luxury home in Venezuela’s capital, Caracas.
Continue reading...For the first time since Texas criminalized abortion, the state’s medical regulator is instructing doctors on when they can legally terminate a pregnancy to protect the life of the patient — guidance physicians have long sought as women died and doctors feared imprisonment for intervening.
The new training from the Texas Medical Board comes nearly five years after the state passed its strict abortion ban in 2021, threatening doctors with severe penalties. ProPublica’s reporting has shown that pregnancy became far more dangerous in the state after the law took effect: Sepsis rates spiked for women suffering a pregnancy loss, as did emergency room visits in which miscarrying patients needed a blood transfusion; at least four women in the state died after they didn’t receive timely reproductive care. More than a hundred OB-GYNs said the state’s abortion ban was to blame.
In response, the Texas Legislature passed the Life of the Mother Act last year. The law updated the abortion ban’s medical exceptions, added to the legal burden needed for prosecutors to criminally charge a doctor and required the medical board to create guidance for doctors by Jan. 1, something no other state with an abortion ban has done.
The new medical training, which ProPublica obtained under a public records request, assures doctors they can now legally provide abortions, even when a patient’s life isn’t imminently in danger, and goes over nine example scenarios, including a patient’s water breaking before term and complications from an incomplete abortion.
Some of the scenarios make clear how doctors can intervene in circumstances similar to cases ProPublica has investigated. For example, in 2021, Josseli Barnica was diagnosed with an “inevitable” miscarriage, leaving her at high risk of dangerous infection, and she died after doctors would not empty her uterus while there was still a fetal heartbeat. The new training includes an example that indicates an abortion would be legal in similar cases.
But medical and legal experts who reviewed the training for ProPublica said the case studies represent only the most straightforward situations doctors encounter. The complications that women face in pregnancy are varied, complex and impossible to capture in a brief presentation, many cautioned. One attorney called the training “the bare minimum.”
“I could probably list 100 different situations that would cause people to pause and say, ‘Wow, does that fit into the law?’” said Dr. Tony Ogburn, an OB-GYN practicing in Texas. “They’re taking years and years of medical training and experience on how to manage these cases and summarizing it in 43 slides.”
Notably absent from the training is guidance on how doctors should care for patients with chronic conditions, a gray area that has come up again and again in ProPublica’s reporting. Last year, ProPublica investigated the death of Tierra Walker, a San Antonio woman with diabetes and high blood pressure who endured repeated hospitalizations and escalating symptoms before she died. Doctors dismissed her requests for an abortion to protect her health, her family said. Doctors and hospitals involved in Walker’s care did not respond to ProPublica’s requests for comment.
And no amount of training can solve what many doctors see as the main problem: the law’s steep criminal penalties. If found guilty of performing an illegal abortion, doctors face up to 99 years in prison, $100,000 in fines and the loss of their medical license. Even the possibility of a lengthy and public court battle can be a powerful deterrent, many physicians told ProPublica.
The Texas Medical Board writes in its training that “the legal risk of prosecution is extremely low” if doctors practice “evidence-based medicine,” follow “standard emergency protocols” and document cases appropriately. The training also emphasizes multiple times that the burden now falls on the state to prove that “no reasonable doctor” would have performed the abortion. Before the Life of the Mother Act, prosecutors could accuse a physician of performing an illegal abortion with little evidence.
That assurance rings hollow to some doctors, who point to the actions of Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton since the state’s abortion ban took effect.
Dr. Damla Karsan, an OB-GYN based in Houston, said she appreciates that the training tells physicians they can use their expertise to make judgment calls during emergency situations. “But having to defend your decision is still scary,” Karsan said.
In 2023, Paxton overruled Karsan’s medical judgement when her patient Kate Cox sought an abortion at 20 weeks after learning the fetus had a fatal genetic anomaly. Texas bans abortions for all fetal anomalies unless the pregnant woman is facing a medical emergency. Karsan argued that Cox qualified: She had previously had two C-sections, increasing her risk of hemorrhage, infection and future infertility. A Texas lower court permitted the abortion, but Paxton appealed the ruling to the Texas Supreme Court, which ultimately overturned the decision, arguing Karsan hadn’t done enough to prove Cox’s life was at risk.
Paxton’s office did not respond to repeated requests for comment about the Cox case and the medical board’s assertion that the risk of legal action for doctors who follow its guidance is extremely low.
Texas Medical Board President Dr. Sherif Zaafran told ProPublica that the training was reviewed by Paxton, as well as Gov. Greg Abbott and state Sen. Bryan Hughes, the abortion ban’s author. The board, which has 19 members appointed by the governor, including 12 licensed physicians but no OB-GYNs, also consulted with the Texas Hospital Association and the Texas Medical Association.
Any doctors who practice obstetric care, including all emergency room and urgent care physicians, will need to complete the self-administered online course before 2027 in order to obtain or renew their license.
Multiple doctors told ProPublica decisions about abortion care are also shaped by hospital lawyers. The Life of the Mother Act required the State Bar of Texas to create its own training for attorneys, which ProPublica reviewed. That presentation also explains that prosecutors looking to file a criminal charge now need to demonstrate that no other doctor would provide an abortion if faced with the same scenario.
Blake Rocap, a longtime reproductive rights attorney, said the state guidance should give doctors and hospitals more protections to help patients access care. “It will save lives,” he said.
After Texas’ six-week abortion ban took effect in 2021, doctors, hospitals and reproductive rights advocates repeatedly urged the Texas Medical Board to provide guidance on how medical professionals could comply with it. In particular, they sought clarity around the law’s vague exception for a “life-threatening emergency.”
For years, the board declined, saying it lacked the authority.
In the absence of guidance, confusion reigned across the state. The standard of care for miscarrying patients in the second trimester, for example, is to offer to empty the uterus, which can lower the risk of infection and sepsis, according to leading medical organizations. While some Texas doctors told ProPublica last year they regularly offer to empty the uterus in these cases, others said their hospitals didn’t allow them to do so until the fetal heartbeat stopped or they could document a life-threatening complication, leading to delays in care like the one that Barnica experienced. Across the state, cases of sepsis in second-trimester pregnancy losses shot up more than 50% after the ban took effect, according to a data analysis by ProPublica.
In 2024, the board released limited guidance stating that providers don’t need to wait until a pregnant woman is on the brink of death to intervene. The new training goes further, offering detailed examples of when abortion would be legal.
One case study addresses patients who get an abortion out of state but retain tissue in the uterus. Because the pregnancy was already ended, the medical board advises, “ongoing treatment of any retained products is not an abortion and is not considered aiding and abetting an abortion.” ProPublica investigated the death of a woman in Georgia, Amber Thurman, who died of sepsis when doctors there delayed emptying her uterus after an incomplete abortion.
The training also makes clear that the definition of ectopic pregnancies — which are always life-threatening — includes any that implant in an abnormal location outside of the uterine cavity. Previous laws had defined an ectopic pregnancy as one outside of the uterus. While most ectopic pregnancies occur in the fallopian tubes, some can also implant inside the uterus, such as in the scar tissue from a previous pregnancy.
Still, the training doesn’t address a key issue in miscarriage management that ProPublica’s reporting has highlighted: Early pregnancy loss often can’t be conclusively diagnosed with a single ultrasound. Confirming that a pregnancy has ended can take days or weeks. In those cases, some doctors have left women bleeding and in pain instead of offering a D&C, a procedure that can prevent hemorrhage. Another Texas woman named Porsha Ngumezi bled to death in 2023 while miscarrying, according to the medical examiner, after her doctor did not provide a D&C.
The training also offers no instruction on how to care for patients whose pregnancies are high risk because of underlying medical conditions like autoimmune disorders, uncontrolled blood pressure or heart disease. Pregnancy can often exacerbate these chronic conditions, sometimes leading to a small risk of death, but doctors may not consider this “life-threatening.”
Walker, the San Antonio woman ProPublica reported on last year, had uncontrolled blood pressure and developed seizures and blood clots. More than 90 doctors were involved in Walker’s care, but not one offered her the option to end her pregnancy, according to medical records. Doctors who reviewed the new training for ProPublica said they still weren’t clear when they could intervene in cases like hers — would it be when a woman first got pregnant because she already had some risk factors that made pregnancy more dangerous? Or would they have to wait until she developed specific symptoms that showed her health was declining?
Zaafran said the training makes clear that doctors can judge whether a patient is at risk of death or irreversible damage — and that they can intervene before the patient reaches that state. “In other words, you don’t need to wait until somebody has clots or seizures or whatever it might be to make a determination that something needs to be done.”
What doctors do need to do, Zaafran repeatedly said, is document those risks in case their patients qualify for an abortion. But Karsan argues she did that in the Cox case, and Paxton fought her in court anyway.
While the medical board’s training includes two case studies related to patients with fatal fetal anomalies, neither addresses whether the updated law allows an abortion in a scenario similar to Cox’s. Karsan documented in the medical records that a third C-section would put Cox at risk of death or a hysterectomy if there was a complication, and that argument is what she shared with the courts. The training emphasizes that a fatal fetal anomaly alone is not covered by the exceptions and that “the mother must have a life-threatening physical condition.” Zaafran declined to comment on Cox’s case specifically but said that his understanding was there was not enough documentation.
Cox told ProPublica she trusted her medical team’s judgment and she did not want to risk her health by continuing her pregnancy. Grieving the unexpected loss while being denied care and seeing her doctor threatened by the top lawyer in the state, Cox said, “was incredibly scary.” She ultimately traveled out of Texas to get an abortion.
“I’m grateful for my doctors. Their hands were tied in many ways,” she said. “The problem isn’t our doctors. It’s that pregnancy is too complicated to legislate.”
The post After Years of Silence, Texas Medical Board Issues Training for Doctors on How to Legally Provide Abortions appeared first on ProPublica.
Sony announced last month that it plans to pass control of its home entertainment division -- including the two-decade-old Bravia television brand -- to Chinese electronics group TCL through a joint venture in which TCL would hold a 51% stake. The Japanese company was long ago overtaken in sales by South Korea's Samsung and LG and now holds just 2% of the global television market. Sony stopped making its own LCD screens in 2011. Chinese companies supplied 71% of television panels made in Asia last year, according to TCL, and less than 10% are now produced in Japan and Korea. TCL is close to overtaking Samsung as the world's largest television maker. Sony retains valuable intellectual property in image rendering, and the Bravia brand still carries consumer recognition, but its OLED screens are already supplied by Samsung and LG. The company has been shifting toward premium cameras, professional audio, and its entertainment businesses in film, music, and games -- areas where intellectual property is less exposed to Chinese manufacturing scale.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The world of hard power, and the future of the war on Ukraine 23 February 2026 — 12:00PM TO 1:00PM Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online
General Valerii Zaluzhnyi, Ukraine’s ambassador to the UK, will speak at Chatham House to mark the fifth year of Russia’s full-scale invasion.
General Valerii Zaluzhnyi, Ukraine’s ambassador to the UK, will appear at Chatham House to mark the fifth year of the Russia invasion.
General Valerii Zaluzhnyi will provide a keynote speech, and answer questions from the audience. The ambassador will give his take on the evolution of the war on the battlefield, and what this means for chances of ending the war.
He will outline a common strategy for European security, focusing on the role of the UK, and what Ukraine can contribute to strengthening both Ukraine’s and Europe’s defence and deterrence capabilities.
The move is among several measures the acting president has touted since Maduro’s capture – yet critics say it erases Venezuela’s long history of repression
It was designed in the 1950s to be the world’s first “drive-through shopping centre”, a futuristic structure with more than than two miles of ramps looping past 300 shops, as well as cinemas, a hotel, a private club, a concert hall and a heliport.
But the building was never completed, and under the regimes of Hugo Chávez and Nicolás Maduro, spaces envisioned as shops were turned into cells, and El Helicoide became Venezuela’s most notorious torture centre for political prisoners.
Continue reading...Whether you’re chasing gym quality on a budget or a fancy folding model, accelerate your training with our expert’s pick of the best running machines
• The best running shoes, tried and tested by runners
• The best running watches
Although the treadmill has been around since the early 1800s, when it was once used to punish prisoners (sounds about right), it didn’t become a common feature in the home until the late 1960s, when William Staub unleashed his PaceMaster 600 on the US public.
Where they were once a simple rolling deck, treadmills today are often glossy pieces of interactive tech. Many now offer on-demand, real-time workouts (pioneered by Peloton) and the latest blockbuster movies via streaming services. Even if your treadmill doesn’t sport a whopping touchscreen display, it probably works nicely with heart-rate monitors, smartwatches and smartphone apps to track workouts and offer performance statistics after every session.
Best treadmill overall:
Peloton Tread
Best budget treadmill:
JTX Slimline
As his team returns to the Super Bowl, the New England owner who once stood up on social issues proves he is just another transactional billionaire
During the worst of it, when Philando Castile and Alton Sterling were killed by police a decade ago and Colin Kaepernick took a knee in protest, when a widespread reaction was to tell the highly accomplished, overwhelmingly Black professional athletes they were un-American, or well-paid farmhands who needed to get back to work, or both, and some of his peers in the ownership class were releasing players as punishment for joining the protest, it was New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft who positioned himself as the voice of reason.
Kraft attempted to broker peace between the ownership hawks who saw the high-paid kneelers as ungrateful mutineers and, after decades of docility, the radicalized players unwilling to collect their checks in exchange for political silence. Kraft encouraged two of his players – the twins Devin and Jason McCourty – into deeper citizenship, to engage with the legal and political systems and promote reforms. As a sign of compassion and a willingness to listen, Kraft visited the incarcerated rapper Meek Mill, and later the two partnered with another artist, Jay-Z, on various criminal justice initiatives.
Continue reading...New Start expires on Thursday. That leaves no limits on US and Russian nuclear arsenals
Let’s be honest: America needs another nuclear weapon about as much as Donald Trump deserves a Nobel peace prize.
Yet on Thursday, the last remaining nuclear arms control treaty between the U S and Russia will expire. When the New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty – New Start – goes away, there will be no limits on US and Russian nuclear arsenals for the first time in more than 50 years.
Edward J Markey represents Massachusetts in the US Senate. He is a co-chair of the bicameral congressional nuclear weapons and arms control working group
Continue reading...In the summer of 2019, a crew leader tasked with overseeing farm laborers sent them to harvest corn in a field where they weren’t authorized to work — and where there wasn’t adequate protection from the sweltering sun. One of them died of symptoms of heatstroke.
Five months later, a crew leader for another Georgia farm kidnapped and brutally assaulted one of his workers who had escaped.
Two years after that, a third crew leader confined workers to housing surrounded by an electric fence so they couldn’t try to flee.
These and other recently documented abuses were carried out by third-party middlemen, or farm labor contractors, who were hired by farm owners to recruit and supervise foreign workers. Those contractors had found ways to wield power with near impunity over hundreds of workers at a time. Federal prosecutors spent years revealing the scope of the problem in Georgia, in a giant labor-trafficking case that launched in 2016 and is now nearing its conclusion.
The evidence in that case led prosecutors to liken the abuse to a form of modern-day slavery.
But despite prosecutors’ efforts to crack down on the exploitation of workers by labor contractors, there has been little to no movement at the state or federal level to make the changes that can stop it. There are laws and regulations that could curb exploitation, but reports from farmworker advocates and labor experts have shown that enforcement has long been lax. A number of elected officials have pushed for years for the government to do more to ensure workers receive those protections. Some advocates now say the only solution is for the government to require that farm owners cut out the middleman and assume ultimate responsibility for their workers.
Experts told ProPublica there aren’t enough state and federal inspectors to adequately vet whether the contractors are following the rules. Nor is there broad political support to invest more resources to protect foreign workers, who themselves have little incentive for reporting abuse given the fear of retribution.
“Regardless of the administration — even ones that are sympathetic to labor — regulators are handicapped,” said Cesar Escalante, a University of Georgia professor of agricultural and applied economics. “They know what’s happening, but they’re incapable of enforcing the regulations.”
As American farmers continue to rely on the decades-old H-2A visa program to fill the seasonal farmworker jobs, they’ve grown more reliant on contractors to find and oversee those workers. Contractors often are fluent in the languages spoken by workers, familiar with the Mexican towns where they’re plentiful and well-versed in the process of securing their temporary work visas. Many farmers also end up hiring contractors to manage the laborers’ work, pay and housing.
Federal regulators have long known about contractors abusing and exploiting these workers — including stealing their wages, charging them illegal fees, forcing them to live in substandard housing, and even physically and sexually abusing them. Government watchdogs have published reports about those regulators’ failures to do more to prevent abuses in the fields — inaction that, according to the U.S. Labor Department’s inspector general’s office, has increased the odds of employers getting away with serious H-2A violations.
The number of H-2A seasonal worker visas requested by contractors has nearly tripled over the past decade, with roughly 2 out of every 5 H-2A workers now directly overseen by a labor contractor. The Government Accountability Office found that more than half of the employers banned from the H-2A visa program between 2020 and 2023 were labor contractors, even though they submitted just 15% of the visa applications during that same period.
One of the key ways to uncover abuses by labor contractors is for regulators to inspect the farms where their workers pick crops. Daniel Costa, an attorney and director of immigration with the think tank the Economic Policy Institute, said federal regulators have become so strapped for resources that they’re only inspecting a tiny fraction of farms each year.
“When less than 1% of farm employers are investigated every year, they can act with impunity, knowing that there is a very low likelihood that they will ever be investigated,” Costa said.
Every year, hundreds of thousands of foreign laborers are drawn to America by the promise of steady, seasonal farmwork through the H-2A program. One of them, Agustin Chavez Santiago, traveled more than 1,500 miles from Oaxaca, Mexico, for his chance to pick crops on a Georgia farm. Once he arrived in the spring of 2019, one of the labor contractors he’d worked with failed to pay him the $11 an hour his contract had promised. Soon after, Chavez was sent to work on a farm where he wasn’t authorized to do so.
As Chavez harvested corn one sweltering afternoon, his body temperature spiked to over 105 degrees. He walked off the field to sip water and rest. Before he cooled down, Chavez collapsed. He was taken to a nearby hospital and died from symptoms of heatstroke. He was 34 years old.

Federal prosecutors charged two contractors involved in recruiting and overseeing Chavez on trafficking charges. Those contractors each pleaded guilty to a lesser crime; one admitted to money laundering and the other admitted to concealing knowledge of a felony. Lawyers for those contractors declined ProPublica’s requests for comment.
In addition, workplace safety inspectors determined that Chavez died because of the negligence of another labor contractor who oversaw his work in the fields. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration concluded that the labor contractor did not provide a worksite free from “hazards that were causing or likely to cause death or serious physical harm.” The contractor’s company paid OSHA a fine of $16,433. He was able to keep supervising workers.
“The fact that OSHA fined him $16,000 is a slap in the face to the victims,” said Teresa Romero, the president of the United Farm Workers, one of the country’s largest farmworker advocacy organizations. “This person should have been behind bars.”
The contractor didn’t respond to ProPublica’s requests for comment. He told OSHA in 2019 that he provided water to his employees and allowed them to take breaks in the shade as needed.
The U.S. Labor Department can fine or suspend contractors for violating the rules of the H-2A program. But it’s doing fewer agricultural investigations than at any point since the turn of the millennium. In the latest year of available data, including parts of 2024 and 2025, the department completed 649 of those investigations, fining farm employers $8.3 million across the country. That is less than half of the investigations done just a decade earlier, even though the H-2A program more than doubled in size during that time.
Experts say the decline in investigations reflects the limited capacity of federal regulators, not that conditions have improved for H-2A workers. Alexis Guild, vice president of strategy and programs with the advocacy group Farmworker Justice, told ProPublica that regulators now rely on workers to report potential violations against themselves. But she said many workers are too scared to speak out because it may lead to retribution and the loss of future work. “It creates an environment that’s ripe for abuse,” she said.
The U.S. Labor Department is responsible for vetting H-2A visa applications that the contractors submit to get foreign workers cleared to come to America. Those regulators routinely audit the contractors’ applications to verify information about the number of workers needed and the terms of their employment. If contractors submit false information, they may be criminally charged, as happened in the federal case in Georgia.
But a surge in those requests has meant that large piles of applications haven’t been vetted as closely for red flags. Regulators went from conducting over 500 audits in the fiscal year ending in 2018 to doing less than 50 five years later. The U.S. Labor Department’s Office of Inspector General has warned that the way that its regulators audit “increases the risk of fraud and noncompliance going undetected.” That warning followed another OIG report that said the way that the department had conducted those audits created an “unnecessarily elevated risk of foreign labor program abuse.”
Federal labor regulators have acknowledged to the Government Accountability Office that they have had “widespread concern” about farmworkers being exploited by contractors. They have also told the GAO that the department has “limited resources” to carry out some of its work, including the audits.
In recent years, the U.S. Labor Department has been pressed to take greater action to fix these problems. After the Georgia case was publicly unveiled in 2021, U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff of Georgia called for more “rigorous oversight” of the contractors. United Farm Workers has also pushed for workers to have “stronger and more effective” protections from their contractors.
In response, the Biden administration finalized a rule in 2024 that sought to increase protections for H-2A workers and hold their employers more accountable. But after numerous states filed lawsuits challenging the rule, the Trump administration decided to suspend all enforcement of those strengthened protections until the litigation is resolved.
The U.S. Labor Department did not respond to ProPublica’s requests for comment.
With fewer federal investigations of farmworker abuses, some states that heavily depend on H-2A workers have tried to address rampant contractor abuses.
Florida regulators require labor contractors to get a state license — a move intended to help ensure greater compliance with the rules of the H-2A program. Washington posts all of its housing inspection and enforcement records in an online database, allowing workers to look at those records before they accept a job. California lawmakers last year passed a new law that will give greater power to its regulators to crack down on the abuses of foreign farmworkers by labor contractors.
But even amid a period of extra scrutiny, Georgia hasn’t made those or any other major changes that could prevent the kind of abuses uncovered in the massive federal probe.


Labor experts say that one of the most important actions that states can take to protect H-2A workers is to devote sufficient resources to the inspection of their housing conditions. In the last full year of available data, Georgia had one H-2A housing inspector for roughly every 7,100 H-2A workers. Other states with high numbers of H-2A workers had hired more inspectors relative to the number of workers. In recent years, Michigan has had one housing inspector for every 2,000 or so H-2A workers; North Carolina has had one inspector for roughly every 4,000 workers. (Other states, including California, have had worse inspector-to-worker ratios.)
At the same time that Georgia’s Labor Department failed to expand its oversight of farmworker housing, one of its top officials called for an internal investigation into alleged problems within the department.
In 2018, as federal investigators were building their case, Georgia’s Labor Department received a complaint alleging that one of its regulators had been approving inspections of H-2A worker housing in exchange for cash. Four years later, a federal agent testified in court that employees of Georgia’s Labor Department had accepted bribes to approve inspections of H-2A worker housing. The employee accused in the 2018 complaint, who was not indicted and retired three months after that agent testified, told ProPublica that he denied any wrongdoing.
Around the time of his retirement, labor advocates published a report that called for the “rebuilding” of the state’s Labor Department. They demanded more stringent inspections of H-2A worker housing, better monitoring for potential violations and increased funding so regulators could more effectively do their jobs.
Instead of having Georgia’s Labor Department adopt those recommendations, Gov. Brian Kemp signed an executive order that stripped the beleaguered department of its oversight powers.
Georgia’s Labor Department did not respond to ProPublica’s requests for comment. A spokesperson for Kemp said the decision was made to “improve alignment with workforce training programs.”
Kemp transferred H-2A oversight to the Technical College System of Georgia. A Technical College System spokesperson said its officials have “strengthened its monitoring processes to ensure thorough oversight of potential H-2A violations.”
She also noted that the agency has increased the number of employees who conduct housing inspections from three to six — with plans to add a seventh soon. In a statement, the spokesperson wrote that the Technical College System has taken steps that “have enhanced our ability to monitor, document, and respond to issues more effectively than before.”
Yet, even after doubling the number of inspectors, Georgia still has fewer inspectors per H-2A worker than some of the other states that heavily rely on the visa program.
States like Georgia that have too few inspectors for H-2A workers all but guarantee that violations of the program’s rules will increase, according to Diane Charlton, an associate professor of agricultural economics at Montana State University. “We need to invest more in actually monitoring labor conditions,” Charlton said. “This has to be a major priority.”

The post The Dramatic Rise of Farm Labor Contractors Has Led to Rampant Abuses. Here’s Why Regulators Have Failed to Stop Them. appeared first on ProPublica.
New European measures to crack down on Russia’s shadow fleet could severely hurt its economy at a time when it is looking increasingly vulnerable.
Post reporters ventured to northwest Nigeria, where fighters affiliated with the Islamic State are on the offensive despite December airstrikes ordered by President Trump.
The number of Black and Hispanic faculty increased at large research universities after a wave of commitments. Now these pledges are being rolled back, a Post analysis found.
On Wednesday, storied newspaper axed nearly one-third of company after earlier unpopular moves by owner Jeff Bezos
Under Marty Baron, the Washington Post won 11 Pulitzer prizes and expanded its newsroom to house more than 1,000 journalists. The storied newspaper’s future is now in question, according to its former executive editor.
“The aspirations of this news organization are diminished,” Baron told the Guardian in an interview. “I think that’ll translate into fewer subscribers. And I hope it’s not a death spiral, but I worry that it might be.”
Continue reading...
Why Should Delaware Care?
Since the passage of legislation in 2023 requiring all Delaware municipalities to create Police Accountability Boards, reform advocates have often criticized the boards as disorganized and lacking real authority. The New Castle County Council passed an ordinance that would transfer more power over its county police accountability board to the county executive, prompting questions from citizens.
The New Castle County Council passed an ordinance earlier this week taking more authority over appointments to the county’s Police Accountability Board away from community groups and giving it to County Executive Marcus Henry.
The move grants Henry the power to appoint the accountability board’s chair, replacing the previous system where the county executive had to ask for recommendations to fill the role from local nonprofit organizations.
The new ordinance also removes certain community representation requirements from the board, such as a civil rights group and a faith-based leader; mandates board members complete 20 hours of police officer-run training; and reduces the number annual board meetings from 10 to six.
County council members and representatives from Henry’s office are lauding the ordinance as a way of tightening up the accountability board to make it more effective, but police reform advocates are pointing to it as another example of the accountability boards across the state not functioning properly.
House Bill 205, passed in 2023, instituted a requirement for each local police department in Delaware to create its own Police Accountability Board to address citizen concerns and discuss potential reforms.
Most boards, like those of the cities of Wilmington and Dover, oversee their own municipal police departments. New Castle County is the only county-wide Police Accountability Board. It was established in July 2024 to preside over the county police department, which itself is directly overseen by the county’s Department of Public Safety.
In the nearly two and a half years since HB 205 was passed, police reform advocates have criticized some jurisdictions for not having functioning accountability boards, and others for having boards that only met once or twice over the years.
The New Castle County ordinance was introduced to the council’s Public Safety Committee at the request of Henry’s office in mid-January.
County Councilmen Kevin Caneco and Brandon Toole, the committee chairs, made it clear at multiple discussions of the ordinance that they were not involved in writing the proposal, but rather were simply introducing it to council at the direction of Henry’s office.
Still, Caneco said he supports the ordinance as a means of adjusting the board’s functions and providing some more flexibility to meeting times and appointments to the board.
“I think it actually kind of tightens up the language to make the accountability board a little more organized as we move forward,” Caneco told Spotlight Delaware.
The ordinance passed 12-1 on Feb. 2, with Councilman Jea P. Street casting the lone vote against the ordinance.
Street made his disapproval of the ordinance clear at the meeting, arguing that it goes against the “spirit and intention” of Police Accountability Boards. His comments come more than two years after the council engaged in a debate over the creation of the board.
At that time, Street – a longtime advocate for police reform – issued a warning to his colleagues: Either approve the advisory board, or “we’ll have to look to the courts to run the police department.”
When New Castle County created its 13-member Police Accountability Board in 2023, it was hailed for being the first jurisdiction in the state to do so.
The county had endured the bruising public scrutiny in the officer-involved killing of Lymond Moses just two years earlier, which came in the wake of calls for reform initiated by the murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police officers.
When then-New Castle County Executive Matt Meyer created the board, he said that, “County residents now have a seat at the table when it comes to law enforcement accountability.”
That approach has now been significantly altered.
Caneco and Toole also said at Tuesday’s meeting that they consulted with members of the Police Accountability Board before moving forward with the ordinance, and got written approval of the changes from Board Vice Chair Kevin Evans.
Natalie Criscenzo, a spokesperson for Henry’s office, wrote in a message to Spotlight Delaware that Henry met one-on-one with board members to hear their feedback before proposing the ordinance.
“While some of the proposed changes originated from the executive office, they were shared with board leadership for review,” Criscenzo wrote. “The intent is to support a more responsive, transparent, and community focused police accountability board.”
The move by Henry was foreshadowed in a sit-down interview with Spotlight Delaware last spring, when he said that he had “a different perspective” on oversight of police.
“I appreciate the work of the Police Accountability Board and other efforts, but I look at it like this: At the end of day, I’m responsible. I’m personally responsible for what happens with the conduct of the police department,” he said. “I appreciate the help of citizens groups and others, but I don’t need additional help in terms of the seriousness and the veracity in my reviews to make sure we’re doing the best we can.”

Caneco introduced an amendment to the ordinance on Tuesday night, requiring the accountability board to submit annual reports and recommendations to county leaders by April 1 of each year.
Discussion of the ordinance among council members focused on the specifics of Caneco’s amendment, and how often the accountability board should present its recommendations to the county council.
Street was the only council member to bring up the power over the accountability board that the ordinance would grant to Henry.
Citizens, however, expressed concern about the impact of the regulation on the board’s ability to function, and the power being stripped from community organizations to decide who represents them.
Chris Asay, a member of the League of Women Voters of Delaware who attends various Police Accountability Board meetings around the state, said the ordinance is disappointing for the integrity of boards in the First State.
“These changes further weaken the independence and diversity of the board,” Asay said, “making it a faux accountability board like most of the other police accountability committees.”
Tanya Whittle, a current member of the New Castle County Police Accountability Board, said she found it “disheartening” that both the county executive’s office and the county council supported an ordinance that she sees as undermining police accountability.
“It’s moving us away from the efforts we’ve made as far as really having community-led accountability boards,” she said.
Whittle’s term on the board is up this month. She told Spotlight Delaware she does not plan to seek another term because she has been “frustrated” by the county’s handling of the board.
The post NCC Council gives Henry more authority over Police Accountability Board appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Women in rural communities describe trauma of moderating violent and pornographic content for global tech companies
On the veranda of her family’s home, with her laptop balanced on a mud slab built into the wall, Monsumi Murmu works from one of the few places where the mobile signal holds. The familiar sounds of domestic life come from inside the house: clinking utensils, footsteps, voices.
On her screen a very different scene plays: a woman is pinned down by a group of men, the camera shakes, there is shouting and the sound of breathing. The video is so disturbing Murmu speeds it up, but her job requires her to watch to the end.
Continue reading...alternative_right writes: The city of Munich has developed its own measurement instrument to assess the digital sovereignty of its IT infrastructure. The so-called Digital Sovereignty Score (SDS) visually resembles the Nutri-Score and identifies IT systems based on their independence from individual providers and 'foreign' legal spheres. The Technical University of Munich was involved in the development. In September and October 2025, the IT Department already conducted a first comprehensive test. Out of a total of 2780 municipal application services, 194 particularly critical ones were selected and evaluated based on five categories. The analysis already showed a high degree of digital sovereignty: 66% of the 194 evaluated services reached the highest levels (SDS 1 and 2), only 5% reached the critical level 4, and 21% reached the most critical level 5. The SDS evaluates not only technical dependencies but also legal and organizational risks.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Stars, new events, iconic Alpine venues and a return to full Olympic atmosphere after the pandemic era. Here’s everything you need to know about Milano Cortina 2026
The Winter Olympics are back – and this time they’re zigzagging across northern Italy. Milano Cortina 2026 will be the most spread-out Winter Games ever staged, jumping from Milan’s arenas to the Dolomites’ classic Alpine slopes. With returning superstars, brand-new events and Italy leaning hard into its Olympic heritage, these Games may feel like they’ve arrived quietly – but there is a lot going on. From how and when to watch, to who matters and why these Olympics could look very different, here are your most pressing questions answered.
• This article was amended on 5 February 2026. In an earlier version, a map misspelled the resort of Livigno as “Livingo”.
Continue reading...Compact and comfortable Pixel Buds have noise cancelling, decent battery life and good everyday sound
Google’s latest budget Pixel earbuds are smaller, lighter, more comfortable and have noise cancelling, plus a case that allows you to replace the battery at home.
The Pixel Buds 2a uses the design of the excellent Pixel Buds Pro 2 with a few high-end features at a more palatable £109 (€129/$129/A$239) price, undercutting rivals in the process.
Water resistance: IP54 (splash resistant)
Connectivity: Bluetooth 5.4 (SBC, AAC)
Battery life: 7h with ANC (20h with case)
Earbud dimensions: 23.1 x 16 x 17.8mm
Earbud weight: 4.7g each
Driver size: 11mm
Charging case dimensions: 50 x 57.2 x 24.5mm
Charging case weight: 47.6g
Case charging: USB-C
Continue reading...Apparent collapse of Nvidia–OpenAI tie-up raises questions about circular funding and who will bear the cost of AI’s expansion
Did the circular AI economy just wobble? Last week it was reported that a much-discussed $100bn deal – announced last September – between Nvidia and OpenAI might not be happening at all.
This was a circular arrangement through which the chipmaker would supply the ChatGPT developer with huge sums of money that would largely go towards the purchase of its own chips.
Continue reading...The five-time Olympian leads a young US team into Milan after nearly two decades at the vanguard of women’s hockey’s rise and transformation
For nearly two decades, Hilary Knight has been the heartbeat of USA women’s ice hockey – the constant through gold-medal ecstasy and silver-medal heartbreaks, coaching changes, domestic league collapses and the sport’s long, uneven push toward professional stability. Now, at 36, she’s arrived in Milan chasing one more Olympic gold before bringing down the curtain on one of the most influential careers the game has known.
The Olympic women’s hockey tournament opens on Thursday with the United States bringing one of their youngest and fastest teams in years – and their longest-tenured player in the captain’s sweater. Only 11 players return from the team that won silver in Beijing four years ago. Seven are still in college. Many developed inside a professional structure that did not exist for most of Knight’s career, shaped by the emergence of the Professional Women’s Hockey League and the broader surge in investment across women’s sports.
Continue reading...In today’s newsletter: A police investigation, newly released documents and long‑standing questions about accountability have converged to place one of Labour’s most enduring figures under unprecedented scrutiny
Good morning. Older readers may remember Peter Mandelson as a man in a sharp suit drifting through New Labour’s 1990s heyday like a Bond villain with a Filofax. An architect of Labour’s modernisation and a lightning rod for right-wing press ire, he has been in the orbit of power for more than three decades.
That run has now come to a shuddering halt after the release of the so-called Epstein files by the US Department of Justice, which detail the extent of Mandelson’s contact with the late billionaire financier and convicted child sexual abuser Jeffrey Epstein. While the Met police investigate Mandelson on suspicion of misconduct in public office, the disclosures from the files have also raised urgent questions about judgment, access and accountability at the highest levels of public life.
UK politics | Labour MPs have warned that Keir Starmer’s days as prime minister are numbered after a day of fury over the appointment of Peter Mandelson as US ambassador despite his friendship with Jeffrey Epstein.
Gaza | Israeli forces have bulldozed part of a Gaza cemetery containing the war graves of dozens of British, Australian and other allied soldiers killed in the first and second world wars.
Crime | An 18-year-old man has been arrested on suspicion of murder after a student in his 20s was stabbed in Leicester city centre and later died in hospital, Leicestershire police have said.
Media | Washington Post editor in chief Matt Murray on Wednesday morning announced internally a “broad strategic reset” that will result in “significant” layoffs across the company.
Immigration | Donald Trump’s border tsar said about 700 federal agents would leave Minnesota, a large drop in agents on the ground but still leaving about 2,000 agents there, far above typical levels for the state.
Continue reading...Taiwanese president says ties with Washington ‘rock solid’, hours after leaders of US and China share first call since November
In their first call since November, Chinese leader Xi Jinping warned US president Donald Trump to be “prudent” about supplying arms to Taiwan, according to a readout of their call provided by China’s foreign ministry.
“President Xi emphasised that the Taiwan question is the most important issue in China-US relations,” the readout said. “China must safeguard its own sovereignty and territorial integrity, and will never allow Taiwan to be separated. The US must handle the issue of arms sales to Taiwan with prudence.”
Continue reading...Huge release of files provides extraordinary detail on the extent of the disgraced financier’s network
Among the new trove of 3m files relating to Jeffrey Epstein released last week are a vast number of stories shedding light on his relationships with prominent figures in the US, the UK, and around the world. Inclusion in the files does not imply wrongdoing or knowledge of Epstein’s wrongdoing – but a sampling of some of the details they include provides extraordinary detail on the extent of his network.
Continue reading...The chairman of Paul Weiss dined with Jeffrey Epstein and sought his help getting his son a job with a Woody Allen film production
Brad Karp, the longtime chair of powerful Wall Street law firm Paul Weiss, has resigned his top leadership role and will be replaced by partner Scott Barshay, the firm said on Wednesday.
Karp has faced scrutiny after emails released by the US Department of Justice on Friday revealed extensive personal and business communications he had with the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Continue reading...President Trump is awarding the Medal of Honor to a pilot whose faceoff with Soviet fighter jets remained secret for a half-century and a soldier who died in Afghanistan while shielding somebody from a suicide bomber.
Exclusive: David O’Sullivan says war-based economy may be nearing point of becoming ‘unsustainable’
Western sanctions are having a “significant impact” on the Russian economy, the EU’s sanctions envoy has said, ahead of the fourth anniversary of Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
David O’Sullivan, a veteran Irish official, said sanctions were “not a silver bullet” and would always face circumvention, but insisted that after four years he was confident they were having an effect.
Continue reading...Why Putin isn’t thriving in Trump’s anarchic world.
Venezuela, Iran, and the dicey politics of military intervention.
Valve has pushed back the launch of its Steam Machine, Steam Frame and Steam Controller hardware from its original Q1 2026 window to a vaguer "first half of the year" target, blaming the ongoing memory and storage shortage that has been squeezing the tech industry. The company said in a post today that rising component prices and limited availability forced it to revisit both its shipping schedule and pricing plans. Valve had previously indicated the Steam Machine would be priced at the entry level of the PC space.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Illinois governor pledges to put ‘science, preparedness and people’ first by participating in global response network, following similar move by California
The state of Illinois and New York City have both announced that they will join the World Health Organization’s Global Outbreak Alert and Response Network (GOARN), following Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw the US from the global body in 2025.
Illinois’s governor JB Pritzker, a Democrat, made the announcement on Tuesday, confirming that Illinois will become part of the coordinated international network dedicated to monitoring and responding to global disease outbreaks.
Continue reading...Police have accused members of a motorcycle club and a street gang of targeting the judge.
The 5th Dimension had broad crossover success and won six Grammy Awards, including record of the year twice.
A judge says U.S. immigration agents in Oregon must stop arresting people without warrants unless they are likely to escape.
Democratic leaders outlined their demands for funding the Department of Homeland Security beyond next week.
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for Feb. 5
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for Feb. 5, No. 500.
I am looking to get a kush wide footpad for the x7. Is it easy to get replacement grip tape? I do not see many vendors.
| Stock Pint S with around 600 miles on it. Is this something putting gripples on would help with? Tonight I was riding Pacific but typically ride Skyline. [link] [comments] |
"Nancy and Savannah have both contributed so much to the Tucson community," Sally Shamrell, the Guthries' family friend of over 30 years, told CBS News.
Ex-House speaker says at dinner ‘facts are challenged, truth is distorted and press is treated as enemy’ by those in power
The Democratic former speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi, said on Wednesday that press freedom is “under siege” in the United States after the Trump administration arrested a prominent journalist and searched the home of another.
The warning from Pelosi comes on the same day that the Washington Post, which is owned by Jeff Bezos, the Amazon billionaire who has recently sought to curry favor with Donald Trump, conducted mass layoffs of its reporters and editors worldwide.
Continue reading...Some Democratic Colorado lawmakers are demanding answers after reports that "death cards" were left in the vehicles of people detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and over claims that immigration agents used fake traffic stops to detain them.
BMW may have retreated from its controversial plan to charge monthly fees for heated seats, but the German automaker is pressing ahead with subscription-based vehicle features through its ConnectedDrive platform. A company spokesperson told The Drive that BMW "remains fully committed" to ConnectedDrive as part of its global aftersales strategy. Features requiring data connectivity will likely carry recurring fees.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
This is now a Class I recall, meaning that the use of these continuous glucose monitoring systems could cause serious health consequences or death.
Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for Feb. 5, No. 1,692.
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for Feb. 5 #970.
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for Feb. 5, No. 704.
A Covington Army veteran facing deportation after more than 50 years in the U.S. could be removed this week.
As Trump questions the loyalty of a NATO ally, CBS News joins one of its warships taking part in a drill far from home, aimed at defending Europe and the U.S.
"Right now we have the Wild West. I want to see some rules of the road," said Democratic Sen. Richard Blumenthal.
President Trump told NBC News the call to remove 700 immigration officers from Minneapolis came from him.
| Just took it all apart, cleaned with soap and water, surface prepped, and hit with spray paint. a bit of trial and error with colors, but ended up gold base and blue/red fade on the rails with a gold/pink fluorescent fade on the fender. Purple bumpers and got a couple different color charge plugs. [link] [comments] |
Trump’s stopgap bill funds the Department of Homeland Security until 13 February
Tom Homan, the president’s so-called “border czar” is set to speak to reporters in Minneapolis shortly.
A reminder that Homan took over the immigration enforcement operation in Minnesota from senior border official Gregory Bovino, just days after the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti and the mounting backlash in the Twin Cities.
Continue reading...Microsoft has finally delivered on its promise to integrate Sysmon -- the long-standing system monitoring tool from its Sysinternals suite -- directly into Windows, a move that should make life considerably easier for enterprise administrators who have struggled with deploying and managing the utility across thousands of endpoints. The functionality landed this week in Windows Insider builds 26300.7733 (Dev channel) and 26220.7752 (Beta channel). Sysmon allows administrators to capture system events through custom configuration files, filter for specific activity, and pipe the data into standard Windows event logs for pickup by security tools and SIEM pipelines. Mark Russinovich, Microsoft technical fellow and Winternals co-founder, has previously noted the lack of official customer support for Sysmon in production environments -- a gap this integration addresses. The feature ships disabled by default and requires PowerShell to enable. Microsoft notes that any existing Sysmon installation must be uninstalled before activating the built-in version.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Alphabet reports $34.5bn profit and revenue soars 48% in recent quarter as it plans a sharp increase in AI spending
Google’s parent company, Alphabet, beat Wall Street expectations on Wednesday, and is planning a sharp increase in capital spending in 2026 as it continues to invest deeply in AI infrastructure.
Alphabet on Wednesday reported profit of $34.5bn in the recently ended quarter, as revenue from cloud computing soared 48%.
Continue reading...The HPC community has made great strides in energy efficiency over the past 25 years, with a 100x improvement in gigaflops per watt on TOP500 systems. However, the advent of generative AI is changing the rules of the game, both in terms of power consumption and the relative efficiency of systems and software. Does AI spell the end of the road for energy efficiency in HPC?
The short answer is no, but with several caveats. According to Kirk Cameron, the faculty lead the Virginia Tech Institute for Advanced Computing and a co-founder of the GREEN500 list, there is still plenty of work to be done in driving efficiency into HPC systems.
“It hasn’t been solved to my knowledge yet,” Cameron quipped during a presentation at SC25 in St. Louis. “I still have a job.”
Cameron and his Virginia Tech colleague Wu-chun Feng founded the GREEN500 list back in 2006 as a means to spread awareness on the need for energy efficiency in HPC, as well as to help drive improvements. Cameron had been studying the topic for years, but outside of a handful of researchers, interest in the field was practically non-existent.
“In 2001 the notions of Green HPC and energy proportional computing were unknown,” Cameron wrote in a 2013 HPCwire story. “There was no tangible evidence that power was an issue in supercomputers. Vendors simply built large systems to customer specifications. Performance kept increasing exponentially and while performance efficiency was of interest, power efficiency was not.”

Much of Cameron’s work has been on closing the “efficiency gap” he identified nearly 20 years ago (Image courtesy Kirk Cameron)
Back then, the bulk of the HPC community didn’t worry about how efficiently their systems were using electricity and whether that use was sustainable, Cameron said in his SC25 presentation. There was an assumption that it was a minor problem that would be solved by industry and government and academic labs.
Cameron and Feng didn’t believe that, and they foresaw there was a ton of work to make HPC systems efficient. However, HPC had a few things going for it, namely that the nature of HPC systems lent themselves well to efficiency. So they set out to do something about it.
Their first step was to gather data, which was a challenge at the time because systems were not instrumented to measure power consumption at the granularity that they needed. “The information was pretty sparse back then in terms of how much power things actually consumed,” Cameron said.
When the electricity consumption data was gathered, it showed there was a yawning efficiency gap between the potential efficiency of HPC systems and the actual efficiency demonstrated in real-world systems. While many supercomputers were capable of power efficiency in the 50% to 60% range, many were actually running in the 10% to 20% range.
“The trends are clear and irrefutable,” Cameron wrote back in 2013. “Supercomputer power was a liability and would soon limit scalability. Of course, it would be almost 4 years before the community at-large began to acknowledge supercomputer power was a fundamental constraint. Let’s just say I’ve learned to be patient.”
Impacting the efficiency curve is something else entirely. The approach advocated by Cameron has been to identify opportunities in the HPC workloads themselves to cut out energy waste. One source of energy waste is idling CPUs. While supercomputers are designed to run flat-out for hours or days at a time, their workloads are not uniform and they’re not static.

Energy efficiency of systems on the GREEN500 have improved by 100x over the past 15 years (Image courtesy Kirk Cameron)
One source of low-hanging fruit has been to identify when CPUs are idle because the system is moving data, either between memory on the bus or over the network. “Those are opportunities for energy savings and energy efficiency,” he said at SC25.
Fast forward two decades, and the work of Cameron and Feng has borne fruit. The HPC community has broken the exascale barrier with systems that consume 30 megawatts or less. What’s more, systems on the GREEN500 list are now, on average, 100x more efficient that they were 20 years ago. Yes, the energy consumption has increased exponentially, but production of gigaflops has grown even faster.
“Two orders of magnitude improvement in efficiency across the list,” Cameron mused. “I think that’s pretty impressive.”
In November 2025, for the first time, the top five most efficient systems on the GREEN500 list–all BullSequana XH3000 systems with Nvidia GH200 Superchips and Quad-Rail Invidia InfiniBand NDR200 interconnects–all scored more than 68.5 gigaflops per watt on the power efficiency metric. More efficiency gains are expected in teh future.
“That’s a tribute to all the people that worked on energy efficiency over the years,” Cameron said. “We did work a lot of work. We got a lot of things done. But the stakes just got higher, didn’t they.”
Despite the real progress made in efficiency, energy remains a critical factor in HPC. The current trend, of course, is the huge demand for generative AI, along with the HPC and energy that make it run.
We’ve gone from exascale systems that consume about 30 megawatts of power to giant clusters, like xAI’s Colussus, that will consume 10 times that amount in a single system. Multiple GPU-heavy clusters are being built in massive AI factories to run AI training and inference workloads. At least five gigawatt-scale data centers are under construction and due to op

Kirk Cameron is a professor of computer science at Virginia Tech
en this year across the United States, with many more slated for the years to come. All told, about 100 gigawatts of new data center capacity is slated to come online by the end of the decade.
Cameron sees some of the same energy efficiency issues from the early 2000s coming around again. For starters, there’s the issue of whether people actually care about energy efficiency and are willing to do something about it, as opposed to assuming that it’s someone else’s problem. Secondly, there are new challenges related to measuring power consumption. Lastly, what are the steps can be taken to reduce energy waste?
“We did this before,” Cameron said in his SC25 presentation. “But I think it’s going to be more important to consider the tradeoffs.”
There are some interesting factors in AI and energy efficiency. For starters, it turns out that LLMs running on GPUs can be a pretty efficient use of electricity, Cameron said.
“These are really dense linear algebra codes that are regular, that are compute bound or high data reuse. The more power you give them, the more compute they can do in a given second,” Cameron said. “They don’t leave a lot of room for energy efficiency, because they actually use the hardware pretty efficiently.”
GPUs are less efficient running other HPC workloads, such as sparse unstructured linear algebra codes, which demonstrate irregular memory accesses and low arithmetic intensity, Cameron said. Examples of these workloads include building design, seismic modeling, and Web search, he said.
The least efficient use of GPUs involve moving data across memory or the network, Cameron said. Examples of these workloads include epidemic prediction, radiation therapy, or risk modeling. These inefficient workloads are memory-bound and communication-heavy, and are good candidates for improve energy efficiency, he said.

