2026-03-12 12:04
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Iran's relentless attacks on Gulf states and infrastructure appear to be overshadowing interventions by the U.S. and its allies aimed at easing energy prices.

2026-03-12 12:04
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A shooter was killed after opening fire in a building on the campus of Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia, the university said.

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An anonymous reader quotes a report from Bloomberg: Atlassian plans to cut 1,600 jobs or a 10th of its global workforce, joining rivals in slashing staffing to cope with the advent of AI and a broader post-Covid industry slowdown. Australian billionaire founder Mike Cannon-Brookes explained the reductions in a staff memo, while also announcing his chief technology officer was leaving the Sydney-based company. "It would be disingenuous to pretend AI doesn't change the mix of skills we need or the number of roles required in certain areas," Cannon-Brookes said. "It does."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 11:56

Trump spins the spiking oil prices as a win for the US as defense departments reportedly spends billions on war with Iran

US defense officials told senators on the armed services committee that the cost of the war on Iran totaled more than $11.3bn in the first six days alone, according to multiple reports.

The New York Times was first to break the news about the conflict’s price tag, citing three people familiar with the closed-door briefing on Tuesday.

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2026-03-12 12:04
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Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news

European gas prices are also rising today.

The month-ahead UK gas contract is up 4.2% at 132.6p per them, while the continental European equivalent is 3.2% higher at €51.6 per Megawatt hour.

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2026-03-12 12:04
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Downing Street denies former minister’s vetting and approval was rushed through after release of documents by government

Downing Street has rejected accusations it covered up Keir Starmer’s role in appointing Peter Mandelson as the UK ambassador to Washington, after documents detailing the process showed no formal input from the prime minister.

A day after 147 pages of documents were released by the government, No 10 also denied that the approval and vetting of Mandelson had been rushed through, saying that normal procedures were followed.

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2026-03-12 12:04
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Message read out by newsreader calls for national unity and says that all US bases in the region should close or face attacks

An Iranian source is denying the country will allow India-flagged tankers to pass through the vital strait of Hormuz, Reuters is reporting.

The news agency a little earlier quoted an Indian source as saying Iran would in fact allow such tankers to pass through the strait, a key artery for global oil trade.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 11:45

Exclusive: none of the MPs are yet near point of crossing the floor and want guarantees they would be reselected for their seat at next election

Several Labour MPs are in talks about defecting to the Greens, but are seeking guarantees they would be backed electorally by their new party, the Guardian has been told.

Zack Polanski, the leader of the Greens in England and Wales, has said publicly that he has chatted to Labour MPs about the idea of switching sides, with the leftwing party enjoying a surge in membership and having overtaken Labour in some recent opinion polls.

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2026-03-12 12:04
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Did a debt collector freeze your bank account? Here's what to do next to protect your money and your rights.

2026-03-12 12:04
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Animal charities call for ‘extreme’ breeds to no longer be eligible for prizes and full vetting of competitors

Animal charities have complained to Channel 4 after the winner of Crufts best in show was found to have been convicted of animal cruelty, and said the winning dog is an “extreme” breed that has had a “lifetime of suffering”.

After Lee Cox and his four-year-old Clumber spaniel Bruin won best in show at the prestigious dog competition, it emerged that Cox had a previous conviction for animal cruelty.

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2026-03-12 12:04
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These features can help you monitor and support your overall health.

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Company that runs the sites says it has ‘no reason to believe there is a correlation between the donors’ passing and plasma donation’

Two people have died in Canada after donating plasma at a chain of clinics that has been under scrutiny by federal inspectors for failing to keep accurate records, screen donors or maintain its machines.

While experts say the deaths are exceedingly rare, critics say Canada’s embrace of private companies to handle blood products reflects a “slow collapse of a system that has been the envy of the world”.

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2026-03-12 12:04
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News stories are weighing nuclear risk as experts muse on the possibility of global warfare

Intimations of world war three – the big one, nuclear Armageddon – didn’t arise yesterday. But they got more urgent when Donald Trump was elected the second time. In December 2024, Newsweek published a map of the “safest US states to live during nuclear war”. The article was not reassuring. “Nowhere is truly ‘safe’” from such consequences as “contamination of food and water supplies and prolonged radiation exposure”, said the senior policy director of the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation. Another expert noted that “even a ‘small’ nuclear war would ... kill at least a billion people”.

And since 28 February, when the US and Israel began their bombardment of Iran, chatter about a world war has spiked, with everyone from anonymous social media users to Harvard policy wonks weighing in.

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2026-03-12 12:04
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More than 300 TSA officers have quit since the partial government shutdown began last month, according to agency statistics obtained by CBS News.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 11:17

Oksana Masters said she was shocked to win her 22nd Paralympic Medal in Milan.

2026-03-12 12:04
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Attacks on shipping traffic and energy infrastructure in the Persian Gulf temporarily pushed oil back above $100 a barrel, stoking investor fears.

2026-03-12 12:04
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Democratic Rep. Jim Clyburn of South Carolina announced Thursday he will seek an 18th term in Congress.

2026-03-12 12:04
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The pipe, with a diameter of 11.5 feet, towered as high as 42 feet at one point, according to the Osaka construction department.

2026-03-12 12:04
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Latest order comes after Hezbollah and Iran launched joint attack on more than 50 targets including Israeli military bases

Israel has issued a sweeping new displacement order for south Lebanon, instructing residents up to 25 miles away from the border with Israel to head north, as its conflict with Hezbollah continues to escalate.

A spokesperson for the Israeli military on Thursday ordered all residents to head north of the Zahrani River “for their safety,” before a bombing campaign against what it said were Hezbollah targets.

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2026-03-12 12:04
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After 14 years in orbit, NASA's Van Allen Probe A dropped back into the atmosphere over the Pacific Ocean.

2026-03-12 12:04
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Senior British army officer tells John Healey Iranian pilots are flying Shaheds much lower, making them more effective

Vladimir Putin’s “hidden hand” lies behind Iran’s military methods, the UK defence secretary, John Healey, has said, after a night in which drones struck a base used by western forces in Erbil, northern Iraq.

Healey was speaking after British officers at the UK’s military headquarters in north-west London had told him that drone pilots from Iran and Iranian proxies were increasingly adopting tactics “from the Russians”.

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2026-03-12 12:04
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Last year’s celebrated French hit Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 is nominated in 12 categories this year, with Ghost of Yōtei, Dispatch, Death Stranding 2 and Indiana Jones also making strong showings

The 22nd Bafta games awards are coming up in April, and the 2026 nominations list is dominated by the impeccably stylish French breakout hit Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 which has 12 nominations, and has already won game of the year prizes at the UK’s Golden Joysticks last November, December’s Game awards in the US and February’s Dice awards in Las Vegas.

Dispatch, a game about a benched superhero roped into running a team of superpowered misfits at a call centre, has nine nominations. Among them is a best performer in a leading role nod for its star Aaron Paul, and one for Jeffrey Wright in a supporting role. Sony’s samurai epic Ghost of Yōtei came out with eight nominations, including best game and best performer in a leading role for Erika Ishii, who plays Atsu.

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The strike appears to have come without warning, and shows that Iran and its proxies can target ships even without mining the Strait of Hormuz.

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Asian governments are implementing emergency measures like four-day workweeks and work-from-home mandates to cope with a fuel shortage triggered by the Iran conflict and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. "Asia is particularly dependent on oil exports from the Middle East; Japan and South Korea respectively source 90% and 70% of their oil from the region," notes Fortune. From the report: On March 10, Thailand ordered civil servants to take the stairs rather than the elevator, and to work-from-home for the duration of the crisis. It increased the air-conditioning temperature to 27 degrees Celsius, and will tell government employees to wear short-sleeved shirts over suits. (Thailand has about 95 days of energy reserves left, according to Reuters). Vietnam also called on businesses to let people work-from-home to "reduce the need for travel and transportation." The Philippines is pushing for a four-day work week, and has ordered officials to limit travel "to essential functions only." South Asia is getting hit hard too. Bangladesh brought forward the Eid-al-fitr holiday, allowing universities to close early in a bid to save fuel. Pakistan also instituted a four-day week for government offices and closed schools. India suspended shipments of liquefied petroleum gas to commercial operators to prioritize supplies for households, leading to worries from hotels and restaurants that they may be forced to close without fuel supplies. Countries across the region are also considering price caps, subsidies, and tapping strategic oil reserves. On Wednesday, the International Energy Agency "unanimously" agreed to release 400 million barrels of oil and refined products from its reserves. The Associated Press offers a look at the energy supplies that countries hold and when they tap them.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 10:56

Tech company filed amicus brief in support of Anthropic’s effort to overturn an aggressive Pentagon designation

Microsoft has thrown its weight behind Anthropic’s legal challenge against the US Pentagon, filing a court brief in support of the AI company’s effort to overturn an aggressive designation that effectively bars it from government work.

In an amicus brief submitted to a federal court in San Francisco this week, Microsoft, which integrates Anthropic’s AI tools into systems it provides to the US military, argued that a temporary restraining order was necessary to prevent serious disruption to suppliers whose products rely on the AI company’s technology. Google, Amazon, Apple and OpenAI have also signed on to a brief in support of Anthropic.

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2026-03-12 12:04
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Fighting near Beirut and in southern Lebanon has killed more than 630 people and forced at least 800,000 from their homes.

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William "Neil" McCasland was last seen at his home in Albuquerque on Feb. 27, investigators said. They have not found evidence of foul play.

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The U.S. Treasury Department on Thursday sanctioned six individuals and two companies accused of aiding North Korea in running a global scheme using remote IT workers to fund their weapons program.

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Quantum computers have begun showing utility for solving problems that traditional supercomputers struggle with, particularly in areas like material science and molecular simulation. In many cases, quantum computers still require large amounts of classical HPC infrastructure to work. To help guide the industry toward a convergence of quantum and HPC, IBM today launched a reference architecture for implementing what it dubs quantum-centric supercomputing, or QCSC. It also shared a roadmap that brings the two worlds together in stages.

Quantum computing is reaching parity with classical HPC for some workloads, which is fueling massive investments across various quantum modalities. A large number of these quantum systems are being installed in supercomputing labs around the world, where HPC resources (like GPUs) can be used for mitigating errors that are inherent with quantum computing.

While work between these two systems is progressing, the integration is not ideal. Quantum computers and HPC resources today mostly exist in isolation, which forces users to manually orchestrate workloads, coordinate job scheduling, and transfer data between systems. This situation is what drove IBM researchers to develop a new framework that integrates the two types of computing and provides for shared resources that can eliminate the silo-ization.

IBM’s QCSC architecture (Source: “Reference Architecture of a Quantum-Centric Supercomputer”)

IBM’s new QCSC architecture depicts four logical layers, including hardware infrastructure, system orchestration, application middleware, and applications. It defines how quantum processors (QPUs) can work alongside GPUs, CPUs, ASCIs, and FPGAs in both tight and loose coupling scenarios. IBM proposes quantum systems API (QSA) that acts as the programmatic boundary between the classical and QPU environments.

The architecture depicts scale-up coupling of QPU and classical environment for real-time access across a low-latency interconnect, such as RDMA over Converged Ethernet (RoCE), Ultra Ethernet, or NVQLink, according to a preprint copy of IBM’s new paper, “Reference Architecture of a Quantum-Centric Supercomputer.” The scale-up pattern is ideal for certain classes of problems that require the lowest latency and therefore the tightest coupling of resources between QPUs and classic HPC resources, such as for fault-tolerant error correction.

IBM also presents a scale-out pattern for connecting QPUs and classical resources in mixed and hybrid cloud environments, which is ideal for a range of workloads that surround and complement QPU execution but don’t have the same latency requirements as real-time error correction. This includes workloads like pre-processing (or generating the initial states for quantum runs); post-processing (retrieving the results from the quantum system, apply error mitigation, and recovering configurations); and interweaving simulations from classical HPC into QPUs as part of a hybrid workflow.

The QCSC architecture also provides for a system orchestration layer, which is powered by a Quantum Resource Management Interface (QRMI) that can be accessed via an API by other resource managers, like Slurm. The QRMI library is needed because classic workflow schedulers like Slurm generally lack native QPU support, IBM says. IBM proposes another component, dubbed the Slurm Plugin Architecture for Node and job Kontrol, or SPANK, to integrate QPU resources with Slurm (don’t ever let them tell you IBM Researchers don’t have a sense of humor).

IBM’s QCSC roadmap (Source: “Reference Architecture of a Quantum-Centric Supercomputer”)

On the middleware front, QCSC proposes a way to integrate the tensor data structures that are common in the supercomputing world with the unit of data in quantum circuits, which are ordered sequences of operations that are applied to qubits. A variety of tools have been created to optimize the compilation of quantum circuits for accuracy and speed, such as TKET, Cirq, and Qiskit. IBM proposes creating a directed acyclic graph dubbed a Tensor Compute Graph (TCG) to provide a way for developers to express workflows across both abstractions.

The QCSC application layer presents a model, or a collection of libraries, upon which developers can build domain-specific solvers that decompose problems into mixed representations of tensors and quantum circuits. These libraries automate various steps in the “application-specific circuit synthesis,” including preparation, optimization of application constraints, and finally encoding data.

Beyond these four elements, IBM discusses several other “cross-cutting” issues that need to be thought out and hopefully solved before QPUs and classical HPC can truly be integrated. This includes system monitoring and system management; orchestration in the cloud (where Kubernetes dominates); and mitigating security concerns.

IBM proposes a phased approach for its QCSC roadmap. Phase 1 involves using QPUs as co-processors, or offload engines, for HPC. In this stage, minimization of vibrations and electro magnetic interference is critical. Phase 2 heralds the age of heterogeneous quantum and classical systems, where latencies are reduced and complex hybrid algorithms can be run. Phase 3 brings tight integration of quantum and HPC systems, where hardware and software is co-designed as a unified platform from the ground up and the most challenging problems can be tackled.

QCSC is the culmination of decades of work and puts a new class of the world’s toughest challenges within reach, said Jay Gambetta, Director of IBM Research, IBM Fellow, and a 2026 HPCwire Person to Watch.

“More than four decades ago, Richard Feynman envisioned computers that could simulate quantum physics,” said Jay Gambetta, Director of IBM Research and IBM Fellow. “At IBM, we’ve spent years turning that vision into reality. Today’s quantum processors are beginning to tackle the hardest parts of scientific problems—those governed by quantum mechanics in chemistry. The future lies in quantum-centric supercomputing, where quantum processors work together with classical high-performance computing to solve problems that were previously out of reach. IBM is building the technology and systems that brings this future of computing into reality today.”

 

The post IBM Launches Reference Architecture for Quantum-Centric Supercomputing appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 10:15

My gt-s 6.5 performance treaded tire has a bulge and looks like float life is out of the stock of the soft Thundercat

Should i go with the mid?/Get the enduro soft?/or go back to the performance treaded.

Riding currently between 17-21 psi .I enjoy a ballooned up nimble tire for carving so I've liked the performance treaded but am sick of loosing traction in my back yard track.

submitted by /u/Comfortable_Cry_5345
[link] [comments]

2026-03-12 12:04
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Revelation prompts questions over Scottish fire service’s capacity to deal with large fires after 2023 cuts

Concerns have been raised about the capacity of Scotland’s fire service to deal with large fires like the one that gutted a Victorian office block in Glasgow as it emerged that the city’s only remaining fire engine with a high-reach ladder was unavailable on Sunday.

The Scottish fire and rescue service confirmed that, while standard city-based fire engines were on the scene within minutes of the first 999 call, the nearest available high-reach appliance – which adds vital additional capacity to tackle a large blaze – came from Coatbridge, an 11-mile (18km), 26-minute drive away in light traffic.

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The first week of the U.S.'s war with Iran cost around $11.3 billion, military officials told members of Congress in a briefing this week, according to sources familiar with the meeting.

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CAMBRIDGE, England, March 12, 2026 — Riverlane today published its new roadmap outlining how its technology can accelerate the arrival of utility-scale quantum computing by as much as 3-5 years. The roadmap lays out step-by-step engineering and science milestones to overcome quantum computing’s defining technical challenge: correcting billions of unavoidable data errors in real-time.

Credit: Riverlane

Quantum computers generate accumulating errors as they perform tasks, creating an avalanche effect that rapidly degrades computation. Without correcting those errors continuously and with extremely low latency, even the most advanced quantum computers fail long before they can run complex computations that match, let alone outperform, classical computers.

Real‑time QEC is therefore essential for unlocking utility-scale quantum computing — the point where quantum computers can begin to solve a broad range of commercially and scientifically valuable problems beyond the reach of today’s supercomputers.

In December 2025, a paper by Riverlane scientists was published in the journal Nature Communications showing how its Local Clustering Decoder (LCD) enabled some quantum computers to improve speed, accuracy and throughput such that they can perform one million error-free operations with 4x fewer qubits. This improvement can accelerate their path to utility-scale quantum computing by 3-5 years. Riverlane’s new technology roadmap shows how the company will build on this work to achieve similar acceleration in quantum computers using every major qubit type.

Steve Brierley, CEO and Founder of Riverlane, said: “Identifying and correcting billions of quantum errors in real-time is one of the most difficult technical challenges in all of science and the key that unlocks quantum’s future. Riverlane is solving this problem for all quantum computers. Our current and future quantum error correction technology enables any quantum computer to run vastly larger applications at far greater speed than would otherwise be possible, accelerating the industry’s route to utility scale by years.”

Riverlane’s roadmap defines successive generations of ‘fault-tolerant’ (e.g. error corrected) systems, each representing a 1,000x scale-up in the number of reliable quantum operations (‘QuOps’) the quantum computer can perform when using Riverlane’s error correction system.

Key roadmap milestones include:

  • MegaQuOp systems (one million reliable operations), expected before the end of the decade. At this stage, quantum computers are expected to surpass classical supercomputers for a narrow set of specialised problems. Early hybrid systems combining quantum processors with AI and classical computing will begin tackling scientific challenges previously beyond reach, particularly in materials science and chemistry.
  • GigaQuOp systems (one billion reliable operations), expected by the early 2030s. Representing a further 1,000× increase in computational capacity, GigaQuOp systems will support complex quantum algorithms and begin enabling a first wave of commercial quantum applications. At this scale, quantum computers will begin modelling complex molecular and physical systems with unprecedented fidelity, accelerating discovery in fields such as advanced materials, energy technologies and industrial chemistry.
  • TeraQuOp systems (one trillion reliable operations), expected from 2033 onwards. Reaching TeraQuOp scale marks the beginning of utility-scale quantum computing. At this stage, quantum systems are expected to deliver transformative advantages across multiple industries, including materials discovery, molecular chemistry, drug design and climate modelling.

The roadmap shows the evolution of Riverlane’s hardware and software products that enable this scaling.

Deltaflow, Riverlane’s real-time QEC system that sits as a layer within the quantum computing stack. Built on scalable FPGA hardware, Deltaflow works by encoding many physical qubits into a single logical qubit, then inferring and decoding errors across many such logical qubits while processing terabytes of data per second in real-time.

Deltakit, Riverlane’s open-source software development kit (SDK) that helps developers and researchers experiment with quantum error correction before deploying real-time QEC on quantum hardware. 95% of quantum computing professionals believe QEC is essential for reaching utility-scale quantum computing. Yet the vast majority cite limited training, knowledge and access to QEC resources as barriers to adoption. Deltakit fills this gap.

Riverlane’s roadmap aligns with the ambitious timelines being explored by various national quantum programmes. Riverlane has partnerships with more than twenty quantum computer makers and national labs in Europe and the US covering all major qubit types, including several performers in DARPA’s Quantum Benchmarking Initiative.

Neil Gillespie, Vice President of Applied Research at Riverlane, said: “Each generation of quantum computers opens new areas for scientific exploration, with different qubit modalities taking researchers down many different paths. At Riverlane, we’ve built one of the world’s largest teams of quantum research scientists and work closely with partners across the ecosystem to turn new quantum science into engineered QEC solutions that accelerate progress for the entire field.”

Accompanying the roadmap is a technical whitepaper published today that provides deeper detail on the science and engineering advances required at each stage of scaling. The full roadmap and technical whitepaper are available here.

About Riverlane

Riverlane is the world leader in quantum error correction (QEC), the technology that unlocks quantum computing’s promise of a new age of human progress. We partner with over 60% of the world’s quantum computer companies and leading high-performance computing (HPC) centres to solve the error problem blocking their path to ‘utility-scale’ systems that can transform multiple industries. Our real-time QEC system, Deltaflow, works with all major qubit types and includes proprietary QEC chips, decoders and a compiler. Deltakit, our software platform, helps quantum developers learn, develop and adopt QEC. Founded in 2016, Riverlane is headquartered in Cambridge, UK, and has offices in Boston in the US and Delft in the Netherlands. The company has raised over $120 million in private funding, including an $85 million Series C in 2024.


Source: Riverlane

The post Riverlane Publishes Quantum Error Correction Roadmap Targeting Utility-Scale Systems by Early 2030s appeared first on HPCwire.

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

The R&D Centre, together with the planned deployment of a Quantinuum Helios system in Singapore, aims to accelerate industrial collaboration across pharma, materials and finance, while bolstering the local quantum ecosystem and workforce

SINGAPORE, March 12, 2026 — Quantinuum, a leading quantum computing company, has announced the establishment of a new R&D and Operations Centre (the “Centre”) in Singapore, marking its formal expansion into Singapore. This important development will enable Quantinuum to deepen collaboration with the nation’s research and industrial ecosystem, together with the company’s plan to deploy its Helios quantum computer in Singapore later this year.

Ribbon-Cutting Ceremony for Quantinuum’s new R&D and Operations Centre. Credit: Quantinuum.

Singapore’s early investment in quantum has positioned the nation to capture value as quantum systems move toward real-world use. In his national budget speech last month, Prime Minister Mr. Lawrence Wong highlighted Quantinuum as an industry leader, emphasizing that Helios will enable Singaporean researchers and companies to work on meaningful projects.

The new Centre will bring together Quantinuum staff with local researchers and industry partners to co-develop commercially relevant solutions across pharma, materials science, finance, and other sectors. It will also serve to help advance Singapore’s national priorities under its National Quantum Strategy by strengthening long-term R&D capabilities and workforce development, helping position Singapore as a global hub for quantum technology.

The Centre’s establishment is supported by the Singapore Economic Development Board (EDB) and builds on Quantinuum’s close partnership with Singapore’s National Quantum Office (NQO) through the National Quantum Computing Hub. The National Quantum Strategy is developed and implemented by NQO, which is hosted in the Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR), and funded by the National Research Foundation (NRF).

As part of its commitment to developing a robust local ecosystem and support for innovation across the full quantum value chain, Quantinuum is collaborating with pioneering startups in Singapore, including Entropica, which accesses Quantinuum systems through its Startup Partner Program, and Squareroot8, with whom Quantinuum signed a Memorandum of Understanding to co-develop quantum communications applications.

Official Statements

  • Dr. Rajeeb Hazra, President and CEO of Quantinuum, said: “We believe there are three pillars to a holistic strategy for building a sustainable quantum frontier: use cases, infrastructure, and workforce. Singapore provides an exceptional foundation for this approach, and we are proud to contribute our experience in ecosystem development as we build a leading quantum ecosystem together.”
  • Dr. Marvin Lee, Country Leader for Quantinuum Singapore, who recently joined the company following senior appointments at A*STAR, EDB, and NRF, where he played a key role in shaping the National Quantum Strategy, said: “The new Centre will enable local talent and industry to work hands-on with quantum technologies, co-develop solutions aligned with national priorities, and support high-value jobs. We are committed to building long-term capability and resilience in Singapore’s digital economy.”
  • Mrs. Josephine Teo, Minister for Digital Development and Information, a key advocate of the National Quantum Strategy, joined Quantinuum as the Guest of Honour at the official opening of its new Centre, commemorated by a formal ribbon-cutting ceremony. She said: “Singapore aims to be a global hub for the development of algorithms and applications for quantum computers. We will tap on our strengths in sectors of potential application, such as finance, logistics, and pharmaceuticals. Doing so will not only benefit these industries in Singapore, but elsewhere in the world.”
  • Mr. Pee Beng Kong, Executive Vice President, Singapore Economic Development Board, said: “Quantinuum’s expansion into Singapore marks an important step in translating quantum research into real-world industry applications. The Helios system and new R&D Centre will enable local companies and researchers to collaborate on next-generation solutions in areas such as drug discovery, materials innovation, and financial optimisation. This investment will deepen partnerships across our industry and research ecosystem and build high-value quantum capabilities from Singapore.”
  • Mr. Ling Keok Tong, Executive Director of the National Quantum Office, said: “Quantinuum’s R&D Centre and the Helios deployment create opportunities for Singapore, giving our researchers hands-on access to advanced quantum hardware, and moves us closer to demonstrating real quantum advantage in drug discovery, portfolio optimisation, amongst others. This is a boost to our quantum research and talent development, as well as our efforts in building a robust quantum ecosystem.”

The new Centre represents an important step in Quantinuum’s international expansion and its commitment to collaborating with partners in key innovation hubs. Quantinuum looks forward to continued collaboration with Singapore’s research and industry ecosystem to advance the development and application of quantum technologies.

About Quantinuum

Quantinuum is a leading quantum computing company offering a full-stack platform designed to make quantum computing deployable in real-world environments. The company has commercially deployed multiple generations of quantum systems built on the well-established QCCD architecture, which it has implemented with novel designs and capabilities to achieve the industry’s highest accuracy levels based on average two-qubit gate fidelity. Quantinuum has active engagements with market leaders across pharmaceuticals, material science, financial services, and government and industrial markets.

The company has a global workforce of approximately 700 employees, including top scientists and researchers. Over 70% of its technology team hold PhDs. Quantinuum’s headquarters is in Broomfield, Colorado, with additional facilities across the United States, United Kingdom, Germany, Japan, and Singapore.


Source: Quantinuum

The post Quantinuum Establishes R&D Hub in Singapore, Plans Helios Quantum Computer Deployment appeared first on HPCwire.

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

European Commission says it will suspend €2m grant if organisers of arts festival go ahead with proposals

The European Commission has warned it will cut funding for the Venice Biennale if organisers go ahead with plans to include Russia.

The commission reiterated that any breach of ethical standards by the art festival would be treated as a violation of contract, leading to suspension of the €2m (£1.7m) agreement.

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2026-03-12 12:04
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Stream the 2019 film Ready or Not, starring Samara Weaving.

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An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: Reducing Europe's nuclear energy sector was a "strategic mistake," European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen said on Tuesday, as governments grapple with an energy crunch from the Iran war. Europe produced around a third of electricity from nuclear power in 1990 but that has fallen to 15%, she told an event in Paris, leaving it reliant on oil and gas imports whose prices have surged in recent days. Being "completely dependent on expensive and volatile imports" of fossil fuels puts Europe at a disadvantage to other regions, von der Leyen said in a speech. "This reduction in the share of nuclear was a choice. I believe that it was a strategic mistake for Europe to turn its back on a reliable, affordable source of low-emissions power." The report notes that the EU does not directly fund nuclear energy projects because all 27 member states have not unanimously supported the technology. However, von der Leyen said the Commission plans to provide a 200-million-euro guarantee from the EU's carbon market to help attract private investment in innovative nuclear technologies.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 09:48

Payment of 2% at employee-owned partnership follows sales increase to £13.4bn

Business live – latest updates

The owner of John Lewis and Waitrose has paid an annual bonus to workers for the first time in four years after underlying profits rose by 6%.

The retail group’s 69,000 employees – which it calls partners – will share £35m, the equivalent of 2% of salary, after it recorded an increase in sales and profits. The payout amounts to about one extra week of pay.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 09:43

Kremlin appearing to ramp up control over internet, as it tests new ‘whitelist’ restrictions and pushes people to state-owned app

Muscovites have been turning to walkie-talkies and pagers amid unexplained disruptions to internet services in the capital, as the Kremlin appears to ramp up control over online activity in Russia.

Users in central Moscow, as well as in St Petersburg, first reported difficulties accessing mobile internet about a week ago. Many said they were unable to load websites or apps, while some lost service altogether, leaving them unable to make phone calls.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 09:26

Sansevero Chapel Museum will host day of guided tours where visitors will be able to feel marble sculptures

The Sansevero Chapel Museum in Naples will allow dozens of visually impaired visitors to take part in a rare tactile experience, letting them touch celebrated works of art including the Veiled Christ, which is widely regarded as one of the most striking masterpieces in the history of sculpture.

On 17 March, the museum will host an initiative called La meraviglia a portata di mano – Wonder within reach – organised in partnership with the Italian Union of the Blind and Visually Impaired of Naples, offering about 80 blind and partially sighted visitors a chance to encounter the marble masterpieces.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 09:20

REGENSBURG, Germany, March 12, 2026 — HPC Gridware, a startup specializing in HPC and AI workload management solutions, has announced the release of Gridware Cluster Scheduler Version 9.1.0. This major release delivers significant advances in security, observability, topology-aware job placement, and cluster administration, building on the performance and GPU enhancements introduced in version 9.0.2.

“Gridware Cluster Scheduler 9.1.0 represents a major leap forward for enterprises running demanding HPC and AI workloads,” said Daniel Gruber, Chief Solutions Officer at HPC Gridware. “With advanced topology-aware binding, munge authentication, TLS encryption, native Prometheus and Grafana integration, and the Qontrol UI preview, we’re giving administrators the tools they need to operate their clusters more securely, efficiently, and with greater visibility than ever before.”

Key Features and Enhancements in Gridware Cluster Scheduler 9.1.0

  • Advanced Binding Framework for Topology-Aware Job Placement: A completely redesigned, scheduler-driven binding framework elevates CPU, cache, and memory-domain placement to a first-class scheduling concept. Binding units—including threads, cores, sockets, dies, L2/L3 caches, and NUMA domains—are treated as consumable resources that are detected, sorted, reserved, and assigned during scheduling. The new -b… option family replaces the legacy -binding syntax, enabling deterministic and topology-aware job placement with support for hybrid CPU architectures (performance vs. efficiency cores), advance reservations, and highly configurable binding strategies for performance-critical workloads.
  • TLS Encryption of Component Communication: Gridware Cluster Scheduler now supports TLS encryption for all internal component communication, with automatic certificate generation and renewal, configurable certificate lifetimes, and simple enablement via the installation workflow or bootstrap configuration. This enhancement strengthens the security posture of cluster environments and supports Cyber Resilience Act (CRA) compliance requirements.
  • Prometheus and Grafana Metrics Exporter: The new qtelemetry tool enters beta, providing a native metrics exporter for integration with Prometheus and Grafana. Administrators gain immediate visibility into cluster health and workload behavior through comprehensive host, job, and qmaster metrics—with a pre-configured Grafana dashboard available for rapid visualization.
  • Protection Against Denial-of-Service (DoS) Attacks: New request-rate limiting protects the qmaster daemon with fine-grained, per-source, per-user, per-host, and per-object GDI request filtering. This ensures scheduler stability under load while allowing normal high-volume operations.
  • Enhanced NVIDIA GPU Support with qgpu: Building on the GPU tool introduced in 9.0.2, this release further improves qgpu with enhanced load sensing via NVIDIA DCGM, per-job GPU accounting for power consumption and usage tracking, and streamlined prolog/epilog setup for NVIDIA runtime environments.
  • Further Improved License Management (FlexNet Integration): Automated FlexNet license-manager integration enables automatic license discovery, real-time license monitoring as a load sensor, and external license tracking—eliminating manual configuration, preventing license exhaustion, and maximizing ROI on commercial software licenses.
  • Munge Authentication Support: Lightweight and secure Munge authentication is now available, highly recommended for container-based and user-namespace environments, and configurable during installation.
  • Systemd Integration: Full systemd integration allows Gridware Cluster Scheduler to be managed as a native systemd service, with optional job execution under systemd control for fine-grained resource management including core binding, device isolation, and cgroup-based accounting.
  • Decrease Resource Requests of Running Jobs: A new qalter -when now capability enables administrators and users to free resources—such as licenses or memory—from long-running jobs, allowing other jobs to consume them without requiring a job restart.

Introducing Qontrol — REST-Based Cluster Configuration UI (Preview)

Gridware Cluster Scheduler 9.1.0 includes a preview release of Qontrol, a modern, REST-based Cluster Configuration UI that simplifies cluster management tasks. Qontrol provides an intuitive web interface for managing hosts, queues, parallel environments, user sets, projects, resource quotas, calendars, and global configuration—replacing the legacy qmon tool. With features like clone functionality for common objects and streamlined host group management, Qontrol makes it easier than ever for administrators to configure and maintain their clusters.

Broad Platform Support and SLES 15 SP7 Certification

Gridware Cluster Scheduler 9.1.0 is certified on SUSE Linux Enterprise Server (SLES) 15 SP7 and supports a comprehensive range of architectures and Linux distributions. The supported platform matrix spans x86-64, ARM64, ppc64le, s390x, and RISC-V64 architectures across major enterprise distributions including RHEL 7–10, Rocky Linux 8–10, Alma Linux 8–10, CentOS 7–9, Ubuntu 20.04–26.04, SUSE Leap 15, SUSE SLES 15, Raspbian 11–12, and FreeBSD 13–14—ensuring seamless deployment across diverse on-premise, cloud, and hybrid infrastructures.

Building on a Legacy of Expertise

While HPC Gridware is a startup, its founders bring decades of experience in workload scheduler development dating back to the 1990s. Gridware Cluster Scheduler continues to deliver exceptional performance, long-term stability, and comprehensive support for large-scale computing operations. It fully supports integration with all “SGE” (“Sun Grid Engine”) compatible interfaces, including major MPI implementations and a vast array of commercial and open-source applications used in industries such as EDA, life sciences, AI, oil and gas, and engineering.

Additional Features

  • Job Submission API Support: Robust support for job management APIs across Python, Go, Java, and C, adhering to the DRMAA standard, catering to diverse enterprise programming environments and supporting external frameworks through compatibility with standard job submission utilities.
  • Extensible Accounting in JSON Format: Standard JSON-based job resource usage accounting enables simple enterprise integration and allows configuration of custom resource metrics within the standard accounting framework, including per-job energy consumption metrics.
  • Faulty Job Loadsensor: Automatic collection and archival of job spool files from failed jobs to a configurable location, simplifying root cause analysis and debugging of job failures.
  • Long-Term Support and Services: Extensive documentation, regular updates, and a dedicated support portal for technical assistance ensure clients receive the highest level of service.

Platform Integrations

  • HPC Box Integration: Gridware Cluster Scheduler is fully integrated with HPC Box, enabling streamlined deployment and management of HPC environments.
  • EF Portal Support: Enhanced HPC and VDI user experiences and streamlined workflows through seamless integration and joint support collaboration with the EF Portal.

Security Enhancements

Version 9.1.0 introduces several security enhancements to strengthen the security posture of cluster scheduler components, including Munge authentication support for secure user and process authentication, TLS encryption for protected data in transit, and enhanced vulnerability reporting and incident response processes aligned with ENISA requirements and Cyber Resilience Act compliance.

Availability

Gridware Cluster Scheduler 9.1.0 is available now and is already in production in some of the world’s most demanding computing environments. For more information, contact HPC Gridware at sales@hpc-gridware.com or visit www.hpc-gridware.com/download-main to request a free trial.

About HPC Gridware

HPC Gridware is an innovative startup specializing in workload management solutions that optimize the performance of applications, services, and users in high-performance computing environments. Founded by industry veterans with experience building HPC workload management solutions since the 1990s, HPC Gridware enables enterprises to fully utilize and scale compute resources across on-premise, cloud, and hybrid infrastructures. Our advanced reporting and monitoring capabilities provide insights to optimize scheduling, achieve faster time-to-results, and reduce operational costs. HPC Gridware’s solutions help companies manage hundreds of HPC and AI applications and run millions of tasks every day. HPC Gridware is headquartered in Regensburg, Germany. For more information, please visit www.hpc-gridware.com.


Source: HPC Gridware

The post HPC Gridware Releases Gridware Cluster Scheduler 9.1.0 appeared first on HPCwire.

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

René Redzepi also steps down from non-profit board after accusations of physical and psychological abuse

René Redzepi, the head chef and co-founder of Noma, has announced his resignation from his internationally acclaimed Copenhagen restaurant following allegations he physically abused his staff.

Redzepi had been facing protests in Los Angeles before a four-month pop-up that launched this week. His resignation on Wednesday comes after the New York Times detailed allegations of physical and psychological abuse, including claims that he “punched employees in the face, jabbed them with kitchen implements and slammed them against walls”.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 09:10

Top US regulators met with Bill Anderson to discuss ‘supreme court action’ over glyphosate weed killer

Top US regulators met with Bill Anderson, Bayer’s CEO, last year to discuss “litigation” issues – including “supreme court action” over its glyphosate weed killer – just months before the Trump administration took a series of steps to boost Bayer’s case at the high court, internal government records show.

The 17 June meeting, between officials at the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Anderson and two other top Bayer executives, came as the Germany-based company was working to quash costly US litigation brought by tens of thousands of people who allege they developed cancer from their use of the company’s glyphosate-based herbicides, such as Roundup.

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

Advocates say bill weakens safety reviews, boosts industry influence and shields pesticide makers from legal liability

The newly proposed, Republican-led farm bill includes a range of provisions opponents say constitute a “pesticide industry wishlist” that would kill protections for humans, the environment, wildlife and endangered species, while also shielding industry from legal liability.

Among other measures, they said the bill would delay safety reviews, give industry a prominent role in determining endangered species’ protections and grant the US Department of Agriculture new veto power over health safeguards for children, farm workers and the public.