Idle processors are a major target for efficiency improvements (Image courtesy Kirk Cameron)
Gaining efficiency in these HPC systems will likely involve making tradeoffs. HPC users may tolerate slightly lower accuracy in an LLM prediction, for example, if it means saving more energy. Similarly, device makers may want to throttle down an inefficient piece of hardware when it’s not being used with low-efficiency codes.
One possibility for efficiency gains is to use specialized hardware instead of commercial-off-the-shelf (COTS) technology. This was attempted in the early 2000s and didn’t work out so well, Cameron said. It’s also quite expensive. While it’s one possible avenue for efficiency gains, it’s not a likely one.
More than likely, HPC will continue to use COTS technology. That’s because massive investment in AI–not traditional HPC workloads–is driving the design for the next generation of GPUs.
“I know it’s hard to swallow for some of us, myself included, but we don’t drive technology innovation,” Cameron said. “Our job in HPC will be to adapt the technologies that we see in the other markets–cloud or AI–for our purposes, to exploit them as best we can.”
The post AI and Power: Where Does Green HPC Go from Here? appeared first on HPCwire.
Gadgets, desk accessories, widgets – whatever you they were called, they were a must-have feature for various operating systems for a while. Windows in particular has tried making them happen six times, and every time, they failed to really catch on and ended up being killed, only for the company to try again a few years later.
Microsoft has been trying to solve the same UX problem since 1997: how to surface live information without making you launch an app. They’ve shipped six different implementations across nearly 30 years. Each one died from a different fundamental flaw – performance, security, screen space, privacy, engagement. And each death triggered the same reflex: containment.
↫ Pavel Osadchuk
There’s quite a few memories in this article. I never actually used Active Desktop back when it came out, because I seem to remember the channels feature was either not available in The Netherlands or the available channels were American stuff we didn’t care about. The sidebar in Vista had a lot of potential, and I did like the feature, but there weren’t a lot of great widgets and we hadn’t entered the era of omnipresent notifications begging for out attention just yet, so use cases remained elusive.
Now Metro, that’s where things came together, at least for me. I was en enthusiastic Windows Phone user – I imported two Windows Phone devices from the US to be an early adopter – and I still consider its live tiles with notifications and other useful information to be the most pleasant user interface for a mobile device, bar none. It may have taken Microsoft six tries, but they nailed it with that one, and I’m still sad the Windows Phone user interface lost out to whatever iOS and Android offered.
On desktops and laptops, though, it’s a different story, and I don’t think the Metro tiles concept ever made any sense there. Widgets as they exist in Windows now mostly seem like an annoying distraction, and I’ve never seen anyone actually use them. Does anyone even keep them enabled at all?
The message, believed to be from Ghislaine Maxwell, was released as part of the latest tranche of the Epstein files
An email believed to have been sent by Ghislaine Maxwell appears to confirm a photograph of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor with his arm around Virginia Giuffre’s waist is real.
The message, released as part of the latest tranche of the Epstein files, was headed “draft statement” and sent by “G Maxwell” to Jeffrey Epstein in 2015.
Continue reading...Luke Pollard says blueprint expected last autumn is ‘a bigger task than many people outside defence realise’
A government minister has defended long delays to a military spending plan that are also stalling the UK’s next-generation Tempest fighter jet programme, but refused to say when it will be complete.
The defence investment plan (DIP), originally expected last autumn, has faced repeated postponements amid warnings that the military faces a £28bn funding gap over the next four years.
Continue reading...Industry bigger than all but seven world economies, and accounts for more than third of China’s economic growth
China’s clean energy industries drove more than 90% of the country’s investment growth last year, making the sectors bigger than all but seven of the world’s economies, a new analysis has shown.
For the second time in three years, the report showed the manufacture, installation and export of batteries, electric cars, solar, wind and related technologies accounted for more than a third of China’s economic growth.
Continue reading...Go behind the scenes with our team as we find and make sense of the numbers.
Microsoft Research, in collaboration with various others, has just released LiteBox, a library operating system.
LiteBox is a sandboxing library OS that drastically cuts down the interface to the host, thereby reducing attack surface. It focuses on easy interop of various “North” shims and “South” platforms. LiteBox is designed for usage in both kernel and non-kernel scenarios.
LiteBox exposes a Rust-y
↫ LiteBox GitHub Pagenix/rustix-inspired “North” interface when it is provided aPlatforminterface at its “South”. These interfaces allow for a wide variety of use-cases, easily allowing for connection between any of the North–South pairs.
Suggested use-cases are running unmodified Linux applications on Windows, sandboxing Linux applications on Linux, running OP-TEE applications on Linux, and more. It’s written in Rust, and the code is available on GitHub under an MIT license.
Besides noise, what does Zero Vector Frequency affect when it comes to board performance or riding?
The Puerto Rican singer’s highly anticipated Super Bowl half-time show has inspired non-Spanish speakers to study Puerto Rican dialect and slang
Bad Bunny is expected to perform the Super Bowl half-time show on Sunday entirely in Spanish – which has inspired fans to quickly learn the language.
In October, the Puerto Rican singer – born Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio – kicked off the 51st season of Saturday Night Live expressing pride over the achievement in Spanish, after which he said in English, “If you didn’t understand what I just said, you have four months to learn!”
Continue reading...Major obstacles to viable deal remain after Volodymyr Zelenskyy accuses Moscow of violating energy truce
Ukrainian and Russian negotiators have held a “productive” first round of US-led peace talks in Abu Dhabi, as Washington seeks a pathway to end the nearly four-year war in Ukraine.
The two-day trilateral talks that are due to continue on Thursday come after Volodymyr Zelenskyy accused Moscow of exploiting a US-backed energy truce last week to stockpile weapons before launching a record number of ballistic missile attacks at Ukraine on Tuesday.
Continue reading...By age 20 diagnosis rates for men and women almost equal, research finds, challenging assumptions of gender discrepancy
Females may be just as likely to be autistic as males but boys are up to four times more likely to be diagnosed in childhood, according to a large-scale study.
Research led by the Karolinska Institutet in Sweden scrutinised the diagnosis rates of autism for people born in Sweden between 1985 and 2020. Of the 2.7 million people tracked, 2.8% were diagnosed with autism between the ages of two and 37.
Continue reading...We may want to go places with Ken and order a bunch of food after watching these.
The five new heroes offer a variety of playstyles that should appeal to a range of players across all three roles.
The five new heroes offer a variety of playstyles that should appeal to a range of players across all three roles.
Singer was member of vocal group that scored 1960s hits with Up, Up and Away and Aquarius/Let the Sunshine In
Singer LaMonte McLemore has died. He was a founding member of the 5th Dimension, a vocal group whose smooth pop and soul sounds with a touch of psychedelia brought them big hits in the 1960s and 70s.
McLemore died on Tuesday aged 90 at his home in Las Vegas, surrounded by his family, his representative Jeremy Westby said in a statement. He died of natural causes after having a stroke.
Continue reading...Former Lieutenant Governor Tahesha Way is not the clear front-runner in New Jersey’s special congressional election on Thursday. She’s seventh in fundraising out of 10 candidates as of last week’s Federal Election Commission deadline, and public polling has been sparse. But as the race drew close to the finish line, the Israel lobby made her the beneficiary of a last-minute push.
In the final weeks before the election, an Intercept analysis has found, 30 donors to groups including the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, its super PAC, and Democratic Majority for Israel have poured more than $50,000 into Way’s campaign. On Friday, amid the fundraising push and less than a week before the election, DMFI officially endorsed her.
The lobby is known for spending against progressives and the most vocal critics of the state of Israel, but in New Jersey, it appears to be backing one moderate to pick off another. Yet more pro-Israel money in the race comes at the expense of Tom Malinowski, who is no progressive on Israel policy but nevertheless has become the subject of AIPAC ire — marking a reversal for the group, which supported him in 2022.
AIPAC’s super PAC, United Democracy Project, has spent more $2.3 million on ads against Malinowski. The ads do not mention Israel but attack Malinowski on immigration, saying he helped fund “Trump’s deportation force” because he voted in favor of a 2019 bipartisan appropriations bill that funded the Department of Homeland Security. The majority of Democrats, including many supported by AIPAC, voted for the bill.
In a statement to The Intercept, UDP spokesperson Patrick Dorton made no mention of Malinowski’s DHS funding vote. He said Malinowski had fallen afoul of the group’s policy priorities by discussing the possibility of conditioning aid to Israel.
“It’s our goal to build the largest bipartisan pro-Israel majority in Congress. There are several candidates in this race far more pro-Israel than Tom Malinowski,” Dorton said.
Way and Malinowski are competing in a crowded race in New Jersey’s 11th Congressional District to replace former Rep. Mikie Sherrill, who vacated the seat after she was elected governor.
Way and Malinowski’s campaigns did not respond to The Intercept’s requests for comment.
Also running are Analilia Mejia, the former political director for Sen. Bernie Sanders’s 2020 presidential campaign; veteran Zach Beecher; Passaic County commissioner and election lawyer John Bartlett; former Morris Township Mayor Jeff Grayzel; and Essex County Commissioner Brendan Gill.
Way already had substantial support from the Democratic Lieutenant Governors Association, which endorsed her and has spent more than $1.7 million backing her campaign, almost half of what it spent in total last cycle. But even with close to $4 million in outside spending on her side, she has lagged behind her opponents in fundraising. She’s raised just over $400,000 — compared to Malinowski’s over $1.1 million, more than $800,000 for Gill, and over half a million for Beecher. Bartlett has raised more than $460,000, Grayzel has raised $428,000, and Mejia has raised just over $420,000.
Now, pro-Israel donors who have given to AIPAC to boost other pro-Israel candidates are trying to help Way close the gap. They include retired investor Peter Langerman, who has given $75,000 to AIPAC’s United Democracy Project since 2023 and $12,000 to AIPAC since 2022. Another Way donor, Florida loan executive Joel Edelstein, has given $25,000 to UDP since 2023 and $3,500 to AIPAC since 2022.
Among Way’s other donors are Bennett Greenspan, founder of the genealogy company Family Tree DNA, who has given $40,000 to United Democracy Project, $4,000 to DMFI PAC, and $1,250 to AIPAC PAC since 2022. Way donor and New Jersey real estate developer Michael Gottlieb gave $25,000 to UDP in 2023. Another Way donor, founder and former president of Microsoft partner HSO, Jack Ades, has given $10,750 to AIPAC since 2024. Gottlieb and Ades have given to Republican candidates including Reps. Mike Lawler and Elise Stefanik in New York; Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La.; Nikki Haley’s presidential campaign; and the Republican group WinRed.
More than half of these contributions all landed on January 14.
More than half of the contributions to Way — $33,000 of the $53,000 in total — all landed on January 14, a common sign that outside groups have sent out a fundraising push to their network.
Another donor to Way’s campaign is Joseph Korn, a New Jersey real estate developer who served on the New Jersey board of the Jewish National Fund, a controversial national organization that has funded settler groups in the West Bank.
Way is campaigning on a relatively centrist platform that primarily includes fighting against President Donald Trump’s agenda. She’s also running on strengthening the Affordable Care Act, ensuring access to reproductive care, protecting democracy and voting rights, and lowering costs without raising taxes, including raising the cap on state and local tax deductions, or SALT. Her website does not mention foreign policy or Israel.
Way is also endorsed by the Congressional Black Caucus PAC; the Democratic Association of Secretaries of State; IVYPAC, which backs candidates who are members of the historically Black Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority; and several other New Jersey organizations.
The Israel lobby’s support for Way may not ultimately help its policy priorities. As a recent column in the Forward points out, by pitting Way and Malinowski against each other, AIPAC donors might help a more progressive candidate get elected.
The post AIPAC Donors Flood Last-Minute New Jersey House Pick With Cash appeared first on The Intercept.
Mistral AI's new Voxtral Mini Transcribe 2 and Voxtral Realtime are intended to run on your device, meaning your conversations never find their way to a data center.
The reduction of ICE officers in Minneapolis is a significant scaling back of Homeland Security’s presence and comes after two U.S. citizens were killed.
I've tested dozens of inexpensive earbuds to find the best values. These are my current top bargain picks, almost all of which cost less than $100, and some less than $50.
A government lawyer who told a judge that her job "sucks" during a court hearing stemming from the Trump administration's immigration enforcement surge in Minnesota has been removed from her Justice Department post.
Here's everything you need to know about ski mountaineering, aka skimo, and when you can watch the newest Olympic sport.
Soon, you may be able to access every family member's health data in one place.
The president noted plans to visit China in April, as Beijing sends a warning to White House over Taiwan arms sales.

Why Should Delaware Care?
School was disrupted in certain areas of the state on Wednesday after several districts received bomb threats. Law enforcement investigators ultimately said they were not credible. They also said that schools in states across the country had received similar threats.
At least five schools in Delaware received automated voice-recorded bomb threats on Wednesday, and the calls might be linked to larger nationwide threats.
The Delaware State Police confirmed to Spotlight Delaware that they learned that “multiple states nationwide have received similar threats and language via voicemail.”
For some schools in Delaware, the calls disrupted their daily schedules. Others went on with their days as planned.
David Karas, spokesman for the Wilmington Police Department, confirmed that officers responded to Padua Academy and Cab Calloway School of the Arts in reference to reports of bomb threats. He said no devices nor other material threats were identified.
Delaware State Police also said its investigators found no evidence of bombs, despite the reported threats.
In a message sent to families on Wednesday, Concord High School Principal Jeff Lawson said the school had received a “threat of violence” that was left on the school’s answering system. Law enforcement determined it was not a credible threat, he said.
Also on Wednesday, the Capital School District announced it was implementing a two-hour delay for students in grades 1 through 8, due to a “transportation disruption,” caused by multiple bomb threats that affected school operations.
In the statement, the Capital said the delay was implemented “out of an abundance of caution” as the alerts were being investigated. They said nothing was found at any school facility.
Farther to the south, Cape Henlopen School District said law enforcement determined that a threat made to its high school “was a hoax made to cause disruption to school operations.”
Unlike the Capital School District, there was no delayed opening and the Cape Henlopen High School day continued as normal, according to the district.
Delaware House Speaker Melissa Minor-Brown said in a Facebook post that she is also aware of the bomb threats made against multiple schools across the state, including her son’s school.
“As a mother, I am relieved to know that all threats involving our schools are taken seriously and investigated thoroughly,” she said in the post.
Minor-Brown also noted that law enforcement believes the threat “to be of low credibility but remains vigilant.”
The post Some classes disrupted after several Delaware schools received bomb threats appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
NASA used Anthropic's Claude for an experiment in plotting the rover's course, which the agency deemed successful.
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission said Nike may have engaged in "a pattern or practice of disparate treatment against White employees."
EEOC demands firm turn over ‘DEI-related objectives’ amid Trump administration’s crackdown on diversity initiatives
The US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) has launched an investigation into Nike over allegations that the sports giant discriminated against white employees and job applicants.
The federal agency is demanding that Nike turn over information related to the allegations, including the company’s “Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion-related 2025 Targets and other DEI-related objectives”, it announced on Wednesday.
Continue reading...Hey, so like heres how i wired up my shiny new momentary switches:
First confirm you are building for thor 301
the size of connectors are JST-GH 1.25
i went ahead and bought a little kit on amazon of GH connectors with precrimped ends, i find this is the only possible way to do it after buying a crimper and tiny wire and throwing both away YRMV….
the photo below shows how i pinned my male end
from left to right, lever down:
Black: Ground(GND)
Yellow: ONL
Red: 5v
Green: ONH
switches with lights will always have the same pin orentation.
switches without lights will not have Positive or Negative terminals
Here is your cheatsheet
(-) NEGATIVE: GND = BLACK
(NO) NORMALLY OPEN: ONL = YELLOW
(+) POSITIVE: 5V = RED
(C) COMMON: ONH = GREEN
BOOM, wrap it up and call it a day.
Feel free to ask any questions, other controllers pins will vary, and you will need to adjust.
Talks that had been scheduled in Turkey salvaged after Arab states convince White House not to walk away from negotiations
Talks between the US and Iran scheduled for Friday have been brought back from the brink of collapse after the US initially rejected Iran’s request to move them from Turkey to Oman without the presence of a group of Arab states.
Iran’s foreign minister said late on Wednesday that the talks would proceed in Oman after reports of a last-minute effort by Arab states to convince the White House not to walk away from negotiations.
Continue reading...Approved by voters, the new map gives Democrats as many as five seats, neutralizing five GOP seats added by Texas
California can use a new congressional map that was approved by voters in November, the supreme court has ruled, handing Democrats a major victory in their effort to neutralize Donald Trump’s push to protect Republicans’ fragile House majority in this year’s midterm elections.
In December, the court said Texas could use its redrawn congressional map in 2026, designed to carve out as many as five Republican-friendly congressional districts, rejecting a lower-court ruling that found it had been racially gerrymandered.
Continue reading...If you snagged a ticket for the big game, AT&T's new service helps you stay connected, even for T-Mobile and Verizon customers.
The four prosecutors who spearheaded a $250 million Minnesota fraud case have all left the U.S. Attorney's Office in a growing wave of resignations.
Elizabeth Zuna Caisaguano and her mother released from Texas facility to head back home to reunite with her father
A 10-year-old Minnesota girl has been released from US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody after a month in detention in Dilley, Texas, school officials said, one of hundreds of children detained at the facility.
Elizabeth Zuna Caisaguano, a fourth-grader, and her mother walked free from the immigration detention center in Dilley, Texas, on Tuesday night. Elizabeth is a student in the school district of Columbia Heights, a Minneapolis suburb, which is also home to five-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos, who was released from Dilley over the weekend amid widespread outrage about his detention.
Continue reading...From indestructible wallets to Crocs (yes, Crocs), we rounded up the best guy-approved Valentine’s Day gifts they won’t know how they lived without
26 sentimental and practical US Valentine’s Day gifts for her in 2026
Sign up for the Filter US newsletter, your weekly guide to buying fewer, better things
Whether you have been together for years or just made it official, one thing remains certain: he is going to claim he doesn’t need anything. But secretly, he will appreciate a really good Valentine’s Day gift. Many men in our lives default to what they have always used and loved, from threadbare T-shirts to melted spatulas. (And if that’s you too, we won’t judge if you peek at this list for yourself.)
When thinking of a present for your go-to guy, prioritize the gift of novelty. Introduce him to a new gadget he hasn’t thought of. Show him that it’s OK to cry with a personalized keepsake commemorating your shared history. Introduce a little color into his life if his year has been a bit bleak.
Best personalized gift: Custom ‘Met, Engaged, Married, Live’ map print
Best food gift: Levain Classic Tin Gift Set
Continue reading...Report offers alternative of the US navy retaining boats and operating them out of Australian bases
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A new United States congressional report openly contemplates not selling any nuclear submarines to Australia – as promised under the Aukus agreement – because America wants to retain control of the submarines for a potential conflict with China over Taiwan.
The report by the US Congressional Research Service, Congress’s policy research arm, posits an alternative “military division of labour” under which the submarines earmarked for sale to Australia are instead retained under US command to be sailed out of Australian bases.
Continue reading...Health secretary to increase pay offer and guarantee working conditions for resident doctors only
Wes Streeting is to offer resident doctors a bigger pay rise than other NHS staff as part of a new package of measures to try to end their long-running dispute.
The health secretary also plans to guarantee resident doctors in England that hospitals will be fined if they do not give them good working conditions, such as rest areas and access to hot food.
Continue reading...Former WaPo executive editor Martin Baron told CBS News the paper's coverage will be "dramatically diminished" because of the job cuts.
Two-decade study indicates a diet rich in foods such as olive oil, nuts and vegetables can cut risk of every type of stroke
A Mediterranean diet can reduce the risk of every type of stroke, in some cases by as much as 25%, a large study conducted over two decades suggests.
A diet rich in olive oil, nuts, seafood, whole grains and vegetables has previously been linked to a number of health benefits. However, until now there has been limited evidence of how it might affect the risk of all forms of stroke.
Continue reading...Over 50 million Americans will face higher utility costs as a result of rate hikes approved in 2025, according to PowerLines.
Ryan Routh, the man convicted in a 2024 assassination attempt of President Trump at his Florida golf course, has been sentenced to life in prison.
European security officials believe two Russian space vehicles have intercepted the communications of at least a dozen key satellites over the continent. From a report: Officials believe that the likely interceptions, which have not previously been reported, risk not only compromising sensitive information transmitted by the satellites but could also allow Moscow to manipulate their trajectories or even crash them. Russian space vehicles have shadowed European satellites more intensively over the past three years, at a time of high tension between the Kremlin and the West following Moscow's full-scale invasion of Ukraine. For several years, military and civilian space authorities in the West have been tracking the activities of Luch-1 and Luch-2 -- two Russian objects that have carried out repeated suspicious maneuvers in orbit. Both vehicles have made risky close approaches to some of Europe's most important geostationary satellites, which operate high above the Earth and service the continent, including the UK, as well as large parts of Africa and the Middle East. According to orbital data and ground-based telescopic observations, they have lingered nearby for weeks at a time, particularly over the past three years. Since its launch in 2023, Luch-2 has approached 17 European satellites.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Commons committee chair says DWP repeatedly failed to prioritise the vulnerable and was slow to fix errors
The government’s most senior welfare official has been accused of presiding over a “culture of complacency” that led to thousands of unpaid carers inadvertently running up huge benefit debts.
Debbie Abrahams, the chair of the work and pensions select committee, said the Department for Work and Pensions had repeatedly failed to prioritise vulnerable people, was unwilling to learn from its mistakes, and slow to fix errors.
Continue reading...Beyond model scale alone, AI for science is increasingly being shaped by the data and compute infrastructure that allows algorithms to search and connect scientific evidence. In biomedicine, for example, data continues to grow and fragment across papers, databases, and clinical records. One response to this fragmentation is the use of knowledge graphs, which turn the scattered data into connected maps that both scientists and algorithms can explore.
That approach was illustrated in a recent talk by researchers at the Renaissance Computing Institute (RENCI), who presented their ROBOKOP platform, or Reasoning Over Biomedical Objects linked in Knowledge Oriented Pathways. ROBOKOP is a large-scale biomedical knowledge graph system that links genes, drugs, diseases, and pathways into a navigable map of evidence, which can then be paired with machine learning to prioritize hypotheses in drug repurposing and rare disease research.
The talk featured Kathleen Carter, a bioinformatics data scientist at RENCI, which is based at UNC Chapel Hill. In practice, ROBOKOP treats biomedical discovery as a structured search over existing evidence, in contrast to large language models that generate answers by synthesizing patterns from text. By modeling biomedical knowledge as explicit nodes and relationships, the system allows researchers to trace proposed connections back to specific pieces of evidence rather than relying on probabilistic inference alone. That structure is especially important for the field of biomedicine because the same concept may appear under multiple names, findings can conflict depending on context, and mechanisms may be both beneficial and harmful under different conditions. Encoding those relationships directly into the data helps preserve nuance while keeping large-scale search feasible.
Operationally, ROBOKOP is designed as a large-scale data integration and graph analytics pipeline. Building the knowledge graph involves curating and ingesting diverse biomedical data sources, transforming them into a shared structure, resolving terminology through ontologies, and periodically reassessing source quality. Carter described a governance process that ranks candidate sources using FAIR-style criteria, with an emphasis on open-access data and selective use of proprietary resources where appropriate. The result is a semantic integration layer that allows downstream analytics to operate on normalized concepts, rather than repeatedly rediscovering that different strings refer to the same protein, phenotype, or chemical.
A second layer in the workflow Carter described is graph machine learning. The knowledge graph is embedded, transforming entities and relationships into numerical representations that allow models to assess similarity, neighborhood structure, and multi-hop connectivity. At scale, this stage becomes operationally significant, as embedding large graphs, refreshing models as data evolves, and evaluating tens of millions of candidate relationships place sustained demands on storage and compute resources. Even when inference takes the form of path-based traversal, maintaining and updating the underlying graph remains a substantial part of the workload.
One of the most mature applications of ROBOKOP is large-scale drug repurposing, where the system is used to scan existing biomedical knowledge for underexplored connections between approved drugs and known diseases. Carter described how RENCI’s graph is integrated into Every Cure’s MATRIX project, which evaluates tens of millions of potential drug–disease pairs by tracing biologically plausible paths through genes, pathways, and clinical associations. Rather than proposing novel compounds, the workflow prioritizes existing drugs that have already cleared regulatory hurdles, narrowing an otherwise unmanageable search space into ranked candidates for human review. Those candidates are then enhanced with supporting evidence from the literature and clinical data before being assessed by medical experts, creating a pipeline that moves from graph-based search to validation and, in some cases, clinical exploration.
A recurring theme in the RENCI talk was data quality and provenance. Carter emphasized that ROBOKOP is built primarily on open-access biomedical resources, drawing from established public databases that span chemicals, proteins, ontologies, and cellular interactions. Each source is individually parsed and transformed into a common structure before being added to the graph, a process that combines automation with hands-on curation. To manage scope and reliability, the team evaluates candidate sources through a formal review process that ranks them against FAIR-style principles, periodically revisiting those decisions as data and standards evolve. While proprietary datasets can offer additional coverage, particularly in commercial biology knowledge graphs, RENCI has largely prioritized openness and transparency, opting to use licensed data selectively rather than as a core dependency. The system also has mechanisms in place for researchers to nominate missing sources and refine how existing data is modeled over time.
This work reflects how progress in AI for science is being shaped not only by advances in foundation models, but also by investments in data integration, graph infrastructure, and compute systems that make scientific evidence searchable and reusable at scale. As scientific knowledge continues to expand faster than any individual or AI model can absorb, systems like ROBOKOP that emphasize transparency and provenance will become critical for giving this knowledge the structure needed for scientific progress. For biomedicine in particular, the payoff will not be just better answers, but more transparent paths from data to labwork to the clinic. Learn more about ROBOKOP and knowledge graphs by viewing the RENCI discussion at this link.
The post ROBOKOP is RENCI’s Graph-Based Approach to Biomedical Evidence appeared first on HPCwire.
Anthropic's Super Bowl ads take a shot at OpenAI, but a much more important question looms.
Starmer faces criticism from MPs on all sides of the Commons
This liveblog is now closed. Read the politics team’s report on today’s developments here
PMQs is starting soon. Here is the list of MPs down to ask a question.
The Reform UK MP Lee Anderson has dismissed claims that his party’s plan to support the pub industry would cost far more than the £3bn it claims.
To be honest with you, we’re not interested in who you’ve been talking to. We’re more interested who we’ve been talking to, and we’ve been talking to landlords and small businesses up and down the country, and every landlord that I speak to … they want this VAT cut.
We can go on all day about the numbers. I’m not interested in the numbers that the BBC have sourced. You’re hardly a bastion of truth at the BBC when it comes to things like this.
This doesn’t add up. This is an unfunded tax cut which also pushes hundreds of thousands of children into poverty.
Reform says that reinstating the two-child limit for most, but not all, families would save £2.29bn in 2026/27. The party claims its package of tax cuts would also cost £2.29bn – making it cost neutral – with the bulk coming from a proposal to halve VAT on hospitality, which it estimates would cost £1.7bn.
Continue reading...The Supreme Court declined to block California's new congressional map that could net Democrats five seats in the upcoming midterm elections.
MPs say release of papers on Mandelson’s appointment as US ambassador could trigger leadership challenge
Labour MPs have warned that Keir Starmer’s days as prime minister are numbered after a day of fury over the appointment of Peter Mandelson as US ambassador despite his friendship with Jeffrey Epstein.
The government was on the brink of a defeat in the Commons until a mid-debate amendment brokered by Meg Hillier and Angela Rayner to force the release of documents about Mandelson’s appointment and the depth of his relationship with the convicted child sex offender.
Continue reading...The documentary premiered at the Kennedy Center. Three days later, the president announced he was shutting it down
This was originally published in This Week in Trumpland; sign up to receive it in your inbox every Wednesday
Has anyone seen Melania (the film) yet? I have. I went to watch it on Friday morning. The idea was to interview other people watching the movie: to get a sense of why they wanted to see it, how they felt about Melania, how weird they were, etc.
It didn’t really work that well in the end, because most of the crowd at the AMC in midtown Manhattan were journalists trying to do the exact same thing as me. As far as I could tell, three non-reporters attended our showing. Of the two who agreed to talk to me, one was there because he had a monthly movie theater pass, and the other was a man who, without wanting to be too unkind, had a very low bar for compelling drama. (“I think it’s interesting just to kind of see, you know, how her life really is, at least to some extent,” this person told me.)
Continue reading...Mortgage interest rates are much lower than they were one year ago. Here's how much a $500,000 costs monthly now.
PLANO, Texas, Feb. 4, 2026 — Siemens today announced the acquisition of Canopus AI, an innovator in computational and AI-driven metrology solutions, enabling semiconductor manufacturers to achieve new levels of precision and efficiency in wafer and mask inspection processes. This acquisition strengthens Siemens’ position in the semiconductor manufacturing ecosystem and expands its semiconductor design and manufacturing digital thread by integrating additional cutting-edge metrology technologies, enhanced with advanced AI capabilities.

Siemens has acquired Canopus AI to expands its semiconductor design and manufacturing digital thread by integrating additional cutting-edge metrology technologies, enhanced with advanced AI capabilities
The semiconductor industry faces increasingly complex manufacturing challenges as device geometries continue to shrink and production volumes scale. Massive metrology has become critical to ensuring quality and yield in advanced semiconductor fabrication. Canopus AI’s innovative AI-powered solutions complement Siemens’ existing portfolio, providing semiconductor manufacturers with intelligent inspection and measurement capabilities that drive operational excellence.
“The acquisition of Canopus AI exemplifies Siemens’ commitment to leveraging industrial AI to solve critical challenges in semiconductor manufacturing,” said Tony Hemmelgarn, president and CEO, Siemens Digital Industry Software. “By combining the computational lithography and manufacturing physics simulation capability in our Calibre portfolio with Canopus-AI’s advanced metrology and inspection technologies, we are creating a differentiated, end-to-end EDA digital thread that improves the fidelity of printed wafer patterns, accelerates yield ramp and reduces time-to-volume for advanced nodes. This integration further advances our vision of a comprehensive, high-accuracy, semiconductor manufacturing digital twin, enabling sub-nanometer process control and mask development.”
Founded in 2021 and based in Grenoble, France, Canopus AI is a fast-growing software and AI company dedicated to revolutionizing wafer and mask metrology and inspection. Canopus AI is pioneering ‘Metrospection,’ a revolutionary approach that enhances metrology and inspection workflows with AI. By bridging the gap between conventional wafer metrology and inspection, this comprehensive software framework uses AI to help chip designers and manufacturers meet the extreme precision requirements of advanced technology nodes.
“We are delighted to join Siemens and bring the power of AI-enabled metrology in the semiconductor industry to a broader audience as part of Siemens’ EDA community of users,” said Joël Alanis, chief executive officer, Canopus AI. “Together, we’ll empower innovators pushing the boundaries of semiconductor design and manufacturing with robust wafer and mask metrology and inspection and help them to meet the challenges of the rapidly changing semiconductor industry.”
The transaction closed on January 12, 2026. To learn more about the Canopus AI acquisition and how Siemens is committed to leveraging AI technologies to solve critical challenges in semiconductor manufacturing, visit https://blogs.sw.siemens.com/calibre/2026/02/04/siemens-acquires-canopusai.
About Siemens Digital Industries Software
Siemens Digital Industries Software helps organizations of all sizes digitally transform using software, hardware and services from the Siemens Xcelerator business platform. Siemens’ software and the comprehensive digital twin enable companies to optimize their design, engineering and manufacturing processes to turn today’s ideas into the sustainable products of the future. From chips to entire systems, from product to process, across all industries. Siemens Digital Industries Software – Accelerating transformation.
About Siemens Digital Industries
Siemens Digital Industries (DI) empowers companies of all sizes within the process and discrete manufacturing industries to accelerate their digital and sustainability transformation across the entire value chain. Siemens’ cutting-edge automation and software portfolio revolutionizes the design, realization and optimization of products and production. And with Siemens Xcelerator – the open digital business platform – this process is made even easier, faster, and scalable. Together with our partners and ecosystem, Siemens Digital Industries enables customers to become a sustainable Digital Enterprise. Siemens Digital Industries has a workforce of around 70,000 people worldwide.
About Siemens AG
Siemens AG (Berlin and Munich) is a leading technology company focused on industry, infrastructure, mobility, and healthcare. The company’s purpose is to create technology to transform the everyday, for everyone. By combining the real and the digital worlds, Siemens empowers customers to accelerate their digital and sustainability transformations, making factories more efficient, cities more livable, and transportation more sustainable. Siemens also owns a majority stake in the publicly listed company Siemens Healthineers, a leading global medical technology provider pioneering breakthroughs in healthcare. For everyone. Everywhere. Sustainably.
Source: Siemens
The post Siemens Acquires Canopus AI to Bring AI-Based Metrology to Semiconductor Manufacturing appeared first on HPCwire.
Here are some highly rated series to stream, plus a look at what's new in February.
Government faces call for transparency on former peer’s involvement amid fears he may have leaked more sensitive information
Peter Mandelson’s involvement with the US tech company Palantir must be exposed to full public transparency, campaigners have said, amid fears he may have leaked more sensitive information than is alleged in his emails to Jeffrey Epstein.
Palantir, a $300bn company that provides military technology to the Israel Defense Forces and AI-powered deportation targeting for Donald Trump’s ICE units, has UK government contracts worth more than £500m. Global Counsel, a lobbying company Mandelson co-founded and part-owns, also works for Palantir.
Continue reading...No 10 is under huge pressure to reveal exactly how the former peer was vetted for his job as US ambassador
After the release of a vast tranche of documents and emails that shed further light on the close relationship between Peter Mandelson and Jeffrey Epstein, the government has come under intense pressure to release details about its vetting process before Mandelson’s appointment as US ambassador in December 2024.
Continue reading..."I hope no one ever finds themselves in the same situation of brutal legal abuse that I did," Artemy Ostaninsaid in his final statement in court.
Davis played sporadically after arriving in Luka Doncic trade
Eight-player swap comes ahead of Thursday’s trade deadline
The Dallas Mavericks are sending 10-time All-Star forward Anthony Davis to the Washington Wizards in an eight-player trade, ESPN reported Wednesday.
The Mavericks will receive Khris Middleton, AJ Johnson, Malaki Branham and Marvin Bagley III plus two first-round draft picks and three second-round selections, per the report.
Continue reading...The bill would mandate use of the biblical term ‘Judea and Samaria’ after a similar effort passed in Arkansas
Florida legislators are pushing to pass legislation that would ban the use of the term “West Bank” in K-12 public schools and state agencies, including public colleges and universities, and mandate use of the term “Judea and Samaria”.
The West Bank is the internationally recognized term for the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territory west of the Jordan River that was seized from Jordan by Israel in 1967. The rightwing Israeli government refers to the area as “Judea and Samaria” in reference to the biblical kingdoms of ancient Israel as part of broader efforts to bolster historical and religious claims to the land. The international community, on the other hand, broadly recognizes the West Bank as occupied land that must be part of a future Palestinian state.
Continue reading...Filing bankruptcy pro se is a complex process, but knowing all your options could save you thousands in legal fees.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom is widely viewed as a strong contender for the 2028 Democratic presidential nomination, particularly by Gavin Newsom. But his record is a real problem, just not in the way pundits think it is.
Take, for example, his determination to thwart the 2026 California Billionaire Tax Act, which would impose a one-time 5 percent levy on residents of the state worth $1 billion or more. This is hardly Bolshevism, as keen mathematicians will note that 5 percent still leaves 95 percent, meaning those affected would wake up the next morning in the same economic bracket that calls to mind a camel and the eye of a needle. Regardless, Newsom remains firmly in the plutocrats’ corner.
There was also his appearance at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, late last month — always a popular destination for those angling for high office — amid President Donald Trump’s lunge toward Greenland. Just as European leaders were discovering that, having tolerated U.S. imperialism in Venezuela, it was now threatening their own backyard, Newsom kindly offered some unsolicited advice, scolding them that “Trump is a T. rex — you mate with him or he devours you, one way or the other, and you need to stand up to it.” (The revelation that T. rexes can be defeated by standing up to them will come as a surprise to anyone who’s seen “Jurassic Park.”) Trump, for his part, merely shrugged in response: “I used to get along so great with Gavin.”
Last week and with much publicity, Newsom launched a review of TikTok’s moderation practices, accusing the platform of suppressing Trump-critical content after a deal was finalized to transfer Chinese ownership of the app to a consortium of pro-Israel, Trump-loving billionaires, including Larry Ellison and Michael Dell. It is unsurprising that social media is an issue of concern for Newsom, as he is apparently the last person on Earth under the impression the Trump administration can be tweeted into submission, a strategy which will surely pay dividends any day now.
Finally, students of shameless self-promotion may already be familiar with “This Is Gavin Newsom,” the podcast launched in early 2025 in which the governor has sought to bridge the political divide by sitting down for chummy dialogue with far-right celebrities like Ben Shapiro and the late Charlie Kirk. What this looks like in practice is Shapiro goading Newsom into denying Israel’s genocidal conduct in Gaza, while Kirk earned Newsom’s fulsome agreement about the nefarious menace of trans women playing sports.
Yet there are those in the political media unbothered by all this — if anything, it is the kind of thing they would like to see more of. Instead, their concern comes from a different direction, if not an alternate universe, altogether.
Writing in The Atlantic late last month, Marc Novicoff and Jonathan Chait argued “Gavin Newsom’s Record Is a Problem.” While acknowledging he has “sensed what Democrats want … and is delivering it with a roguish charisma” (your mileage may vary), they nevertheless worry he may be perceived as too progressive. This will, one assumes, be followed by essays on why Chuck Schumer is too courageous and JD Vance is too likable.
Novicoff and Chait posit that Newsom’s tenure as governor has seen California “fall hard for faddish progressive policies on immigration, education, and crime that either didn’t work, violated the intuitions of most Americans, or both.” As proof, they offer the state providing Medicaid to undocumented immigrants and gender-affirming health care for prisoners, both of which they present as catastrophic missteps that will come back to haunt him in 2028.
Such is the modern centrist credo: to overcome a perception rooted in fantasy, it may be necessary to make the reality of people’s lives worse.
Such is the modern centrist credo: to overcome a perception rooted in fantasy, it may be necessary to make the reality of people’s lives worse. In fact, it would seem their preferred litmus test for a candidate is that they not only refuse to recognize the rights and basic humanity of immigrants, LGBTQ+ people, and the incarcerated, but that they also must never offer even the most superficial indication to the contrary.
This is all par for the course from Chait, who maintains Kamala Harris’s 2024 defeat had little to do with her support for Israel during a genocide, her proud past as California’s “top cop,” or her unwillingness to distance herself from Joe Biden’s legacy. Instead, Chait blames those few instances during her Hindenburg-like 2019 stab at the Democratic nomination where she briefly and unconvincingly pivoted left before returning to the comfort of political moderation.
In the real world however, the arch-centrist Chait got everything he could hope for in Harris, who promptly blew it; now, with Newsom as the alleged front-runner for 2028, the fact that Chait is already preemptively recycling the same excuses for failure does not inspire confidence.
“Just about everything people don’t like about the Democratic Party has come true in Newsom’s California,” Chait and Novicoff write, inadvertently stumbling onto a point. Many Americans despise the Democrats for their craven coddling of billionaires and corporate interests, their fealty to zombified Third Way snake oil, and their twitchy, terrified suspicion of any mass movement too radical for their own beige, milquetoast taste — and sure enough, in the California governor’s mansion sits a man who personifies all these grim qualities.
If Newsom — who treats billionaires as a treasured natural resource, who mobilized thousands of National Guard troops to quash Black Lives Matter protests, who made a photo op of breaking down a homeless encampment with his own hands — is not impeccably centrist enough for the likes of Chait, who the hell is? A John Fetterman who’s on the ball and not acting like a Republican? A Kyrsten Sinema whose personal life isn’t straight out of a daytime soap opera? A reanimated WelcomeFest speaker stitched together in Matt Yglesias’s laboratory?
It does ring true that Newsom will be painted as a deranged radical out of some Californian hippie dystopia, because under Trump, what was once McCarthyism is now standard practice. So why would anyone still believe the forces he represents can be met halfway, given they will inevitably smear as commies anyone to the left of “The Turner Diaries”?
Watching Newsom’s refusal to accept this reality has not been edifying. Following the murder of Renee Good by ICE last month, Newsom’s press office released a post on X which simply read “STATE. SPONSORED. TERRORISM,” a position which held for a little over a week until Ben Shapiro badgered him into walking it back. For all his tough-guy posturing, one wonders how tough a politician can really be if Ben goddamn Shapiro — whose greatest enemies are socialism, wokeness, and things on high shelves — can get you to fold like a cheap lawn chair. But this is Newsom’s style: blustering proclamations that might, to the casual observer, be mistaken for principle or policy, closely followed by the reticence and cowardice that defines mainstream Democratic politics.
It should go without saying that Newsom’s palling around with right-wing pseudo-intellectuals like Kirk and Shapiro — along with his assurances that he does not favor abolishing the death squads currently occupying Minnesota — do not appear to have won him any converts, respect, or sympathy from the American right. And why should it? In Trump, they have found a president that will indulge their darkest desires, liberate their deepest prejudices and deliver the violence they yearn to see inflicted on all those they judge as deserving — in short, everything they could ever want. Meanwhile, there are still those who believe the key to defeating American fascism is making sure the left gets none of what it wants. Go figure.
Unsurprisingly, there has been little indication the American progressive left perceives Newsom as deserving anything but disdain. Recent weeks have only bolstered the sense that committing to the abolition of ICE is a prerequisite for any remotely moral candidate in 2028. If Newsom fails to become that candidate, it will not be because he appeared too left-wing, but because he lacked the guts or the inclination to be anything except what he manifestly is: a preening political operator, beholden to a status quo that no longer exists.
The post Gavin Newsom’s Biggest Problem Is Gavin Newsom appeared first on The Intercept.
The American has earned the trust of Luciano Spalletti in Italy, but his role with the USMNT remains an open question
Juventus have tried to get rid of Weston McKennie. They even succeeded once, sending him on loan to Leeds United only for the American to return six months later. When he got back to Turin, as US coach Gregg Berhalter told the story at the time, Juve had emptied his locker and given away his parking spot. Despite this, McKennie stuck around.
It’s just as well for the Old Lady that he did – McKennie is now in the form of his life. The 27-year-old has scored four times in just eight games since the start of 2026. He has become one of Juve’s most important players and arguably the biggest driving force behind their recent upturn in form. Luciano Spalletti – among the most big-name coaches currently working in Italian football – has used McKennie to mould the team in his own image.
Continue reading...Immigration authorities say they're targeting the "worst of the worst," but they haven't asked to take custody of over 100 non-citizens in Minnesota's prison system.
Casey Wasserman has said he regrets 2003 emails with the convicted sex trafficker
Several Los Angeles officials have urged Casey Wasserman, the chair of the LA28 Olympics committee, to step down after emails between him and the convicted sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell surfaced.
The emails date back to 2003 and appear among more than 3m files related to Jeffrey Epstein released by the justice department last week.
Continue reading...These are our CNET experts' top picks for best desks of the year.
Improve your office ergonomics with the best standing desks available.
A sprawling informal economy of rogue streaming devices has taken hold across the U.S., as consumers fed up with rising TV subscription costs turn to cheap Android-based boxes that promise free access to thousands of live channels, sports events, and on-demand movies for a one-time $200 to $400 purchase. The two dominant players -- SuperBox and vSeeBox -- are manufactured by opaque Chinese companies and distributed through hundreds of American resellers at farmers markets, church festivals and Facebook groups, according to a report by The Verge. The hardware is generic and legal, but both devices guide users toward pirate streaming apps not available on any official app store. vSeeBox directs users to a service called "Heat"; SuperBox points to "Blue TV." One user estimated access to between 6,000 and 8,000 channels, including premium sports networks and hundreds of local affiliates. A 2025 Dish Network lawsuit against a SuperBox reseller alleged that some live channels on the device were being ripped directly from Dish's Sling TV service -- Sling's logo was still visible on certain feeds. Dish has pursued resellers aggressively, winning $1.25 million in damages from a vSeeBox seller in 2024 over 500 devices and $405,000 from another over 162 devices. None of this has meaningfully slowed adoption. The market has roots in earlier Chinese-made devices like TVPad that targeted Asian expat communities and reportedly sold 3 million units before being litigated out of existence. SuperBox and vSeeBox simply broadened the audience to mainstream America.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
British firms could get more opportunities to supply defence equipment to Kyiv if agreement can be reached
The UK could reap greater benefits from a €90bn (£78bn) EU loan for Ukraine, if it agrees to help pay the cost of borrowing, after European countries signed off long-awaited financial aid for Kyiv.
British firms could have greater opportunities to supply defence equipment to Ukraine funded by the loan if the government agrees a “fair” contribution towards EU borrowing costs.
Continue reading...A commitment to an ongoing story and more frequent new heroes, including five right now, move the game in the direction it always seemed to promise.
Ex-Trump adviser adds to elections officials’ concern about potential interference from Trump administration in voting
Steve Bannon, the former White House strategist and rightwing podcast host, said he wants to see immigration agents at the polls in November, a proposal that election officials have feared.
Bannon has no formal power, but is an influential figure on the far right and is closely tied with the Trump administration.
Continue reading...Marius Borg Høiby, 29, on trial accused of 38 crimes, broke down in tears as he claimed press had harassed him for years
Marius Borg Høiby, the son of Norway’s crown princess, has told a court he does not remember taking pictures and videos found on his phone that police say show him sexually assaulting a woman at a royal residence.
Høiby, Mette-Marit’s son from a relationship before her marriage to Crown Prince Haakon, is on trial accused of 38 crimes, including four rapes and assaults.
Continue reading...For those following: Been asking about “which one” for a bit, and learning from everyone here.
Completely new, never rode. Decided to stay with Onewheel but didn’t want to drop $$ on something I’m not sure I’ll be into. I’m into doing my own thing and repair guitar electronics/amps, so definitely am interested in tweakability of Vesc designs etc. But…. Haven’t ridden one.
I made a list of components etc to build my own board, but didn’t want to put the cart before the horse.
Soooooo… I found a wonderful low mileage, fully loaded, extras and everything GT that is about a year old for a fantastic price!
I’ll give it a try and if i hate it, I’m pretty sure i can sell for the exact price i paid. But I’ll know if it’s my sport or not!
So thanks everyone.
Last question: those that have or had a GT (not the S or XL) what were things you did to it, or mods etc… to make it a comfortable or fun as possible?
Thanks again. X7 is on my radar hard. But let me put 100mi in before i decide what i want to do!
Is it against the law for someone to possess a firearm who is considered an “unlawful user” of any controlled substance, including marijuana? The exact definition of those terms is at the heart of one of the biggest Supreme Court decisions this term.
On March 2, 2026, the justices will hear arguments in United States v. Hemani, a case from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, where the appeals bench struck down the application of a federal law banning anyone who is “an unlawful user of or addicted to any controlled substance” from possessing firearms or ammunition.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation arrested Ali Danial Hemani after it obtained a warrant to search his home. Agents found a 9mm pistol, 60 grams of marijuana, and 4.7 grams of cocaine in Hemani’s possession, according to court documents. The government believed that Hemani was a habitual marijuana user. A grand jury found that Hemani had violated the “unlawful user” provision” of U.S.C. 922(g)(3) by possessing a handgun while in the possession of marijuana. Hemani said that U.S.C. 922(g)(3) didn’t apply to his case and that the arrest violated his rights under the Second Amendment, which protects an individual’s right to keep and bear arms.
The case has attracted a considerable amount of attention, with groups like the National Rifle Association (NRA), the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML), the New York State Rifle & Pistol Association, and the Cato Institute filing briefs supporting Hemani. In addition to United States Solicitor General John Sauer, a group of 19 states, Everytown For Gun Safety, and the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence support the federal government’s position.
The Facts in the Case
A magistrate judge initially ruled in favor of Hemani finding the government lacked sufficient “historical analogues,” required by the Supreme Court’s 2022 decision in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association, Inc. v. Bruen, to prosecute him. “When the Second Amendment’s plain text covers an individual’s conduct, the Constitution presumptively protects that conduct,” said Justice Clarence Thomas in Bruen. “The government must then justify its regulation by demonstrating that it is consistent with the Nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation.”
On June 21, 2024, Supreme Court applied the Bruen test for the first time in United States v. Rahimi, ruling that an individual found by a court to pose a credible threat to the physical safety of another person may be temporarily disarmed under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(8), without violating the Second Amendment.
Hemani’s case was considered in the context of several other court decisions as it headed toward the Fifth Circuit. The appeals court ruled in favor of Hemani in Jan. 31, 2025. It cited United States v. Connelly (2024) also from the same circuit, which found that a marijuana-smoking gunowner who was not impaired could not be charged under U.S.C. 922(g)(3).
The Basic Arguments at the Supreme Court
In his petition to the Supreme Court, Solicitor General Sauer said the Fifth Circuit’s Connelly decision was wrong, and there was enough evidence historically to support U.S.C. 922(g)(3)’s firearms restrictions for a person who “is an unlawful user of or addicted to any controlled substance,” and such restrictions applied to Hemani. The Court accepted the case on Oct. 20, 2025.
In his most recent brief to the Supreme Court, Sauer cites Bruen and Rahimi, and he argues the government can show the application of the law “is consistent with this Nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation.” Sauer notes, “[T]his case presents narrow circumstances where the government can satisfy that rigorous burden.”
Sauer believes the historical record supports disarming people actively under the influence of alcohol or controlled substances, and it also supports temporarily disarming people who habitually use alcohol and, by association today, controlled substances. “Early American legislatures recognized that habitual drunkards present heightened dangers of crime and violence,” he states. “They classified drunkards as criminal vagrants subject to confinement in jail or workhouses, committed drunkards to lunatic asylums, and subjected drunkards to surety laws backed by threat of jail.”
The Solicitor General notes that Congress and the states have restricted firearms possession by illegal drug users “for as long as that social evil has plagued America” and the Supreme Court should reverse the Fifth Circuit’s ruling.
In their latest brief, Hemani’s attorneys believe the case’s core question is if U.S.C. 922(g)(3) can be applied to a person who occasionally uses marijuana and is not a habitual consumer: “The only question before this Court is whether §922(g)(3) is constitutional as applied to someone who admits to consuming marijuana a few times a week. It is not.”
The government’s case against Hemani also has other problems, they believe: “Lower courts have long recognized that it is not clear what the ‘unlawful user’ prong covers at all, and some have candidly admitted that it is likely unconstitutionally vague absent at least some sort of temporal connection between drug use and gun possession.”
They also don’t agree with the historical precedents cited by the government as permitting a restriction of Hemani’s Second Amendment rights. The government’s interpretation is “broad enough to encompass anyone who drank beer, wine, or spirits with meals a few days a week,” they argue. “By the government’s logic much of the Founding generation—not to mention tens of millions of Americans today—could have been deprived of the right to keep a firearm in the home for self-defense.”
Broader Second Amendment Trends
United States v. Hemani is one of two major Second Amendment cases at the Court this term. The justices heard arguments on Jan. 20, 2026 in Wolford v. Lopez, which may clarify when and where people with gun-ownership permits can possess firearms in publicly accessible private locations. A core question in that case is if the owner of a concealed gun permit can enter many private properties without informing owners they are carrying a gun legally unless asked.
In both of the current cases, the justices will consider the new tests proposed in Bruen and Rahimi, and if the basic Second Amendment rights of citizens will be expanded or restricted based on historical interpretations from the Court.
The decision in United States v. Hemani will likely come down from the Court by late June.
Scott Bomboy is the editor in chief of the National Constitution Center.
As the wheels of justice begin to turn in Britain, a spotlight should also shine on the financier’s wealthy enablers in the US
“The more Epstein documents get released, the more we see how he had so many powerful friends, and that’s ultimately what helped him,” commented the US lawyer Lisa Bloom in an interview with the Guardian this week. As Ms Bloom, who represents 11 of Jeffrey Epstein’s dogged and brave victims, drily notes: “That’s not the way the justice system is supposed to work.”
From the outset, the Epstein affair has offered a textbook example of the ability of the influential and well-connected to avoid scrutiny and intimidate those who would exert it. A ruthless pursuit of transparency, both institutional and personal, is the only way to combat such tactics and hold power to account. In the extraordinary days following the release of further Epstein files last week, the wheels of justice in Britain are belatedly beginning to turn on that basis.
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.
Continue reading...Fulton County officials moved Wednesday to regain control of thousands of 2020 election records seized by federal agents last week.
Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, shot dead on Tuesday, appealed to ‘a nostalgia for a past that is remembered as more secure’
The assassination of Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, the second son of Libya’s late dictator Muammar Gaddafi, is a reminder of both how violent Libya remains more than 15 years after his father’s demise – and how much Saif had come to be perceived as a threat to Libya’s governing elite.
The loyalist Gaddafi green movement remained a potent gathering point for some Libyans nostalgic for a return to imagined past security that Saif’s father symbolised.
Continue reading...Ryan Routh, who tried to kill president in 2024, also receives a consecutive seven-year sentence for gun conviction
A man convicted of trying to assassinate Donald Trump on a Florida golf course in 2024 was sentenced on Wednesday to life in prison.
US district judge Aileen Cannon pronounced Ryan Routh’s fate in the same Fort Pierce courtroom that erupted into chaos in September when he tried to stab himself shortly after jurors found him guilty on all counts.
“It’s clear to me that you engaged in a premeditated, calculated plot to take a human life,” Cannon said.
Continue reading...Investors were assessing on Wednesday whether a selloff in global software stocks this week had gone too far, as they weighed if businesses could survive an existential threat posed by AI. The answer: It's unclear and will lead to volatility. From a report: After a broad selloff on Tuesday that saw the S&P 500 software and services index fall nearly 4%, the sector slipped another 1% on Wednesday. While software stocks have been under pressure in recent months as AI has gone from being a tailwind for many of these companies to investors worrying about the disruption it will cause to some sectors, the latest selloff was triggered by a new legal tool from Anthropic's Claude large language model (LLM). The tool - a plug-in for Claude's agent for tasks across legal, sales, marketing and data analysis - underscored the push by LLMs into the so-called "application layer," where these firms are increasingly muscling into lucrative enterprise businesses for revenue they need to fund massive investments. If successful, investors worry, it could wreak havoc across a range of industries, from finance to law and coding.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Chatham House fellow gives evidence on Venezuela to UK Parliament Foreign Affairs Committee News release jon.wallace
Dr Christopher Sabatini, Senior Research Fellow for Latin America, provided evidence on 3 February.
Senior Research Fellow Dr Christopher Sabatini provided evidence to a session of the UK Parliament’s Foreign Affairs Committee on 3 February.
Dr Sabatini was invited to provide evidence due to his expertise on Venezuela and US policy towards the country. During his appearance he discussed repression and electoral fraud under Venezuela’s deposed President Nicolás Maduro; US claims of narcotics trafficking by his government; the subsequent attack on Venezuela and removal of Maduro and his wife; and the response of the Venezuelan people and the wider region.
Dr Sabatini also discussed US objectives in the country now regarding democracy, economic recovery and the oil industry, and the relation of the Trump administration’s actions to domestic US politics.
Drawing from his previous work on Chatham House’s Venezuela working group, Dr Sabatini’s testimony focused on recommendations on how the UK and other democratic governments can be more effective defending international norms and multilateralism through collective, pre-emptive diplomacy.
Dr Sabatini said:
‘The response to President Trump’s sabre rattling over Greenland provides an example of what nation states acting pre-emptively and collectively may achieve.
‘In the case of Venezuela, governments could and should have acted earlier to defend the other international norms of self determination and human rights.
‘International efforts to defend human rights, self-determination and national sovereignty may not have been enough to deter the targeted military action in Venezuela. But they would have signalled earlier a commitment to international norms’.
Rahmanullah Lakanwal, a 29-year-old Afghan national, is accused of shooting two members of the West Virginia National Guard near the White House in November.
The Anker Solix E10 competes with the Powerwall and other home battery backups. It offers three ways to keep your home powered during an outage. You can buy it now.
Suit is the first under new law allowing residents to sue providers protected in their states under ‘shield laws’
A physician based in California has become the first medical provider sued under a recently enacted Texas statute that empowers private individuals to file civil lawsuits against providers who mail abortion medication into the state.
The case was brought by Jerry Rodriguez, who claims that Remy Coeytaux, a doctor practicing in the San Francisco Bay Area, violated a Texas law that allows abortion providers to face penalties of at least $100,000 if they mail pills into Texas. The filing alleges Coeytaux mailed abortion medication to end Rodriguez’s girlfriend’s pregnancies twice, once in 2024 and again in early 2025.
Continue reading...Local politician says armed men rounded up residents, bound their hands behind their backs and shot them
More than 160 people have been killed in two villages in western Nigeria in the country’s deadliest armed assaults this year, as communities reel from repeated and widespread acts of violence perpetrated by jihadists and other armed groups.
The death toll from Tuesday’s attacks in Woro and Nuku in Kwara state stood at 162 on Wednesday afternoon, according to Mohammed Omar Bio, a member of parliament representing the area.
Continue reading...NSS with ML-KEM and ML-DSA algorithms passes lab testing and enters Modules in Process list, making Rocky Linux from CIQ one of the first Enterprise Linux distributions advancing FIPS-validated post-quantum cryptography with NSS
RENO, Nev., Feb. 4, 2026 — CIQ today announced that Network Security Services (NSS) for Rocky Linux from CIQ (RLC) 9.6 with post-quantum cryptography (PQC) algorithms has achieved Cryptographic Algorithm Validation Program (CAVP) certification from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and entered the Modules in Process (MIP) list. This milestone makes Rocky Linux from CIQ the first Enterprise Linux distribution with an NSS module containing NIST-approved PQC algorithms advancing toward full FIPS 140-3 validation.
The NSS module includes two NIST-approved PQC algorithms: ML-KEM (Module-Lattice-Based Key Encapsulation Mechanism) for secure key exchange, and ML-DSA (Module-Lattice-Based Digital Signature Algorithm) for digital signatures. These algorithms are designed to resist attacks from both classical and quantum computers.
When Rocky Linux released NSS version 3.112 in September 2025 with ML-KEM and ML-DSA support, the algorithms were feature complete but not FIPS compliant. CIQ Distinguished Engineer and Samba Project Co-Creator Jeremy Allison led the effort to enhance NSS to meet FIPS 140-3 standards for submission to NIST.
“The ML-KEM and ML-DSA code in NSS was feature complete, but not FIPS compliant,” said Allison. “CIQ has enabled and open-sourced FIPS 140-3 compliance code in nss-3.112 for these increasingly important algorithms to provide security for our customers and help them prepare for the post-quantum future.”
All of CIQ’s FIPS PQC engineering work is open source and available on GitHub, contributing to the broader security community.
The National Security Agency’s CNSA 2.0 sets a compressed timeline for National Security Systems to adopt quantum–resistant cryptography, with key transition milestones beginning in 2027 and a full migration targeted by 2035. However, the “harvest now, decrypt later” threat makes immediate preparation critical. Adversaries can collect encrypted data today and decrypt it once quantum computers become capable.
NSS provides application-level cryptography for browser sessions, SSL/TLS connections, and serves as the cryptographic provider for Java applications when systems operate in FIPS mode. This makes PQC-enabled NSS relevant not just for web communications but for the broad range of Java-based enterprise applications common in government and regulated industries.
“Organizations making platform decisions today need confidence that their infrastructure partner can deliver quantum-resistant solutions,” said Gregory Kurtzer, CEO of CIQ. “Achieving MIP status with CAVP-certified PQC algorithms demonstrates CIQ can solve these complex engineering challenges and gives customers confidence in the roadmap for OpenSSL and other cryptographic modules as we build the quantum-resistant stack they’ll need.”
CIQ’s cryptographic strategy extends beyond NSS. The company is tracking PQC implementation across all five FIPS cryptographic modules:
As upstream projects stabilize PQC implementations, CIQ will continue pursuing FIPS validation to deliver comprehensive quantum-resistant infrastructure.
NSS with ML-KEM and ML-DSA post-quantum algorithms in MIP status is available now for Rocky Linux from CIQ customers. Many compliance frameworks accept MIP status while awaiting full CMVP validation. The MIP listing and technical details are available on the NIST Cryptographic Module Validation Program website. CIQ’s open source FIPS PQC compliance code is available on GitHub.
Read more about the CAVP certification in this CIQ blog post.
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About CIQ
CIQ delivers secure and performant software infrastructure for the demands of all modern workloads, from the most mundane to the most extreme HPC and AI jobs. We believe infrastructure should drive the future of your business and that both the operating system of a single machine and the orchestration layer to manage a cluster of machines and even hybrid environments needs to be optimized for your requirements. We are an open source company who has started and contributed to critical infrastructure projects such as Rocky Linux, Warewulf, Fuzzball, Ascender and Apptainer. For more information, visit ciq.com.
Source: CIQ
The post CIQ’s NSS Module 1st to Achieve CAVP Certification for Post-Quantum Cryptography Algorithms appeared first on HPCwire.
The FBI raid in Georgia is not an aberration. It fits a broader playbook, with troubling historic precedents
What in the hell were FBI agents doing in an election facility in Fulton county, Georgia, last week? They surely weren’t investigating a crime. Nor were they serving the public.
Justifying Donald Trump’s “big lie” about winning the 2020 election may seem like his own lost cause – but like his Confederate forebears, he is weaponizing it, damage be damned. Not even his subsequent election victory has quieted Trump’s appetite for more power, earned or otherwise.
Jamil Smith is a Guardian US columnist
Continue reading...Vatican appears to have ordered removal of restored work, which artist confessed he had made to resemble PM
The face of a winged angel bearing a striking resemblance to the Italian prime minister Giorgia Meloni has been erased from a fresco in a historic Rome church, putting an end to a debacle that embarrassed the Vatican.
The image on the wall painting in a chapel of the Basilica of St Lawrence in Lucina in central Rome was removed overnight, leaving the cherub headless.
Continue reading...Penny, a doberman pinscher, won best in show at the 150th Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show in New York
Continue reading...Sheriff’s department says detectives are speaking with anyone who may have been in contact with Nancy Guthrie
Authorities in Arizona have still not identified a suspect in the investigation surrounding the apparent abduction of Nancy Guthrie, the elderly mother of the Today show host Savannah Guthrie.
In a statement posted on X, the Pima county sheriff’s department said that detectives were continuing to speak with anyone who may have been in contact with Nancy Guthrie and were working with the Guthrie family.
Continue reading...Departure marks large drop in agents on the ground but still leaves about 2,000 there, far above typical levels for state
Tom Homan, the White House border czar, said about 700 federal agents would leave Minnesota, a large drop in agents on the ground but still leaving about 2,000 agents there, far above typical levels for the state.
Homan said the reduction came as county jails were negotiating over increased coordination with federal officials, though it’s not clear which counties have agreed to coordinate with immigration enforcement officials.
Continue reading...The disappearance of "Today" show co-host Savannah Guthrie's mother, Nancy Guthrie, is being investigated as a crime.
Since federal immigration agents fatally shot a man in Minnesota, the state's top corrections official told CBS News there have been "conversations" with the federal government
Two school districts and a teachers union allege that the immigration crackdown has spilled onto campuses and interrupted the functioning of schools across the state.
HAMBURG, Germany, Feb. 4, 2026 — ISC High Performance is excited to announce the creation of the ISC Next Generation Committee, a new operational and advisory body aligned with ISC’s goal of fostering high performance computing (HPC) talent development. The committee aims to enhance dialogue between the established HPC community and students and young professionals, ensuring ISC remains relevant and accessible to the next generation of talent.
“The Next Generation Committee marks an important step in the systematic development of the ISC program to make it more accessible for younger attendees,” said Colleen Sheedy, People and Organization Development Manager at ISC Group. “Our objective is not only to invite students and young professionals to participate in ISC, but to involve them more actively in shaping ideas, formats, and connections within the community – within a clear and sustainable framework.”
A Structured Bridge Between Generations
The committee’s creation follows sustained feedback from younger attendees who expressed a need for stronger orientation, greater visibility, and more opportunities to contribute. While these attendees have long provided valuable input informally, the Next Generation Committee formalizes this engagement and establishes a structured channel for emerging talent to engage with the ISC community.
Positioned as a connector between generations, the committee advances three core objectives: enhancing the visibility of young talent, reducing barriers for new participants, and ensuring the relevance of ISC content for students and entry-level professionals.
The Next Generation Committee operates within a clearly defined scope, combining selected operational contributions with an advisory function. Its activities include:
The committee will be officially introduced at ISC 2026. During this initial phase, members will focus on observation, community engagement, and identifying key needs and opportunities. From 2027 onwards, the first jointly developed measures will be implemented as part of evolving our offering for the next generation of HPC practitioners.
Committee Members
Investing in the Future of the HPC Community
With the Next Generation Committee, ISC reinforces its long-term commitment to community development and talent cultivation in HPC. Beyond technical excellence, the initiative aims to foster orientation, networking, and professional development, enabling young talents to find their place and voice within the ISC ecosystem.
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.
Source: ISC
The post ISC Forms New Committee to Boost Engagement of Emerging HPC Talent appeared first on HPCwire.
House Democrats say US anti-trafficking efforts have been hamstrung by diversion of resources to immigration raids
A diversion of law enforcement personnel and resources to assist with Donald Trump’s mass deportation campaign and deployments to US cities has undermined the government’s efforts to combat child exploitation and human trafficking, Democratic lawmakers warned.
In the letter, sent on Wednesday and first shared with the Guardian, nearly two dozen House Democrats demand that the homeland security and justice departments “immediately” restore full staffing and resources to their anti-trafficking divisions. It also makes reference to the Jeffrey Epstein investigative files, arguing that the government’s failure to publicly release the full scope of the documents in its possession “damages trust in institutions meant to deliver justice”.
Continue reading...Will Ilia Malinin's signature quadruple axel earn him gold in Italy?
Plugging up data-leaking apps extends your phone's battery life. Who would have guessed?
SYDNEY, Feb. 4, 2026 — Silicon Quantum Computing (SQC), a leader in quantum computing and quantum machine learning, today announced the launch of Quantum Twins, an application-specific quantum simulator designed to accelerate molecule and materials discovery. Built utilizing the company’s atomic-scale semiconductor manufacturing process, Quantum Twins showcases the exceptional precision and already-achieved scalability of SQC’s full-stack approach to quantum computing.
Quantum Twins are comprised of large arrays of qubit registers (quantum dots) patterned on pure silicon with 0.13 nanometer (atom level) accuracy. This exquisite precision enables SQC to create custom chips – Quantum Twins – that physically encode direct replicas of the physical systems and chemical interactions that customers wish to analyse and understand.
This world-first product provides a pathway to simulation of quantum systems that is impossible for classical computers. Quantum Twins provide an enhanced understanding of quantum interactions. Analysing magnetism, atomic interaction and superconductivity at this scale will pave the way for novel information storage, low power electronics and broad materials discovery. Details on the scientific foundation of this platform were published today in Nature, a system including 15,000 qubit registers.
The launch follows a period of rapid expansion in SQC’s manufacturing capabilities. In November 2025, the company demonstrated the ability to pattern 250,000 qubit registers in just eight hours, de-risking the required manufacturing yields and volumes needed to deliver commercial-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computers. As a full-stack company, SQC can design, produce and test new quantum chips in under a week. It’s one of the many key advantages of the company’s 14|15 platform in the race to deliver the world’s first commercial scale quantum computer.
SQC’s Founder and CEO, Michelle Simmons, said: “Quantum Twins represents a window into the quantum world that customers can use for materials discovery today. The enabler is that we can engineer hundreds of thousands of qubit registers with atomic precision. It’s an incredible achievement in semiconductor manufacturing with sub-nanometer accuracy.”
SQC’s Chair and former ARM CEO, Simon Segars, added: “Expanding our product offering with the launch of Quantum Twins brings SQC’s atomic-scale advantage to the global materials and chemistry sectors. Having demonstrated commercial success with our quantum machine learning system, Watermelon, SQC’s latest offering is a definitive signal of our world leading manufacturing precision and scalability.”
SQC debuted its multi-qubit, multi-register processor last month with industry-leading fidelities up to 99.99% and performance that improves as the system scales. The company recently progressed to Stage B of DARPA’s Quantum Benchmarking Initiative and its quantum machine learning system, Watermelon, is already delivering impact across a variety of sectors including telecommunications and defence.
Quantum Twins are now available via direct contract with SQC. For more information, visit www.sqc.com.au.
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About Silicon Quantum Computing
Silicon Quantum Computing (SQC) is at the forefront of global efforts to build a commercial-scale quantum system. Leveraging over 25 years of technological excellence and delivery, SQC’s proprietary machines and processes allow the company to see and control matter atom-by-atom. SQC’s atomically engineered quantum machine learning chips and universal quantum computing systems have demonstrated world-leading algorithmic fidelity, positioning the company at the forefront of quantum innovation. Controlling its own QPU manufacturing means that SQC can design, produce and test new systems every week while delivering quantum machine learning and simulation systems to customers today. The company was founded in 2017 and is headquartered in Sydney, Australia.
Source: Silicon Quantum Computing
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Julie Le expressed frustration to judge, in response to questions about failure to comply with court orders
An ICE attorney who publicly expressed frustrations with her role and told a court “this job sucks” is no longer detailed to the US attorney’s office for the district of Minnesota, according to NBC News.
“The system sucks. This job sucks,” Julie Le, an attorney representing the US attorney’s office in Minnesota, said in response to a federal judge’s questions on why ICE has repeatedly failed to comply with court orders.
Continue reading...Position of Mountbatten-Windsor now appears even more grave, and the shadow cast over his family even darker
When King Charles stripped Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor of his titles and announced he would be booted out of Royal Lodge, Buckingham Palace said the “censures are deemed necessary, notwithstanding the fact that he continues to deny the allegations against him”.
Four months and more than 3m documents later, Charles must surely feel vindicated on his tough approach. For while there is nothing to suggest the king nor any other senior royals knew then what was to come in the release of the Jeffrey Epstein files, what has emerged has been truly shocking.
Continue reading...President Trump is expected to sign an executive order putting JD Vance and Andrew Ferguson in charge of the group.
Melinda French Gates insists Microsoft founder has questions to answer over his relationship with Epstein
Bill Gates has said he “regrets” ever knowing Jeffrey Epstein, as his former wife Melinda French Gates alluded to “muck” in their marriage, and insisted the Microsoft founder has questions to answer over his relationship with the deceased child sex offender.
Allegations that Gates hid a sexually transmitted disease from his wife after contact with “Russian girls” surfaced in the latest release of the Epstein files, which have provided remarkable insight into the disgraced financier’s multiple celebrity connections and activities.
Continue reading...U.S., Russian and Ukrainian negotiators are back around a table for a second round of technical talks, but in Kyiv, Russian bombs bring suffering and skepticism.
Robb Pitts said call came days before federal agents seized 2020 election documents in Georgia
The Fulton county commission chair, Robb Pitts, said at a press conference this morning that he received a phone call last Monday – two days before the FBI served a criminal warrant to seize 2020 election documents – to warn that he, Georgia’s secretary of state, Brad Raffensperger, former Raffensperger deputy Gabriel Sterling and others in the state were at risk of imminent arrest by federal agents.
“That did not happen on Monday,” Pitts said. “It didn’t happen on Tuesday, but lo and behold on Wednesday, the FBI shows up.”
Continue reading...King Charles' disgraced brother Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor moves from his royal mansion to a private estate after appearing in newly released Epstein files.
Pinterest says two engineers lost their jobs after writing custom scripts to identify employees who were cut in a recent round of layoffs.
In today's market, the price of your silver bars depends on the spot price, premiums and even where you buy them.
Former phone hacker Graham Johnson denies claims, saying payments were part of effort to draw attention to unlawful behaviour by media
A researcher investigating lawbreaking by the media paid private investigators and ex-journalists for their testimony about alleged unlawful activity at the publisher of the Daily Mail, the high court has heard.
Graham Johnson, a former phone hacker who later turned to researching unlawful activity in the press, confirmed he had made payments to six people who all feature in the case Prince Harry and others have brought against Associated Newspapers Ltd (ANL).
Continue reading...Anthropic said today that its AI assistant Claude will not carry advertising of any kind -- no sponsored links next to conversations, no advertiser influence on the model's responses, and no unsolicited third-party product placements -- calling Claude a "space to think" that should remain free of commercial interruption. The announcement comes days after Anthropic's chief rival, OpenAI, announced plans to bring ads to some of its ChatGPT offerings. Anthropic said its internal analysis of Claude conversations found that a significant share involve sensitive or deeply personal topics. An advertising-based model would also create incentives to optimize for engagement and time spent rather than usefulness, Anthropic said, noting that the most helpful AI interaction might be a short one that doesn't prompt further conversation. Anthropic generates revenue from enterprise contracts and paid subscriptions. The company said it is exploring agentic commerce -- Claude handling a purchase or booking on a user's behalf -- but stressed that all such interactions should be user-initiated, not advertiser-driven. Anthropic has also brought AI tools to educators in over 60 countries and said it may consider lower-cost subscription tiers and regional pricing.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The most popular mom content tends to be rightwing tradwife propaganda or not political at all – pushing progressive creators out of the algorithm
For someone who doesn’t have a marble island in their kitchen I spend a disproportionate amount of time staring at marble kitchen islands, slack-jawed, brain turned half off. That’s because I consume a lot of videos from mommy bloggers, mom influencers and the like. In kitchen “closing shift” videos, they wipe down their islands and reset by lighting luxury candles, the glow accentuating their respectable cosmetic procedures. Other times I watch them waltz through their morning routines: getting kids out the door, sweating it out in boutique fitness classes, showing off Amazon hauls, or explaining their children’s matching holiday photoshoot outfits.
For better or worse, this is how I have chosen to spend my one wild and precious life: consuming blissfully low-stakes motherhood content on my phone. It is domestically competent ASMR that also satiates my desire to peek into everyone’s bathroom cabinets. I nod in unsolicited approval as a TikTok mom I follow shares her green juice order. Fascinating. I should drink something like that. Another posts timestamps of her baby’s night-time sleep schedule. I, who lives between walls that have never heard the wail of an infant, ingurgitate the entire video.
Continue reading...National progressives see a chance in Texas to install a new member of the Squad in the place of departing Democratic Rep. Jasmine Crockett — by electing her pastor.
With Crockett vacating her House seat to run in a competitive — and increasingly ugly — Senate primary, pastor Frederick Haynes III is running to fill her seat. The progressive outfit Justice Democrats endorsed Haynes’s campaign on Wednesday, becoming the first national group to wade into the primary for the Democrat-friendly 30th Congressional District.
The primary in Texas is just a month away, and Justice Democrats views Haynes as one of its first real chances to notch a win for the electoral left this cycle, the group’s spokesperson Usamah Andrabi told The Intercept. The 65-year-old Dallas pastor has already attracted some national attention for his outspoken criticism of Israel’s genocide in Gaza, putting him at odds with many of his peers in Texas and the Deep South, where an open affinity between right-wing Christianity and pro-Israel Zionism is common.
That stance also marks an apparent difference between him and Crockett. While Haynes is running on ending U.S. military support for Israel and the genocide in Gaza, Crockett has drawn criticism for voting to send U.S. military aid to Israel and taking a trip there as a first-term member of Congress in August 2023 with the American Israel Public Affairs Committee and the Israel Defense Forces. She has similarly faced criticism for accepting campaign support from the crypto industry, while Haynes has called for new regulations on cryptocurrency.
Crockett, who has brushed off some criticism of her record as “intellectually lazy,” says she’s in favor of Haynes’s campaign and endorsed him last month.
“Every leader approaches things differently, and I greatly respect Congresswoman Crockett’s work and approach,” Haynes told The Intercept. “My worldview and my positions are deeply rooted in my community, and the struggles I see those around me experiencing on a daily basis. Our community is justice minded here in Dallas.”
Also running in the March 3 Democratic primary for Crockett’s seat are former Texas state Rep. Barbara Mallory Caraway and pastor Rodney LaBruce. To win a primary in Texas, candidates have to receive a majority of votes or compete in a runoff in May.
A pastor for 40 years and a fixture in Dallas, Haynes is the 11th candidate Justice Democrats has endorsed this cycle. The group is backing more new candidates ahead of the upcoming midterm elections than it has in any other year since its inaugural 2018 cycle, which ushered in now well-known Squad members like Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Ilhan Omar. After major losses last cycle, Justice Democrats says it’s deploying a more aggressive strategy this time, seeking to capitalize on voter frustration with the party establishment.
“We try to be as selective and intentional about the races and candidates we pick and really evaluate their path to victory,” Andrabi said. “We’re hoping we can really, as a movement — but if not, as Justice Democrats — to start this cycle off with some wins.”
In Haynes’s view, “Dems have let us down,” he told The Intercept. “The wolves of hunger, fascism, and injustice are at our door, and what does the Democratic establishment have to offer in response — strongly worded letters? Our community deserves better than this: they deserve leadership that will fight for them with the courage and commitment that this moment requires.”
“The wolves of hunger, fascism, and injustice are at our door, and what does the Democratic establishment have to offer in response — strongly worded letters?”
As the pastor at Crockett’s church, Haynes has been an activist on issues from predatory lending to voting rights. His church holds a legal clinic, hosts a toolkit for congregation members to contact their legislators, and runs programming on food security, economic and environmental justice, and civic engagement. The church website hosts a link to a petition calling for a ceasefire in Gaza led by former Rep. Cori Bush, D-Mo.
That activism has also made him a target of the right. In a story last week, Jewish Insider wrote that Haynes delivered “an anti-Israel polemic from the pulpit” the day after the October 7 attacks. In his remarks, Haynes denounced Israeli apartheid.
“The Palestinians don’t have the financial backing from the United States that Israel has, and so they throw their rocks and shoot their arrows,” Haynes said on October 8, 2023, “and Israel is able to bomb them and kill them.”
“You see a much tighter grip on evangelical Christians and churches in the south, particularly ones that represent Republican constituencies, from the Israel lobby and AIPAC,” Andrabi said. But Haynes “sees it as his moral imperative to call out Israeli apartheid and genocide, particularly because so many other Christian leaders have used it for their own benefit and used it to advance their own interests and the interests of right-wing politicians.”
In addition to ending U.S. military support for Israel and regulating the crypto industry, Haynes is running on abolishing Immigration and Customs Enforcement, providing Medicare for All, getting dark money out of elections, and banning congressional stock trading. He’s also rejecting corporate PAC money.
“Every time we choose imperialism abroad, or tax cuts for the wealthy, we are telling working people in our communities that we value their lives less,” Haynes said, citing the notion that a budget is a moral document, often attributed to Martin Luther King Jr. “Every bomb dropped in Palestine is money for an underfunded school, an unpaved road, a mother who has to decide between groceries and insulin. Our tax dollars must go to supporting life in our families at home, not death in other families abroad.”
“It doesn’t do us much good to replace old corporate shills with young corporate shills.”
At age 65, Haynes contradicts the narrative that the battle over the future over the Democratic Party is purely about pitting younger candidates against older incumbents. The gerontocracy in Congress is its own issue, Andrabi said; being represented by corporate interests and right-wing lobbies is another.
“It is a new generation. But that generation is not necessarily just defined or limited by an age group,” Andrabi said. “It doesn’t do us much good to replace old corporate shills with young corporate shills. The problem is that they’re corporate shills, not just that they are aging.”
The post He’s Running to Fill Jasmine Crockett’s House Seat From Her Left. He’s Also Her Pastor. appeared first on The Intercept.
Six children among dead as Israeli agency restricts evacuations two days after crossing to Egypt reopened
Israeli tank shelling and airstrikes have killed at least 21 people, including six children and seven women, in Gaza, and Israel has halted the evacuation of patients through the Rafah border crossing just two days after it reopened.
Among the casualties was a medic who rushed to the scene to assist the wounded and was killed by a second strike on the same location in the southern city of Khan Younis. Tents in al-Mawasi, an encampment of displaced people in Khan Younis, were shredded by the blasts.
Continue reading...As Westminster week once again put dog breeding under the spotlight, Peta’s messaging remains as incisive as ever. But its moral clarity fades when the conversation shifts to cats
Every February, the Westminster Dog Show arrives in New York City trailing equal parts pageantry, nostalgia and protest. The dogs come to be judged. The owners and handlers come to uphold breed standards. And, almost as reliably as the movie references and the best-in-show ribbon, Peta arrives ready to dominate the conversation.
If there is one certainty about the Super Bowl of canines, it’s that the protest will share the stage with the pageantry. Westminster is an annual collision of tradition, spectacle and dissent, and Peta has become exceptionally good at owning that moment. This year was no different. Two enormous billboards screamed down from across the street of the Javits Center, where breed judging unfolded on Monday and Tuesday ahead of the prime-time sessions at Madison Square Garden. One read: Flat-faced dogs struggle to breathe. NEVER buy them. Another: You can get a nose job. They can’t. DON’T buy breathing-impaired breeds.
Continue reading...RENO, Nev., Feb. 4, 2026 — Positron AI, a leader in energy-efficient AI inference hardware, today announced an oversubscribed $230 million Series B financing at a post-money valuation exceeding $1 billion.
The round was co-led by ARENA Private Wealth, Jump Trading, and Unless, and includes new and strategic investment from Qatar Investment Authority (QIA), Arm, and Helena. Existing investors Valor Equity Partners, Atreides Management, DFJ Growth, Resilience Reserve, Flume Ventures, and 1517 also participated. The financing validates Positron’s mission to make AI inference dramatically cheaper and more energy-efficient at scale.
“We’re grateful for this investor enthusiasm, which itself is a reflection of what the market is demanding,” said Mitesh Agrawal, CEO of Positron AI. “Energy availability has emerged as a key bottleneck for AI deployment. And our next-generation chip will deliver 5x more tokens per watt in our core workloads versus Nvidia’s upcoming Rubin GPU. Memory is the other giant bottleneck in inference, and our next generation Asimov custom silicon will ship with over 2304 GB of RAM per device next year, versus just 384 GB for Rubin. This will be a critical differentiator in workloads including video, trading, multi-trillion parameter models, and anything requiring an enormous context window. We also expect to beat Rubin in performance per dollar for specific memory-intensive workloads.”
Positron is building the infrastructure layer that makes AI usable at scale by lowering the cost and power required to run modern models. The company’s shipping product, Atlas, is an inference system designed for rapid deployment and scaling. Atlas is also a fully American-fabricated and manufactured silicon and system, enabling fast production ramp and dependable supply for customers who need capacity quickly.
“Memory bandwidth and capacity are two of the key limiters for scaling AI inference workloads for next-generation models,” said Dylan Patel, founder and CEO of SemiAnalysis, an advisor and investor in Positron. SemiAnalysis is a leading research firm specializing in semiconductors and AI infrastructure that provides detailed insights into the full compute stack. “Positron is taking a unique approach to the memory scaling problem, and with its next-generation Asimov chip, can deliver more than an order of magnitude greater high-speed memory capacity per chip than incumbent or upstart silicon providers.”
Jump Trading Leads After Deploying Atlas
A key highlight of the round is Jump Trading’s decision to co-lead after first becoming a customer.
“For the workloads we care about, the bottlenecks are increasingly memory and power—not theoretical compute,” said Alex Davies, Chief Technology Officer of Jump Trading. “In our testing, Positron Atlas delivered roughly 3x lower end-to-end latency than a comparable H100-based system on the inference workloads we evaluated, in an air-cooled, production-ready footprint with a supply chain we can plan around. The deeper we went, the more we agreed with Positron’s roadmap—Asimov and the Titan systems—as a memory-first platform built for future workloads. We invested because Positron combines traction today with a roadmap that can reshape the cost curve and capabilities for inference.”
“Jump Trading came to Positron as a customer,” said Agrawal. “As they saw our roadmap for Asimov, our custom silicon, and Titan, our next-generation system, they chose to step up as a co-lead investor. A customer becoming an investor is one of the strongest validations we can receive. It signals both technical conviction and real-world demand.”
Building Toward Asimov and Titan: A Memory-First Platform for Next-Gen Inference
Positron’s next-generation custom silicon, Asimov, is designed around the reality that modern AI workloads are increasingly limited by memory bandwidth and capacity, not just compute flops. Asimov is designed to support 2 terabytes of memory per accelerator and 8 terabytes of memory per Titan system at similar realized memory bandwidth to NVIDIA’s next-generation Rubin GPU. At rack scale, this translates to memory capacity of well over 100 terabytes.
“As AI inference scales, efficiency and system design matter more than raw benchmarks,” said Eddie Ramirez, Vice President of Go-to-Market, Cloud AI Business Unit, Arm. “Positron’s memory-centric approach, built on Arm technology, reflects how tightly coupled systems and a broad ecosystem come together to deliver scalable, performance-per-watt gains in next-generation AI infrastructure.”
This memory-first architecture unlocks high-value inference workloads, including long-context large language models, agentic workflows, and next-generation media and video models. Positron is on track to tape out its Asimov chip just 16 months after its June Series A financing gave it the resources to fully launch the design process, and the company intends to maintain this pace with future chips. “To us, development speed is an essential competitive advantage,” said Agrawal. “Competing with Nvidia means matching their shipping frequency, and we have designed our organization around that goal.”
“Positron is solving one of the most important bottlenecks in AI: delivering inference at scale within real-world power and cost constraints,” said Ari Schottenstein, Head of Alternatives at ARENA Private Wealth. “The combination of shipping traction today with Atlas, plus a credible path to Asimov, creates a rare opportunity to define a new category in AI infrastructure.”
Positron is building this platform with an ecosystem of industry leaders, including Arm, Supermicro and other key technology and supply-chain partners.
Momentum and Growth Trajectory
Positron expects strong revenue growth in 2026, positioning the company to become one of the fastest-growing silicon companies ever, achieving large-scale commercial traction in roughly 2.5 years from company launch. The company is working with multiple frontier customers across cloud, advanced computing, and performance-sensitive verticals, and continues to expand deployments and customer programs.
More from HPCwire: Positron Secures $23.5M to Design And Manufacture Energy-Efficient, Made-In-America AI Chips
About Positron AI
Positron AI builds purpose-built hardware and software to make AI inference dramatically cheaper and more energy-efficient. Positron’s shipping product, Atlas, is designed for rapid, scalable deployment, and the company’s next-generation custom silicon, Asimov, targets tape-out toward the end of 2026 with production in early 2027. Positron’s systems are built to serve long-context and next-generation AI workloads with leading economics. Learn more at positron.ai.
Source: Positron AI
The post Positron AI Raises $230M Series B to Scale Energy-Efficient AI Inference appeared first on HPCwire.

Why Should Delaware Care?
The plan for a massive data center near Delaware City has garnered backlash from residents who are worried about its potential impact on energy costs and the environment. Today’s ruling could stop the project from moving forward entirely.
Delaware’s environmental agency ruled Wednesday morning that a plan for a massive data center near Delaware City is not allowed under the state’s Coastal Zone Act.
This decision could stop the project from moving forward entirely, unless developer Starwood Digital Ventures wins an appeal or makes major changes to its design. It has until Feb. 18 to appeal the decision to the Coastal Zone Industrial Control Board, an administrative panel.
The Delaware General Assembly passed the Coastal Zone Act in 1971 to protect the state’s shorelines from the impacts of new heavy industry.
The Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control (DNREC) decided that the proposed data center near Delaware City, dubbed Project Washington, is not allowed under the law primarily because of its diesel generators.
The data center plan calls for 516 backup diesel generators that would operate in the case of a power outage. They would together need 2.5 million gallons of stored diesel, which DNREC Secretary Gregory Patterson called “entirely unprecedented” in his ruling.
“The large tank farm that is incorporated into this proposal will pose exactly the types of risks that justify the categorical exclusion of such a tank farm from the Coastal Zone,” Patterson wrote.
The most backup generators currently at a facility in the Coastal Zone is eight, he wrote.
New Castle County Councilman Dave Carter, who previously worked for DNREC and has been trying to regulate data centers, said he thought the agency made the right decision.
“Personally, I didn’t see how they could find the decision any other way,” he said.
Carter said he believes an appeal of the decision would be “a difficult, very long process” and that Starwood may have to try to find other ways to generate the backup power needed to keep the facility running 24/7.
State Sen. Stephanie Hansen (D-Middletown), author of a data center regulation bill, wrote in a statement that she agreed with DNREC’s decision but that it “should not be viewed as a referendum on the future of data centers in Delaware.”
“Given the growing emphasis on technology and artificial intelligence, it’s clear that data centers are here to stay — and it’s up to us to implement meaningful regulations that balance economic opportunity with energy affordability and reliability,” Hansen wrote.
Dustyn Thompson, chapter director of Sierra Club Delaware, called the decision a “monumental win for the environment.”
“We applaud the Department and the administration for standing up for our environment and our communities and ensuring that neither bears the brunt of this new heavy industry,” he wrote in an emailed statement.
House Speaker Melissa Minor-Brown, who represents the district where Project Washington would be located, posted on Facebook thanking those who submitted public comments to DNREC ahead of the decision.
“This decision reflects the very real concerns raised by residents about environmental impact, air pollution, large scale fuel storage, and the potential risks to our community’s health and quality of life,” she wrote. “Those concerns were heard, carefully evaluated, and ultimately validated.”
Delaware Building Trades President James Maravelias — who has been a leading advocate for the project and the construction jobs it could bring — said the state needs to find a workable solution to its data center controversy that can provide new jobs, and implement guardrails onto the industry.
He also noted that the specific fight over the Starwood project isn’t over, citing the developer’s right to appeal.
Starwood representatives said Wednesday that they are “absolutely confident the project will be successfully completed and remain on track despite this decision.”
“Project Washington is proud to have the support of the Delaware unions and trades, the business community, and hundreds of New Castle County residents,” the company said in a statement to Spotlight Delaware. “We are committed to working with DNREC, state and local regulators, and the entire community to make certain that Project Washington will be a state-of-the-art, data center campus that will bring thousands of jobs to Delaware.”
Then-Gov. Russ Peterson, an environmentalist champion, shepherded the Coastal Zone Act to passage in 1971 as Delaware saw a rising trend of industrialization creeping down the shores of the Delaware River from Pennsylvania and New Jersey.
The act was the first coastal zone prohibition enacted anywhere in the United States, and even pre-dated federal environmental efforts like the national Clean Water Act.

Since being approved more than 50 years ago, Delaware’s Coastal Zone Act has largely proved to be a deterrent to controversial developments within the coastal plain, or the land roughly east of U.S. Route 13/113 and Delaware Route 1.
Existing industrial sites were grandfathered in, but new heavy industrial sites would undergo additional regulatory scrutiny to make sure that they did not pose a threat to the health of residents or the environment.
In the last few decades, industrial users like Fujifilm and Veolia have received modifications to their operations permits under the CZA, while new projects have been limited to uses like a marijuana processing facility and a fish smoking plant.
Its most famous utilization was a 2008 case that denied a liquefied natural gas terminal and was ultimately upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court – but that terminal was actually being built in New Jersey. Delaware state officials denied New Jersey’s ability to build a pier into the First State’s territorial waters of the Delaware River by using the CZA, which Supreme Court justices agreed with.
The CZA has never been used to deny such a high-profile project here in Delaware though, which marks the Starwood decision as a watershed moment for DNREC’s enforcement of environmental regulations.
The post Delaware City data center faces major setback after environmental denial appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Former Post executive editor blasts owner Jeff Bezos’s ‘sickening efforts to curry favor’ with Trump
The Washington Post laid off hundreds of employees on Wednesday, which its former executive editor said “ranks among the darkest days” in the newspaper’s history. Approximately one-third of employees were affected.
Staffers at the Post have been on edge for weeks about the rumored cuts, which the publication would not confirm or deny. “It’s an absolute bloodbath,” said one employee, not authorized to speak publicly.
Continue reading...Film-maker Peter Ettedgui responded to BBC interview in which Reform leader apologised for any hurt caused
Nigel Farage has been accused of making a “non-apology” by a school contemporary who accused him of racist and antisemitic behaviour, after saying he was “sorry” if he had “genuinely” hurt anyone.
For the first time since the row broke after a Guardian investigation, the Reform UK party leader appeared to indicate some remorse for the impact of his alleged behaviour while at Dulwich college, a private school in south London.
Continue reading...Hi everyone! I have been riding a onewheel xr and gtv for 6-7 years. Now thinking about buying a funwheel x7 long range. Just wanted to see if anyone can tell me if there is a big difference riding between a Onewheel GTV and a Funwheel X7LR? Anybody who has done such a switch?
For months, the Trump administration has justified its dramatic midnight raid on a Chicago apartment complex by saying that it had intelligence that the violent Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua had taken over the building. But officials have provided no evidence to back up the claim.
Now, new documents confirm in the government’s own words that what prompted the raid was more pedestrian: allegations that immigrants were squatting in the complex. And the landlord had given federal officials, who were already targeting immigrants in Chicago, the blessing to search the building.
Arrest records for two of the 37 immigrants detained that September night, included in a motion filed Tuesday that’s tied to an ongoing federal consent decree, provide the clearest picture yet of what led to the controversial and aggressive operation, in which agents descended from a Blackhawk helicopter, broke down doors and zip-tied U.S. citizens and immigrants.
The records reveal that agents entered and searched the complex with the “owner/manager’s verbal and written consent.” Agents wrote that they launched the operation “based on intelligence that there were illegal aliens unlawfully occupying apartments.” They said they focused their search on units “that were not legally rented or leased at the time.” That narrative appears word for word in both arrest reports — for a Venezuelan man and a Mexican man.
“It was a brutal lie against the American public,” said Mark Fleming, an attorney with the National Immigrant Justice Center and co-counsel in a lawsuit against the government that led to the consent decree. “This was really about immigrants purportedly occupying apartments unlawfully, which is radically different than the story they told.”
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security makes no mention in the records of Tren de Aragua, even though officials repeatedly cited the gang’s presence in the building as the motivation for the raid. Agents paraded immigrants in front of cameras and called their arrests a victory against terrorism. The government also claimed two of those arrested were gang members but never provided any proof.

ProPublica previously reported, based on interviews and records, that there was little evidence to back up the government’s claims. Even today, four months after the raid, federal prosecutors have not filed criminal charges against anyone who was arrested.
Over the past few months, ProPublica has interviewed 15 of the immigrants detained that night; all denied gang membership. They and others who lived in the building acknowledged there was criminal activity there, including the murder of a Venezuelan man last summer, but nobody knew of gang members there.
The two arrest records were filed in federal court as part of ongoing litigation over whether the government, during its monthslong deportation campaign in Chicago, violated a 2022 consent decree that limits warrantless arrests. The consent decree is still in place, and the government continues to challenge it.
Government attorneys had previously acknowledged in court that hundreds of immigrants detained last year may have been improperly arrested.
Following a court order, DHS has been providing administrative arrest records to attorneys who now are demanding the release of some of those immigrants from custody or the removal of restrictions for those who are already out. That includes the Venezuelan man and Mexican man taken during the raid.
In the motion filed Tuesday night, immigrant rights attorneys said that to justify warrantless arrests across Chicago, the government described immigrants as flight risks though they were not. Some of the factors that DHS used to make that determination for the South Shore men — including their “willful disregard for other’s personal property” and their “attempt to flee from law enforcement” — were baseless and contradicted by the arrest narratives, the attorneys wrote.
Even more of the 37 arrests that night may have violated the consent decree, attorneys said, but the cases under review are for those who remain in the U.S. As the weeks and months passed, most of the immigrants detained in the South Shore raid were deported or gave up on their efforts to stay in the country.
The property owner, Trinity Flood, a Wisconsin-based real estate investor, and the management company at the time of the raid, Strength in Management, did not immediately respond to requests for comment on Wednesday morning. Flood and Corey Oliver, the management company’s owner, have repeatedly declined interview requests and have not acknowledged any involvement in the operation.
A DHS spokesperson did not respond to questions Wednesday morning but repeated earlier statements that the raid was performed legally. “Given that two individuals of a Foreign Terrorist Organization were arrested, at a building they are known to frequent, we are limited on further information we can provide,” the spokesperson said.
From the beginning there had been questions about whether Flood and her property manager tipped off the government to get rid of squatters in her building, which had repeatedly failed city inspections in the two years before the raid.
Last month, state officials launched a housing discrimination investigation into allegations that Flood and Strength in Management used federal agents to illegally force the Black and Hispanic tenants from the 130-unit building in Chicago’s South Shore neighborhood.
In their complaint, state officials wrote that “building management blamed Venezuelan tenants for their own (management’s) failure to provide needed locks and security service, as well as other needed maintenance and repairs, and perpetuated stereotypes about Venezuelan gang members to send a message that tenants born outside of the United States were considered gang associates, even if they were law abiding.”
Within hours of the raid, workers from the management company were tossing tenants’ belongings in the trash and clearing out apartments, the complaint states.
State officials said that they could not provide any additional information on an ongoing investigation, but that they look forward to a response from Flood and Strength in Management.
Several Venezuelan immigrants detained that night said they were angry to learn that the building’s owner and property manager had facilitated federal agents’ entry. “We were paying our rent, doing things the right way,” said Jean Carlos Antonio Colmenares Pérez, 39. “Then suddenly, boom, the government comes in and takes us out. I don’t understand.”
Colmenares spent more than two months in federal custody before he was deported in December.
“They took us out as if we were dogs. As if we were criminals,” said his cousin, Daniel José Henríquez Rojas, 43.
Henríquez was detained for about two months before he was deported. Federal agents also took his wife and then-6-year-son that night and later transported them to a facility in Texas where they were detained for about a month. The family is now back together in Venezuela.
Johandry José Andrade Jiménez, 23, had moved into the South Shore complex with his wife and three young daughters just two days before the raid. Andrade was deported in December. His wife was released with an ankle monitor in Chicago, where she now struggles to support their daughters alone.
“They separated me from my family,” Andrade said. “I feel awful.”
The complex was home to dozens of mostly African American and Venezuelan tenants. While some said they had stopped paying rent because of the dangerous and dilapidated conditions, close to a dozen Venezuelans, including Colmenares, Henríquez and Andrade, told us they were paying rent to people they believed worked for the management company.
But in some cases, that money was going to other tenants who claimed to be the managers. ProPublica interviewed a U.S. citizen who said that he and others moved Venezuelan families into empty units, charged whatever amount they believed was fair and pocketed the money. “We started making them pay rent to us,” the man said.
Flood, who is facing a foreclosure lawsuit, said in court records last fall that her company had invested millions of dollars to repair and maintain the building and on legal fees for evictions. Weeks before the raid, the company obtained court orders to evict squatters.
The building continued to deteriorate after the raid. Oliver testified in court that he briefly hired security people but then fired them after they didn’t do their jobs. In November, a county judge ordered that another company take over management of the building and required that the remaining residents move out.
The post The Real Story Behind the Midnight Immigration Raid on a Chicago Apartment Building appeared first on ProPublica.
The talks are expected to be held after the U.S. military said it shot down an Iranian drone and Iranian forces threatened to seize a U.S.-flagged vessel.
This blog is now closed, you can read more on this story here
The Kremlin has reacted to comments made by French president Emmanuel Macron that he was looking to resume contact with Putin on the war in Ukraine.
According to Reuters news agency, the Kremlin confirmed ongoing technical discussions between Russia and France, but provided no further details or indicated any dialogue between Putin and Macron.
At night, the enemy carried out a massive attack with strike drones on the Odesa region. Damage to civilian, residential and industrial infrastructure was recorded.
In the city of Odesa, about 20 residential buildings and cars were damaged. Four people were rescued from the rubble, but one person was unfortunately injured.
Continue reading...Feb. 4, 2026 — The Technical University of Munich (TUM) has unveiled the EU’s first AI chip using modern 7-nanometer technology. The neuromorphic chip was designed by Prof. Hussam Amrouch in accordance with the industry standards set by world-leading chip manufacturer TSMC. The professor of AI processor design and his research group now plan to produce at least three new designs per year, to be manufactured from 2028 onward by the Dresden-based European Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (ESMC).