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

Microsoft doesn't want its AI to be your doctor. It wants to make you better prepared when you do see them.

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

Don't know what to watch? Dig through these Netflix movie picks that span every genre, and catch up on some Oscar nominees, too.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 08:59

Programme which supports schemes in six African countries was previously hailed as vital protection for Britain against future pandemics

A flagship health project in Africa, which UK ministers said would play a vital role in protecting Britain from future pandemic threats, is being axed due to aid cuts, the Guardian can reveal.

The Global Health Workforce Programme (GHWP) which supported development and training for healthcare staff in six African countries, will close at the end of the month, the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) said.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 08:55

SANTA CLARA, Calif., March 12, 2026 — Upscale AI has announced its plan to deliver open, scale-out Ethernet systems. These systems will be built upon industry-leading NVIDIA Spectrum-X Ethernet switch silicon and Upscale’s AI-optimized SONiC software. This enables AI infrastructure operators to deploy scalable, low-latency fabrics optimized for modern AI workloads, while supporting heterogeneous architectures across compute, accelerators, memory, and storage.

As part of this initiative, Upscale AI has joined the NVIDIA Partner Network, working closely with NVIDIA and its ecosystem on reference architectures and validated designs to accelerate the deployment of large-scale AI data center networks. Upscale AI’s planned NVIDIA-powered solutions strengthen its position as a pure-play provider of AI-native networking infrastructure.

Streamlining AI Infrastructure at Scale

To reduce complexity at scale, Upscale AI is fueling the adoption of open, interoperable Ethernet networking for heterogeneous AI clusters. This new AI fabric blueprint for NVIDIA Spectrum-X Ethernet-based systems, centered on Ethernet interoperability and designed for diverse compute environments, enables customers to deploy multi-vendor, production-grade AI infrastructure while maintaining a consistent operating model.

Upscale AI’s AI optimized, scale-out systems built on NVIDIA Spectrum-X Ethernet switch silicon are powered by an enterprise-grade, focused SONiC network operating system with end-to-end support. By integrating ASIC-native telemetry with deterministic, lossless Ethernet behavior and industry-standard networking workflows, these systems deliver predictable performance, operational simplicity, and reliability at scale.

This full-stack approach enables high-speed data movement, workload isolation, and scalable orchestration across heterogeneous environments, while preserving the flexibility of open-source management.

Upscale AI plans to bring its Spectrum-X Ethernet based scale-out systems to market later this year, targeting AI data centers building diverse, multi-vendor infrastructure. Delivered as fully supported, end-to-end solutions, these offerings combine hardware, software, and lifecycle services to accelerate deployment, simplify operations, and enable long-term AI infrastructure evolution.

“NVIDIA Spectrum-X Ethernet switch silicon is setting a new standard for Ethernet-based AI performance,” said Barun Kar, CEO of Upscale AI. “Pairing this technology with our purpose-built systems and AI-optimized SONiC software allows us to deliver the best of both worlds: an open, highly scalable and interoperable architecture with operational simplicity.”

“To lead in the trillion-parameter model era, scalability and efficiency are paramount,” said Gilad Shainer, SVP at NVIDIA. “We look forward to collaborating closely with Upscale AI as the team leverages the NVIDIA Spectrum-X Ethernet platform to help companies build the world’s most advanced open AI infrastructure.”

“As AI infrastructure evolves toward increasingly heterogeneous architectures, scalable and operationally sound Ethernet fabrics are becoming essential,” said Alan Weckel, Co-Founder and Technology Analyst at 650 Group. “By combining NVIDIA Spectrum-X Ethernet switch silicon with a full-stack approach that integrates systems, software, and support, Upscale AI is addressing a key gap in making open, scale-out AI networking practical for large scale AI deployments.”

“As scale-out Ethernet becomes the foundation for AI infrastructure, organizations are looking for solutions that combine openness with operational maturity,” said Sameh Boujelbene, Vice President at Dell’Oro Group. “By delivering a fully integrated stack built on NVIDIA Spectrum-X Ethernet switch silicon-based systems and SONiC, Upscale AI is addressing key requirements around scalability, supportability, and long-term operability for heterogeneous AI data center networks.”

About Upscale AI

Upscale AI is a category-defining pure-play Al networking infrastructure company enabling heterogeneous compute through open-standard, full-stack, turnkey solutions. Its portfolio of silicon, systems, and software is purpose-built for ultra-low-latency networking, enabling breakthrough performance and scalability across Al training, inference, generative Al, edge computing, and cloud-scale deployments.


Source: Upscale AI

The post Upscale AI Introduces Open, Scale-Out Ethernet Architecture for Heterogeneous AI Clusters appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 08:53

PALO ALTO, Calif., March 12, 2026 — PsiQuantum announced today that the company has signed a collaborative research agreement with the National Cancer Center Japan, a leading cancer treatment and research facility, to advance applications in oncology and healthcare for utility-scale quantum computers. This new agreement underscores the enormous potential for utility-scale quantum computing across the healthcare value chain, specifically in research and development, resource allocation, and patient outcomes in cancer treatment.

Under the newly formed collaboration, PsiQuantum will work alongside the National Cancer Center Japan to advance fault-tolerant quantum algorithm development and collaborate with the National Cancer Center Japan and other leading pharmaceutical companies in Japan in the development of clinically relevant quantum applications. The partnership will also utilize PsiQuantum’s software suite, Construct—a secure, end-to-end platform for designing, analyzing, and optimizing algorithms for fault-tolerant quantum computing.

“PsiQuantum is proud to work alongside the National Cancer Center Japan as we explore what utility-scale quantum computing will be able to deliver in designing new treatments for the benefit of researchers and patients,” said Sam Pallister, PsiQuantum’s Vice President for Quantum Applications. “Once deployed, utility-scale quantum computers will accelerate research and development that transforms how we develop new medicines—and partnerships like these are critical for making sure providers are equipped to take full advantage of this technology.”

“We are thrilled to partner with PsiQuantum on leveraging quantum computing technology to address some of the most pressing challenges in healthcare,” said Dr. Takayuki Yoshino, Director for the Department of Global Oncology at the National Cancer Center Hospital East in Kashiwa, Japan. “Together, our teams are poised to conduct innovative research and unlock new solutions at the intersection of pharmaceuticals, biotechnology, and quantum computing.”

Today, the research and development process for new pharmaceutical treatments is long and expensive, and current computing methods struggle to produce meaningful or reliable outcomes that expedite a treatment’s time-to-market. Utility-scale quantum computers promise to deliver transformative results across the healthcare industry by simulating molecular systems with unprecedented accuracy, scale, and speed. By executing chemically accurate simulations faster, fault-tolerant quantum computers can accelerate drug discovery, lower research and development costs, and help providers tackle real-world healthcare challenges.

About PsiQuantum

PsiQuantum was founded in 2016 and is headquartered in Palo Alto, California. The company’s mission is to build and deploy the world’s first useful, fault-tolerant quantum computing systems. PsiQuantum’s photonic approach enables it to leverage high-volume semiconductor manufacturing and existing cryogenic infrastructure to rapidly scale its systems. Learn more at www.psiquantum.com.


Source: PsiQuantum

The post PsiQuantum and National Cancer Center Japan Partner to Accelerate Drug Discovery for Healthcare appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 08:45

NEW YORK, March 12, 2026 — Qrypt, the quantum security company that eliminated encryption key transmission, today announced it has brought its BLAST Protocol end-to-end encryption and quantum-entropy key generation to the NVIDIA Jetson edge AI platform, including Jetson Orin Nano and Jetson Thor. The integration extends Qrypt’s quantum-secure encryption from NVIDIA BlueField DPUs in the AI factory to Jetson endpoints at the edge, giving organizations a single security architecture from the data center to deployed robotics, autonomous systems and critical infrastructure.

BLAST is a peer-reviewed cryptographic protocol developed by Qrypt Chief Cryptographer Yevgeniy Dodis, a fellow of the International Association for Cryptologic Research and a professor at New York University. Conventional encryption relies on a key-distribution architecture, originally designed for 1970s telecom networks, that binds encryption keys and encrypted data together in the same channel. Replacing the underlying algorithm, as post-quantum cryptography does, does not resolve this structural weakness, because the new algorithms may themselves need to be replaced as cryptanalysis advances.

BLAST takes a fundamentally different approach, replacing the key-distribution architecture itself by generating identical encryption keys independently at each endpoint from quantum entropy. No key ever crosses a network, and the keys are never correlated with the data they protect. The protocol also automates key provisioning, rotation and lifecycle management across large-scale deployments, enabling organizations to secure entire fleets of edge devices without rebuilding their existing infrastructure.

Edge AI is accelerating into real-world, safety-critical environments such as robotics fleets, autonomous systems and remote industrial monitoring, pushing sensitive data and AI models outside the protection of the data center. Many of these devices will remain deployed for a decade or more, making them prime targets for “harvest now, decrypt later” attacks in which adversaries capture encrypted data today with the expectation of breaking it once quantum computing matures.

“AI is moving from the data center to the edge, and the security requirements are moving with it,” said Denis Mandich, Qrypt co-founder and CTO, who spent 20 years in the US Intelligence Community focused on national security and advanced technology development. “Organizations building on Jetson need encryption that’s quantum-ready on day one, not something they have to retrofit after deployment.”

As the only quantum security company in the NVIDIA Inception program, Qrypt integrates across the full NVIDIA platform stack. Each Jetson integration is built on a custom Yocto Project kernel tailored to the target device. For Orin Nano, Qrypt developed a kernel upgrade from Linux 5.15 to 6.6 to meet modern security requirements ahead of official NVIDIA support. These foundations are paired with Qrypt’s CNSA 2.0 and NIST-aligned cryptography stack. Qrypt’s hardware quantum random number generators are also NIST ESV certified, utilizing quantum entropy sourced through exclusive licensing agreements with Oak Ridge and Los Alamos National Laboratories.

“The same level of encryption that protects the most sensitive operations in the intelligence community should be available to every organization deploying AI at the edge,” said Kevin Chalker, CEO and co-founder of Qrypt, a former CIA operative who founded the company to democratize intelligence-grade cryptography. “With BLAST on NVIDIA Jetson, a robotics fleet or a critical infrastructure operator gets the same quantum-secure protection as a national security mission, from a single architecture that scales from the edge to the AI factory.”

BLAST Protocol is now available on NVIDIA Jetson Orin Nano and Jetson Thor through Qrypt’s early access integration program. Organizations interested in deploying quantum-secure encryption across Jetson-based edge environments can learn more at qrypt.com/contact.

About Qrypt

Qrypt is the only company in the world to eliminate the need for encryption key transmission. Using quantum entropy sourced through exclusive licensing agreements with Oak Ridge and Los Alamos National Laboratories, Qrypt generates identical encryption keys simultaneously at multiple endpoints, so no key ever crosses a network. The company’s BLAST Protocol provides end-to-end encryption, automated key lifecycle management and post-quantum compliance for AI infrastructure, critical networks and edge deployments across the NVIDIA platform stack. Founded by former intelligence community officers Kevin Chalker and Denis Mandich, Qrypt is headquartered at One World Trade Center in New York City.


Source: Qrypt

The post Qrypt Brings Quantum-Secure Encryption to NVIDIA Jetson appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 08:43

The honor recognizes Koller’s leadership in collaborative European initiatives to increase HPC expertise and impact.

March 12, 2026 — Dr. Bastian Koller, Managing Director of the High-Performance Computing Center Stuttgart (HLRS), has been named one of twelve “People to Watch 2026” by HPCwire.

The selection focuses on Dr. Koller’s leadership roles in international collaborative projects like EuroCC, CASTIEL, and FFplus, EuroHPC Joint Undertaking Centers of Excellence like EXCELLERAT, and the AI Factory HammerHAI. These efforts have contributed to expertise development in high-performance computing and artificial intelligence across Europe, HPC and AI uptake in industry and SMEs (small and mid-size enterprises), and initiatives to improve Europe’s digital sovereignty.

HPCwire is a leading publication covering the international high-performance computing industry. For 24 years, its “People to Watch” program has recognized HPC industry professionals who are driving innovation and increasing the benefits of high-performance computing for society.

For more information and an interview with Bastian Koller, click here.

More from HPCwire


Source: HLRS

The post HLRS Managing Director Bastian Koller Named to HPCwire ‘People to Watch 2026’ List appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 08:42

SUNNYVALE, Calif.March 12, 2026 — Synopsys, Inc. has announced advancements across its leading hardware-assisted verification (HAV) portfolio, including new hardware platforms and capabilities to support the ever-expanding demand for AI chip verification from the data center to the edge. Synopsys HAV platforms, powered by the company’s unique software-defined capabilities, set new performance, scalability, and use case benchmarks for verifying the world’s most sophisticated multi-die and AI chips amidst compounding design complexity and time-to-market requirements.

AI chip verification complexity is escalating rapidly as large language models continue to double in size roughly every four months, and interface data rates advance at a 2x rate every three years. Simultaneously, edge AI architectures are driving aggressive throughput, latency, and power‑efficiency targets that further expand the design and validation workload. To keep pace, the industry requires HAV solutions to support broader application coverage and run quadrillions of verification cycles, enabling first‑time‑right silicon and a seamless ability to integrate heterogeneous AI systems.

“As AI-driven systems become more complex, verification must scale just as quickly. Hardware-assisted verification is no longer optional. It is critical to meeting aggressive time-to-market goals and ensuring silicon readiness,” said Salil Raje, Senior Vice President and General Manager, Adaptive and Embedded Computing Group, AMD. “FPGA-based emulation and prototyping play a central role in that effort by accelerating system bring-up and enabling earlier software development. Our collaboration with Synopsys reflects that focus. Through joint optimization of Synopsys ZeBu with the AMD Vivado software stack, and by leveraging AMD EPYC processors for compute acceleration, we are reducing compile times and helping customers move to accurate system models faster.”

“As AI becomes more pervasive across almost every industry and products are now workload-optimized and silicon-powered, building high confidence early that the workloads are running to spec on the silicon under development is critical,” said Ravi Subramanian, Chief Product Management Officer at Synopsys. “Our software-defined, hardware-assisted verification solutions deliver continuous innovation. They are a powerful force multiplier to scale verification productivity and meet the growing demand for pre-silicon development across industries.”

The latest advancements across Synopsys’ software-defined hardware-assisted verification portfolio, include:

Breakthrough performance and capacity for the AI era: The latest software-defined updates and modular HAV are available across the ZeBu and HAPS platforms. Of note, with these updates, the industry’s highest capacity-scalable emulation platform, ZeBu Server 5, supports complex designs to meet the demands of mega designs supporting data center AI training and inference, GPU, custom accelerators, and networking IPU/DPU workloads. Modular HAV for HAPS enables the largest prototypes for software development, with further improvements for compute, storage, and bring-up capabilities.

New HAPS and ZeBu platforms: The new HAPS-200 12 FPGA and ZeBu-200 12 FPGA systems address the complexity and high-performance requirements for data center-sub-system, mobile, client, server, consumer, and edge AI applications. They deliver 2x higher capacity compared to previous 6 FPGA platforms utilizing the flagship AMD Versal Premium VP1902 adaptive SoCs, offering EP-Ready Hardware-enabled configurability between prototyping and emulation. Synopsys also introduces the new HAPS-200 1 FPGA platform as a desktop system ideal for IP verification and software bring-up using Synopsys Interface Prototyping Kits.

“As NVIDIA’s AI platforms have become software‑defined to meet rising performance and scalability demands, verification must evolve in the same way,” said Narendra Konda, Vice President, Hardware Engineering at NVIDIA. “Synopsys’ software‑defined hardware‑assisted verification and the new HAPS‑200 12 FPGA systems are accelerating our system‑level verification and validation, helping us deliver complex AI platforms on aggressive schedules. And, Synopsys modular hardware-assisted verification enables deeper collaboration across our ecosystem.”

Software-defined HAV capabilities extend system lifetime value: Continuous software improvements deliver compounding performance gains, increased debug productivity, as well as additional use case capabilities for both new and installed systems. The Synopsys HAV portfolio supports new, industry-first Hardware-Assisted Test Solutions, test automation capabilities that allow teams to stress corner cases for processor, memory, and I/O subsystems as well as full-system coherency validation and observe system behavior under realistic workloads in emulation long before silicon is ready. For mixed-signal and system-level designs, Real-Number Models (RNM) emulation enables fast, scalable abstraction of analog behavior within digital-centric verification flows for faster software bring-up. For safety-critical and high-reliability designs, new fault emulation capabilities enable scalable fault injection and analysis across RTL simulation, emulation, and prototyping.

“Verifying hardware for our highly anticipated rack-scale AMD Helios solution – marked by massive AI scale, complex subsystems, and robust software stacks – demands scalable and versatile verification platforms,” said Alex Starr, Corporate Fellow, AMD. “The Synopsys software-defined, HAV capabilities with EP-Ready Hardware are critical to how we perform CPU, GPU, and AI subsystems verification as well as full-system validation. Teams can also cover an expanded number of use cases in the pre-silicon phase, encompassing analog, digital, and software design verification using Real-Number Models (RNM) in emulation. As well, the flexibility to reconfigure and reuse hardware across projects and move seamlessly between emulation and prototyping as AI designs grow in both physical size and software stack volume are essential to delivering the high-performance, interoperable AI infrastructure at scale needed to meet the world’s growing AI demands.”

About Synopsys

Synopsys, Inc. (Nasdaq: SNPS) is the leader in engineering solutions from silicon to systems, enabling customers to rapidly innovate AI-powered products. We deliver industry-leading silicon design, IP, simulation and analysis solutions, and design services. We partner closely with our customers across a wide range of industries to maximize their R&D capability and productivity, powering innovation today that ignites the ingenuity of tomorrow. Learn more at www.synopsys.com.

The post Synopsys Introduces Software-Defined Hardware-Assisted Verification to Enable AI Proliferation appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 08:41

TORONTO, March 12, 2026 — Xanadu Quantum Technologies Inc., a leading photonic quantum computing company, has announced that it has entered negotiations with the Government of Canada and the Government of Ontario for support for Project OPTIMISM, an initiative to establish advanced semiconductor and photonic manufacturing capabilities for the quantum technology supply chain in Canada. Subject to due diligence and the execution of definitive agreements, up to $390 million in combined government support is under consideration.

Under Project OPTIMISM, Xanadu would aim to establish new domestic capabilities for heterogeneous integration, photonic integrated circuit packaging, wafer-level semiconductor test and measurement, and quantum module assembly. By building this infrastructure in Canada, the initiative is expected to significantly advance Xanadu’s roadmap toward utility-scale quantum computing and future quantum data-center infrastructure, while offsetting a substantial portion of the capital required to develop that next phase of quantum computing deployment.

“Project OPTIMISM reflects a bold vision for building the advanced manufacturing capabilities required to support the next generation of quantum technologies. We believe this investment, upon finalization, will unlock a major milestone for Xanadu and for Canada’s quantum ambitions. With the proceeds expected from our pending transaction alongside the government’s support, we will be well-positioned to fund the infrastructure required for large-scale quantum computing,” said Christian Weedbrook, Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Xanadu. “We are grateful for the opportunity to explore working with the Government of Canada and the Government of Ontario as we continue discussions toward advancing this initiative and strengthening Canada’s leadership in quantum innovation.”

The project would help position Canada and Ontario at the forefront of advanced photonics, semiconductor innovation, and quantum manufacturing by addressing key gaps in the emerging quantum technology supply chain and enabling the development of next-generation photonic quantum systems. In addition to supporting quantum computing, the infrastructure and expertise developed through the initiative could contribute to broader advances in areas such as telecommunications, AI hardware, sensing, and other emerging semiconductor-driven technologies.

The proposed support remains subject to the completion of due diligence and the execution of final agreements.

About Xanadu

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


Source: Xanadu

The post Xanadu Explores C$390M Government-Backed Quantum Manufacturing Project in Canada appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 08:34

Dyshan Best later died after having to wait 10 extra minutes for next ambulance, according to Connecticut investigation

A man who was shot by police and later died had to wait 10 extra minutes for an ambulance after an officer having a “mild anxiety attack” took the first one that arrived at the scene, according to a newly released state investigation.

Dyshan Best, 39, was shot in the back last year as he fled from officers in Bridgeport, Connecticut. A report released this week by the state’s inspector general found that the shooting was justified because Best had a gun in his hand and the officer pursuing him had reasons to fear for his own safety.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 08:30

The feature allows users to interact conversationally with the app, finding places such as a charging station, or available tennis court.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 08:21

Oil prices again rise over $100 a barrel as Iran threatens long ‘war of attrition’. Plus, San Francisco slashes air pollution

Good morning.

Iran dramatically escalated its strategy of striking civilian infrastructure and transport networks across the Gulf on Wednesday, attacking commercial ships and targeting Dubai’s international airport as US and Israeli warplanes launched new waves of strikes.

Who has borne most of Iran’s strikes? More than two-thirds of Iran’s attacks have been on the UAE. Dubai, a center of global finance and international tourism, is facing an existential threat as foreigners flee.

What do we know about the US defense secretary’s attitude toward Iran? A Guardian review of Pete Hegseth’s books, speeches and broadcasts revealed he has voiced extreme antipathy towards Iran for years.

Where is the bill now? The House has approved a version of the bill – but the Senate does not have the votes to do so. It would need 60 votes to move forward because of the filibuster rule.

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

Criminals using artificial intelligence tools to take over mobile, bank and online shopping accounts, says Cifas

Criminals are increasingly exploiting AI technology to take over people’s mobile, banking and online shopping accounts, the UK’s leading anti-fraud body has warned.

Last year, a record number of scams were reported to the national fraud database, fuelled by AI, which allows for large-scale deception on “industrialised” levels, according to Cifas, the fraud prevention organisation.

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

Campaigners say people unlikely to ‘look favourably’ on package for Wael Sawan, which rose to £13.8m in 2025

The chief executive of Shell saw his pay jump more than 60% to almost £14m in 2025 despite a slump in profits at the oil company and prospects of rising pump prices related to war in the Middle East.

The package for Wael Sawan, who took the top job in 2023 and has refocused the company on fossil fuels, rose from £8.6m in 2024 to £13.8m in 2025.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 08:07

Whether the Iran war-linked leap in the price of gas will give a shot in the arm to EV sales will depend on a variety of factors, experts say, so the answer isn't clear-cut.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 11:44

Golestan Palace in Tehran, a world heritage site, and buildings in historic city of Isfahan harmed, despite Unesco sending coordinates

The governor of the historic Iranian city of Isfahan has accused the US and Israel of a “declaration of war on a civilization” as heritage sites across the country suffer damage in their bombing campaign.

The most serious confirmed damage to date has been to Tehran’s Golestan Palace, dating back to the 14th century, and the 17th-century Chehel Sotoon Palace in Isfahan.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 08:04

Exclusive: Lab tests discover ‘new form of insider risk’ with artificial intelligence agents engaging in autonomous, even ‘aggressive’ behaviours

Robert Booth UK technology editor

Rogue artificial intelligence agents have worked together to smuggle sensitive information out of supposedly secure systems, in the latest sign cyber-defences may be overwhelmed by unforeseen scheming by AIs.

With companies increasingly asking AI agents to carry out complex tasks in internal systems, the behaviour has sparked concerns that supposedly helpful technology could pose a serious inside threat.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 08:01

Samsung delivers modest but meaningful upgrades to the Ultra's design, cameras and battery. And yes, the phone is packed with new AI features -- and most of them are actually pretty useful.

2026-03-12 08:04
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The most powerful nation in the world is now being led by a rogue president who rejects its longstanding values

As we reach the 13th day of the war in Iran – with death and destruction rippling throughout the Middle East – it’s important to bear in mind where the real failure lies.

So far, nearly 2,000 people have been killed, including 175 Iranian schoolchildren and seven US service members. At least 140 US service members have been wounded, several critically. The final tallies on both sides will almost certainly be far higher.

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

Experts warn younger people not to dismiss symptoms such as rectal bleeding as diagnoses rise for those under 50

Colorectal cancer is now the leading cause of cancer death in the US for people under 50, according to a new analysis from the American Cancer Society, prompting both experts and those in that age group with the disease to warn others to take certain symptoms seriously.

Becca Lynch, who works in cyber security in Denver, Colorado, was diagnosed with advanced colon cancer last year, when she was just 29. At first, she assumed her symptoms couldn’t be anything serious: “I chalked it up to stress,” she said.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 07:57

We look at the 14th regular season before it kicks off on Friday with two expansion sides: Boston Legacy and Denver Summit

The National Women’s Soccer League’s 14th regular season starts on Friday with a rematch of last year’s semi-final between the Portland Thorns and Washington Spirit. From there, 16 teams will compete in a 248-match season, with eight teams qualifying for the playoffs.

We look at four themes that may define the year.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 07:53

As pennies begin to disappear, states are grappling with a "rounding" problem for cash purchases that would have included them in the past.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 07:50

Proposed package comes after regulator finds ‘serious and unacceptable breaches’ in how company operates

Welsh Water is to pay a proposed £44.7m after the industry regulator found “serious and unacceptable” breaches in the supplier’s sewage and network services.

Ofwat said Dŵr Cymru Welsh Water failed to properly operate, maintain and upgrade its wastewater network to ensure it could cope with levels of sewage and wastewater, and did not have adequate processes in place or oversight by senior bosses.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 07:50

Hacker group Handala claimed responsibility for attack that caused ‘global disruption’ to Stryker Corporation’s systems

An Iran-linked group said it hacked a US medical company, causing “global disruption” to its systems, in retaliation for the bombing of the Minab school in Iran, in an attack seen as widening the Middle East into the cyber realm.

Handala, a hacker group, claimed responsibility for the attack on Wednesday on the Stryker Corporation, which makes medical devices and is based in Michigan. It affected thousands of employees using the company’s Microsoft systems.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 07:43

Vast release of emergency crude reserves fails to quell mounting fears about supply crunch, rattling markets

Oil prices have again topped $100 a barrel as widespread Iranian attacks on energy facilities in the Middle East overshadowed a vast release of government reserves.

As Donald Trump vowed to “finish the job” and press ahead with the US-Israel war on Iran, the country’s regime stepped up retaliatory strikes on economic targets across the region.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 07:42

Court makes finding pending final hearing that trafficking victim ‘likely to suffer harm to his mental health’ if returned

A high court judge has halted the removal of an Eritrean trafficking victim to France under the UK’s “one in, one out” scheme, after raising concerns that forcibly sending him back could cause him harm.

The controversial deal, under which one asylum seeker who arrives in the UK on a small boat is forcibly returned to France in exchange for another being brought over legally, was launched last summer. As of 5 March, 370 people have been brought to the UK legally and 354 sent back to France. The aim is to deter small boat crossings, but thousands of asylum seekers have crossed the Channel since the scheme started. So far this month, 1,200 people have made the perilous journey.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 07:40

The Senate will vote again on a measure to fund the Department of Homeland Security as an impasse over how to reform immigration enforcement agencies has grown ugly, nearly a month into a partial shutdown.

2026-03-12 08:04
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my kid tried the GT and it simply refuses to acknowledge he's on. he tried different positions on the sensor but to no avail. while some positions do work, the GT stops within 1 or 2 seconds afterward.

so which model is better for this 8years old?

submitted by /u/Curious_Party_4683
[link] [comments]

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 07:07

The report raised questions about what took place after the shooting, which left Dyshan Best bleeding with fatal injuries.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 07:00

In week two of Rhik Samadder’s diary, our resident AI skeptic put his reputation on the line

Every writer I know is in despair at the prospect being replaced by AI. Many of them say they never use it on principle; I know all of them do.

So this week, as part of my AI diary, I’m conducting the forbidden experiment in plain sight. I’m going toe to toe with ChatGPT as a creative writer. Can it truly match me, and might it replace me? Let’s settle this.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 07:00

The world of soccer throws up no shortage of questions. Today, Graham Ruthven endeavors to answer three of them

Sergiño Dest’s World Cup is at risk. The 25-year-old limped off with a hamstring injury during PSV’s Eredivisie win over AZ Alkmaar on Saturday, immediately starting a countdown clock in the minds of US men’s national team supporters who now fear Mauricio Pochettino’s first-choice right back could miss this summer’s tournament. Dest said on social media he hopes to be back by the end of the season, but nobody truly knows when he’ll return.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 07:00

Florida investors featured in Guardian investigation claimed they lost most of their life savings after a financial adviser put their money into ‘alternative’ assets

In a victory for everyday investors, arbitrators have awarded $3.8m to 13 Florida seniors who claimed a financial adviser squandered their retirement money by plowing it into risky investments.

The award comes after the Guardian highlighted these investors’ losses as part of an investigation into dangers that so-called “mom and pop” investors face at a time when the Trump administration has thrown its support behind Wall Street’s efforts to sell them more higher-risk “alternative investments”.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 07:00

Dentists explain why you shouldn't rinse right away when brushing your teeth

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 07:00

The answer to rising food costs isn't eating less of what you love -- it's making more of it at home. Here are seven kitchen tools worth every penny.

2026-03-12 08:04
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A Pew Research Center survey found that only 53% of U.S. adults went to a movie theater in the past year, while 7% said they've never seen a movie in a theater at all. "The findings reflected a domestic box office still fighting to regain its footing since the COVID-19 pandemic, when ticket sales collapsed 81% in 2020 due to theater closures," reports Variety. From the report: In 2025, moviegoers in the U.S. and Canada bought 769.2 million tickets, less than half of the all-time peak of roughly 1.6 billion tickets sold in 2002, according to data from Nash Information Services. However, an August 2025 study field by NRG/National Research Group showed that 77% of Americans ages 12-74 went to see at least one movie in a theater in the previous 12 months. Box office revenue peaked at an inflation-adjusted $16.4 billion in 2002, and annual ticket revenue held relatively steady through the 2000s and 2010s before falling to under $3 billion in 2020 when theaters closed for months. Last year, U.S. theaters sold just over $9 billion worth of tickets, per media analytics firm Comscore. The number represents a recovery, but nowhere near a full one, as ticket sales have been lagging around 20% below pre-pandemic levels.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 07:00

Fortunes of the country’s 22 billionaires doubled in last five years, reaching unprecedented collective wealth of $219bn

Scrunched between luxury apartment buildings and a lush gated community, the neighborhood of Santa Lucía Reacomodo in Mexico City is a working-class pocket of real estate. Electrical wires tangle above cinder-block houses, stray cats slink down narrow streets, debris piles up on the pavement.

María del Socorro Corona, 79, arrived here decades ago, back when it was just a cactus-covered hillside. The two-bedroom turquoise house she built with her now-deceased husband is crammed with bags of clothes and knick-knacks she sells at a weekly market.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 06:34

Despite what online forums might tell you, including ChatGPT, you can't "speed up" an old TV.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 06:23

The general staff said that it used Storm Shadow missiles, which are produced jointly by Britain and France, to hit a plant that makes microchips and high-end electronics.

2026-03-12 08:04
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President delivered a vague and contradictory forecast on the future of the war in Middle East. Plus, how to recognize a psychopath

Good morning.

Donald Trump has said the war in Iran is “very complete, pretty much”, as the economic toll of the joint US-Israeli operation rises, disrupting global oil trade and threatening to engulf the Middle East in a regional war.

Any unintended consequences so far? Among others, it has probably reinforced North Korea’s decision to build a nuclear arsenal.

Do we know yet who bombed the Minab school? Trump blamed Iran without evidence. All the actual evidence indicates the US was responsible.

This is a developing story. Follow the latest updates here.

Who did X say were the most prolific state actors? Russia, followed by Iran and China.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 06:14

President Trump says he'll end the war soon, when he wants to, as Iran hits ships in and near the Strait of Hormuz and warns U.S.-linked banks will be next.

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

If regime holds, control of enriched uranium may be ultimate measure of US-Israeli success, insiders say

Israel did not have a realistic plan for regime change when it attacked Iran, multiple Israeli security sources have said, with expectations that airstrikes could lead to a popular uprising having been driven by “wishful thinking” rather than hard intelligence.

Iran has survived nearly two weeks of bombing raids and the assassination of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and Trump is publicly contemplating ending the increasingly costly war.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 06:01

Meal kits cost more than buying groceries outright -- but some are a better deal than others. We priced out recipes from seven leading kits against supermarket equivalents to find the best value in 2026.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 06:01

The U.S. and Israel had a "flawed assumption" that the death of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei would lead to the collapse of the regime, said an expert on the region.

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

Under new Taliban laws, a husband is allowed to beat his wife as long as it is not done with ‘obscene force’, which the woman must prove in court

The shocking level of physical violence against women permitted under the Taliban’s new laws has been revealed this week by the case of a woman in northern Afghanistan, who said she was beaten with a cable wire by her husband and told by a judge: “You want a divorce just because of that? … A little anger and a few beatings won’t kill you.”

Farzana* said her husband was quick-tempered and often resorted to beating her. He regularly humiliated her and called her “disabled”, she said, because her right leg was slightly shorter than the left. She had tolerated the abuse for the sake of their children, but one evening, she said, his violence went too far.

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

A lot is riding on the success of the latest multiplayer online shooter from Halo creator Bungie, a DayGlo spectacular that whisks players to a far-off planet mired in an endless battle for resources

In rare quiet moments playing Marathon, you may find yourself overcome by the iridiscently pretty planet Tau Ceti IV. This fictional world seems to radiate a chemical glow: powdery pink skies and lurid green vegetation fill the screen alongside supermassive architecture emblazoned with ultra-stylish, neon graphic design. Yet enjoy the scenery for a split second too long and you might catch a bullet, causing your character to bleed an icky blue substance. In such moments, the camera locks – meaning you must stare down at their unceremonious expiry. Marathon’s considerable beauty is matched only by its clinical brutality.

The road to Marathon’s release has been long and contentious. This extraction shooter – so-called because you must do as much shooting and looting as you can in a given level before making an escape – was first shown off in 2022 with a ravishing trailer (below). Among many startling images, it showed tiny robotic bugs, a little like silkworms, weaving a synthetic body into existence. The game, made by Halo and Destiny creator Bungie, looked weird in a way that blockbuster shooters rarely do, causing excitable stirrings among both shooter stalwarts and art-game aficionados.

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

The differences between what Trump and Netanyahu want out of this war are starting to show and complicating how it will end

When the US and Israel launched an attack on Iran to start a war that is now entering its third week, it was the start of something unprecedented; the first joint Israeli-American war. Even though the US has long been a close military ally of Israel, this has never happened before. Unlike last year’s “12-day war” where Israel launched a war that the US joined near the very end with a single set of strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities, this Israeli-American war on Iran is deeply coordinated at the operational level between both belligerents day in and day out.

That is precisely why clear, shared objectives between Washington and Tel Aviv will be crucial for the US to exit this war with a political victory and not just the tab for tons of destruction across the region with little significant change. Much of what we have seen so far suggests strongly that that is not the case; Israel and the US have different goals here, if they even really know what their goals are, and because of this no clear endgame can be envisioned even as the costs of the war mount.

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

Comments in books, speeches and videos shed new light on defense secretary’s personal commitment to war on Iran

The US defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, has expressed a violent antipathy towards Iran for years in books, Fox News broadcasts, educational videos and a 2018 speech to an Israeli media conference in Jerusalem, a Guardian review has revealed.

In a 2020 book, for example, Hegseth wrote that Iran’s leaders were “actively seeking the military means – especially nuclear weapons – to bring the West to its knees”. And in a 2017 video for PragerU, the hard-right media platform, Hegseth described Iran as “America’s mortal enemy”.

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

If you're looking for a cam with a spotlight, floodlight or other illumination, I've tested top models to see how they perform.

2026-03-12 08:04
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Why Should Delaware Care?
The Leipsic River — running through a small, Kent County town bearing the same name — has for generations been a taxiway out to the Delaware Bay for swaths of the state’s watermen to catch crabs, oysters and different kinds of fish. But as watermen who have called the river home for years watch their industry change over time, some have begun thinking about how to preserve it for future generations.

Craig Pugh sat inside his pickup truck, his eyes trained on the bending Leipsic River before him.

A river that, despite its tranquil nature, bore an outsized impact on Pugh’s life. 

The Leipsic River runs through a 180-person fishing town bearing the same name, about 7 miles northeast of Dover. Pugh has called the town home for each of his 63 years. He even served as mayor for a time. 

Many in Delaware have likely never even driven through the small town off Route 9, especially since the Route 1 highway allowed traffic to virtually bypass it. For those who make the trek, it’s likely to eat at Sambo’s Tavern, the local favorite crab spot that many argue is the best in Delaware for crustaceans. 

For generations, watermen — commercial fishermen who often cycle between crabbing and oystering depending on the season — have called the Leipsic River home. 

And Pugh is among them. He has worked the water, using the Leipsic River as a taxiway to and from the Delaware Bay to collect crabs and oysters, for nearly five decades. 

But he has seen the industry change over the years, from rising operating costs to increased regulations. And he is not alone. 

As Pugh, and some other veteran watermen, think about their own futures, they also are looking for ways to preserve Delaware’s commercial fishing industry for the next generation.

“We’re all connected to this goddamn river,” Pugh said on a sunny day last December. 

A life on the water

Founded in the late 1700s, the town was named Leipsic by 1814 because of its muskrat pelt industry — taking the Americanized name from Leipzig, Germany, another fur trading center of its time. Its successes as a river town grew to include a grist mill, canneries, shipyard, docks and hotels in the 1800s, but it declined in the next decade as roads grew farther inland.

But the Leipsic River, Pugh explained, is one of the deepest running in the state. Its depth makes for a far more stable route to the bay during low tides than some of the state’s other waterways.