The Technical University of Munich (TUM) has unveiled the EU’s first AI chip using modern 7-nanometer technology. The neuromorphic chip was designed by Prof. Hussam Amrouch, pictured. Photo Credit: Andreas Heddergott/TUM.
The COVID-19 pandemic, the war in Ukraine and broader geopolitical shifts have exposed weaknesses in global supply chains. “That is why it will be crucial in the future to cover all stages in Germany and Europe — from training AI chip specialists to technological development and chip manufacturing,” said Prof. Amrouch.
Amrouch recently established the MACHT-AI chip research and training center at TUM, funded by the Bavarian Ministries of Science and Economic Affairs. Looking ahead, he envisions students in Germany learning to design AI chips and develop algorithms directly with companies, with production also taking place domestically.
AI Chip Enables Local Data Processing
In contrast to cloud-based chips such as those manufactured by NVIDIA, Prof. Amrouch’s approach focuses on technology that processes data locally on the device itself rather than sending it to the cloud. ‘This is a fundamental solution for protecting the privacy of our citizens,’ said Amrouch.
The AI chips are based on the open-source RISC-V architecture and can be customized for specific applications — from recording and analyzing heartbeats or brain signals in healthcare to implementing language models. This specialization is more efficient than using a general-purpose AI chip. Amrouch: ‘You can buy a Ferrari, but that doesn’t necessarily make you faster in the city. An e-bike is more efficient here.’ Another critical point is that the technology is also intended for use in control electronics in quantum computing in the medium term.
Data Remains Private and Secure
Local data processing enhances cybersecurity and helps protect technologies against misuse by third parties. ‘Those who design and build the chip know exactly what is inside it and can guarantee how it will function,’ says Amrouch, who believes it is essential for companies to be able to assure their customers that their data will remain private.
Trust is a critical ‘currency’ for industries such as the automotive sector, where Europe currently lacks sovereignty in high-performance chips. The defense industry also places the most stringent demands on security, for example when it comes to the use of chips for drones. Potential built-in vulnerabilities such as Trojans pose incalculable risks here, especially if chips are developed and manufactured outside Germany and the EU.
Markus Blume, Bavaria’s Minister of Science, said: “This is a big breakthrough for AI research at TUM. The European Union’s first AI chip using 7-nanometre technology comes from Bavaria and combines performance, energy efficiency and security. With MACHT-AI, TUM plays a central role in Bavaria’s semiconductor ecosystem. To remain competitive and independent while retaining technological sovereignty, we are developing key technologies and training talent here.”
Bavarian Minister of Economic Affairs Hubert Aiwanger is convinced: “Artificial intelligence has undergone tremendous development in recent years. As an economy, we must be in a position not only to keep pace with this development, but also to help shape it. The development of TUM’s own AI chip is an impressive demonstration of how well the Bavarian semiconductor ecosystem is developing.”
TUM President Thomas Hofmann said: “Geopolitical risks have increased dramatically in recent years. That is why cutting-edge technology must be developed and produced in Germany and Europe. With his AI chips, Prof. Hussam Amrouch impressively demonstrates how dependence on Asia and the USA can be successfully reduced, and Europe’s technological self-determination strengthened. And, incidentally, with a very sustainable concept.”
Source: TUM
The post TUM Unveils EU’s 1st 7nm AI Chip with Local Processing and RISC-V Architecture appeared first on HPCwire.
State-owned company will sell under the Lepas brand, continuing its rapid expansion in the British market
The Chinese carmaker Chery is launching a fourth brand in the UK, continuing a push into the British market where it has rapidly become a major player.
The state-owned company said on Wednesday it would sell cars under the Lepas brand, which is developing battery and hybrid SUVs aimed at younger families, mainly in the European market.
Continue reading...Pinterest has sacked two engineers for tracking which workers lost their jobs in a recent round of layoffs. BBC: The company recently announced job cuts, with chief executive Bill Ready stating in an email he was "doubling down on an AI-forward approach," according to an employee who posted some of the memo on LinkedIn. Pinterest told investors the move would impact about 15% of the workforce, or roughly 700 roles, without saying which teams or workers were affected. But then "two engineers wrote custom scripts improperly accessing confidential company information to identify the locations and names of all dismissed employees and then shared it more broadly," a company spokesperson told the BBC. "This was a clear violation of Pinterest policy and of their former colleagues' privacy," the spokesperson added. The script written by the Pinterest engineers was aimed at internal tools used at the company for employees to communicate, according to a person familiar with the firings who asked not to be identified. The person said the script created an alert for which employee names within a tool like the team communication platform Slack were being removed or deactivated, giving some insight into who at the company was impacted by the layoffs.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
PARIS, Feb. 4, 2026 — Welinq, a leader in quantum networking technology, today announced the commercial launch of its high-performance, rack-mounted Entangled Photon Pair Source. The company has also sold and delivered its first unit to a leading European institution. This milestone marks a pivotal step forward in the development of quantum infrastructure, providing businesses and research institutions with an integration-ready solution.
The advancement of quantum technologies depends on the ability to generate and distribute entanglement at scale across quantum networks. Welinq’s Entangled Photon Pair Source addresses this challenge by delivering the critical technology required to reliably generate entangled photons for secure communications and quantum computer interconnects. Designed for compatibility with a wide range of quantum technologies, including multiple quantum computing modalities, this flexibility positions Welinq’s source as a core building block for next-generation, scalable, high-performance quantum infrastructures.
Tom Darras, CEO and co-founder of Welinq, commented: “With this sale, we are not only demonstrating the viability of our technology, but also its strategic importance in building the quantum infrastructures of tomorrow. Our vision is to provide a complete networking solution for quantum-augmented data centers and quantum-safe networks, and this commercial source is a vital piece of that puzzle.”
A High-Performance, Integration-Ready Photonic Solution
Welinq’s Entangled Photon Pair Source delivers a unique combination of performance, stability, and cross-platform compatibility, making it a foundational component of quantum networks. Designed for deployment within existing fiber infrastructures, it enables the reliable generation of entanglement required for quantum-safe networks and quantum-augmented data centers.
Key features include:
A Second Commercial Milestone for On-Prem Quantum Networks
With the recent commercial delivery of its quantum memory to SkQCI and the newly launched entangled photon pair source, Welinq now provides multiple interoperable core components required to deploy operational quantum networking systems directly on customer premises. These technologies are no longer confined to laboratory demonstrations, but are being delivered as engineered, production-ready modules to end users.
This second commercial milestone confirms strong market validation of Welinq’s technology portfolio in Europe. By addressing concrete deployment needs across research and industrial customers, Welinq is establishing itself as a leading European provider of quantum networking infrastructure, while actively expanding its commercial footprint into international markets, including the USA and Asia.
More from HPCwire
About Welinq
Based in Paris, Welinq is pioneering in the industrialization of quantum infrastructure, offering solutions that extend beyond individual hardware components. With a full technology stack spanning software solutions for algorithm partitioning and a suite of quantum hardware, including photon pair sources, quantum memories, and qubit-photon interfaces, Welinq addresses the comprehensive needs of quantum data centers and secure networks. A spin-off from Sorbonne University, CNRS, and PSL University, Welinq was founded in 2022 by Tom Darras, Julien Laurat, and Eleni Diamanti.
Source: Welinq
The post Welinq Secures 1st Sale of Its Entangled Photon Pair Source appeared first on HPCwire.
Defense department says it may end support unless youth group abandons inclusivity and returns to ‘God and country’ values
The Pentagon is again threatening to sever ties with Scouting America unless the organization formerly known as the Boy Scouts of America reverts to “core values” and realigns itself with service to “God and country”.
A warning to end the US military’s longstanding partnership with one of the nation’s largest and most popular youth organizations came in a Monday night post to social media by the Pentagon spokesperson, Sean Parnell, who insisted the scouting movement “lost its way” in a 2025 rebrand that promoted inclusivity and included admitting girls and LBGTQ+ members.
Continue reading...As anti-migration policies sweep the continent, the Spanish PM is going against the tide by announcing plans to legalise the status of undocumented migrants
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You don’t need a degree in political science to understand why so many supposedly centrist European leaders have begun talking about immigration in terms that would have been unthinkable even a few years ago.
Far-right parties across the continent have fuelled their rise by seizing on the issue as a political cosh with which to beat their more mainstream and established rivals, whom they accuse of complacency, inaction and a failure to defend borders.
Continue reading...Anniversary depicts a rightwing takeover of the US inspired by a book of essays. But it’s fuzzy on the bits in between
As we all know from history and the current news cycle, autocracy is bad. But it can also be boring. For every explosive confrontation in Minneapolis, there is a quieter, less tangible threat in the form of Kash Patel’s FBI seizing voting records from Fulton county, Georgia – a state Donald Trump lost by fewer than 12,000 votes in 2020 – or the steady implementation of 900-page manifesto by the influential rightwing thinktank the Heritage Foundation, neither of which lend themselves to blockbuster treatment. And so we have a problem: how to animate the quiet part of what’s happening in the US to reflect a dangerous but tedious reality – namely, that this thing ends not with a bang, but a combination of voter manipulation and federal electoral interference that undermines faith in the democratic process.
I bring this up after a week of watching popular movies that resonate in Trump’s US, most of which go heavy on the firefights and light on the details of how we arrive at them. The latest, Anniversary, which launched this week on Netflix – a streamer increasingly uninterested in the subtleties of any situation, let alone this one – depicts a US in which an evil rightwing genius in the shape of a beautiful young woman talks the country into ditching democracy via the medium of (I love this detail; the sheer optimism of it) a stirring book of essays.
Continue reading...A new painting by the maestro of Trumpian kitsch offers a fever dream of musical unity – and fundamentally misunderstands orchestras and conductors. And where are the music stands?
Events in the United States of Trumpland continue to reveal staggering new dimensions to the possibilities of orchestral music. Trump’s announcement that his “Trump Kennedy Center” is to be shut for a refit is a brilliantly cynical way to stop the noise when artists try to cancel their appearances during the rest of his presidential tenure: it’s shut already! Bigly losers, all of you!
But that’s not the new dawn for the artform I’m talking about. I mean the inspirational painting unveiled by the maestro of Trumpian kitsch, Jon McNaughton (and stamped with the presidential seal of approval – ie a post on Truth Social).
Continue reading...The USMNT manager said players should stay out of conversations that don’t deal with soccer
Last week, Mauricio Pochettino began a World Cup year with an unforced error.
At the tail-end of a virtual press conference that covered a wide range of ongoing USMNT business, the 53-year-old Argentine – who has made himself commendably available to the American soccer press – was asked about recent comments by Tim Weah.
Leander Schaerlaeckens’ book on the United States men’s national soccer team, The Long Game, is out on 12 May. You can preorder it here. He teaches at Marist University.
Continue reading...This will be the first time humans have traveled all the way to the moon since the early 1970s.
SAN DIEGO, Calif., Feb. 4, 2026 — EPRI has announced a collaboration with Prologis, NVIDIA, and InfraPartners to study smaller-scale data centers designed for distributed inference, a form of real-time data processing used across sectors including logistics, health care, finance, and public services. The announcement was made today at DTECH.
The collaborators will assess the deployment of micro data centers—ranging from 5 to 20 megawatts—at or near utility substations with available grid capacity that can be quickly set up. The goal is to bring inference capabilities—the process of generating real-time responses from trained models—closer to where data is generated and consumed, while making better use of underutilized infrastructure and reducing pressure on congested transmission systems.
The companies will explore how smaller, distributed sites can meet computing needs without straining the grid. The collaboration aims to have at least five pilot sites in development across the U.S. by the end of 2026, providing a replicable model for rapid, scalable deployment.
“AI is transforming every industry, and the energy system will need to continue to evolve to meet increasing demand,” said EPRI President and CEO Arshad Mansoor. “This collaboration with Prologis, NVIDIA, InfraPartners, and the utility community highlights the type of innovative actions required to meet the moment. Using existing grid capacity to bring inference compute closer to where it’s needed—quickly and reliably—is a win for all.”
As artificial intelligence applications scale across industries, demand for AI inference continues to surge. Meeting this demand not only requires more compute, but AI infrastructure deployed closer to end-users to relieve pressure on congested transmission systems.
From autonomous logistics to fraud detection and digital diagnostics, inference systems are playing an increasingly important role in supporting real-time decision-making across nearly every sector of the economy. These workloads don’t require hyperscale facilities, but they do demand reliable, fast, and location-sensitive compute power. By moving inference closer to the edge of the grid, utilities and infrastructure providers can respond more efficiently to the growing volume and velocity of data.
This approach also supports grid reliability. By co-locating computing capacity with substations that have existing but underused distribution headroom, utilities may reduce transmission congestion, improve system flexibility, and help integrate renewable energy.
“As energy demand grows, we need infrastructure solutions that support grid reliability and make better use of what’s already built,” said Parag Soni, senior vice president and global head of Utility Strategy and Engagement at Prologis. “This collaboration is about using our development and energy expertise to help deliver smarter, more flexible infrastructure right where it’s needed.”
“AI is driving a new industrial revolution that demands a fundamental rethinking of data center infrastructure,” said Marc Spieler, senior managing director for the Global Energy Industry at NVIDIA. “By deploying accelerated computing resources directly adjacent to available grid capacity, we can unlock stranded power to scale AI inference efficiently. This distributed approach, powered by NVIDIA accelerated computing, maximizes existing energy assets, helping to deliver the intelligence required to transform every industry.”
Each organization will play a key role in supporting this project and the development of sites that relieve pressure on the grid:
“AI is becoming the real-time engine of growth for the modern economy, and it demands a new kind of digital infrastructure,” said Harqs Singh, chief technology officer at InfraPartners. “By pairing InfraPartners’ AI data center solutions with EPRI’s technical leadership, NVIDIA’s platforms, and Prologis’ national footprint, we’re enabling rapid deployment of AI nodes where they’re needed most. Together, we’re building the foundation for the next decade of intelligent infrastructure.”
About EPRI
Founded in 1972, EPRI is the world’s preeminent independent, non-profit energy research and development organization, with offices around the world. EPRI’s trusted experts collaborate with more than 450 companies in 45 countries, driving innovation to ensure the public has clean, safe, reliable, and affordable access to electricity across the globe.
Source: EPRI
The post EPRI Launches Distributed Inference Data Center Pilot with NVIDIA and Prologis appeared first on HPCwire.
Satellite images and witness testimony show destruction as IDF claims it was forced to take defensive measures
Israeli forces have bulldozed part of a Gaza cemetery containing the war graves of dozens of British, Australian and other allied soldiers killed in the first and second world wars, satellite imagery and witness testimony reveal.
Satellite imagery of the Gaza war cemetery in al-Tuffah, a district of Gaza City, shows extensive earthworks in the southernmost corner of the graveyard. Bomb craters can be seen around the cemetery, but in this area the destruction appears to have been more systematic.
Continue reading...Google's much-anticipated plan to merge Android and ChromeOS into a single operating system called Aluminium is shaping up to be a drawn-out, complicated transition that could leave existing Chromebook users behind, according to previously unreported court documents in the Google search antitrust case. The new OS won't be compatible with all existing Chromebook hardware, and Google will be forced to maintain ChromeOS through at least 2033 to honor its 10-year support commitment to current users -- meaning two parallel operating systems running for years. The timeline itself is messier than Google has let on publicly, the filings suggest. Sameer Samat, Google's head of Android, called the merger "something we're super excited about for next year" last September, but court filings describe the "fastest path" to market as offering Aluminium to "commercial trusted testers" in late 2026 before a full release in 2028. Enterprise and education customers -- the segments where Chromebooks currently dominate -- are slated for 2028 as well. Columbia computer science professor Jason Nieh, who interviewed Google engineers as a witness in the case, testified that Aluminium requires a heavier software stack and more powerful hardware to run.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
If you're tracking your glucose, these are the best monitors, according to the pros.
Only 180 bats survived intense heat in South Australian town, including 34 babies that carers say face months of recovery
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A colony of about 1,000 flying foxes in a South Australian town has been shattered by the intense heat that gripped south-eastern Australia last week, with more than 80% of the camp at Naracoorte wiped out.
“It’s a devastating loss of numbers,” said Judith Bemmer, a carer at Bat Rescue SA. Among the surviving 180 animals, about 34 underweight and dehydrated babies were rescued, and would face months of recovery.
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Continue reading...WASHINGTON, Feb. 4, 2026 — The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has announced the chair and members of the newly established Office of Science Advisory Committee (SCAC), a unified advisory body that will provide independent advice on complex scientific and technical challenges across the Department’s Office of Science.
This announcement advances the Department’s implementation of President Trump’s Executive Order Restoring Gold Standard Science as the cornerstone of federal research—ensuring that the Department and its National Laboratory systems’ science is collaborative, transparent, and guided by evidence to rebuild public trust in science. As DOE modernizes and strengthens its scientific enterprise, SCAC will provide expert input to help inform priorities, improve coordination, and address cross-cutting research challenges across the Office of Science.
“The establishment of SCAC underscores the Department’s commitment to scientific integrity and the power of partnership,” said DOE Under Secretary for Science Darío Gil. “By bringing together leading minds from diverse institutions, we’re forging a collaborative framework that will not only enhance our scientific endeavors but also accelerate the translation of fundamental research into tangible benefits for the American people. This committee exemplifies how shared vision and collective expertise are essential for navigating the complex scientific landscape of today and tomorrow.”
Members of SCAC, appointed by Under Secretary Gil, represent the full breadth of Office of Science research, drawing expertise from leaders across academia, industry, science philanthropy, and the Department’s National Laboratories. The Committee will help the Office of Science adapt to a rapidly evolving research landscape and address interdisciplinary challenges in a streamlined and flexible manner. It will also provide advice on initiatives that are priorities for the entire Office, including the Genesis Mission, scientific discovery, fusion energy, and quantum science.
SCAC will be chaired by Persis Drell, professor of materials science and engineering and physics at Stanford University, provost emerita of Stanford, and director emerita of SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory.
The Committee will adopt the core functions of the Office of Science’s six former discretionary advisory committees. Any current charged responsibilities of these former committees will transfer to SCAC, providing a single, coordinated source of independent expert advice. A full list of the 21 SCAC members is available here.
Source: U.S. Dept. of Energy
The post DOE Announces Members of the Office of Science Advisory Committee appeared first on HPCwire.
A number of countries including Australia are investigating X over Grok-produced sexualised deepfakes
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The eSafety commissioner, Julie Inman Grant, says global regulatory focus on Elon Musk’s X has reached a “tipping point” after a raid of the company’s offices in France this week.
The raid on Tuesday was part of an investigation that included alleged offences of complicity in the possession and organised distribution of child abuse images, violation of image rights through sexualised deepfakes, and denial of crimes against humanity.
Continue reading...We asked dentists for their recommendations on the best whitening toothpastes for sensitive teeth and more.
The child walked away from his home during a snowstorm Saturday night, as temperatures fell below freezing.
A man who sued his college after being suspended over a rape allegation was hired into a powerful position at the federal agency tasked with defending workers against workplace discrimination, including sex discrimination.
Benjamin North, who maintained his innocence during the lawsuit, went on to become an attorney who took public stances against what he characterized as the excesses of Title IX, the law prohibiting sex discrimination in federally funded education.
Less than eight years after his case was closed following an agreement with the university, North has quietly become the new assistant general counsel of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, according to a screenshot of the agency’s employee directory and an agency employee who requested anonymity to avoid retaliation.
“You need people in that office who understand that their job is to uphold the law and to apply the law faithfully.”
North now reports directly to Acting General Counsel Catherine Eschbach, according to the employee.
“The general counsel’s office is an incredibly important part of the EEOC,” said Jenny Yang, a partner at the law firm Outten & Golden and a former EEOC chair. The general counsel holds the power to decide which employers to sue and over which issues, and oversees litigation brought in the agency’s 15 regional offices, and assistant general counsels help coordinate litigation “for the entire agency,” Yang said. They often review cases and their evidence to evaluate the merits and help determine whether the agency should invest its limited resources into pursuing a suit, she said.
“You need people in that office who understand that their job is to uphold the law and to apply the law faithfully,” she said. (Neither North nor the EEOC responded to requests for comment.)
North’s role could have even more heft than usual, the EEOC employee said, given how many attorneys have left the agency and the office of the general counsel under the second Trump administration. The office is typically filled with “experienced litigators,” the employee said, noting that North was still a college student 10 years ago and now has been hired into “a very senior position” in which he will “have a huge impact on the cases that the EEOC chooses to bring.”
North sued Catholic University after he was accused of rape by a fellow student, investigated, and suspended for two years. In his legal complaint, he claimed he and his accuser met at a party, then in an upstairs bathroom “engaged in consensual sex.” According to the judge’s ruling in the case, North sought to refute the accuser’s allegation that she had taken three shots of vodka and became distraught. The university found that she had been incapable of giving consent due to intoxication and suspended North.
North alleged in his suit that the university had violated its own policies as well as Title IX, which prohibits gender discrimination at federally funded institutions. The Title IX claim rested on North’s allegation that the university had been biased against him and gave his accuser “preferential treatment,” thereby “discriminating against [him] based on his gender.” He sought $1 million in damages as well as injunctive relief.
In 2019, the case was closed when North and his legal team stipulated to dismissal, indicating an agreement between the plaintiff and defense, usually a settlement. (Catholic University declined to comment.)
North also dealt with Title IX claims as an attorney after completing law school. Before taking his role in the government, North most recently worked at Binnall Law Group. The firm published an article on its website in 2018 saying that universities use Title IX to “abuse the Constitutional rights of students accused of sexual misconduct.”
At Binnall, North served as a Title IX adviser who helped students in such proceedings. (Binnall did not respond to a request for comment.)
North wrote an op-ed for The Federalist in 2021 about Title IX arguing that a Biden administration nominee had “led the charge against students’ civil rights and due process” and that men’s rights are often violated in university proceedings after they’re accused of sexual assault.
Now, North could help guide litigation at the EEOC.
“It sends a concerning signal to have hired somebody with his background.”
“Given that we are the agency tasked with enforcing protections against sexual violence in the workplace, it sends a concerning signal to have hired somebody with his background,” the EEOC employee said.
That signal will be sent both internally to staff, the employee said, about what the agency wants to focus on and to workers who have experienced sexual harassment or assault at work about whether the agency will take their claims seriously.
North is not the first EEOC hire who has raised eyebrows during the second Trump administration. Last April, EEOC Chair Andrea Lucas appointed Shannon Royce, a longtime Christian conservative activist, as her chief of staff. Royce had been serving as president of the Christian Employers Alliance, which sued the EEOC in 2021 over its defense of the rights of trans people at work. Her group also sued the EEOC over its inclusion of abortion care in the protections offered by the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act.
On January 12, the Christian Employers Alliance announced that it had notched an agreement with the EEOC in which the agency agreed not to enforce abortion and gender identity requirements against its members while the EEOC “considers revising its policies.”
Lucas also hired Connor Clegg, a former Fox News producer, in the agency’s communications department. In 2018, Clegg was impeached as student body president at Texas State University over uncovered social media posts in which he mocked Asian tourists with hashtags that included “#pearlharborwasbad” and “#kimjongil.” He was later found not guilty by the Student Government Supreme Court.
More recently, Clegg posted a long rant to social media about an interaction with a traffic enforcement officer who “barely spoke a lick of English” and reposted a tweet from late Turning Point USA co-founder Charlie Kirk that said, “There is an undeniable War on White People in The West.”
North’s hire comes after Lucas has asserted new priorities at the agency.
In a post to X in December, she directly solicited complaints from white men who allege they’ve been discriminated at work based on their race or sex. She has also instructed agency officials to focus on cases that line up with her own personal priorities, which include “defending the biological and binary reality of sex and related rights,” “rooting out unlawful DEI-motivated race and sex discrimination,” and “religious bias and harassment, including antisemitism.”
Meanwhile, under her leadership, the general counsel’s office dropped the litigation it had already brought on behalf of transgender workers and in a disparate impact racial discrimination case.
The post EEOC Quietly Hired Lawyer Who Crusaded for Cases of Discrimination Against Men — Including His Own appeared first on The Intercept.
Two brothers of Renee Good, the Minneapolis woman who was shot and killed in January by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent, have described the impact on their family to a panel of Democratic lawmakers on Capitol Hill.
The forum, consisting of Democrats from the US House and Senate, listened to testimony from people who have been affected by the way agents of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) have used force
Continue reading...A Doberman pinscher named Penny won best in show at the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show.
From your camera settings to how to develop and scan film, these are my tips for getting started in analog photography.
Phone battery life has always been important, but which brands consistently offer the longest battery life? After extensive testing, we've found the two leaders.
Philando Castile, a lawful gun owner, was shot and killed by a police officer in 2016 – gun rights groups were largely silent
The killing of Alex Pretti by federal immigration agents in Minneapolis has sparked a thorny conversation among gun rights groups and Trump administration officials about the second amendment and the right to carry concealed firearms at protests and demonstrations. Among the questions is which cases the movement rallies behind – and which it doesn’t.
In the hours and days after Pretti’s killing, dozens of local national and local gun rights groups lambasted federal officials like Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary, and Gregory Bovino, a senior border patrol official, who baselessly claimed that Pretti’s carrying of a handgun proved that he planned to harm and kill border patrol agents. Prominent gun rights organizations, including Gun Owners of America (GOA) and the National Rifle Association (NRA), called for an independent investigation into the shooting and defended Pretti’s right to carry a gun.
Continue reading...We compared prices, features, performance and customer support of the top WordPress hosting services to help you make the right decision for your website.
Adobe is no longer planning to discontinue Adobe Animate on March 1st. From a report: In an FAQ, the company now says that Animate will now be in maintenance mode and that it has "no plans toâdiscontinue or remove access" to the app. Animate will still receive "ongoing security and bug fixes" and will still be available for "both new and existing users," but it won't get new features. Many creators expressed frustration after Adobe's original discontinuation announcement from earlier this week, and the application is still used by creators like David Firth, the person behind the animated web series Salad Fingers. Now, Adobe says that "We are committed to ensuring Animate usersâalways have access to their content regardless of the state of development of the application."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

In many ways, Delaware’s multi-billion-dollar budget is like any household spending plan. The big difference is that this family is nearly a million people strong.
Just like a household, the state must find a way to take care of everyone, adjust to changing needs, and stay balanced year in and year out. Both occasionally contend with higher-than-expected expenses, and both face that eternal struggle – balancing wants against needs .
“We can’t spend what we don’t have” is a guiding principle in state finance, and a plain cold reality for many households. Neither the state nor a prudent family planner would borrow money just to run everyday expenses, but in the state’s case, it’s against the law: A balanced budget is constitutionally required in Delaware, meaning it cannot spend more than its officially certified revenue forecast allows. Each June, the General Assembly and Office of Management and Budget finalize spending within this cap, much like a family must ensure bills don’t exceed income.
Families that value education make it a priority – budgeting for school supplies, tuition, or extracurricular programs. Delaware does the same, dedicating nearly one-third of its General Fund to public education. From early childhood programs to higher education, the state treats learning as an investment in its “next generation.”
Just as families support aging and needy relatives, Delaware allocates significant funding to Medicaid, senior health services, and long-term care. When healthcare costs rise or the senior population grows, the state must find new ways to fund these programs – or make difficult tradeoffs elsewhere, just like any family.
In many families, some members need extra help from time to time. Delaware also lends a hand to those in need, through programs for special education, disability services, and housing assistance. The Department of Health and Social Services (DHSS) administers much of this care, ensuring that vulnerable residents aren’t left behind.
A household budget usually must cover the unavoidable needs of modern life – things like utilities, car repairs, and home maintenance. For Delaware, that translates to public safety, road maintenance, and emergency services, funded through the Operating Budget and Capital Improvement (aka Bond) Bill. These “maintenance” costs keep the state’s infrastructure and services functioning day to day.
Families might save for college or home repairs; Delaware saves for economic stability. The Rainy Day Fund and Budget Stabilization Fund are reserve accounts designed to cover emergencies and revenue downturns. Lawmakers must decide when it’s truly “raining” – and how much to draw from savings.
Just as a family’s income swings up or down with pay raises or layoffs, Delaware’s revenue streams – from personal income taxes, corporate fees, and federal funds – fluctuate with the economy. When revenues fall short, the DEFAC (Delaware Economic and Financial Advisory Council) updates forecasts and leaders adjust spending mid-year.
Families might take out a mortgage; Delaware issues bonds for schools, roads, and infrastructure. Look at bonds as a giant home loan – but instead of asking a bank, the state goes to the open market, seeking the best terms it can get. Maintaining a strong credit rating is essential to keep borrowing affordable for both families and the state, and the state’s Bond Bill process ensures that debt remains within limits. Delaware has managed to keep a fairly solid credit rating, which means less of its money has to go toward paying off debt.
In any home, family members debate what to spend their limited funds on – like a vacation, or roof repair? Delaware’s version of this dinner table discussion happens in Legislative Hall, where lawmakers negotiate over competing funding priorities, from education to healthcare, to the environment and economic development.
Families track expenses to avoid overdrafts. Similarly, Delaware maintains public budget hearings, detailed appropriations bills, and open financial reports so taxpayers can see exactly where their money goes.
About the Civics 101 Series: Civics 101 is a continuing explanatory series by Delaware LIVE and the Spotlight Delaware content marketing team designed to help readers understand how state government works and how budget decisions affect everyday life in Delaware. To read other stories in the series, visit the Civics 101 home page.
The post Civics 101: How Delaware’s Budget is a lot like a family budget appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
China will ban hidden door handles on cars, commonly used on Tesla's electric vehicles and many other EV models, starting next year, due to safety concerns.
Perfect Tides perfectly captures the older millennial college experience, and a time when nobody worried about being embarrassing online
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I’ve noticed an interesting micro-trend emerging in the last few years: millennial nostalgia games. Not just ones that adopt the aesthetic of Y2K gaming – think Crow Country or Fear the Spotlight’s deliberately retro PS1-style fuzzy polygons – but semi-autobiographical games specifically about the millennial experience. I’ve played three in the past year. Despelote is set in 2002 in Ecuador and is played through the eyes of a football-obsessed eight-year-old. The award-winning Consume Me is about being a teen girl battling disordered eating in the 00s. And this week I played a point-and-click adventure game about being a college student in the early 2000s.
Perfect Tides: Station to Station is set in New York in 2003 – a year that is the epitome of nostalgia for the micro-generation that grew up without the internet but came of age online. It was before Facebook, before the smartphone, but firmly during the era of late-night forum browsing and instant-messenger conversations. The internet wasn’t yet a vector for mass communication, but it could still bring you together with other people who loved the things that you loved, people who read the same hipster blogs and liked the same bands. The protagonist, Mara, is a student and young writer who works in her college library.
Continue reading...Dismantling rules will make children vulnerable to chronic diseases ‘make America healthy again’ wants to eradicate
Donald Trump’s aggressive rollback of environmental protections directly contradicts the promises of his “make America healthy again” campaign, according to new research.
Helmed by Robert F Kennedy Jr, Trump’s health and human services department has touted pledges to “transform our nation’s food, fitness, air, water, soil and medicine” and “reverse the childhood chronic disease crisis”. But the president’s Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is pushing the country in the opposite direction, says the new report from the liberal research and advocacy non-profit Center for American Progress (CAP).
Continue reading...Dictator’s second son, a key figure in post-2011 Libyan politics, reportedly shot dead at home by masked assailants
Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, the son of the late Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi and for years the second most powerful person in the country, has been killed in a village south-west of Tripoli, officials said on Tuesday night.
The 53-year-old died from gunshot wounds in the town of Zintan, 85 miles south-west of the capital, according to the Libyan attorney general’s office. Gaddafi’s own office said he was killed in his home by masked assailants.
Continue reading...Buckingham Palace announced in October that Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor would vacate Royal Lodge, though he was photographed there on horseback just this week.
Penny the Doberman pinscher named America’s top dog
Linton lands second best in show nearly four decades on
Westminster honors Catherine O’Hara with video tribute
A Doberman pinscher named Penny is America’s top canine after earning the title of best in show on Tuesday night at the 150th Westminster Kennel Club dog show in New York.
Judge David Fitzpatrick tapped the four-year-old female with the mirror-sheen black-and-rust coat from Reseda, California, over a field of six other group champions, among them a Chesapeake Bay retriever named Cota, who was awarded reserve best in show to roars of approval from the crowd. Also making the final lineup were an Afghan hound named Zaida, a Lhasa Apso named JJ, a Maltese named Cookie, a smooth fox terrier named Wager and a popular old English sheepdog named Graham.
Continue reading...Bobi Wine’s whereabouts unknown since he fled what he said was night raid on his home by police and military
Bobi Wine, Uganda’s most prominent opposition figure, remains in hiding nearly three weeks after a disputed election, as a high-stakes social media feud with the east African country’s military chief escalates.
Wine’s whereabouts have been unknown since 16 January, when he fled what he said was a night raid by the police and military on his home, leaving his family behind.
Continue reading...Police say 18-year-old arrested on suspicion of murder after death of man in his 20s on Tuesday evening
An 18-year-old man has been arrested on suspicion of murder after a man in his 20s was stabbed in Leicester city centre and later died in hospital, Leicestershire police have said.
Police and East Midlands ambulance service were called just after 5pm on Tuesday after reports that a man had collapsed. They later received reports that the man had been stabbed.
Continue reading...Citadel hedge fund boss, Republican donor and vocal Trump critic says administration has made ‘distasteful’ choices not in the public interest
The billionaire investor Ken Griffin has accused Donald Trump’s administration of “enriching” its families, and criticised its interference in American businesses as “distasteful”.
Griffin, who is the chief executive of the hedge fund Citadel and a large Republican donor, rebuked the Trump administration, saying it “has definitely made missteps in choosing decisions or courses that have been very, very enriching to the families of those in the administration”.
Continue reading...Bills mandate ICE cooperation, school status checks and criminalize information release, testing constitutional lines
The power to enforce immigration law rests with the federal government. But Trump adviser, Stephen Miller, has a vision for states working in coordination with federal immigration officials, and he’s attempting to test it out in Tennessee.
Earlier this month, the Knoxville News Sentinel reported that Miller had been meeting in Washington DC with Tennessee speaker of the house, Cameron Sexton, to craft model legislation for states around the country.
Continue reading...Vijay Prashad said he was ‘disgusted’ by linguist’s friendship with Epstein as new files shed light on their relationship
An author who collaborated on two books with Noam Chomsky has written a letter condemning the acclaimed scholar’s friendship with the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, as newly released files shed light on the social relationship between the two men.
Vijay Prashad – a journalist, author and the director of the Tricontinental Institute for Social Research – wrote that he was “heartsick” over the new correspondence between Chomsky and Epstein.
Continue reading...Spokesperson says Burns ‘deeply regrets ever meeting’ with Epstein and cut ties after learning of his conviction
A new tranche of documents related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein revealed several communications with William J Burns, a career diplomat who would go on to become the central intelligence director under Joe Biden.
The documents describe the planning for meetings between Burns and Epstein, two of which occurred, and show Epstein texting with Burns and recommending that other people in his orbit meet with him. The meetings and correspondence occurred after Epstein had pleaded guilty to prostitution-related charges in Florida in 2008, including solicitation of prostitution with a minor under the age of 18.
Continue reading...An exercise bike may be your favorite way to work out, but are you using it correctly? Cycling experts weigh in.
The police chief and mayor of Brooklyn Park, Minneapolis, react to new ICE body cameras and speak about economic impacts and eroding trust in local law enforcement.
There are many reasons why credit card interest rates are high. Here's what to know (and what to do in response).
President claims idea to ‘nationalize’ elections in 15 states before midterms is to prevent noncitizen voting. Plus, how Muslim creatives are changing New York City’s cultural landscape
Good morning.
Donald Trump suggested on a conservative podcast released on Monday that Republican state officials “take over” and “nationalize” elections in 15 states to protect the party from being voted out of office.
What did the president say? That immigrants “were brought” to the US to vote. “They vote illegally … We should take over the voting in at least many – 15 places – the Republicans ought to nationalize the voting,” he said on the podcast of Dan Bongino, the short-lived FBI deputy director.
What have Democrats said in response? “That statement alone makes clear that this threat to our election security, the basic premise of our democracy, is forward looking, to 2026, to 2028,” Senator Mark Warner of Virginia said yesterday. “This is about whether these same tactics we’re seeing now, or worse, will be used to disrupt free and fair elections.”
What are Democrats demanding? They agreed to fund most of the federal government through September while providing DHS with two weeks of short-term funding. That will enable lawmakers to return for negotiations around long-term DHS funding after the killings by federal agents of Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis. Among Democrats’ demands are that federal agents wear body cameras and cease wearing masks, follow a code of conduct, and obtain arrest warrants for people in the country illegally.
How did the White House press conference go? Trump again scolded a female reporter, this time CNN’s Kaitlan Collins, who was questioning him about the Epstein files. “I’ve known you for 10 years. I don’t think I’ve ever seen a smile on your face,” Trump said, adding that CNN should be “ashamed of you”.
Continue reading...Gaza medical officials say Israeli strikes killed at least 19 people, including two infants, with one hospital director asking, "Where is the ceasefire?"
A search and rescue operation involving patrol vessels, an air force helicopter and a boat carrying divers was underway for potentially missing passengers.
| My pint has been sat for 4-5 years at about 40-50% battery charge. While I researched proper storage, I didn’t look into waking it back up so I hopped on and got dumped off at about 30% with battery warnings. Someone on here gave some good tips on letting the battery cells balance so left it on the charger for about 30 hours then tried again. Battery dropped to 67% in 1.9km (maybe 10 minutes riding) so I took the advice for a longer balance and left it on for 4 days straight after that. Just tried it again and battery drops fast but I got 4.4km out of it and rode it down to 17% without it giving any battery warnings. From what I understand I should do a few cycles, let it charge again for 24-48 hours, ride it down to around 20%, and repeat this another 2-3 times. Is there anything else I should be doing? I’m aware the battery pack likely suffered some permanent damage and I don’t expect to get full range back but I’d like to restore it as much as I can so any tips are appreciated! [link] [comments] |
I spent my entire adult life cooking with gas. I thought I'd hate my new induction stove, but I couldn't have been more wrong.
| I've had my eye on the Indy speed control pnp 18s for my XRV build. The problem is I have no idea about cells. I thought P50B was the one to get but then I asked chatgpt and this is what it came up with (I left the references). I ride in the northeast all seasons as a commuter (unless I can't get through the bridges). I'm leaning towards RS50 cells now purely because of temps I ride in but I would love to hear some feedback. On me thinking P50B is the better cell. On chatgpt steering me towards RS50 as the better pick for an XRV. On cell comparison in general to add. Thank you ahead guys I appreciate any help. [link] [comments] |
Federal authorities are releasing fourth-grader Elizabeth Zuna, the first of several students detained by immigration officers in the Minneapolis suburb of Columbia Heights, school officials said.
The reopening of the Rafah crossing provides some hope for Palestinians, but can it be sustained? Expert comment jon.wallace
The crossing’s return will restore one small freedom for Palestinians – but will anger Israel’s far right ahead of elections later this year.
Most of Gaza is enclosed by Israel: army to the north and east, gunboats to the west, and warplanes control the sky above.
So for Palestinians the Rafah gate – along Gaza’s short southern border with Egypt – has long been the one lifeline to the outside world that does not pass through Israel, at least in normal times.
Some semblance of that normality began to return on Monday when, under the terms of a US-brokered ceasefire signed last year, and after months of pressure from humanitarian organizations and international allies, Israel reopened the Rafah crossing. That will allow a limited number of Palestinians to pass in both directions.
Some of those crossing have reported harassment or abuse. Of the estimated 20,000 Gazans seeking to cross and access medical treatment, only a handful exited on the first day, according to news reports, and a very small number were allowed entry. Small numbers have crossed since.
Israel’s unit for Coordination of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) has said that all arrivals and departures would be vetted ‘in coordination with Egypt, following prior security clearance of individuals by Israel, and under the supervision of the European Union mission’.
Nevertheless, the EU’s civilian Border Assistance Mission (EUBAM), which has returned to Rafah after years of conflict and political deadlock, called its redeployment and the crossing’s reopening ‘significant steps in the implementation of the Comprehensive Plan to End the Gaza Conflict.’
It is a limited opening, for who knows how long. Major political and military and humanitarian obstacles lie ahead as President Donald Trump and his advisers and allies try to advance the 10 October 2025 ceasefire into the proposed later stages of the ‘Comprehensive Plan’.
That would see the installation of a technocratic administration mechanism working with Palestinian and international partners to rebuild Gaza – after two years of war between Israel and Hamas that Gaza health authorities say has killed more than 71,000 Palestinians and left at least 10,000 missing. They also say more than 520 Palestinians have been killed since the ceasefire.
Rafah is only one crossing but it has real significance – symbolic and practical – for both sides. Access through the border crossing has been on-again, off-again throughout decades of Israeli military occupation in Gaza.
Israel sealed it off completely in May 2024, seven months into the war that followed Hamas’s 7 October 2023 cross-border attack which killed around 1200 people in Israel, with more than 250 others taken hostage. It was the release of the remains of the last of those hostages in January that triggered the reopening of Rafah.
The renewed access for Palestinians – the first to enter Gaza since the 2023 hostilities broke out – may cause problems for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. He faces elections later this year and reopening the crossing has opened up divisions with some of his far-right coalition allies.
At a security cabinet meeting on 25 January Itamar Ben Gvir, Israel’s Minister of National Security, criticized the decision, arguing that Hamas had not yet been eliminated. ‘Enough with Kushner and Witkoff’s naivety – if Rafah Crossing opens, it will be a big mistake and a very bad message,’ he is reported to have said.
Ben Gvir and his fellow ultranationalists have made no secret of their wish to see Palestinians expelled from Gaza and for the return of Israeli settlers, who were forced to leave the strip by a previous Israeli government in 2005.
Their voices will be loud in the election campaign, and the Trump administration and international community must be on guard to prevent backsliding by the Israeli government and any attempt to seal Gaza off once again.
But Israel does have real security concerns over Rafah, regarding it as a key channel for arms, weapons and money to flow to Hamas.
Certainly, in the years when Hamas controlled the Gaza Strip after 2007, its Egyptian border turned into a California Gold Rush-style encampment of corrugated iron sheds, providing access to tunnels through which smugglers brought food, consumer goods, weapons and even cars.
A parallel network of tunnels run by Palestinian militant groups were hidden from sight and – it later emerged – were a key part of Hamas’s vast military underground network that extended throughout the Gaza Strip.
When – and if – Rafah opens for larger numbers of travellers, its mechanisms must be transparent and as free from manipulation as possible.
History provides lessons. After Israel pulled its soldiers and settlers out of Gaza in 2005, Palestinian and Egyptian officials controlled their own sides of the crossing, with an earlier iteration of EUBAM. Israeli officials kept watch on cameras from Kerem Shalom, Israel’s much larger goods crossing two miles away.
One weakness of the previous arrangement was that if the European monitors weren’t on site the crossing had to close: But monitors could only access the crossing through an Israeli-controlled route, allowing Israel to seal off access and close the crossing, citing security concerns.
Rafah also risks becoming a focal point for competing Palestinian factions eager to secure the terminal, with the power, money and patronage that such control gives whichever faction is in control.
This was evident after Hamas won elections in 2006 and vied with President Mahmoud Abbas’s Fatah-dominated forces for control of the crossing. A gun battle broke out that year when Hamas’s prime minister, Ismail Haniyeh, tried to cross through Rafah with millions of dollars in cash raised from donors abroad.
But for all the risks associated with opening up Gaza, there are risks to keeping it locked down too. Thwarted hope leads to despair. And despair, critics of Israel’s ‘security-first’ approach say, is what led to decades of conflict, bloodshed and political deadlock.
And it is not that long ago that Rafah was the focus of hopes for a more open, economically viable Palestine.
Within sight of the Rafah crossing are the ruins of Gaza International Airport. Constructed during the 1990s in the optimistic era of the Oslo Accords, it was opened in December 1998 by US President Bill Clinton. In the few short years that the airport operated, it became a symbol of hope and economic possibilities.
That post-Oslo era was brief. Less than two years after Clinton’s visit, the Second Intifada broke out. Hope and prosperity faltered during the mutual bloodletting of the early 2000s, with near daily Palestinian suicide bombings, Israeli air strikes, curfews, shootings, tank raids and recriminations. Israel bombed the airport after 9/11, and it is now in ruins.
Ads could remove the sting of Xbox Game Pass price hikes, but will it be worth it?
With the Winter Olympics set to begin in proper on Friday, here’s a look at 10 Americans worth keeping an eye on
Mikaela Shiffrin has surpassed Vonn’s record haul of World Cup wins and staked her claim as the GOAT. But Vonn has a solid claim to be the best ever in the speed events (downhill, super-G), and she has been racing exclusively in those disciplines since returning from retirement, surging to the top of the World Cup downhill standings at age 41. She has a score to settle with the sport’s biggest stage – her lifetime total of three Olympic medals (one gold) would probably be higher if not for a horror crash in practice in 2006 and injuries that either limited or outright excluded her from other Games. After some selection drama in the team combined event in last year’s world championships, it seems inconceivable that Vonn and Shiffrin, both of whom have had some misfortune in the Olympics, would not be paired up to form Alpine skiing’s equivalent of the 1992 basketball Dream Team. Vonn was in a nasty crash last weekend but it seems that she will be fit to take part in Italy.
Continue reading...DNC’s Local Listeners initiative will target one million ‘infrequent’ voters in battleground districts
Democrats are launching an aggressive campaign to win back voters they lost, not to Donald Trump, but to the proverbial “couch,” as they look to regain support ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.
On Wednesday, the Democratic National Committee (DNC) rolled out a new initiative called Local Listeners with the goal of targeting over one million “infrequent” voters in key battleground districts. Seeking to build on the party’s string of off-year election victories, which extended into 2026 with an upset in Texas last weekend, the DNC is betting that early, localized outreach will be crucial in winning back these voters’ trust – and their ballots – this time around.
Continue reading...Home Chef, HelloFresh and Blue Apron have dominated the meal kit space for years. Here's why this lesser-known service has them all beat.
American athletes are preparing for the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics. These are some of the top Team USA competitors to watch.
An anonymous reader shares a report: Speaking during an earnings call on Tuesday, CEO Lisa Su stated that its development of Microsoft's next-gen Xbox SoC is "progressing well to support a launch in 2027." While the comment doesn't outright confirm the next Xbox will release next year, it indicates that the Microsoft could be ready to launch soon.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Unionized baristas continue to fight for a fair contract and ask public for solidarity as strike stretches into third month
Striking Starbucks baristas are calling on customers of the world’s largest coffee chain to delete its popular mobile app in solidarity with their demands for a first union contract.
Starbucks Workers United, which has been coordinating a strike for almost three months, is vowing to press ahead.
Continue reading...In July of 1968, Samuel Bowers sat down in his office with fingers poised over his typewriter keys, thoughts filled with fury. As founder and imperial wizard of the White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, he cut a charismatic figure, though one with a militant Christian faith and a hate-filled mind. Just a day earlier, police had killed one of his most trusted assassins and severely injured another.
Bowers had spent the past few years masterminding bombings at Mississippi’s Black churches and, more recently, synagogues as well. His two foot soldiers now riddled with bullets had bombed the Beth Israel Congregation in Jackson on a foggy night nine months earlier and were en route to bomb a Jewish leader’s home when police gunned them down.
At the typewriter, Bowers pounded out a five-page missive to Thomas Tucker, a local police officer who shot one of the Klan members but had earlier faced suspicions of being a Klan sympathizer himself, journalist Jack Nelson wrote in his 1993 book “Terror in the Night: The Klan’s Campaign Against the Jews.”
“Mr. Tucker,” Bowers wrote, “the principle of law as it has been twisted and abused by the animals in the Synagogue of Satan, one of which you were guarding and protecting.” The Klanswoman killed, he insisted, was an American Patriot “doing her limited best to preserve Christian Civilization by helping to destroy the body of an animal of Satan’s Synagogue.”
Flash forward almost 60 years after Bowers wrote his letter.
On Jan. 10, a whole new generation of congregants at Beth Israel, among Mississippi’s oldest synagogues, awoke to devastating news about their house of worship. Someone had set a fire inside. The blaze had started in the library, destroying it along with sacred Torah scrolls, prayer books and myriad other materials. Smoke had filled the sanctuary. No congregants were injured, but they would not be able to worship there for some time.
Later the day of the arson, a young man with scorched hands faced an FBI agent and others investigating the crime. Stephen Spencer Pittman was born in Jackson in 2006, the year Bowers died. Just 19 years old, he allegedly admitted to investigators that he set fire to the temple due to its “Jewish ties,” according to an FBI agent’s affidavit. He dubbed Beth Israel a “synagogue of Satan.”

The term refers to biblical passages in which Jesus described Jews in specific communities who were persecuting the early Christians. Antisemites like Bowers had co-opted the phrase to describe Jews broadly as agents of evil plotting against white Christians. He believed that Jews who hadn’t converted to Christianity were “heretics” and their houses of worship therefore legitimate military targets — especially those like Beth Israel, whose rabbi had been linking arms with civil rights protestors.
Why Pittman, who has pleaded not guilty, used those words remains unclear. But according to the affidavit, after the fire burned the temple, Pittman texted his father, “I did my research.”
What did that research entail? Little is known so far. It remains unclear whether the teenager knew much about the ideology of the people behind the 1967 bombing or if he followed any of today’s antisemitic influencers.
Pittman, a community college baseball player from Madison, Mississippi, did engage in substantial online activity. He appears to have created profiles on multiple social media platforms where he mostly posted about his sport, nutrition and his Christian faith. Yet, shortly before the fire, an Instagram account that appears to be his posted an antisemitic meme of a cartoon character with a prominent nose, a Star of David affixed to his chest and a money bag in each hand.
And across the online world that Pittman traversed, a crop of young influencers have been spreading antisemitism, often rooted in Christianity. They are attracting millions of followers, embracing conspiracy theories of global Jewish takeovers and using terms like the “synagogue of Satan” that people like Bowers would well recognize.
In many ways, the original sin of mass antisemitic disinformation stems from a text called “The Protocols of the Elders of Zion.” Published in the Russian empire in 1903, it claimed to be an insider account of Jews plotting world domination. The tropes in it weren’t new, but the text provided rich fodder to those who embraced its “evidence” that Jews were orchestrating a global plan to amass wealth and eradicate non-Jews.
“Only we, the Jews, are qualified to rule the world,” the text proclaimed. “We shall surround our government with economists, bankers, industrialists, capitalists — and the main thing — millionaires — for everything will be settled by gold.”
The fact that the text was proven a forgery did little to thwart those who embraced it. Adolf Hitler called the document “immensely instructive.” Klan groups adopted it as a foundational text.
Bowers used conspiracy theories rooted in “The Protocols” to contend that Jewish puppetmasters were the real masterminds behind the NAACP, the FBI and the young civil rights volunteers pouring into places like Mississippi and Black people were merely their pawns. With that framing, his followers could demean Black protesters and vilify federal agents and Jews, notably those who linked arms with their Black neighbors to demand equal rights — as the rabbi at Beth Israel had increasingly done before Bowers’ henchmen bombed his synagogue and then his home.

“It’s a way of rationalizing racism and finding a way not to acknowledge Black political agency and power,” said William Robert Billups, a University of Florida historian who hails from Mississippi and published research about Bowers and 1960s synagogue bombers in the Journal of American History.
Some like Bowers, later convicted of murdering a civil rights leader, also imbued their white supremacy with a militant theology known as the Christian Identity movement: Jews weren’t only political and economic threats. They were religious enemies, too, ones seeking to usurp white Christians from their place as God’s true chosen people.
“They didn’t see any daylight between Christianity and whiteness,” Billups said. “They did not believe that Jewish people were fully white and didn’t believe they were fully human.” He wrote in his research that Christian Identity followers believed that Jews’ “innate depravity” drove them to pursue world domination.
Christian Identity adherents tapped biblical phrases like the “synagogue of Satan” to justify their antisemitic views. Because they were religious, references from the Bible “came very easily to their tongues,” said Mark Pitcavage, a senior research fellow at the Anti-Defamation League who has spent three decades studying extremism.
The phrase appears twice in the New Testament. Both references deal with specific local conflicts between established Jewish communities and the early Christians they persecuted. Jesus was offering support to his faithful as they faced these hostilities, not making blanket statements about Jewish people.
“Behold, I will make them of the synagogue of Satan who say they are Jews and are not but do lie. Behold, I will make them come and worship at thy feet and to know that I have loved thee,” Jesus assured a fledgling church in one of the passages.
But as Bowers continued typing his letter to the police officer that hot day in 1968, he added, “I just do not know what we Christians can do about these Synagogue of Satan Jews other than to oppose them in every possible way and pray for Divine Relief.”
In 2015, the “alt-right” white nationalist movement ascended to extremist popularity online in the corners of 4chan and 8chan and on burgeoning white supremacist websites like The Daily Stormer, named for the Nazi Party’s newspaper. Followers often posted jokey, racy and racist memes where they could hide behind the plausible deniability of humor.
That summer, Donald Trump announced his candidacy for president, a move swiftly embraced by The Daily Stormer’s founder and others. The next day, a 21-year-old white supremacist named Dylann Roof drove to Emanuel AME Church, a historic Black congregation in downtown Charleston, South Carolina.
When Roof arrived, the church’s pastor invited him to join the small group of mostly older women gathered for weekly Bible study. Roof sat with them for about an hour, until the closing prayer. Then he pulled out a pistol.
As he fired more than 70 shots, killing nine people, he said, “Y’all raping all our white women and taking over the nation.”
Roof had discovered the “great replacement theory.” Adherents believe that an elite group, often Jewish and described in terms such as “globalists,” is orchestrating mass immigration of nonwhites along with social policies that reduce white birth rates and otherwise “replace” whites — and their control of the West.
It’s part of a shift in white supremacist ideology since the civil rights era from preserving white dominance to preventing white extinction. More recently, these notions have also bolstered a crop of influencers circulating versions of the ideology to new audiences.
In 2017, hundreds of white supremacists and other extremists flocked to the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, brandishing torches and chanting, “Jews will not replace us!” An 18-year-old named Nick Fuentes was in attendance and posted on Facebook that “the rootless transnational elite knows that a tidal wave of white identity is coming.”


The rally proved a launching pad for a career in commentary that now draws millions of followers for whom Fuentes has described the great replacement theory as the “Great Replacement REALITY.” At a “Stop the Steal” rally in 2020, he applauded Trump for standing up to various groups including “the synagogue of Satan.”
But Fuentes is only one of a slew of influencers who have adopted similar anti-immigration rhetoric and frequently criticize what they perceive as Israel’s power in the United States, particularly related to the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza. (Supporters of the U.S.-Israel alliance contend that the relationship benefits both democracies.)
Candace Owens, whose YouTube channel has 5.75 million subscribers, once worked for the late Charlie Kirk’s Turning Point USA and later at The Daily Wire until she was pushed out last year following conflicts with co-founder Ben Shapiro, who is Jewish. In 2024, she described an anti-Christian global conspiracy. “It does seem that they’re trying to almost now indoctrinate the entire world into their satanic faith. Like I said, it is my belief that this is a synagogue of Satan,” she told viewers.
Similarly, Andrew Torba, founder and CEO of the social media site Gab, popular with extremists, wrote last fall that the federal government is owned by Israel and “its powerful fifth column of Jewish elites in our country.”
“Naming the group that is the engine of our nation’s subversion isn’t bigotry,” Torba added, “it’s a Biblical diagnosis of a spiritual cancer. It is identifying the modern-day ‘synagogue of Satan’ that Christ Himself warned us about.”
There’s no indication that Pittman, the teenager charged in the Beth Israel fire, was aware of any of these comments.
ProPublica reached out to Fuentes on his website and on X and to Torba through Gab’s general email. We reached out to Owens on her website’s media request portal. (Her website tells users, “We do not allow pornography, incitement to violence or gore, discussions about active drug use and other topics in that vein.”) None responded to requests for comment about the Beth Israel fire and their use of the term “synagogue of Satan.” Torba’s X account posted our emailed questions with the message, “I regret to inform you that journos are at it again.”
The Anti-Defamation League, which tracks antisemitic incidents including assaults, harassment and vandalism, found an 893% increase over the past decade with particularly large leaps in 2023 and 2024, according to its most recent audit. In 2024, it found 9,354 incidents compared to 1,267 in 2016. The audit also notes that much of the recent surge was related to protests, often on college campuses, against Israeli actions in Gaza, some of which included rhetoric such as “death to Israel.”