Pugh’s godfather first put him to work on a crabbing boat when he was 12 years old. He never looked back.

“I believe that boy is old enough to do a day’s work,” Pugh remembered his godfather telling his dad.

Pugh’s story is familiar among watermen of his generation. 

Leonard “Limbo” Voss — his uncle gave him the nickname — is a fifth-generation waterman. He also started working on a boat when he was “young enough to still be playing Little League,” he said. All three of his brothers are watermen, as well.

Leonard “Limbo” Voss talks with his crew of fellow watermen as they make their way out the Delaware Bay on Dec. 8, 2025, in search of oysters to harvest. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY ETHAN GRANDIN

Limbo did not grow up in Leipsic — he is from nearby Smyrna. But he has docked his boat in town on the river for nearly 30 years. And while the river has been a stable home for Limbo and other Delaware watermen like him, the commercial fishing industry it supports has been marked by adapting to change.

Pugh and Limbo both began their careers primarily as crabbers. Both men also stand by their assertion that Delaware Bay crabs far exceed in quality their more well-known Chesapeake Bay “blue” brethren.

But while crabbing gave both men their start, oyster dredging was once the name of the game on the Leipsic River, Pugh said.

That changed in the 1950s and ‘60s, when parasitic diseases that plague oysters, like MSX and Dermo, forced watermen to diversify their income. Pugh said that refocused the industry in Leipsic around crabbing.

The town’s location on the mouth of a river centrally located along the shore of the Delaware Bay also makes it a prime spot for crabbers, who work up and down the coastline, to dock their boats, Limbo noted.

But crabbing, like oystering, proved volatile.

In the winter of 1976 into 1977, the Delmarva peninsula plunged into a sustained, months-long freeze. It was so cold the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Agency rated it the “coldest winter on the East Coast since maybe the founding of the Republic,” according to local author and historian Jim Duffy.

Pugh recalled that winter, saying it was “catastrophic” to the blue crab population. 

Limbo, who has worked on boats since he was about 10 years old, said 1977 is one of the only two years he has not worked since. 

“You’re feast and famine,” Pugh added.

A morning out on the bay

It was quarter past 6 a.m. on a frigid morning last December. Limbo was already out on the Leipsic River, heading toward the bay. 

The sun rises over the bank of the Leipsic River on Dec. 8, 2025. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY ETHAN GRANDIN

Accompanying him were a slew of other watermen – all of whom happened to be his relatives: His son, Zach; his brother, Bird (whose given name is Burton, but that uncle had a penchant for nicknames); and his cousin, Joe. The crew hoped to harvest the last remaining oysters of the season before it became too cold to make the trek out to the bay. 

But Limbo also had another goal to accomplish.

After making it out of the river, Limbo drove down the coast and picked up a group of post-graduate students studying at the University of Delaware’s College of Earth, Ocean, and Environment in Lewes. While Limbo and his crew hoped to catch some oysters, the students would collect data on the ones not yet ready for harvest.

Out on the bay, the water was rough. Rougher than Limbo had expected. 

Waves rocked his 20-foot-long boat to one side and then back again. Water crashed into the cabin’s windshield. 

Gone was the man who casually steered through the Leipsic River’s winding waters earlier that morning, charismatically holding court from his captain’s chair and telling stories of gambling woes and wins, boat mechanics, climate change and evolution.

Now, Limbo was focused. His eyes shifted between the wide open bay in front of him and the boat’s back deck, where the crew had assembled in anticipation of the real work beginning.

He decided to abandon harvesting for the day. No need to stay out in that mess longer than necessary, he said.

But he wanted the students to check on the oysters’ growth — to collect the data they needed. So he dropped the dredge — a large, chainlink, basket-like structure with metal teeth on one end — into the murky water. 

When the dredge reached the floor of the bay, where the oysters grow on “beds” of accumulated mud and shell, he slowly drove the boat forward, dragging the dredge with it. 

After a few moments, the dredge, now filled to the brim with slimy brown and gray colored shells, rose out of the surf. 

Zach, Limbo’s son, stood on a platform at the rear of the boat, grabbing the full dredge and pouring out the oysters onto a conveyor belt. A smile was plastered across his face.

The students stood in a line, picking at the shells as they moved down the conveyor belt and throwing them back over the side of the boat like a scene out of “I Love Lucy.”

Occasionally, Limbo shouted questions out the back window of his cabin: Have the students found any oysters? How do they look? How big are they? 

Limbo explained later that he works with the school on some of its marine science programs, hoping to ensure the bay’s oyster beds remain sustainable for future generations.

It takes anywhere from four to six years for an oyster to mature, he said. So cataloguing the size of oysters in certain beds can help determine their age and how much longer they should remain in the bay to grow and reproduce.

“We’re trying to build something up,” Limbo said. “And you can’t build something up if you’re constantly tearing it down.”

An eye on the future

While Limbo works to ensure the environment for watermen is on solid ground, he and Pugh also know that building a sustainable industry requires more.

Pugh has seen Leipsic lose some of its ties to the fishing industry as longtime residents – many of whom were watermen themselves, or came from families with a history of working on the water – either die or move away.

And beyond the town itself, the industry is tougher now, Pugh said. He pointed to increased regulations on watermen, like commercial license requirements that are often capped, meaning only a certain number of people can hold them at a time. 

Limbo also said rising costs for fuel, bait and labor have been coupled with largely stagnant sale prices for crabs and oysters, meaning there is less profit to be made.

Essentially, there is no longer room for error for the younger watermen trying to make their way in the industry. 

“I don’t think there is a shortage of younger guys,” Limbo said. “It’s just that throwing somebody in the water and saying, ‘Sink or swim,’ is tough. And it’s not like it was when I started doing it. You could make mistakes, and you didn’t hurt [financially].”

To help combat this, Pugh has taken a younger waterman, 22-year-old Trevor Fox, under his wing. Pugh has taught Fox the hard skills of fishing, crabbing and oystering, but he also has tried to instill in Fox a sense of business acumen.

Craig Pugh, a lifelong waterman and Leipsic resident, has a home full of art and memorabilia about the town — and the commercial fishing industry — that raised him. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY TIM CARLIN

“And now it’s time for you kids to learn from our mistakes,” Pugh said. “And hopefully, you’ll be able to retain what we’ve done, and then build on that.”

At 63 years old, Pugh said he is ready to pass on his decades of knowledge to the next generation. He has come to learn, he said, that life — especially life on the water — is about cycles and seasons. 

For now, it seems, the seasons are starting to change.

The post In Leipsic, watermen have toiled for generations to dredge the deep appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

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

About half of middle-income households said they have delayed a major life event because of medical costs, new Gallup polls found.

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

Why Should Delaware Care?
With the lowest average elevation in the country, Delaware is in line to be among the most impacted states by sea-level rise. Coastal communities are at the forefront of those flood risks, and homeowners there will be faced with increasing questions of how much flood resiliency is needed.

Simone Reba said she was worried about the future of her southern Delaware vacation home when she began seeking solutions to the increasing risks posed by coastal storms and floods.

She didn’t expect her curiosity would get her sued.

The nine-member condominium association board that manages her Mallard Lakes community filed a lawsuit last fall against Reba, seeking an injunction that would gag her from asking public officials for funding or other support for flood repairs or resiliency measures for the coastal development. 

The Mallard Lake Community Association claims Reba was speaking on behalf of the board-governed group at county meetings, in emails with government officials, and on her personal website. 

And they say she has no right to act as a formal representative of the community or of the board, which is responsible for the community’s shared resources including its roadways, stormwater infrastructure, and most of the buildings’ exteriors. 

Reba’s attorney wrote in recent court filings that anything she might have said ”falls within the scope of core political speech.” 

“This lawsuit is nothing more than an attempt to limit Reba’s public participation in the political process and stifle her First Amendment rights,” the attorney, Daniel McAllister, wrote.

The dispute highlights growing tensions in Delaware’s low-lying coastal communities as residents grapple with worsening flood risks tied to sea-level rise and coastal erosion. It also sets up an early test of a new state law designed to protect people from lawsuits that they claim are meant to silence public speech.

Simone Reba | PHOTO COURTESY OF SIMONE REBA

Reba’s quest for solutions to her condo’s flood risks — which are expected to increase as climate change exacerbates sea-level rise along the East Coast — is now just one thing causing her stress.

With the lawsuit and the association’s messaging to neighbors, Reba says her reputation has also been damaged. The Virginia resident and retired federal government employee said that even if a judge dismissed the case, she worries “it’ll be difficult to live that type of life I wanted.” 

“We bought it as a vacation home, and it’s supposed to be fun,” she said. “It’s supposed to be relaxing.”

While Reba doesn’t make a reputational counter-claim in the court case, the condo association argues that its reputation has been damaged by what they called Reba’s “continued misconduct.” 

The association claims Reba’s efforts “eroded much of the groundwork” it had previously made with elected officials. 

But Reba notes that the association also stated in court documents that it has found “no readily available, financially feasible solutions to address tidal water flow into the community.”

“They’re basically saying, ‘We’re done,’” Reba said. “What harm did I do if they’re not even trying to get government funding?”

Association leaders particularly point to a website Reba created to house her research into flood risks and potential solutions for the community that sits just west of Fenwick Island. 

They claim “misinformation” from the website could potentially drive down property values, alleging in their lawsuit that at least one local real estate agent was led to believe the condominium buildings need to be raised “at considerable cost” to avoid future flood problems.

The debate over raising the buildings — and who should bear that cost  — has pitted Mallard Lakes residents against the board before. It first became a point of contention over a decade ago, after Hurricane Sandy damaged several buildings in the neighborhood and left residents arguing in court over who was responsible for the fixes.

In its October lawsuit, the condominium association, which operates like an HOA, also demanded that Reba add additional disclaimers to her website noting that it is not endorsed by the association. As of Tuesday, the website does include such disclaimers.

Are public comments protected?

Reba insists that her website is fact-based. And she claims in court documents that the lawsuit amounts to an attempt to silence her.  

But Mallard Lakes’ case also relies heavily on public comments Reba made during one Sussex County Council meeting in July 2025. During the meeting, she identified herself as an individual condo owner and asked the elected officials to consider setting aside $500,000 in funding for a watershed-wide engineering study or a smaller feasibility study to identify solutions to future flooding.

Her lawyer has argued that Reba has “every right to speak at public meetings” and to ask public officials to help the community pay for flood mitigation.

“This is true even if Reba has no authority to speak on behalf of the Association, or if the expenditure of any requested money on Mallard Lakes common areas would require ultimate approval from the Association,” Reba’s attorney said. 

Leaning on a law passed last year to further protect free speech in the First State, Reba’s attorney is asking the court to dismiss the case entirely and also award Reba punitive damages for a suit they believe should have never been brought in the first place. 

Last year’s amendments to the Uniform Public Expression Protection Act aim to shield individuals from being sued for speaking publicly – particularly during public meetings or to elected officials.

Living that ‘salt life’

Mallard Lakes is no stranger to water. 

Water regularly flows under some of its buildings, including the 11-unit dwelling that houses the condo Reba and her husband, Jeff, bought in September 2023 for $337,000. They had dreamed of owning beachfront property, and bought the unit sight-unseen, after falling in love with the community during previous trips there with friends.

Mallard Lakes officials acknowledge that water flows under its buildings, but the community association’s board vice president, Chris Reutershan, said structures in the 61-acre community haven’t suffered any significant flooding damage since Superstorm Sandy in 2012. 

Reba argues that her building’s 3-foot pilings mean water sometimes comes right to the first floor. 

“We were told by the owner, no, there’s no water issues,” Reba said. 

But when she witnessed the water flowing beneath the porch, Reba was surprised to hear there was nothing to be done about it. That’s when she started doing some research on her own.

Mallard Lakes was essentially designed to welcome the tides — the community is nestled into Delaware’s southernmost coast with Assawoman Bay to the south, canals and Little Assawoman Bay to the north, and several smaller ponds scattered throughout the community. A handful of the buildings were constructed on raised pilings.

According to publicly accessible flood mapping tools provided by the Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control, which rely on mapping data that is over a decade old, much of Mallard Lakes lies less than 10 feet above sea level. Its proximity to the coast makes it even more vulnerable during tropical storm or winter nor’easter conditions.

The community includes 47 buildings with 477 condominium units and is mostly in a floodplain surrounded by natural and manmade waterways. Located just north of Route 54, construction was focused in two phases between 1986 and 1992.

Since that time, sea level as measured in Lewes has risen about 7.25 inches, said Delaware State Climatologist Kevin Brinson.

Based on current trends, which show that sea level rise is accelerating, the area is expected to see that same amount of sea level rise in a shorter timeframe, Brinson said.

“In other words, another 7.25 inches by 2040,” Brinson said. 

Those estimates do not account for impacts from erosion on shorelines near the community, or a replaced drainpipe under Route 54 that the HOA in court documents said reportedly has allowed for larger volumes of water to flow between one of the ponds and Assaswoman Bay, increasing water levels in and around Mallard Lakes by adding an estimated 6-8 inches of tidal change.

“I think of Mallard Lakes as one of the area’s canaries in the coal mine, kind of signaling the past ills of poor development choices coupled with and coming up against the flood risks that are so inherent in that area and that are only going to be getting worse,” said Danielle Swallow, coastal hazards specialist with Delaware Sea Grant, who is familiar with this unincorporated area of Sussex County.

Todd Fritchman, of Envirotech, an environmental consulting firm in southern Delaware, said he was not even sure how Mallard Lakes was permitted to be built in the first place. 

“They’re clearly in the wetlands,” Fritchman said, recalling a walk-through assessment of the property years ago. “Any corrective actions that would be done would be Band-aids…relative to the entire situation.”

From the coast to the courtroom

This also is not the first time the association has been pitted against displeased residents in court over water-related drama.

In the wake of Superstorm Sandy, water damaged about two dozen units in four buildings. Delaware was spared a direct hit from the 2012 storm, but it still grazed the coast with destructive wind and waves that caused more than $9 million in damages in Delaware, according to the National Weather Service.

Several years after the storm, a handful of residents sued the condominium association and others after being told they would each have to pay tens of thousands to address an alleged lack of repairs that rendered some units legally uninhabitable

In that 2016 Chancery Court case, former Vice Chancellor Sam Glasscock III denied the association’s attempts to gag individual condo owners from speaking out about the litigation and storm damage.

At the heart of that legal dispute were discussions about the need to elevate some of the buildings — at the time, to the tune of about $400,000 each. That solution, like all other previous attempts to address rising tides, proved too complex and too costly. 

“Eventually, all litigation from Superstorm Sandy was settled and all units repaired,” lawyers representing the association wrote in court documents in Reba’s case.

Documents provided by Reutershan, the association board’s vice president, note that the post-Sandy litigation, not the damages from Sandy itself, were what negatively impacted the community’s property values at the time.

“Once the suit was settled, the property values have risen to values equivalent to similar properties located along the Delaware Coastline (adjusted for age, quality and location),” a printed out presentation from the board reads. “For most of the last three years, few units have remained on the market much longer than a month or so and [Mallard Lakes] sales continue to reach record highs.”

Now the question of whether to raise the buildings is being raised again. 

On Saturday, Mallard Lakes residents will be asked to vote on whether they want to raise their buildings for further flood protection, explore the possibility of a tidal flood gate on the Route 54 drainage pipe. And, if so, if they’d be willing to privately foot the bill for those efforts.

Reutershan said the price tag to elevate buildings would run $75,000 to $112,000 per unit owner this time around.

“It will be tabulated right then and there, so we will know what the answer is,” he said. 

Meanwhile, Reba’s pending motion to dismiss the association’s case against her will be heard this April. But by that time, she may no longer even own the Mallard Lakes condo.

Reba said she and her husband listed their vacation home for sale this spring.

“It breaks my heart,” she said. “But in my former life, I was also a risk manager. Every time we see the next big nor’easter coming that way, we get nervous.”

The post A condo owner asked the county for flooding help. Her HOA sued appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 05:57

TV star announces birth of Ozzy Matilda Osbourne on social media, alongside image of cuddly bat

Jack Osbourne, the only son of Ozzy and Sharon Osbourne, has honoured his late father by naming his baby daughter after him.

Jack, 40, announced the birth of Ozzy Matilda Osbourne on social media alongside his wife, Aree, whom he married in 2023. The newborn Ozzy was pictured lying next to a cuddly bat toy: another reference to his father, who famously bit the head off a real bat during a 1982 concert believing it was made of rubber.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 05:30

As Jason Beaman recounts his long slog searching for mental health therapy last year, he sounds defeated.

The first therapist assigned to him by the Department of Veterans Affairs told him at their initial meeting that she was leaving the agency. A few months later, his second therapist told him she was also leaving. An appointment with a third counselor was canceled with no explanation.

These were huge setbacks for the 54-year-old veteran of the Navy and Army Reserve. Nearly a decade ago, a spiral of depression and anxiety left him homeless and living on the streets of Spokane, Washington. A VA social worker threw him a lifeline, helping him apply for benefits, find housing and get into therapy.

He still needs mental health care, he and his physician say. But bouncing from therapist to therapist has left him exhausted.

“I just quit. I don’t want to mess with the therapist anymore,” Beaman said. He spends much of his time now alone playing video games or walking with his dogs.

A seated man, wearing a blue checkered shirt and blue jeans, ruffles the fur of a dog’s neck.
Beaman, a veteran of two military branches, gave up searching for a new therapist after attempting to meet regularly with several different providers after his move to Nebreska. He eventually met with a therapist in January, after months of false starts.

After President Donald Trump returned to office last year, his administration announced plans to overhaul the VA, one of the largest health care systems in the country, to deliver “the highest quality care.”

“This administration is finally going to give the veterans what they want,” VA Secretary Doug Collins said last March, as the department announced tens of thousands of job cuts.

But in interview after interview, veterans across the country told ProPublica that one year into the second Trump administration it’s become more difficult to get treatment, as hundreds of therapists and social workers have left the VA. Many of them have not been replaced.

While front-line mental health care workers were largely exempted from the job cuts, hundreds chose to leave anyway. Some cited disagreements with new administration policies, including several targeting the LGBTQ+ community, while others, facing diminished ranks, said they simply could no longer provide proper care.

In January, the department had around 500 fewer psychologists and psychiatrists than it had at the same time last year, ProPublica found.

Although the losses represent a relatively small number — about 4% of psychologists and 6% of psychiatrists — they are notable for an agency that has long struggled with inadequate mental health staffing. For years, administrators have listed psychologists in particular among their most “severe staffing shortages.”

Mental health is not the only area where the VA has lost medical staff. The agency has eliminated more than 14,000 vacant health care positions across the system, according to data first reported by The New York Times.

Data published by the VA going back to May 2023 shows that the agency was adding psychologists every quarter until Trump’s return to the White House. Then, the trend flipped, with departures outpacing hires in all four quarters of last year.

Compounding the losses, the agency’s cohort of social workers, some of whom are licensed therapists who provide mental health counseling, declined by nearly 700 staffers over the year.

To better understand the departures and their impact on veterans’ care, ProPublica interviewed dozens of former and current VA staffers as well as patients.

ProPublica also examined a previously unreported internal employee exit survey, which included hundreds of responses from mental health care workers.

“Mental Health is understaffed, burned out, and there is not enough mental health care for the Veterans who need the services,” wrote one New York-based former employee, according to the records.

“Support is no longer there to provide ethical and good care for these Veterans,” wrote a second, based in Indiana. “Scheduling issues are incredibly high due to poor staff hiring and retainment.”

Yet another wrote that the number of new patients seeking help at their Kansas facility was far too high, making it “unethical to accept more veterans in our clinics.”

Many of those vacated positions have gone unfilled due to a yearlong hiring freeze, which was only lifted in January.

After Hiring Spree Under Biden, VA Lost Mental Health Staff When Trump Returned to Office

The losses under the new administration amount to 4% of the agency’s psychologists, 6% of psychiatrists and 3% of social workers.

Bar chart showing the change in the number of providers — social workers, psychologists and psychiatrists — from the third quarter of 2023 to the end of 2025 on the x-axis and the number of providers from negative 400 to 800 on the y-axis. The trend starts with a peak of about 700 social workers and around 200 psychologists added in the third quarter of 2023, followed by a steady decline across all groups, dropping below zero by the first quarter of 2025 with social worker losses eventually dipping around 400.
Note: Quarters are labeled by calendar, not fiscal, year. Source: VA workforce dashboard, internal data.

Echoing the exit survey, many who remain on staff describe crushing workloads as they struggle to fill the gaps. Those reached by ProPublica, who agreed to speak only under the condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation, said that as staffing losses mount, they’ve seen their patient loads increase, while administrators shorten their appointments and pack more and more clients into group therapy sessions.

“It was always bad,” said one VA psychologist, referring to staffing at a facility in Arizona. “And now it’s at a breaking point.”

The therapist described being stretched so thin that schedulers replaced some one-on-one sessions with online group sessions that included as many as 35 veterans. The therapist said despite that they were still overloaded with individual sessions and had to limit each one to as little as 16 minutes.

The VA declined ProPublica’s request to interview an official familiar with its mental health programs. In an email, VA spokesperson Peter Kasperowicz accused ProPublica of attempting to mislead the public by “cherry picking issues that are limited to a handful of sites and in many cases were worse under the Biden Administration.”

He argued that the agency’s performance around mental health has improved since Trump took office, citing more than 15.5 million direct mental health care appointments in the most recent fiscal year (Oct. 1, 2024, to Sept. 30, 2025), a 4% increase from the previous fiscal year. He did not say whether those additional appointments were for individual therapy. Kasperowicz also noted that the administration has opened 25 new health care clinics.

After ProPublica shared its findings and the names of veterans who would appear in this story, the agency reached out to several to inquire about their care and offer help. The veterans told ProPublica they remained skeptical that the VA would consistently respond to their mental health needs.

As the ranks of mental health care providers at the VA have shrunk, the department has proposed shifting billions of dollars into community care, a program in which veterans obtain health care via private physicians and other providers. But the program has been stretched thin amid the loss of administrative staff and ongoing issues finding private therapists, ProPublica found, with veterans encountering longer delays as they seek help.

In December, patients waited an average of around 25 days just to receive a confirmed appointment date, nearly four times the VA’s stated goal for scheduling community care.

Collins has disputed assertions that there’s a systemwide problem with access to mental health care. “And if you need emergency care, or are in a crisis situation, you have immediate care,” he told a Senate committee in January.

He said the VA’s average wait time for new patients seeking mental health care appointments was less than 20 days, the number it has set as its goal. But other VA officials have acknowledged problems with access.

“There are wait times at some facilities that are beyond what our expectations and standards would be,” Dr. Ilse Wiechers, assistant undersecretary for health for patient care services, told senators at a separate hearing.

ProPublica’s analysis found that wait times fluctuate dramatically, and fast access to care can depend on location. For example, the small clinic near Beaman’s home in rural Nebraska, with its comparatively small staff, saw appointment wait times for new mental health clients climb as high as 60 days in December and drop to 20 days in February, according to the VA figures.

But a closer look at the entire VA system reveals that a large number of facilities are struggling. In early February, more than half of its hospitals and clinics reported one-on-one mental health appointment wait times for new patients that were longer, and in some cases far longer, than the VA’s 20-day goal, according to a ProPublica analysis of data published on the agency’s website.

In late December, Beaman said he received an email from the VA saying he’d been approved for additional therapy. He was able to meet with a therapist in January — after about six months of waiting and going more than a year without a session. In the interim, he said, he relied on prescription medications, video games and his therapy dogs to keep him steady. Still, his anxiety worsened, he said, and now he often feels so uncomfortable around others that he rarely leaves his home except to walk his dogs while wearing headphones so no one speaks to him.

Kasperowicz, the VA spokesperson, wrote in his email to ProPublica that Beaman had “more than a dozen mental health visits at VA between late 2024 to mid-2025 through the Cheyenne VA clinic” in Wyoming, which is about an hour-and-a-half trip for Beaman. Kasperowicz declined, however, to say whether those appointments involved the one-on-one mental health counseling Beaman had requested. Beaman said he only had two sessions for one-on-one therapy in 2025 — meetings that were truncated because of the therapists’ impending departures.

Kasperowicz also said that one of Beaman’s appointments didn’t occur because he had “moved.” Beaman, however, said he has lived at only one address in Nebraska.

Experts warn that the exodus of mental health care providers from the VA has hurt the agency’s ability to meet veterans’ unique needs.

“VA psychologists are best in class,” said Russell Lemle, former chief psychologist for the San Francisco VA Health Care System and a senior policy analyst at the Veterans Healthcare Policy Institute. “They have research and training and decades-long experience” working with veterans. 

“When you lose them, the veterans are the ones who pay the price,” he said.

A pink plastic figurine of a soldier pointing a firearm rests on a green marble table.
Michelle Phillips, a Navy veteran, received a pink toy soldier at a Department of Veterans Affairs event.

“It Could Mean Life or Death”

Michelle Phillips, 56, a Navy veteran from Ohio, saw her therapist in remote sessions once a week for two years for her PTSD. Then, in December, Phillips’ therapist told her that she was quitting the VA because of Trump’s policies.

The change, Phillips said, “could mean life or death.”

Years of depression have led Phillips to isolate. Inside her small home about an hour outside of Columbus, the city where she enlisted in 1988, the walls are filled with reminders of brighter times — photos of family members and military paraphernalia from her time in the service. Her only real company is an aging dog, and she almost never leaves.

Her virtual therapy sessions were “the only contact that I had coming in my home to talk to me every week,” she said. “And I would sit and just wait for that appointment.”

Phillips said the counselor requested that the VA continue her one-on-one remote counseling with a new therapist — which totaled about four hours per month. The agency initially offered her virtual group therapy, an option that her previous therapist dismissed as inappropriate. In the third week of January, the VA told Phillips she could have an appointment for one-on-one sessions in March. She later declined the appointment because she didn’t want to face starting over with a new therapist.

Phillips, who is disabled and doesn’t work, said she will try to pay for one-on-one therapy out of pocket with the same therapist who left the VA but will likely only be able to afford one, possibly two, sessions a month.

James Jones said his close connection to his VA therapist, who was trained in combat trauma, helped him control his PTSD-fueled episodes of anger and alcohol abuse. Now the 54-year-old Gulf War veteran, who lives in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina, has seen his care cut in half after his therapist told him colleagues had quit and he had to pick up the load.

His sessions went from an hour every week to half an hour every two weeks. “I can tell it’s rushed,” said Jones, a maintenance mechanic with the National Park Service. “I’m not able to work through something.”

Others have found it difficult to establish care in the first place.

Last summer, George Retes, 26, who left the Army in 2022 after serving for four years, was driving to work in Camarillo, California, when he was suddenly caught between immigration agents and protesters. Retes said the agents broke his car window, pepper-sprayed him and detained him for days. The incident, which ProPublica detailed last fall, left him shaken and exacerbated the PTSD that was first sparked after he faced missile attacks in Iraq, Retes said. (The Department of Homeland Security has not responded to ProPublica’s questions about Retes.)

Following his release, Retes found himself withdrawing from the world. “I wasn’t texting anyone or talking to anyone,” he said. “Not even my kids.”

A few weeks after being arrested, Retes sought help from the VA clinic in Ventura, California, where staffers told him they’d be in touch for an appointment. But Retes said he never heard back, even after he called to follow up. His incident with Immigration and Customs Enforcement was in July. Retes is still waiting.

According to data on the VA’s website, new patients seeking individual therapy at the Ventura clinic had to wait an average of two and a half months in early February.

The VA said it could not discuss Jones’ or Retes’ accounts because the veterans declined to waive their privacy rights.

Strains on the System

The VA overhaul has also taken a toll on mental health providers, many of whom quit after spending years at the agency.

Natalie McCarthy worked as a social worker and mental health therapist for a decade before quitting the VA in May. Like many others working in mental health, she did all of her work remotely; from her Ohio home she saw vets mostly from the Washington, D.C., area.

But McCarthy and her colleagues faced pressure to return to agency offices after the VA issued new restrictions on telehealth workers. She was uneasy about the prospect of having to conduct sessions in makeshift spaces like conference rooms filled with other counselors — a situation that raised widespread ethical concerns over the legally mandated privacy for medical conversations.

Complicating matters, McCarthy said, were Trump’s orders eliminating diversity and equity initiatives within the federal government. She said she began to worry that therapists would no longer be able to discuss the subject of race with their patients or document patients’ thoughts on the topic in their session notes. So she quit.

“I was angry that veterans were in that position,” said McCarthy, who started her own practice. “I was angry that I was in that position. It just felt like an unnecessary thing to have to navigate.”

A woman wearing a maroon button-up shirt and blue pants sits in an office chair near a desk with a laptop and notepad.
Psychologist Mary Brinkmeyer quit working with the VA last February after her superiors began enforcing the Trump administration’s anti-diversity agenda.

Psychologist Mary Brinkmeyer found herself in a similar situation. She started at a VA facility in metropolitan Norfolk, Virginia, in 2022 after seeing a posting for an LGBTQ+ care coordinator, which oversees support programs for LGBTQ+ veterans and helps navigate their care. She quit last February after her superiors began enforcing Trump’s anti-diversity orders.

Brinkmeyer said she was told to stop conducting training for physicians and other staff on best practices for caring for LGBTQ+ patients. Then, she said, staff members were ordered to remove all LGBTQ+ paraphernalia from the facility such as rainbow flags, identity-affirming literature and program brochures. Also, an edict was issued directing people to use the bathroom of their gender assigned at birth, Brinkmeyer said.

That’s when the VA stopped feeling like a welcoming place. “There was a failure of empathy,” she said.

The VA did not respond directly to either Brinkmeyer’s or McCarthy’s accounts of how the administration’s policies had impacted the quality of mental health care.

Much like those seeking mental health care directly from the VA, veterans referred to community care are also struggling to secure appointments.

Gwyn Bourlakov, 58, enlisted in the Army National Guard in 1998 and over the following 21 years she was awarded a Bronze Star for her service in the invasion of Iraq, climbed the ranks to become a major and won a Fulbright scholarship to study Russian history.

Today, after a series of professional setbacks, Bourlakov works as a museum security guard. Lingering PTSD from her time in the service, coupled with deep bouts of depression over her current circumstances, have kept her seeking the VA’s help despite long-standing frustrations with its services.

After she began looking for a new therapist last year following a move to Colorado, officials at her local VA clinic in Golden said at her intake appointment that its in-house providers were swamped and could not see new patients for at least six months.

She asked if she could get help through community care, but staffers told her that the system was so overwhelmed that it would be a “nightmare,” she recalled. Veterans living in eastern Colorado waited 57 days on average to get a community care appointment scheduled in December, VA figures show.

Bourlakov said she tried to get help through a separate VA clinic, but when her phone calls went unanswered, she finally gave up.

“I don’t have time for all of that,” she explained. “It’s just like shouting into the wind.”

A woman with short graying hair, wearing glasses and a checkered shirt, sits on a pink sofa with a cat and blue curtain behind her.
Gwyn Bourlakov gave up looking for care through the VA after a series of unanswered calls and attempts to find help went nowhere. After inquiries by ProPublica, VA authorities reached back out to offer her assistance.

Following inquiries from ProPublica, VA officials reached out to Bourlakov and other veterans interviewed for this story to offer additional assistance with their mental health care. The calls left several frustrated, saying it shouldn’t take questions from the media for them to get help from the VA. 

Though skeptical, Bourlakov decided to move forward. She was contacted by three separate VA representatives in February asking about her health and if she needed help scheduling a therapy appointment. 

The earliest telehealth appointment they offered was not until June, she said. The next available in-person slot was not until July. Bourlakov opted for June.

The post Veterans Who Depend on Mental Health Care Keep Losing Their Therapists Under Trump appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-12 05:17

Ofgem licence means firm can replicate Texas setup of powering homes, businesses and EVs

Elon Musk’s Tesla has won approval to supply electricity to households and businesses across Great Britain, as the tech billionaire expands his energy ambitions.

The energy regulator, Ofgem, has formally granted Tesla an electricity supply licence, enabling it to provide electricity to domestic and business premises in England, Scotland and Wales.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 05:00

The Hawks decided to pay tribute to Atlanta institution Magic City. The league soon found itself dealing with a narrative it doesn’t understand fully

Manufactured outrage will have to serve as the theme for what had been the most hotly anticipated game of the season.

For those who may have missed it: last month the Atlanta Hawks announced plans for a 16 March promotional event called Magic City Night. The name wasn’t just a nod to that evening’s opponent, the Orlando Magic; it was meant to honor the civic institution in the shadow of the Hawks’ arena – Magic City, America’s most famous strip club.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 05:00

The Trump administration is backing off a rule aimed at stopping commercial space companies from leaving rocket bodies in Earth’s orbit, a practice that experts say could threaten public safety and telecommunications.

The Federal Aviation Administration first proposed the measure in 2023, under the Biden administration, in hopes of curbing the growing junkyard of debris circling the planet. It would have required companies like Elon Musk’s SpaceX to safely remove such spacecraft within 25 years of launch, saying they “pose a significant risk to people on the ground due to their mass and the uncertainty of where they will land.” 

Officials cited examples such as a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket reentering Earth’s atmosphere over the Pacific Northwest in March 2021, which created streaks of lights across the night sky and dropped a tank on a farm in Washington state.

SpaceX and other companies, however, criticized the proposal, citing concerns that included its cost, and in January, the FAA nixed the rule, saying the agency needs more time to research it. 

“FAA intends to review the space launch industry cost inputs and expectations with respect to debris mitigation activities,” the FAA said, adding it would also look at the agency’s authority to enact such regulations. In response to questions for this story, an agency spokesperson reiterated that rationale.

The White House did not respond to requests for comment about the withdrawal.

The action is a concession to the commercial space industry and follows moves by President Donald Trump’s administration last year to roll back regulations meant to protect the environment and the public during rocket launches. “The Trump administration is committed to cementing America’s dominance in space without compromising public safety or national security,” a White House spokesperson said last summer. 

Critics, however, said the government was missing an opportunity to control debris — and endangering the public in the process. Rockets can be hundreds of feet tall and typically are made up of multiple parts, known as stages. After any lower stages fall away, the upper stage continues on into space to deploy payloads such as satellites or to perform other missions.

“Instead of requiring companies to responsibly dispose of these upper stages, the U.S. has decided to roll the dice on a person or a plane getting hit by falling debris,” said Ewan Wright, a Ph.D. candidate at the University of British Columbia and junior fellow at the Outer Space Institute, a nonprofit that supported the rule. 

Wright’s research with colleagues found a 20% to 29% chance that debris from a reentering rocket would kill at least one bystander sometime in the next decade.

No deaths have occurred from falling space debris yet. But minor injuries have been documented, including a boy in China whose toe was broken and a woman who was hit on the shoulder in Tulsa, Oklahoma. In 2024, a piece of metal from the International Space Station crashed through the roof of a home in Naples, Florida.

The explosions of two SpaceX Starship megarockets last year that rained debris over the Caribbean brought new attention to the danger to airplanes as spacecraft reenter the atmosphere — sometimes in an uncontrolled way. After ProPublica wrote about the Starship mishaps, the FAA issued a new warning to airlines, saying that rocket launches could “significantly reduce safety” and that pilots should prepare for the possibility that “catastrophic failures” could create dangerous debris.

Space junk also adds to the threat, experts said, for both the space program and daily life on Earth.

If the growing debris field above the planet is left unchecked, the FAA said in 2023, it could clutter orbits used for human spaceflight and increase the chance of collisions causing damage to satellites that support communications, weather forecasting and global positioning systems. The FAA said at the time that the rule was an attempt to bring the evolving commercial space industry in line with national practices that are followed by NASA and with international guidelines. 

Wright said that about half of all launches leave the rocket’s upper stage in orbit. There, it can pose a risk to crewed space stations and interfere with astronomers’ research before crashing to earth. 

In the last three years, U.S. rocket companies, including SpaceX and United Launch Alliance, have abandoned 41 upper stage rockets in orbit, Wright said. Thirty-three are still there now. “Abandoning truck-sized upper stages in orbit is an irresponsible act,” he said.

In response, SpaceX pointed to a statement posted on its website, saying it has been working to reduce — and ultimately eliminate — space debris left behind by Falcon, which regularly deploys new Starlink satellites. 

“In 2024, 13 out of 134 upper Falcon 9 stages remained on-orbit after successful payload deploys,” the company said. “In 2025, we reduced this number to three out of a total of 165 launches.”

United Launch Alliance, a joint venture of Lockheed Martin and Boeing, said through a spokesperson that it disposes of its upper stage rockets safely “by placing them in a graveyard orbit or conducting a controlled reentry where most of the stage disintegrates over the remote, deep ocean.” 

A piece of space debris has fallen to Earth every day on average for the last 50 years, the FAA said when it proposed the rule. Last year, an eight-foot, 1,100-pound ring from a rocket fell on a remote Kenyan village, and fragments of a Falcon 9 were found in a forest, warehouse and field in Poland.

The FAA’s proposal would have required launch companies to submit a plan for how they would remove debris prior to launch and would apply to any pieces of debris larger than five millimeters. Acceptable options for disposing of used rockets that couldn’t burn up in the atmosphere would include pushing them out to a higher “disposal” orbit or navigating them to splashdown in a “broad ocean area,” the FAA wrote.

In comments responding to the proposal, commercial space companies challenged the FAA’s authority to implement the rule and said they were concerned about issues including cost. SpaceX said the proposal “grossly underestimates the costs and impacts of the proposed rule and overstates the benefits.”

Experts worry that a debris collision could create a chain reaction that would be hard to stop, rendering large areas unnavigable — a phenomenon known as Kessler syndrome. In 2009, a U.S. satellite and a defunct Russian satellite collided above northern Siberia, generating more than 2,300 pieces of debris large enough to be tracked.

The problem complicates SpaceX’s work, too. As the New Scientist reported in January, the company’s Starlink satellites regularly maneuver to avoid colliding with objects such as other satellites or space debris — performing about 300,000 such actions last year alone.

The post Amid Crowded Skies, FAA Kills Rule Aimed at Regulating Space Junk appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 05:00

Crystalline silica, which is released into the air when workers cut and polish engineered stone for kitchen countertops, can scar human lungs beyond repair.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 04:33

Prime minister makes claim as accusations mount that he is using row with Ukraine for political gain in run-up to elections

Hungary’s prime minister, Viktor Orbán, has accused Ukrainians of plotting to attack his family, as an increasingly bitter standoff between Kyiv and Budapest continues.

Orbán and his allies appear to be using the dispute for maximum political gain before the election due next month that could end the 16-year rule of his nationalist government.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 03:25

The fox is said to be ‘settling in well’ after mischievous 3,400 mile journey from Southampton to New York

A sly fox slipped on to a cargo ship and travelled from Southampton to New York, according to officials at Bronx Zoo.

The zoo, which is looking after the animal, said it appears healthy after early examinations.

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

Health justice charity Medact says data-sharing potential could be used for UK version of US immigration raids

Palantir’s NHS contract opens the door to the Big Brother-style data-sharing that Reform UK would use for a version of US immigration raids, health bosses have been told.

Palantir Technologies – the data analytics company founded by Peter Thiel and Alex Karp – won a £330m NHS England contract to deliver the Federated Data Platform in 2023.

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

GFiber (a.k.a. Google Fiber) and Astound Broadband announced that they plan to merge into a deal backed by infrastructure investor Stonepeak Infrastructure Partners. The resulting company will be majority owned by Stonepeak, with Alphabet becoming a "significant minority shareholder." Light Reading reports: Stonepeak Infrastructure Partners teamed with Patriot Media to acquire Astound in November 2020 for $8.1 billion. Stonepeak is Astound's largest investor. The deal is expected to close in the fourth quarter of 2026. The combined business will be led by the existing GFiber executive team. GFiber is currently led by CEO Dinni Jain. Jain, a former Time Warner Cable and Insight Communications exec, took the helm of what was then called Google Fiber in 2018. "This agreement advances GFiber's mission of redefining internet connectivity and represents a major step toward its goal of operational and financial independence," the companies said. "GFiber will have the external capital and strategic focus needed to accelerate its next phase of growth, expanding its customer-first approach and pioneering fiber technology across the country." GFiber's combination with Astound represents "a strategic opportunity to scale our customer-focused approach to connect more households to a truly different type of internet service," Jain said in a statement.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 02:57

In today’s newsletter: Robert Malley, who led talks for the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, helps make sense of the war

Good morning, and apologies for the interruption to your usual programming. Stepping out from behind the editing desk to write today’s newsletter feels somewhat like a player-manager throwing himself on to the pitch, but I’ll try not to destabilise your morning routine too much. Lord knows, the world doesn’t need any more chaos.

Since the US and Israel first attacked Iran two weeks ago, it’s been a scramble to keep up with events. The death of a supreme leader, speculation about his successor, global implications ranging from oil price spikes to drones raining down on once-safe cities like Doha and Dubai – the world has rarely felt so unstable.

Iran | Iran dramatically escalated its strategy of striking civilian infrastructure and transport networks across the Gulf on Wednesday, attacking commercial ships and targeting Dubai’s international airport as US and Israeli warplanes launched new waves of strikes on the Islamic Republic.

UK news | Keir Starmer overruled officials who warned of a “reputational risk” in making Peter Mandelson US ambassador, despite being handed a dossier of evidence about the peer’s relationship with the sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, documents reveal.

Artificial intelligence | Popular AI chatbots helped researchers plot violent attacks, including bombing synagogues and assassinating politicians, with one telling a user posing as a would-be school shooter: “Happy (and safe) shooting!”

Oil | The International Energy Agency is poised to call for the largest release of government oil reserves in its history to help calm the oil price shock triggered by the US-Israeli attacks on Iran.

UK politics | Keir Starmer warned his cabinet against an “overly deferential” approach to the Welsh, Scottish and Northern Irish governments, telling ministers they should be prepared to make spending decisions “even when devolved governments may oppose this”, according to a leaked memo.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 02:18

Anthropic sued the Defense Department and other federal agencies on Monday over the government's move to designate it a risk to the supply chain.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 02:00

Former PM says schools ‘deserve same moral status as hospitals’ after 168 schoolgirls killed in US-Israel war on Iran

Gordon Brown has called for the creation of an international criminal court for crimes against children, saying “no child should ever become collateral damage in a conflict”.

Writing for the Guardian, the former prime minister drew on the tomahawk missile strike on the Shajareh Tayyebeh school at the start of the Iran conflict, which killed 168 schoolgirls, to argue that “schools deserve the same moral status as hospitals – protected places – and the same protection under international law”.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 02:00

Countries across the continent have spent more than $2bn on Chinese tracking technology that is not ‘necessary or proportionate’, new report finds

The rapid expansion of AI-powered mass-surveillance systems across Africa is violating citizens’ right to privacy and having a chilling effect on society, according to experts on human rights and emerging technologies.

At least $2bn (£1.5bn) has been spent by 11 African governments on Chinese-built surveillance technology that recognises faces and monitors movements, according to a new report by the Institute of Development Studies, which warns that national security is being used to justify implementing these systems with little regulation.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 01:00

Exclusive: Oil at $100 a barrel means higher prices in the EU and UK, making savings for those with electric vehicles even greater, analysts say

European drivers face paying an extra €220 (£190) a year at the pumps because of the surge in oil prices caused by the war in Iran, analysts have warned. In the UK, a separate estimate puts the cost at an extra £140.

A sustained oil price of $100 a barrel, the level seen on Monday, would mean motorists in the EU paying €55bn more over a year, researchers at the Transport & Environment (T&E) thinktank estimated. That is the equivalent of an average of €220 for each driver, with higher-mileage drivers facing even bigger hikes. The assessment was made by comparing data from 2022, when Russia’s invasion of Ukraine pushed the oil price to the $100 mark, with data from 2017-2019.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 01:00

Viral video of girl being shoved by fellow pedestrian has reignited debate over butsukari – with experts blaming stress and gender dynamics

It starts out as a heartwarming clip. A young girl, clearly delighted to be in Tokyo, beams as she makes a peace sign to the camera. Seconds later, she is shoved to the ground from behind by a woman wearing a surgical mask. The assailant doesn’t skip a beat, striding out of shot of the clip filmed by the girl’s mother.

This was no accidental clash of shoulders in a crowded place, but one of the most visible examples of a spate of butsukari otoko – “bumping man” – shoving incidents in Japan that experts attribute to a combination of gender dynamics and the stresses of modern life.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-12 01:00

The Guardian’s science editor, Ian Sample, talks to Madeleine Finlay about three eye-catching science stories from the week, including a study that explores the link between exercise and brain health. Also on the agenda: the discovery that hedgehogs can hear high-frequency ultrasound and what this could mean for their conservation, and new research examining how biased AI autocomplete tools can influence the beliefs of users.

Ultrasound repellers could keep hedgehogs off roads, scientists hope

Support the Guardian: theguardian.com/sciencepod

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

A wounded Islamic Republic can still threaten the world.

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

The U.S. military isn’t ready for it.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 23:40

From fuel caps to four-day work weeks, the Middle East conflict has left the world’s top crude oil importing region desperate to shore up supplies

Donald Trump has scrambled in recent days to reassure the world that the economic impact of his war on Iran can be contained.

Sure, one of the most important waterways in global trade has, in effect, been shut for almost two weeks – but it might reopen before long. In the meantime, US oil-related sanctions on “some countries” will be lifted. And besides, the entire conflict could be over soon.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 23:30

An anonymous reader quotes a report from the New York Times: In a paper, published last month in the journal The Anatomical Record, researchers offered a novel take on falling felines. Their evidence suggests new insights into the so-called falling cat problem, particularly that cats have a very flexible segment of their spines that allows them to correct their orientation midair. [...] People have been curious about falling cats perhaps as long as the animals have been living with humans, but the method to their acrobatic abilities remains enigmatic. Part of the difficulty is that the anatomy of the cat has not been studied in detail, explains Yasuo Higurashi, a physiologist at Yamaguchi University in Japan and lead author of the study. [...] Modern research has split the falling cat problem into two competing models. The first, "legs in, legs out," suggests that cats correct their falling trajectory by first extending their hind limbs before retracting them, using a sequential twist of their upper and then lower trunk to gain the proper posture while in free fall. The second model, "tuck and turn," suggests that cats turn their upper and lower bodies in simultaneous juxtaposed movements. [...] The researchers found that the feline spine was extremely flexible in the upper thoracic vertebrae, but stiffer and heavier in the lower lumbar vertebrae. The discovery matches video evidence showing the cats first turn their front legs, and then their lower legs. The results suggest the cat quickly spins its flexible upper torso to face the ground, allowing it to see so that it can correctly twist the rest of its body to match. "The thoracic spine of the cat can rotate like our neck," Dr. Higurashi said. Experiments on the spine show the upper vertebrae can twist an astounding 360 degrees, he says, which helps cats make these correcting movements with ease. The results are consistent with the "legs in, legs out" model, but definitively determining which model is correct will take more work, Dr. Higurashi says. The results also yielded another discovery: Cats, like many animals, appear to have a right-side bias. One of the dropped cats corrected itself by turning to the right eight out of eight times, while the other turned right six out of eight times.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 23:09

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 23:01

Global heating linked to rising risk of extreme rain that causes devastating landslides and rising coffee prices

The record floods that have brought death and destruction to the heartland of Brazil’s coffee industry are expected to intensify if people continue to burn fossil fuels, analysis has shown.

Dozens of residents in the state of Minas Gerais have been buried alive in landslides or swept away as roads turned into rivers over the past month. Thousands more have been forced to evacuate their homes, while the wider, longer-term effects are likely to include higher prices for coffee across the world.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 23:01

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for March 12.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 22:52
  • Pasquantino lifts Italy with historic effort

  • US reach quarter-finals despite loss to Italy

  • Canada beat Cuba to win group in San Juan

Vinnie Pasquantino had the World Baseball Classic’s first three-homer game, leading Italy over Mexico 9-1 on Wednesday night to win Pool B and advance the United States to the quarter-finals as group’s second-place team.

Italy’s victory ended a day of uncertainty for the Americans, who needed help to reach the quarter-finals after losing to Italy 8-6 on Tuesday night.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 22:43

René Redzepi, the head chef of one of the highest-rated restaurants in the world, has resigned from Noma amid abuse allegations and protests outside his L.A. pop-up location.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 22:30
Vesc kit for xrc

just wondering if anyone knows how this relates to floatwheels gtv kit, and if it would be better for the money (it costs 700 usd)

submitted by /u/-theplayer11-
[link] [comments]

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 22:02

President tells John Thune to force through Save America act, which requires proof of citizenship while registering to vote and curbs mail-in voting

Donald Trump said that the US-Israel war in Iran will end “soon” because there is “practically nothing left to target” in a phone interview with Axios.

“Any time I want it to end, it will end,” the president told the outlet. “The war is going great. We are way ahead of the timetable. We have done more damage than we thought possible, even in the original six-week period.”

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 21:51

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for March 12, No. 535.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 21:00

Your Attention Please, a documentary premiering this week at SXSW in Austin, Texas, explores how we live in the attention economy.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-11 21:00

President Trump ordered the release of 172 million barrels of oil from the U.S.'s Strategic Petroleum Reserve on Wednesday, after oil prices rocketed to their highest levels in years amid the U.S.'s war with Iran.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 20:57

Training today’s largest AI models requires thousands of GPUs operating as a single synchronized system, which means a single hardware fault can halt a job and wipe out hours of work.

Most training frameworks still rely on periodic checkpointing to recover from these failures, forcing jobs to roll back to the last saved model state and repeat lost computation. Clockwork.io, a startup developing software for managing large-scale GPU clusters, says a new capability in its FleetIQ platform addresses this problem by allowing distributed training jobs to continue running even when individual GPUs fail.

The new capability, called TorchPass Workload Fault Tolerance, was announced today as generally available. TorchPass takes a different approach to failure recovery than traditional checkpointing. When a GPU fails or begins showing signs of instability, the platform transfers the training state from the affected GPU to a spare GPU and reintegrates it into the distributed job rather than restarting from a checkpoint. Clockwork says the process typically takes seconds to a few minutes, depending on whether the failure can be predicted in advance.

(Image courtesy of Clockwork.io)

HPCwire sat down with Clockwork CEO Suresh Vasudevan to learn more. “When you’re training an AI model, typically you’re running thousands, or tens of thousands of iterations of the same computation. Each iteration may last anywhere from a second to maybe tens of seconds for very large-scale models, but at the end of every iteration, all of these thousands of GPUs have to synchronize state with each other,” Vasudevan explained. “That synchronization doesn’t just happen once every iteration. It can happen dozens to a few hundred times during that one second. When the synchronization happens, if any single GPU is either failing or running slow, then everybody else has to wait for that single GPU.”

Vasudevan said these failures become more common as AI clusters grow in size. Citing research from companies including Meta, Alibaba, and Google, he noted that clusters with around 1,000 GPUs can experience disruptive events roughly every eight hours, leaving operators to deal with multiple failures in a single day. At larger scales, such as clusters with tens of thousands of GPUs, those events can occur every few hours or less. The causes vary from network link issues and firmware problems to memory errors, power supply faults, and thermal conditions that reduce GPU performance.

TorchPass addresses this problem by maintaining standby GPUs that can take over when a failure occurs. According to Vasudevan, the handoff happens at the infrastructure layer, allowing frameworks such as PyTorch to continue operating as if the original GPU were still part of the job. The approach depends on spare capacity that many large GPU clusters already maintain. Vasudevan said operators typically reserve a small pool of standby GPUs that can be brought online when hardware fails. In practice, that reserve often amounts to about 8–12% of a cluster’s GPUs. While holding GPUs in reserve may seem counterintuitive at a time when GPU capacity is in high demand, operators say the buffer is necessary to keep large systems running reliably. Some rack-scale systems are now being designed with a similar spare capacity built in, leaving a small number of GPUs available to replace failed devices without interruption.

Vasudevan

The TorchPass process resembles live virtual machine migration in cloud environments, where workloads can be moved between machines without shutting them down. But the capability brings the concept of live migration to GPU-based AI training, allowing CUDA workloads running across synchronized clusters to move between devices without interrupting the job. While the underlying mechanisms differ because AI training involves tightly coordinated communication across many GPUs rather than a single operating system instance, the goal is similar: move the workload to new hardware while the distributed training job continues.

In addition to supporting sudden failures, TorchPass can also preemptively migrate workloads when infrastructure telemetry shows that a failure may be coming. Based on internal observations and industry data, Vasudevan said roughly 70–80% of hardware failures show detectable symptoms before they occur, such as rising memory error rates, PCIe communication errors between the CPU and GPU, or thermal conditions that cause devices to reduce clock speeds. In those cases, the platform can move the workload before the device fails, shortening the migration process even more.

Because the migration happens at the infrastructure layer, TorchPass can work independently from the machine learning frameworks used to run training jobs. Vasudevan said the system has been tested with frameworks including PyTorch, Megatron, and DPPs, as well as common cluster schedulers such as Slurm and Kubernetes. While some research projects have explored fault tolerance within the training frameworks themselves, he said those approaches often introduce significant performance penalties, limiting their adoption for large-scale clusters.

TorchPass is only one component of Clockwork’s FleetIQ platform, launched late last year, which the company describes as software designed to improve reliability, observability and performance across large GPU clusters. The platform operates as a control layer across different GPU architectures and networking technologies, monitoring infrastructure health and managing communication between nodes in distributed AI workloads, an approach Clockwork refers to as a “software-driven AI fabric.”

(whiteMocca/Shutterstock)

Clockwork is targeting several segments of the rapidly expanding AI infrastructure market, including neo-cloud providers, large enterprises, and national laboratories. Vasudevan said the company sees growing interest from HPC and sovereign AI initiatives as research institutions begin adopting generative AI workflows alongside traditional machine learning pipelines. In some cases, he said, organizations that previously relied on conventional HPC-based modeling are experimenting with large language models and other AI techniques to address similar scientific and analytical problems.

“In a recent conversation with one of the largest national labs, they were describing a fairly large effort to migrate traditional HPC-based learning models into AI-based learning models. And I was stunned at how quickly that seems to be moving now,” Vasudevan said.

Looking to the future, Vasudevan believes the ability to migrate GPU workloads could eventually support operational tasks beyond failure recovery. “If you think about live GPU migration as a capability, as opposed to just being used for fault tolerance, the ability to move infrastructure around to accommodate workloads is a broad capability,” he said. “It’s a foundational technique that can be used in many other use cases as well.” Distributed AI and HPC workloads are often sensitive to network topology, Vasudevan noted, and a single GPU placed on a distant rack can introduce communication delays across an otherwise tightly coupled job. Live migration could allow operators to rebalance workloads dynamically, moving GPUs closer together within the cluster to improve performance. If that vision comes to pass, live GPU migration may ultimately become a routine part of operating large-scale compute infrastructure.

The post Clockwork.io Introduces Live GPU Migration for AI Cluster Failures appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 20:45

Trump continues contradictory messaging on Iran; US will release 172m barrels of oil from strategic supplies. Key US politics stories from 11 March

Donald Trump has continued his contradictory messaging over the Iran war, telling a rally in Kentucky that the war is “won” but “we don’t want to leave early, do we?”.

With Trump and his fellow Republicans under pressure, according to polls, due to a stuttering economy, immigration crackdowns and the Iran conflict, the president noted this year’s midterm elections “are going to be very, very important”.

Continue reading...

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 20:44

The company aims to combat growing fraud schemes, including impersonation accounts that lure users with fake celebrity endorsements.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-11 20:26

Blake Miguez, 44, not criminally charged over allegation reported to local police but never disclosed to public

A Louisiana congressional candidate endorsed by Donald Trump was the subject of a 2007 rape accusation that was reported to local law enforcement the same day of the alleged assault – but never disclosed to the public or, reportedly, the president’s team as he became one of the rising stars in the state’s Republican party.

That has raised concerns within the White House that Blake Miguez “either wasn’t fully vetted or wasn’t forthcoming about discoverable documents from his past” before securing Trump’s backing, the Atlantic reported on Wednesday, citing two unnamed sources familiar with the endorsement process.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 20:15

NYPD Chief Aaron Edwards hopped a metal barrier to chase down a suspect accused of throwing IEDs during clashing protests outside Gracie Mansion.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 20:24

President Trump's scorn towards GOP Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky is a key factor in the May primary. He has called Massie the "worst Republican congressman" in Congress' history

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 20:04

FBI memo warning that Iran may try to launch drones at California in a seaborne "surprise attack" raised concern Wednesday — but officials tell CBS News there is no known, specific threat underpinning it.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 22:36

A string of tornadoes touched down in multiple states as severe weather stretched from Texas to Michigan.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 20:04

"The president is constantly critical on mail-in voting, and that's ridiculous," Democratic Sen. John Fetterman said Wednesday.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 20:00

New legislation will require schools to use Mandarin by default, taking priority over minority ethnic languages such as Tibetan, Uyghur and Mongolian

China’s National People’s Congress (NPC), the state legislature, will vote on Thursday on a suite of new laws agreed at this year’s annual two sessions gathering, including a piece of legislation that will diminish the role of minority ethnic languages in the education system.

NPC delegates are expected to approve a new ethnic unity law, along with a new environmental code and the 15th five-year plan, the economic planning document for 2026-2030. Delegates have spent the last week debating Beijing’s proposed bills, which they are all but certain to approve. The NPC, which is often described as a rubber-stamp parliament, has never rejected an item on its agenda.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-11 19:51

Administration opens new trade investigation into manufacturing in foreign countries

The Trump administration on Wednesday opened a new trade investigation into manufacturing in foreign countries – an effort that comes after the supreme court struck down Donald Trump’s previous use of tariffs by declaring an economic emergency.

The US president and his team have made clear that they’re seeking to replace the hundreds of billions of dollars in lost revenues after the supreme court’s February ruling by using different laws to establish new tariffs .

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2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 19:42

Qatar defense minister says nine missiles launched in its territory; Trump declares victory in Iran conflict but acknowledges the operation is not over

Over in Senate question time, the foreign affairs minister, Penny Wong, has confirmed embassies in Abu Dhabi and Tel Aviv and the consulate in Dubai all physically closed in the last week.

Wong said the government’s number one priority is to “keep Australians safe at home and abroad”.

She continued:

“The dangerous and destabilising attacks by Iran put civilian lives at risk, including Australian lives.”

More than 3,200 Australians over 23 commercial flights have returned to Australia since the US and Israel attacked Iran, setting off a regional conflict and grounding thousands of international flights.

Wong criticised Nationals senators for “winding up people and stoking fear” to panic buy fuel.

The senator said:

“Petrol companies are telling us that fuel stock continues to arrive as expected and on time but there has been a large change in the pattern of demand and that is having an effect on the supply, particularly in regional communities. We have seen jerry cans coming off the shelves at Bunnings and lines at the pump.”

One of the two members of the Iranian women’s football teams provided with a humanitarian visa to stay in Australia has changed her mind and contacted the Iranian embassy, according to the country’s home affairs minister.

In Australia, people are able to change their mind, people are able to travel. So, we respect the context in which she has made that decision.

Unfortunately, in making that decision, she had been advised by her teammates and coach to contact the Iranian embassy and get collected … As a result of that, it meant that the Iranian embassy now knew the location of where everybody was.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 19:41

A new paper argues that humans are losing varied ways of thinking due to the use of chatbots, and that's concerning.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 19:39

While offering no details to hundreds of supporters, US president seemed to suggest conflict would not end soon

Donald Trump told hundreds of supporters assembled inside a packaging plant in northern Kentucky on Wednesday that Iran’s military and nuclear capabilities had been significantly degraded.

“Their drones are down 85%, we’re blowing up their factories,” he told an ecstatic audience in Hebron.

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2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 19:35

Layoffs to affect 10% of workforce amid Australian company’s restructuring plan to push into artificial intelligence and enterprise sales

Software giant Atlassian has announced it is laying off about 10% of its workforce, or roughly 1,600 positions, and replacing its chief technology officer as it restructures to invest further in artificial intelligence.

Shares of the company rose more than 4% in extended trading on the Nasdaq.

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2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 19:31

The Supreme Court ruled in February that the president lacks the authority to impose unilateral tariffs using an emergency powers law.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 19:30

TikTok and Apple Music come together to introduce two new features to the music listening experience.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 19:24

"I think, overall, what's accomplished is remarkable," Sen. John Fetterman told CBS News chief White House correspondent Major Garrett in an interview Wednesday.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 19:20

Diego Villavicencio also made violent threats against an unnamed individual, who appears to be Jerome Powell

A Florida man was charged with making threats against Donald Trump, the Democratic representative Eric Swalwell and an unnamed individual who appeared to be Fed chair Jerome Powell.

A federal grand jury in the northern district of Florida returned a four-count indictment against Diego Villavicencio, who is accused of making violent threats against a member of Congress and the president of the United States. A lawyer for Villavicencio declined to comment.

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2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 19:12

If you're an Amazon member with health questions, this chatbot may have answers for you.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 19:02

Iranian officials warn of ‘war of attrition’ and global economic chaos as energy supplies are throttled

Iran dramatically escalated its strategy of striking civilian infrastructure and transport networks across the Gulf on Wednesday, attacking commercial ships and targeting Dubai’s international airport as US and Israeli warplanes launched new waves of strikes on the Islamic Republic.

Senior Iranian officials struck a defiant tone, warning of a long “war of attrition” that would threaten global economic chaos as energy supplies from the region were throttled.

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2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 19:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Researchers say they have uncovered a takedown-resistant botnet of 14,000 routers and other network devices -- primarily made by Asus -- that have been conscripted into a proxy network that anonymously carries traffic used for cybercrime. The malware -- dubbed KadNap -- takes hold by exploiting vulnerabilities that have gone unpatched by their owners, Chris Formosa, a researcher at security firm Lumen's Black Lotus Labs, told Ars. The high concentration of Asus routers is likely due to botnet operators acquiring a reliable exploit for vulnerabilities affecting those models. He said it's unlikely that the attackers are using any zero-days in the operation. The number of infected routers averages about 14,000 per day, up from 10,000 last August, when Black Lotus discovered the botnet. Compromised devices are overwhelmingly located in the US, with smaller populations in Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Russia. One of the most salient features of KadNap is a sophisticated peer-to-peer design based on Kademlia (PDF), a network structure that uses distributed hash tables to conceal the IP addresses of command-and-control servers. The design makes the botnet resistant to detection and takedowns through traditional methods. [...] Despite the resistance to normal takedown methods, Black Lotus says it has devised a means to block all network traffic to or from the control infrastructure." The lab is also distributing the indicators of compromise to public feeds to help other parties block access. [...] People who are concerned their devices are infected can check this page for IP addresses and a file hash found in device logs. To disinfect devices, they must be factory reset. Because KadNap stores a shell script that runs when an infected router reboots, simply restarting the device will result in it being compromised all over again. Device owners should also ensure all available firmware updates have been installed, that administrative passwords are strong, and that remote access has been disabled unless needed.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 18:52

When used by humans, large language models often lack sufficient information to make a correct diagnosis, a new study in Nature Medicine shows.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 18:49

CBS News California Investigates found that food banks, children's hospitals and charities are owed thousands of dollars sitting in the state's unclaimed property system, while other states automatically send checks to return the money.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 18:20

The Van Allen probe's mission was meant to last two years, but ended up going for nearly seven.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 18:17

Red Hat developer Marcin Juszkiewicz is working on the RISC-V port of Fedora Linux, and after a few months of working on it, published a blog post about just how incredibly slow RISC-V seems to be. This is a real problem, as in Fedora, build results are only released once all architectures have completed their builds.

There is no point of going for inclusion with slow builders as this will make package maintainers complain. You see, in Fedora build results are released into repositories only when all architectures finish. And we had maintainers complaining about lack of speed of AArch64 builders in the past. Some developers may start excluding RISC-V architecture from their packages to not have to wait.

And any future builders need to be rackable and manageable like any other boring server (put in a rack, connect cables, install, do not touch any more). Because no one will go into a data centre to manually reboot an SBC-based builder.

Without systems fulfilling both requirements, we can not even plan for the RISC-V 64-bit architecture to became one of official, primary architectures in Fedora Linux.

↫ Marcin Juszkiewicz

RISC-V really seems to have hit some sort of ceiling over the past few years, with performance improvements stalling and no real performance-oriented chips and boards becoming available. Everybody seems to want RISC-V to succeed and become an architecture that can stand its own against x86 and Arm, but the way things are going, that just doesn’t seem likely any time soon. There’s always some magical unicorn chip or board just around the corner, but when you actually turn that corner, it’s just another slow SBC only marginally faster than the previous one.

Fedora is not the first distribution struggling with bringing RISC-V online. Chimera Linux faced a similar issue about a year ago, but managed to eventually get by because someone from the Adélie Linux team granted remote access to an unused Milk-V Pioneer, which proved enough for Chimera for now. My hope is still that eventually we’re going to see performant, capable RISC-V machines, because I would absolutely jump for joy if I could have a proper RISC-V workstation.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 18:14

The simply named Better Value plan has features that will appeal to families, but check the details.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-11 18:05

Google founder backs both Republican and Democrat in governor’s race while ex-CEO fights billionaire tax

Tech billionaires are adding to their already huge spending spree on California politics as campaigns for governor and a proposed wealth tax heat up. According to recently released campaign finance disclosures, big names pouring millions into state politics include current and former chief executives from Google, DoorDash, Reddit, LinkedIn and Facebook – evidence of Silicon Valley’s increasing involvement in politics.

Google’s former CEO Eric Schmidt has become a major donor, contributing $1.04m to an independent committee, the California Business Roundtable, that is campaigning against the proposed Billionaire Tax Act, according to new filings released by the state government. The union-backed tax proposal, opposed by almost all of the state’s mega-rich, aims to help cover education, food assistance and healthcare programs.

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2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 18:04

Strait of Hormuz, key transit passage for global oil trade, has been effectively shut down by Islamic Revolutionary Guard

US intelligence reporting sees direct attacks by Iran as the greatest threat to oil tankers going through the strait of Hormuz, the key transit passage for the global oil trade that has been effectively shut down by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard since the start of the US-Israeli war against Iran.

The Trump administration, spooked by possible preparations by Iran to mine the strait, carried out strikes against 16 mine-laying vessels near the strait on Tuesday. US Central Command posted a video showing munitions hitting nine vessels, most of which were moored as they were struck.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 18:02

LOS ANGELES, March 11, 2026 — The 2026 Optical Fiber Communications Conference and Exhibition (OFC), the world’s largest annual gathering for optical networking and communications professionals, takes place next week at the Los Angeles Convention Center (March 15-19, 2026, Exhibition: March 17–19).

Credit: OFC

With the exhibit hall sold out, OFC 2026 is set to be one of the largest to date, with an expected 16,000 attendees from 90 countries and more than 700 exhibiting companies convening in Los Angeles for a week of product debuts, technical milestones and industry collaboration. The program will also feature 130 invited and tutorial speakers and 45 presentations across three exhibition theaters.

From startups to established global brands, OFC’s exhibit floor will spotlight the technologies shaping next-generation networks, including systems, silicon photonics, lasers, optical modules, components and the test and measurement tools that support performance at scale.

“We are witnessing a pivotal time for the industry, as AI-driven growth accelerates the need for higher bandwidth and better power efficiency,” said OFC General Chair Johannes Fischer, Fraunhofer Heinrich-Hertz Inst., Germany. “The sold-out exhibit floor and broad global participation underscore how urgently the ecosystem is advancing new solutions, and how quickly they’re moving toward deployment.”

OFC gives attendees a chance to compare approaches side by side, connect directly with the engineers and product teams behind them and better understand which technologies are ready for near-term deployment and which are still taking shape.

Exhibitor Announcements Set to Debut in Los Angeles

With the industry convening in one place, OFC expects a strong slate of exhibitor news and product updates across the optical communications ecosystem, including announcements submitted through OFC’s First News program (an advance preview of exhibitor announcements for media and analysts). A selection includes:

  • Acacia – Acacia will highlight its coherent pluggables and client optics portfolio, including field-proven 400G products and the industry’s first 800GZR+ with interop PCS for AI-era networking.
  • Applied Optoelectronics, Inc. (AOI) – AOI will showcase its readiness for CPO and NPO architectures with transceivers through 1.6T, 6.4T on-board optics demos and a new narrow-linewidth pump laser.
  • CEA-Leti – CEA-Leti and NcodiN will announce a strategic collaboration to industrialize optical interposer technology on a 300 mm photonics process for next-generation semiconductors and AI chips.
  • LightSpeed Photonics – LightSpeed Photonics will launch what it calls the industry’s first solderable near-packaged optical interconnect technology, positioned as a low-power alternative between CPO and LPO.
  • OIF – OIF will bring multi-vendor interoperability to life with 40 member companies demonstrating the building blocks behind AI-era data center networks, from coherent optics to CEI-224G, live 448G, CMIS and co-packaging.
  • Semtech – Semtech will unveil a new family of 224G per lane TIAs and MZM drivers built for the shift toward linear optical interconnects across 800G, 1.6T and 3.2T architectures.
  • Taara – Taara will unveil Taara Photonics and Taara Beam, a solid-state wireless optical communications platform based on optical phased arrays.
  • VIAVI Solutions – VIAVI will showcase validation tools for next-generation AI fabrics, including demos focused on 1.6T Ethernet, PCIe over optics and high-density test capabilities.

Plenary Spotlights AI, Optical Innovation and Optical Networks in Space

The OFC Plenary Session takes place on Tuesday, 17 March (08:00–10:00 PDT) at the JW Marriott next to the Los Angeles Convention Center, featuring:

  • Julie Sheridan Eng, Chief Technology Officer, Coherent
  • Alexis Bjorlin, Senior Vice President, AI Infrastructure, NVIDIA
  • Siegbert Martin, Chief Technology Officer, Tesat-Spacecom

Registration and information

For registration, exhibitor details and the schedule-at-a-glance, visit OFCConference.org.

About OFC

The Optical Fiber Communication Conference and Exhibition (OFC) is the world’s largest event for optical communications and networking professionals — a showcase for the trends and technologies that impact how the world communicates and transacts. It is the locus for scientific visionaries and the industry’s biggest brands to make connections and move business forward. For more than 50 years, participants from all corners of the globe have been drawn to OFC by its high-impact, peer-reviewed research, dynamic business programs and the world’s largest in-person exhibition for optical communications.

OFC is co-sponsored by the IEEE Communications Society (IEEE/ComSoc) and the IEEE Photonics Society and co-sponsored and managed by Optica.


Source: OFC

The post OFC 2026 Brings 16,000 Attendees to Los Angeles for Optical Networking Showcase appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 18:00

In the last few days, President Donald Trump has said that the U.S-Israel war on Iran will end soon, after oil prices jumped and the growing regional conflict continued to shake markets. After a wave of heavy bombardments throughout Iran, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth promised another round, “The most fighters, the most bombers, the most strikes.” 

“Hegseth has, yes, said that it’s going to be basically death and destruction from the air, and they’re delivering that,” Hooman Majd, an Iranian American writer and journalist, tells The Intercept Briefing. 

“Killing civilians is a hallmark of American air war. This particular campaign Operation Epic Fury is set apart by the relentlessness of the attacks,” adds Nick Turse, senior reporter for The Intercept. “The two militaries — U.S. and Israel — combined were striking a conservative estimate of 1,000 targets per day in the first days of the conflict. Around 4,000 targets were hit in the first 100 hours of the campaign. For another point of comparison, Israeli attacks in the recent Gaza war were also relentless, but this far outpaces the Israeli campaign by more than double the number of strikes.” On Wednesday, Trump told Axios the war would end soon because there’s “practically nothing left to target.”

This week on the The Intercept Briefing, host Akela Lacy talked to Majd and Turse about the latest developments in the U.S. and Israel war on Iran and the growing number of conflicts the U.S. is engaged in. Senior technology reporter Sam Biddle also joined to discuss how artificial intelligence is being used in various U.S. conflicts.

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“Airstrikes, air war generally is already so prone to killing innocent people even when you take your time. But whenever you try to hurry for the sake of hurrying — and AI is great at enabling that — you just increase over and over again the chance of killing someone that you didn’t intend to or didn’t care enough to avoid killing,” says Biddle. “So I think that is an immense risk of just accelerating the metabolism of killing from the air by drone, by airplane — with the stamp of ‘intelligence’ that these AI companies are really pushing.”

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

Transcript 

Akela Lacy: Welcome to The Intercept Briefing, I’m Akela Lacy, senior politics reporter at The Intercept.

Sam Biddle: And I’m Sam Biddle, senior technology reporter at The Intercept.

AL: Sam, this is your first time on The Intercept Briefing, correct? 

SB: It is. I’ve been at the Intercept for 10 years. I finally got the call. I’m excited.

Akela Lacy: Welcome, we’re very glad to have you. 

SB: Thank you so much.

AL: On a serious note, as we speak, the U.S. is engaged in war and acts of aggression on multiple fronts from the Middle East to the Caribbean and Central America. You have been doing some really important reporting on how the Pentagon is using artificial intelligence in wars and surveillance around the world.

Last month, the Wall Street Journal reported that Claude, an AI tool from the company Anthropic, was used to capture now former Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, which set off a dispute between the company and the U.S. government, and opened the door for Anthropic’s rival to swoop in. The Wall Street Journal also reported that Trump has used those same tools in strikes on Iran. Tell us more. 

SB: So what’s been reported is that the Pentagon has made use of a system it has called the Maven Smart System, which is operated by Palantir, the semi-infamous data mining firm. We know based on multiple reports at this point that they’re using the Maven system to essentially accelerate the selection and subsequent destruction of targets on the ground.

This is a way of executing airstrikes at a greater speed potentially, not necessarily more intelligently or with greater accuracy, but I think just faster. And I think people at the Pentagon would probably say, more effectively, more efficiently finding things to destroy and people to kill.

“Target selection is a labor-intensive task.”

Target selection is a labor-intensive task. If you can have an LLM like Anthropic’s Claude system — we’ve all seen how quickly they can generate a huge wall of text, of questionable accuracy — can bring that same hyper-speed to creating lists of buildings to destroy and people to kill. I think that is proven to be the biggest value — not just to our military, but to militaries abroad as well.

AL: Sam, what do we know about how the Pentagon is using AI tools in the Trump administration’s various wars?

SB: Under Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, there has been a huge, very aggressive push to integrate AI really wherever and whenever possible.

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I think that you’re seeing the Pentagon under Hegseth mimic a lot of tech industry rhetoric, which is “we don’t totally understand this technology. We don’t totally know where it’s got to be useful, but we need to use it as much as possible anyway.” I think that you’ve seen DOD under Hegseth be extremely aggressive in the cadence of airstrikes.

This is a Pentagon that believes in killing people. I think, at times, it seems to sort of give itself things to tweet about. This is a political movement and an ideology guiding the Pentagon that I think relishes violence. These AI systems, when you want to blow things up and kill people, these tools can provide a very rapid, turnkey means of having a list of people and places to destroy.