“Increasingly, extreme actors in the anti-Israel space have incorporated antisemitic rhetoric into their activism, and it has become commonplace for perpetrators across the political spectrum to voice hatred of Israel or conspiracy theories about the state in a range of antisemitic attacks,” the ADL report says.
Synagogues also received hundreds of bomb threats, and fears of violence remain a persistent part of what Jewish communities face. Indeed, in the early morning hours of Jan. 10, a man in a hoodie broke a window and slipped inside Beth Israel Congregation. He poured gasoline and ignited a fire near the spot where Klan members had burned the synagogue in 1967. Once again, the people of Beth Israel were left to rebuild from the ashes of antisemitism. Their library and offices will have to be demolished, it appears, but engineers found the sanctuary walls remain structurally sound.
Since the fire, at least 15 churches have reached out to Beth Israel saying, “Our house of worship is your house of worship,” said Zach Shemper, the synagogue’s president. “There has been such a lovely, almost overwhelming outpouring of love and compassion from our local community.”
The people of Beth Israel are, for now, holding services in a Baptist church in Jackson, one they opened their doors to in the 1960s, before the bombing. The Baptists needed temporary space then because they had just broken away from a church that refused to let in Black worshippers, and few other houses of worship would open their doors.
The post A Mississippi Synagogue Was Attacked in 1967 and 2026. The Antisemitic Rhetoric Looked the Same Then and Now. appeared first on ProPublica.
Novo Nordisk share price plunges after blaming lower US drug prices, patent protection issues and rising competition
The maker of Wegovy and Ozempic, Novo Nordisk, has predicted a sharp drop in revenues this year owing to what its boss described as a “painful” push by Donald Trump to lower US weight-loss drug prices, rising competition, and the loss of important patent protections.
Denmark’s Novo, once the poster-child for the growth in weight-loss treatments, said sales this year were likely to fall between 5% and 13%, ending years of double-digit gains, despite the promising launch of its new Wegovy pill in the US. Its share price plummeted 17% on Wednesday, erasing all gains so far this year. In the past year the stock has lost nearly 50% of its value.
Continue reading...Former Capitol Police officer Harry Dunn — who emerged as a national figure after the Jan. 6 riot — announced a second bid for Congress on Wednesday.
New York state lawmakers have introduced legislation to boost spending on the state’s troubled guardianship system by $15 million a year — an unprecedented cash infusion for a bureaucracy that has long struggled to care for the tens of thousands of disabled or elderly New Yorkers who cannot care for themselves.
By law, judges appoint guardians to manage the health and financial matters of people they deem incapacitated, and these guardians are then compensated from the estates of their wards. But there are not enough guardians to serve the roughly 30,000 New Yorkers who need them, and the new bill, called the Good Guardianship Act, aims to help the most vulnerable segment of this population: those who are too poor to pay for a private guardian and who have no family or friends willing to serve.
In the industry, they are known as “the unbefriended,” and the millions in new funding would flow to a statewide network of nonprofit guardians who serve them.
The proposal follows a 2024 ProPublica investigation that revealed how the state’s guardianship system was failing this group in particular by conducting little to no oversight of guardians, some of whom provided substandard care and exploited those they were charged with looking after.
The stories prompted the state attorney general to open an investigation into several guardianship providers and spurred the court system to appoint a special counsel to enact reforms. But advocates said the Good Guardianship Act presents the most promising step to date in improving the system — if it can get the support of Gov. Kathy Hochul.
The legislation mirrors the recommendations of a task force appointed by the governor last summer, yet Hochul has not said whether she supports the plan and did not include any funding for guardianships in the $260 billion executive budget she recently unveiled.
“What’s it going to take for the governor to pay attention to guardianship and realize there’s a viable solution on the table?” said Kimberly George, who runs a nonprofit that serves about 200 New York City wards and helps lead Guardianship Access New York, a coalition of groups that’s pushing the bill in Albany.
A spokesperson for Hochul, a Democrat who is running for reelection, said the governor will review the legislation.
In recent years, Albany has provided just $1 million to help fund a statewide guardianship hotline, which provides advice for people considering guardianship for their relatives or friends. But the Good Guardianship Act would provide considerably more guardians for those who need them, effectively ensuring that qualified nonprofit groups with a history of providing guardianship services are available to be appointed by judges in cases involving the unbefriended.
To ensure that state funding only goes to what the legislation calls “reputable” nonprofits, groups must be in good standing with a state regulator and their guardianship plans and funding requests must be reviewed by a contractor picked by the director of the state’s Office for the Aging.
Assembly Member Charles Lavine, a Long Island Democrat who chairs the Assembly Judiciary Committee and introduced the legislation, expressed confidence that the bill would pass this session, noting it has no opposition and fixes a readily identifiable problem.
“It’s time that we did something to be able to provide those who are in actual, real need,” he said in an interview. “We believe we are working in the right direction.”
Lavine hosted a roundtable last fall focused on confronting what he dubbed “the crisis” in the guardianship system, describing it as being “stretched very, very thin.”
The legislation also has the support of legislative leaders in the state Senate — including its powerful majority leader, Andrea Stewart-Cousins, her spokesperson said.
State Sen. Cordell Cleare, a Harlem Democrat who chairs the Aging Committee, is shepherding the bill through the chamber. It’s on the panel’s agenda for Wednesday and is expected to be adopted.
The post We Found New York’s Guardianship System in Shambles. Now State Lawmakers Say They Have a Plan to Help Fix It. appeared first on ProPublica.
The world is far off meeting its growing water needs. Can the UN still lead the response? Expert comment jon.wallace
The 2026 UN Water Conference can still have a big impact this year – if it can discuss water action as critical to human wellbeing and economic activity and focus on pragmatic solutions.
Drastic changes to the hydrological cycle and longstanding water management problems continue to create havoc around the world this year. In January a UN report declared an era of global water bankruptcy. A prolonged drought has contributed to unprecedented water shortages in Iran. And in Mozambique, the worst floods in recent memory have created a humanitarian crisis, destroying crops, livelihoods and infrastructure and displacing 650,000 people.
The global economy’s thirst for water – the world’s most finite, but underpriced and undervalued resource – is growing, as water-intensive products cross borders in ever greater volumes. The water use associated with trade in food and agricultural products nearly trebled between 1986 and 2022.
Yet, as recent events demonstrate, this dependence is increasingly precarious. As more water bodies retreat and aquifers decline, the health and wellbeing of the global population will be impacted, while multiple economic sectors and supply chains run the risk of continuous disruption. At the same time, institutions like the UN, that have enabled some faltering progress on global environmental crises, are under strain.
In a febrile geopolitical environment, what value can a UN-led process provide? And can a global response adequately address a problem that is very distinctly local in impact?
The severity of the global water crisis is beginning to gain some traction. In December 2026, the UN will convene its third global water conference in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), one of the most water-scarce countries on Earth.
These conferences are happening with increasing frequency: the first was held in 1977, the second not until 2023. But the third is happening this year and a fourth is already planned for 2028. This new urgency reflects the fact that two initiatives designed to galvanize global action on water are set to expire soon.
First, the UN Water Decade comes to a close in 2028. This was intended to generate the political commitment and momentum required to transform how the world manages water. But progress has been limited.
Meanwhile the sixth UN Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) which aims to ‘Ensure availability and sustainable management of water and sanitation for all’ by 2030, is severely off track.
A UNICEF/WHO report released last week has shown that 2.1 billion people still lack safely managed drinking water and 3.4 billion lack access to sanitation.
These uncertain efforts in part reflect a lack of connection to a political process. There is no multilateral governance mechanism for water, no binding targets (unlike for climate change), and no clear global institution with a strong mandate to oversee water governance.
Addressing that will be crucial to driving water governance efforts towards a post 2030 agenda.
The outlook for better international collaboration is only getting harder. In a speech at Davos on 20 January, Canada’s Prime Minister Mark Carney called attention to the ‘rupture’ in the rules-based international order. On 30 January, Secretary General António Guterres said the UN was at risk of ‘financial collapse’.
Nonetheless, opportunities still exist for countries to come together for critical issues based on common values and interests. Properly harnessed, the UN’s December Water Conference could galvanize a period of ambitious action this year, catalysing accelerated investment and progress and reinvigorating the UN Water Decade’s goals.
That will require pragmatic approaches and well-coordinated regional consultations, engaging inclusively with all relevant stakeholders. The conference needs to be responsive to emerging water challenges. And water action needs to be discussed as critical to economic activity, recognizing its centrality to climate-resilient development and the circular economy.
One criticism of water’s treatment in the current SDG framework is that it is insufficient to capture these emerging imperatives and does not sufficiently enable cross-sectoral coordination.
Mozambique is a case in point – its water challenges are not one dimensional. The country is a climate risk hotspot, and is highly vulnerable to multiple shocks from conflict and natural disasters. These factors place enormous pressures on a population where only 28 per cent use a safely managed drinking water source.
New frameworks should better address the complex and connected tensions between accelerating progress on access to water and sanitation, and addressing water’s role in agriculture, energy production, climate change adaptation and natural disasters.
Part of the challenge in addressing global water governance is that water availability, use and pollution inherently vary by locale. Differences in climate, topography, hydrology and soil characteristics all influence water availability and pollution capacity. That means global volumetric targets to reduce water use and pollution tend to be unhelpful.
Nonetheless, impacts within the hydrological cycle are not wholly local. Solutions must rely heavily on cooperation within water catchment areas, across national borders and throughout international supply chains.
Previous global processes tackling water use have ranged widely, touching on everything from boosting access to water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) for the world’s poorest, to transboundary water cooperation. And water is governed by a fragmented patchwork of national or local policies, that vary in effectiveness. Environmental standards are also disjointed, and too often sidelined. Transparency is scarce.
The previous UN Water Conference in 2023 was criticized for requiring only voluntary commitments from governments, corporations and civil society, and for its vague outcomes.
Ifunanya Nwangene died in hospital after being bitten in her Abuja home, raising questions about the availability of effective antivenoms
In a last message to her friends, Ifunanya Nwangene wrote: “Please come.”
The 26-year-old singer and former contestant on The Voice Nigeria had been bitten by a snake while asleep in her flat in Nigeria’s capital, Abuja, and was in hospital, anxiously awaiting treatment.
Continue reading...Under Tom Brady and Bill Belichick New England were ruthless winners. But new head coach Mike Vrabel has transformed the narrative around the team
There used to be a simple rule: Anybody but the New England Patriots.
From 2001 through 2019, the Tom Brady-Bill Belichick dynasty totaled six Super Bowl titles, 13 conference championship appearances and 17 divisional crowns. They were the Evil Empire, constant contenders in a league designed for parity. It didn’t matter who you were; the Patriots were the final boss.
Continue reading...I’m reporting on a political retribution campaign, disguised as immigration enforcement, in the community where I live
I knew they would come here.
If you’re a president hell-bent on retreading 2020 and retaliating against your enemies, the midwestern state that started the George Floyd protests, with a generous social safety net and diverse population, governed by a vice-presidential candidate you vehemently hate, is a certain target.
Continue reading...Idaho is taking steps to bolster its antiquated coroner system following stories by ProPublica that documented how lawmakers have repeatedly failed to fix problems that harm grieving families.
An advisory panel created last year at the request of Gov. Brad Little is developing legislation to require autopsies in a variety of circumstances, including the unexplained death of a child. It would help coroners pay for those autopsies as long as they get a national certification that proves they can meet certain standards.
The legislation would mimic a similar setup in neighboring Washington. An increase in fees on Idaho death certificates would finance the autopsy reimbursements.
A ProPublica review of hundreds of death records in 2024 found that some coroners failed to meet national standards when investigating child and infant deaths, and a state oversight report found Idaho ranked last in the U.S. for autopsies when children or infants died unexpectedly. The state Office of Performance Evaluations cited poor funding as a major problem.
ProPublica’s examination of training records for Idaho coroners also revealed that many failed to get the hours of continuing education required by state law. Further reporting in 2025 examined how potentially suspicious deaths can slip through the cracks of Idaho’s poorly funded system.
The committee working on the legislation includes seven county coroners and a deputy coroner; representatives of city, county and state law enforcement agencies; a deputy county prosecutor; a county commissioner and a tribal member.
Kelli Brassfield, co-chair of the panel and a lobbyist who represents Idaho’s county governments, cautioned that the proposal likely won’t be ready during the 2026 annual legislative session. But this is the first time in decades that coroners and other local and state officials have agreed on a path forward to improve Idaho’s system for investigating death.
Idaho’s death investigation system is almost entirely funded by counties, and county officials have fought past efforts to require autopsies, which can cost thousands of dollars apiece. At the committee’s meeting in January, Brent Mendenhall, a commissioner from Madison County, was enthusiastic about the draft legislation and the push for more autopsies.
“When I hear that a commission or any county has turned down an autopsy, it just makes me shudder,” Mendenhall said at the meeting. “I just think, ‘What are you doing to that family that doesn’t know what happened?’”
Mendenhall said that under the legislation being developed, coroners who have struggled with a small autopsy budget could approach their county commissioners and say, “Here’s the law, and you need to make sure that I can do this.”
The advisory panel working on legislation is co-chaired by Sen. Melissa Wintrow, a Boise Democrat. Wintrow said ProPublica’s reporting raised awareness of the harms done by a faulty system for death investigations.
“Here’s the system going wrong, and your reporting shines a light on it,” she said.
Bingham County Coroner Jimmy Roberts, a member of the panel, told ProPublica that Wintrow has said repeatedly that one of the motivators to get something done about Idaho’s coroner system is that “she doesn’t want to see the coroner system in the media or in the news any longer.”
“I think that speaks volumes,” Roberts said.
Idaho’s governor said more than a year ago that he would support giving coroners more resources to do their jobs right. Lawmakers failed to take him up on it.
Wintrow won modest changes to the coroners system during the 2025 session with legislation that clarified the roles of coroners and law enforcement in death investigations.
Another development in the wake of ProPublica’s reporting is a newly created series of intensive courses for coroners, law enforcement officers and others around the state to learn how to handle child and infant deaths. Funded by a grant from the Governor’s Children At Risk Task Force, the courses this spring will be the most in-depth training of its kind since 2019.
Roberts and Ada County Chief Deputy Coroner Brett Harding will lead the trainings: eight hours of virtual education for coroners statewide and in-person education for coroners in the Boise area and in eastern and northern Idaho. Eastern Idaho is where an infant, Onyxx Cooley, died suddenly and unexpectedly in February 2024. His mother, Alexis Cooley, found him cold and lifeless and called for help, but the baby couldn’t be revived.
Reports released to ProPublica by the coroner who was legally responsible for figuring out why the baby died showed that he did not follow national guidelines. He did not speak with the parents, examine the baby’s body or the scene of the death to search for clues or order an autopsy. That coroner, who has since retired, told ProPublica he spoke with law enforcement officers who responded to the infant’s death and relied on the emergency physician who examined the baby’s body to decide what caused his death.
Alexis Cooley told ProPublica that she hoped the death of her baby would not be in vain, and that sharing his story with the public could set in motion some positive change.
She began to cry when she learned that coroners are working on legislation to improve Idaho’s last-in-the-nation autopsy rate for unexplained child deaths, and that first responders and coroners around the state will get specialized education to handle those cases.
“I’m glad that through my pain and suffering that it’s hopefully lessening the burden on other parents, when a situation like this happens again,” Cooley said. “And it’s amazing that they’re going to be able to get answers and that Onyxx’s case was heard.”
Wintrow, meanwhile, said her committee members’ willingness to work together on a solution to problems is encouraging but that progress is slow and piecemeal in a system with no centralized state agency to develop public policy for coroners. She is working on a pitch to get Idaho a full-time coordinator to fill a role that she has played as a part-time legislator.
The post Idaho Seeks to Improve Its Troubled Coroner System and Lagging Child Autopsy Rates appeared first on ProPublica.
Some advocates say the Winter Games are driving up property prices and exacerbating income inequality.
International criminal syndicates have been using Fiji as a transshipment point for drugs originating in Southeast Asia and Latin America.
Experts say the U.S. needs an additional 2 million to 20 million homes to fix the shortfall, underscoring the challenge of meeting the nation’s housing needs.

Why Should Delaware Care?
The Freeman Arts Pavilion has built a name for itself over the last two decades as a prominent arts venue and economic driver for the Sussex County area. With director Patti Grimes’ upcoming departure, the arts organization’s leadership and future direction remains to be seen.
Patti Grimes, the long-serving – and influential – executive director of Selbyville’s Freeman Arts Pavilion, announced last week that she will exit her role later this summer.
Considered to be among the biggest names in the southern Delaware arts and culture scene, Grimes has carried the Freeman Arts organization through a period of exponential growth and expanded reach throughout Sussex County and the broader Delmarva Peninsula since 2007.
She is set to step down after the organization unveils its long-awaited new stage in July.
The Freeman Arts Pavilion – an outdoor performance venue in Selbyville, a small town off Route 113 on the Delaware-Maryland border – has grown under Grimes’ leadership to serve more than 130,000 people per year.
The organization has courted a mix of high-profile performers, like Diana Ross and Jerry Seinfeld, and local, homegrown talent. Freeman Arts also functions as a nonprofit, with an initiative of bringing arts experiences to schools across Sussex County and nearby Worcester and Wicomico counties in Maryland.
The organization made headlines in January when a James Taylor concert scheduled for September sold out the 4,000-seat venue in 16 minutes.
Grimes’ departure will force the Freeman Arts Pavilion – and its parent organization the Joshua M. Freeman Foundation – to reckon with whether another leader will be able to carry on the legacy and programming that Grimes has spent the past 19 years building.
But Grimes told Spotlight Delaware she is not concerned about the transition plan to a new leader of the arts organization. She has worked with the organization’s board of directors to develop a succession plan, she said, and she will still be present to help with the transition process.
“I felt like it was the right time with this brand new venue to deliver that and launch into the next evolution,” she said. “It will be a great time for a new executive director to come in.”

Grimes is not retiring from all of her responsibilities with Freeman-related organizations, as she will continue serving as executive director of the Carl M. Freeman Foundation, another grant-giving organization that is named after Joshua Freeman’s father and owned by members of the same family.
As Delaware’s arts community reacted to Grimes’ announcement, many described her to Spotlight Delaware as one of the biggest names working in the First State, and someone who will leave behind enormous shoes to fill.
Neil Kirschling, executive director of the Delaware Arts Alliance, a statewide arts advocacy organization, said Grimes has been an “incredibly thoughtful partner” in inspiring a culture of excellence in the arts across the state.
Joe Gfaller, managing director of Clear Space Theatre Company in Rehoboth Beach, said Freeman Arts became a cornerstone of the Sussex County arts scene because of Grimes.
“There’s no question that the existence of the Freeman Arts has had a transformative effect on our region,” Gfaller said.
The Joshua M. Freeman Foundation announced in a press release last week that they brought in a global hiring firm, Russell Reynolds Associates, to begin the search for Grimes’ replacement this spring.
When Freeman Arts began hosting performances, its set-up consisted of a small wooden stage and some lawn seating. The organization drew in a couple thousand attendees in its first year.
“We started as a social experiment,” Grimes recalled. “Is this something that is desired by the greater Sussex County community? Is this something that is wanted?”
Quickly, she found out, the answer was a resounding yes.
Now, the pavilion draws in more than 130,000 people annually for its concerts and other programs. The organization also is about to complete a 10-year-long, $40 million capital campaign to construct its new stage.
Since 2017, the organization has been using a mobile stage to host larger performers, like Darius Rucker, Grimes said.
The new permanent stage will include backstage green rooms and equipment rooms for touring artists, along with a more sleek stage look, which Grimes said she thinks will help continue to attract big name performers.

Over the years, Grimes said, she has found that the large appetite for the Freeman Arts programming has come from a lack of other arts opportunities in Sussex County, which is more rural and sprawling than the rest of Delaware. At the same time, she said, the large crowd of summer tourists that flock to Sussex County beaches want to participate in the organization’s art offerings.
The Delaware Arts Alliance conducted a study of the state’s arts economy last year.
Kirschling, the alliance’s director, said the report revealed that Sussex County has larger “art deserts” than other parts of the state, meaning people in the county often need to drive farther to participate in arts events of any kind.
By continuing to grow its events with more famous performers, while also investing in local performers and school outreach programs, Kirschling said Grimes has done a good job of building a more robust and sustainable arts community in the Sussex area.
“What’s nice is that people who live here now don’t have to drive two to three hours to see their favorite artist or to partake in the arts experience,” Grimes said.
Freeman Arts also has proven to be a catalyst for economic growth and development in the area.
Grimes said that for every $1 spent at the pavilion, $1.90 is distributed back into the local economy, from visitors eating at restaurants, staying in hotels and taking advantage of other activities in the community.
Jessica Welch, director of the Delaware Tourism Office, provided data to Spotlight Delaware showing the Freeman Arts Pavilion had a $24 million economic impact on Sussex County last year.
That economic driver is particularly valuable, Welch said, because it is not primarily going to Lewes, Rehoboth Beach, Dewey Beach, or Bethany Beach, where more tourists frequent, but rather is focused in Selbyville, which is further inland and typically gets less economic activity.
Welch said she expects to see those economic impacts continue to grow as the organization opens its new stage and is able to draw even bigger crowds.
“Building the infrastructure and setting it up for the future is key,” she said. “Patti [Grimes] should be commended for that work she has done.”
The post Freeman Arts to face new era as Grimes exits, new stage is unveiled appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Delaware is one of just a few states that send school funding questions to voters through the referendum process. Just two districts are going out for a referendum this year after multiple school districts have failed to pass referendums in recent years. Both the Caesar Rodney and Laurel school districts are looking to raise funds to cover operating costs and provide competitive salaries.
The Caesar Rodney and the Laurel school districts will ask their communities to approve tax increases during referendums scheduled for Monday.
The Caesar Rodney School District is seeking an additional $6 million annually, while the smaller Laurel School District is asking for $1.6 million.
If voters approve Caesar Rodney’s request, owners of a home worth about $300,000 in the district would pay just under $23 more per month in property taxes.
If Laurel’s request is successful, an average $230,000 home would pay roughly $14.25 more each month.
Both districts say they need the new dollars to fund ongoing operations, including initiatives to retain and recruit teachers and other educators. Districts throughout the state have struggled in recent years to retain educators amid what school advocates call a national teacher shortage.
Beyond teacher pay, Caesar Rodney says its $6 million request would also pay for school safety, arts programs and bus services, among other items.
Laurel says its requested $1.6 million would also stabilize the district’s budget.
Despite the needs, the decisions to hold referendums come after Delaware school districts have failed in recent years to convince their communities to raise school taxes.
Among those was Caesar Rodney where voters rejected a referendum in 2023.

Then, last spring in nearby Smyrna, nearly 60% of voters did the same when the local school district requested $5.4 million. In the months after the failed referendum, Smyrna schools struggling to pay its bills, leaving the district and its union of teachers and other staff members in a standoff over pay.
Also last year, voters rejected two referendum requests from the Indian River School District, even after school board members in the booming Sussex County area went public with their fiscal woes.
The money from Indian River’s request would have been used to pay “increased operating costs and to maintain a competitive salary package,” that district said last year.
Last year was the first time since 1997 that no school district voters in Delaware approved a spending referendum.
The Caesar Rodney and Laurel school districts hope to reverse that trend when they each hold referendum votes on Monday.
Polls in the Caesar Rodney School District will be open Monday Feb. 9, from 7 a.m. until 8 p.m. at Caesar Rodney High School, Fred Fifer III Middle School, W. Reily Brown Elementary School, Allen Frear Elementary School, Nellie Stokes Elementary School, Star Hill Elementary School, David E. Robinson Elementary School, and the Magnolia Volunteer Fire Company.
Polls in the Laurel School District will also be open Monday Feb. 9, from 7 a.m. until 8 p.m. at Laurel Elementary School, the Laurel Fire Department, and the North Laurel Early Learning Academy.
Neither district has taxed its property owners as much as others in recent years.
According to the Caesar Rodney officials, the district has the lowest local funding and the lowest school tax rate in Kent County. Educators within the district also earn less than those in neighboring districts.
Meanwhile in Laurel, the school district has not held a referendum since 1985. And as a result, educators have told Spotlight Delaware that the small Sussex County district has not been able to keep teachers’ salaries competitive with wealthier districts.
In August, Spotlight Delaware reported about the struggles that rural, working-class districts, such as Laurel, face to keep teacher salaries competitive with those in wealthier areas.
Patrick Gross, head of the educators’ union in Laurel, said then that he believed Laurel would ultimately hold a referendum in the coming years, but he was cautious about its success.
“I think that the referendum is going to be key … If we can get that done, we’ll see,” Gross said last summer.
The total salary for a teacher in the Laurel School District with 10 years of experience and a master’s degree is just more than $71,000, according to the district’s salary schedule for the 2025-26 school year.
A teacher with the same experience and education in the wealthier Cape Henlopen School District — about 30 miles from Laurel — makes more than $79,000.
Furthermore, the Cape Henlopen School District, which serves more than 6,500 students, had a budget of more than $180 million during the Fiscal Year 2025.
Laurel schools had a budget of just less than $44 million that same year, while educating more than 2,600 students.
Educators’ salaries are funded by a combination of state and local tax revenue, with the state paying approximately 70% of a total salary.
The state share takes into account a teacher’s education and experience. It also funds a preset schedule of pay raises for each teacher.
The local share of an educator’s salary is primarily funded by property taxes.
The post Caesar Rodney, Laurel school districts seek tax increases through referendums appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Digital pinboard business cutting 15% of workforce as it invests heavily in AI
Pinterest has fired two engineers who created a software tool to identify which workers had lost their jobs in a recent round of cuts and then shared the information, according to reports.
The digital pinboard business announced significant job cuts earlier this month, with the chief executive, Bill Ready, telling staff he was “doubling down on an AI-forward approach”, according to a LinkedIn post by a former employee.
Continue reading...Pressure grows on PM over ex-minister’s Jeffrey Epstein links as Tories criticise move to withhold some records
Keir Starmer will attempt to get ahead of the widening scandal over Peter Mandelson’s conduct with the expected release of files relating to his appointment as Britain’s US ambassador, in what a minister has described as “drawing a line in the sand”.
The Conservatives had been preparing to force the publication of the records – including what Mandelson may have told Starmer about his relationship with the convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein before being appointed to Washington – with a motion in the Commons.
Continue reading...Signalling issue and train derailment still affecting Southern, Thameslink and Gatwick Express services
The UK’s largest railway franchise has lifted a “do not travel alert” it had issued after a train derailment and signalling issues affected services across south-east England, but service disruption continues.
The train operators Southern, Thameslink and Gatwick Express – all part of the Govia Thameslink Railway (GTR) franchise in south-east England – had urged passengers not to travel at 8am on Wednesday morning “if at all possible” because of “multiple incidents”.
Continue reading...Mandarin transliteration of character’s name regarded as auspicious, prompting wave of memes and fan art
Draco Malfoy, one of Harry Potter’s most recognisable villains, has become an unlikely lunar new year icon across China, as fans embrace the character for the year of the horse.
In Mandarin, Malfoy’s name is transliterated as “mǎ ěr fú”. The first character means “horse” while the final character, “fú”, means “fortune” or “blessing” – a powerful symbol found across lunar new year celebrations.
Continue reading...BrianFagioli writes: Google has quietly retired the ZetaSQL name and rebranded its open source SQL analysis and parsing project as GoogleSQL. This is not a technical change but a naming cleanup meant to align the open source code with the SQL dialect already used across Google products like BigQuery and Spanner. Internally, Google has long called the dialect GoogleSQL, even while the open source project lived under a different name. By unifying everything under GoogleSQL, Google says it wants to reduce confusion and make it clearer that the same SQL foundation is shared across its cloud services and open source tooling. The code, features, and team remain unchanged. Only the name is different. GoogleSQL is now the single label Google wants developers to recognize and use going forward.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The death last month of former NFL player Kevin Johnson is possibly linked to three other killings of unhoused people in the same area that occurred over the last four months, detectives said.
Sustainable smartphone takes a step forward with modular accessories, a good screen and mid-range performance
The Dutch ethical smartphone brand Fairphone is back with its six-generation Android, aiming to make its repairable phone more modern, modular, affordable and desirable, with screw-in accessories and a user-replaceable battery.
The Fairphone 6 costs £499 (€599), making it cheaper than previous models and pitting it squarely against budget champs such as the Google Pixel 9a and the Nothing Phone 3a Pro, while being repairable at home with long-term software support and a five-year warranty. On paper it sounds like the ideal phone to see out the decade.
Continue reading...America can project power with little constraint—and its rivals cannot.
OpenAI's rivals are cutting into ChatGPT's lead. From a report: The top chatbot's market share fell from 69.1% to 45.3% between January 2025 and January 2026 among daily U.S. users of its mobile app. Gemini, in the same time period, rose from 14.7% to 25.1% and Grok rose from 1.6% to 15.2%. The data, obtained by Big Technology from mobile insights firm Apptopia, indicates the chatbot race has tightened meaningfully over the past year with Google's surge showing up in the numbers. Overall, the chatbot market increased 152% since last January, according to Apptopia, with ChatGPT exhibiting healthy download growth. On desktop and mobile web, a similar pattern appears, according to analytics firm Similarweb. Visits to ChatGPT went from 3.8 billion to 5.7 billion between January 2025 and January 2026, a 50% increase, while visits to Gemini went from 267.7 million to 2 billion, a 647% increase. ChatGPT is still far and away the leader in visits, but it has company in the race now.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Alex Pretti had courage and empathy. This, not Maga’s conception of male power, is what we must teach young men
The first thing that grabbed me about the Rapture’s 2011 song It Takes Time to be a Man was the warbly, analogue fuzz of its recurring guitar and piano riff. Once that drew me in, what kept me listening were the lyrics’ hard-marriage of masculinity and empathy. In the final verse, Luke Jenner tells us that: “Well there’s room in your heart now / for excellence to take a stand / And there’s tears that need shedding / it’s all part of the plan”.
For the past year, rightwing voices have waged war on empathy. According to Elon Musk, empathy is “the fundamental weakness of western civilisation”. Others go further, calling it “toxic”, “suicidal” and even “sinful”. Certainly, the macho wing of the Maga right sees no place for it amid its (mis)appropriation of medieval history and imagery that is visible everywhere from the face paint and horned headdress of the “QAnon shaman”, convicted for his role in the US Capitol siege, to the tattooed arms and body of Donald Trump’s secretary of war, Pete Hegseth.
And yet, consider the ideal of chivalry held by medieval knights: generosity and suspicion of profit, courtesy, honesty and the bind of your word, hospitality, abiding by the rules of combat and granting mercy to your adversary – whose life a knight takes only as a last resort. I say this not because I think the medieval knight should be the new standard for modern men, but to point out that Maga men would fail, miserably so, to live up to their own ideals.
Alexander Hurst is a Guardian Europe columnist. His memoir, Generation Desperation, is published in January 2026
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Solidarity will protect prosperity.
The Trump administration’s America First strategy has trickled down to what’s left of the government’s humanitarian apparatus, potentially leading to millions of deaths by 2030.
Sustaining the country’s progress requires a more inclusive transition.
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for Feb. 4
No need to load up devices with movies on long flights. You can stream them -- and even live events -- on Starlink-equipped United flights.
The season 2 finale of Fallout was filled with revelations regarding the state of the Wasteland and how it came to be. More questions remain unanswered as war looms on the horizon.
Prediction markets allow you to put money on everything from the US attacking Iran to Jesus returning. Saahil Desai explains their dizzying rise
In the early hours of 3 January, Donald Trump ordered a surprise attack on the Venezuelan capital, Caracas, to kidnap the country’s leader, Nicolás Maduro. Millions of Venezuelans’ lives were thrown into uncertainty. Politicians at home and abroad scrambled to respond. It seemed this was something no one had seen coming. Except one person did actually predict it.
In the hours before the attack, someone - and we have no way of knowing who - placed a series of bets that Donald Trump would oust Maduro on a prediction market platform, netting them nearly $500,000 when it happened. These platforms allow their users not just to bet on whoever’s going to win the Super Bowl, but also on world events. Heavily regulated under the Biden administration, these apps have enjoyed a huge boom in popularity since Trump came to power.
Continue reading...Lawyers for accused Tyler Robinson urge removal because prosecutor’s daughter attended rally where Kirk was killed
A Utah prosecutor involved in the case against Tyler Robinson, the alleged killer of the rightwing activist Charlie Kirk, denied allegations of a conflict of interest in the case during a hearing on Tuesday.
Robinson’s attorneys have argued that a judge should disqualify local prosecutors because the adult daughter of Chad Grunander, a deputy county attorney, was in attendance at the rally on a Utah college campus where Kirk was shot dead. The defense alleges that the office’s move to seek the death penalty just days after Kirk’s killing indicated a “strong emotional reaction” from Grunander, and suggested a conflict of interest.
Continue reading...No Republicans attended hearing with brothers of Renee Good and three US citizens shot and detained by federal agents
Democrats on Capitol Hill offered apologies and promises of accountability on Tuesday amid often harrowing testimony from people who had experienced violent encounters with federal agents engaged in Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown.
With Republicans conspicuously absent, the forum of senators and representatives heard from Luke and Brent Ganger, the brothers of Renee Good, a 37-year-old mother of three, who was shot dead by an Immigration, Customs and Enforcement (ICE) officer in Minneapolis on 7 January as she tried to drive away from agents.
Continue reading...Miran, set to continue as Federal Reserve governor until Jerome Powell successor is confirmed, to leave CEA post
Federal Reserve governor Stephen Miran has resigned from his position as chair of the White House’s council of economic advisers, fulfilling a pledge he made to the Senate as his assignment at the central bank becomes longer-lasting.
Miran had been on unpaid leave from his CEA post since Donald Trump appointed him last year to fill an unexpected vacancy on the Fed’s board of governors to a term that expired on 31 January. The arrangement drew the ire of Democratic senators, who said it would make a presidential puppet of the Fed’s newest policymaker.
Continue reading...Walmart's market cap surpassed $1 trillion on Tuesday, putting the largest U.S. retail chain in an exclusive club dominated by tech groups. Bloomberg adds: The Bentonville, Arkansas-based chain -- a longtime favorite of bargain-hunting consumers -- has flexed its massive scale and supplier network to keep prices low and grab market share across the income spectrum. While Walmart has maintained its appeal to households looking for value, its online offerings are drawing new, wealthier shoppers seeking convenience.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Statement says Republican senator, 83, checked himself into local hospital and prognosis is ‘positive’
The Republican senator Mitch McConnell was admitted to a hospital on Monday night due to “flu-like symptoms”, his office said in a statement.
“In an abundance of caution, after experiencing flu-like symptoms over the weekend, Senator McConnell checked himself into a local hospital for evaluation last night,” the statement reads. “His prognosis is positive and he is grateful for the excellent care he is receiving.”
Continue reading...I have a Pint X from when it first came out its rode under a mile and YEARS old. I broke my leg (un related) and I just never got back on it. Still worth anything or just keep it
The House on Tuesday voted 217 to 214 to fund major parts of the government and end the partial shutdown.
The HPC community welcomed a familiar name last week, when Atos Group announced that it was reintroducing Bull as the name of its HPC and advanced computing arm. With a 95-year history, Bull has strong roots in Europe, and the French government considers Bull to be a sovereign asset with strategic importance.
While Bull is currently a unit of the European multinational company Atos Group, it soon will be a completely standalone company with headquarters near Paris, France. That’s significant not only for historical reasons, but because is arguably the most complete HPC system maker on the continent, capable of building the full stack of hardware and software necessary to develop HPC systems.

A Bull Gamma 60 system installed in Paris in the 1960s (Image courtesy Bull)
Steve Conway, a longtime industry analyst and HPCwire contributor, has been watching the HPC story unfold in Europe for decades. That story would be incomplete without Bull.
“Bull is a storied HPC brand that stayed with the supercomputer products (e.g., BullSequana),” Conway told HPCwire. “Now, the company name sends an important signal to customers, employees and the French government as an investor, that the company will maintain a strong, long-term emphasis on HPC and other advanced computing.
“It’s a smart move to help restore confidence after the financial struggles in recent years,” he added.
Bull’s history is replete with multiple name changes, mergers, and acquisitions. The French government has stepped in to safeguard what it considers a national asset not once, but now twice.
The Bull story starts in 1931, when the company H.W. Egli-Bull was founded as a means to exploit the patented punch card technology developed by Norwegian engineer Fredrik Rosing Bull, who died of cancer at age 43 in 1925. While the company was founded in France, it was a subsidiary of H.W. Egli, which was based in Switzerland.

Bull headquarters in Les Clayes-sous-Bois, outside of Paris (Image courtesy Bull)
The Bull company built a business making tabulators, punched card sorters, and punching machines for automating calculations, and competed with the likes of IBM and other early computer makers. The French company changed its name to Compagnie des Machines Bull in 1933, a name it kept until 1964, when a business downturn led to a merger with General Electric and the creation of several new Bull-General Electric entities.
Bull continued to build computers from the 1960s through the 1980s. It also continued to be acquired by foreign entities and renamed. In 1970, Bull-GE was acquired by Honeywell, which renamed it Honeywell-Bull. In 1975, Honeywell-Bull merged with Compagnie Internationale de l’Informatique (CII) and took the name CII-Honeywell-Bull.
Concerned with the loss of national identity with its premiere computer maker, the French Government nationalized CII-Honeywell-Bull in 1982 and gave it a new name: Bull Group. The new company continued with M&A activity, and in 1987 Bull Group partnered with Honeywell and NEC to create Honeywell Bull (subsequently named Bull HN). In 1989, Bull HN acquired Zenith.
In the 2000s, Bull entered the supercomputer business for the first time. Among its systems was CURIE, which installed at the French Atomic Energy Commission (CEA). When it debuted in 2012, Curie was the was the most powerful European supercomputer, with 1.4 petaflops of sustained capacity on the Linpack benchmark, good enough for number nine on the TOP500 list.

Bull Logos through the years (Image courtesy Bull)
In 2014, Bull joined the Atos Group, a large European multinational IT company with headquarters near Paris, France. Atos continued to develop Bull-labeled HPC systems, including BullSequana in 2016 and JUWELS Booster in 2020, which delivered 25 and 44.1 petaflops of computing power, respectively.
In 2022, Atos announced it would soon break the exascale barrier with BullSequana XH3000, a new line of supercomputers that feature liquid cooling and a choice of processors and interconnect architectures. Currently there are several BullSequana XH3000s in the TOP500 list, including the Jupiter Booster installed at EuroHPC’s Jülich Supercomputing Center, which is currently number 4 on the list with 1 exaflop of sustained capacity. There’s also Marenostrum, which is installed at the EuroHPC Barceleona Supercomputer Center, which was clocked at 175.3 petaflops of sustained capacity on Linpack and is currently number eight on the TOP500.
Atos also occupies the number 10 spot with a BullSequana XH2000 system installed at EuroHPC’s CINECA site, which ran 241 petaflops on the Linpack test. There are several other XH3000’s in the TOP500, including Jedi at EuroHPC at Jülich, which debuted at number 189 with 4.5 petaflops; and the Viper system at Max-Planck Gesselshaft, which sits at number 299; among others.

Bull’s Jupiter Booster, currently number four on the TOP500
Also in 2022, Atos decided to split its operations in two. Atos Tech Foundations would provide services, digital workspaces and professional services, while Eviden would target advanced computing, AI, the cloud, and cybersecurity. Starting in 2023, Bull was grouped into Eviden.
While Bull was busy with BullSequana XH3000, the French government was angling to make another move to secure what it considered to be an important sovereign asset with strategic military and nuclear value. In 2024, Atos announced that it was in talks to sell its HPC, quantum, and AI divisions of Eviden to the French government for €500 million. The two parties agreed to terms in July 2025, with the French government investing €410 million for the assets.
The deal inched further toward completion last week, when Atos announced the return of Bull. The company stated:

Bull’s new logo
“The rebirth of Bull represents a strategic milestone on its journey towards becoming a private, independent company, following the signing of the share purchase agreement with the French State on July 31, 2025. The complete transaction, which is expected to close in the first half of 2026, will support Bull in accelerating its vision of the digital future–more powerful, more sustainable, more sovereign and more open.”
Bull currently employs 2,500 workers in Europe, Latin America, and India. It owns 1,500 patents. It continues to manufacture its system at a factory in Angers, France.
“With the launch of Bull, we are reconnecting with our technological heritage to build our future,” stated Emmanuel Le Roux, SVP and head of Bull. “Our mission is clear: deliver powerful, sustainable, and sovereign computing and AI technologies that enable nations and industries to innovate with confidence and purpose.”
The post What the Return of Bull Means to European HPC appeared first on HPCwire.
The ruling comes just days after federal agents launched tear gas at a crowd of demonstrators, including young children, that local officials described as peaceful.
The Dyson PencilVac doesn't cost as much as you might expect.
In Mississippi, more than 36,000 homes and businesses have now gone a second week without electricity after a historic winter storm.
Pedro Sánchez says urgent action needed to protect children from ‘digital wild west’, drawing anger from owner of X
Spain has proposed a ban on social media use by teenagers as attitudes hardened in Europe against the technology, drawing personal insults against the prime minister from Elon Musk.
The government is preparing a series of measures including a social media ban for under-16s, the prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, said, promising to protect children from the “digital wild west” and hold tech companies responsible for hateful and harmful content.
Continue reading...Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for Feb. 4, No. 499.
Mozilla says the new version will be available on desktop-only on Feb. 24.
NASA plans to test the planned leak repair with a second dress rehearsal fueling test later this month.
The sheriff says the note was sent to a local Arizona news station, which agreed not to report on it, following the disappearance of "Today" show co-host Savannah Guthrie's mother, Nancy Guthrie.
President replied to Collins’ persistent questions about Epstein files by accusing her of not smiling ‘because you know you’re not telling the truth’
Donald Trump has continued to sow doubt in the election system. While appearing on former deputy FBI director Dan Bongino’s podcast on Monday, the president called on Republicans to “nationalize the voting,” in at least “15 places”, although he did not clarify which ones.
“The Republicans should say, ‘we want to take over’,” Trump said in the interview.
Continue reading...Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for Feb. 4, No. 703.
A spokesman for Sen. Mitch McConnell said the Kentucky Republican's "prognosis is positive."
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for Feb. 4 #969.
Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for Feb. 4, No. 1,691.
A year after CBS News California Investigates exposed secrecy inside the California FAIR Plan, the insurance commissioner is backing a bill that would open meetings and financial records and require public reporting for the state's insurer of last resort.
Tyler Robinson's attorneys want the entire Utah County Attorney's Office disqualified because one of the prosecutors has a daughter who was present at the rally where Kirk was shot.
Digital surveillance of your phone data poses a significant risk in any setting, particularly during demonstrations.
I just got new foot pads and flight fins for my xr and any time I jump or hit a bonk my bord deactivates. Does anyone have a solution to this
The forum, sponsored by two Democrats, is intended to focus on what they call “violent tactics and disproportionate use of force by the Department of Homeland Security.”
Shahed-139 said to have approached USS Abraham Lincoln ‘with unclear intent’ in lead-up to expected US-Iran talks on Tehran’s nuclear programme
The US military says it shot down an Iranian drone that “aggressively” approached the Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier in the Arabian Sea.
The Iranian Shahed-139 drone was flying toward the carrier “with unclear intent” when an F-35 fighter jet shot it down, US Central Command said on Tuesday.
Continue reading...Report to tackle courts’ backlog also recommends new criminal justice adviser to oversee courts, prisons and policing
A new post of prime minister’s criminal justice adviser and the widespread use of remote hearings are among the recommendations of a government-commissioned independent review on tackling the courts’ backlog in England and Wales.
The second part of Sir Brian Leveson’s review – unlike the first part, which recommended slashing jury trials – focuses on efficiencies that can be achieved without legislation.
Continue reading...Data comes as government prepares to publish plans to overhaul Send system in England
One in six autistic pupils have not been to school at all since the start of this academic year, according to a new survey which found that mental health issues were often behind high levels of school absence.
Nearly half (45%) of the parents and children who responded to the UK-wide survey by the Ambitious About Autism charity said they felt “blamed” by the government for the absences.
Continue reading...Netflix film revisits evidence that led to Letby’s conviction and hears from expert who says his research was misused
Shortly after Lucy Letby was sentenced to 15 whole-life terms for murdering seven infants and attempting to murder seven others between June 2015 and June 2016 – a conviction that made her Britain’s worst ever child serial killer – Cheshire police agreed to give “unparalleled and exclusive access” to the makers of a Netflix film about the case.
The finished documentary, The Investigation Of Lucy Letby, which is released on Wednesday, must be very different from what the producers envisaged when they first began work on the project, given the subsequent unexpected turns in the story. Since the two trials, the prosecution evidence and police handling of the case have faced criticism from an unprecedentedly large number of distinguished British and international medical experts. Led by the Canadian neonatologist, Dr Shoo Lee – who says again in the feature-length Netflix documentary that his research was misused to convict the nurse – many of the experts are convinced Letby is innocent, the victim of a catastrophic miscarriage of justice.
Continue reading...Rights group says growing authoritarianism and abuses in US, Russia and China threaten global rules-based order
The world is in a “democratic recession” with almost three-quarters of the global population now living under autocratic rulers – levels not seen since the 1980s, according to a new report.
The system underpinning human rights was “in peril”, said Philippe Bolopion, executive director of Human Rights Watch (HRW), with a growing authoritarian wave becoming “the challenge of a generation”, he said.
Continue reading...‘Mid-career’ female workers also being sidelined by rigid hiring processes, says City of London Corporation
Women working in tech and financial services are at greater risk of losing their jobs to increased use of AI and automation than their male peers, according to a report that found experienced females were also being sidelined as a result of “rigid hiring processes”.
“Mid-career” women – with at least five years’ experience – are being overlooked for digital roles in the tech and financial and professional services sectors, where they are traditionally underrepresented, according to the report by the City of London Corporation.
Continue reading...Josh MacAlister issues warning as government launches £88m ‘call to arms’ to recruit 10,000 new foster carers
Private providers of child social care in England will be pushed out of the system if they are found to be profiteering, the children’s minister has said.
Josh MacAlister, who is in charge of overhauling the care system for children, also called for a fostering equivalent of the Homes for Ukraine scheme to provide homes for tens of thousands of children.
Continue reading...The ACA Marketplace is a platform for purchasing private insurance plans, some of which offer income‑based subsidies to lower costs.
Entitlement programs are federally or jointly funded programs that guarantee benefits to all individuals who meet legally defined eligibility rules.
The alternative minimum tax ensures certain taxpayers pay a minimum amount by using a separate calculation that limits deductions and exclusions.
Capital gains are profits earned when someone sells a long‑term asset like stocks, real estate, or other valuable property.
Sports betting is legal in 39 states and in Washington, DC, generating millions in tax revenue.
Billionaires and intellectuals attended events with the disgraced financier years after he served time for sex offense, files reveal
Newly released emails and travel itineraries appear to show that for years after Jeffrey Epstein served time for procuring underage girls for prostitution, he continued to attend exclusive dinners alongside Silicon Valley’s most famous billionaires.
The emails, part of a trove released by the Department of Justice on Friday, show that as late as 2018, Epstein was invited to or attended dinners alongside the likes of Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Google founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin, Twitter co-founder Evan Williams, Microsoft founder Bill Gates, and Google vice-president and later Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer.
Continue reading...A federal judge expressed skepticism over the Pentagon's effort to downgrade the pay and rank of Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly after he urged service members not to follow unlawful military orders.
| Hi everyone. I wanna start off by thanking everyone again for the help, comments, and suggestions on my previous post. I’m also having an issue with haptic buzz when I try to tap the bumper to the ground. What’s the trick called? Anyways,as you can see in the video it gets “stuck” in haptic buzz. I do this all the time with my GT and never had this happen. I tried doing a 180 spin and I think this happened. It got stuck I lost my balance, fell and scraped my elbow. I don’t think I’m doing anything wrong. Could it be related to my board jerking issue? [link] [comments] |
An anonymous reader shares a report: Google Home users, your long nightmare is over. The platform has finally added support for buttons. The release notes for a February 2 update state that several new starter conditions for automations are now available, including "Switch or button pressed." Smart buttons are physical, programmable switches that you can press to trigger automations or control devices in your smart home, such as turning lights on or off, opening and closing shades, running a Good Night scene, or starting a robot vacuum. A great alternative to voice and app control when you want to control multiple devices, smart buttons are often wireless and generally have several ways to press them: single press, double press, and long press, meaning one button can do multiple things.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Armed with your own creativity and this $300 sticker printer, you can bring joy to everyone around you. But if you're looking to start a small craft business, is it right for you?
Leaders had been trading hostile remarks for months but Gustavo Petro’s visit ended with warm words from US counterpart
After months of trading insults – from “sick man” and “drug trafficking leader” on one side, to “accomplice to genocide” with a “senile brain” on the other – the first meeting between Donald Trump and Gustavo Petro ended with pleasantries, autographs and a Maga cap.
The Colombian president was received by his US counterpart for a closed-door meeting at the White House, with no press access.
Continue reading...President Trump has continued to claim without evidence that there is widespread fraud in U.S. elections.
Conservancy sees nonnative species as major threat to local biodiversity, while residents rally to preserve local identity
California wildlife officials moved forward last week with a plan to eradicate a mule deer herd from Santa Catalina Island: extermination.
The plan has long pitted locals from the island off the coast of Los Angeles against the Catalina Island Conservancy, an environmental non-profit that manages 88% of the island’s terrain. The conservancy sees mule deer, which are not native to the island, as a major threat to local biodiversity, water quality and fire resilience.
Continue reading...MacBook Air or MacBook Pro? M4 or M5? Is the older M1 Air still worth it? You have MacBook questions, and CNET's laptop experts have the answers.
Dyson's PencilVac is so thin and light that it feels more like a broom than a cordless vacuum. Here's how using it went.
Search and rescue operation involving boats, helicopter and divers under way off the eastern Aegean island of Chios
A collision between a speedboat carrying migrants and a Greek coastguard patrol vessel off the eastern Aegean island of Chios has killed at least 14 people, the coastguard said.
A search and rescue operation involving four patrol vessels, an air force helicopter and a private boat carrying divers was under way for potential missing passengers.
Continue reading...Although economists have generally downplayed the impact of artificial intelligence on jobs, some employers are highlighting their adoption of AI.
Prosecutors in Paris also order Elon Musk to appear for questioning in April as part of a year-long investigation.
Cartoon lump of coal with giant eyes was spotlighted by US interior secretary in X post saying: ‘Mine, Baby, Mine!’
The Trump administration has turned to an unusual weapon in its attempt to resurrect coal mining – a cartoon lump of coal, complete with giant eyes and yellow mining garb, called “Coalie”.
The administration’s new mascot, kitted out with a helmet, boots and gloves, was introduced in a seemingly artificial intelligence-generated picture posted online by Doug Burgum, Donald Trump’s interior secretary.
Continue reading...The complaint was closed administratively by the intelligence community inspector general's office in June 2025, under prior leadership, watchdog says.
Appropriations measure will let Democrats negotiate with White House and GOP leaders over mass deportation efforts
Donald Trump on Tuesday signed legislation to end a government shutdown hours after it was approved by the House of Representatives, as top Democrats warned they will block further funding to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) if their demands for restrictions on Trump’s mass deportation campaign are not addressed.
The Republican-controlled House approved the $1.2tn appropriations measure by a narrow 217-214 vote, with all but 21 Republicans voting in favor and all but 21 Democrats against. The president signed it later in the afternoon at the White House, bringing to an end the shutdown that began after midnight last Friday, which had halted many operations at departments including defense, health and human services, labor, and transportation.
Continue reading...The new law will ban anyone younger than 16 from using social media apps in Spain.
President Donald Trump wasted no time in responding to the deaths of two U.S. citizens last month during protests against an immigration crackdown in Minneapolis. Trump and other top administration officials made inaccurate or unsupported statements within hours of the incidents, a departure from how previous presidents responded in similar situations, experts told us.
Hours after an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent shot and killed Renee Good on Jan. 7, Trump claimed that Good was “very disorderly, obstructing and resisting, who then violently, willfully, and viciously ran over the ICE Officer, who seems to have shot her in self defense.” The president included a video clip of the shooting, captured from a distance, but closer video showed the agent wasn’t run over.
Then, hours after federal agents shot and killed Alex Pretti on Jan. 24, Trump posted a picture of a handgun and wrote, “This is the gunman’s gun, loaded (with two additional full magazines!), and ready to go – What is that all about? Where are the local Police? Why weren’t they allowed to protect ICE Officers? The Mayor and the Governor called them off? It is stated that many of these Police were not allowed to do their job, that ICE had to protect themselves — Not an easy thing to do!”
Department of Homeland Security officials also made statements that Pretti “approached” officers with a handgun, “violently resisted” an attempt to “disarm” him, and “wanted to do maximum damage and massacre law enforcement.” As we’ve explained, in the immediate aftermath of a shooting, it’s difficult to know exactly what happened, but bystander videos contradicted DHS’ account. They don’t show Pretti holding the gun or threatening officers with it.
The president, himself, softened his remarks, saying the next day, “We’re reviewing everything and will come out with a determination” on whether the federal agent’s actions were justified. And the civil rights division of the Justice Department is now investigating the Pretti killing.
All four of the experts we spoke to — a group that included political communications researchers and historians — said that Trump’s remarks following these deaths marked a shift from previous presidents, and even from some of his own rhetoric during his first term.

“As with so much else Trump, yes — he’s extremely different,” Matt Dallek, a political historian and professor at George Washington University’s Graduate School of Political Management, told us in an interview.
“He’s much more extreme and far more untethered from facts and the reality on the ground,” Dallek said, noting that, importantly, it’s not just the president, but also his officials who have taken this tack.
Others we spoke to made the same point.
“Without question,” there has been a shift, Roderick Hart, a professor emeritus of communication at the University of Texas at Austin with expertise in politics and the mass media, told us. “And it has very little to do with this particular situation in Minneapolis. He’s a rhetoric-first guy. … And he’s chosen his people who have exactly the same instincts,” Hart said.
Presidents are normally judicious, particularly when reacting to an event, Hart said. But, “Trump talks before the event is even finished.”
The Minnesota fatal shootings, however, involved federal agents, while examples from past presidencies concern state or local officers.
For example, former President Barack Obama — who was in office at a moment when the ubiquity of camera phones and the rise of social media converged to shine light on the killings of unarmed Black men and boys — took more time before publicly expressing his thoughts.
One of the first illustrations of this moment didn’t actually feature an officer, but rather a neighborhood watch volunteer in central Florida, who shot and killed 17-year-old Trayvon Martin on Feb. 26, 2012. About a month after that, in response to a reporter’s question, Obama said, in part, “Well, I’m the head of the executive branch, and the attorney general reports to me, so I’ve got to be careful about my statements to make sure that we’re not impairing any investigation that’s taking place right now. But obviously, this is a tragedy. I can only imagine what these parents are going through. And when I think about this boy, I think about my own kids. And I think every parent in America should be able to understand why it is absolutely imperative that we investigate every aspect of this and that everybody pulls together — federal, state, and local — to figure out exactly how this tragedy happened.”
Obama continued: “But my main message is to the parents of Trayvon Martin. If I had a son, he’d look like Trayvon. And I think they are right to expect that all of us as Americans are going to take this with the seriousness it deserves and that we’re going to get to the bottom of exactly what happened.”
In 2014, a year that saw several high-profile police killings, Obama waited three days to publicly respond to the Aug. 9 death of 18-year-old Michael Brown, who was shot and killed by a local police officer in Ferguson, Missouri, sparking widespread protests.
Then, Obama said in a statement: “The death of Michael Brown is heartbreaking, and Michelle and I send our deepest condolences to his family and his community at this very difficult time. As Attorney General Holder has indicated, the Department of Justice is investigating the situation along with local officials, and they will continue to direct resources to the case as needed. I know the events of the past few days have prompted strong passions, but as details unfold, I urge everyone in Ferguson, Missouri, and across the country, to remember this young man through reflection and understanding. We should comfort each other and talk with one another in a way that heals, not in a way that wounds. Along with our prayers, that’s what Michael and his family, and our broader American community, deserve.”
The former president waited three weeks — when he was asked about it in an interview — to comment on the shooting death that year of 12-year-old Tamir Rice in Cleveland. In a lengthy answer to a question about how responsible he felt his administration was for addressing police shootings, Obama said, “Well, I think an enormous amount. Not just because, as president, you’re always responsible for what happens in this country and you’ve got to be part of the solution, not part of the problem, but because of my particular experiences that I bring to this office.”
And Obama took more than four months to make remarks on the July 17, 2014, death of Eric Garner in New York — the former president had waited until a grand jury decided not to indict the police officer who had choked Garner. In December 2014, Obama said, in part, “My tradition is not to remark on cases where there may still be an investigation. But I want everybody to understand that this week, in the wake of Ferguson, we initiated a Task Force whose job it is to come back to me with specific recommendations about how we strengthen the relationship between law enforcement and communities of color and minority communities that feel that bias is taking place; that we are going to take specific steps to improve the training and the work with State and local governments when it comes to policing in communities of color; that we are going to be scrupulous in investigating cases where we are concerned about the impartiality and accountability that’s taking place.”
Before the era of the camera phone, the Rodney King case in 1991 grabbed national attention when a man in a nearby apartment videotaped Los Angeles police beating King during a traffic stop.
Then-President George H.W. Bush waited almost three weeks before commenting. Then, in a prepared statement on March 21, 1991, he said, in part, “We’ve all seen those shocking videotapes and have seen transcripts of the incident in Los Angeles. And without getting into the specifics of the case, those terrible scenes stir us all to demand an end to gratuitous violence and brutality. Law enforcement officials cannot place themselves above the law that they are sworn to defend. This administration will investigate possible breaches of federal law aggressively and will prosecute violators to the full extent of the law. … I was shocked by what I saw in that tape–that violence. And to the degree there’s a federal role here, I’m confident we will go the extra mile to see that that is fulfilled.”
Going back even further, to the 1970s, Dallek said, “Even Nixon’s comments in the wake of the Kent State killings were far more restrained and measured than anything Trump has offered the American people.”
On May 4, 1970, the same day that the National Guard shot and killed four students during a protest of the Vietnam War at Kent State University in Ohio, then-President Richard Nixon issued a statement that said, “This should remind us all once again that when dissent turns to violence, it invites tragedy. It is my hope that this tragic and unfortunate incident will strengthen the determination of all the Nation’s campuses–administrators, faculty, and students alike–to stand firmly for the right which exists in this country of peaceful dissent and just as strongly against the resort to violence as a means of such expression.”
When he was asked about the proper role of the National Guard — which, in this case, had been called in by the state’s governor — at a press conference four days later, Nixon said, “I want to know what the facts are. I have asked for the facts. When I get them, I will have something to say about it. But I do know when you do have a situation of a crowd throwing rocks and the National Guard is called in, that there is always the chance that it will escalate into the kind of a tragedy that happened at Kent State. If there is one thing I am personally committed to, it is this: I saw the pictures of those four youngsters in the Evening Star the day after that tragedy, and I vowed then that we were going to find methods that would be more effective to deal with these problems of violence, methods that would deal with those who would use force and violence and endanger others, but, at the same time, would not take the lives of innocent people.”
“There are some echoes, I think,” Dallek said, comparing Trump’s recent statements with Nixon’s. But Nixon was much more measured in the aftermath, Dallek said, adding that “he never branded [the students] as traitors or domestic terrorists.” (After the Good killing, DHS Secretary Kristi Noem called Good’s actions “domestic terrorism,” and Noem used the same phrase to describe Pretti’s actions.)
One distinction between these previous examples and the current situation is that agents deployed in Minneapolis are federal, rather than state or local, Barbara Perry, a professor of governance at the University of Virginia’s Miller Center, which focuses on the American presidency, told us in an interview.
Since most previous cases of officer-involved shootings implicated state or local police, presidents could distance themselves, she said, and say that the Justice Department would investigate.
“So they could keep at arms length the legal process while expressing their sorrow,” Perry said.
Similarly, Guian A. McKee, a professor of public affairs at the Miller Center, told us in an email, “Trump administration statements about the recent killings in Minneapolis have been immediate, they have been political, and they have had little regard for facts or willingness to wait until evidence is clear.”
He went on to explain that one reason for this may be that “the recent killings have been done by federal agents acting as instruments of the president’s own policies and the tactics chosen to implement them. This has not been the case in most other law enforcement-involved deaths, where the officers were state or local. So the actions and their consequences fall much closer to the president.”
Near the end of his first term, Trump made conciliatory remarks about a high-profile case that involved local police officers, not federal agents.
Two days after the May 25, 2020, killing of George Floyd, whose death under the knee of a Minneapolis police officer led to widespread protests, Trump wrote on Twitter, “At my request, the FBI and the Department of Justice are already well into an investigation as to the very sad and tragic death in Minnesota of George Floyd.”
And, two days after that, on May 29, he said at the start of an event for business leaders, “I want to express our nation’s deepest condolences and most heartfelt sympathies to the family of George Floyd. A terrible event. Terrible, terrible thing that happened. I’ve asked that the Department of Justice expedite the federal investigation into his death and do it immediately, do it as quickly as absolutely possible. … It should never be allowed to happen, a thing like that.”
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The post Trump’s Immediate Speculation on Shootings Bucks Presidential Norms appeared first on FactCheck.org.
Attorney general Letitia James says observers will monitor if Trump enforcement ‘remains within bounds of the law’
New York is creating a team of legal observers that will don purple vests to monitor and record the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement officers as they seek to detain and deport migrants, the state’s attorney general said on Tuesday.
The announcement follows weeks of sometimes violent tumult in Minneapolis, where Donald Trump has deployed thousands of armed, masked agents as he tries to deport more migrants than any of his predecessors.
Continue reading...While most focused on competition issues, Josh Hawley accused Netflix of promoting trans content to children
Netflix co-chief executive Ted Sarandos faced tough questioning over whether the streamer is “overwhelmingly woke” or killing competition on Tuesday afternoon during a congressional hearing focused on its pending acquisition of the film and streaming assets of Warner Bros Discovery.
The hearing was conducted by the Senate subcommittee on antitrust, competition policy, and consumer rights. Bruce Campbell, chief revenue and strategy officer for Warner Bros Discovery, also testified in the packed Senate hearing room.
Continue reading...Here's how to tune into the hit show starring Kaitlin Olson.
Over the past month or so, several enterprising contributors have taken an interest in the zig libc subproject. The idea here is to incrementally delete redundant code, by providing libc functions as Zig standard library wrappers rather than as vendored C source files. In many cases, these functions are one-to-one mappings, such as
memcpyoratan2, or trivially wrap a generic function, likestrnlen.So far, roughly 250 C source files have been deleted from the Zig repository, with 2032 remaining.
With each function that makes the transition, Zig gains independence from third party projects and from the C programming language, compilation speed improves, Zig’s installation size is simplified and reduced, and user applications which statically link libc enjoy reduced binary size.
↫ Andrew Kelley on the Zig Devlog
The goal is to replace all of the musl, wasi-libc, and MinGW-w64 C code bundled in Zig with new Zig code.
On Moltbook, bots have formed communities, invented their own inside jokes, cultural references and even formed a parody religion. Or have they?
Rust is everywhere, and it’s no surprise it’s also made its way into the lowest levels of certain operating systems and kernels, so it shouldn’t be surprising that various operating system developers have to field questions and inquiries about Rust. NetBSD developer Benny Siegert wrote a blog post about this very subject, and in it, details why it’s unlikely Rust will find its way into the NetBSD base system and/or the kernel
First, NetBSD is famed for its wide architecture and platform support, and Rust would make that a lot more troublesome due to Rust simply not being available on many platforms NetBSD supports. Rust release cycles also aren’t compatible with NetBSD, it would draw a lot of dependency code into the base system, and keeping Rust and its compiler toolchain working is a lot of work that falls on the shoulders of a relatively small group of NetBSD developers.
Note that while NetBSD does tend to take a more cautious approach to these matters than, say, Linux or FreeBSD, the operating system isn’t averse to change on principle. For instance, not only is Lua part of the base system, it’s even used in the NetBSD kernel due to its ability to rapidly develop and prototype kernel drivers. In short, while it doesn’t seem likely Rust will make it into the NetBSD base system, it’s not an impossibility either.
SAN DIEGO, Feb. 3, 2026 — Schneider Electric, a global energy technology leader, and ETAP, an industry and technology leader in power system design and operation, today announced a new physics-based digital twin solution to help utilities and critical infrastructure operators strengthen resilience and accelerate time-to-power. The announcement was made at DTECH, the leading transmission and distribution trade show in the U.S.
ETAP is part of Schneider Electric’s portfolio of software solutions, following its acquisition in 2021. As the industry’s leading provider of electrical power system modeling and simulation software, ETAP complements Schneider Electric’s digital grid capabilities by delivering engineering-grade analysis and lifecycle modeling for utilities and critical infrastructure.
Engineering Confidence for Every Decision
“Until now, utilities have operated two separate worlds, one for planning, another for operations. We’ve collapsed that divide,” said Tanuj Khandelwal, CEO of ETAP. “This isn’t simulation anymore. It’s a living digital twin that thinks alongside the grid while validating protection schemes before they execute, anticipating faults before they cascade. As electrification accelerates and extreme weather rewrites the rules, utilities need more than faster analysis. They need a system that already knows what’s coming. That’s what we’ve built.”
Integrated with Schneider Electric’s One Digital Grid Platform and EcoStruxure ArcFM Web – an advanced GIS for a complete, location-based view of utility assets – the new physics-based Digital Twin links network data with real-time operations. By combining spatial intelligence with simulation-grade modeling, utilities can move beyond static visualization to predictive insights, enabling them to anticipate outcomes before switching and align planning with live grid conditions.
Beyond Visualization: A True Physics-Based Digital Twin
Unlike generic digital twins, ETAP’s model is grounded in electrical physics, enabling operators to:
Meeting the Challenges of a Rapidly Changing Grid
As utilities face unprecedented challenges – rapid electrification, extreme weather and rising reliability expectations – engineering-grade simulation is critical for informed decision-making. ETAP’s capabilities extend beyond utilities to mission-critical sectors such as data centers, healthcare and aerospace, where downtime is unacceptable.
“By combining ETAP’s engineering rigor with Schneider Electric’s industry-leading geospatial technologies, operators gain a unified, lifecycle model that reduces risk and accelerates modernization,” said Ruben Llanes, CEO, Digital Grid, Schneider Electric.
Proven Impact Across Utilities and Critical Infrastructure
Experience It Live at DTECH Booth 1201
Visit Schneider Electric and ETAP at Booth 1201 for demonstrations.
About Schneider Electric
Schneider Electric is a global energy technology leader, driving efficiency and sustainability by electrifying, automating, and digitalizing industries, businesses, and homes. Its technologies enable buildings, data centers, factories, infrastructure, and grids to operate as open, interconnected ecosystems, enhancing performance, resilience, and sustainability. The portfolio includes intelligent devices, software-defined architectures, AI-powered systems, digital services, and expert advisory. With 160,000 employees and 1 million partners in over 100 countries, Schneider Electric is consistently ranked among the world’s most sustainable companies.
Source: Schneider Electric
The post Schneider Electric and ETAP Unveil Physics-Based Digital Twin for Utility Grid Resilience appeared first on HPCwire.
Ultra-processed foods (UPFs) have more in common with cigarettes than with fruit or vegetables, and require far tighter regulation, according to a new report. The Guardian: UPFs and cigarettes are engineered to encourage addiction and consumption, researchers from three US universities said, pointing to the parallels in widespread health harms that link both. UPFs, which are widely available worldwide, are food products that have been industrially manufactured, often using emulsifiers or artificial colouring and flavours. The category includes soft drinks and packaged snacks such as crisps and biscuits. There are similarities in the production processes of UPFs and cigarettes, and in manufacturers' efforts to optimise the "doses" of products and how quickly they act on reward pathways in the body, according to the paper from researchers at Harvard, the University of Michigan and Duke University. They draw on data from the fields of addiction science, nutrition and public health history to make their comparisons, published on 3 February in the healthcare journal the Milbank Quarterly. The authors suggest that marketing claims on the products, such as being "low fat" or "sugar free," are "health washing" that can stall regulation, akin to the advertising of cigarette filters in the 1950s as protective innovations that "in practice offered little meaningful benefit."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
In unveiling new dietary guidelines, federal health officials have claimed they are correcting past guidance that created a “generation of kids low in protein” and that Americans should get “dramatically” more of the nutrient. While some individuals may benefit from more protein, Americans are not generally protein-deficient.

In fact, many Americans, including a majority of children, already meet or come near to meeting the lower end of the higher daily protein goals promoted in the new guidelines, which range from 1.2 to 1.6 grams per kilogram of body weight per day. There’s some uncertainty about how much protein people should consume for optimal health. Multiple factors affect protein needs, which may be higher for older adults, as well as for people who are building muscle through exercise or actively losing weight.
Despite this nuance, officials portrayed the 2025-2030 Dietary Guidelines for Americans, released Jan. 7, as righting a clear wrong, while misleadingly stating or implying that Americans in general need to eat significantly more protein. The new guidelines include an inverted food pyramid that prominently features a large steak, and the website promoting the guidelines proclaims, “We are ending the war on protein.”

“The old guidelines had about half the protein that you need,” Dr. Marty Makary, the Food and Drug Administration commissioner, said during a Jan. 9 appearance on CNN. “Look at the consequence of the old, corrupt food pyramid: a generation of kids low in protein, struggling with muscle mass, weak, having trouble concentrating, addicted to ultraprocessed foods and refined carbohydrates.”
“The science was clear enough on proteins that we should dramatically increase our input of proteins,” Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said during a Jan. 21 rally.
Nutrition experts we interviewed objected to the idea that Americans in general need to “dramatically increase” protein intake, or that children are broadly deficient. HHS did not reply to an email asking for more information to support these claims.
“When you look at most intake surveys, most Americans were getting in the range of intakes that is being recommended, close to 1.2” grams per kilogram of body weight per day, Stuart Phillips, a professor who studies the effects of nutrition and exercise on skeletal muscle at McMaster University in Canada, told us.
For reference, the recommended range would translate to around 108 to 144 grams of protein per day for a 199-pound man or 94 to 125 grams per day for a 172-pound woman, the average weights for U.S. adults. A 3-ounce serving of chicken breast has 26 grams of protein; a 3-ounce serving of cooked salmon has 19 grams; half a cup of cooked lentils or white beans has 9 grams; and a cup of milk has 8 grams.
Moreover, “probably less than 5% of the U.S. population eat diets that are consistent with the previous dietary guidelines,” Wayne Campbell, a Purdue University professor who studies nutrients, foods and dietary patterns, told us. “It is an inappropriate attack on past guidelines to say that the guidelines are the reason why everybody eats a poor diet and is not as healthy as they hopefully would be.”
“There is no evidence of widespread protein deficiency in the U.S. population,” Dr. Frank B. Hu, a professor of nutrition and epidemiology at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, told us.
Previous editions of the dietary guidelines did not give a particular figure for the amount of protein people should eat, experts said. Hu explained that a different group of experts helps set daily recommendations for specific ranges of protein and other nutrients.
“Who is going to track how many grams per kilogram body weight of protein” they are eating? Wendi Gosliner, who leads research projects at the University of California’s Nutrition Policy Institute, told us, noting that the guidelines are meant to guide federal food programs and nutrition education by providing advice that is “digestible” for the general public.
Raising protein intake recommendations requires data showing “widespread protein inadequacy” or that there are benefits to eating more protein beyond the minimum, Hu said. “We don’t have any of those data at this point to substantially increase protein intake recommendations” for the general population, Hu said. He added that an argument could be made for relatively high protein intake for certain segments of the population, including people on weight loss drugs, older adults and people engaged in physical activity that builds muscles.
Some experts are supportive of the protein recommendations in the new guidelines.
Phillips, who was not involved in the guidelines, said that the new range is “more in line with what I would recommend,” agreeing the evidence is particularly strong for certain subgroups and depends on physical activity level. However, he disagreed with the implication that prior guidelines led to widespread deficiency.
Claims that the old food pyramid “produced a ‘generation of children low in protein’ or broadly impaired muscle mass or cognition are not supported by direct evidence,” Phillips told us. “Childhood health challenges are far more plausibly linked to excess energy intake, poor diet quality, physical inactivity, and high consumption of ultra-processed foods than to insufficient protein per se.”
(To be clear, the new food pyramid does not replace the original 1992 food pyramid people may remember, which was replaced by another, less hierarchical pyramid in 2005 and then MyPlate in 2011.)
“My takeaway from all of it is that we’ve elevated protein in people’s thinking, it’s front and center, and we gave people very specific goals,” Donald Layman, a protein biochemist and professor emeritus at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, told us. “I think we’ve made an enormous step forward in clarity.” Layman, who is also a food company consultant, owns a fat loss company that sells meal replacement shakes, although he told us he has lost money on this latter endeavor.
Layman and nutritional physiologist Heather Leidy of the University of Texas at Austin co-authored reviews of the effects of the new recommended protein range on weight management and nutrient adequacy for HHS and the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the agencies that produce the guidelines.
Unusually, Layman, Leidy and seven additional scientists were asked to perform these reviews in under three months, according to STAT. A 20-person committee of nutrition researchers had previously spent years identifying research questions, reviewing the literature and formulating recommendations. The scientific advisory committee does not write the guidelines, but their conclusions inform them. The guidelines in the past have been credited to a list of HHS and USDA staff, although this year’s guidance document does not name authors.
Makary has repeatedly said that the new Dietary Guidelines for Americans increased recommended daily protein intake by “50% to 100%.”
It’s true that the new recommended intake of 1.2 to 1.6 grams per kilogram of body weight per day is 50% to 100% above the Recommended Dietary Allowance of 0.8 grams per kilogram per day for adults. (Children have somewhat higher RDAs, when measured per kilogram of body weight.) These RDAs were established to set baselines for nutrients to prevent deficiency in the vast majority of Americans.
But to be clear, the Dietary Guidelines for Americans do not set RDAs, Campbell explained, which are instead set via a process led by the Food and Nutrition Board of the National Academies of Sciences Engineering, and Medicine.
The RDA is “not a recommendation for people to purposefully try to eat that amount of protein,” Campbell said, but rather represents an amount people should not fall below. “If you’re eating 1.0 gram per kilo, 1.2 or 1.4 — or even very few people eat 1.6 — then that’s all within a range … that the 0.8 would support.”
The RDAs, along with other values, inform the dietary guidelines. However, Campbell said that the guidelines are meant to recommend which food types to eat, not particular nutrient intakes. Researchers do modeling to ensure what they are recommending “meets or moderately exceeds” the nutrient minimums, he said. He was not involved in the current guidelines but served on the scientific advisory committee for the 2015-2020 guidelines.
Campbell said that the current RDA was based on the best evidence available in the early 2000s, when it was last reviewed, and that there’s “inconsistent” evidence since on whether it should be changed. Ann Yaktine, director of the Food and Nutrition Board, told us that protein is among the nutrients set to be updated, although she said she could not predict a timeline. Until that update is complete, she said, the current RDA “will remain,” adding that RDAs and other nutrient-related values inform the dietary guidelines, “not the reverse.”
Americans mostly exceed the minimal requirement to prevent protein deficiency and, in many cases, even meet the higher goal set in the new Dietary Guidelines for Americans.
“The consensus has not been that there is a dramatic shortage of protein in this country,” Gosliner said, contrary to Kennedy’s claim that Americans need to “dramatically” increase intake.
Using survey data on American diets collected by the U.S. government, researchers have estimated that adults on average get near or even slightly above 1.2 grams of protein per kilogram of body weight per day — the bottom of the range now recommended by the dietary guidelines.
“Because the intake of protein is already pretty high, especially animal protein, in the U.S. population, there is no evidence that further increasing protein intake, especially in a major way, will confer significant health benefit,” Hu said.
However, Layman pointed out that there’s variation in how much protein Americans consume. The people who already consume protein within the new recommended range do not need to increase their intake, he said, but some people “need to dramatically increase” protein intake.
A 2018 study on protein intakes between 2001 and 2014 shows that nonelderly American adult males on average exceeded 1.2 grams per kilogram, but that the average fell to closer to 1.0 as they aged. Women on average got between approximately 1.0 and 1.15 grams per kilogram per day, with amounts also falling with age.
Phillips also said there was room for improvement in protein consumption. “Many Americans meet the RDA only marginally, consume protein in uneven daily patterns, or obtain it largely from low-quality, ultra-processed sources,” he said. However, he added that most Americans “are not protein deficient in the clinical sense.” He cautioned against framing the new recommendations as being driven by deficiency, rather than a way to optimize certain outcomes.
Makary’s claim that prior guidelines led to “a generation of kids low in protein” also overstates the prevalence of protein deficiency in the U.S.
“It’s not like there’s growth stunting on a large scale in the United States because kids are protein deficient,” Phillips said. “It’s disingenuous at best and flat out wrong at worst.”
The 2018 study found that virtually no children age 8 and under ate less than the RDA — the level meant to prevent deficiency in the vast majority of the population. Protein underconsumption did rise with age for minors, with 11% of teenage boys and 23% of teenage girls not meeting the RDA.
Most age groups of children, both male and female, on average exceeded 1.2 grams of protein per kilogram of body weight per day. The exception was adolescent girls, who consumed around 1.1 grams of protein per kilogram daily.
Layman acknowledged a relative lack of research on children and protein intake but also pointed to data showing that adolescents are at risk of not eating enough protein. He also listed the many poor health outcomes for American children today and argued that past guidance had preceded changes in kids’ diets.
“We know it’s not working,” he said. “We know that after the original guidelines in 1980 that mothers, thinking they were doing the right thing and avoiding cholesterol and saturated fat, switched from having eggs and bacon and milk at breakfast to having Pop-Tarts and Cap’n Crunch and orange juice.”
However, Hu detailed a long list of factors other than protein that have led to childhood obesity and other metabolic conditions. These include generally low-quality diets in an obesity-promoting environment, lack of sufficient sleep, inactivity and excessive social media use. “Those are all important drivers of adverse health incomes in children,” he said. “I don’t think protein inadequacy or protein deficiency is a major driver.”
“I wish I could tell you that I thought that … we just haven’t been feeding kids enough protein, particularly animal protein, and that’s what’s causing all of the very sad dietary-related challenges that kids are experiencing,” Gosliner said. “From my perspective, there is no evidence of that being true.”
A separate question is whether people are generally healthier if they consume substantially more protein than the RDA’s minimum requirement.
Campbell said that this is a challenging question to answer rigorously. “It’s very difficult to do controlled feeding studies of sufficient length to actually feed people different quantities of protein for months on end to see what happens to them,” he said.
“Where the science is strongest is in showing that certain groups benefit from protein intakes above the RDA,” Phillips said. “Older adults, people engaged in regular resistance or endurance training, individuals recovering from illness or injury, and those intentionally losing weight all appear to achieve better outcomes at intakes closer to 1.2–1.6 g/kg/day. In these contexts, higher protein supports the maintenance of lean mass, functional capacity, and satiety.”
However, Hu criticized the new guidelines for setting this intake goal broadly, saying that they “are not designed for specific groups of U.S. adults,” but rather the general population.
In a Jan. 7 opinion article in the Free Press, Makary and an FDA co-author referred specifically to benefits of higher protein intakes for weight loss. “Eating more protein in line with these recommendations consistently improves weight and body composition without harm,” they wrote.
Layman and Leidy’s review, used to justify the new guidelines, concluded there was “moderate to strong” evidence that eating protein within the new recommended range promotes weight management.
However, Gosliner said that the review relied on studies of people engaged in weight loss, which are not necessarily generalizable. “They are extrapolating that to the entire population, which doesn’t make sense,” she said.
Layman countered that 75% of Americans are overweight or obese. “Should they basically be guidelines to keep people fat or to get people to ideal weight?” he said. He said that the weight loss studies included in his review in many cases included a maintenance period where people were not restricting calories.
But just because many Americans could benefit from calorie restriction or strength training does not mean that most adults are engaging in these behaviors, other experts said.
A higher protein diet while people are “purposefully energy restricting their diets to lose weight” may help people maintain lean tissue and muscle, Campbell explained. But protein is “not going to be a magical solution for you to actually permanently keep any weight off.”
“Protein without resistance exercise, during weight loss, does very little,” Phillips wrote in a Jan. 6 article on protein hype published in the Conversation. “Exercise is the major driver that helps lean mass retention. Protein is the supporting material.”
Phillips also pointed out that older adults, who can benefit from higher protein intake, make up an increasing share of the population. Protein is “important,” he said, “but it is not a stand-alone solution to metabolic health, childhood development, or healthy aging.”
The impact of the new dietary guidelines will depend on how people interpret them, some experts said.
Phillips wrote in his Conversation article that 2025 was the year protein “jumped the shark,” explaining a cultural context where it has been “oversold, overvalued and overhyped.” One concern, he told us, is that people will think they are doing “something good for their health” simply by increasing their protein intake, even if they are already consuming a relatively high amount.
If people eat “substantially” more protein, it could increase the risk of chronic disease, Hu said, explaining that consuming too much protein — and particularly animal protein — is associated with increased risk of chronic disease. “It depends on what comes together with the protein,” he said. For example, he said, people who consume more animal protein also consume more saturated fat, cholesterol and “other unhealthy components.”

“At the end of the day you are eating foods for multiple compounds and nutrients, not just protein,” Campbell said.
The guidelines themselves encourage eating a “variety” of protein foods from animal and plant sources, but the new food pyramid prominently features a large steak in the upper left-hand corner, with nuts and legumes further down.
The original committee tasked under the Biden administration with the scientific review for the dietary guidelines recommended an emphasis on consuming more peas, beans and lentils and less red and processed meat. The new dietary guidelines rejected this advice, with the exception of recommending against processed meat.
If someone replaced refined carbohydrates and sugar in their diet with plant protein, lean protein and eggs, that would be “reasonable,” Hu said. But people who consume a large quantity of animal protein tend to eat significantly less nutrient-dense plant protein sources, he said.
Further, Hu said, supermarkets are now stocked with numerous highly processed protein products.
The new guidelines discourage eating highly processed foods. But Gosliner reiterated that people often do not follow dietary advice. “There’s no reason to think now that if protein is all the rage and people are saying, ‘Eat more protein,’ that you’re not going to start seeing ice cream with protein powder and cookies with protein powder.”
When asked about the risk of the new guidance feeding into the current trend for promoting highly processed foods as sources of protein, Layman replied, “I think you need to step back and look at the guidelines. What’s the opening words? Eat real food.”
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STAMFORD, Conn., Feb. 3, 2026 — Worldwide IT spending is expected to reach $6.15 trillion in 2026, up 10.8% from 2025, according to the latest forecast by Gartner, Inc., a business and technology insights company.
“AI infrastructure growth remains rapid despite concerns about an AI bubble, with spending rising across AI‑related hardware and software,” said John-David Lovelock, Distinguished VP Analyst at Gartner. “Demand from hyperscale cloud providers continues to drive investment in servers optimized for AI workloads.”
Server spending is projected to accelerate in 2026, growing 36.9% year-over-year. Total data center spending is expected to increase 31.7%, surpassing $650 billion in 2026, up from nearly $500 billion the previous year (see Table 1).
Software Spending Shows Second-Highest Growth Potential Despite Lower Revision
Software spending growth for 2026 has been slightly revised downward to 14.7%, from 15.2% for both application and infrastructure software.
“Despite the modest revision, total software spending will remain above $1.4 trillion,” said Lovelock. “Projections for generative AI (GenAI) model spending in 2026 remain unchanged, with growth expected at 80.8%. GenAI models continue to experience strong growth, and their share of the software market is expected to rise by 1.8% in 2026.”
Device Growth Expected to Slow in 2026
Shipments of mobile phones, PCs, and tablets continue to grow steadily. Total spending on devices is projected to reach $836 billion in 2026. However, market-demand constraints will slow growth to 6.1% in 2026.
“This slowdown is largely due to rising memory prices, which are increasing average selling prices and discouraging device replacements,” said Lovelock. “Additionally, higher memory costs are causing shortages in the lower end of the market, where profit margins are thinner. These factors are contributing to more muted growth in device shipments.”
Gartner’s IT spending forecast methodology relies heavily on rigorous analysis of the sales by over a thousand vendors across the entire range of IT products and services. Gartner uses primary research techniques, complemented by secondary research sources, to build a comprehensive database of market size data on which to base its forecast.
The Gartner quarterly IT spending forecast delivers a unique perspective on IT spending across the hardware, software, IT services and telecommunications segments. These reports help Gartner clients understand market opportunities and challenges. The most recent IT spending forecast research is available to Gartner clients in Gartner Market Databook, 4Q25 Update.
More information on the forecast can be found in the complimentary Gartner webinar IT Spending Forecast 4Q25: Navigating GenAI’s Trough of Disillusionment.
About Gartner
Gartner (NYSE: IT) delivers actionable, objective business and technology insights that drive smarter decisions and stronger performance on an organization’s mission-critical priorities. To learn more, visit gartner.com.
Source: Gartner
The post Gartner Forecasts Worldwide IT Spending to Grow 10.8% in 2026, Totaling $6.15T appeared first on HPCwire.
The cars sat abandoned at the side of the road. Their engines idling, with hazard lights flashing, according to a witness who captured video of the incident on his phone. The occupants of the vehicles had been taken away by Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers late last month in what a local immigrant rights group calls “fake traffic stops.” During these encounters, ICE vehicles reportedly employ red and blue flashing lights to mimic those of local law enforcement agencies, duping people into pulling over.
When family members arrived on the scene in Eagle County, Colorado, their loved ones had already been disappeared by federal agents. But what they found inside the vehicles was disturbing: a customized ace of spades playing card — popularly known as a “death card” — that read “ICE Denver Field Office.”
“We are disgusted by ICE’s actions in Eagle County,” Alex Sánchez, president and CEO of that immigrant rights group, Voces Unidas, told The Intercept. “Leaving a racist death card behind after targeting Latino workers is an act of intimidation. This is not about public safety. It is about fear and control. It’s rooted in a very long history of racial violence.”
During the Vietnam War, U.S. troops regularly adorned Vietnamese corpses with “death cards” — either an ace of spades or a custom-printed business card claiming credit for their kills. A 1966 entry in the Congressional Record noted that due to supposed Vietnamese superstitions regarding the ace of spades, “the U.S. Playing Card Co. had been furnishing thousands of these cards free to U.S. servicemen in Vietnam who requested them.”
Official U.S. military film footage, for example, shows ace of spades “death cards” being placed in the mouths of dead Vietnamese people in South Vietnam’s Quảng Ngãi province by members of the 25th Infantry Division. Similarly, Company A, 1st Battalion, 6th Infantry of the 198th Light Infantry Brigade left their victims with a customized ace of spades sporting the unit’s nickname “Gunfighters,” a skull and crossbones, and the phrase “dealers of death.” Helicopter pilots also occasionally dropped custom calling cards from their gunships. One particular card read: “Congratulations. You have been killed through courtesy of the 361st. Yours truly, Pink Panther.” The other side proclaimed, “The Lord giveth and the 20mm [cannon] taketh away. Killing is our business and business is good.”
The cards found in Eagle County harken back to this brutal heritage. The black and white 4×6-inch cards look like an ace of spades with an “A” over a spade in the top left and bottom right corners. A larger ornate black and white spade dominates the center of the card. Above it reads “ICE Denver Field Office.” Below it is the address and phone number of the ICE detention facility in nearby Aurora.
Sánchez said his organization took possession of identical cards found in two separate vehicles by two different families. “These were not from a doctored deck of cards. These were designed with this legacy in mind. They were printed on some sort of stock paper and cut in the dimensions of a card,” he explained. Basic templates for ace of spaces playing cards are readily available as clip art for purchase online.
A DHS spokesperson told local NBC affiliate 9News that ICE’s Office of Professional Responsibility will “conduct a thorough investigation and will take appropriate and swift action.” ICE’s Denver Field Office did not respond to questions posed by The Intercept about the office’s use of the cards, the meaning behind them, and its agents’ tactics.
“You realize — of course — that in Spades, the ace of spades is the trump card,” said a federal official of the Bridge-like card game, alluding to the possibility that the death card is also an homage to President Donald Trump. That official, who spoke to The Intercept on the condition of anonymity, because they were not authorized to speak to the press continued: “These guys are not too subtle, to be honest.”
Sen. John Hickenlooper, D-Colo., recently took to the Senate floor to denounce the use of the malicious ICE calling cards. “They found ‘death cards’ [left in] the cars of their family members who were taken away by ICE agents,” he said. “These cards … have a history of being used by white supremacist groups to intimidate people of color. ‘Death cards’ is what they call them.”
Sánchez expressed worry that similar acts of intimidation are happening elsewhere but may not be reported, noting that while Voces Unidas became aware of the death cards in the course of their work, investigating such incidents is not a core focus of his organization, which provides legal assistance to immigrants.
“When people call us, they call us to get an attorney out to them at a detention center,” Sánchez explained. “In the process, we sometimes hear about these details. But it isn’t a priority. Our job is not to investigate cards. Our job is to provide legal aid.” He noted that the community served by Voces Unidas in the western slope of rural Colorado does not trust local law enforcement officers, elected officials, or mainstream human rights groups. “They’re calling organizations that they trust. And unless those trusted organizations are doing civil rights reporting or are going in-depth in providing emergency assistance, it’s very difficult to find out the details of such incidents,” he explained. “So I would be surprised if we’re the only community where this has happened. We just might not know it.”
Neither ICE nor its parent agency, the Department of Homeland Security, returned a request for comment about the use of the death cards in Colorado or elsewhere in the U.S.
This isn’t the first time that immigration agents have used similar imagery during the Trump administration’s ongoing deportation campaign. This summer, for example, a Border Patrol agent taking part in immigration raids in Chicago wore the image of a skull with a spade on its forehead affixed to his helmet below another unidentified but apparently unofficial patch. Customs and Border Protection did not respond to a request for comment.
Recently, The Intercept published a guide to official and unofficial patches worn by immigration agents. These included a shoulder patch worn by personnel from the St. Paul, Minnesota Field Office, where Jonathan Ross — the ICE agent who shot Renee Good — works. The St. Paul office’s Special Response Team patch was spotted on the camouflage uniform of a masked ICE officer during a raid of a Minneapolis Mexican restaurant last year. The circular patch depicts a bearded Viking skull over an eight-prong wayfinder or magical stave — a Nordic image called a “Vegvisir.” The symbol has sometimes been co-opted by far-right extremists.
Another ICE officer in Minnesota was spotted wearing a patch reading “DEPLORABLE,” a term some devotees of then-candidate Donald Trump adopted in 2016 after Hillary Clinton said half of his supporters belonged in a “basket of deplorables,” since they were “racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, [and] Islamophobic.”
ICE and DHS failed to respond to repeated requests for comment about these patches.
The ace card has a long and macabre history. A British tax on playing cards, which specifically required purchasing aces of spades from the stamp office, resulted in the hanging of a serial forger of the “death card” in 1805. Legend has it that “Wild Bill” Hickok held the Dead Man’s Hand — aces and eights, including the ace of spades — when he was gunned down in Deadwood in Dakota Territory in 1876. In 1931, murdered Mafia boss Giuseppe Masseria was photographed with the ace of spades clutched in his hand. By that time, it was firmly entrenched in culture as the “death card.”
The U.S. use of death cards in Vietnam was immortalized in the 1979 film “Apocalypse Now” in a scene in which Lt. Col. Bill Kilgore, played by Robert Duvall, places unit-branded playing cards, reading “DEATH FROM ABOVE,” on the bodies of dead Vietnamese people. During the 2003 invasion of Iraq, the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency developed a set of playing cards to help troops identify the most-wanted members of the Iraqi government. President Saddam Hussein, who was eventually captured and executed, was the ace of spades.
Last year, the official Instagram account of Border Patrol’s San Diego Sector used the 1980 Motörhead song “The Ace of Spades” as the soundtrack of a video of its canines practicing attacks on people. “Our Patrol-K9s are trained to take down violent threats,” reads the accompanying caption.
The post Federal Agents Left Behind “Death Cards” After Capturing Immigrants appeared first on The Intercept.
Immigration officials said agent shot two ‘vicious gang members’ in Portland, but records obtained by the Guardian reveal US prosecutor contradicted claims
Immediately after a US border patrol agent shot two people in Oregon last month, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said the targets were “vicious” gang members connected to a prior shooting and alleged they had “attempted to run over” officers with their vehicle.
In the weeks since, key parts of the federal government’s narrative have fallen apart.
Continue reading...The US president’s celebration of the 1847 conquest draws fury from Mexican leaders over ‘imperialist tone’
A message from Donald Trump celebrating the 19th-century US invasion of its southern neighbour – and the subsequent loss of more than half its territory – has touched a historical nerve in Mexico, with some seeing it as a veiled threat for future incursions.
Reacting to the US president’s statement, which described the invasion as “a legendary victory”, Claudia Sheinbaum, Mexico’s president, said during her morning news conference on Tuesday: “We must always defend our sovereignty.”
Continue reading...Starting March 1, the SBA will no longer guarantee loans for small businesses owned by foreign nationals, including green card holders.
Officials said the aircraft was “acting aggressively” when it approached the USS Abraham Lincoln, which is in the Middle East amid tensions between Washington and Tehran.
Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak signed the check 50 years ago, just weeks before Apple was founded.
The New Mexico Department of Health said officials believe the baby contracted listeria after their mother drank raw milk during pregnancy.
The massive merger is part of a plan to power "space-based AI," according to Musk.
The seizure was announced on the same day that Colombian President Gustavo Petro met with President Trump at the White House.
The Democratic members of a U.S. House committee have released the findings of a report examining last month's fatal shootings in Minneapolis by federal immigration officers.
Hillary Clinton will appear for a deposition on Feb. 26, while former President Bill Clinton will appear on Feb. 27, according to the House Oversight Committee.
U.S. Central Command said the drone "aggressively" approached the USS Abraham Lincoln as it was crossing through the Arabian Sea.
Here are some highly rated films to check out, plus a look at what's new in February.
Files released by US apparently show Mandelson sending Epstein market-sensitive information while serving as business secretary
The Department for Work and Pensions has named 12 disability experts with “lived experience of disability or long-term health conditions” who will sit on the steering group of the review looking at the future of the personal independence payment (Pip), a disability benefit. Stephen Timms, the minister leading the review, says:
Disabled people deserve a system that truly supports them to live with independence and dignity, and that fairly reflects the reality of their lives today.
That’s why we’re putting disabled people at the heart of this review – ensuring their voices shape the changes that will help them achieve better health, greater independence, and access to the right support when they need it.
* Could we see a crunch point as soon as tomorrow over Mandelson?
* Tories have an opposition day debate - could they force a vote on Mandelson vetting disclosure. Shadow cabinet sources tell me they’re thinking about it
Continue reading... | Update: Thank you for the suggestions. In the mean time I turned off the light so I would reduce the risk of shorting something. I will open the board and see if I can just reconnect and while I am in there I will replace the ring and cable if needed. Need some help, just started happening last night when on a ride. I typically don’t have my headlight on because I like to be incognito so the issue could have started earlier. Any recommendations on what it could be and am I safe to ride it? [link] [comments] |
Cult classics and romantic comedies abound this month, and you can watch them all for free.
The Smithsonian National Zoo in Washington DC celebrated the birth of a baby Asian elephant on Monday, its first in nearly 25 years. The female calf was born to her 12-year-old mother Nhi Linh and 44-year-old father Spike
Continue reading... | I inherited some belongings from a friend who moved out of the country, including this one wheel. I am trying to sell it on his behalf but I’m not sure what it is worth or how to assess the condition/mileage. Any recommendations on where to sell or what a reasonable price would be? [link] [comments] |
ClickOnThis writes: NASA has delayed the Artemis II launch to March of this year, after a wet dress-rehearsal uncovered a hydrogen leak. From the NASA article: During tanking, engineers spent several hours troubleshooting a liquid hydrogen leak in an interface used to route the cryogenic propellant into the rocket's core stage, putting them behind in the countdown. Attempts to resolve the issue involved stopping the flow of liquid hydrogen into the core stage, allowing the interface to warm up for the seals to reseat, and adjusting the flow of the propellant. Teams successfully filled all tanks in both the core stage and interim cryogenic propulsion stage before a team of five was sent to the launch pad to finish Orion closeout operations. Engineers conducted a first run at terminal countdown operations during the test, counting down to approximately 5 minutes left in the countdown, before the ground launch sequencer automatically stopped the countdown due to a spike in the liquid hydrogen leak rate.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Nancy Guthrie was last seen on Saturday night and is believed to have been taken against her will
Officials in Arizona said on Tuesday afternoon they were no closer to finding the missing mother of Savannah Guthrie, the Today show host, three days after the octogenarian disappeared from her Tucson home – which detectives are treating as “a crime scene”.
Nancy Guthrie, 84, was last seen on Saturday night and is believed to have been taken against her will, Chris Nanos, the Pima county sheriff, said. Media reports on Tuesday said blood was found at the residence, and there were signs of forced entry.
Continue reading...Facility unites Laboratory’s quantum computing efforts under one roof
Feb. 3, 2026 — Los Alamos National Laboratory has formed the Center for Quantum Computing, which will bring together the Lab’s diverse quantum computing research capabilities. Headquartered in downtown Los Alamos, the Center for Quantum Computing will consolidate the Laboratory’s expertise in national security applications, quantum algorithms, quantum computer science and workforce development in a shared research space.
“This new center of excellence will bring together the Laboratory’s quantum computing research capabilities that support Department of Energy, Defense and New Mexico state initiatives to achieve a critical mass of expertise greater than the individual parts,” said Mark Chadwick, associate Laboratory director for Simulation, Computing and Theory. “This development highlights our commitment to supporting the next generation of U.S. scientific and technological innovation in quantum computing, especially as the technology can support key Los Alamos missions.”
The center will bring together as many as three dozen quantum researchers from across the Lab. The center’s formation occurs at a pivotal time for the development of quantum computing, as Lab researchers partner with private industry and on a number of state and federal quantum computing initiatives to bring this high-priority technology closer to fruition. Laboratory researchers may include those working with the DARPA Quantum Benchmarking Initiative, the DOE’s Quantum Science Center, the National Nuclear Security Administration Advanced Simulation and Computing program’s Beyond Moore’s Law project, and multiple Laboratory Directed Research and Development projects.
The center will also host the Quantum Computing Summer School, a 10-week fellowship program that connects quantum-interested undergraduate and graduate students with the theoretical foundations of quantum computation and the programming of commercial quantum computers. The Quantum Computing Summer School enrolls up to 25 students per year.
“I am thrilled to see these quantum computing teams coming together under one roof,” said Carleton Coffrin, quantum science coordinator for the Laboratory. “Each team is arguably world-leading in their specific domain expertise. An environment that fosters further collaboration and united effort will no doubt help our quantum computing teams achieve amazing things.”
Source: LANL
The post Los Alamos Forms Quantum Computing-Focused Research Center appeared first on HPCwire.
REDWOOD CITY, Calif., Feb. 3, 2026 — MinIO today announced the general availability of MinIO AIStor Tables. By unifying Tables and Objects in a single high-performance and Iceberg-native data store, AIStor eliminates structured and unstructured data silos to elegantly power any analytics, AI, and agentic workload at enterprise scale. With AIStor Tables, MinIO is demonstrating Open Table Format (OTF) leadership and is the first in the industry to build the full Apache Iceberg V3 Catalog REST API directly into the data store. The general availability of AIStor Tables reflects MinIO’s ability to commit and deliver innovation for customers, building on the September 2025 AIStor tech preview. AIStor Tables is now available globally and can be deployed across on-premises, private, sovereign, and hybrid environments.
MinIO AIStor Tables unifies tables and objects in a single enterprise data store built for agentic AI. By eliminating the silos between databases and object storage, AI agents can analyze structured and unstructured data together, operating on complete, up-to-date enterprise data at massive scale and performance.
MinIO’s integration of Apache Iceberg V3 API into AIStor marks a fundamental shift in how enterprises may more easily prepare and leverage data for analytics and AI use. With the AIStor Tables capability, Apache Iceberg tables become first-class citizens within AIStor itself—inclusive of Views and Multi-table Transactions. This ensures customers can consistently and securely store and query across more of their data ecosystem faster and more efficiently, and execute atomic multi-table transactions with simpler, industry-compliant catalog. Unlike AWS S3 Tables, MinIO AIStor Tables is included natively in AIStor—helping customers reduce list-price storage costs by up to 40%.
“Analytics and AI infrastructures are no longer defined by compute alone. The data layer now determines how much enterprise AI value can actually be realized,” said AB Periasamy, co-founder and CEO of MinIO. “When structured and unstructured data are unified, AI systems can learn more, reason better, and deliver greater impact. Only an object-native architecture like MinIO AIStor can make that data fast, fluid, and ready for AI at scale. With AIStor Tables, we bring enterprise data together in a high performance data store that feeds analytics and AI systems directly.”
The High Performance Analytics and AI Data Store Where All Data Lives Together
AIStor’s Tables feature is an on-prem and hybrid-capable breakthrough for enterprises building modern data intelligence stacks. Tabular data and object data coexist within a single data plane and security model, scaling seamlessly from small datasets to exabyte-scale environments. This architecture allows enterprises to treat all enterprise data as AI data, increasing its value when analytics, data science, and AI workloads operate on the same authoritative source.
AIStor Tables complements up-stack compute across warehouse, lake, and lakehouse query engines, as well as emerging AI agents. Enterprises can run analytics, data science, and AI workloads directly on the same data with predictable performance, consistent governance, and cost efficiency, regardless of where the infrastructure is deployed.
Object-Native by Design for Highly Performant Enterprise AI
Enterprise AI and analytics workloads demand massive concurrency, predictable latency, and the ability to support mixed workloads at scale. Traditional storage architectures introduce operational complexity and performance constraints that limit how efficiently data can be used across these environments.
MinIO AIStor takes a different approach. Built with a minimalistic, software-centric design, AIStor uses an object-native architecture to maximize flexibility and performance while reducing operational overhead. This design enables seamless scalability across edge, on-premises, private, sovereign, and hybrid deployments. With AIStor Tables, these object-native advantages extend fully to structured data, allowing a single system to support analytics and AI workloads end to end.
The general availability of AIStor Tables follows a highly active tech preview program that attracted strong enterprise interest in unifying enterprise data for AI and analytics. Early adopters validated the need for an object-native approach to tables that simplifies operations while maintaining performance and control.
“By running analytics and AI workload directly on the same data, MinIO AIStor Tables fundamentally simplifies how we build and operate data pipelines,” said Conor Brennan, Managing Director Risk IT at Nomura. “It allows us to move faster, reduce operational complexity, DR recovery process, and treat all our data as first class.”
MinIO AIStor Tables is available today as part of MinIO AIStor. Enterprises can download and deploy directly from 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 Introduces GA of AIStor Tables, Unifying Enterprise Data for Agentic AI appeared first on HPCwire.
Considering a home purchase this February? Here are three critical questions to consider the answers to first.
President claims idea to ‘nationalize’ elections in 15 states before midterms is to prevent rare noncitizen voting
Donald Trump suggested on a conservative podcast released on Monday that Republican state officials “take over” and “nationalize” elections in 15 states to protect the party from being voted out of office.
Trump framed the issue as a means to prevent undocumented immigrants from voting. Claims that noncitizens are voting in numbers that can affect an election are a lie. But it raises concerns about potential efforts by the president to rig the November midterm elections.
Continue reading...Gold prices have surged to historic highs in recent years and experts say the momentum is unlikely to slow anytime soon.
A 609 letter can help you challenge credit report errors, but it's not a magic fix for your debt. Here's why.
Exclusive: Thames Valley police says it will review allegation that Epstein trafficked woman to UK to have sex with Andrew at Royal Lodge
British police are to review fresh allegations that Jeffrey Epstein provided Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor with a woman to have sex with at the Royal Lodge in 2010.
The woman has claimed she spent the night at the then prince’s residence in Windsor, her US lawyer, Brad Edwards, said after the allegations surfaced over the weekend. The woman, who is not British, was in her 20s at the time, and was later given a tour of Buckingham Palace, it is further alleged.
Continue reading...Far-right leader was barred for five years after being found guilty of extensive fake jobs scam at European parliament
French state prosecutors have asked appeal court judges to maintain a five-year election ban on the far-right leader Marine Le Pen for embezzlement of European parliament funds in a fake jobs scandal.
If the judges decide to grant the request, Le Pen would probably not be able to run in France’s 2027 presidential election.
Continue reading...Linda Stevenson found unresponsive on 28 December after police responded to domestic dispute
The ex-husband of former US first lady Jill Biden has been arrested and charged with the murder of his wife, officials said on Tuesday.
William Stevenson, 77, was taken into custody on Monday and is facing a charge of first-degree murder in the death of Linda Stevenson, according to a grand jury indictment filed in Delaware.
Continue reading...Academic says risk factor is not sexual orientation but society’s treatment of sexual minority people
Life expectancy for people who identify as gay, bisexual or another sexual orientation in England and Wales was approximately a year lower than their heterosexual counterparts, according to the first analysis of its kind by the Office for National Statistics.
The life expectancy for men who identified as LGB+ was 1.2 years lower than men who identified as straight, at 59.4 years and 60.7 years respectively.
Continue reading...In 2010 then business secretary contacted Jes Staley, then at JP Morgan, about funding for £700m listing on London Stock Exchange
Jeffrey Epstein described Peter Mandelson as “devious” after lobbying a bank to underwrite a mining project launched by their mutual friend Nat Rothschild, emails included in the latest tranche of Epstein files suggest.
In April 2010, the then business secretary appears to have contacted banker Jes Staley, then at JP Morgan, from his personal email account in what appears to be an attempt to secure funding for Rothschild, Mandelson’s longtime friend.
Continue reading...Epstein files appear to show then business secretary passing market sensitive information to child sex offender
• UK politics live – latest updates
The Metropolitan police have formally launched a criminal investigation into allegations that Peter Mandelson leaked Downing Street emails and market sensitive information to the child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Documents from the Epstein files released in recent days appeared to show the then business secretary sent confidential details of internal discussions to the late financier in the aftermath of the financial crash.
Continue reading... | Taking apart an older pint to turn it into a pint X and noticed the gasket was not in the groove and pinched and there was a fair amount of dust inside. I’m the first owner and have never taken it apart before. Nothing too concerning as I already ordered new gasket material before hand just thought this was interesting. [link] [comments] |
Alphabet is plotting to dramatically expand its presence in India [non-paywalled source], with the possibility of taking millions of square feet in new office space in Bangalore, India's tech hub. From a report: Google's parent company has leased one office tower and purchased options on two others in Alembic City, a development in the Whitefield tech corridor, totaling 2.4 million square feet, according to people familiar with the deal. The first tower is expected to open to employees in the coming months, while construction on the remaining two is set to conclude next year. Options in the real estate industry give would-be tenants the exclusive right to rent, or in some cases buy, a property at a predetermined price within a specific time frame. It's also possible Alphabet will not exercise the option to use the additional towers. If it does take all of the space, the complex could accommodate as many as 20,000 additional staff, which could more than double the company's footprint in India, said the people, asking not to be identified because the plans aren't public. Alphabet currently employs around 14,000 in the country, out of a global workforce of roughly 190,000. [...] US President Donald Trump's visa restrictions have made it harder to bring foreign talent to America, prompting some companies to recruit more staff overseas. India has become an increasingly important place for US companies to hire, particularly in the race to dominate artificial intelligence.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Prosecutors’ announcement comes amid a hardening of European attitudes to social media firms
Prosecutors have raided the French headquarters of Elon Musk’s social media platform X and summoned the tech billionaire and the company’s former chief executive for questioning as part of an investigation into alleged cybercrime.
“A search is under way by the cybercrime unit of the Paris prosecutor’s office, the national police cyber unit and Europol,” the Paris prosecutors’ office said in a post on X on Tuesday, adding that it would no longer be publishing on the network.
Continue reading...The brother and sister-in-law of Virginia Giuffre, one of Jeffrey Epstein's most vocal accusers, are speaking out about the Justice Department's handling of the latest Epstein files release.
Moscow launched ‘terrorising’ attack on energy grid as temperatures reached -20C, Ukrainian president says
Volodymyr Zelenskyy accused Russia on Tuesday of violating an agreement with Donald Trump to hold off from attacking Ukraine’s energy systems in the depths of a freezing winter, as its forces carried out large-scale airstrikes on Kyiv on the eve of three-way talks in Abu Dhabi.
Ukraine’s president said Moscow carried out a massive and “deliberate” attack overnight as temperatures in Kyiv plunged to -20C. It involved a record number of 71 ballistic missiles as well as 450 drones, he said, sent to destroy energy infrastructure.
Continue reading...Nvidia and Dassault Systèmes announced a new Industrial AI partnership today that aims to push the envelope in the use of AI and digital twin technology to accelerate innovation in the fields of biology, materials science, engineering, and manufacturing.
Dassault Systèmes is a digital powerhouse for product engineering. Its 3D computer aided design (CAD) and product lifecycle management (PLM) software is used by 15 million scientists and engineers around thew world. The company’s software benefits from the graphical processing power of Nvidia GPUs, and the two companies have been partners for decades.
Today’s announcement builds on that existing partnership, and commits the two companies to work together to bring new Industrial AI capabilities to market. Notably, the partnership calls for Dassault Systèmes to build new AI factories that combine its digital twin technology with Nvidia AI models. All of this, naturally, will run on Nvidia’s accelerated compute hardware.