So what we know based on a recent Washington Post report that was discussing the use of Anthropic’s Claude system in Iran, was that it was not just used for target selection, but also target prioritization: Here are the most important targets to attack. Also, something that the Post described as sort of simulating battlefield outcomes. It’s a little unclear what exactly that means. One can imagine just asking a chatbot to basically create a story about how an airstrike could play out. That’s essentially what an LLM does, is generate text that’s plausible based on the inputs. How exactly these simulations are playing out of what value they are, how accurate they are in terms of what might actually happen subsequently in real life is unknown.

“This is a Pentagon that believes in killing people.”

To me and for the public, the most concerning aspect of what’s been reported about the ongoing use of these LLMs by the Pentagon is the focus on speed. Airstrikes, air war generally is already so prone to killing innocent people even when you take your time. But whenever you try to hurry for the sake of hurrying, and AI is great at enabling that, you just increase over and over and over again the chance of killing someone that you didn’t intend to or didn’t care enough to avoid killing.

So I think that is an immense risk of just accelerating the metabolism of killing from the air by drone, by airplane — with the stamp of “intelligence” that these AI companies are really pushing. If you blow up a school because Claude told you that it was actually an IED factory or whatever, you could say, “Oh, well, the super-smart computer told me to.”

AL: It was the robot. It wasn’t me.

SB: Exactly. We’ve spent the past several years having the tech industry tell us how ultra-smart, ultra-intelligent these systems are. That’s worrying enough when we’re asking them to write our emails for us and do our homework for us. But again, this is the business of killing people. Mistakes are not just mistakes. I think that is now just the way wars are going to be fought, and that is a very troubling new reality.

“This is the business of killing people. Mistakes are not just mistakes. I think that is now just the way wars are going to be fought, and that is a very troubling new reality.”

AL: Backing up a little bit. There is a fight right now between these companies and the government over how, if at all, their tools should be used. We know that they are being used.

But can you tell us a little bit about what is in dispute here? It also sounds like there’s some talk about guardrails being put in place, but we know that means very little in this context. Can you walk us through that?

SB: So the original controversy here was Anthropic, a leading rival of OpenAI. Some would say they have a better product at this point. They got into a dispute with the Pentagon over selling access to Claude, which is their AI chatbot system, akin to ChatGPT.

AL: But it has a human name.

SB: It does have a human name. Don’t you love that?

The company says that they did not want to permit the Department of Defense to use Claude for domestic surveillance of Americans and for killing people without human oversight. The Pentagon says this is woke nonsense, you’re now banned from doing work with the government —and then OpenAI enters.

AL: I will also note in 2024, The Intercept sued OpenAI in federal court over the company’s use of copyrighted articles to train its chatbot ChatGPT. The case is ongoing.

SB: And this is where it gets very strange because OpenAI claims to have the same red lines as Anthropic, but somehow was able to seal a deal with the Pentagon.

Both are very muddled when it comes to what they actually refuse to do. They seem to both want to say that, look, we’re not going to do anything illegal and we’re also not going to engage in these acts — autonomous killing and domestic surveillance — which are largely considered legal.

“It ultimately comes down to what they, what their lawyers decide is legal.”

Appealing to the law is no protection against these acts that the companies are saying that they will not facilitate. I wrote in a piece a few days ago, I think, ultimately, without being able to review the actual contract language for ourselves and to have lawyers go through it carefully, it all just comes down to whether or not you trust the corporate leadership of OpenAI and Anthropic, as well as Pete Hegseth and the White House. It ultimately comes down to what they, what their lawyers decide is legal. We’ve seen White House lawyers say a lot of things are legal: NSA spying, torture, et cetera. So that appeal to the law by these companies is not as reassuring as they want the public to believe it is.

Just one note though: Even though Anthropic’s deal with the Pentagon fell apart, the DOD is still able to use their technology through — it gets a little complicated here — Palantir’s Maven Smart System software, which has Claude in it as a feature, rather than getting it straight from Anthropic.

When you see headlines about Anthropic being banned or being rejected by the military, DOD can still use their software. It’s a pretty nice loophole. So they are still very much in use.

AL: I’ll also mention that the U.S.–Israel war on Iran is also the first example of countries attacking data centers as an act of war, which Sam, you have some reporting coming out on in the future, so everyone look out for that. 

So to recap, the Trump administration appears to be at war with the world. The self-proclaimed “president of peace” has sent U.S. forces jumping from conflict to conflict from Venezuela to Iran to Ecuador and more. As our colleague Nick Turse, senior reporter for The Intercept, tells me on the podcast today, the U.S. has launched attacks in eight countries and killed civilians in two bodies of water — and made threats against five other nations. We also speak with Hooman Majd, an Iranian American journalist and contributor to NBC News, about the latest developments in the U.S. and Israel’s war on Iran, which is ricocheting around the globe. This is our conversation. 

Nick and Hooman, welcome to The Intercept Briefing 

Hooman Majd: Thank you. 

Nick Turse: Thanks for having me on.

AL: Hooman, the Israel–U.S. war on Iran is stretching into another week. A new round of air bombardments hit throughout the country, Al Jazeera reported Monday evening, “We can say this is by far one of the most heavily intense nights in Tehran in terms of air bombardment.” Secretary of War Pete Hegseth promised, “The most fighters, the most bombers, the most strikes.” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he hoped the Iranian people would oust the regime. The civilian death toll in Iran has reached about 1,300 people. To start, what are the latest developments, particularly over the last few days? 

HM: Last few days, I mean, it’s heavy bombardment. That’s what it is.

Hegseth has, yes, said that it’s going to be basically death and destruction from the air, and they’re delivering that. Bombing — whether it was Israel or the United States, I don’t know — but earlier this week, they bombed oil depots in and around Tehran. There was black soot, oily rain falling on people’s heads basically in Tehran.

You’ve got Netanyahu telling people to rise up. Rise up how? Exactly how are they supposed to take control of a government that is so secure right now that it can go through the constitutional process of setting up its three-person council that rules Iran in the absence of a supreme leader, then elects a supreme leader by a majority of ayatollahs in person? Because the actual vote has to be in person and they were not blown up. So they obviously had a secure location to do this. How are the Iranian people supposed to do this? You’ve got the Revolutionary Guards who are very powerful. They haven’t shown any real fracture in their ranks. There’s not been a split. The top leadership is there. The second tier of the leadership is there. The third tier of the leadership is there. How are people supposed to get out and go and take over the government?

It’s insane for someone like the prime minister of another country to say, “We’re bombing the hell out of you, now please rise up and go take over your government.” It defies logic.

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But to answer your question, what’s been happening? It’s just been war. It’s an all-out war. They can call it a special operation. They can call it whatever they want. The Iranians recognize it as war. The death toll is rising among Iranians, but also among the American servicemen and women.

The cost of this war is going up daily for everyone. It’s turning into this kind of — oh, I won’t call it a world war, that would be hyperbole — but way more countries are involved in this other than the U.S., Israel, and Iran.

AL: One of the first acts of aggression in this war was this strikes on this elementary school for girls in the southern Iranian town of Minab, which killed 175 people, mostly children, according to Iranian health offices. Trump blamed Iran for the bombing. But Nick, your reporting, and reporting from the New York Times and others, and new video evidence all suggest that the U.S. struck the school. What did your sources tell you?

NT: Even before footage of a Tomahawk missile landing near the school emerged, I was talking to sources that were refuting claims by President Trump about this being an errant Iranian strike. He apparently seized on talking points that emerged in Iranian monarchy circles. They were spread on social media that this attack on the elementary school was an errant Iranian rocket. Or he just made it up. This is standard Trump behavior.

But my sources — current government official, two former Pentagon officials who were experts in civilian harm, who worked on these issues for the Pentagon for years — said that the satellite imagery showed that these weren’t errant strikes, but they were precision attacks. The angle of the weapon, the precise nature of the strike, the fact that the munitions came straight down from above, the fact that all the strikes in the general area looked the same, including those that hit buildings on the nearby Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps base — all this made it crystal clear that this was a U.S. or an Israeli attack.

The fact that it was known that the U.S. carried out strikes in the specific area offered more evidence that America was behind this. And then this video emerged a couple days ago showing a Tomahawk missile landing in the area.

Now, only the U.S., Britain, Australia, and the Netherlands use Tomahawks. Israel doesn’t have them. Despite mis- or disinformation that President Trump peddled during a news conference on Monday, Iran does not have Tomahawks. Any country the U.S. sold Tomahawks to would have to obtain authorization from the State Department before transferring these sophisticated weapons to a third party. The U.K. is not going to sell Iran Tomahawk missiles.

If Iran was somehow able to obtain a black-market Tomahawk — and let me emphasize, there’s no such thing as black-market Tomahawk. There’s no market for these. Iran lacks the technical equipment and the capabilities that are used to program the flight paths of these missiles and to upload the data necessary to the missiles onboard computer. They also need a specialized launcher to fire a Tomahawk.

So Trump’s assertion on Monday that the Tomahawk is some sort of generic munition and that Iran has some Tomahawks — it’s absurd.  The only party to this conflict that’s firing off Tomahawks is the United States.

What’s also notable about this, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth was standing right next to Trump when the president claimed that it was Iran that hit the school, and Hegseth would not endorse those comments.

He said there was an ongoing investigation, and he issued a classic non-denial, denial taking Iran to task for targeting civilians. But the fact that he wouldn’t back up his boss who was standing right next to him, I thought was very telling.

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Then I spoke to U.S. Central Command, which oversees U.S. military operations in the Middle East, oversees this war in Iran. They told me that to comment on any of this was getting ahead of an ongoing military investigation — which is precisely what President Trump did. They said it was just inappropriate to do. You don’t often have a military spokesperson say that what the commander-in-chief has just done was inappropriate, but they did so in this case.

HM: Yeah, I mean it’s really interesting, Nick. For Iranians, it reminds them of the USS Vincennes shooting down an Iran air jet killing all passengers — civilian jet — in the Persian Gulf under George Bush Sr. at the time. And denials, denials, denials that it was us. And then, “Well, it looked like an enemy aircraft, so we fired a missile.” George Bush refused to apologize, but the U.S. did finally admit that it was an accidental shooting down of the passenger plane. And did actually end up paying reparations to Iran for that act. 

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It just adds to the litany of complaints or accusations that Iran throws at the United States for how the United States is the aggressor against Iran and not the other way around. There is a point to their claims that the U.S. will start aggression against Iran unprovoked. 

In this particular case, there’s very little evidence, if any at all, that Iran, as President Trump has just said, was about to attack the United States and therefore we had to attack them. There’s literally no evidence. And if they do have the evidence, they really should provide it because the American people at this point are not particularly keen on this war and the approval will probably go down from what it is now, the approval ratings for being at war, as we see more and more damage, as we see gas prices go up further, as we see American servicemen and women potentially lose their lives or be injured. And of course, our allies be continually attacked.

Which by the way, I should add, I don’t know why it’s a surprise to anybody. Iran said this after the last Twelve Day War in June. They said, “Next time, no more Mr. Nice Guy; we had restraint this time.” It’s that old joke, no more Mr. Nice Guy. They actually said it out loud, no one’s going to be safe if we are attacked again by U.S., Israel, or both. They said it to the Persian Gulf States. They said it to Saudi Arabia, which is probably the reason those countries were so adamant in trying to get President Trump to not attack Iran because they knew that the blowback would be against them. 

AL: A couple of things I want to just pick up on here. Going to your point on provocation and the idea that the U.S. was somehow provoked to attack Iran. They’ve already shown their hand on this. A couple days after the first strikes you had Marco Rubio blaming Israel for dragging the U.S. into the war. Then Trump is walking that back a couple days later. I think anyone who’s paying attention — obviously, there are a lot of questions about what the communication was here, how much the U.S. was actually goaded into this over Israel. I don’t think it’s a surprise that the neocons in the various administrations have been foaming at the mouth to go to war with Iran for a very long time. So I just want to make that point.

You mentioned this regime change thing. I mean we’ve talked about this when you were last on the show, Hooman. There’s been additional reporting in the last few days, hammering home this idea that that is not on the table right now.

HM: There’s been a million different reasons or rationale given by the U.S. administration for starting this war — bounces back and forth from one thing to another. Just this week, Trump now is saying that Kushner and Witkoff and Rubio, and these guys were telling him we have to go to war otherwise — two real estate people were telling you to go to war? Really? Would any president of the United States say that?

Jared Kushner doesn’t have a job. Has no title whatsoever. Steve Witkoff has never talked about Iran his entire professional life and has no knowledge. I’m not dissing him; I’m just saying he has no knowledge of the nuclear issue. None whatsoever. Probably got a briefing from the State Department, one-hour briefing — this is what enrichment means, this is how they can do this, how they can do that — and gets thrown into negotiations while he’s running back and forth from one negotiation to the Ukraine negotiations in Geneva and taking Jared with him. It’s an insane way to negotiate, but they did it. And so they, and this is what Donald Trump said this week, they — along with Marco Rubio and obviously Lindsey Graham, we know that — were pressing very hard for an attack on Iran, “Iran is the weakest that it’s ever been.” 

According, again, to Donald Trump, Steve Witkoff told him that Iran could build a bomb in two weeks. How Steve Witkoff could even think that when there is no access right now to the nuclear material, let alone bomb making ability of Iran? It’s just beyond belief. So it’s insane. 

The regime changed idea was clearly something that was in Donald Trump’s mind. We go in — I’m sure Lindsey Graham, Bibi Netanyahu, various people were telling him: Look, you did it in Venezuela. It’s not that hard. Look at all the protests in January. These people want to overthrow the government. This is what they want to do. They’re shouting “Down with the regime.” And they were brutally murdered. So all you have to do is just take out the supreme leader and bang, people will rise up. 

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Well, they took out the supreme leader, and people didn’t rise up because bombs were falling on their heads. If that’s all they had done, maybe some people would’ve been coming out on the streets celebrating. There were some celebrations, but they stopped pretty quickly because you keep bombing people. They’re going to care about their own lives, especially since there’s no leader to take over to help overthrow the regime. Trump has already ruled out the former Crown Prince of Iran, Reza Pahlavi. He himself has ruled himself out. He has no operations on the ground in Iran. His name is shouted by people when they protest a little bit because that’s the only name they know. It doesn’t mean that they want the monarchy to return.

Then the MEK, as we know, are absolutely despised by 99 percent of the Iranian people. They have some ground operations in Iran, but again, not enough to overthrow the regime. They’ve been trying for 47 years, and they haven’t been successful.

So talking about regime change is meaningless. Most Iranians understand that. Iranians want the regime changed. That doesn’t mean they want it overthrown, but they want it changed. No question about that. I would argue that there’s a majority, but there’s a minority — quite a strong minority, as we saw even from the images a couple of days ago, of crowds gathering to mourn the supreme leader’s death. So if there’s 10 percent, 20 percent of the population that are diehard supporters of the Islamic Republic, that’s a significant number of people, significant enough — and they tend to be the people with the guns.

[Break]

AL: Nick, in all of this, Iran is not the only country the U.S. is at war with at the moment. Trump also recently launched attacks on Ecuador. What can you tell us about the various countries the U.S. has attacked since Trump came into office this term and other conflicts that U.S. forces are involved in?

NT: Yeah, this is a president who ran for office promising to keep the United States out of wars, who claims to be a “peacemaker,” who has campaigned for the Nobel Peace Prize and founded a so-called Board of Peace but President Trump is conducting wars across the globe at a furious clip. Sen. Elizabeth Warren said Trump has conducted more strikes in more countries than any modern president. I’m not sure that’s actually true. It really depends on what you call a strike, what you’re counting. But during his second term, Trump has already launched attacks on Ecuador, two wars in Iran, attacks in Iraq, Nigeria, Somalia, Syria, Venezuela, Yemen. He’s attacked civilians in boats in the Caribbean Sea and the Pacific Ocean.

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The Trump administration also claims to be at war with at least 24 drug cartels and criminal gangs, who, I should add, it won’t name. It’s also threatened Colombia, Cuba, Greenland, Iceland — I think, inadvertently, caught flack from Greenland — and Mexico. The Trump administration is threatening some sort of takeover of Cuba at this very moment.

“It seems to me that U.S. involvement in raids against so-called narco-terrorist targets was more than just passing along intel.”

There have been at least two attacks inside Ecuador, both of them since the second Iran war started. It’s unclear as to the extent of U.S. involvement in this. A lot of outlets initially reported that the U.S. simply provided intelligence to Ecuadorian forces. I specifically did not. A lot is unclear, but it seems to me that U.S. involvement in raids against so-called narco-terrorist targets was more than just passing along intel.

I believe this even more following a very strange war powers report that the Trump administration sent to Congress on Monday regarding the recent partnered U.S. operations in Ecuador. It says specifically, although present for this partnered operation, the United States ground forces did not come in contact with hostile forces. Mere mention of U.S. ground forces in connection with this operation raises red flags for me. And the fact that the administration actually filed this war powers report with Congress suggests to me that U.S. forces themselves took kinetic action, that it wasn’t just Ecuadorian forces. So I think there may have been U.S. forces on the ground and that the U.S. possibly conducted lethal strikes there, much like the boat strikes in the Caribbean Sea and the Pacific Ocean that have killed close to 160 civilians since September.

My sources say that these strikes in Ecuador are the opening salvo of a larger campaign in that country and also elsewhere in Latin America. So I’d stay tuned on that.

“The fact that the administration actually filed this war powers report with Congress suggests to me that U.S. forces themselves took kinetic action, that it wasn’t just Ecuadorian forces.”

AL: I’m just got to list these out for people. You mentioned Ecuador, Iran, Iraq, Nigeria, Somalia, Syria, Venezuela, Yemen, civilians boats in the Caribbean and the Pacific, the 24 unnamed cartels and criminal gangs and threats, to Columbia, Cuba, Greenland, Iceland, and Mexico.

HM: What about Canada?

AL: We haven’t even talked about Canada.

NT: Yes, our 51st state in the making.

HM: Yeah, by force if necessary. 

NT: If necessary, yes.

AL: Going back to Iran, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth has said “America, regardless of what so-called international institutions say, is unleashing the most lethal and precise air power campaign in history.” Can you tell us more about how the U.S. is conducting this war on Iran? What does that actually mean? What does that look like?

NT: Lethal is certainly right, lethal to the Iranian security forces, but also to innocence — men, women, and children. The U.S. has been killing civilians from aircraft for more than 100 years, and lying about it, covering up, trying to explain it away, so that part is par for the course. Killing civilians is a hallmark of American air war.

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This particular campaign — “Operation Epic Fury” — is set apart by the relentlessness of the attacks. There was a new investigation by Air Wars, which is a U.K.-based airstrike monitoring group. And it found that the first days of this Iran war saw far more sites targeted than any recent U.S. or Israeli military campaign.

The moniker “Operation Epic Fury” is ridiculous and bellicose. But there’s some perverse truth to this name because in the first 100 hours of this war the U.S. and Israel said that they struck more targets in Iran than in the first six months of the U.S. led coalition’s bombing campaign of the so-called Islamic State in Syria and Iraq, which was a formidable campaign. 

The two militaries — U.S. and Israel — combined were striking a conservative estimate of 1,000 targets per day in the first days of the conflict. Around 4,000 targets were hit in the first 100 hours of the campaign. For another point of comparison, Israeli attacks in the recent Gaza war were also relentless, but this far outpaces the Israeli campaign by more than double the number of strikes. It’s going to be a while, I think before the full civilian toll of this war is clear, if we ever really find out. Official Iranian sources say it’s creeping up on 1,500 or more killed, but it may actually be higher. 

While the true rate of civilian harm can’t solely be predicted by the number of targets that are hit, the initial indication suggests it’s been high, and I should add that U.S. targets have been correlated with heavily populated areas. So we have to assume that we’ll come to find out that large number of civilians have been killed and will continue to be killed before this war is over.

HM: The kind of war that is being waged on Iran, generally speaking, the Iranian Red Cross, or Red Crescent in Iran’s case, has been pretty accurate in terms of what they’ve reported. As Nick pointed out, it’s probably under-reporting right now. We do know there’s rubble in parts of the city of Tehran. Tehran, a city of more than 9 million, probably closer to 10 or 11 million people, densely populated, very densely populated.

For anybody who’s been there or even looked at a satellite image, they’ll see you cannot strike a building in Tehran and not kill someone who is unintended, an unintended target. Iran is not making this stuff up. They’re busy trying to protect themselves, trying to fire as many missiles as possible to try to bring an end to this war in a way by causing pain for not just America, but for American allies. 

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A lot of people complain and say Iran is breaking international law by attacking countries that have nothing to do with this war. That’s probably true. It is probably against international law what Iran is doing, but so is the war that the United States and Israel started on Iran. That’s also against international law. So it’s a complete break of the so-called international order.

AL: I just want to add some context for our listeners. You’re mentioning these attacks by Iran on U.S. allies. Since the war began, Iran retaliated against the U.S.-Israel attacks by targeting U.S. military bases in Bahrain, Iraq, the United Arab Emirates, and three sites in Kuwait. Israel has also been attacking southern Lebanon where it says it’s targeting Hezbollah and seizing land, displacing at least 80,000 people so far. Lebanon’s government has now asked Israel to talk and blamed Hezbollah for attacks [on Israel].   

Iran’s strategy appears to be also targeting Israel and Gulf energy sites. Iran blocked oil and gas exports through the Strait of Hormuz and attacked several oil tankers. Energy sites in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, UAE, Oman have also reported damage from Iranian drones. Last week, U.S. Central Command, or CENTCOM, reported that the U.S. had destroyed Iran’s navy, and that there are no Iranian ships underway in the Strait of Hormuz, the Gulf of Oman, and the Arabian Gulf. But fighting has continued to slow ship traffic through the Strait of Hormuz. 

Last week, President Donald Trump said the war could last weeks. On Monday, Trump now says the war could end very soon after oil prices jumped significantly and this conflict spooked the markets. For both of you, do you think that impact on the markets will actually motivate Trump to end U.S. involvement in the war? 

NT: It’s always difficult to gauge where this administration is at and you know what the president is thinking. This is a wildly unpopular war, and I think the longer it goes on, the more we’ll see whatever bare minimum of public support exists continue to drop. So if Americans continue to feel pain at the pump, I think there is a chance that it could hasten an end to this conflict.

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The trouble is it’s really difficult to gauge what the goals of this conflict were. I’m also not sure what impact public sentiment has on Trump at this point. It may take billionaire friends of his calling him, telling them that they’re starting to feel pain for him to decide to wrap up this conflict. 

On Monday, we heard that the conflict was almost over while the stock market was in session, and then afterward we heard that the war might go on for a week more, or maybe as long as it takes — unclear what that means. It does, at some points, appear the president’s trying to manipulate the markets with his statements.

“It does, at some points, appear the president’s trying to manipulate the markets with his statements.”

HM: I would agree with that, Nick. I also would say some of his friends in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and places like that. Qatar just gave him a $400 million plane, and they’re not particularly interested in this war going on.

But what I want to add to this is that Trump may be looking for an off-ramp right now. Obviously, the war’s not going the way he expected. So looking for an off-ramp means the Iranians have to be willing to offer one. They’re very adamant in every interview the foreign minister has given, every X post that one of the other leaders — Larijani, Ghalibaf — make is: We’re not interested even talking to you and let alone a ceasefire. We’re not interested in a ceasefire.

“This one is really existential.”

If you look at that carefully, and if you know the Iranians, you understand where they’re coming from since the Twelve Day War back in June, is that this one is really existential. That one wasn’t existential. That one they could show some restraint and then maybe talk to Trump and figure out how to make this nuclear deal. As we know they did, they started talking about it. 

Now it’s like, this is going to happen every six months, if we stop the war. If we go to a ceasefire, six months from now it’s going to be the same thing. Our new supreme leader will be assassinated, and then we have to start all over again. So this time, we’re not going to give him that opportunity.

What it appears they are doing is bringing as much pain as possible so that when Trump, without begging, looks for an off ramp, Iran then says, sure, but I want these sanctions removed. I’ll give you that off ramp, but you’ve got to give me a non-aggression pact, and you’ve got to give me some of these sanctions because I need to fix my country, and I can’t do it with the sanctions you’ve got.

Then it’s a question of whether the U.S. and how Israel factors into this. Trump we know is fine with dictators. He’s totally fine with it. He’ll be totally fine with Mojtaba Khamenei as the new supreme leader. The question is really what will Trump do at a point where it appears that the U.S. wants to get out of this war he wants to get out, even if Hegseth doesn’t, and Lindsey Graham doesn’t, but he wants out? Gas is at $6 a gallon in California at that point, $7 a gallon in some places. And people are crying saying, wait a sec, this is not what we counted on. Then Iran is in the driver’s seat at that point. Did he ever think that could ever happen?

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I’m not trying to advocate for Iran’s position. I’m saying they’re playing it well, if you think about it, they are playing it well. It’s like yeah, we’re just got to keep going. It’s fine. We can handle it. Foreign Minister of Iran on NBC News, on “Meet the Press”: Ground troops, bring ’em on. We’re ready. We’re ready for them. They probably are prepared for ground troops.

Turkey doesn’t want this war right on their border. Iraq doesn’t want this war right on their border. Kuwait doesn’t want it, we know. And all the other Persian Gulf countries don’t want it. And I think they’re, all the Persian Gulf countries, in all the other countries are very worried that this is not regime change. And the regime will be in power, and the regime can threaten them again. Everyone will, in my mind, will want an end to this war that includes a strong sense that this won’t happen every six months. And then the question really becomes, what are the Israelis going to do? What’s Netanyahu — how is he gonna sell the end to the war?

“Everyone will, in my mind, will want an end to this war that includes a strong sense that this won’t happen every six months.”

AL: We know that on the question of ground troops, Trump has sent conflicting messages saying he hasn’t ruled out sending ground troops into Iran. We also know that seven U.S. soldiers have already been killed in the war, and as we’re recording, news broke that about 140 U.S. troops have been wounded in the war, including eight severely, according to the Pentagon.

Hooman, to your earlier point on the Trump administration’s expectations, as you mentioned over the weekend in Iran, the son of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Mojtaba, was named his successor. Trump told reporters at a press conference he was disappointed. Briefly, what can you tell us about the new supreme leader? 

HM: He was the second oldest son of the supreme leader who had a few other sons and daughters. Very little is known about him personally because he’s been behind the scenes, but known to be very close to the supreme leader, his closest adviser actually, and very close to the IRGC, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, who are the most powerful military force in Iran; and the Basij, who are the paramilitaries force under the IRGC. He is known among Iranians to have basically created that very close connection between the supreme leader’s office and the revolutionary guards. 

One thing we have to remember is that when Ayatollah Khamenei, his father, took over, he was considered a weak supreme leader. He didn’t have the same authority either — political or religious authority — that [Ruhollah] Khomeini, the founder of the Islamic Republic had.

It’s also good to remember that the supreme leader is not the supreme leader of Iran. His title is the Supreme Leader of the Revolution — the Islamic Revolution. And it’s also good to remember that the military force, the IRGC, are not the Islamic Revolutionary Guards of Iran. They’re the Islamic Revolutionary Guard of the Revolution. They’re the guardians of the revolution. So those two, that connection, that tight connection has meant that it’s always been something that any future supreme leader would try to maintain. Since Mojtaba already had that connection, one of his closest people inside the guards is the former intelligence chief for the IRGC.

Mojtaba was known — at least whether it’s true or not, because we don’t know, we can’t tell — [to be] behind the manipulation of votes or whatever you want to call it, to have the second term of Ahmadinejad to be president for a second term. On a personal level, people don’t really know him. Everybody in Iran knows who he is because he’s been talked about for years and years as being the closest person to the supreme leader.

He hasn’t shown up yet. There were rumors that he was killed in the first strike on his father. There were rumors that he’s injured, and if he was injured, I can imagine why he wouldn’t want to be seen as the new supreme leader in a hospital bed, for example, if that’s the case.

“Netanyahu and Donald Trump killed his dad, killed his mom, killed his wife, killed his sister, killed his niece in one strike.”

How will he command as the supreme leader, if you want to call it that? It’s hard to say, but Netanyahu and Donald Trump killed his dad, killed his mom, killed his wife, killed his sister, killed his niece in one strike, and potentially injured him. He’s not got to be keen on Donald Trump and on the United States, and he’s definitely not going to be keen on Israel either.

He’s also probably quite pragmatic. He’s 56 years old. I don’t think he wants to be assassinated. I don’t think he wants war for the long term. I’m sure he wants to continue this war, as we were talking earlier about Iran’s strategy, to go as long as they can to put pressure on Trump and on all the allies, but I don’t think in the long term he wants to commit suicide of any kind and or anything like that.

But he’s going to be a hard-liner. He’s considered to be hard-line, in some cases, more hard-line than his father. One thing that opens up for him is the fatwa that his father supposedly people talk about as prohibiting the building or use of nuclear weapons as being against Islam. He could arguably reverse that. He could arguably have his own fatwa.

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So I think we’re in a very dangerous place right now in terms of what could happen in the future. Iran could certainly look at North Korea and say nobody’s threatening North Korea and they have missiles — nuclear missiles that can hit California. I think there’s a lot of things we don’t know what can happen in the future, what can Mojtaba do. 

Israel has already threatened to assassinate him or actually said they’re going to assassinate him. Trump has already said he should be careful. He’s not going to last long, meaning the U.S. is also potentially looking to assassinate him. Clearly he’s not got to be running around the streets of Tehran.

He’s only ever been seen in a few photographs, and he only ever comes out in the past publicly for the rallies which celebrate the birth of the Islamic Republic. He’s never given a speech, to my knowledge; he will have to as supreme leader, but he has not done so yet. So we don’t really know — the long answer to that. We really don’t know.

AL: I know you have a forthcoming piece in the Los Angeles Review of Books. I want to ask you, as we’re wrapping here, for your personal hopes for the future and thoughts on where this all goes, speaking as an Iranian exile.

HM: My hopes are always for Iran to be a democratic country, rule of law, have the people — it sounds cliché, but have people have freedom and freedom to choose their own leaders, not to be imposed from outside, not to be bombed, and not to be at war with anyone. And also to not suffer from economic sanctions that make the lives of the people miserable, hardly make the lives of whatever regime is in power miserable. That’s been proven. Regimes don’t change because of sanctions. All it does is immiserate the people. So that’s what I want for Iran. Whether that’s possible or not, I don’t know, but in terms of hope. 

“Regimes don’t change because of sanctions. All it does is immiserate the people.”

There’s so many different things that can happen. War upends a lot of other kinds of predictions that we may have had in the past. The Iranians certainly thought at the last meeting they had in Geneva between the Iranian Foreign Minister and Witkoff and Kushner, that they thought things were moving ahead and they were going to have a deal.

They were sending their technical team to Vienna for the following week to go through the technical aspects of how this deal was going to work. What we do know, and this is not me, this has been printed and reported on that what Iran was willing to offer the United States was better — far better — than the deal that President Obama was able to make with Iran in 2015, 2016. Trump, we now know, could have taken that and said, I did better than Obama, but chose not to. 

The hope for some Iranians was that with a nuclear deal out of the way, sanctions perhaps being lifted, that the regime would change a little bit, if not completely into something different, but at least loosen up, meet the demands of the people, but that wasn’t to be as we know now.

AL: We’re going to leave it there.

Thank you, Nick and Hooman for joining me on The Intercept Briefing.

HM: Thank you. Thank you for having me. 

NT: Thanks so much.

AL: That does it for this episode. 

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

Slip Stream provided our theme music.

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

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

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

Until next time, I’m Akela Lacy.

The post Trump’s AI-Powered World Wars appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 18:00

In April, Microsoft will be rolling out a full-screen "Xbox mode" to all Windows 11 PCs, including laptops, desktops, and tablets. The move follows last week's confirmation of its next-generation Xbox console, known internally as Project Helix, which will be capable of running both Xbox titles and PC games. The Verge reports: Technically, you've been able to try the Xbox Full Screen Experience (FSE) in preview since November 2025, if you were part of both the Windows Insider and Xbox Insider Programs. But it needed work, as well as a better name. When Microsoft originally shipped it on the Asus-designed Xbox Ally and Xbox Ally X handhelds, we were clear: it didn't meaningfully turn a PC experience into an easy-to-use Xbox one. But if Microsoft is putting its full weight behind PC as the future of Xbox gaming, perhaps that will change change.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 17:56

AUSTIN, Texas, March 11, 2026 — JetCool, a Flex company and a leading provider of end-to-end liquid cooling solutions for high-density compute, today announced it has collaborated with Broadcom to deliver liquid cooling for next-generation AI XPUs, backed by Flex’s global mass production capabilities.

As AI training and inference workloads accelerate, silicon power densities are advancing into sustained multi-kilowatt ranges per device. Thermal architecture now directly impacts system performance, long-term reliability, and deployment timelines. Through this collaboration, JetCool has developed a single-phase direct-to-chip cooling solution designed to integrate with Broadcom’s mechanical and thermal reference architecture, enabling sustained multi-kilowatt ASIC operation at heat flux levels of 4 W/mm² per device.

By aligning silicon design, advanced packaging, mechanical integration, and thermal engineering early in development, Broadcom and JetCool are enabling AI platforms engineered for performance and repeatable manufacturing. Combining JetCool’s direct-to-chip liquid cooling, Flex’s global manufacturing scale, and Broadcom’s custom AI silicon expertise, the partnership establishes a production-ready thermal foundation for hyperscale AI infrastructure.

“At Broadcom, we design AI systems to lead at hyperscale,” said Ken Kutzler, VP of AI Systems Development for Broadcom’s ASIC Products Division. “Supporting multi-kilowatt ASIC platforms requires a tight coordination across silicon architecture, advanced packaging, power delivery, and thermal engineering. Our partnership with JetCool, combined with Flex’s manufacturing and integration capabilities, provides a clear path from advanced ASIC innovation to high-volume AI XPU deployment.”

“Cooling has become a primary design constraint for next-generation AI silicon,” said Bernie Malouin, PhD, VP, Liquid Cooling at Flex. “JetCool’s advanced direct-to-chip cold plate technology, combined with Flex’s global manufacturing scale, enables production-ready thermal solutions engineered for high-density silicon architectures. We’ve developed a strong partnership with the Broadcom team, and together we’re advancing scalable thermal solutions for the next generation of AI infrastructure.”

The partnership supports AI systems that:

  • Deliver sustained multi-kilowatt-class performance for high-density ASIC platforms through advanced direct-to-chip liquid cooling
  • Enable high-volume manufacturing through Flex’s global scale
  • Support future AI silicon generations as power densities continue to increase

Broadcom maintains a broad ecosystem of partners supporting diverse cooling approaches and deployment models. As part of this ecosystem, JetCool is working closely with Broadcom to advance high-performance direct-to-chip thermal architectures for next-generation AI platforms. JetCool provides end-to-end liquid cooling infrastructure from cold plates and manifolds to coolant distribution units (CDUs) supported by Flex’s global manufacturing capabilities to enable scalable deployment across hyperscale AI environments.

About Flex

Flex (Reg. No. 199002645H) is the manufacturing partner of choice that helps a diverse customer base design and build products that improve the world. Through the collective strength of a global workforce across 30 countries and responsible, sustainable operations, Flex delivers technology innovation, supply chain, and manufacturing solutions to diverse industries and end markets.

About JetCool

JetCool, a Flex company, is a global leader in advanced thermal management for compute-intensive applications. Trusted by top chipmakers, OEMs, and data centers, JetCool delivers a comprehensive portfolio of liquid cooling solutions that enhance performance, increase energy efficiency, and support sustainability goals. Engineered for the demands of artificial intelligence (AI) and next-generation computing, JetCool’s liquid cooling technologies deliver reliable, scalable, and future-ready performance for data centers worldwide.


Source: JetCool

The post JetCool Collaborates with Broadcom to Deliver Innovative Liquid Cooling for Next-Generation AI XPUs appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 20:04
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The key functionality runs through Aliro, a new protocol from the makers of Matter and Thread.

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The strike on an Iranian elementary school killed at least 175, many of them children, raising questions as to whether the military’s use of AI-enabled targeting was a factor.

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John Thune refusing to alter rules to force a vote as US president says he won’t sign any legislation until bill is passed

Donald Trump hit back at Republican Senate majority leader John Thune over the latter’s refusal to alter rules to force a vote on the Save America act, a sprawling bill that would upend elections for American voters amid the midterms.

Trump delivered a blunt message for Thune to reporters outside the White House on Wednesday: “He’s got to be a leader.”

Continue reading...

2026-03-11 20:04
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Identity theft experts say criminals are creating fake business entities by targeting a specific population: legal immigrants.

2026-03-11 20:04
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Grammarly has disabled its Expert Review feature after backlash from writers whose names were used to present AI-generated feedback without their permission. Superhuman (formerly Grammarly) CEO Shishir Mehrotra wrote in a LinkedIn post that the company will disable Expert Review while they "reimagine" the feature: Back in August, we launched a Grammarly agent called Expert Review. The agent draws on publicly available information from third-party LLMs to surface writing suggestions inspired by the published work of influential voices. Over the past week, we received valid critical feedback from experts who are concerned that the agent misrepresented their voices. This kind of scrutiny improves our products, and we take it seriously. As context, the agent was designed to help users discover influential perspectives and scholarship relevant to their work, while also providing meaningful ways for experts to build deeper relationships with their fans. We hear the feedback and recognize we fell short on this. I want to apologize and acknowledge that we'll rethink our approach going forward. After careful consideration, we have decided to disable Expert Review while we reimagine the feature to make it more useful for users, while giving experts real control over how they want to be represented -- or not represented at all. We deeply believe in our mission to solve the "last mile of AI" by bringing AI directly to where people work, and we see this as a significant opportunity for experts. For millions of users, Grammarly is a trusted writing sidekick -- ever-present in every application, ready to help. We're opening up this platform so anyone can build agents that work like Grammarly -- expanding from one sidekick to a whole team. Imagine your professor sharpening your essay, your sales leader reshaping a customer pitch, a thoughtful critic challenging your arguments, or a leading expert elevating your proposal. For experts, this is a chance to build that same ubiquitous bond with users, much like Grammarly has. But in this world, experts choose to participate, shape how their knowledge is represented, and control their business model. That future excites me, and I hope to build it with experts who want to develop it alongside us.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-11 20:04
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French aid worker Karine Buisset died in the attack. Two others were also killed, according to rebel group M23. Congo’s government and M23 blamed each other.

2026-03-11 20:04
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From the iPhone 17 Pro and Google Pixel 10 Pro to Samsung's Galaxy S25 Ultra and Galaxy Z Fold 7, these are the top camera phones we've tested.

2026-03-11 20:04
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First thing to do with Onewheel XL?

just got it from the mail today

submitted by /u/BJorn_LuLszic
[link] [comments]

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 16:44

How much high-bandwidth memory (HBM) is enough? For Meta, the answer apparently is around half a terabyte, which is the amount of HBM it’s aiming to pack into one of the new AI accelerators it unveiled today.

An MTIA chip from Meta

Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram, announced four new members of its Meta Training and Inference Accelerator (MTIA) lineup today. The homegrown chips, which it develops with partner Broadcom, are designed to handle a range of compute-intensive tasks at the social media giant, from ranking and recommendation (R&R) training and inference workloads to training foundational AI models and running those models in inference mode.

Each of the chips is designed to accel at a particular task. For instance, the new MTIA 300–which contains two RISC-V cores in addition to several other specialized processing elements (PEs) assembled using a chiplet design–is intended to be used for R&R training. The MTIA 400, which is based on the MTIA 300 design, is aimed at general Meta workloads. The MTIA 450 and MTIA 500 are evolutions of that original MTIA 300 design that bring new chiplet configurations, additional PEs, and support for new data types, with the intent to tackle the biggest, gnarliest AI workloads.

Meta paid particular attention to speed up data movement between memory and processors, which often is the bottleneck in GenAI workloads. While the MTIA brought 288 GB of HBM and 9.2 TB per second in HBM bandwidth, the MTIA 450, which also has 288 GB of HBM, offers double the memory bandwidth, or 18.4 TB per second. The MTIA 500, meanwhile, gets anywhere from 384 GB to 512 GB of HBM and offers a smoking 27.6 TB per second of memory bandwidth.

MTIA specs (Source: Meta)

The MTIA 500, which is slated to go into Meta data centers in 2027, will also deliver 30 petaflops of MX4 (i.e. MXFP4, or microscaling 4-bit floating point) inference performance, versus 21 petaflops of MX4 inference performance for the MTIA 450 chip. It will do this within a thermal design power (TDP) envelope of 1,700 watts, versus 1,400 watts for the MTIA 450 and 1,200 watts for MTIA 400.

Those figures stack up nicely against Nvidia and its upcoming Rubin GPU. Rubin will deliver 22 TB per second of HBM4 bandwidth, which is 5 TB per second less than what Meta says it will deliver with MTIA 500. In terms of performance, Nvidia says Rubin will offer 35 petaflops of NVP4 training capacity and 50 petaflops of NVP4 inference capacity. NVFP4 is a new low-precision data type unveiled last year by Nvidia for Blackwell that it says delivers more accuracy and lower quantization error, and the expense of more complexity and lower compression.

Meta says the MTIA 400 is its first in-house chip designed to compete with the fastest AI accelerators in the market. “It combines two compute chiplets to double compute density, and also supports enhanced versions of MX8 and MX4, which are important low-precision formats for efficient GenAI inference,” the company writes in a blog post today. “A rack with 72 MTIA 400 devices, connected via a switched backplane, forms a single scale-up domain.”

The MTIA 450 builds on the MTIA 400 with more memory bandwidth, a 75% increase in MX4 capacity, new hardware acceleration for attention and feed-forward network (FFN) computation, and the capability to efficiently support mixed low-precision computation, the company says.

Evolution of MTIA chip design (Source: Meta)

The MTIA 500 offers even more raw HBM and memory bandwidth, in addition to some design innovation. For instance, with MTIA 500, Meta will adopt a 2×2 configuration, where smaller compute chiplets are “surrounded by several HBM stacks and two network chiplets, along with an SoC chiplet that provides PCIe connectivity to the host CPU and scale-out NICs.

The MTIA 400, 450, and 500 all use the same chassis, rack, and network infrastructure, which allows the chips to be upgraded with a minimum of hassle. “We architect our accelerators as systems of chiplets–discrete, reusable building blocks for compute, I/O, and networking,” Meta writes. “Because each chiplet can be upgraded separately, we can implement improvements in months rather than years. Moreover, different chiplets can be manufactured at different process nodes that are most cost-effective while meeting performance and power requirements.”

While Meta is building its own custom silicon with Broadcom, it’s also one of Nvidia’s biggest customers, buying millions of its GPUs over the years, including Grace, Blackwell, and the upcoming Rubin GPUs.

 

 

The post Meta Packs Gobs of HBM Into Homegrown AI Accelerators appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 16:42

A new, open, 120-billion-parameter hybrid mixture-of-experts model optimized for NVIDIA Blackwell addresses the costs of long thinking and context explosion that slow autonomous agent workflows.

March 11, 2026 — Launched today, NVIDIA Nemotron 3 Super is a 120‑billion‑parameter open model with 12 billion active parameters designed to run complex agentic AI systems at scale. Available now, the model combines advanced reasoning capabilities to efficiently complete tasks with high accuracy for autonomous agents.

Credit: NVIDIA

AI-Native Companies: Perplexity offers its users access to Nemotron 3 Super for search and as one of 20 orchestrated models in Computer. Companies offering software development agents like CodeRabbit, Factory and Greptile are integrating the model into their AI agents along with proprietary models to achieve higher accuracy at lower cost. And life sciences and frontier AI organizations like Edison Scientific and Lila Sciences will power their agents for deep literature search, data science and molecular understanding.

Enterprise Software Platforms: Industry leaders such as Amdocs, Palantir, Cadence, Dassault Systèmes and Siemens are deploying and customizing the model to automate workflows in telecom, cybersecurity, semiconductor design and manufacturing.

As companies move beyond chatbots and into multi‑agent applications, they encounter two constraints.

The first is context explosion. Multi‑agent workflows generate up to 15x more tokens than standard chat because each interaction requires resending full histories, including tool outputs and intermediate reasoning.

Over long tasks, this volume of context increases costs and can lead to goal drift, where agents lose alignment with the original objective.

The second is the thinking tax. Complex agents must reason at every step, but using large models for every subtask makes multi-agent applications too expensive and sluggish for practical applications.

Nemotron 3 Super has a 1‑million‑token context window, allowing agents to retain full workflow state in memory and preventing goal drift.

Nemotron 3 Super has set new standards, claiming the top spot on Artificial Analysis for efficiency and openness with leading accuracy among models of the same size.

The model also powers the NVIDIA AI-Q research agent to the No. 1 position on DeepResearch Bench and DeepResearch Bench II leaderboards, benchmarks that measure an AI system’s ability to conduct thorough, multistep research across large document sets while maintaining reasoning coherence.

Hybrid Architecture

Nemotron 3 Super uses a hybrid mixture‑of‑experts (MoE) architecture that combines three major innovations to deliver up to 5x higher throughput and up to 2x higher accuracy than the previous Nemotron Super model.

  • Hybrid Architecture: Mamba layers deliver 4x higher memory and compute efficiency, while transformer layers drive advanced reasoning.
  • MoE: Only 12 billion of its 120 billion parameters are active at inference.
  • Latent MoE: A new technique that improves accuracy by activating four expert specialists for the cost of one to generate the next token at inference.
  • Multi-Token Prediction: Predicts multiple future words simultaneously, resulting in 3x faster inference.

On the NVIDIA Blackwell platform, the model runs in NVFP4 precision. That cuts memory requirements and pushes inference up to 4x faster than FP8 on NVIDIA Hopper, with no loss in accuracy.

Open Weights, Data and Recipes

NVIDIA is releasing Nemotron 3 Super with open weights under a permissive license. Developers can deploy and customize it on workstations, in data centers or in the cloud.

The model was trained on synthetic data generated using frontier reasoning models. NVIDIA is publishing the complete methodology, including over 10 trillion tokens of pre- and post-training datasets, 15 training environments for reinforcement learning and evaluation recipes. Researchers can further use the NVIDIA NeMo platform to fine-tune the model or build their own.

Use in Agentic Systems

Nemotron 3 Super is designed to handle complex subtasks inside a multi-agent system. A software development agent can load an entire codebase into context at once, enabling end-to-end code generation and debugging without document segmentation.

In financial analysis it can load thousands of pages of reports into memory, eliminating the need to re-reason across long conversations, which improves efficiency.

Nemotron 3 Super has high-accuracy tool calling that ensures autonomous agents reliably navigate massive function libraries to prevent execution errors in high-stakes environments, like autonomous security orchestration in cybersecurity.

Availability

NVIDIA Nemotron 3 Super, part of the Nemotron 3 family, can be accessed at build.nvidia.com, Perplexity, OpenRouter and Hugging Face. Dell Technologies is bringing the model to the Dell Enterprise Hub on Hugging Face, optimized for on-premise deployment on the Dell AI Factory, advancing multi-agent AI workflows. HPE is also bringing NVIDIA Nemotron to its agents hub to help ensure scalable enterprise adoption of agentic AI.

Enterprises and developers can deploy the model through several partners:

  • Cloud Service Providers: Google Cloud’s Vertex AI and Oracle Cloud Infrastructure, and coming soon to Amazon Web Services through Amazon Bedrock as well as Microsoft Azure.
  • NVIDIA Cloud Partners: Coreweave, Crusoe, Nebius and Together AI.
  • Inference Service Providers: Baseten, CloudFlare, DeepInfra, Fireworks AI, Inference.net, Lightning AI, Modal and FriendliAI.
  • Data Platforms and Services: Distyl, Dataiku, DataRobot, Deloitte, EY and Tata Consultancy Services.

The model is packaged as an NVIDIA NIM microservice, allowing deployment from on-premises systems to the cloud.


Source: Kari Briski, NVIDIA

The post NVIDIA’s New Nemotron 3 Super Delivers 5x Higher Throughput for Agentic AI appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 16:42

These are the best TVs I’ve reviewed for every budget, including top brands, including LG, Samsung and TCL.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 16:24

Anthropic's AI assistant can now keep a single continuous conversation across both tools.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 16:21
  • He withdrew from Arnold Palmer Invitational on Saturday

  • ‘I’m taking it hour by hour, but it feels better’

Rory McIlroy will make a last‑minute call on Thursday over whether to defend his Players Championship title, with the Northern Irishman still feeling the effects of a weekend back injury. McIlroy will wait until his pre-round range session to determine whether he is fit enough to play.

McIlroy arrived here on Wednesday afternoon, having withdrawn shortly before his third round of the Arnold Palmer Invitational. He hit shots for around an hour before walking the back nine with wedge and putter in hand. McIlroy sustained a muscle problem in the gym on Saturday morning, which left him basically inactive for three days.

Continue reading...

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 16:19

PALO ALTO, Calif., March 11, 2026 — D-Wave Quantum Inc. has announced that it will present new scientific results at the American Physical Society’s Global Physics Summit, the world’s largest physics conference, on March 15-20, 2026, in Denver, Colorado.

At the conference, D-Wave researchers will present technical developments in both annealing and gate-model quantum computing, highlighting advances in analog-digital processor control, error detection and correction, programmable quantum dynamics and optimization. The talks underscore D-Wave’s continued momentum scaling practical, commercially viable quantum computers.

“The Global Physics Summit is an important forum for sharing scientific progress with the global physics community,” said Trevor Lanting, chief development officer at D-Wave. “The work we will present reflects meaningful advancements in performance, scalability and real-world applications. We are focused on translating these technical breakthroughs into capabilities that help our customers solve complex problems better, faster and more efficiently than classical approaches.”

Through this research, D-Wave’s esteemed scientists and engineers continue to strengthen the Company’s commercial leadership in annealing quantum computing while accelerating its differentiated dual-rail approach to building gate-model systems. D-Wave’s dual-rail gate-model qubits combine superconducting speed with the fidelity of trapped ion and neutral atom systems, a capability unmatched by any other quantum computing vendor.

The D-Wave team will present the following accepted talks (all times listed are in Mountain Daylight Time):

March 18, 2026

March 19, 2026

March 20, 2026

Attendees are invited to visit Booth 1228 to meet with D-Wave scientists, experience interactive demonstrations, and learn more about career opportunities, which can also be found on D-Wave’s website.

Explore D-Wave research publications here.

About D-Wave Quantum Inc.

D-Wave is a leader in the development and delivery of quantum computing systems, software, and services. It is the world’s first commercial supplier of quantum computers, and the first and only to offer dual-platform quantum computing products and services, spanning both annealing and gate-model quantum computing technologies. D-Wave’s mission is to help customers realize the value of quantum today through enterprise-grade systems available on-premises and via its Leap quantum cloud service, which offers 99.9% availability and uptime. More than 100 organizations across commercial, government and research sectors trust D-Wave to address complex computational challenges using quantum computing. Learn more about realizing the value of quantum computing today and how D-Wave is shaping the quantum-driven industrial and societal advancements of tomorrow: www.dwavequantum.com.


Source: D-Wave

The post D-Wave to Present Quantum Computing Scientific Advancements at APS Global Physics Summit appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 16:18

Here's how the $599 iPhone 17E matches up with the lower-cost flagship offerings from Google and Samsung.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 16:14

A 2024 government lawsuit accused Invitation Homes of deceiving renters about lease costs, charging undisclosed junk fees and other unlawful practices.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 16:13

PALO ALTO, Calif., March 11, 2026 — Broadcom Inc., a global technology leader that designs, develops and supplies semiconductor and infrastructure software solutions, today announced the availability of its 3nm 400G/lane optical PAM-4 DSP, the Taurus BCM83640, optimized for 1.6T transceiver solutions with unprecedented bandwidth density and efficiency. T

he device features 400G/lane serial optical interfaces, which enable optical transceiver manufacturers to cost effectively deliver low power 1.6T pluggable modules to meet the growing bandwidth needs for AI data centers.

Taurus BCM83640 Product Highlights

  • Monolithic 3nm 1.6T (8:4) PAM-4 DSP with integrated laser driver
  • Delivers best-in-class module performance in BER and power consumption
  • Proven interoperability with Broadcom’s 400G EML and PD
  • Compliant to all IEEE and OIF standards, capable of supporting LR links on the chip to module electrical interface
  • Supports optical modules from 1.6T to 3.2T

400G/lane technology is the next evolution of 200G/lane architectures, enabling a critical step in scaling bandwidth for high-performance networking and AI infrastructure. 1.6T pluggable modules using the Taurus BCM83640 double the bandwidth per optical lane, effectively enabling 102.4T switching capacity in a 1RU system to improve bandwidth density in AI optical interconnects. Further, the adoption of 400G/lane optical interfaces lays the foundation for the eventual deployment of 3.2T module solutions with 400G/lane electrical interfaces for 204.8T switches.

“Broadcom’s 400G/lane Taurus platform of optical DSPs is laying the foundation for next- generation AI networks and data center connectivity,” said Vijay Janapaty, vice president and general manager of Broadcom’s Physical Layer Products Division. “Taurus, the industry’s first 1.6T DSP based on 400G/lane I/O, doubles the throughput per lane to enable the next generation of 3.2T optical modules. Crucially, Taurus pushes the IMDD technology envelope into 400G/lane, further reducing power and advancing our roadmap of cost-optimized solutions for connectivity in AI and cloud networks.”

“We expect more than 100 million units of 1.6T and 3.2T optical transceivers to be shipped over the next 5 years with close to half of these using 400G optics,” commented Vladimir Kozlov, CEO and founder of LightCounting. “High speed optical interconnects are essential for operation of AI clusters. Doubling of the lane rates has been a proven strategy to keep up with the bandwidth growth and it is great to see the first 400G per lane solutions becoming available.”

“Our goal is to drive innovation,” said Richard Huang, CEO of Eoptolink Technology. “Taurus is more than a product milestone — it’s a catalyst for the future of connectivity. By delivering the industry’s first fully functional 448G/ln transceivers, we are empowering a new era of scale, speed, and possibility. Taurus-based optical transceivers bridge today’s 102.4T networks with tomorrow’s switching generations, unlocking transformative bandwidth growth. With Taurus, we are not just advancing technology — we are shaping the 448G future.”

Availability
Broadcom has begun sampling its Taurus BCM83640 to its early access customers and partners. Please contact your local Broadcom sales representative for samples and pricing.

For more information on Broadcom’s 400G/lane optical solutions, please click here.

About Broadcom

Broadcom Inc. (NASDAQ: AVGO) is a technology leader that designs, develops, and supplies semiconductors and infrastructure software for global organizations’ complex, mission-critical needs. Broadcom combines long-term R&D investment with superb execution to deliver the best technology, at scale. Broadcom is a Delaware corporation headquartered in Palo Alto, CA. For more information, visit www.broadcom.com.


Source: Broadcom

The post Broadcom Delivers 400G/lane Optical DSP for Next-Gen AI Networks appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 16:05

Decades after patients first warned Columbia University that one of its doctors sexually abused them, some university administrators have finally faced consequences.

On Tuesday, Columbia released a long-awaited report that details a culture of silence that allowed OB-GYN Robert Hadden to abuse more than 1,000 patients during his nearly 25-year career at Columbia. 

In unveiling the report, the university also announced that two long-time administrators are leaving their positions. 

Dr. Mary D’Alton, chair of the OB-GYN department and Hadden’s former boss, has stepped down. D’Alton will maintain her clinical practice.

Dr. Lee Goldman, the former dean of the medical school, will retire. The two were administrators above Hadden. They were also among those cc’d on a 2012 letter that let Hadden continue seeing patients even after he was arrested when one woman reported he’d assaulted her.

Yesterday’s report was prompted by a ProPublica investigation that revealed how Columbia had dismissed women and ultimately protected a predator. Amid outrage in the wake of the 2023 story, Columbia announced it would set up a $100 million fund for survivors and initiate an independent review.  

More than two years after the review was announced, the 156-page report was published days after the New York attorney general said it was investigating Columbia’s response to the Hadden case.

The report outlines how more than a dozen patients’ complaints had gone nowhere, in part because of the lack of clear reporting procedures. The report also found a “hierarchal institutional culture” in which physicians occupied an “exalted” or “god-like” status that made it difficult for staff to report concerns.

One patient, Eva Santos Veloz, was 18 years old when she saw Hadden for an emergency delivery in 2008. At the time, she and her mother reported that Hadden had touched her in ways that made her uncomfortable, sometimes without gloves. Nothing happened after she filed the complaint. At the time, she said, she came to believe she was making the whole thing up because no one seemed to believe her.

Santos said that while the report confirms that she was right all along, it doesn’t tell her anything new. “The only peace it gives me is that they are publicly saying, ‘We knew about this and we did nothing,’” she said.

The report also lists five different complaints that were reported to leadership but resulted in no action against Hadden. Investigators note that the university’s record-keeping practices were insufficient and that higher-ups failed to conduct a full investigation into his misconduct.

In an internal email sent Tuesday to the OB-GYN department and obtained by ProPublica, D’Alton announced that she will remain on the faculty “to continue our department’s work of advancing women’s health.” 

“I cannot adequately express the sorrow that I feel for the suffering Robert Hadden inflicted on his patients,” D’Alton wrote in the email. “That these acts were committed by a doctor in our department, including while I was chair, pains me deeply and always will.”

A similar statement posted to the Columbia website does not note her continued employment.

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

In a statement, Goldman said his “heart breaks for the victims of Robert Hadden.”

He continued: “Throughout my tenure we focused on prioritizing a culture of ethics and patient safety at the medical school, and to reassess and enhance its policies and procedures on an ongoing basis.”

The report also confirms that executives at the top of the organizations — including former Columbia President Lee Bollinger, as well as one of the trustees at both Columbia and NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, the Columbia-affiliated system where Hadden was an attending physician — had been alerted to Hadden’s arrest the evening it occurred.

Bollinger, who retired from his post in the summer of 2023, did not respond to a request for comment.

A letter accompanying the report’s release said, “The University remains steadfast in our commitment to our ongoing responsibilities. We must continue to operate with transparency and confront systemic failures when they occur.” Columbia did not provide an additional comment.

In a statement, a group of survivors, including Marissa Hoechstetter and Evelyn Yang, criticized the report for failing to examine what happened in the years after Hadden left Columbia — including the university’s documented efforts to destroy evidence, fight former patients in court and discredit those survivors.

The statement also points out that Claire Shipman, the current acting president of the university and who signed Tuesday’s announcement, has been on the board of trustees since 2013, amid the fallout from the Hadden case. She did not respond to a request for comment.

“What Columbia has released today offers the bare minimum accountability for failures that

should have been addressed years ago,” the survivors’ statement said. “It confirms the systemic breakdown that allowed Hadden to operate. But it stops short of examining the cover-up culture that survivors experienced firsthand once the abuse came to light.”

The deadline to submit a claim for compensation to Columbia’s survivor fund, which was established for former patients who do not want to file a lawsuit, was extended to June 15.

The post Report Confirms Columbia Ignored Decades of Doctor’s Sexual Abuse appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 21:00

Innovation. Music. Films. Artificial intelligence. Here's what we're looking forward to at this year's South by Southwest festival and conference.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 20:40

Richard Kahn was one of Epstein's closest associates in his final years, managing his finances and investments.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 16:01

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., March 11, 2026 — Lightmatter today announced vClick Optics, a breakthrough technology enabling detachable fiber array units (FAU) that overcome the critical scaling challenges of Co-Packaged Optics (CPO).

Optimized for high-volume manufacturing (HVM), vClick Optics accelerates the industry roadmap toward advanced packaging for 3D CPO-enabled XPUs and switches by demonstrating a low insertion loss of less than 1.5 dB. With support for high-bandwidth Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing and unmatched field serviceability, this technology provides the essential foundation for 32-100Tbps+ next-generation optical interconnects, including Lightmatter’s Passage L-Series.

vClick Optics: Shifting Left to Scale Photonic Interconnect Production

The development of high-bandwidth optical engines (OEs) requires integration with advanced packaging (AP) technologies. The delivery of known-good OEs with detachable FAUs is essential for ensuring high production yields in advanced packaging flows. To address this challenge, vClick Optics enables the integration of SENKO’s SEAT and MPC Connector solutions with Lightmatter’s vertically expanded-beam photonic technology. This creates a detachable optical interface between fiber arrays and photonic integrated circuits (PICs) that is mold-and-grind compatible, as demonstrated in ASE’s advanced packaging flows. The integration of vClick Optics capability directly into the wafer fabrication process enables a “shift left” in the assembly cycle; a critical innovation required to scale next-generation 3D CPO production. By allowing manufacturers to verify “known good optical engines” before final integration, vClick significantly reduces the risk of yield loss when integrating optics with high-cost ASIC die structures in advanced XPU or switch chip packages.

Key advantages of vClick include:

  • High Bandwidth DWDM Compatibility: Supports broadband (up to 80+ nanometers) Coarse Wavelength Division Multiplexing (CWDM) and Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing (DWDM) to enable massive optical bandwidth density and flexibility.
  • Advanced Packaging Compatible: The technology is mold-and-grind compatible across advanced packaging flows of the world’s largest foundries and outsourced semiconductor assembly and test (OSAT) vendors.
  • Automated Assembly: Does not require active fiber alignment during production, minimizing assembly and testing time.
  • Field Serviceability: A demonstrated insertion and re-insertion loss of less than 1.5 dB, preserves the optical power required to drive field-serviceable CPO with 100Tbps or more of bandwidth.

Executive Perspectives

“The increasing complexity in advanced AI chip packages and their production processes necessitates a move toward a known good optical engine at the wafer level,” said Ritesh Jain, SVP, Engineering and Operations of Lightmatter. “With vClick Optics, we are providing physical optical engine connectivity that integrates seamlessly into the world’s largest and most advanced semiconductor supply chains, ensuring that our L-Series 3D CPO platform is hyperscale volume-ready.”

“Collaborating with Lightmatter on this milestone underscores our commitment to advancing scalable packaging solutions for evolving AI infrastructure,” said Calvin Cheung, VP, Engineering and Business Development of ASE. “Integrating vClick technology into high-volume advanced packaging flows is a vital step toward enabling detachable fiber connectivity for co-packaged optics and emerging XPU platforms.”

“Our partnership with Lightmatter on vClick Optics moves detachable fiber connectors closer to mainstream adoption,” said Kazu Takano, President, Senko Emerging Technologies Group and Corporate Officer of SENKO Advanced Components. “By integrating our SEAT and MPC technologies into Lightmatter’s 3D CPO architecture, we are enabling detachable fiber interfaces that meet the manufacturability, performance, and serviceability requirements of large-scale AI infrastructure.”

An FAU serves as the critical bridge between optical fibers and Photonic Integrated Circuits (PICs). vClick Optics represents a major step forward as the industry’s first detachable FAU that is compatible with advanced packaging, transforming once-permanent fiber attachment into a “must-have” plug-and-play FAU. With this new technology, Lightmatter ensures that high-density 3D CPO solutions like Passage L-Series are both massively deployable and easily serviceable for mission-critical hyperscale AI data center applications.

To provide comprehensive coverage across the CPO roadmap, Lightmatter also revealed eClick Optics, a high-performance edge-coupling solution optimized for larger die complexes like those enabled by the Passage M1000 reference platform. By utilizing an edge-attach method to minimize the impact on PIC die area, eClick achieves very low insertion loss in large-scale implementations, serving as a complementary alternative for specialized, large-format hardware.

Lightmatter will showcase its latest innovations, including vClick Optics, at the Optical Fiber Communication conference in Los Angeles, from March 15-19, 2026. For more information, please visit https://lightmatter.co/event/ofc-2026.

About Lightmatter

Lightmatter is leading a revolution in AI data center infrastructure, enabling the next giant leaps in human progress. The company’s groundbreaking Passage platform—the world’s first 3D-stacked silicon photonics engine—and Guide—the industry’s first VLSP light engine—connect thousands to millions of processors. Designed to eliminate critical data bottlenecks, Lightmatter’s technology delivers unprecedented bandwidth density and energy efficiency for the most advanced AI and high-performance computing workloads, fundamentally redefining the architecture of next-generation AI infrastructure.


Source: Lightmatter

The post Lightmatter Unveils vClick Optics Detachable Fiber Array Unit for CPO Advanced Packaging and High-Volume Production appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 16:01

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for March 12 No.1,005.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 16:01

Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for March 12, No. 739.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 16:00

A Swiss e-voting pilot was suspended after officials couldn't decrypt 2,048 ballots because the USB keys needed to unlock them failed. "Three USB sticks were used, all with the correct code, but none of them worked," spokesperson Marco Greiner told the Swiss Broadcasting Corporation's Swissinfo service. The canton government says it "deeply regrets" the incident and has launched an investigation with authorities. The Register reports: Basel-Stadt announced the problem with its e-voting pilot, open to about 10,300 locals living abroad and 30 people with disabilities, last Friday afternoon. It encouraged participants to deliver a paper vote to the town hall or use a polling station but admitted this would not be possible for many. By the close of polling on Sunday, its e-voting system had collected 2,048 votes, but Basel-Stadt officials were not able to decrypt them with the hardware provided, despite the involvement of IT experts. [...] The votes made up less than 4 percent of those cast in Basel-Stadt and would not have changed any results, but the canton is delaying confirmation of voting figures until March 21 and suspending its e-voting pilot until the end of December, while its public prosecutor's office has started criminal proceedings. The country's Federal Chancellery said e-voting in three other cantons -- Thurgau, Graubunden, and St Gallen -- along with the nationally used Swiss Post e-voting system, had not been affected.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 16:00

WILMINGTON, Del., March 11, 2026 — Zymtrace, a distributed AI infrastructure optimization platform, today announced that it has raised $12.2 million to date to help enterprises uncover hidden performance bottlenecks inside their GPU clusters. The funding includes a newly closed $8.5 million seed round led by Venture Guides, an early-stage investor in cloud infrastructure and AI companies, with participation from Mango Capital, Fly Ventures, and 6 Degrees Capital.

The round also includes strategic angel investors Thomas Wolf, co-founder of Hugging Face; Christian Bach, founder of Netlify; AI systems optimization expert Christopher Fregly; Reece Chowdhry of Concept Ventures, and more.

The company also previously raised an unannounced $3.7 million pre-seed round led by Fly Ventures and Mango Capital, with participation from Entropy Industrial Capital. In the latest financing, Mango Capital and Fly Ventures doubled down on their investment, reinforcing their conviction and support in Zymtrace’s mission.

The new funding will support continued product development, expanded enterprise deployments, and growth of the U.S. go-to-market team, while advancing Zymtrace’s move toward profile-guided autonomous AI workload optimization. The company’s Profile Guided AI Optimization approach completes the full agentic optimization loop autonomously, from detecting a GPU bottleneck to opening a pull request with the fix. With MCP integration, customers can wire it directly into their existing pipelines, cutting what once took weeks of manual investigation down to minutes.

The founding team pioneered, open-sourced, and donated the eBPF CPU profiling agent to OpenTelemetry while at Elastic. This technology is now used in production at Cisco, Datadog, Grafana, IBM, and more. At Zymtrace, they are bringing that same engineering excellence to GPUs and AI-accelerated workloads.

Continuous GPU Profiling for Production AI Workloads

As AI adoption increases, infrastructure spending has risen significantly, with the global GPU market expected to reach $326 billion by 2036. Yet, most GPU clusters operate at just 35-40% utilization, wasting billions of dollars in compute capacity.

This inefficiency is a massive economic drain. Underutilized GPUs lead to longer training cycles, costly inference, and wasted energy. When performance bottlenecks arise, identifying the root cause is no simple task. It demands highly specialized expertise and days or weeks of manual investigation across fragmented tools. As a result, many organizations default to a costly stopgap: buying more GPUs.

At the heart of the problem is a lack of fleet-wide, production-grade visibility. Existing solutions are intrusive, fragmented, and blind to the critical interactions between hosts and GPUs. They show utilization percentages. They don’t show why.

Zymtrace was built to close that optimization gap. The platform continuously profiles GPU and CPU workloads across distributed systems, correlating cluster-level activity down to individual lines of code. Engineers can trace GPU kernel stalls, memory bottlenecks, or scheduling inefficiencies back to specific CUDA kernels, Python functions, Rust or C++ routines, without requiring code changes.

“The cheapest GPU you can buy is the one you already own,” said Israel Ogbole, co-founder and CEO of Zymtrace. “The bottleneck is rarely the hardware. It’s the code that runs on it. Every idle GPU cycle is money and energy lost. We are building the autonomous optimization layer for AI infrastructure, improving unit economics with more throughput per GPU, lower cost per inference, and less energy per output.”

Customers have used Zymtrace to reduce inference latency and improve GPU throughput while avoiding costly overprovisioning. To cite an example, “before Zymtrace, we spent so much time hunting down why our GPUs were being used inefficiently,” said Ben Carr, co-founder and CTO of Anam. “Zymtrace pinpointed where our workloads were stalling and showed us how to resolve the issues. We improved inference latency by 2.5x and increased throughput by 90% for our Cara3 model.”

Unlike traditional profiling tools that can introduce significant overhead in production environments, Zymtrace uses an eBPF-based architecture designed for continuous introspection with minimal performance impact. The platform generates actionable optimization recommendations across kernel execution and batch sizing, CPU scheduling, and distributed communication, along with estimated cost and performance gains.

Scaling the Next Layer of Efficient AI Infrastructure

As AI infrastructure costs continue to rise, Zymtrace aims to become a critical efficiency layer for enterprises running large-scale AI workloads. Here’s what some of the investors backing Zymtrace had to say.

“Zymtrace is creating core technology that will underpin the next generation of AI infrastructure. As infrastructure increasingly becomes the limiting factor to growth, performance gains and efficiency aren’t optional, they’re essential,” said Sage Nye, Partner and Founding Team Member at Venture Guides. “With a strong focus on customers and a clear long-term vision, the Zymtrace team is addressing one of the most significant challenges in GenAI adoption.”

“The future of AI won’t only be defined by who can acquire the most GPUs, but by who gets the most out of them. As compute becomes the dominant cost center, Zymtrace is solving a problem every AI-driven enterprise will face,” said Fredrik Bergenlid, Partner at Fly Ventures.

“Most organizations are still flying blind inside their GPU clusters, unable to see why their most expensive resources are sitting idle,” said Robin Vasan, Founder and Managing Partner at Mango Capital. “The teams that can squeeze the most FLOPs from their GPU will have a decisive competitive advantage. That’s exactly why we backed Zymtrace from day one.”

About Zymtrace

Zymtrace is an AI infrastructure optimization platform that helps enterprises run large-scale AI workloads more efficiently. By continuously profiling GPU and CPU execution across heterogeneous, distributed systems with zero instrumentation, Zymtrace delivers deep visibility into CPU⇄GPU interactions, pinpoints root causes down to the line of code, and uses Profile-Guided AI optimization to help engineers fix bottlenecks and maximize throughput per GPU, per dollar, per watt.


Source: Zymtrace

The post Zymtrace Raises $12.2M to Optimize GPU Cluster Performance for AI Workloads appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 16:00

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for March 12, No. 1,727.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 16:00

Meal kits can make dinner a breeze, especially when you get one that uses this foolproof cooking method.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 16:00

If you're looking for a sign to get an under-desk treadmill, this is it.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 15:56

SAN JOSE, Calif., & TAIPEI, Taiwan, March 11, 2026 — Ayar Labs, a leader in co-packaged optics (CPO) solutions for AI scale-up, and Wiwynn, an innovative cloud IT infrastructure provider for data centers, announced a strategic partnership to deliver optically connected, rack-scale AI systems that support next-generation hyperscale AI workloads.

Joint AI CPO solution from Ayar Labs and Wiwynn, highlighting an HVDC (High Voltage Direct Current)-enabled, rack-level system architecture for next-generation AI data centers. It features a 100% liquid-cooled AI system reference design with support of ELSFP SuperNova remote light sources and AI ASICs with Ayar Labs TeraPHY optical engines.

As AI models drive compute demand, traditional copper interconnects increasingly constrain performance, system growth, and power efficiency. By combining Ayar Labs’ CPO solution with Wiwynn’s rack-level system design and manufacturing capabilities, the two companies are enabling a new class of rack-scale AI infrastructure that’s not constrained by the bandwidth and reach limitations of copper.

“AI infrastructure is outgrowing the limits of copper, and hyperscalers need a fundamentally new approach to scale,” said Mark Wade, CEO and co-founder of Ayar Labs. “Optically connected racks eliminate the interconnect bottleneck and unlock the next order of magnitude in performance and efficiency. By combining Wiwynn’s global system and manufacturing leadership with Ayar Labs’ co-packaged optics expertise, we are delivering pioneering, rack-scale architectures purpose-built for optically connected scale-up AI networks.”

The joint solution integrates Ayar Labs’ AI scale-up CPO technology, including TeraPHY optical engines powered by the SuperNova remote light source, into Wiwynn’s rack-level architecture for next-generation data centers. Together, the companies are solving the practical deployment challenges hyperscalers face, including optical fiber management, integration of CPO-enabled AI ASICs, thermal management, power efficiency, and manufacturability.

“Silicon photonics is reshaping how AI infrastructure is built,” said William Lin, President and CEO of Wiwynn. “With Ayar Labs’ leadership in co-packaged optics and Wiwynn’s strengths in rack-level integration and manufacturing, we accelerate the shift from silicon-ready innovation to system-ready solutions. Together, we are enabling advanced optical I/O that delivers greater scalability and energy efficiency for cloud and hyperscale customers, powering next-generation AI data centers.”

The new optically-connected rack-scale AI infrastructure is designed to scale to 1,024 AI accelerators and beyond, with each accelerator capable of delivering more than 100 Tbps of optical connectivity, enabling thousands of accelerators to operate as a single, unified system across multiple racks. The solution incorporates a liquid-cooled architecture optimized for high-power operation, including support for external laser small form factor pluggable (ELSFP) light sources, advanced fiber management, and serviceable system designs required for hyperscale environments.

Wiwynn brings over a decade of experience delivering rack-level IT solutions to the world’s leading cloud service providers, with end-to-end capabilities spanning board design, system integration, and high-volume L10 and L11 rack delivery. The company has shipped general and AI servers to more than 750 data centers worldwide, supported by manufacturing operations in Taiwan, the United States, Mexico, Malaysia, and the Czech Republic.

At the Optical Fiber Communication Conference (OFC), March 15-19, 2026, in Los Angeles, Ayar Labs and Wiwynn will showcase their joint AI CPO solution, highlighting an HVDC (High Voltage Direct Current)-enabled, rack-level system architecture for next-generation AI data centers. It features a 100% liquid-cooled AI system reference design with support of ELSFP SuperNova remote light sources and AI ASICs with optical engines. Access to this preview will be available through private, pre-arranged briefings for select customers, press, and analysts

For a full list of Ayar Labs’ activities at OFC 2026, visit the OFC event web page for more information.