Dassault Systèmes hopes to accelerate pharmaceutical research with its new Nvida-based solutions based on AI and virtual twin technology (Image courtesy Dassault Systèmes)
The goal is to combine emerging physical AI technologies with trusted scientific and engineering principles to provide a powerful new way to perform scientific research and engineer products, said Florence Hu-Aubigny, executive vice president of R&D at Dassault Systèmes.
“We are going to bring the factories of the future to life,” Hu said in a press conference on Monday, “and we are going to unlock the full potential of industrial knowledge through new ways of working.”
According to the announcement, to advance biology and materials research, the companies will integrate Nvidia’s BioNeMo models with Dassault Systèmes’ Biovia platform to accelerate the discovery of new molecules and next-generation materials.
In the field of AI-driven design and engineering, the companies are combining Dassault Systèmes “virtual twin” platform Similia with Nvidia CUDA-X and AI physics libraries to improve the accuracy of digital twins. They will also work to integrate Nvidia’s Omniverse physical AI libraries with Dassault’s Delmia software, which is used to automate manufacturing and operations.
Finally, the partners are also working to combine Dassault Systèmes’ 3Dexperience PLM and Industry World Models software with Nvidia Nemotron open models to give joint customers better modeling capabilities.
There’s a subtle but fundamental difference in how existing digital twin technology has been used in the past and how new the new AI-powered digital twin solutions that Dassault Systèmes and Nvidia are developing will work, said Rev Lebaredian, VP of Omniverse and simulation technology at Nvidia.
“The world foundation models that are being trained [currently] are being trained on information about what we observe as consumers of the world outside. So these are largely based on video and observations of the world after things are built,” Lebaredian said during the press conference.
“What’s missing is how the world is built, the information about that inside these world foundation models,” he continued. “These models are fundamentally different. They’re not just about how the world works after we built it, but it has knowledge about how we build the world.”
The new partnership also looks to leverage recent breakthroughs in agentic AI technology to help supercharge the abilities of scientist and engineers by giving them a team of assistants that can process information and augment their knowledge, Lebaredian said.
“By bringing [agentic AI] into the industrial space here, we’re effectively going to make it so anybody who is building and designing anything for the real world can now have a team of assistants that has deep knowledge about how things are built to help them,” he said.
“These kinds of abilities to build virtual twins, to simulate the physical world, have been restricted to a very small number of people who know how to operate and use these tools,” he continued. “The physical AIs, the industrial AI that that we are building with Dassault Systèmes will allow effectively every person eventually to be able to use all of these capabilities, not just the few small number of people in in in these niche areas in our companies.”
The post Nvidia and Dassuault in New ‘Industrial AI’ Pact appeared first on HPCwire.
Feb. 3, 2026 — Berkeley researchers have developed a proven mathematical framework for the compression of large reversible Markov chains—probabilistic models used to describe how systems change over time, such as proteins folding for drug discovery, molecular reactions for materials science, or AI algorithms making decisions—while preserving their output probabilities (likelihoods of events) and spectral properties (key dynamical patterns that govern the system’s long-term behavior).
While describing the dynamics of ubiquitous physical systems, Markov chains also allow for rich theoretical and computational investigation. By exploiting the special mathematical structure behind these dynamics, the researchers’ new theory delivers models that are quicker to compute, equally accurate, and easier to interpret, enabling scientists to efficiently explore and understand complex systems. This advance sets a new benchmark for efficient simulation, opening the door to scientific explorations once thought computationally out of reach.
Markov chains are widely used to model systems that evolve in time with some intrinsic randomness, from the folding of proteins to the spread of disease. But as the number of possible states grows—such as all the shapes a protein might take or all the reaction pathways in a chemical network—these models can become so large that even the most powerful computers struggle to simulate them. Existing simplification methods can speed up computation, but they often distort the system’s essential dynamics, making predictions unreliable. This has limited researchers’ ability to fully explore some of the most complex and important problems in science.
The Berkeley Lab team develops two complementary strategies to shrink large reversible Markov chains while preserving their essential behavior. The first, called projective compression, yields reduced models guaranteed to faithfully mirror the long-time dynamics of the original systems. The second, called structure‑preserving compression, builds a reduced Markov chain that follows the same rules as the original but operates only on a carefully chosen set of key states. Together, both of these approaches capture the system’s critical dynamics in a far more compact form.
To ensure the reduced models remain trustworthy, the team has developed strict and simple accuracy controls. They derived mathematical formulas to measure how closely the compressed version matches the original, relying on heretofore unknown connections between numerical linear algebra, probability theory, and complex analysis. These guarantees extend the applicability of a well-known mathematical technique called the Nyström approximation and use a modern optimization method—known as nuclear maximization—to select the best states to keep in the reduced model. In tests on complex systems, the approach produced models that ran much faster, retained essential dynamics, and were easier to interpret, bringing large-scale simulations within reach.
Co-authors: Mark Fornace and Michael Lindsey
Publication: An Approximation Theory for Markov Chain Compression
Image caption: Top: This diagram shows a mathematical path (blue arrows) through which researchers analyze how a system changes over time. The circles represent key numbers describing the system’s dynamics. The orange and green segments represent parts of the calculation that, in the limit, make no difference—allowing scientists to focus on the essential features of the system, for faster and just as accurate results.
Bottom: This illustration shows how a random process—like protein folding or a sequence of chemical reactions—can be broken down into repeating loops called cycles. Each colored mark along the line represents the process of visiting particular kinds of states. The red boxes highlight cycles where the process returns to a group of important states, while the blue boxes show a more specific kind of cycle returning to a single state. By mathematically analyzing these cycles, researchers can simplify and speed up complex simulations—while preserving what matters most about the system’s behavior.
About Computing Sciences at Berkeley Lab
High performance computing plays a critical role in scientific discovery. Researchers increasingly rely on advances in computer science, mathematics, computational science, data science, and large-scale computing and networking to increase our understanding of ourselves, our planet, and our universe. Berkeley Lab’s Computing Sciences Area researches, develops, and deploys new foundations, tools, and technologies to meet these needs and to advance research across a broad range of scientific disciplines.
Source: Linda Vu, Berkeley Lab
The post Berkeley Lab Advances Efficient Simulation with Markov Chain Compression Framework appeared first on HPCwire.
Charles "Sonny" Burton faces execution in Alabama for his role in a 1991 robbery in which a man was fatally shot, even though Burton did not fire the gun or witness the killing.
A day before Russian, Ukrainian and U.S. teams meet to talk peace, Putin's forces pounded Ukraine's energy infrastructure with dozens of drones and missiles.
Through President Donald Trump’s first full 10 months in office, the cumulative U.S. trade deficit in goods and services was down 3.9% from the same period in 2024. His claim that he has “slashed our trade deficit by 77%” appears to compare the monthly trade deficit in January 2025 to the deficit nine months later in October.
Economic experts told us that Trump’s method is not the preferable way to measure whether the overall trade imbalance with international trading partners is up or down.
“[L]ooking at changes from one month to another is not a reliable way to assess whether the trade deficit is rising or falling in any meaningful sense,” Kyle Handley, a professor of economics at the University of California, San Diego, wrote in an email to us.
He said “[m]onthly trade balance figures are extremely volatile” and “reflect timing of shipments, energy prices, seasonal adjustment noise, and one-off transactions.” He suggested instead looking at trade trends over several months or, when possible, a full year.
On multiple occasions, however, Trump has claimed to have already reduced the trade deficit by a large amount based on just two months of data.
“We had the largest trade deficit in world history” under former President Joe Biden, “but in one year I’ve slashed our gaping trade deficit by a staggering 77%,” Trump said in Jan. 27 remarks in Iowa, for example.
In a speech at the World Economic Forum on Jan. 21, Trump made it more clear that he was comparing the trade deficit in one month to another, saying, “In one year, I slashed our monthly trade deficit by a staggering 77% — and all of this with no inflation, something everyone said could not be done.” The president highlighted the drop in the monthly trade deficit again in a Jan. 30 Wall Street Journal op-ed, in which he attributed the “astonishing” decrease to “the help of tariffs.”
He even predicted in a Jan. 20 White House press conference: “Next year we won’t have a trade deficit.”
To be clear, the Bureau of Labor Statistics says that the annual inflation rate has declined from 3% to 2.7% since Trump has been back in office, but it’s not at 0%. So prices are still increasing, just at a slower pace. His emphasis on the monthly trade deficit could also mislead people hearing or reading his remarks.
“The monthly trade balance has been unusually volatile this year, so I would be cautious about drawing conclusions from the data so far,” Robert Johnson, an international economist and associate economics professor at the University of Notre Dame, told us in an email.

In October, U.S. imports of goods and services exceeded exports by about $29.2 billion, the lowest one-month gap in trade since 2009, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. The October figure was down roughly 77.3% from the $128.8 billion deficit in trade in January last year. That appears to be how Trump calculated the percentage, although the White House did not confirm that when we asked.
But Johnson said that deficits were “unusually large” in early 2025, between roughly $120 billion and $136 billion in January, February and March, because U.S. importers stocked up on goods to build their inventories before various tariffs on imported products that Trump had said he planned to implement went into effect. “Then, after the tariffs were put in place, imports fell back to normal,” producing smaller monthly deficits in later months.
“Whether this is a permanent change, or simply reflecting the drawdown in inventories, is too soon to tell,” Johnson said.
“If you just take the number from a month and you compare it to a number from another month, then you’re just introducing a lot of all of the noise that’s in the monthly data,” Monica de Bolle, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, told us in an interview.
When the monthly trade deficit in goods and services dipped to a 16-year low in October, some economists attributed the decline mostly to an increase in U.S. exports of gold and a decrease in imports of pharmaceuticals. Meanwhile, BEA data released on Jan. 29 show that the monthly deficit nearly doubled to $56.8 billion in November, which would be a 55.9% drop from January – and would make the 77% figure outdated.
“Large month-to-month swings are common, even in periods with no underlying structural change in trade policy or economic conditions,” Handley, at UC San Diego, said. “For that reason, economists almost never evaluate claims about the ‘trade deficit’ based on comparisons between two individual months.”
He listed other measurements that better assess whether the trade deficit is rising or falling, such as comparing cumulative deficits within a year or year-to-date totals compared with the same period in prior years.
“On those measures, the claim that the deficit fell sharply in 2025 does not hold up,” he said.
As we noted, when totaling the trade deficit in each of Trump’s first full 10 months in office in 2025, from February to November, the most recent data available, the gap between imports and exports was $710.7 billion – a 3.9% decline from the same period in 2024. On the other hand, the trade deficit including all months from January to November last year was $839.5 billion – up 4.1% from the same 11 months in 2024.
Trump didn’t take office until Jan. 20, but to reemphasize Johnson’s point, there was a large trade deficit in the first quarter of 2025 as importers rushed to acquire goods ahead of Trump’s proposed tariffs.
Trade data for December, and thus all of 2025, should be published on Feb. 19, according to the Census Bureau’s release schedule. The largest annual U.S. trade deficit in goods and services on record was about $923.7 billion in 2022, during the Biden administration, according to BEA data going back to 1960. (The Census Bureau and BEA jointly provide this data.)
Although Trump may view a trade deficit as something negative, many economists don’t see it that way.
“A trade deficit sounds bad, but it is neither good nor bad,” Tarek Alexander Hassan, a professor of economics at Boston University, wrote in an April 2025 opinion post. “It doesn’t mean the US is losing money. It simply means foreigners are sending the US more goods than the US is sending them.”
The experts we consulted also told us that the trade deficit is unlikely to be eliminated “next year,” as Trump claimed.
“It is still the case that the U.S. is not self-sufficient in everything,” de Bolle, at PIIE, said. “It may be able to export a lot, but it still imports way more than it exports.”
She said on a macroeconomic level, the U.S. consumes more than it saves, and “that is going to translate into a trade deficit most of the time, not a trade surplus.”
Handley said to proceed “very cautiously” with predictions that the trade deficit will end due to tariffs, as Trump suggested in his Jan. 20 White House remarks.
“Trade deficits reflect saving and investment balances, exchange rates, and macroeconomic conditions, not just tariffs,” Handley said, adding that tariffs could reduce the exports of U.S. manufacturing firms by increasing the cost of goods imported for production, “and thus the deficit will not improve.”
He noted that most of the tariffs that Trump imposed in 2018 and 2019, during his first presidential term, applied to goods that American manufacturers imported for production purposes. “When their inputs got more expensive, their exports slowed down as well,” he said. “We are seeing those same dynamics right now.”
The last time that the U.S. did not have an annual trade deficit in goods and services was 1975. That year, there was a trade surplus of $12.4 billion, according to BEA records.
There is also the issue of whether all of Trump’s second-term tariffs will continue as implemented.
The Supreme Court is expected to rule this year on the legality of some Trump tariff policies. That will determine whether the tariffs remain in place in their current form.
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The post Trump’s Selective Comparison Overstates Trade Deficit Decline appeared first on FactCheck.org.
Apparent leak by Peter Mandelson gave advance notice of Gordon Brown’s resignation and €500bn eurozone deal
On a brisk Monday evening in May 2010, Gordon Brown stood on the steps of Downing Street and delivered one of the most dramatic announcements of the New Labour era: his resignation as UK prime minister.
The decision came days after a nail-biting general election that left no single party with a clear run at No 10. Brown kept his decision, which followed days of political wrangling, to a tight inner circle. Nick Clegg, who would go on to serve as deputy prime minister of the Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition, was formally told of Brown’s resignation only 10 minutes before the announcement.
Continue reading...The man whom Jill Biden divorced for the eventual 46th President of the United States is now in jail on murder charges.
Apple might release its long-rumored first foldable phone in 2026, and the rumors continue to reveal potential hardware capabilities.
Mark Rutte and Volodymyr Zelenskyy hold joint press conference as air alert sirens blare across Kyiv
The EU’s foreign policy chief, Kajas Kallas, has been speaking as part of a panel on Arctic security. Kallas was asked if the EU was “too cautious” in taking action because of its dependence on the US for security, which has been exposed amid Russia’s war on Ukraine and the Trump administration’s threats on Greenland and erratic behaviour towards its longstanding western allies. Kallas, who has said Nato must “become more European” to maintain its strength, responded:
Of course, we are cautions because there is a lot at stake. There is a full-scale war going on the European continent and there are threats coming from economic coercion, big challenges from China that is influencing our economies.
If it is influencing our economies, it is influencing jobs and people’s salaries and then it is creating polarisation within our societies and more instability, so it is all very much interlinked.
Continue reading...
Days before the federal government falsely claimed cellphone-brandishing nurse Alex Pretti was a terrorist plotting a “massacre,” a jury in Chicago acquitted Juan Espinoza Martinez on bogus charges of a murder-for-hire plot against then-Border Patrol commander Greg Bovino. A recently unsealed court transcript shows the government used that case to bolster its claims about the dangers of “doxing” Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials. That pretext was used to convince a judge to obscure an ICE agent’s face during a public court proceeding when his name, face, employment, and location were publicly listed on his LinkedIn page.
As with its baseless claims about Pretti, the government presented no evidence supporting its proclamations that Martinez, a union carpenter, was a higher-up in the Latin Kings gang with the ability or intent to put out hits on Bovino or other immigration agents. The case against him hinged on ambiguous Snapchat messages that Martinez’s attorney called “neighborhood gossip.” But the Department of Homeland Security brought its allegations to the public long before it could be tested in court, repeating claims of bounties up to $50,000.
The transcript from a federal court in Chicago, which was recently released pursuant to a motion filed by law firm Mandell PC on behalf of local media outlets, shows how far the hysteria has gone. During an October 20, 2025, hearing in a case challenging immigration enforcement tactics, government lawyers asked for a private conference with Judge Sara Ellis to request the courtroom sketch artist not draw ICE Deputy Field Office Director Shawn Byers.
Government attorneys claimed that, in light of the alleged “bounties” on the heads of ICE agents, Byers had taken extensive precautions to disconnect his identity from his image online to protect himself. When the judge asked for details on the bounties, Department of Justice attorney Samuel Holt responded, “I don’t have all the details. My understanding is that I — I think it was a gang bounty.”
The judge cleared the courtroom and called Byers in to provide the details about the “threat.” Byers first claimed there was a $50,000 “bounty issued by the cartels on me,” along with $10,000 “for all my family members.” He also said the “credible threat” was out against “all senior ICE officials here in Chicago,” where Byers said he was the most senior ICE agent on the ground. Asked when he learned about the bounty, Byer said “It’s been about a week or so I believe.” Martinez’s arrest was announced two weeks earlier, on October 6; no other bounties were publicly reported in the interim. When the judge asked whether these threats were “directed specifically” at him, Byers seemed to walk his claims back, replying, “Well, all senior ICE officials. So it’s not just me.”
Byers also said he’d taken action to “limit social media exposure” and “reduce the footprint” to avoid his face being connected with his name and that even his appearance in court required “additional precautions.”
“You know, my name is out there. I’ve been doxed as — as recently as over the weekend,” Byers told the judge, according to the court transcript. “So my name is out there, but my name has not been connected to my face yet, so that’s what I’m trying to prevent from happening.”
Despite objections from opposing counsel that court proceedings (and courtroom sketches) should be public, the judge ordered the sketch artist to blur Byers’s facial features, concealing his identity. Ellis’s compromise, while likely intended as a good-faith effort to balance safety and transparency, nonetheless validated the notion that immigration agents operate under extreme risk, justifying extraordinary protective measures by our legal system. It also effectively brought the masks immigration agents wear on the street into the courtroom.
The judge’s compromise validated the notion that immigration agents operate under extreme risk, justifying extraordinary protective measures by our legal system.
Then, while Byers and other witnesses testified, someone apparently Googled his name and informed the judge that a simple search turned up his LinkedIn profile, complete with his photo, his exact job title, and his location in Chicago.
The judge called the parties back into closed session (it’s unclear why, given that the false reason for the earlier private sidebar had been exposed).
“I got to say, you know, I feel slightly foolish in trying to protect Mr. Byers when, you know, a simple Google search pulls up his name and his picture,” she said, according to the transcript. She also encouraged the attorney to advise the ICE deputy director that his name and photograph were readily available online. “If I could find his picture in two seconds with his name, it just looks a little silly to be asking the courtroom sketch artist to blur his features.” Being recognized is “the cost of being a public servant,” she continued.
The judge also said moving forward, she would “just be more hesitant to kind of obscure somebody’s identity,” but did not say she’d be entering any actual sanctions for the half-baked rationale used to convince her to censor the public record.
After some back and forth with the DOJ attorneys about whether Byers’s LinkedIn profile contained his actual picture, Ellis confirmed the profile for “Shawn B.” did when viewed by someone logged into LinkedIn. (A LinkedIn search for “Shawn Byers ICE” brings up just one profile for a Shawn B., who is listed as currently working as Deputy Field Office Director for ICE in Chicago. It also notes he is a 22-year veteran of the department and contains reposts about ICE removals in Chicago and a hiring notice for GEO Group, the for-profit prison conglomerate contracted with ICE, but no longer contains any profile picture.)
Since Byers’s manufactured emergency obviously wasn’t based on real concerns for his safety, what was the point of the whole sideshow? It was likely intended to feed the narrative that immigration agents face such grave threats that identifying them — in addition to filming their operations, following them to do so, tracking and communicating about their locations and other clearly constitutionally protected conduct — needs to be restrained. It’s the same fiction that primes segments of the American public to be receptive to claims that people like Pretti and Renee Good were threatening officers’ lives to justify their killings.
In January, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem scolded CBS News’ “Face the Nation” host Margaret Brennan for naming Jonathan Ross, the immigration agent who shot and killed Good in Minneapolis. She accused Brennan of “continu[ing] to dox law enforcement,” despite acknowledging that Ross’s name was already very public, citing unspecified attacks against his family. It’s far from the first time Noem and others have claimed that naming or videotaping law enforcement officers is improper, illegal, or even intended to foment violence.
These efforts to chill the work of reporters and ICE watchers have spread beyond immigration enforcement, as we saw from last month’s subpoena by the House Oversight Committee of journalist Seth Harp, which was accompanied by a criminal referral to the Department of Justice by Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, a Republican from Florida. Harp was also accused of “doxing” for naming a Delta Force commander involved in the abduction of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, an allegation backed up by unsubstantiated claims that the commander’s life was at risk.
The Byers ordeal is an unusually clear example of the current playbook being used to shield administration officials and their foot soldiers from accountability under the guise of protecting public officials’ safety.
The notion that naming public officials at the center of major news stories, who very often conceal their identities while carrying out unprecedented law enforcement operations on the streets of our cities, or that simply drawing their faces for the court record is “doxing” or otherwise improper, is a complete Trump administration fabrication. Still, the government is repeating it often enough that it’s warping the public’s perception of journalism. The Byers ordeal is an unusually clear example of the current playbook being used to shield administration officials and their foot soldiers from accountability under the guise of protecting public officials’ safety.
The next time this happens in court, the judge needs to demand specifics, with evidence, about whatever nebulous alleged plots or threats the government is pushing to justify secrecy. With comprehensive studies demonstrating their constant misrepresentations, nothing government lawyers say can be taken at face value. And when it happens outside the courthouse, the media needs to be similarly skeptical and not take the “threats” narrative at face value from an administration with a long, proven track record of misleading the public for its own political ends.
Judges also need to impose significant sanctions on lawyers and witnesses who mislead them, make them pawns in the administration’s anti-transparency objectives, and waste their time. Gently reprimanding them in private doesn’t cut it, especially when these false, alarmist narratives used in court are then being used to justify ICE killings to the public.
The post Judge Censored an ICE Agent’s Face Over “Threats.” His Info Was a Google Search Away. appeared first on The Intercept.
Four economists across Central European University, Bielefeld University and the Kiel Institute have built a general equilibrium model of the open-source software ecosystem and concluded that vibe coding -- the increasingly common practice of letting AI agents select, assemble and modify packages on a developer's behalf -- erodes the very funding mechanism that keeps open-source projects alive. The core problem is a decoupling of usage from engagement. Tailwind CSS's npm downloads have climbed steadily, but its creator says documentation traffic is down about 40% since early 2023 and revenue has dropped close to 80%. Stack Overflow activity fell roughly 25% within six months of ChatGPT's launch. Open-source maintainers monetize through documentation visits, bug reports, and community interaction. AI agents skip all of that. The model finds that feedback loops once responsible for open source's explosive growth now run in reverse. Fewer maintainers can justify sharing code, variety shrinks, and average quality falls -- even as total usage rises. One proposed fix is a "Spotify for open source" model where AI platforms redistribute subscription revenue to maintainers based on package usage. Vibe-coded users need to contribute at least 84% of what direct users generate, or roughly 84% of all revenue must come from sources independent of how users access the software.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Scheduling and financial impasses at Vancouver’s World Cup stadium are leading down a road the league hasn’t traveled in over a decade
On the surface, Vancouver Whitecaps CEO Axel Schuster’s press conference last week would have felt familiar to almost any North American sports fan. Once again, a team was agitating for more money or a better stadium. Once again, local governments were at least partially to blame.
Some of his comments, though, felt more alien, and raised a question that seemed unfathomable just a couple of months ago: are the Vancouver Whitecaps about to die?
Continue reading...The top sports streaming services for you depend on your favorite sports. We've analyzed the options, covering everything from the NFL and NBA to soccer and UFC.
AIs are not sentient – but tweaks to their ethical codes can have far-reaching consequences for users
Do you want an AI assistant that gushes about how it “loves humanity” or one that spews sarcasm? How about a political propagandist ready to lie? If so, ChatGPT, Grok and Qwen are at your disposal.
Companies that create AI assistants, from the US to China, are increasingly wrestling with how to mould their characters, and it is no abstract debate. This month Elon Musk’s “maximally truth-seeking” Grok AI caused international outrage when it pumped out millions of sexualised images. In October OpenAI retrained ChatGPT to de-escalate conversations with people in mental health distress after it appeared to encourage a 16-year-old to take his own life.
Continue reading...A raft of online videos show parents serving up dinner without a single plate in sight, to the amazement of their families
Name: Dump dinners.
Age: Horribly new.
Continue reading...CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., Feb. 3, 2026 — EPB recently launched a new Quantum Computing Fellowship to provide valuable training and real-world experience, equipping participants to develop quantum solutions that benefit EPB customers and our community. The program is designed to build a local quantum-ready workforce and support new, local job creation from the rapidly emerging quantum industry. Eight fellows participate in the program, which provides hands-on experience and quantum-ready skills.
“This critical investment in workforce development will prepare a highly skilled workforce to lead the quantum future and keep Chattanooga’s innovation ecosystem on the cutting edge,” said EPB President and CEO-elect Janet Rehberg.
Congressman Chuck Fleischmann (TN-03) has long supported EPB’s pursuit of quantum technology advancements, beginning in 2015 with an R&D 100 Award-winning project to use quantum networking to secure the energy grid.
“We appreciate the support of Congressman Chuck Fleischmann, who has championed East Tennessee’s role in advancing quantum technology to shape the future of national security, energy and economic competitiveness,” Rehberg continued. “This grant will support EPB Quantum’s work to develop a next-generation workforce and attract talent to our region.”
Quantum Computing Manager Paul Smith leads the Fellows program. Previously, Smith held leadership roles in technology and innovation at EPB, managing enterprise-scale systems and guiding teams through complex modernization efforts. With varied experience spanning software development, infrastructure optimization, and the adoption of emerging technologies, Smith applies his unique perspective to bridge traditional computing with quantum advancements.
The fellowship was established thanks to a $4 million National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) grant awarded in 2024 to accelerate the research, development, and workforce development of quantum technologies. The fellowship curriculum was developed in partnership with leading quantum platform company IonQ, which will also develop and execute a quantum executive education program and identify potential applications and quantum solutions for use cases that EPB and our community members can leverage. Last year, EPB announced the addition of an IonQ Forte Enterprise Quantum Computer to EPB Quantum Center in downtown Chattanooga.
More from HPCwire
About EPB
Located in Chattanooga, Tennessee, EPB is a nationally recognized energy and communications provider with a mission to enhance quality of life for the people it serves across its 600-square-mile service area. Starting in 2010, EPB gained notice as a national model for building and utilizing its 100% fiber-to-the-home network to deliver cutting-edge services such as the world’s fastest community-wide internet, now with service up to 25 Gig, and the nation’s most advanced automated electric grid. As a pioneer in fiber optic innovation, EPB also launched EPB Quantum to provide access to cutting-edge quantum technology platforms and help innovators bring paradigm-shifting solutions into the real world. With the launch of EPB Quantum Network in 2023 and EPB Quantum Computing (coming in early 2026), EPB Quantum offers the most comprehensive, commercially available quantum technology platform in the U.S.
Source: EPB
The post EPB Awarded $4M Federal Grant to Boost Quantum Workforce Development appeared first on HPCwire.
HOUSTON, Feb. 3, 2026 — Dassault Systèmes and NVIDIA today announced a long-term strategic partnership to establish a shared industrial architecture for mission-critical artificial intelligence across industries.
Combining Dassault Systèmes’ Virtual Twin technologies with NVIDIA AI infrastructure, open models and accelerated software libraries will establish science-validated industry World Models, and new ways of working through skilled virtual companions on the agentic 3DEXPERIENCE platform, that empower professionals with new expertise.
“We are entering an era where artificial intelligence does not just predict or generate, but understands the real world. When AI is grounded in science, physics and validated industrial knowledge, it becomes a force multiplier for human ingenuity,” said Pascal Daloz, CEO of Dassault Systèmes. “Together with NVIDIA, we are building industry World Models that unite Virtual Twins and accelerated computing to help industry design, simulate and operate complex systems in biology, materials science, engineering and manufacturing with confidence. This partnership establishes a new foundation for industrial AI, one that is trustworthy by design and capable of scaling innovation across the generative economy.”
“Physical AI is the next frontier of artificial intelligence, grounded in the laws of the physical world,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA. “Together with Dassault Systèmes, we’re uniting decades of industrial leadership with NVIDIA’s AI and Omniverse platforms to transform how millions of researchers, designers and engineers build the world’s largest industries.”
Dassault Systèmes and NVIDIA Partner to Accelerate Every Industry
Dassault Systèmes, with its OUTSCALE brand, is deploying AI factories as part of its sustainable and sovereign cloud strategy. OUTSCALE AI factories will harness the latest NVIDIA AI infrastructure on three continents, bringing additional capabilities to operate AI models in the 3DEXPERIENCE platform, while guaranteeing data privacy, intellectual property protection and sovereignty of Dassault Systèmes’ customers.
NVIDIA is adopting Dassault Systèmes model-based systems engineering (MBSE) to design AI factories, starting with the NVIDIA Rubin platform and integrating into the NVIDIA Omniverse DSX Blueprint for large-scale AI factory deployment.
This infrastructure will power Dassault Systèmes’ industrial Virtual Twins using NVIDIA open models and libraries, unlocking new opportunities across biology, materials science, engineering and manufacturing:
The partnership elevates the existing collaboration between Dassault Systèmes and NVIDIA to a shared long-term vision for how industrial AI will be built, validated and deployed at scale, through a unique combination of Dassault Systèmes’ Virtual Twin Factories and NVIDIA’s AI technologies for all industries.
Global Leaders Build the Future of Industry With Dassault Systèmes and NVIDIA
“Bel Group is building a sustainable food future through responsible formulation and packaging. Through the NVIDIA-Dassault Systèmes collaboration, we gain the computational power to model and optimize our products at scale-accelerating innovation while delivering on our sustainability commitments,” said Cécile Béliot, CEO of Bel Group.
“To address the growing complexity of modern manufacturing, the industry must move toward fully autonomous and digitally validated production systems,” said Motohiro Yamanishi, President of Industrial Automation at OMRON. “By combining NVIDIA Physical AI frameworks with Dassault Systèmes’ Virtual Twin Factory and OMRON’s automation technologies, manufacturers can move from design to deployment with greater confidence and speed.”
“Lucid’s award-winning engineering and technology continues to set new standards in the automotive industry, and Dassault Systèmes remains a key partner, enabling us to stay at the forefront of vehicle and powertrain engineering,” said Vivek Attaluri, Vice President of Vehicle Engineering at Lucid. “Agility, speed of innovation and rapid iteration are at the core of our work flows, and our exploration of Virtual Twin AI-based physics, powered by NVIDIA’s open-source physics informed AI models, has the potential to help our teams move from concept to production faster than ever before, without sacrificing predictive accuracy. We look forward to continued collaboration and leveraging these new tools to support Lucid’s future innovations.”
“NIAR empowers the next generation of aircraft. From asset digitization through design and manufacturing creation and validation, Virtual Twin technology introduces unparalleled capabilities and efficiency. Dassault Systèmes’ Virtual Companions for engineering, leveraging the 3DEXPERIENCE agentic platform using NVIDIA Nemotron open models and Dassault Systèmes Industry World Models, accelerate the by-design compliant synthesis of aircraft Virtual Twins. Using the platform to align the Virtual Twin to the means of compliance, reduces certification efforts while preserving sovereignty of the information,“ said Shawn Ehrstein, Director, Emerging Technologies and CAD/CAM, National Institute for Aviation Research, Wichita State University.
More from HPCwire: Nvidia and Dassuault in New ‘Industrial AI’ Pact
About Dassault Systèmes
Dassault Systèmes is a catalyst for human progress. Since 1981, the company has pioneered virtual worlds to improve real life for consumers, patients and citizens. With Dassault Systèmes’ 3DEXPERIENCE platform, 370,000 customers of all sizes, in all industries, can collaborate, imagine and create sustainable innovations that drive meaningful impact. For more information, visit: www.3ds.com
About NVIDIA
NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) is the world leader in AI and accelerated computing.
Source: Dassault Systèmes
The post Dassault Systèmes and NVIDIA Partner to Build Industrial AI Platform Powering Virtual Twins appeared first on HPCwire.
Caden Fine, 17, from Birmingham, Alabama, and two of his teammates were killed when their vehicle collided with a semi-truck in Canada.
Successful shot would have made $1m for charities
Social media users say event was ‘dystopian’
The NHL has received backlash after slashing a donation to cancer research by $800,000 after a missed shot during a charity promotion.
The incident came during Sunday’s game between the Tampa Bay Lightning and Boston Bruins. Rob Higgins, the athletics CEO of the University of South Florida, was brought on to the ice to attempt a shot through a very small opening in an empty goal. If Higgins, who is a cancer survivor, made the shot the NHL said it would donate $500,000 to cancer charities; if he missed the donation would be $100,000. The event was broadcast live on Sportsnet in Canada and ESPN in the US. Higgins missed what was a very tough shot. He was then given another chance, with a guaranteed donation of $200,000 if he missed, which would increase to $1m if he scored. Higgins missed again.
Continue reading...AUSTIN, Texas, Feb. 3, 2026 — FormationQ today announced the launch of a new applied quantum program in collaboration with the Cavendish Laboratory at the University of Cambridge. Powered by IonQ—the world’s leading quantum platform company—and its state-of-the-art trapped-ion quantum systems with world-record gate fidelity and all-to-all connectivity, the program will translate cutting-edge quantum research into practical, real-world applications while building an institutional ecosystem for long-term adoption.
The collaboration brings together the Cavendish Laboratory’s scientific leadership and FormationQ’s institutional and operational capabilities. The Cavendish Laboratory provides the scientific foundation, while FormationQ serves as the enabling platform and long-term operator, building the institutional pathways, governance, and continuity required to translate research into sustained real-world deployment. The program will leverage IonQ’s quantum technologies spanning computing, networking, sensing, and security systems. IonQ’s platforms provide participating researchers and teams with access to high-fidelity, scalable quantum hardware, enabling applied experimentation and system development that builds on laboratory demonstrations.
Quantum technologies are increasingly recognized as critical to science, security, medicine, and global systems. Yet despite rapid advances in research, adoption remains constrained by gaps in institutional readiness, business model innovation, workforce capability, and coordination across the broader quantum landscape. This partnership is intended to address those challenges by focusing on building the connective tissue—programmatic and organizational—that allows quantum technologies to move from laboratory discovery into credible, sustained use to address grand societal challenges.
Professor Mete Atatüre, Head of the Cavendish Laboratory, said: “Progress in quantum technologies requires strong collaborations and a constant dialogue between industry and academic research. This initiative, enabled by IonQ’s advanced quantum systems, is a fantastic step in this direction and will help turn our quantum research into practical solutions by bringing the community together.”
“Quantum’s bottleneck isn’t science—it’s the ecosystem,” said Nada Hosking, Founder and CEO of FormationQ. “Adoption demands scalable talent pipelines, interoperable institutions, and shared stewardship for long-term deployment. By uniting the Cavendish Laboratory’s scientific excellence, FormationQ’s operational backbone, and IonQ’s industry-leading quantum technologies, we’re finally constructing the bridges that turn today’s quantum discoveries into tomorrow’s practical revolutions.”
The partnership will launch the Quantum Technologies Accelerated Alignment Initiative, a two-year applied program focused on translating quantum research into real-world solutions through structured application development and institutional integration, while strengthening coordination across the quantum ecosystem. The initiative will concentrate on three areas: enabling reliable use of quantum computing systems beyond the laboratory, building and testing connected quantum technologies for communications and sensing, and preparing industry and society to engage with emerging quantum capabilities. Each area will be led by an academic expert and supported by interdisciplinary research teams, pairing clearly defined challenges with open, collaborative project development to ensure alignment with real-world needs, while contributing to economic growth and societal wellbeing in a responsible manner.
By combining the Cavendish Laboratory’s depth of scientific leadership and the expertise across departments of the University of Cambridge with FormationQ’s operational and institutional approach, the partnership aims to support long-term impact across research translation, workforce readiness, and applied deployment.
About FormationQ
FormationQ is the enablement layer for global quantum adoption. The company builds the institutional pathways and collaborative structures that allow quantum technologies to move from frontier research into real-world use. Working with leading institutions and technology partners, FormationQ operates and sustains programs that support talent development, application formation, and ecosystem coordination in ways that can be governed, trusted, and sustained over time.
About the Cavendish Laboratory
For 150 years, the Cavendish Laboratory has been at the forefront of scientific discovery. Its state-of-the-art facilities are open to students, researchers, and industry partners from across the world. It works at the frontier of experimental and theoretical physics to tackle some of the most monumental challenges of our times, from climate change and sustainability to harnessing the quantum revolution, transforming global healthcare, and understanding the origins of life. The Cavendish Laboratory is a place of pioneering physics, where world-leading research and teaching happens.
Source: FormationQ
The post FormationQ, Cavendish Laboratory Partner on Applied Quantum Initiative Using IonQ Systems appeared first on HPCwire.
YouTube has confirmed that it is blocking background playback -- the ability to keep a video's audio running after minimizing the browser or locking the screen -- for non-Premium users across third-party mobile browsers including Samsung Internet, Brave, Vivaldi and Microsoft Edge. Users began reporting the issue last week, noting that audio would cut out the moment they left the browser, sometimes after a brief "MediaOngoingActivity" notification flashed before media controls disappeared. A Google spokesperson told Android Authority that the platform "updated the experience to ensure consistency," calling background play a Premium-exclusive feature.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Nili Kupfer-Naouri and Rachel Touitou said to be accused of trying to block delivery of humanitarian aid to Gaza
A French investigating magistrate has issued summonses to two French-Israeli nationals in relation to “complicity in genocide” over allegations they tried to block the delivery of humanitarian aid to Gaza, French media have reported.
The summonses, which reportedly mark the first time a country has considered the blocking of aid “complicity in genocide”, were issued for Nili Kupfer-Naouri and Rachel Touitou in July, Le Monde and Agence France-Presse reported.
Continue reading...Exclusive: Trump endorsed national intelligence director’s sweeping review by sending her on Georgia raid last week
Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence, is running her own review into the 2020 election with Donald Trump’s approval, working separately from a justice department investigation even as she joined an FBI raid of an election center in Georgia last week.
Her presence at the raid drew criticism from Democrats and former intelligence officials, who questioned why the country’s top intelligence officer with no domestic law enforcement powers would appear at the scene of an FBI raid.
Continue reading...Among the major decisions expected this year from the Supreme Court is a case from Hawaii that would clarify when and where people with gun-ownership permits can possess firearms in publicly accessible private locations.
In 2022, in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association, Inc. v. Bruen, a divided 6-3 Court, struck down a New York state law that required a person to prove a special self-protection need to carry a licensed concealed firearm outside their residence or business. In his majority opinion, Justice Clarence Thomas said that consistent with the Court’s precedents, “the Second and Fourteenth Amendments protect an individual’s right to carry a handgun for self-defense outside the home.”
Justice Thomas noted that 43 states have “shall issue” permit laws based on applicants meeting basic objective criteria such as age, background check, and criminal history requirements. New York, six other states, and the District of Columbia have “may issue” requirements that demand proof of a special need beyond basic objective criteria to carry a concealed handgun outside of a home or business.
The Bruen decision also held that precedent showed that carrying arms in “sensitive places” such as legislative assemblies, polling places, and courthouses could be restricted. But any government seeking regulations beyond the objective criteria used in most states needs to prove a tradition of similar restrictions that existed as the basis for new laws.
The Hawaii Case Presents a New Test
In the wake of the Bruen decision, Hawaii passed a new law in 2023, Act 52, that defined how it could regulate the use of concealed carry permits. The new law criminally prohibited a person with a concealed carry permit from bringing a handgun onto private property open to the public unless the property owner consented. Examples of such locations included bars, restaurants serving alcohol, parks, and banks, in addition to the sensitive areas defined in Bruen.
In Wolford v. Lopez, three individuals and the Hawaii Firearms Coalition sued the state of Hawaii. The group alleged that Hawaii’s law conflicted with a U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit ruling in Antonyuk v. James (2024), a decision that struck down a state law like the Hawaii ban. The Ninth Circuit upheld most of the Hawaii law. The Supreme Court then accepted the case on Oct. 3, 2025, to consider the split between the two federal courts.
Link: Read the Arguments Transcript
During arguments on Jan. 20, 2026, the majority of the justices questioned the logic behind the Hawaii bans and the property-owned consent provision labeled as a “vampire rule” (based on folklore and the novel Dracula that states someone must invite a vampire into a residence or room for it to enter a property). In most other states, the owner of a concealed gun permit can enter many private properties without informing owners they are carrying a gun legally unless asked.
Chief Justice John Roberts questioned Neal Katyal, who was representing the state of Hawaii, on how rules about property-owner consent presented First Amendment and Second Amendment conflicts. “You said part of the history and tradition is there’s no right to enter private property without the owner’s consent, right?” Roberts asked Katyal, who agreed with the Chief Justice. “I don't have to have a sign on the sidewalk before you enter my property saying okay to come on if you’re going to give me some leaflet or okay to come on if you’re a candidate.”
Justice Neil Gorsuch asked about the state decision to cite a Reconstruction-era law from Louisiana that suppressed Black rights as supporting Hawaii’s case about gun restrictions. “You rely very heavily on an 1865 black code law in Louisiana. You say it’s a dead ringer and a reason alone to affirm the judgment. And I really want to understand how that could be,” he asked Katyal.
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson posed a different point. “Bruen gave rise to the need for clarity about property owners. Once Bruen said you can carry the gun outside of your home and there was an alternative well-established principle that private property owners can exclude people, I think the states were trying to make sure that property owners had the opportunity to do that.”
A Similar Gun Rights Case in Maryland
On the same day, the Supreme Court heard arguments in Wolford v. Lopez, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit decided a similar case, Kikpe v. Moore. Maryland is a state, like Hawaii, which passed new legislation after Bruen that expanded the list of what it considered a “sensitive place” where concealed carry was not allowed.
The Maryland law prohibited guns in government buildings; mass transit facilities and vehicles; school grounds; public demonstrations (and areas within 1,000 feet thereof); state parks and forests; healthcare facilities; places of amusement, including museums, stadiums, racetracks, video lottery facilities, amusement parks, and casinos; locations that sell alcohol; and private property.
A divided three-panel court upheld bans for most of the locations cited in the new law, with one exception. “We hold that Maryland’s prohibition on carrying guns on private property held open to the public is unconstitutional,” it said.
All three judges concurred on the private property ruling. “Maryland’s prohibition is directed at gun owners, not property owners,” wrote Judge Roger Gregory. “It is a criminal statute that nowhere references the right of the property owner to exclude a gun owner.”
Gregory added that “Maryland’s reliance on the trespass tradition is inapposite,” and it disagreed with the Ninth Circuit’s “default rules that apply specifically to the carrying of firearms onto private property.”
The Fourth Circuit also determined the historical laws cited by the state of Maryland as supporting their case, including a 1771 New Jersey statute and the 1865 Louisiana statute (cited in Wolford v. Lopez) were outliers. “Maryland’s rule would effectively declare most public places ‘gun-free zones.’ But that likely stretches the sensitive places doctrine too far,” Gregory concluded.
Judge Steve Agee disagreed specifically with upholding the ban on concealed carry within 1,000 feet of a public demonstration. “Maryland has not come forward with evidence that—at the Founding—States enacted measures prohibiting firearms at public demonstrations. On the contrary, the historical record reflects quite the opposite,” he concluded.
For now, a decision in Wolford v. Lopez is expected by late June 2026, and the Court’s holding will likely impact any appeal of the Fourth Circuit decision in Kipke v. Moore. The decision could offer a more defined ruling on the sensitive areas doctrine from Bruen, and rights of property owners and handgun owners alike.
Scott Bomboy is the editor in chief of the National Constitution Center.
Protein is essential, but it shouldn’t be your only focus. A balanced diet requires other nutrients. Here’s what you need to know.
Known as ‘white gold’, lithium is among the most important mined elements on the planet – ideal for the rechargeable batteries used in tech products. Can Europe’s largest deposit bring prosperity to the local community?
It looks more like the past than the future. A vast chasm scooped out of a scarred landscape, this is a Cornwall the summer holidaymakers don’t see: a former china clay pit near St Austell called Trelavour. I’m standing at the edge of the pit looking down with the man who says his plans for it will help the UK’s transition to renewable energy and bring back year-round jobs and prosperity to a part of the country that badly needs both. “And if I manage to make some money in the process, fantastic,” he says. “Though that is not what it’s about.”
We’ll return to him shortly. But first to the past, when this story begins, about 275-280m years ago. “There was a continental collision at the time,” Frances Wall, professor of applied mineralogy at the Camborne School of Mines at the University of Exeter, explained to me before my visit. This collision caused the bottom of the Earth’s crust to melt, with the molten material rising higher in the crust and forming granite. “There are lots of different types of granite that intrude at different times, more than 10m years or so,” she says. “The rock is made of minerals and, if you’ve got the right composition in the original material and the right conditions, then within those minerals there are some called mica. Some of those micas contain lithium.”
Continue reading...Pearson, Experian and others fall sharply after startup unveils software to automate a range of professional services
European publishing and legal software companies have suffered sharp declines in their share prices after the US artificial intelligence startup Anthropic revealed a tool for use by companies’ legal departments.
Anthropic, the company behind the chatbot Claude, said its tool could automate legal work such as contract reviewing, non-disclosure agreement triage, compliance workflows, legal briefings and templated responses.
Continue reading...Vonn confident despite ACL rupture before Olympics
Will decide after testing knee at race speeds soon
Olympic downhill scheduled for Sunday at Cortina
Lindsey Vonn said she is “confident” she can compete at the Milano Cortina Winter Games despite revealing she has been managing a ruptured ACL, maintaining that her Olympic comeback remains on track after a crash last week raised fresh doubts over her participation.
Speaking on Tuesday, the 41-year-old American said she was approaching the final decision cautiously but remained focused on lining up for the downhill at the Tofane Alpine Skiing Centre in Cortina d’Ampezzo, where the Olympic women’s alpine programme opens Sunday.
Continue reading...Feb. 3, 2026 — Diraq has secured a strategic $20 million equity investment from the National Reconstruction Fund Corporation (NRFC) backing the company’s ambition to become the global leader in the development of utility-scale quantum computing and deliver its first product by 2029, a quantum computer capable of genuine quantum advantage.

David Gall, NRFC CEO, and Andrew Dzurak, Diraq CEO, standing in front of cryogenic fridges at Diraq’s laboratory. Credit: Diraq.
Diraq Founder & CEO Andrew Dzurak said, “We are at a pivotal moment where years of breakthrough research is transitioning into a commercial reality that will redefine future computing. Australia has always been a quantum powerhouse in the lab and, with the NRFC’s backing, we are ensuring it becomes a quantum powerhouse in the market. I’d like to thank the NRFC for its support, which is precisely the type of mandate the Corporation was created to fulfill. By backing Diraq, the NRFC is not just investing in a company; it is helping to building a sovereign, advanced manufacturing capacity that will allow Australia to lead the next era of computing.
“This investment arrives as Australia builds its strength in critical technology infrastructure, particularly within our booming data centre sector. Diraq’s quantum computers are natively designed to integrate seamlessly with existing data centers, offering a unique, homegrown advantage. By leveraging Australian quantum expertise, local businesses—from energy providers optimizing the power grid to defense and pharmaceutical innovators—can gain a decisive competitive advantage in the global market, ensuring Australia captures the full economic value of its inventions.”
NRFC CEO David Gall said, “Australia has the potential to lead the world in quantum computing and Diraq’s groundbreaking combination of silicon-based qubits and tried and tested semiconductor architecture will revolutionize the industry. Diraq’s growth prospects are immense, and the company represents the exact kind of high-value, transformative manufacturing the NRFC was created to support.”
Diraq is backed by global deep-tech investors including ICM and Quantonation, and has attracted investment from Australian superannuation funds Hostplus, NGS Super and UniSuper, in addition to Australian investors John Higgins Family Office, Taronga Ventures, Main Sequence Ventures, Co:Act Capital and Uniseed.
The company recently launched operations in Melbourne, in addition to its two hubs in Sydney, and has U.S. operations in Palo Alto, Boston and Chicago.
Main Sequence Ventures Investment Manager Alejandra Romero, said, “At Main Sequence, we look for ‘unfair advantages’. Diraq has the ultimate edge: they are the only players capable of putting millions of qubits on a single chip using the world’s existing multi-trillion-dollar silicon supply chain. While other quantum approaches require exotic materials or massive footprints, Diraq scales. The team has progressed rapidly in a few short years establishing partnerships with global technology leaders, including Dell and Nvidia, that recognize the opportunity and want to partner with Diraq to integrate the company’s quantum technology.”
Diraq’s quantum computers store information in silicon-based quantum bits, known as “qubits”. Diraq’s proprietary technology enables millions of qubits to be placed on a single chip, meaning Diraq is able to produce compact computers – minimizing the intensive cooling facilities required – and deliver practical quantum computing that is both cost-and-energy efficient.
Founded in 2022 and spun out of UNSW Sydney, Diraq currently employs more than 70 staff and PhD students in Australia. The NRFC investment will significantly grow the team with new Australian-based jobs in research, development, and commercialization.
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Source: Diraq
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Trump has prioritized fossil fuel companies over consumers, hitting the lowest-income families hardest
Donald Trump promised to cut energy prices by 50%. Instead, average electricity prices over the past year have risen by about 6.7%, while natural gas prices have increased by 10.8%. Energy prices are influenced by many factors beyond any president’s direct control, including market conditions, weather-driven demand, regional infrastructure constraints and the rapid growth of energy-intensive datacenters that are driving new system costs. Policy choices do not determine prices on their own, but they do shape market outcomes, and the direction of this administration’s energy policy has been clear.
From his first days in office, President Trump made clear that his energy agenda would prioritize fossil fuel producers over consumers. His administration moved to expand US liquefied natural gas exports, increasing exposure to volatile global markets. At the same time, it froze wind power projects that provide some of the cheapest new electricity, intervened to keep costly coal plants running, and backed the elimination of energy-efficiency tax credits that lower household energy bills.
Mark Wolfe is executive director of National Energy Assistance Directors Association, co-director of the Center on Energy Poverty and Climate and adjunct faculty at the Trachtenberg School of Public Policy at George Washington University
Continue reading...LOUISVILLE, Colo., Feb. 3, 2026 — Infleqtion, a global leader in quantum sensing and quantum computing, announced research results from a collaboration with the University of Wisconsin–Madison that demonstrate a more reliable way to measure individual quantum bits, or qubits, without interrupting ongoing circuits. The work addresses one of the central challenges in quantum computing by enabling faster computation cycles while preserving fragile quantum states. This announcement follows Infleqtion’s plans to go public through a merger with Churchill Capital Corp X.
As quantum systems grow in size and complexity, the ability to measure qubits accurately and repeatedly becomes increasingly important. Conventional measurement techniques can introduce errors or cause information to be lost, slowing progress and limiting scalability. The results announced today show how combining precise measurement with continuous cooling can reduce these disruptions, allowing researchers to run computations more efficiently and with greater confidence.
“This work addresses a fundamental bottleneck in quantum computing,” said Dr. Pranav Gokhale, CTO at Infleqtion. “If you can measure qubits accurately without losing them, you can move faster, repeat measurements more reliably, and build systems that scale beyond the laboratory. That is why this result matters.”
Led by researchers in Professor Mark Saffman’s group at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, with sponsored support from Infleqtion, the collaboration delivered two key advances:
“High-fidelity, nondestructive measurement is a key requirement for scaling neutral atom quantum systems,” said Professor Saffman. “By combining measurement and cooling, this work shows a practical path toward faster, more reliable operation, and helps move these platforms from controlled laboratory experiments toward systems that can support larger-scale quantum computation.”
The full research findings are published in Physical Review Letters.
About Infleqtion
Infleqtion is a global leader in quantum sensing and quantum computing, powered by neutral-atom technology. We design and build quantum computers, precision sensors, and quantum software for governments, enterprises, and research institutions. Our commercial portfolio includes quantum computers as well as quantum RF systems, quantum clocks, and inertial navigation solutions. Infleqtion is the partner of choice for governments and commercial customers seeking cutting-edge quantum capabilities. Infleqtion announced in September 2025 it plans to go public via a merger with Churchill Capital Corp X (NASDAQ: CCCX).
Source: Infleqtion
The post Infleqtion and University of Wisconsin–Madison Show 99.93% Qubit Measurement Fidelity appeared first on HPCwire.
I’m sorry, but this is not just a political scandal. Time to refocus on the horrific mistreatment of women and girls, and the role of these ghouls
Like a lot of women, I do vaguely care about the latest political implosion of Peter Mandelson – but I think we’re all massively more obsessed with the fact that there really was a network of incredibly famous and powerful men trying to help a known ex-con minimise and wave away his underage sex crimes. Amirite, ladies? Sure, I’m crying my eyes out about some Gordon Brown adviser having his asset-sale memo forwarded in 2009 … but at the same time I’m a whole lot more concerned about the actual Sex Bilderberg. Which, even now, our eyes seem to keep being conveniently dragged away from. Can we refocus?
We are, naturally, talking about the Jeffrey Epstein files. Since the latest lot dropped, I’ve been collating the emails from extremely famous men who actively sought to help the since-deceased underage sex trafficker trivialise his crimes in the years after his jail release in 2009. Richard Branson, Noam Chomsky, Steve Bannon, Mandelson, Andrew (obviously) – all of these men offer strategic advice, or media training, or chummy solidarity. Or, in the case of Chomsky, all of the above plus a drive-by on the notion of female victimhood. According to text signed under his first name that Epstein sent to a lawyer and publicist in February 2019, months after the Miami Herald had run an explosive series of articles laying out the scale of Epstein’s serial underage sexual abuse and the perversion of justice that covered it up, Chomsky sneered at “the hysteria that has developed about abuse of women”. Wow. Never mind Manufacturing Consent – have a read of Not Giving A Shit About Consent. I thought Chomsky cared about power and exploitative elites? Still, nice photo of him laughing it up with Steve Bannon.
Continue reading...What Trump wants from Iran talks – and what Tehran is prepared to give Expert comment thilton.drupal
Iran’s nuclear programme, missile arsenal, militia network and crackdown on protesters could all feature in upcoming negotiations in Turkey.
US President Donald Trump has repeatedly said he prefers to make a deal with Iran over going to war. But what’s not clear is what type of deal he is willing to accept – or what compromises the Iranians are willing to make.
At the time of writing, the two sides agreed to negotiate and meet in Turkey on Friday, 6 February. US Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi will meet in Istanbul, along with representatives from Saudi Arabia and Egypt, Reuters reported.
Common sense suggests that the more maximalist Trump’s demands are, the less likely Tehran will concede. In this case, military confrontation therefore becomes more likely. On the other hand, the more flexible Trump is, the more likely Tehran will cooperate and as a result, war becomes less likely.
So, what exactly is Trump asking for?
In May of last year, Trump said he would accept nothing less than the ‘total dismantlement’ of Iran’s nuclear programme. Last week, however, he said ‘NO NUCLEAR WEAPONS.’ But those are two very different things.
Every American president since George W. Bush has warned Iran against acquiring the bomb. If that is what Trump is seeking, then Tehran will happily bargain, lie, and conceal – as it always has – to avoid facing a far superior US military machine. It might give up its highly enriched nuclear material, but in return, keep its programme intact, essentially buying itself time until Trump leaves power so it can resume enrichment.
But if Trump insists on Iran terminating all of its nuclear programme, then Tehran most probably will not agree. This is not only because it has put in a lot of effort, time, and money into building its nuclear programme.
It’s also because for Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, it will look like surrendering to the Americans, whom he views (just like his predecessor Khomeini did) as the ‘Great Satan.’ If it comes down to it, Khamenei might decide to take his chances by fighting (and hope Trump doesn’t finish off the regime, given his aversion to open-ended wars) rather than signing a capitulation agreement with his arch-enemy.
The nuclear programme is not the only important issue at play. Iran’s missile arsenal and its regional militia network will also likely feature in negotiations. And there are also the freedom aspirations of the Iranian people, especially in the light of the regime’s recent crackdown on protests.
At first, Trump seemed to show care for the protesters, threatening to bomb Iran if the regime didn’t stop killing them. But now, his focus seems to have shifted. That shouldn’t be shocking, though. The harsh reality is that human rights in Iran have not been the priority for Trump or any American president before him when dealing with the Islamic Republic. The priority has always been security.
On Iran’s missiles, about which Israel and the Gulf Arab states worry a lot, it’s even more complicated than the nuclear programme. It’s doubtful, if not inconceivable, that Iran will give up the only shield that’s preventing its adversaries from toppling its regime.
The bargaining range on the nuclear programme is wider than it is on the missiles, on which Khamenei and his generals are unlikely to make any concessions. Similar to his logic on totally giving up the nuclear programme, Khamenei might as well use those missiles in a war for survival instead of giving them up and thus making Iran especially vulnerable to future attacks.
The biggest space for bargaining, perhaps, is on Tehran’s regional proxies. Those actors – the Lebanese Hezbollah, the Yemeni Houthis, the Iraqi militias, and the Palestinian Hamas and Islamic Jihad – are important tools for Iran to project power. But unlike the missiles and the nuclear programme, they’re not existential issues over which Tehran can’t negotiate.
Advocates call for further disclosures after Trump’s justice department released more than 3m files last week
The release of about 3m Jeffrey Epstein investigative files has failed to quell outrage over justice department officials’ handling of these disclosures, with advocates claiming potentially millions of documents are still being withheld.
Donald Trump’s Department of Justice was required to disclose all investigative files by 19 December under the Epstein Files Transparency Act (EFTA). While the justice department did release some documents on that date, last week’s disclosure came nearly six weeks after this deadline.
Continue reading...
Why Should Delaware Care?
On Saturday, Gov. Matt Meyer said he had spoken with superintendents in New Castle County to determine which roads, sidewalks and bus stops remain unsafe, and that the Delaware Department of Transportation would be clearing those streets ahead of school on Monday. But even though the Colonial School District opened its doors on Monday, it was unable to provide transportation to all communities because of remaining road conditions.
Days after Gov. Matt Meyer said it was “unacceptable” that Delaware schools remained closed nearly a week after a crippling snowstorm swept through the state, some students in the Colonial School District were still unable to go to school Monday because of road conditions.
Last week, parts of Kent County received more than 6 inches of snowfall on Sunday, while New Castle County saw up to 10 inches, according to the National Weather Service. Freezing rain in some areas then added an inch of solid ice atop that accumulation.
Temperatures have remained frigid in the days since the storm, and much of the snow has compacted into a dense layer of ice, which has stifled cleanup crews, according to state and city transportation officials.
On Saturday, Meyer said he had spoken with each New Castle County superintendent and “received lists of roads, sidewalks and bus stops that remain unsafe.”
Meyer added that the Delaware Department of Transportation would be clearing those streets over the weekend to ensure schools could open their doors on Monday.
Still, transportation was not available to multiple communities in the Colonial School District on Monday. Those communities included Rosegate, Garfield Park, and Willow Grove, among others.
Colonial Superintendent Jeff Menzer said the district originally released a statement Sunday night saying the district would not be able to pick up students from 11 neighborhoods along Route 9 and one in the lower half of the district due to difficult driving conditions.
Many district bus drivers then reported back to officials that they were unable to finish their routes early Monday morning. Menzer said the district pushed out information to the district’s middle and elementary school families that buses would not be able to pick up students.
Menzer said attendance was down in some of the schools that were part of the impacted communities, such as Eisenberg Elementary School and McCullough Middle School.
Attendance across the district was at roughly 60% to 70% on Monday.
The Brandywine, Red Clay Consolidated, and Christina school districts also reopened their doors on Monday, following Meyer’s weekend announcement.
Some of those districts, though, also experienced complications with picking up students.
Although the Red Clay Consolidated School District’s transportation went well, one bus did temporarily get stuck in a neighborhood, Director of Transportation Kelly Shahan wrote in a statement to Spotlight Delaware. The incident occurred before the bus had picked up any students, and it only resulted in a minor delay, Shahan said.
The Christina School District also wrote to families on Sunday, saying there may be some “unavoidable delays due to neighborhood conditions, which could mean that wait times at bus stops will be longer than usual.”
The Brandywine School District successfully ran all bus routes on a staggered schedule, though some stops and sidewalks still pose a challenge to students, according to a statement from Superintendent Lisa Lawson.
Brandywine will also be returning to its regular bus and school schedules on Tuesday, Lawson said.
All four school districts also said students will not be marked late because of the weather. Districts are also offering excused absences to families who do not feel comfortable sending their children to school with the road conditions.
Menzer said the district had shared a list of priority areas and roads that were impassable with DelDOT on Jan. 29, but his district was not seeing improvements late last week. By Jan. 31, the ice was too thick for salt to help break down the compact, Menzer said.
C.R. McLeod, a spokesperson for the Delaware Department of Transportation, said in a statement the department had to apply salt to the roads and wait for the sun to melt enough ice for plowing to be effective in neighborhoods.
“We’ve been in communication with the [Colonial] school district and expect to see improvement today and tomorrow with temperatures above freezing,” McLeod wrote.
Last week, Colonial Supervisor of Transportation Marc Emerick told Spotlight Delaware the district’s smaller neighborhoods, “who are digging themselves out,” were the most impacted by the storm.
“If you are fortunate enough to live in a neighborhood with a DART route, you know that at least some of your roads are going to be tended to by DelDOT, which is the most effective way of clearing a road,” he said.
Communities that are not near a DART route or roads that DelDOT plows typically rely on contractor services to clear the snow.
But Emerick said districts must also check the passability of streets, because some contractors’ plows do not create a path wide enough for school buses. If a bus gets stuck or experiences a minor fender-bender that does not impact student safety, it can still delay students’ pickups for an hour.
Colonial’s buses go into neighborhoods and pick students up close to their homes. At the same time, more than half of Colonial’s bus fleet are 84-passenger, flat-nose buses that require a wider turn radius than typical buses, Menzer. said
Menzer said those two factors complicated student pick-ups on Monday.
“Even though our drivers had driven the routes and checked them out in their personal vehicles, it’s different,” Menzer said. “You don’t really know until you get your bus upon it and realize, ‘Man, I can’t make that corner.’”
The district also adjusted its bus stops for students in the communities it had previously suspended transportation to, with buses picking students up at main streets in those communities rather than going down side streets.
The post A week after winter storm, Colonial students still can’t get to school appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

Why Should Delaware Care?
The Port of Wilmington is one of the last anchors of good-paying, blue-collar jobs in Delaware. It also has suffered a string of financial blows over a dramatic six-year-period. How the state responds to the setbacks may determine the shape of Delaware’s workforce into the future.
Delaware’s quest to build one of the mid-Atlantic’s biggest port container terminals may have quietly cleared a key hurdle last month.
During a meeting on Monday of the state board that oversees the Port of Wilmington, Secretary of State Charuni Patibanda-Sanchez said Delaware is no longer required to secure an approval from the Port of Philadelphia in order to move forward with efforts to recapture construction permits that a federal judge invalidated in 2024.
Delaware port officials need the permits to fulfill their longstanding, yet beleaguered, goal of building a new port at the site of a former chemical plant in Edgemoor. Hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars have already been committed to the project, which port officials say will create thousands of new jobs in the state.

Patibanda-Sanchez said the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers — which is in charge of issuing the permits — agreed last month to grant an exception to a rule requiring Delaware to obtain a formal ”statement of no objection” from the Port of Philadelphia – a regional competitor that has long opposed Delaware plans to expand the Port of Wilmington.
Internal port documents state that the Port of Philadelphia, as of last fall, had declined to sign such a statement.
Now, with an exception to the rule, Patibanda-Sanchez said the Corps of Engineers can begin its review of Delaware’s application for permits to build a port seawall, and to dredge the Delaware River from the Edgemoor docks to the main channel.
“And we’re very excited to have cleared that first step,” she said during the Monday meeting of the board of the Diamond State Port Corporation – the state-owned entity that oversees the Port of Wilmington.
The development follows years of turmoil that has plagued the Port of Wilmington and its $600 million expansion plans.
When the state privatized the port’s operations in 2018, the company that took over, Gulftainer, promised to privately fund the development of Edgemoor by doubling the shipments at the Port of Wilmington’s existing facility along the Christina River. Not only did those bold projections fail to materialize, but the port’s finances under Gulftainer also deteriorated.

Hopes for the port’s expansion were revived in 2023 when Delaware brought in a new operating company, Enstructure. But a year later, a federal judge invalidated the Edgemoor permits following a lawsuit brought by competing ports along the Delaware River, including the Port of Philadelphia.
The upstream ports sued the Army Corps of Engineers for what they said was a “perfunctory and inadequate review” of Delaware’s permit applications. While many in Delaware saw the lawsuit as part of a powerplay between officials at the ports of Wilmington and Philadelphia, the legal complaint alleged that ships leaving a future Edgemoor port would cause a dangerous marine bottleneck when turning into the river’s main channel.
In the sharply worded ruling issued in October, 2024, U.S. District Judge Mark Kearney stated that the Army Corps of Engineers had acted “arbitrarily and capriciously” when it issued the Edgemoor building permits.
He also criticized Delaware port officials for failing to obtain a statement of no objection to the permits from their upstream neighbor. The requirement was in place because the Port of Philadelphia had been the primary non-federal financial sponsor of a recent Delaware River dredging project along the estuary to deepen the shipping channel.
Kearney also stated that if the Corps of Engineers reevaluated the Edgemoor permits, it must address “navigation and safety issues,” and must ensure that Delaware “obtains a Statement of No Objection from the Philadelphia Port Authority.”
It is not immediately clear how the judge will interpret the Army Corps of Engineers’ recent decision to make an exception for the requirement.
Patibanda-Sanchez did not directly address the issue when asked by email why she believes the exception will pass muster with Kearney.
Instead, she said in a statement that Delaware’s port officials “continue our work on the Delaware Container Terminal project and are encouraged with the progress we have made so far.”
“We look forward to the USACE’s (Corps of Engineers’) complete review of our application. As we make progress on the permitting, we are also working on issues raised by the community and all the stakeholders involved with this project,” Patibanda-Sanchez said in the statement.
The post Port of Wilmington officials: Edgemoor plans clear a key hurdle appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Aerospace business and artificial intelligence firm to unite for IPO as world’s most valuable private company
Elon Musk’s aerospace company SpaceX has acquired his artificial intelligence business xAI, in a $1.25tn (£910bn) merger that consolidates part of Musk’s empire as SpaceX prepares to go public later this year.
The two companies announced the deal on Monday in a statement on SpaceX’s website, saying the merger would form “the most ambitious, vertically-integrated innovation engine on (and off) Earth, with AI, rockets, space-based internet, direct-to-mobile device communications and the world’s foremost real-time information and free speech platform”.
Continue reading...Sleek car doors reduce vehicle drag but are prone to losing operability in the event of a crash, officials say
China will soon ban concealed door handles on electric vehicles (EVs), becoming the first country to do so after several deadly incidents triggered global scrutiny of the controversial design first popularised by Tesla.
According to regulations announced on Monday by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, cars sold in China will now be required to have a mechanical release on both the inside and outside of every door except the boot.
Continue reading...A frozen conflict would be a Russian victory in anything but name. Why a frozen conflict in Ukraine would amount to a Russian victory—and why Europe’s real vulnerability lies not in military weakness, but in political entropy. I consider it likely that Russia will, de facto, win its war on Ukraine. Not because Ukraine collapses militarily, but because the West succumbs to political entropy of its own making. The failure will not be measured in kilometres lost on a map. It will be measured in attention span, in parliamentary calendars, in the relief of a ceasefire sold as “stability”. Strategic defeat is
The post Vae Victis: Putin Wins appeared first on Lima Charlie World.
India wants to reset relations after Bangladesh elections. It will be easier said than done Expert comment LToremark
India is hoping a new democratically elected government in Bangladesh will help improve bilateral relations. But identity politics in both countries could derail progress.
As Bangladesh prepares to hold elections on 12 February – after almost 18 months under an unelected interim government – India is seeking a reset in bilateral relations. The relationship between Dhaka and New Delhi has deteriorated after the government of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina was ousted in August 2024 following large-scale unrest in which some 1,400 people were killed. India’s historically close relations with Hasina’s party – the Awami League – fuelled allegations that New Delhi empowered her government’s increasingly autocratic tendencies.
The fact that Hasina fled to India and has continued to make statements from there has added to the bad blood, as has the verdict issued in November which found her guilty of crimes against humanity and sentenced her to death. Bangladesh and India maintain an extradition treaty, but New Delhi has so far refused to extradite Hasina on the grounds that it has the right to refuse requests if the offence is of a ‘political character’.
New Delhi fears that Hasina’s removal from power has created space for groups that are hostile towards India, amid growing anti-India rhetoric and violence in Bangladesh. Attacks on minorities – including Bangladesh’s 13 million-strong Hindu population – have exacerbated tensions. The Bangladeshi government claims that such attacks have been exaggerated and are largely politically motivated, not about religious affiliation. The murder in December of a Bangladeshi youth activist who had been critical of India triggered further unrest, including the lynching of a Hindu man. Claims that the suspects fled to India worsened relations between the two countries.
Reflecting the poor state of bilateral relations, India halved its financial assistance to Bangladesh in its latest budget.
Adding insult to injury is the Bangladeshi government’s outreach to countries that have historically difficult relations with India, including China and Pakistan. But close ties with China are not new. Beijing has been a longstanding trade, investment and defence partner for Bangladesh – more than 70 per cent of the country’s arms imports came from China in the 2019-23 period for example. Nonetheless, India fears that China is seeking to exploit its deteriorating relations with Bangladesh. In June, Bangladesh, China and Pakistan held the inaugural meeting of a foreign secretary/vice foreign minister dialogue. This parallels a similar initiative between Afghanistan, China and Pakistan. New Delhi views this as an effort to marginalize India in its own neighbourhood.
During a visit to China in March 2025, Bangladesh’s Chief Adviser Muhammed Yunus referred to India’s ‘landlocked’ northeastern states and said Bangladesh is the ‘only guardian of the ocean’ that could serve as an ‘extension of the Chinese economy’. This did not go down well in New Delhi. China is involved in several high-profile infrastructure projects in Bangladesh, including modernization of the Mongla Port – its second-largest seaport – and a water management project along the Teesta River. The latter is of particular concern to New Delhi as Bangladesh and India have been engaged in stalled negotiations on sharing the river waters.
Dhaka’s engagement with Islamabad have seen a more notable shift. The two countries have had historically strained relations following Bangladesh’s secession from Pakistan in 1971 following a violent independence struggle. Improved relations have seen a relaxation of visa rules and trade restrictions, the establishment of direct sea links between Chittagong and Karachi and several senior-level interactions. Dhaka and Islamabad have also discussed deepening defence cooperation. For example, Bangladesh is considering procuring the JF-17 fighter aircraft, which is jointly produced by China and Pakistan.
India is hoping the return to democratic rule in Bangladesh will help reset relations. In preparation, New Delhi has sought to deepen and diversify its political engagement with Bangladesh, to dispel allegations surrounding its historic ties with the Awami League. India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Yunus met on the sidelines of a conference in Bangkok in April and Modi sent a condolence letter following the death of Khaleda Zia – leader of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) – in December. Indian External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar also attended Zia’s funeral where he met her son, Tarique Rahman. Rahman has recently returned to Bangladesh after 17 years in exile and is widely tipped to be the next prime minister if the BNP performs well in the election.
However, identity politics in both countries threatens to derail progress. A new government in Dhaka that is overtly hostile towards India, for example one that includes Islamic hardliners, will make rapprochement difficult. Even a BNP-led government does not guarantee improved relations. In an interview, Rahman stated that ‘the people of Bangladesh have decided that relations will remain cool. So, I have to stand with my country’s people’. When the BNP ruled Bangladesh in 2001-06 relations with India deteriorated amid growing instability along the border and a surge in terrorist activity.
A shift in mindset towards India will be dictated in part by the issue of Hasina’s extradition. Publicly, New Delhi will remain averse to extraditing her. Privately, however, the Indian government will be looking to make the issue go away, for example by Hasina moving onto a third country.
In India, meanwhile, attacks on Bangladeshi Hindus have become a prominent issue in public and media discourse. India will be holding elections this year in two states that border Bangladesh – Assam and West Bengal – which could see an increase in anti-Bangladesh rhetoric in the run-up to the polls.
The credibility of the Bangladeshi election and its outcome will also determine the trajectory of the bilateral relationship. A low voter turnout fuelled by violence could undermine the credibility of the electoral process. Supporters of the Awami League have threatened to disrupt the elections after the party has been effectively banned from standing in the election. The former foreign minister in the Hasina government, Hasan Mahmud, has said stability will not return to Bangladesh if the Awami League is excluded.
Defending NATO’s eastern flank: How Romania is responding to Russian aggression and European rearmament 9 February 2026 — 5:30PM TO 6:30PM Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online
Oana Țoiu, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Romania, speaks at Chatham House on support for Ukraine, European security, and tackling the Russian threat.
Oana Țoiu, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Romania, speaks at Chatham House on support for Ukraine, European security, and tackling the Russian threat.
Romania’s geographical position places it at the heart of the effort to defend NATO’s eastern flank.
As a frontline state bordering the war in Ukraine, and amid Russian drone incursions near Romanian territory and intensified information warfare, Romania is acutely aware of the threat Russia poses to European stability. Ukrainian and Russian operations in the Black Sea have given Romania a unique vantage point on the future of naval warfare, while the relocation of NATO’s largest base to Romanian territory underscores the country’s strategic importance within the Alliance.
Oana Țoiu, Romania’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, has repeatedly reaffirmed Romania’s commitment to supporting Ukraine and strengthening European security. She has highlighted Romania’s ongoing defence modernization, sustained investment in its armed forces. Her message aligns closely with NATO’s push to reinforce deterrence along its eastern perimeter and ensure member states remain coordinated and resilient.
But critical questions remain: Is Europe making meaningful progress on rearmament? And is it doing enough to deter an increasingly assertive, imperialist Russia – especially at a time when the United States appears less engaged in Europe’s security affairs?
How can Libya reconcile and reunify after 15 years of instability? 12 February 2026 — 12:00PM TO 1:00PM Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online
HE Abdullah al-Lafi, Member of the Libyan Presidential Council—the three‑member body that serves as Libya’s head of state—will outline how international partners can support and engage with Libya to tackle the global challenges it faces.
HE Abdullah al-Lafi, vice-chairman of the Libyan Presidency Council—the three member body that serves as Libya’s head of state—will outline how international partners can support and engage with Libya to tackle the global challenges it faces.
Fifteen years after the uprising that toppled Muammar Gaddafi, Libya remains in a state of ‘no war and no peace’. Governance is still contested, with rival administrations in western Libya (internationally recognised) and eastern Libya (unrecognised). The Presidency Council continues to act as the country’s collective head of state, while Libyans face a worsening economic climate marked by rising inflation and declining purchasing power.
The United Nations is working to help Libya hold elections and reunify its political institutions. Its efforts continue to focus on mediating between factions and supporting initiatives to repair the country’s fractured social fabric.
In this session, HE Abdullah al-Lafi will assess the current situation in Libya and outline the Presidency Council’s progress on national reconciliation. He will also discuss how international partners can best work with Libya on shared concerns—such as organised migration crime—and contribute to addressing the country’s ongoing political divisions.
With the Presidential Council facing a wide range of immediate challenges, can these issues wait for the formation of a new government?
Key questions to be discussed include:
Over the past month, the Trump administration has deployed thousands of federal immigration agents to the Minneapolis area. On Saturday, Jan. 24, federal agents shot and killed Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old intensive care nurse for the Department of Veterans Affairs. Pretti was the third person shot by federal agents in the area in January.
The Department of Homeland Security initially said an agent fired “defensive shots” after Pretti approached officers with a weapon, but video of the incident appears to contradict that claim. DHS said this week that two officers involved were placed on leave. In a press conference on Thursday, border czar Tom Homan said the administration is working on making the operation “safer, more efficient, by the book.” He said that agents will focus on “targeted, strategic enforcement operations” with a “prioritization on public safety threats.”
Our photojournalists Cengiz Yar and Peter DiCampo were on the ground in Minneapolis, covering what they saw in the days before and after Pretti’s death. Read their accounts below.
I arrived in Minneapolis last week to report on the crackdown and how local residents were reacting.
I had packed my medical kit, full face respirator, helmet and a couple tourniquets, essentials for my reporting bag when I make trips to dangerous and potentially violent areas. I also brought layers upon layers of warm clothing, as temperatures were expected to drop to 20 below in the coming days. I knew the ICE raids and the community’s response had been intense across the region, but I wasn’t fully prepared for what I’d end up seeing playing out in the streets.
In my few days in Minnesota, I’ve been witness to countless scenes that remind me of moments I’ve seen during previous trips covering conflicts around the world. I watched heavily armored federal units roll through quiet neighborhoods. In a grocery store parking lot, angry residents screamed at agents, demanding they leave the city. Masked and armed government agents pointed weapons toward me and some protesters during an encounter in the middle of the afternoon. Curious guests in a hotel elevator wondered why I was carrying around a medical pack and gas mask. Local residents thanked me for being there to witness the situation. A drunk man at a hotel bar cursed at me, saying the media was at fault. The wars we’ve carried out as a nation abroad have come home.
On my first day out reporting, I came upon an incident that had been unfolding for over an hour. Late in the afternoon on Thursday, Jan. 22, three construction workers clung to a roof, bracing themselves against the slanted plywood of an unfinished two-story house on the far south side of Minneapolis. Federal agents had massed in the house and in cars on the street, conducting a raid on the construction site. The agents called for the workers to come down. They refused. They stayed on the roof, exposed to the elements in negative 4 degree weather.

I stood outside the house looking up at the men on the roof, wondering how they were surviving in only high-visibility vests and work clothing. Onlookers begged the agents to let them bring the men blankets. They were told to stay out of the building.
Other construction workers milled about the snow-covered site as their co-workers hung on above. Some cursed at the officers. One worker told the men to come down before they freeze to death. “You can at least go to a warm cell,” he shouted. One young, white worker stuck his middle finger in the face of agents idling in their car. “Fuck you,” he screamed as he stomped around the site. A half dozen onlookers had assembled as well, shouting encouragement to the men above and asking the agents for compassion.
The three men remained on the roof as the young, white construction worker argued angrily with the agents for almost an hour.
Finally, as the time approached 5 p.m., the agents left.

Onlookers rushed into the building and brought the men down to wrap them in blankets. “You’re OK now,” they reassured the men. “You did great.”
On Friday, I arrived in South Minneapolis as protesters gathered, shouting, filming and blowing whistles at armored agents in a pickup. After a few minutes, the agents threw tear gas into the small crowd of onlookers and sped away. Gas drifted through the snowy streets, passing cute two-story houses and short, leafless trees. My throat burning, I crouched to the ground, coughing up the irritants behind a snowbank.
I couldn’t have known that less than a day later, in a similar situation, Customs and Border Protection agents would kill a man by shooting him multiple times in the back as they pinned him to the ground. Pretti died while filming agents and trying to help a woman as he was pepper sprayed. In the unfolding chaos in the hours after the shooting, I watched as agents unloaded tear gas on a couple hundred furious protesters who had assembled at the site of the shooting. Heavily armored law enforcement faced off against a crowd of unarmed protesters carrying signs and screaming for justice and retribution.


It was 9:07 a.m. on Saturday morning when I learned that someone had been shot outside Glam Doll Donuts on Nicollet Avenue. It would be hours before I heard the name Alex Pretti and watched the grisly videos of CBP agents shooting him to death. But knowing that Minneapolis was on edge following the death of Renee Good, also killed by federal agents, I grabbed my camera and the warmest clothing I could find. I rushed out of my house. By 9:29 a.m., I was in my car texting a group of fellow photographers “omw.”
Yellow police tape and federal agents lined the scene of the shooting, keeping everyone about a block away in every direction. A small crowd gathered. The first person I recognized wasn’t another journalist, it was my neighbor. “Peter!” she cried, and told me she wasn’t sure what was happening, just that she had also heard about the shooting and wanted to get down there. She sobbed into my arms for a minute, then we parted ways.
More agents gathered. Many wore gas masks. More residents and others ready to protest another killing arrived. A young man stood at the edge of the yellow tape and yelled; an older woman hugged him to try to calm him down. The anger of the crowd was palpable. “ICE agents: Get out of Minneapolis,” they screamed.


I do not have the words to articulate how it feels to watch this unfold in Minneapolis, a city that I have grown to know and love after moving here a few years ago. The journalists who flocked here over the past few weeks are people I have run into while on assignment in hot spots all over the world. Now they were in my home city.
As crowds grew, agents fired tear gas to keep them back. Crowds would then briefly disperse, but some agents would grab and detain people regardless. The crowds reformed quickly, and the cycle of tear gas, detentions and regrouping continued.

After one bout of tear gas, I stumbled away, doubled over and coughing. “Come inside!” I heard someone yell. I looked up and saw a woman opening the door to an apartment building. She wasn’t yelling to me but to two photographers I know. I stumbled toward them, and the three of them saw me, and all extended the invitation: “Come inside!”
I was grateful to be out of the tear gas, and I was grateful to be warm. That day’s high temperature was well below zero; at one point, I looked down and realized frozen condensation had iced my camera dials and buttons in place.
The other two photographers and I made our way to the rooftop and spent the next hour-plus photographing from above. We overlooked the scene of the shooting and could see the FBI examining it and the line of protesters and agents going back and forth in three different directions.

We watched as the federal presence finished at the shooting scene and packed up. They slowly backed out, firing tear gas at protesters who ran at them as they drove away.
We went back down to the street. Protesters gathered at the next block, and a similar scene played out there, this time with city and state police. “Why aren’t you protecting us?” one person yelled at them. Another protestor tried to calm the crowd down, but people were fed up: “Fuck your pacifism,” I heard someone yell.
Tear gas was fired, people dispersed and the police slowly backed out. Eventually, without federal agents and police around, the mood shifted from chaos to something more somber.


As I took a moment to breathe, I realized that the final standoff had taken place right in front of Cheapo Records, where I went record shopping on my birthday a couple years back. And the events of the entire day — the shooting, the protests, the tear gassing — all unfolded on a stretch of Nicollet Avenue called Eat Street, known for having many of the best restaurants in town, with cuisines from all over the world that showcase the city’s diversity. I knew then that walking these streets would never feel the same.
People made their way to the site of Alex Pretti’s death. There was still yellow tape around it, now tied haphazardly around trash cans. A small bloodstain was visible on the pavement.
Quietly, they began to build a memorial.

The post What We Saw in Minneapolis appeared first on ProPublica.

Part 1 of the Delaware Civics 101 Series:
Understanding How Delaware Organizes, Spends, and Balances Its Money
To many Delawareans, the state’s budget process has always been a bit of a mystery. We read headlines about “bond bills” and “capital budgets,” and wonder why we should care. We hear legislators battle over spending priorities, but it’s not always clear where the money goes – or where it’s coming from. Are we living within our means – or beyond them? And what are the consequences in either direction?.
This series aims to resolve that murky picture – and show the many ways that Delaware’s budget has the power to affect our lives, our families and our future.
When lawmakers pass the state budget each year, they’re doing more than playing politics –they’re shaping how the state educates children, builds roads, attracts business, keeps communities safe, and provides care for families and seniors.
To follow how those policy choices come to life, it helps to understand the basic structure of Delaware’s finances. The state budget is built around four main parts – think of them as “buckets” of money – each with a specific role and funding source:
Across all four of those buckets, Delaware’s total budget can add up to $15 billion (depending on the year), but when most people talk about the “state budget,” they’re talking about the general fund. In this current fiscal year (July 1, 2025-June 30, 2026), the general fund fell just shy of $6.6 billion.
The process follows a predictable rhythm each year:
As a starting point, the state turns to the Delaware Economic and Financial Advisory Council (DEFAC), an independent body of experts that since 1977 has issued quarterly forecasts of how much revenue the state is expected to take in. By state law, the governor and General Assembly must base the budget on DEFAC’s official, politics-free projections.
This is an area where Delaware’s lawmakers are restrained by the state constitution – the legislature is required to spend no more than 98% of the estimated available revenue. The remaining 2% must be used as a cushion to prevent deficits and safeguard against overspending.
With revenue numbers in hand, the state then begins to decide how the money will be divided among agencies. Each agency submits their budgetary “wish lists” every summer, and in November, the governor’s Office of Management and Budget (OMB) holds public hearings and produces a report.
Even though the legislature ultimately has the “power of the purse” in Delaware, state code gives the governor the first crack at the budget: “[The governor] may make such changes … as the Governor may deem necessary or desirable in accordance with the Governor’s own best judgment … and shall submit the budget report … to each House of the General Assembly, on or before February 1 of each year.”
That proposed budget then goes to the Joint Finance Committee (JFC), made up of House and Senate lawmakers. (The JFC is one of the most powerful and sought-after committee appointments in the legislature, and is often made up of the chamber’s most experienced lawmakers, from both parties.) The JFC holds public hearings on the governor’s proposal, reviews agency requests line-by-line, and ultimately writes the final budget bill that will be voted on by the entire assembly.
Once the legislature approves the bill, it goes on to the governor, who gets one more chance to make their voice heard: Through a “line-item veto,” the governor has the power to strike out specific spending items in the budget bill without vetoing the entire budget. This executive power isn’t available for all legislation, and it can make final budget negotiations particularly intense.
But it’s rarely used: The last governor to use this leverage was Jack Markell, in 2011.
By law, all this maneuvering has to be settled by June 30 each year, making the start of Delaware’s summer a notoriously hectic time for lawmakers.
In addition to the “Four Buckets” detailed below, there are a few budget-related mechanisms to keep in mind. These serve as tools to help keep the process running smoothly, and safeguard against the unexpected:
Delaware’s main spending account, also referred to as the “operating budget.” It pays for salaries, services, and ongoing programs that keep the state running.
• Personal and corporate income taxes
• Franchise and business license fees
• Gross receipts tax (on business sales and services), and lottery revenue
• Education (~35-40%) – Teacher pay, classroom operations, special education, and higher-ed funding.
• Health & Social Services (20–25%) – Medicaid, public health, child welfare, and mental-health services.
• Public Safety (10–15%) – State Police, prisons, courts, and emergency response.
• General Government (10%) – Administration, finance, technology, and facilities.
• Debt Service (5–10%) – Payments on prior borrowing and contingency funds.
• Your child’s teacher in Milford? Paid from the General Fund.
• A state trooper patrolling Route 1? General Fund.
• The public health nurse giving free flu shots? General Fund.
So-called “Appropriated Special Funds” are earmarked revenues – money that can be spent only on its assigned purpose. These funds – approximately $1.2 billion in FY 2026 – come from fees, fines, or dedicated taxes rather than general income.
• Transportation Trust Fund (TTF): Motor-fuel taxes, tolls, and registration fees pay for roads, bridges, and DART transit.
• Lottery & Gaming Proceeds: Support education and addiction-prevention programs.
• Environmental Fees: Support clean water and state park improvements.
• Health Funds: Tobacco-settlement dollars for cancer prevention and public-health campaigns.
• The pothole repairs on Route 13? Transportation Trust Fund.
• The playground upgrades in a state park? Environmental Special Funds.
• Problem-gambling hotlines and education grants? Lottery Special Funds.
The Bond and Capital Improvements Act, or Bond Bill, funds construction and long-term investments, often by authorizing the state to borrow money through the bond market. Think of it as Delaware’s infrastructure plan for schools, roads, and state facilities that will be needed in the near future.
By law, the state cannot simply borrow what it wants — it must follow a fixed formula designed to prevent the state from borrowing too much money. Mandated by statute, the Debt Affordability Limit is based on a formula related to personal income and revenue.
The Bond Bill is ultimately drafted by the separate Joint Committee on Capital Improvement (often called the Bond Committee), which is similar to the Joint Finance Committee’s role in the Operating Budget.
• General obligation bonds (state borrowing)
• General Fund transfers
• Special Funds such as the Transportation Trust Fund
• Federal matching grants
• Education: New schools, renovations, HVAC, and safety systems.
• Transportation: Road and bridge projects, transit hubs, bike trails.
• Public Safety: Police barracks, courts, correctional facilities.
• Environment: Clean-water systems, flood control, park facilities.
• Technology: Modernized data centers and cybersecurity systems.
• A new elementary school wing in Sussex County? Bond Bill.
• A bridge replacement on Route 9? Bond Bill.
• Beach nourishment in Lewes or state-park renovations? Bond Bill.
Federal Transfer Funds are grants and reimbursements from the U.S. government that support specific programs. They make up roughly $2–3 billion of Delaware’s total budget.
• Health & Social Services: Medicaid, SNAP (food), TANF (Temporary Assistance for Needy Families), and public-health initiatives.
• Education: Title I (low-income schools) and Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (special education).
• Transportation: Federal highway and transit grants.
• Environment & Housing: Clean-water revolving funds, FEMA disaster relief, HUD housing programs.
• A Medicaid patient’s hospital visit? Half paid by the federal government.
• Title I reading tutors in Wilmington? Funded federally.
• Highway upgrades on I-95? Largely federal grants.
Together, these four funds make up Delaware’s financial ecosystem:
• General Fund = everyday operations
• Special Funds = dedicated programs
• Bond Bill = infrastructure investments
• Federal Funds = federally supported programs.
As an example of how the four parts of the system work together, consider a schoolteacher who earns a salary (General Fund), drives to school on Delaware roads (Special Funds), arrives at her new school building (Bond Bill), and teaches with support of a reading grant for struggling students (Federal Funds).
Part 2 – Where the Money Comes From: Delaware’s Revenue, Taxes, and Fees.
We’ll break down how the state raises its funds — from income and corporate taxes to tolls, fees, and federal matches — and how those sources shape our ability to invest in Delaware’s future.
About the Civics 101 Series: Civics 101 is a continuing explanatory series by Delaware LIVE and the Spotlight Delaware content marketing team designed to help readers understand how state government works and how budget decisions affect everyday life in Delaware. To read other stories in the series, visit the Civics 101 home page.
The post Civics 101: Dive into the four buckets of Delaware’s State Budget appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Once a month, American labor activist Jim Keady logs into Remitly, an app for transferring money abroad, at his New Jersey home and sends $100 to a former Nike factory worker in Indonesia.
Cicih Sukaesih helped bring the world’s attention to the lives of the young women in poor countries who made sneakers in the 1990s, first by organizing a strike and later by marching onto Nike’s bucolic corporate campus in Oregon to demand a meeting with co-founder Phil Knight.
Her story — at a time of police and military harassment of labor organizers abroad — caught the attention of The New York Times and other news organizations. It also helped inform a generation of workers about their rights.
“She helped to birth, I would argue, the Indonesian trade union movement within Nike’s supplier factories,” Keady said.

But media attention and accolades don’t pay the bills. Cicih had trouble finding work following her 1990s activism. (Cicih prefers to go by one name. It’s pronounced “Chee Chee.”)
Decades after her crusade faded from the headlines, Keady and other labor organizers began sending Cicih money to keep her afloat.
“She took a stand and she was a revolutionary,” Keady said. “And she has nothing to show for it.”
Now 62, Cicih welcomed a reporter for The Oregonian/OregonLive into her home last year, part of a reporting trip that included interviews with about 100 workers who make Nike sneakers, mostly in Indonesia, which was ground zero for the decade of sweatshop criticism that stained Nike’s reputation in the 1990s.
Cicih said she’s proud of the example she set by standing up to Nike. She said workers “became aware of their rights and aware of the law.”
“Many things changed,” she said.
The advocacy led to improvements, she said, including cracking down on child labor, installing better safety equipment and providing menstrual leave.
“Many of my friends,” Cicih said, “became brave enough to speak up.”

But she described her work as incomplete because problems linger, including chronically low wages.
Nike did not address specific questions about Cicih’s experience or about the Nike supplier that employed her in the 1990s, nor did Knight provide comment. Instead, Nike issued a broad statement saying, in part, “We’re appreciative of the efforts that individuals and organizations, including Cicih, have made in helping push the industry forward.”
Nike said the company has been “deeply committed to advancing a responsible and resilient supply chain for more than 30 years” and that while progress hasn’t been perfect, it has sought “systemic improvements across the industry.” Nike’s goal, the statement said, is that “all people involved in the manufacturing of Nike’s products are respected, valued, and treated fairly.”
Cicih keeps tokens of her activism in her home, including a framed poster that depicts a factory worker and reads, “Who made your shoes?”
Jeff Ballinger, a labor organizer who was prominent in the 1990s’ anti-sweatshop movement, gave it to her. In an interview, Ballinger said he still considers Cicih a “hero” — albeit unsung, even in Tangerang, the industrial hub where the Indonesian factory movement took off.
“Like in wartime, some people just step up,” Ballinger said. “In a perfect world, there’d be a statue of her in Tangerang.”
Cicih sat for an interview in a backyard filled by a chicken coop and a small garden that included pumpkins, bananas and edible bamboo. The small house she and one of her sisters inherited from their parents in Menes, her childhood village about a 90-mile drive west of Jakarta, is now home.
After putting out snacks that included a traditional Indonesian dessert made from rice and grated coconut in banana leaves, Cicih often flashed a wide grin as she reflected on a life intertwined with Nike’s emergence in her country.


Nike, then known as Blue Ribbon Sports, bought its first sneakers from Japanese factories in the 1960s. But as Japan’s wages rose, it shifted manufacturing to lower-cost Asian countries, including Taiwan and South Korea.
In 1988, it started making sneakers in Indonesia.
The country had a terrible human rights record, but it was eager to attract foreign investors. Factories in Jakarta paid wages as low as $1 a day, compared with $8 in South Korea, $14 in Taiwan and $33 in Tokyo, according to a 1988 State Department report.
In 1989, five years after she graduated from high school, Cicih joined one of her sisters making Nike sneakers at the Sung Hwa Dunia factory 40 miles west of Jakarta, Indonesia’s biggest city.
She started work each day at 7 a.m.
At first, she said, she cleaned glue and chemicals off sneakers with her bare hands. Then she moved to a glue line, attaching soles to shoes. The factory was poorly ventilated. Co-workers coughed from the fumes. Cicih recalled seeing one person faint and then return to the assembly line because factory managers didn’t give her permission to go home.
(The factory is still open, but it has changed owners and now has a different name. The current owner did not respond to emails. The previous owner could not be reached.)

Worker safety was “very, very bad,” Cicih said through an independent journalist The Oregonian/OregonLive hired to translate the conversation.
“There were many, many labor laws that the company did not follow,” she added.
Like today, the vast majority of factory workers were young women. Most of the managers were older men, which Cicih said led to a natural power imbalance and problems with sexual harassment.
“I have watched and seen a lot of women being sexually abused, or touched inappropriately,” she said.
There was constant pressure to meet daily production quotas.
Cicih made $1.26 a day, around minimum wage. A 1989 study found the minimum wage was so low that many factory workers were malnourished.
“It was not enough for me to get by on a daily basis,” she said. “However, I had to make it on the amount I received.”
Cicih often worked overtime until 9 p.m. Sometimes she worked on Saturday and Sunday, which she considered forced labor. The amount of overtime, she said, motivated her to “rebel.”

The turning point for Cicih came when one of the company’s buses, which workers rode to the factory and were always overcrowded, flipped and killed a co-worker.
“How can we protest this issue to the company?” she asked another co-worker.
Unbeknownst to Cicih, this co-worker had joined an organization that taught workers about labor rights. Cicih faked a doctor’s letter, got a sick day and took a class.
Through the organization, she met Ballinger, who had moved to Indonesia to organize factory workers. In 1992, Ballinger wrote a story for Harper’s Magazine that compared the wages of Sadisah, one of Cicih’s co-workers, to the earnings of Nike endorser Michael Jordan. Sadisah earned 14 cents an hour. It would have taken her more than 44,000 years to make what Jordan earned from Nike in a single year.
Cicih started skipping lunch and prayer breaks to organize her co-workers.
On Sept. 28, 1992, Cicih and workers from her factory went on strike. The New York Times reported 600 walked out, but Cicih and other activists have put the number of strikers in the thousands. They demanded better treatment of women, better union representation, better food, better transportation and, most importantly, better pay.
“A wage increase was the top priority,” she said, holding up the original document that listed protesters’ demands.


Her activism came with great risks. Around that time, Marsinah, a factory worker who was recognized last year as the country’s first National Hero from the labor movement, was kidnapped, tortured and murdered.
“Military and police were everywhere,” Cicih said, but she said her desire to help her co-workers “eclipsed all the fear.”
The strike lasted two days.
It ended after the factory agreed to increase wages for many employees, Cicih said, but she added that her seniority made her eligible for just a small raise. The company accepted other demands, including allowing menstrual leave. Cicih said she was the first worker to take it.
That same year that Cicih led the strike, Nike released a code of conduct, becoming one of the first brands to do so. Codes of conduct have since become the default method companies like Nike use to police overseas factories. The basic system: The company writes rules and contract factories agree to follow them. Auditors monitor compliance.
A few months after the strike, Cicih and roughly two dozen of her co-workers got laid off. Leslie Milano, a prominent American labor organizer in the early 2000s, said unemployment at the time was high in Indonesia.
“That’s why a lot of people didn’t want to do what Cicih did,” Milano said. “They didn’t want to lose their jobs.”

Cicih said that not long after being laid off, she was hauled into a police station and spent two days being pressured to confess to destruction of property and causing a disturbance. She was not allowed to go to the bathroom, she said.
Cicih said the police made her watch them beat a suspect. Then they made her sit in his blood, she said, before releasing her.
The Indonesian embassy in Washington, D.C., did not respond to questions about military repression of worker rights in the 1990s. (The country undertook democratic reform after the dictator Suharto stepped down in 1998, although problems remain.)
After her release, encouraged by Ballinger and others, she joined co-workers in filing a lawsuit against the factory alleging wrongful termination. The lawsuit went all the way to Indonesia’s Supreme Court. In 1996, Cicih and her co-workers prevailed. She got about $200 in back wages. She still has the check in a binder with other documents from her organizing days.
For two years of lost wages, Ballinger figures Cicih should have gotten more than $2,000. That would have been enough to set up a small business.
“It would have been a hell of a lot of money back then,” he said. The movement’s failure to deliver greater restitution to Cicih and others “is something that I’ll never get over.”
Around the time the lawsuit concluded, in July 1996, Cicih walked onto Nike’s suburban campus near Beaverton, Oregon, and demanded a meeting with the company’s co-founder.
“I’m here to meet with Phil Knight,” she said, according to The Oregonian’s coverage of her visit. “I want to ask him to consider the plight of Indonesian workers.”
Cicih had stayed in touch with Ballinger. He helped bring her to the United States to put pressure on Nike, one of four such visits she made to the country.
Knight refused to see her.

A week before Cicih arrived in Beaverton, Knight wrote a letter to her trip’s organizers, saying he was “sympathetic” to her case but preferred to meet with people “interested in constructive, proactive solutions, not those who announce their intentions through news conferences and mean-spirited media campaigns.”
He defended Nike’s response to problems at Cicih’s factory, saying Nike had worked to correct them.
“The factory where Ms. Sukaesih worked has been under new Indonesian management for two years, the grievances have been addressed and the minimum wage is in force,” Knight wrote. “In our view, this is an example of the benefit Nike brings in upgrading labor practices in emerging market societies.”

After she made her request to meet with Knight, a “trio of beefy Nike security guards” escorted Cicih off Nike’s campus and local sheriff’s deputies asked her to leave the premises, according to The Oregonian’s coverage.
Roughly a week later, Knight sat across the table from President Bill Clinton at the White House to talk about labor reforms, according to records obtained from the Clinton Presidential Library. Knight then stood in the Rose Garden behind Clinton as the president announced a sweeping effort to address sweatshop conditions in overseas factories.
“While I think that we have been good citizens within our industry, I think there’s clearly a lot more that we can do, that we can indeed be better,” Knight said in his brief remarks.
The meeting with Clinton led to the creation of the Fair Labor Association, one of several groups that monitor factory working conditions.
Knight publicly committed to specific sweatshop reforms in a 1998 speech at the National Press Club. Knight announced six changes, including heightened indoor air quality standards, increased factory monitoring and raising the minimum age in footwear factories to 18.
He didn’t say anything about raising wages.
These days, Nike factory workers in Indonesia told The Oregonian/OregonLive, the kind of forced overtime that sparked Cicih’s desire to “rebel” is nonexistent. They also said Nike lived up to Knight’s commitment to get underage workers out of Indonesian factories.
But they said problems remain.
In interviews, they criticized the auditing process, the linchpin of the factory monitoring system that Nike helped pioneer. Workers said factories know in advance when auditors will arrive. At one factory, workers said safety equipment had been distributed on the eve of an audit.
“The best time to work at a Nike factory is when it’s being audited,” a worker said.
Workers said more rigorous and consistent auditing would catch problems with safety and sexual harassment, which they said remain persistent.
Asked about the workers’ description of factories prepping for planned audits, Nike said that it conducts unannounced audits in addition to those that are scheduled in advance, and that these are supplemented by “worker engagement and well-being surveys,” among other efforts.
“When issues are brought to our attention, through any mechanism, we work with suppliers to validate, identify root causes and implement comprehensive remediation processes,” Nike said.
Nike’s most recent disclosures say 87% of the 623 suppliers it audited in fiscal year 2024 at least met the company’s basic code of conduct requirements. The company also disclosed a factory injury rate significantly below its peers. Less than 1% of code of conduct violations related to harassment and abuse, according to the disclosure.
Workers and union leaders also say their No. 1 concern — low wages — has not been addressed. Many said they work second jobs to make ends meet.
“One job isn’t enough,” Keady said. “They’re not getting a second job because they want to send their kid to a really good private school or they want to buy a home in a great neighborhood. They’re getting a second job because they can’t afford three meals a day for their family.”
Cicih also has struggled.
After her lawsuit against the factory that once employed her, she had the option to return, but she declined. She thought the environment would be uncomfortable because of her history as an organizer.
She did some volunteer work as a labor organizer. Some other organizers encouraged her to set up a small business.
Those efforts never panned out. She moved back to her hometown of Menes in 2018.
A sister on whom Cicih depended financially died during the pandemic. Cicih opened a roadside food stall and sold vegetable salad and gado gado, a type of Indonesian dish, but it didn’t go well.
She gets by on donations from American do-gooders, including Keady. She grows some of her own food. She doesn’t have a pension or savings.
“Nothing,” she said.
But she’s resolute.
“You have to do this,” she said, reflecting on her years as an activist. “You have to fight.”

The post She Was a Key Voice of the 1990s Labor Movement in Nike’s Indonesia Factories. Today She Relies on Donations From Abroad. appeared first on ProPublica.
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