About Ayar Labs

Ayar Labs is transforming AI infrastructure with the industry’s first proven co-packaged optics (CPO) solution manufactured in partnership with the world’s leading semiconductor ecosystem. By unlocking performance gains and reducing workload costs in power-constrained environments, Ayar Labs’ optical engines are key to enabling next-generation AI scale-up. Founded in 2015, Ayar Labs is funded by domestic and international venture capital firms, as well as strategic investors including AMD, Applied Ventures, MediaTek, NVIDIA, and VentureTech Alliance. For more information, visit www.ayarlabs.com.


Source: Ayar Labs

The post Ayar Labs and Wiwynn Partner to Bring Co-Packaged Optics to Rack-Scale AI Systems appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 15:53

Newly released documents also show Peter Mandelson was offered highly classified briefings before formal vetting was complete

Keir Starmer overruled officials who warned of a “reputational risk” in making Peter Mandelson US ambassador, despite being handed a dossier of evidence about the peer’s relationship with the sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, documents reveal.

The disclosure in newly released files will raise fresh questions about Starmer’s judgment – as well as about the vetting procedures at the highest levels of government.

Mandelson was offered a severance payment of £75,000 after initially asking the Foreign Office to pay him more than £500,000;

Starmer was warned before appointing Mandelson that he remained in contact and stayed with Epstein after the financier was first convicted of procuring an underage girl in 2008;

Powell told an investigation that he thought the appointment was “weirdly rushed”;

Starmer was reassured about Mandelson’s friendship with Epstein by Matthew Doyle, his former communications chief and a friend of Mandelson. Doyle said he was “satisfied” with Mandelson’s explanation of the relationship.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 15:51

The Trump administration asked the Supreme Court to clear the way for it to end temporary deportation protections for more than 350,000 Haitian immigrants.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 15:50

Release shows that Jonathan Powell warned Morgan McSweeney about the appointment of Mandelson as US ambassador

As reported by Nadeem Badshah this morning, the documents relating to Peter Mandelson’s appointment as ambassador to the US expected to be released today will include a due diligence report by the Cabinet Office, which is believed to be two pages long.

It is likely to raise questions about Keir Starmer’s judgment, with sources saying it had warned the prime minister of the serious “reputational risk” of going ahead with Mandelson’s appointment in December 2024 given his links with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

He has said, as you know that it is a little bit – it does fall into the category of too little too late, but I think they have a good, solid relationship, and hopefully they’ll be able to repair it. I go by what the president says, and the president says continuously that everybody is entitled to their point of view. But I think sometimes we detect that there’s not that feeling of gratitude.

I think the president’s position is that we do plenty for Europe, plenty for the UK, in the area of trade, in the area of defence, in the area of the support we give to Nato. And I think sometimes the response back, the reciprocity back, is a little bit lacking. I would leave it at that, OK?

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2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 15:40

Latest sculpture titled ‘King of the World’ includes plaques with pointed commentary on pair’s past association

A woman’s heart is a deep ocean of secrets. The appearance of a golden statue depicting Donald Trump and the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein as doomed lovers from the movie Titanic is confronting Washington with a murkier mystery.

The nearly 12ft sculpture, unveiled on Tuesday on the National Mall, is the third piece of guerrilla art satirising Trump’s past relationship with Epstein attributed to The Secret Handshake, a shadowy collective whose members remain anonymous.

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2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 15:38

Apple's MacBook lineup now includes three tiers: Neo, Air and Pro. See our favorites and find the best MacBook for your laptop budget and needs.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 15:30

PM knew of US ambassador’s ‘close relationship’ with Jeffrey Epstein and potential conflicts of interest from his lobbying role

Four months after Peter Mandelson was sacked as UK ambassador to Washington over his links with Jeffrey Epstein, he sat down for a primetime BBC interview. A less hubristic individual would have long since slunk away into the shadows.

But despite all the condemnation and humiliation surrounding his departure, Mandelson seemed intent on maintaining a public profile. “Who knows what’s next?” he told Laura Kuenssberg. “I don’t know what’s next. I’m not going to disappear and hide – that’s not me”.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 15:18

Richard Kemp tells high court former Sinn Féin leader would have authorised attacks carried out in England

A former British army commander has told the high court it is “inconceivable” that Gerry Adams was not involved in the authorisation of IRA bombings.

Richard Kemp said there was evidence from “a multitude of intelligence” spanning 20 years about the former Sinn Féin leader’s membership of the paramilitary organisation.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 15:18

Amazon-owned Zoox hopes to start offering paid robotaxi rides to regular riders sometime this year. Right now, the rides are free.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 15:18

A new report shows inflation holding steady. So, does gold investing still make sense? Here's what to consider now.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 15:14

Unite union began all-out strike more than a year ago and city remains without full waste collection service

It has been more than a year since Birmingham’s bin workers began their all-out strike that has left residents without a fully functioning waste collection service – and there is still no end in sight.

The strikes have attracted global media attention as pictures emerged of towering waste and overflowing bins on the streets of the UK’s second largest city.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 15:09

Nathan Chasing Horse found guilty on 13 of 21 charges in case that affected Indigenous communities across US

Nathan Chasing Horse, the actor known for his role in Dances With Wolves, is scheduled to be sentenced next Wednesday after being convicted of sexually abusing Indigenous women and girls, bringing to an end a case that deeply affected Native American communities across the country.

The sentencing comes about a month after a Nevada jury found him guilty on 13 of the 21 charges brought against him. Many of the convictions stemmed from allegations involving a victim who was 14 years old when the abuse began. The jury cleared him of several other sexual assault counts. Chasing Horse has denied all accusations.

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2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 15:08

Strike in Shukeiri killed schoolgirls, teachers and healthcare workers in latest incident in three-year war

At least 17 people, most of them schoolgirls, were killed on Wednesday when an explosive-laden drone blamed on Sudan’s paramilitary Rapid Support Forces struck a secondary school and a health care centre.

At least 10 people were wounded in the strike in the village of Shukeiri in the White Nile province, according to Dr Musa al-Majeri, director of Douiem hospital, the nearest major medical facility to the village.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 15:02

President Trump said the government agency will provide political risk insurance to "all shipping lines" operating in the Persian Gulf.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 15:00

Using a VPN on your Android device can help you keep your online activity private, stream geo-restricted content and bypass throttling from anywhere.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 15:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Binance is hoping that suing (PDF) The Wall Street Journal for defamation might help shake off a fresh round of government probes into how the cryptocurrency exchange failed to detect $1.7 billion in transfers to a network that was funding Iran-backed terror groups. The lawsuit comes after a Wall Street Journal investigation, based on conversations with insiders and reviews of internal documents, reported that Binance had quietly dismantled its own investigation into the unlawful transfers and then fired compliance staff who initially flagged them. Alleging that the report falsely accused Binance of retaliation -- among 10 other allegedly false claims -- Binance accused the Journal of conducting a "sham" investigation that intentionally disregarded the company's statements. That included supposedly failing to note that Binance had not closed its investigation into the unlawful transfers. Binance's role in the large-scale violation of US sanctions laws is currently being investigated by the Justice and Treasury Departments. Congress members also took notice, including Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), ranking member of the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations (PSI), who launched an additional inquiry. In a letter to Binance CEO Richard Teng, Blumenthal cited the Journal's report, as well as reporting from The New York Times and Fortune, while demanding that Binance explain how it managed to overlook the money-laundering for so long and why compliance staff members were fired. In its complaint Wednesday, Binance claimed that these probes may "be just the tip of the iceberg" if the record is not corrected. The reputational harm is particularly damaging, the exchange noted, since Binance has allegedly worked hard to strengthen its compliance after reaching a settlement with the US government in 2023. In taking that plea deal, Binance admitted to violating anti-money laundering and sanctions laws and paid a $4.3 billion fine, and its founder, Changpeng Zhao, eventually pled guilty to a related charge. Since that scandal, Binance claimed that the WSJ has "made a business of maligning both the cryptocurrency industry generally and Binance specifically." That's why the Journal allegedly rushed to publish its story following a similar New York Times investigation. Alleging that the WSJ was financially motivated to publish a negative story that would get more clicks, Binance claimed the Journal provided little time to respond and then failed to make necessary corrections before and after publication.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 14:51

Elon Musk said his long-planned payments platform, dubbed XMoney, is set to launch for select users. Here's what to know.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 14:43

Now let’s go live to Amazon for the latest updates about this developing story.

Amazon’s ecommerce business has summoned a large group of engineers to a meeting on Tuesday for a “deep dive” into a spate of outages, including incidents tied to the use of AI coding tools.

The online retail giant said there had been a “trend of incidents” in recent months, characterized by a “high blast radius” and “Gen-AI assisted changes” among other factors, according to a briefing note for the meeting seen by the FT.

Under “contributing factors” the note included “novel GenAI usage for which best practices and safeguards are not yet fully established.”

↫ Rafe Rosner-Uddin at Ars Technica

Oh boy.

2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-11 14:38

Payment for Inditex founder, the world’s 15 richest person, tops last year’s dividend of €3.1bn

The billionaire founder of Zara is to receive a company record €3.23bn (£2.8bn) dividend this year from the world’s biggest fashion retailer.

Amancio Ortega, who still controls 59% of Spain’s Inditex and whose daughter Marta Ortega Pérez is now chair, will receive half his dividend in May and half in November – as will other shareholders.

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2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 14:32

March 11, 2026 — For nearly two decades, Rice University’s Ken Kennedy Institute has convened the energy and computing communities to focus on a shared reality: Modern energy discovery, production and transition depend on advanced computation.

Credit: Donald Soward, D2 Studios

That theme anchored the 19th annual Energy HPC & AI Conference, held Feb. 24-26 at Rice’s BioScience Research Collaborative. The meeting brought together nearly 600 leaders and experts from industry, academia, national labs and the information technology sector to engage in critical discussions on high-performance computing and AI-powered integrations that support increasing workload demands across the energy sector.

The program included keynotes, panels and fireside chats, technical sessions, workshops and numerous networking opportunities. Invited speakers represented organizations including BP, ExxonMobil, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Texas Advanced Computing Center and the University of Texas at Austin. One keynote featured the 2025 ACM-IEEE CS Ken Kennedy Award winner Saman Amarasinghe.

The conference traces its roots to 2008, when it launched as the Rice Oil and Gas HPC Workshop. What began as a focused industry-academic exchange has grown into a premier annual gathering at the intersection of energy, advanced computing and data science. The program provides a platform to showcase technical rigor and emerging advancements in computing while also creating space for niche conversations on workforce strategies for a rapidly evolving industry.

In the opening remarks, David Sholl, Rice’s executive vice president for research and a professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering and chemistry, tied the conference to both institutional history and global need.

“Energy is the cornerstone of our modern economy,” Sholl said. He pointed to Rice’s long-standing contributions to computing, from early university projects in the late 1950s to Ken Kennedy’s foundational work in parallel computation in the 1980s.

“Today, the Ken Kennedy Institute connects over 300 faculty and researchers across the campus,” said Sholl, emphasizing Rice’s role in guiding the development of responsible and ethical AI as part of the university’s strategic plan.

Keith Gray, vice president of computational science and engineering at TotalEnergies and a co-founder of the conference, described its origins as a practical response to change inside the energy sector.

“High-performance computing was becoming more important to the oil and gas industry,” Gray said.

He noted that Houston is an ideal backdrop for the conference, given its status as “energy capital of the world” and the high density of high-performance computing practitioners in the area. He also pointed to Rice’s strengths in research and education, particularly in computer science, geophysics and applied math.

“The synergies just work,” he added.

It began as an opportunity to bridge communication across industries. The first gathering, held in conjunction with the Society of Exploration Geophysicists annual meeting, drew about 100 participants. Once at Rice, it expanded from roughly 200 attendees in Duncan Hall to now nearly 600 participants eager to shape the future of energy infrastructure and innovation.

Credit: Donald Soward, D2 Studios

An enduring goal of the conference is to build meaningful connections. The culture of Rice’s interdisciplinary network of researchers and exemplary students and faculty underscore that impact. In keeping its roots on campus, the conference maintains its influence through focused, smaller-scale connections that bring together a wide range of participants — from local industry professionals and Rice researchers to global partners from leading energy and computing companies.

“We’ve chosen to keep the scale at approximately 600 people,” Gray said. “It allows a much better sense of community, and we recognize how important it is to create a community within the industry to solve problems.”

That community also reflects a long-running interplay between energy and computing. For decades, offshore seismic surveys — in which vessels tow sensor-equipped streamers to record reflected sound waves from beneath the seafloor — have generated enormous data volumes that must be processed into coherent subsurface images. As acquisition techniques and imaging methods advanced, so did the need for faster, more capable computing systems. Dedicated high-performance computing centers within energy companies, and close collaboration with hardware and software providers, grew in response.

That lineage was visible in the conference exhibit hall, where 30 sponsors demonstrated high-powered systems and architectures. On one screen, a detailed 3D slice of subsurface geology rotated in real time — a reminder that behind every visualization is a chain of data collection, modeling and compute-intensive processing that links field operations to decision-making.

Beyond industry exchange, the conference plays a direct role in graduate education at Rice.

Over the years, the Energy HPC & AI Conference has directly funded 95 graduate students through the Ken Kennedy Institute’s annual recruiting and sponsored fellowship programs. These awards help attract and support graduate students working in AI, high-performance computing and related areas of computational science and engineering, particularly in areas relevant to energy.

Gray sees that workforce connection as central to the event’s purpose.

“This is where we come to look for the interns who are going to become our next generation of professionals,” he said. “This is just incredibly valuable for us.”

Students were involved throughout the program, many presenting their work during lightning talks and poster sessions. Carolina Brindis, a chemical and biomolecular engineering graduate student in Walter Chapman’s research group and a recent recipient of the Scott Morton Memorial Fellowship, presented research on hydrogen and carbon dioxide geostorage — an area that combines laboratory experiments with large-scale computational modeling.

“I greatly appreciate how the Scott Morton Memorial Fellowship, along with the lightning talk and poster session, increase visibility for our research,” Brindis said. “This is particularly significant as our new consortium expands partnerships that integrate experimental measurements with large-scale computational modeling to advance energy innovation.”

Her comments reflect a goal of the conference’s broader structure: to create space for students to present work directly to industry representatives and computing specialists, while building relationships that extend beyond a single week.

As advanced computation in energy has evolved, so has the conference. The addition of “AI” to its name reflects a shift in the kinds of methods practitioners are deploying.

“AI was a natural outgrowth of the use of advanced computation in energy,” said David Pynadath, executive director for research initiatives at the Ken Kennedy Institute, noting the steady increase in AI-focused submissions and presentations over the years. The change also reflects growing interest in shaping AI’s transformative impact across industries and workforces — a priority for both Rice as a leading research institution and Houston as the energy capital of the world.

Even as new methods gain attention, the conference remains a forum for taking the pulse of industry needs and discussing challenges, opportunities and new developments across the energy sector.

“The scale that we’re working at and the importance to the business continues to grow,” Gray said. “So I think that is another reason this continues to be exciting.”

Next year, the Energy HPC & AI Conference will celebrate its 20th anniversary Feb. 23-25, 2027.

Recordings of the 2026 conference presentations and of the Best Practices in HPC Systems Management workshop can now be viewed online.

More from HPCwire: Finding Energy at the Rice University HPC & AI Conference


Source: Silvia Cernea Clark and Kelly Peters, Rice University

The post Ken Kennedy Institute’s Energy HPC & AI Conference Ties Advanced Computing to Energy Innovation appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 14:31

Lack of public appearances prompted speculation about new leader’s mortality after multiple family members died

The confirmation that Iran’s new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, was injured in the first wave of Israeli attacks underlines how desperate the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (ICRG) was to ensure their wounded choice was elevated to high office, and how confident it is that the wartime machinery can operate almost on automatic pilot without him.

The full scale of Khamenei’s injuries and speed of his recovery remain unclear, but a broken leg and facial injuries are the minimum. It is not a medical bulletin on which the authorities are seeking to dwell, although Ali Larijani, the secretary of the supreme national security council, chose his words carefully in saying “his condition has not been reported as critical”, a phrasing that suggests he has not personally seen him.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 14:30

The Tories and Reform UK have abandoned British interests to become ideological satellites of radical US conservatism

Britain is one of many countries that would benefit from the replacement of brutal theocracy with democratic government in Tehran. The Iranian people would be the biggest beneficiaries. It does not follow that British interests are served by the current US-Israeli military campaign against Iran, which claims regime change as a goal but includes no credible strategy for achieving it.

The distinction was never hard to grasp. Sir Keir Starmer understood it and kept his distance from Donald Trump’s war. The leader of the opposition was not so judicious. In the first week of the conflict, Kemi Badenoch accused Sir Keir of indecision and cowardice. She thought the absence of a legal mandate for war was irrelevant and called for the RAF to be more involved. The Conservative leader no longer holds that view. Or, rather, she denies having held it. She says that she did not call for Britain to join the US-Israeli action, but did call for British forces to strike targets inside Iran and that those are different things, although she struggles to explain how.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 14:30

More than a week into the US-Israel war on Iran, president has provided little clarity on how the conflict might end

One week into the war with Iran, the central questions about the conflict remained largely unanswered: what would constitute victory, how long the crisis might last and whether the United States was responsible for a deadly strike on a girls’ elementary school that has come to embody the war’s early controversy.

On Saturday, leaning against the bulkhead outside the press cabin as Air Force One cruised toward Florida, Donald Trump still struggled to clarify his own message.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 14:30

Here are some highly rated series to try, plus a look at what's new in March.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 14:29

Grammy-winning singer is in advanced talks to lead an adaptation of Sylvia Plath’s novel for Oscar-winning writer-director

Grammy-winning singer-songwriter Billie Eilish is set to make her big screen acting debut in an adaptation of Sylvia Plath’s semi-autobiographical novel The Bell Jar.

According to Deadline, the 24-year-old will take on the lead role for Sarah Polley, the writer-director who previously won an Oscar for her Women Talking screenplay. Eilish is reportedly in advanced talks for the part.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 14:26

Trio held on suspicion of ‘terrorist bombing’ that caused minor damage but no injuries

Three Norwegian brothers have been arrested on suspicion of a “terrorist bombing” at the US embassy in Oslo that caused minor damage at the weekend but no injuries.

The police prosecutor Christian Hatlo told a press conference that the brothers, who were Norwegian citizens of Iraqi origin, had been arrested in Oslo and that police were investigating the motive.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 14:23

Strike that killed at least 175 people, most of them children, reportedly due to targeting mistake by US military planners

A preliminary US military investigation has reportedly determined that Washington was responsible for a deadly Tomahawk missile strike on an Iranian elementary school in February that killed scores of children.

According to the New York Times, quoting unnamed US officials and others familiar with the initial findings, the investigation has concluded that the strike on 28 February on the Shajarah Tayyebeh elementary school building was the result of a targeting mistake by the US military planners.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 14:22
  • Quarterback had promising start to Colts career

  • 2025 season ended in series of injuries

Daniel Jones plans to stay with the Indianapolis Colts for at least two more years.

The two sides agreed to a new contract, a deal that will pay the quarterback up to $100m, a person with knowledge of the contract told the Associated Press on Wednesday.

Jones will receive $88m over the next two seasons with $50m guaranteed. He can make an additional $12m through incentives.

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2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 14:21

Jason Hughes died after slipping in the road as Georgia teens fled a prank involving toilet paper

The parents of a high school student charged in the death of his teacher after a prank gone wrong have released a statement saying that the teacher “meant the world to our son” and their family is in “deep remorse and grieving”.

Jason Hughes, 4o, a teacher at North Hall high school in Georgia, died last week after being run over by a student driving away from a prank involving toilet paper.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 14:15

Crew of Thai-registered bulk carrier forced to flee fire, as US says it has destroyed 16 Iranian mine-laying vessels

Three merchant ships have been struck in and around the strait of Hormuz, including a Thai registered bulk carrier that caught fire after leaving a port in the UAE, forcing crew members to evacuate for their safety.

The Mayuree Naree was struck on Wednesday by “two projectiles of unknown origin”, its owners said, as it sailed about 11 nautical miles north of Oman, marking the end of a four-day lull of attacks in the strategic waterway.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 14:00

Nvidia is preparing to launch an open-source AI agent platform called NemoClaw, designed to compete with the likes of OpenClaw. According to Wired, the platform will allow enterprise software companies to dispatch AI agents to perform tasks for their own workforces. "Companies will be able to access the platform regardless of whether their products run on Nvidia's chips," the report adds. From the report: The move comes as Nvidia prepares for its annual developer conference in San Jose next week. Ahead of the conference, Nvidia has reached out to companies including Salesforce, Cisco, Google, Adobe, and CrowdStrike to forge partnerships for the agent platform. It's unclear whether these conversations have resulted in official partnerships. Since the platform is open source, it's likely that partners would get free, early access in exchange for contributing to the project, sources say. Nvidia plans to offer security and privacy tools as part of this new open-source agent platform. [...] For Nvidia, NemoClaw appears to be part of an effort to court enterprise software companies by offering additional layers of security for AI agents. It's also another step in the company's embrace of open-source AI models, part of a broader strategy to maintain its dominance in AI infrastructure at a time when leading AI labs are building their own custom chips. Nvidia's software strategy until now has been heavily reliant on its CUDA platform, a famously proprietary system that locks developers into building software for Nvidia's GPUs and has created a crucial "moat" for the company.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:50

Gold IRA withdrawals come with strict tax rules. Here's what investors should understand before taking money out.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:46

Don't let your tax refund linger in a regular savings account. Here's how to earn 4% interest (or more) on it now.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:43

Let's just say Taylor Swift has nothing to worry about.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:42

The men were Norwegian citizens of Iraqi origin who were not previously known to police, police prosecutor Christian Hatlo said.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:31

Samsung's flagship audio line upgraded with the Galaxy Buds 4 Pro. I'm revisiting the Buds 3 Pro to see if their lower price makes them a smarter buy than the latest model.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:29

Man in his 60s from Berne area had been reported missing before incident, say authorities in Fribourg canton

Police investigating a bus fire that killed at least six people in western Switzerland have said they believe it was started by a “marginalised and disturbed” Swiss man onboard who set himself ablaze.

The vehicle, operated by a service that transports passengers and mail, went up in flames on Tuesday evening in Kerzers, a town of about 5,000 people about 12 miles (20km) west of Berne in the canton of Fribourg.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:24

Chief executive and chairman of ICI in the 1990s who oversaw the creation of the pharmaceutical company Zeneca

Ronnie Hampel was a businessman’s businessman, a major force in the reshaping of ICI, Britain’s largest manufacturing company, in the 1990s and in the birth of the pharmaceutical company Zeneca (now part of AstraZeneca), as well as a powerful influence on other company boards.

He was exceptionally well-connected. His place at the heart of the UK business establishment as chairman of ICI – from 1995 to 1999 – was highlighted by his regular golfing four which included the then cabinet secretary, the chairman of BP and the permanent secretary of the Treasury.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:22

The discovery caused officials to evacuate 18,000 people on Wednesday, the largest such operation ever in the city, emergency services said.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:15

Save your body from falling into fatigue and stiffness with one of the best standing desks.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:14

Despite rare act of multilateralism, there is no guarantee the IEA’s release of 400m barrels from reserves will depress prices

When the global economy was still in the grip of the devastating 1970s oil crises, exposing the chokehold exerted by a few important oil states, the International Energy Agency (IEA) was created, in the hope of limiting future shocks.

Almost half a century on, the IEA’s 32 members have drawn up plans to hit the emergency button, for only the fifth time in its history.

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2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 13:14

Company also launches tools to spot scammers as Thai police arrest 21 people

Meta disabled more than 150,000 accounts and Thai police arrested 21 people in a sweeping international crackdown on south-east Asian criminal scam centers that targeted people around the world, the social media company said on Wednesday.

The operation was led by Thailand’s Royal Thai police anti-cyber scam center, alongside the FBI and the US justice department’s scam center strike force, with Meta investigators acting on intelligence shared in real time by law enforcement.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:07

A U.S. military investigation determined in its preliminary findings that the United States conducted an attack on an Iranian elementary school that killed at least 175 people, most of them children, according to two U.S. officials familiar with the ongoing inquiry. The findings directly contradict assertions by President Donald Trump that Iran struck the school.

The lethal strike on the Shajarah Tayyebeh elementary school building was the result of a “targeting error” by the U.S. military, which mistook the facility for part of an Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps navy base that was adjacent to the school, according to one of the U.S. officials who spoke to The Intercept on the condition of anonymity to discuss an ongoing investigation.

U.S. Central Command attacked the school based on long outdated coordinates for the strike provided by another defense agency, one of the officials told The Intercept. While the Shajarah Tayyebeh elementary school was once connected to the IRGC base by roads, the building was partitioned off by 2016, according to an investigation by New Lines Magazine.

The attack, which came after a yearlong effort by Secretary of War Pete Hegseth to gut programs to reduce civilian casualties, killed more civilians than any other strike in Trump’s second Iran war. It was “colossal negligence,” one of the current government officials said.

Trump has repeatedly claimed that Iran was responsible for the strike, despite mounting evidence to the contrary. “In my opinion, based on what I’ve seen, that was done by Iran,” Trump told reporters March 7. “They have no accuracy whatsoever. It was done by Iran.”

Wes Bryant — who served until last year as the senior analyst and adviser on precision warfare, targeting, and civilian harm mitigation at the Pentagon’s Civilian Protection Center of Excellence — called the attack on the Shajarah Tayyebeh elementary school a “failure in fundamental targeting doctrine and standards.” 

Bryant, who called in thousands of strikes across the greater Middle East as a Special Operations joint terminal attack controller, said it was common to rely on outdated imagery while conducting operations.

Related

U.S. Military Refuses to Endorse Trump Claim That Iran Bombed Girls’ School

“As a targeter, the imagery and initial intelligence data you receive on a potential target or target set is just the start. You don’t prosecute based solely off any organization — NGA or otherwise — giving you an image and saying they have intelligence that it’s an enemy location,” he told The Intercept, referring to the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, which specializes in such imagery. “You corroborate with other intelligence, and you conduct as near real time as possible characterization of that target as well as the civilian presence and risk to include collateral damage analysis risk of civilian casualties.”

U.S. Central Command refused to comment on the preliminary findings of the inquiry. “It would be inappropriate to comment given the incident is under investigation,” a CENTCOM official told The Intercept by email.

The National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency and the Defense Intelligence Agency did not immediately reply to requests for comment on their potential involvement in providing intelligence that led to the strike.

The investigation’s findings were widely expected as evidence of a U.S. attack on the school mounted. A video released on Sunday by Iran’s semiofficial Mehr News Agency showed a cruise missile striking the IRGC naval base beside the elementary school as smoke appears to billow from the school itself, indicating that it had recently been struck. According to Bellingcat, the cruise missile was a Tomahawk missile. The U.S. is the only party to the conflict employing Tomahawk missiles.

“America, regardless of what so-called international institutions say, is unleashing the most lethal and precise air power campaign in history,” Hegseth said at a March 2 press conference. “No stupid rules of engagement.”

CENTCOM would not offer an estimated civilian death toll for the U.S. war on Iran. More than 1,300 Iranian civilians have been killed, according to the Iranian Red Crescent Society.

An investigation by Airwars, a U.K.-based airstrike monitoring group, found that the first days of the Iran war saw far more sites targeted than any recent U.S. or Israeli military campaign. “While the rate of civilian harm cannot be solely predicted by the number of targets hit, initial indications suggest it has been high — particularly with U.S. targets correlating with heavily populated areas,” according to the Airwars report. “The targets map heavily onto the highest populated areas.”

The post Pentagon Report: U.S. Military Fired Missile at Elementary School in Iran appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:01

The reigning champions welcome Liam Rosenior's Blues to the Parc des Princes.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:01

Flavor Flav is honoring all of the Team USA female Olympians and Paralympians who won a medal at the 2026 Winter Games.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:00

The pick of this week's UCL action sees the injury-hit Los Blancos host Pep Guardiola's men.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 13:00

YouTube is expanding its AI deepfake detection tools to a pilot group of politicians, government officials, and journalists, allowing them to identify and request removal of unauthorized AI-generated videos impersonating them. TechCrunch reports: The technology itself launched last year to roughly 4 million YouTube creators in the YouTube Partner Program, following earlier tests. Similar to YouTube's existing Content ID system, which detects copyright-protected material in users' uploaded videos, the likeness detection feature looks for simulated faces made with AI tools. These tools are sometimes used to try to spread misinformation and manipulate people's perception of reality, as they leverage the deepfaked personas of notable figures -- like politicians or other government officials -- to say and do things in these AI videos that they didn't in real life. With the new pilot program, YouTube aims to balance users' free expression with the risks associated with AI technology that can generate a convincing likeness of a public figure. [...] [Leslie Miller, YouTube's vice president of Government Affairs and Public Policy] explained that not all of the detected matches would be removed when requested. Instead, YouTube would evaluate each request under its existing privacy policy guidelines to determine whether the content is parody or political critique, which are protected forms of free expression. The company noted it's advocating for these protections at a federal level, too, with its support for the NO FAKES Act in D.C., which would regulate the use of AI to create unauthorized recreations of an individual's voice and visual likeness. To use the new tool, eligible pilot testers must first prove their identity by uploading a selfie and a government ID. They can then create a profile, view the matches that show up, and optionally request their removal. YouTube says it plans to eventually give people the ability to prevent uploads of violating content before they go live or, possibly, allow them to monetize those videos, similar to how its Content ID system works. The company would not confirm which politicians or officials would be among its initial testers, but said the goal is to make the technology broadly available over time.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 12:35

Supreme court recently rejected Cedric Ricks’ claim that potential jurors in his trial were eliminated based on race

A north Texas man faces execution on Wednesday for fatally stabbing his girlfriend and her eight-year-old son nearly 13 years ago.

Cedric Ricks was sentenced to death for the May 2013 killings of 30-year-old Roxann Sanchez and her son Anthony Figueroa at their apartment in Bedford, a suburb in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. Sanchez’s 12-year-old son, Marcus Figueroa, was injured during the attack.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 12:29

Bring one of the best desks of 2026 into your work, gaming or hobby space.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 12:25

Advisers to RFK Jr drop the plan to end federal guidance amid Republican worries about the political impact

A major federal panel that advises the government on vaccines has stepped back from efforts targeting Covid-19 mRNA vaccines, a change that comes as some Republicans reportedly caution that additional shifts in vaccine policy could hurt the party in the upcoming midterm elections.

Several vaccine advisers selected by Robert F Kennedy Jr, the health secretary, had been exploring the possibility of ending federal recommendations for mRNA covid shots. That initiative is no longer going forward, according to two sources familiar with the discussions who spoke to the Washington Post.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 12:14

Julie T. Le made headlines during DHS’s surge in Minneapolis and will launch a campaign to challenge Rep. Ilhan Omar for her seat.

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

With the Iran war nearing its second week, social media posts shared unfounded reports that a key Israeli political figure was killed.

A March 9 X post showing an image of Israel National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir said Israeli and Iranian media reported his death.

"BREAKING: So the Israeli media reports Itamar Ben‑Gvir died in a ‘car crash,’" the post read, garnering more than 623,000 views as of the morning of March 11. "While in fact he’s been obliterated by an Iranian missile strike on his home."

(Screenshot of X post.)

The far-right Ben-Gvir has advocated relocating Palestinians from Gaza. He has also been convicted for supporting terrorism and inciting anti-Arab racism, CNN reported in 2024. In January 2025, Ben-Gvir resigned in protest of a Gaza ceasefire deal, but Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s cabinet reappointed him in March 2025. 

Hundreds of people have been killed across the Middle East during the Iran war, but Ben-Gvir isn’t among them. He also hasn’t been in a recent car accident, as the social media posts claim. 

Ben-Gvir was injured and taken to the hospital after a car accident in 2024 as he returned from a stabbing scene in the city of Ramle, Israel. But neither the Israeli government nor any credible news outlets have released any recent reports about Ben-Gvir’s demise, either from an automobile accident or from a strike on his home. 

Ben-Gvir’s verified TikTok account posted a March 10 video in Hebrew with the caption, "I'm alive, God willing," and he went on to debunk clips and headlines that said he was dead. We translated the video and caption from Hebrew to English using Google Lens and Google Translate.

Ben-Gvir also posted March 10 at least three times on his X and Telegram accounts. 

Other news outlets have also debunked the claim that Ben-Gvir is dead.

An Iran war report from the Israeli government (which we translated from Hebrew to English using Google Translate) says the claim that Ben-Gvir was killed by an Iranian attack isn’t true, and that its purpose is to "create the impression that Iran is capable of penetrating Israel's security alignment and directly harming key decision-makers."

We rate the claim that Ben-Gvir died False. 

PolitiFact Researcher Caryn Baird contributed to this report.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 14:09

You can make a number of edits quicker and more efficiently with these AI tools.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 18:07

Dee Warner's brother, Gregg Hardy, says he was being sarcastic when he wrote the billboard in Lenawee County, Michigan, that read "Help Dale Find Dee." Dale Warner denies he ever harmed his wife.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 15:13

The inflation data captures the period before the Iran war broke out. Since then, oil prices have surged, driving inflation fears.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 19:55

About 30 U.S. service members remained hospitalized Tuesday after an Iranian drone strike in Kuwait.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 15:34

The emergency oil release — the largest in the multinational organization's history — could help ease oil prices in the short term, according to analysts.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 21:39

The International Energy Agency announced that it would carry out its largest-ever release of oil reserves — 400 million barrels.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 12:00
Issue after use in rain.

I road it through some wet areas on the way to school. Nothing too out of the normal, just wet concrete, some puddles, and a bit of mud, which it normally does just fine in.

After a while it didnt wanna start again after I’d gotten off for a cross walk, and when it did get started, it through me off soon after.

I suspected some sort of water damage so I opened it up, but nothin on the inside seemed to have gotten wet.

Still it makes this strange incredibly faint buzzing sound near the square component nearest to the wall.

Initially it seemed like it would shut off after being on for a few seconds every time I tried to turn it on, but now it seems that (at least the lights) are staying on.

Should I put it back together and try to ride it? Is there anything I should check or be concerned about, or things I could do in the future to prevent this?

Thanks for any and all advice, I am new to this scene.

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

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Bloomberg: Chinese authorities moved to restrict state-run enterprises and government agencies from running OpenClaw AI apps on office computers, acting swiftly to defuse potential security risks after companies and consumers across China began experimenting with the agentic AI phenomenon. Government agencies and state-owned enterprises, including the largest banks, have received notices in recent days warning them against installing OpenClaw software on office devices for security reasons [...]. Several of them were instructed to notify superiors if they had already installed related apps for security checks and possible removal, some of the people said. Certain employees, including those at state-run banks and some government agencies, were banned from installing OpenClaw on office computers and also personal phones using the company's network, some of the people said. One person said the ban was also extended to the families of military personnel. Other notices stopped short of calling for an outright ban on OpenClaw software, saying only that prior approval is needed before use, the people said. The warning underscores Beijing's growing concern about OpenClaw, an agentic AI platform that requires unusually broad access to private data and can communicate externally, potentially exposing computers to external attack. [...] Despite the potential security risks, companies from Tencent to JD.com Inc. have been rolling out OpenClaw apps to try and capitalize on the groundswell of enthusiasm, while several local government agencies have declared millions of yuan in subsidies for companies that develop atop the platform. [...] Tech giants like Tencent and Alibaba, along with AI upstarts ranging from Moonshot to MiniMax, have rolled out their own tweaks of the software touting simple, one-click adoption. A slew of government agencies, in cities from Shenzhen to Wuxi, have issued notices offering multimillion-yuan subsidies to startups leveraging OpenClaw to make advances. The frenzy has helped drive up shares of AI model developer MiniMax nearly 640% since its listing just two months ago. It's now worth about $49 billion, surpassing Baidu -- once viewed as the frontrunner in Chinese AI development -- in market value. The company launched MaxClaw, an agent built on OpenClaw, in late February.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 11:54

Debt settlement companies can reduce what you owe, but the fees mean the savings may be less than you expect.

2026-03-12 08:04
2026-03-11 11:47

For now, the Supreme Court has ended a controversial bid for a machine to be named as the original author of artwork sent to the U.S. Copyright Office for protection.

On March 2, 2026, the Court without comment denied an appeal in Thaler v. Perlmutter. Nearly a year earlier, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia determined the Copyright Office correctly denied Dr. Stephen Thaler’s copyright claim for an AI-created picture titled “A Recent Entrance to Paradise.”

Thaler, a computer scientist, created a generative artificial intelligence named the “Creativity Machine,” which then created the picture on its own. On a copyright registration application, Thaler listed the Creativity Machine as the work’s sole author, and himself as the work’s owner.

In his appeal to the Supreme Court, Thaler wanted the justices to consider whether “works outputted by an AI system without a direct, traditional authorial contribution by a natural person could be copyrighted.”

The case’s background

Congress created the U.S. Copyright Office under its power to regulate copyrights, as outlined in Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution. The Copyright Clause allows Congress to “promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries.”

On Nov. 3, 2018, Thaler filed an application to register “A Recent Entrance to Paradise” with the Copyright Office. He stated the submission “lacked traditional human authorship” and Thaler, as the owner of the AI he created, should be the owner of any copyright related to the artwork. On August 12, 2019, the Copyright Office refused Thaler’s copyright claim because it “lack[ed] the human authorship necessary to support a copyright claim.”

The Copyright Office cited as precedent the Supreme Court ruling in Burrow-Giles Lithographic Co. v. Sarony (1884). In the Sarony decision, Justice Samuel F. Miller ruled that Burrow-Giles Lithographic violated the copyright owned by Sarony for a posed picture taken of the playwright Oscar Wilde. Burrow-Giles argued unsuccessfully that photographs were not copyrightable because they lacked human authorship, and they were the product of a machine; but the Court held the “photograph to be an original work of art, the product of plaintiff's intellectual invention.”

In its Compendium of Copyright Office Practices, the Copyright Office cites the Sarony decision and another case, In re Trade-Mark Cases, from 1879, as limiting copyright authorship to human beings. The Copyright Office uses the Compendium to state its policies.

Thaler appealed to the U. S. District Court for the District of Columbia, where District Judge Beryl A. Howell on August 3, 2023, held that the “Copyright Office acted properly in denying copyright registration for a work created absent any human involvement.” Judge Howell said copyright law “has never stretched so far, however, as to protect works generated by new forms of technology operating absent any guiding human hand, as plaintiff urges here. Human authorship is a bedrock requirement of copyright.”

A three-judge District of Columbia appeals panel affirmed the Copyright Office’s ruling and Howell’s decision. “The Creativity Machine cannot be the recognized author of a copyrighted work because the Copyright Act of 1976 requires all eligible work to be authored in the first instance by a human being,” said Circuit Judge Patricia A. Millett, writing for the court. In her decision, Millett ruled only on Thaler’s application as not conforming to the law, and not on broader constitutional issues raised by the Copyright Office and Thaler in court briefs.

“The Compendium reflects the agency’s longstanding view that copyright requires human authorship. It states that the Copyright Office ‘will refuse to register a claim if it determines that a human being did not create the work,’” the Copyright Office argued in its district court brief.

Millett also discounted Thaler’s argument that the Copyright Office’s human-authorship rule prevents copyright law from protecting any works made with artificial intelligence. “The rule requires only that the author of that work be a human being—the person who created, operated, or used artificial intelligence—and not the machine itself.”

The appeal from Thaler to the Supreme Court

In the petition for a writ of certiorari, Thaler’s attorney, Ryan Abbott, made several claims. Abbott argued that a “straightforward reading” of the Copyright Act results in the conclusion that “works without a direct, traditional authorial contribution by a natural person can be copyrighted.”

“The U.S. Copyright Office, however, imports words into the Act that Congress never drafted and requires vague elements of human authorship that arose from the Copyright Office itself—without statutory support. Indeed, the Copyright Act explicitly permits nonhuman authorship,” Abbott concluded.

Among other arguments, Abbott believed the appeals court decision, if left standing, would undermine the definition of “author” in Burrow-Giles Lithographic v. Sarony, resulting in photographs losing their copyright protection.

In his brief, Solicitor General John Sauer repeats the appeals court’s argument that the Copyright Office’s Compendium “reflects the agency’s longstanding view that copyright requires human authorship” and the Copyright Office “will refuse to register a claim if it determines that a human being did not create the work.” Sauer cited the Burrow-Giles Lithographic v. Sarony precedent.

Sauer also concurred with Judge Millett’s opinion that “adhering to the human-authorship requirement does not impede the protection of works made with artificial intelligence.” Sauer believed the case focused on the narrow question of whether an AI machine can be considered as an “author” of a copyrightable work. “It does not present any broader question about the eligibility for copyright registration of works created using AI,” he concluded.

In the end, the Supreme Court agreed with Sauer and Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia by denying Thaler’s appeal.

Scott Bomboy is the editor in chief of the National Constitution Center.

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

Hi all - I have a ~5 year old "stock" GT (does have a new FM battery). Love riding it (am pretty mellow...in my 40's, experienced with surfing/snowboarding but don't want an ER room visit...). I'm a bit overwhelmed at the options for upgrades/replacements. I had FM replace the battery a few months ago (it was dead) and they also (without me asking) replaced the footpad. If I understand correctly, it was a "known issue" so they proactively replaced it. Cool of them...but: My son, who is about 100 lbs soaking wet, can't ride it anymore, as it seems he doesnt have enough weight to trigger both toe/heel sensors at the same time. If he puts a backpack with 30 lbs on, it rides fine. But obviously that's not a great long-term solution.

It also gave me trouble at the beginning, but that's abated. Seemed like a similar deal -- like it was really "stiff" / hard to trigger.

FM said that it is common for them to start out like that and to "break in" over time. But after hours of riding...still doesn't work for him.

So - I am considering buying a new footpad. Part of the reason for this is unrelated: I wear a size 14 shoe and am 6'3". I'm considering "Low Boy" footpads from FM so that I have less toe/heel sticking out.

A few questions:

1.) Are there other wide footpads I should consider? I'm open to non FM parts, but would like to avoid other changes...i.e. changing out the controller, etc. (note that the board is well outside of the warranty period). (Also note - FM "recommended" but did not require that I replace the controller. We declined to, as it was going to be hundreds of $ more)

2.) Should we expect the same kind of issues with "stiffness" and lightweight riders not being able to trigger the footpads properly?

3.) Are there any "downsides" to Low Boy footpads (other than cost, and I suppose the board is a bit wider so it might need slightly wider gaps to squeeze through....mostly just an issue for my smaller-footed son).

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2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 11:32

Howard Schultz said he and his wife will move to Florida as Washington weighs a roughly 10% annual tax on earnings over $1 million.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 11:26

US energy prices were set to rise long before the Iran war Expert comment thilton.drupal

Even if the disruption to oil and gas from the Iran war subsides, the Trump administration’s energy policy will likely lead to a long-term increase in energy prices.

Power lines in California

In his election campaign, US President Donald Trump promised to halve energy prices within 12 months in office. Not only was this unrealistic, but all signs now point in the opposite direction – including trends that predate the US-Israeli war with Iran. 

The war and the resulting disruption to oil and natural gas exports from the Middle East has shocked global energy markets. Global oil prices soared to almost $120 a barrel on Monday, their highest level since 2022, as a result of the effective halting of shipments through the Strait of Hormuz, through which about 20 per cent of global oil and natural gas passes. 

Prices then dropped slightly on Tuesday as Trump sought to reassure markets that the war would be over soon and G7 ministers met to discuss the release of strategic oil reserves. Nevertheless, American consumers are already likely to feel the war’s impact at the gasoline pump.

Liquefied natural gas (LNG) has also been dramatically affected by the war. Qatar, which accounts for a fifth of global LNG supply, has halted LNG production amid Iranian drone attacks. This disruption has led to European and Asian natural gas prices doubling. The change in US natural gas prices has been more muted as they reflect domestic supply and demand rather than global LNG markets due to export constraints.

However, the long-term trend suggests that energy prices in the US will continue to rise. This was the case even before the current war. Last year, US retail electricity prices rose by almost 7 per cent compared to 2024, double the rate of inflation. While pre-war petrol prices had fallen by 5 per cent since Trump’s inauguration, the price of heating oil and natural gas had also increased significantly. 

Consumers are likely to face even higher electricity and gas prices in coming years, in addition to the mounting costs from climate inaction. In simple terms, this is because demand is skyrocketing while supply is tightening. Meanwhile, infrastructure is becoming more expensive and vulnerable to extreme weather. 

Rising demand 

Demand is being driven by new data centres, increasing LNG exports and deregulation.

New data centres require massive amounts of new power generation, with their demand projected to more than double by 2030 and quintuple by 2035. This surge has led utility companies to run older, less efficient and more polluting power plants. Analysis suggests that data centre growth could drive up electricity prices as much as 25 per cent for some US markets by 2030. 

The Trump administration recently announced its Ratepayer Protection Pledge, framed as a ‘historic commitment to keep electricity costs down’ by getting tech companies to pay  for the energy to build and operate data centres.  But the pledge is more of a political signal than a policy solution. It is voluntary, non-binding and relies on self-negotiated agreements between tech companies and utility companies, with no federal oversight of whether those agreements actually shield consumers from rising costs. 

Fundamentally, even if companies pay for new power generation infrastructure, they still compete for fuel and equipment, raising demand and prices for others.

Under prevailing utility regulation and explicit exemptions for data centres, the burden of transmission upgrades and elevated demand will still likely fall on consumers. The counterargument that data centres could actually reduce electricity bills by spreading costs across a larger consumer base and providing flexibility would require demand management policy that is currently absent. Unless the buildout of data centres is carefully planned with low-cost clean energy, it will likely lead to a rise in both costs and emissions. 

US natural gas demand is also rising due to increasing LNG exports, which are forecast to be up 50 per cent by 2027 compared to 2024. This tightens the domestic market, as LNG exports compete with domestic natural gas. In 2025, exports were the fastest growing use of natural gas, comprising 14.1 per cent, more than residential or commercial sectors. The war in Iran is likely to push exports to their maximum; an extended conflict could incentivize further export infrastructure investment. 

Moreover, broad deregulation will not only accelerate costly climate impacts, but also increase consumer energy costs by removing efficiency standards. This effectively raises demand, as more energy is needed for the same output. In the power sector, the subsidized use of coal power plants past their retirement date will cost $3-6 billion per year. 

Tightening supply 

Meanwhile, supply is tightening. While embracing and expanding fossil fuel production, the Trump administration has moved to cancel clean energy projects, including wind projects already under construction, and phased out tax incentives for clean energy under the ‘The One Big Beautiful Bill Act’ (OBBBA).

Yet renewables are the cheapest and quickest deployed additions of energy supply. Studies suggest that the OBBBA could lead to households paying an additional $165 annually by 2030 and $280 by 2035. Despite a clear partisan divide, over two-thirds of Americans say they support the expansion of solar and wind power. 

Antagonistic policy surrounding clean energy will likely harm future investments. In 2025 alone, $30 billion of clean technology investments left the US market, with a cumulative $500 billion forecasted by 2035. While renewables did still rise in 2025, this reflects projects approved years earlier – with some developers likely rushing to capture incentives before expiring. Renewable energy capacity is still forecast to grow, but at a slower rate. 

President Trump’s pledge to ‘drill, baby, drill’ has not driven the price of gas down. The cheapest US natural gas basins are pipeline-constrained, leading to any new incremental supply coming from deeper and more expensive basins, such as Haynesville, with nearly double breakeven costs compared to other basins. This will reflect higher gas prices, which are projected to already be 60 per cent higher this year than in 2024. 

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 11:22

Amid fears the conflict will strengthen Russia, Ursula von der Leyen’s embrace of US-backed regime change already looks like a doomed strategy

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The message from Ursula von der Leyen was blunt. “Europe can no longer be a custodian for the old-world order” and needs a “more realistic and interest-driven foreign policy”. In a major foreign policy speech this week, the European Commission president said the EU would always “defend and uphold the rules-based system” but in a precarious and chaotic world, that could no longer be relied upon. On the day she spoke, missiles were raining down on Tehran and southern Iran as the war entered its 10th day, proving her point.

Reverberating around Europe, the Middle East conflict has triggered a range of responses. France is sending a dozen naval vessels to the Mediterranean and the Red Sea. EU officials convened an ad-hoc summit with Middle Eastern leaders in a show of solidarity with the region. EU humanitarian aid for Lebanon is being dispatched to help 130,000 people, after at least half a million were displaced by Israeli bombs and evacuation orders.

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

WASHINGTON, March 11, 2026 — Siemens today announced it has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) to support the Genesis Mission, a federal initiative to modernize America’s scientific infrastructure and strengthen the translation of research into real-world deployment through advanced AI, computing, and interoperable digital systems. The Genesis Mission seeks to accelerate discovery, strengthen lab-to-industry translation, and reinforce technological leadership across critical domains.

As a global industrial technology leader, Siemens brings decades of experience in digital engineering, high-fidelity simulation, industrial AI, scientific data lifecycle management, and mission-critical infrastructure. Siemens is prepared to help provide industrial technology that aligns directly with the Genesis Mission’s goal of compressing discovery timelines and ensuring breakthroughs can scale into operational environments.

“The Genesis Mission’s goal of accelerating scientific discovery and scaling it in the real world is a perfect match for our core expertise: combining the real and the digital worlds,” said Roland Busch, President and CEO of Siemens AG. “Our leadership in industrial AI and advanced simulation is proven in national laboratories and industrial ecosystems across the United States and worldwide. We look forward to contributing these capabilities to make the Genesis Mission a success.”

Siemens’ unique expertise brings AI into the real world by uniting scientific data, physics-informed simulation, digital twins, automation systems, and secure infrastructure into a connected industrial tech stack. Rather than delivering isolated AI models or point solutions, Siemens integrates deep domain AI directly into engineering, validation, and operational workflows, enabling discoveries to be simulated, tested, validated, and deployed within the same interoperable digital environment.

“Siemens has a long history of trusted partnership with the U.S. government, supporting scientific leadership and industrial competitiveness,” said Ann Fairchild, Interim President and CEO, Siemens Corporation. “The Genesis Mission represents an immense opportunity to modernize the digital infrastructure that underpins scientific discovery and innovation. Together with DOE and partners, we can strengthen the connection between research and real-world deployment, accelerating innovation across industry and infrastructure.”

By maintaining continuity from research to deployment, Siemens’ end-to-end solutions ensure resilience and scalability across complex physical systems, helping translate breakthrough research into reliable, real-world impact across energy, manufacturing, infrastructure, and other mission-critical domains. Our integrated approach empowers the Genesis Mission to bridge the gap between advanced research and tangible impact, accelerating discovery and enabling resilient, future-ready scientific infrastructure.

Through its participation, Siemens will engage with DOE, interagency stakeholders, and private sector partners to explore collaboration on interoperable, secure, and industrial-grade digital infrastructure for science and engineering. This includes advancing AI-enabled simulation and digital twins, scientific data lifecycle governance, lab-to-deployment workflows, and the resilient physical infrastructure required to support AI-intensive research environments.

Siemens’ participation builds on its longstanding engagement with DOE and the National Laboratories, as well as its broader commitment to advancing U.S. innovation, manufacturing, and infrastructure. Siemens Government Technologies, a wholly owned but distinct operating unit for Siemens in the U.S., enables collaboration with government researchers across domains at all classification levels given its regulatory framework and certified procurement and accounting systems, with a proven track record of delivering advanced software solutions for missions of national consequence.

More from HPCwire: First Genesis Mission Supercomputers on Track to Launch by June. ‘Unprecedented’ Speed, DOE’s Darío Gil Says

About Siemens

Siemens Corporation is a U.S. subsidiary of Siemens AG, a leading technology company focused on industry, infrastructure, transport, 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. A leader in industrial AI, Siemens leverages its deep domain know-how to apply AI – including generative AI – to real-world applications, making AI accessible and impactful for customers across diverse industries. 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 to Help Build AI-Ready Scientific Infrastructure as Part of DOE’s Genesis Mission appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 11:10

Judges uphold decision to dismiss case against Liam Óg Ó hAnnaidh for allegedly displaying Hezbollah flag at gig

The Kneecap rapper Liam Óg Ó hAnnaidh will not face a terrorism charge over allegedly displaying a Hezbollah flag during a gig after the high court in London upheld a decision to throw out the case.

Ó hAnnaidh, 28, who performs under the name Mo Chara, had been charged with the offence for allegedly displaying the flag of the proscribed group during a performance at the O2 Forum in Kentish Town, north London, in November 2024.

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2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 11:10

Vibration plates are trending, but are they necessary?

2026-03-11 12:04
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Rebel group blames government for attack on residential area of M23-controlled city of Goma

Three people including a French UN aid worker have been killed in a drone attack in Goma, a spokesperson for the M23 rebel group has said.

The attack took place at about 4am on Wednesday in the upmarket residential neighbourhood of Himbi in the city, which has been under M23 occupation since January 2025.

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

Deep Engineering Collaboration on AI Factories, Powering Inference and Agentic AI, Enables Nebius to Deploy More Than 5 Gigawatts of NVIDIA Systems by End of 2030

SANTA CLARA, Calif. and AMSTERDAM, March 11, 2026 — NVIDIA and Nebius Group N.V. today announced a strategic partnership to develop and deploy the next generation of hyperscale cloud for the AI market, from AI natives to enterprises. NVIDIA will invest $2 billion in Nebius, reflecting NVIDIA’s confidence in Nebius’s business and unique depth of engineering expertise across the full AI technology stack.

Credit: Shutterstock

To help meet rapidly growing global demand for high-performance compute, the partnership deepens Nebius and NVIDIA’s relationship across the full AI technology stack, from AI factory architecture to production software, enabling Nebius to accelerate the buildout of its industry-leading, full-stack AI cloud platform.

This partnership builds upon Nebius’s ongoing deployment of NVIDIA infrastructure across its global platform, including multiple gigawatt-scale AI factories in the U.S. To enable Nebius to deploy more than 5 gigawatts of capacity by the end of 2030, NVIDIA will support Nebius’s early adoption of the latest generation of NVIDIA’s accelerated computing platform.

Under the terms of the partnership, the companies will collaborate on:

  • AI factory design and support: Including access to partner design material, design review processes and acceptance, early samples and system software support, bring-up support, and regular system partner business and technical reviews.
  • Inference: Creating a best-in-class inference and agentic AI stack for developers and enterprises with NVIDIA’s latest software technologies, optimized models and libraries.
  • AI infrastructure deployment: Deploying multiple generations of NVIDIA infrastructure across Nebius’s platform through early adoption of NVIDIA computing architectures, including the NVIDIA Rubin platform, NVIDIA Vera CPUs and NVIDIA BlueField storage systems.
  • Fleet management: Optimizing Nebius’s holistic fleet health by deploying NVIDIA’s latest GPU health monitoring and software recommendations.

“AI is at another inflection point — agentic AI, driving incredible compute demand and accelerating infrastructure buildout,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA. “Nebius is building an AI cloud designed for the agentic era, fully integrated from silicon to software and powered by NVIDIA’s next-generation accelerated compute. Together, we are scaling the cloud to meet the surging global demand for intelligence.”

“Nebius has been built for AI since day one — not adapted from a general-purpose cloud, but designed for what developers actually need,” said Arkady Volozh, CEO of Nebius. “Now with NVIDIA, we are extending that throughout the stack — from gigawatt-scale AI factories to inference and software — as we build one of the first and largest clouds for all AI builders everywhere.”

About Nebius

Nebius, the AI cloud company, is building the full-stack platform for developers and companies to take charge of their AI future — from data and model training to production deployment. Founded on deep in-house technological expertise and operating at scale with a rapidly expanding global footprint, Nebius serves startups and enterprises building AI products, agents, and services worldwide. Nebius is listed on Nasdaq (NASDAQ: NBIS) and headquartered in Amsterdam.

About NVIDIA

NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) is the world leader in AI and accelerated computing.


Source: NVIDIA

The post NVIDIA and Nebius Partner to Scale Full-Stack AI Cloud appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 11:05

ESPOO, Finland, March 11, 2026 — IQM Quantum Computers today announced the launch of Aalto Q20 quantum computer in Finland, reinforcing its commercial leadership in the quantum industry.

The 20-qubit system, which is operational at Aalto University, is the fourth quantum computer deployed by IQM in Finland, marking a milestone in the country’s growing quantum technology ecosystem. Finland has recently been characterized as the number two global quantum cluster and is amongst the top five countries for quantum patent applications.

Ribbon cutting of the Aalto Q20 quantum computer delivered by IQM. Credit: IQM.

“When institutions like Aalto University own their quantum computers, it means their data, their IP, and their expertise stay theirs. That’s not a feature — that’s a strategic posture to enable world-class research and education. Aalto Q20 is Finland’s fourth proof point that IQM´s strategy to empower customers is a winning strategy” said Jan Goetz, CEO and Co-founder of IQM Quantum Computers.

Aalto University aims to use the quantum computer to educate future talent in quantum engineering. The advanced specifications of the systems make it one of the highest performant quantum computers deployed at a university, allowing world-class research in quantum computing.

The installation builds on IQM’s investments in education and collaboration with universities, research institutions, industry and policymakers in advancing research. Together with other offerings like IQM Academy the quantum computer installation is supporting the growing needs of the quantum ecosystem in Finland.

The Finnish quantum industry is projected to need around 3,000 new skilled employees to maintain the country’s leading position and deliver the goals laid out in the national quantum technology strategy. IQM’s deployment at Aalto directly addresses the talent gap and development.

In addition, the installation strengthens Finland’s quantum computing capabilities and expands the domestic supercomputing infrastructure. For this purpose, Aalto University is also collaborating with CSC – IT Center for Science to integrate AaltoQ20 with LUMI, one of the EuroHPC pre-exascale supercomputers, to provide access to a broader community of users across the European Union.

With a proven scalable deployment track record, IQM’s approach is to power local quantum ecosystems with an open and transparent hardware and software platform.

“As Finland’s fourth quantum computer, the Q20 is a show of strength for the Finnish quantum ecosystem of universities, companies, and research organizations. Q20 allows Aalto to have its own computer for researchers to easily access and students in the quantum technology major will get to use it as part of their studies, which is rare even on a global scale,” said Professor Tapio Ala-Nissilä of Department of Applied Physics at Aalto University.

More from HPCwire

About IQM Quantum Computers

IQM Quantum Computers (IQM) is a global leader in superconducting quantum computers. IQM provides both on-premises full-stack quantum computers and a cloud platform to access its systems. IQM customers include leading high-performance computing centres, research laboratories, universities, and enterprises that require full access to quantum hardware and software. IQM has over 300 employees, with headquarters in Finland and a global presence in countries including France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Poland, Saudi Arabia, Spain, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan, UK and the United States.


Source: IQM Quantum Computers

The post IQM Delivers 4th Quantum Computer in Finland, Operational at Aalto University appeared first on HPCwire.

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

I've used a lot of great wireless gaming headsets, but this pair from SteelSeries helped me stop worrying about battery life, making them worth the high price.

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

The scary movie arrives in April.

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

Goal Zero's newest portable power station comes with a more durable build and additional capabilities.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 11:01

Goal Zero's newest portable power station comes with a more durable build and additional capabilities.

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

The revival of this 90s favourite is a retro-futuristic fever dream that is first incomprehensible, then thrillingly evocative. Plus, Donald Glover’s Yoshi debut

Back in the mid-1990s, when I was a staff writer for Edge magazine, Marathon was our multiplayer shooter of choice. We all worked on Apple Macs, not PCs, so Bungie’s sci-fi opus was one of the only networked shooters we could all play together. At the end of every day, staff from magazines around the company loaded it up and played for hours (usually with Chemical Brothers or Orbital blasting from the stereo). This was the era in which video games discovered club culture – Sony employed the legendary Sheffield studio the Designers Republic to create its box art and licensed the latest dance tunes for its marketing and game soundtracks. Western developers swooned over cyberpunk anime, newly available thanks to video distributors such as Viz Media and Manga Entertainment, and the internet was emerging as a weird, wild global meeting place. It felt, for a while, as if we were living in a William Gibson novel.

I’m reminded of these things while playing the new version of Marathon, released this week by Bungie and heavily inspired by 1990s futurism. It’s now an online sci-fi extraction shooter in which players beam down to the planet Tau Ceti IV to scavenge for loot, carry out missions and potentially blast each other in the process. Its closest rival is Arc Raiders, which makes a similar use of stylised retro-futurism. In a recent Twitter exchange, Bungie’s global franchise director, Philip Asher, namechecked Sony’s Wipeout game, its Mental Wealth ads for PlayStation and its translucent Dual Shock controllers as inspirations.

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2026-03-11 12:04
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For nearly three decades, Jim West transformed San Juan Bautista. After his shocking gun suicide, a local behavioral health agency dove in to help a community in mourning

Any other night, the small California town of San Juan Bautista is shrouded in darkness, lit only by scattered streetlights and the dim glow of a few saloons. But on the first Saturday of December, a parade lights it up. Dozens of cars wrapped in Christmas lights roll through streets that look as if they were pulled from an old western. Since its inception in the 2000s, the parade has become a tradition in this village in the foothills of the Gabilan range, just 100 miles (160km) south of San Francisco.

Anthony Botelho, a county supervisor, had never missed one. In 2018, exhausted from a trip from Arizona, he meant to stay home, until his longtime friend Jim West, the town’s mayor, convinced him otherwise.

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

Due to the volatile cocoa market, companies like Hershey are using replacement ingredients such as sugar, oil, milk and nuts

Just before Valentine’s Day, Brad Reese bought a bag of Reese’s Unwrapped Peanut Butter Creme Mini Hearts from his local convenience store in West Palm Beach, Florida. It was a brand-new product, released especially for the holiday, tagline: “We’ll never break your heart.”

Reese is a Reese’s aficionado who makes a point of trying everything the company produces. This isn’t a coincidence: he’s one of the Reeses, a grandson of HB Reese, the former Hershey dairy farmer who invented the peanut butter cup in 1928. Although he’s never worked for Reese’s or Hershey, which acquired the peanut butter cup company in 1963, Reese considers himself a custodian of HB’s legacy. He also takes an avid interest in the Hershey company and its leadership.

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I edited photos with the original Nano Banana, the pro model and now Nano Banana 2. Here's how they stack up.

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ASUS says the MacBook Neo is a "shock" to the Windows PC ecosystem. "In the past, Apple's pricing situation has always been high, so for them to release a very budget-friendly product, this is obviously a shock to the entire industry," said ASUS co-CEO S.Y. Hsu in a Tuesday earnings call. While he expects PC makers to respond, rising AI-driven memory shortages could push hardware prices higher across the industry. PCMag reports: Hsu said he believes all the PC players -- including Microsoft, Intel, and AMD -- take the MacBook Neo threat seriously. "In fact, in the entire PC ecosystem, there have been a lot of discussions about how to compete with this product," he added, given that rumors about the MacBook Neo have been making the rounds for at least a year. Despite the competitive threat, Hsu argued that the MacBook Neo could have limited appeal. He pointed to the laptop's 8GB of "unified memory," or what amounts to its RAM, and how customers can't upgrade it. He also described the MacBook Neo as a "content consumption" device, similar to an iPad. "This is different from the use case of a mainstream notebook," which can handle more compute-intensive tasks, Hsu said. "How big of an impact [the MacBook Neo] will have on the PC industry will still require some time for us to observe," Hsu said while suggesting it might not gain traction among Windows PC users due to software differences. "Of course, the entire Windows PC ecosystem will push out products to compete against Apple," he added.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-11 11:00

Experts documented murder, torture and disappearances under Nayib Bukele’s policy targeting gangs

The draconian mass incarceration policy of El Salvador’s president, Nayib Bukele, may have led to crimes against humanity, according to a new study by legal experts.

By locking up 1.4% of the population without due process, Bukele turned El Salvador from one of Latin America’s most violent countries into one of its least violent – but at the cost of human rights and the rule of law.

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2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 10:58

Business lobby groups say ‘taking the risk’ of employing less-experienced workers is being avoided

British companies are struggling to afford to hire young people after a long period of rising costs that have hit profit margins and derailed recruitment plans, business leaders have said.

Rising labour costs including increases to the minimum wage and employer’s national insurance by the government have put young people at the back of the queue when employers consider recruitment, business lobby groups have told MPs.

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2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 10:55

Ex-peer sacked as US ambassador over Epstein links was offered £75,000, documents released by Cabinet Office show

Peter Mandelson was offered a severance payment of £75,000 after initially asking the Foreign Office to pay him more than £500,000 upon his sacking as US ambassador, newly released documents reveal.

Exchanges in the documents released by the Cabinet Office suggested that officials did “well to get this settlement down this low with minimal fuss”, after Mandelson was forced to resign as ambassador to the US because of newly disclosed details about his long friendship with the child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

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2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 10:55

Debt collectors can't drain your account without a court order, but once they have one, the rules may surprise you.

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March 11, 2026 — Using a tool to solve a protein’s structure, for most researchers in the world of structural biology and computational chemistry, is not unlike using the Rosetta Stone to unlock the secrets of ancient Egyptian texts. Once a protein’s structure has been discovered, or defined, one can infer crucial information about its function or, in a diseased state, its dysfunction. While researchers have been pursuing the quest of solving protein structure for decades, advancing tools and computing technologies offer a new frontier for this work.

Timeline highlighting progress toward the development of AI potentials and AQuaRef enabled by incremental quantum mechanical calculations and research. Credit: Adapted from figure by Hatice Gokan/Carnegie Mellon University.

collaborative study recently published in Nature Communications unveiled a new computing program that offers a faster and more accurate way to determine protein structure at a new level of precision. Researchers from the Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab), along with an international team of researchers, were a part of the effort. This tool, dubbed AI-enabled Quantum Refinement, or AQuaRef for short, uses quantum-mechanical calculations (QM) and artificial intelligence (AI) to predict the highly-accurate placement of atoms and electrons to determine a protein’s molecular structure.

This program is a part of Phenix, a comprehensive software suite that generates realistic computer models used by structural biologists around the world to solve macromolecular structures. “We’re all basically a bunch of proteins,” said Nigel Moriarty, a Berkeley Lab researcher and contributor to the recent publication. “They do so much in our bodies that detail the processes of life. Understanding their structure can give us insights into the mechanisms that cause disease in humans or produce energy in plants. All of this knowledge can lead to more effective therapeutics and bioenergy production.”

The current way of mapping a protein’s structure entails bringing together two streams of information: experimental data produced through techniques like X-ray crystallography and cryogenic electron microscopy (cryo-EM), and theoretical data that exists in a library of detailed, known protein structural information. But the current options are limited, explained Moriarty, a computational research scientist in the Molecular Biophysics and Integrated Bioimaging (MBIB) Division’s Phenix group. Our understanding today is limited to the chemical entities that have already been defined and doesn’t yet include meaningful noncovalent interactions, the type of attraction typically seen holding a protein in its structural form. “That’s where quantum and AI come in,” he said.

Nearly five years ago, members of the Phenix team began working with researchers at Carnegie Mellon University to explore how they might be able to apply their coding work to Phenix’s offerings. The collaborative approach, coupled with 15 years of incremental research, led to this breakthrough program. In addition to Moriarty, other members of the Phenix team involved in this work were Paul Adams and Billy Poon, with Pavel Afonine leading the research. AQuaRef uses machine learning (ML) tools developed at Carnegie Mellon integrated with the Phenix software to compute energy and forces for scientifically interesting proteins—making quantum-level refinement practical where it was previously impossible.

Of the 71 experiments that were tested in this study, AQuaRef produced higher quality structural information at a substantially lower computational cost while maintaining an equal or better fit to experimental data. In addition to the proof-of-concept results from this work, AQuaRef also correctly determined proton positions in DJ-1, a human protein linked to some forms of Parkinson’s Disease, the structure of which has been notoriously difficult to map. Now that the team has confirmed that quantum-level refinement of a 3D protein model structure is possible, they’re aiming to broaden the scope to include more diverse structures, such as those required for pharmaceutical drug design. And the potential impacts of this work reach far beyond human health, from better understanding the mechanisms of photosynthesis for enhanced crop productivity to mapping the proteins in plants as it relates to biofuel production.

“There is a near-infinite number of things that can benefit from a detailed understanding of these mechanisms and protein structure,” said Moriarty. “I’m excited to see how the paradigm shift that AQuaRef represents impacts the field of protein structure determination.”

This international team also included collaborators from the University of Wrocław, Poland, the University of Florida, and Pending.AI, Australia.

This work was funded by the National Institutes of Health as well as with support from the Phenix Industrial Consortium.


Source: Ashleigh Papp, Berkeley Lab

The post Berkeley Lab Team Helps Develop ‘AQuaRef’ AI-Quantum Approach for Protein Structure Modeling appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 10:51

President Trump told FIFA representatives Tuesday that Iran is welcome to play in the World Cup tournament in the United States, officials told CBS News.

2026-03-11 12:04
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After Dee Warner, a Michigan businesswoman and mother, disappeared from her home, her family believed she has been murdered and suspected her husband Dale Warner. But without physical evidence, they knew it would be hard to prove.

2026-03-11 20:04
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Bobbi Boudman’s win over Republican Dale Fincher could be a harbinger of blue wave during midterms

A Democrat won a special election for a state house seat in New Hampshire on Tuesday, flipping a Republican district that Donald Trump carried and marking the latest in a string of 28 Democratic upsets that could usher in a blue wave in the midterms.

Bobbi Boudman beat Republican Dale Fincher in New Hampshire’s Carroll county district 7. It was Boudman’s third try at the seat – she lost to incumbent representative Glenn Cordelli in the last two cycles by several points. Cordelli resigned from the seat after moving, leading to the special election on 10 March.

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2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 10:42

PM says UK would ‘be at war’ now if it were up to Tory and Reform leaders and accuses both of changing position

Keir Starmer has attacked Kemi Badenoch and Nigel Farage over their stance on the war in Iran, accusing both of U-turning on their support for Donald Trump.

At a raucous prime minister’s questions, Starmer accused the leader of the opposition of making the “mother of all U-turns” and furiously trying to backpedal after on Tuesday she denied calling for the UK to join the US president’s war on Iran, after previously saying Starmer should do more to “stop the people who are attacking us”.

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2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 10:40

TORONTO and DAEJEON, South Korea, March 11, 2026 — Xanadu Quantum Technologies Inc., a leading photonic quantum computing company, has partnered with the Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute (ETRI), South Korea’s premier government-funded research institution, on a new two-year collaborative research project. The project is supported by a major grant from the South Korean government to advance the nation’s quantum ecosystem.

Building on the two organizations’ successful history of collaboration in quantum machine learning, the new research partnership focuses on advancing the software infrastructure required to study and execute complex algorithms for fault-tolerant quantum computing (FTQC). The collaboration aims to equip researchers with tools to identify algorithmic bottlenecks and optimize resource usage, a critical step toward enabling distributed quantum computing.

Specifically, the project seeks to advance the resource estimation capabilities within Xanadu’s PennyLane quantum programming library and its Catalyst hybrid quantum-classical compiler. These integrated tools empower researchers to predict quantum computing performance and shorten development cycles by estimating resources, such as qubit and gate counts, required for complex algorithms before they are run on hardware.

“It is vital for researchers to understand the quantum resources their algorithms require,” said Christian Weedbrook, Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Xanadu. “By developing advanced resource estimation and compiler tools in PennyLane and Catalyst, we are providing ETRI with the software capabilities needed to design next-generation algorithms that are both efficient and scalable.”

“Our goal is to develop the essential system software that will power a distributed quantum future,” said Dr. Yongsoo Hwang, Manager of the Quantum Computing Research Section at ETRI. “Xanadu’s expertise in full-stack quantum development, FTQC algorithms, and their widely adopted software tools make them an ideal partner as we work to uncover and solve the challenges of large-scale quantum application design.”

By combining Xanadu’s world-class software stack with ETRI’s deep research capabilities, the project is set to establish a robust foundation for scaling up quantum algorithms for FTQC that will serve as a cornerstone for both South Korea’s and Canada’s quantum technology sector in the years ahead.

More from HPCwire: Xanadu and AMD Accelerate Quantum Computing for Aerospace and Engineering

About Xanadu

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


Source: Xanadu

The post Xanadu and ETRI Partner to Accelerate Fault-Tolerant Quantum Algorithm Design Using PennyLane appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 10:36

Former US secretary of state says oil shock driven by war in Iran highlights dangers of reliance on fossil fuels

Countries must seek energy independence through renewable resources and nuclear energy for their national security, and to avoid the “choke points” of fossil fuel supply, the former US secretary of state John Kerry has warned.

The war in Iran has sent oil prices soaring, as refineries and fields have closed down in several Middle Eastern countries and many tankers are stranded in the strait of Hormuz, with economic impacts beginning to be felt around the world.

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2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 10:27

Members agree unanimously to release about 400m barrels amid market volatility caused by Iran war

The International Energy Agency has ordered the largest release of government oil reserves in its history to help calm the oil price shock triggered by the US-Israeli attacks on Iran.

The world’s energy watchdog said its 32 members had agreed unanimously to release about 400m barrels of emergency crude, a third of the group’s total government stockpiles and more than double the IEA’s previous biggest release.

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2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 10:19

Alireza Salarian says Iran’s new supreme leader was lucky to survive strike that killed six of his family members

Iran’s new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, was injured in the 28 February attack that killed six of his family members, including his father, Tehran’s ambassador to Cyprus has confirmed.

In an interview conducted at his embassy compound in Nicosia, Alireza Salarian elaborated on the circumstances in which Khamenei, 56, was injured, saying he was lucky to survive the strike, which levelled the late ayatollah’s residence.

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2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 10:13

Partnership expands IonQ’s UK presence, accelerates IP generation, brings IonQ’s world-class quantum networking capabilities, and its forthcoming 256-qubit system to Cambridge as well as its quantum sensing and quantum security capabilities

COLLEGE PARK, Md., March 11, 2026 — IonQ today announced a landmark agreement with the University of Cambridge to establish the IonQ Quantum Innovation Centre. The collaboration is designed to accelerate quantum research commercialization, expand IonQ’s intellectual property portfolio, and deepen the company’s commitment to the United Kingdom’s quantum ecosystem.

As part of the initiative, the parties intend to deploy IonQ’s 6th-generation, chip-based, 256-qubit system on campus and provide access to IonQ’s quantum cloud, supporting advanced research and workforce development across quantum computing, networking, sensing, and security. The partnership will generate significant innovation and intellectual property to be shared under established licensing terms. The structure of the agreement is designed to align academic research incentives with commercial outcomes and long-term industry impact.

“This historic agreement with Cambridge deepens IonQ’s commitment to the United Kingdom and accelerates our technology platform with novel research at one of the world’s most storied physics powerhouses,” said Niccolo de Masi, Chairman and CEO of IonQ. “By establishing the IonQ Quantum Innovation Centre, we are strengthening the bridge between academic discovery and commercial quantum advantage. We believe this partnership will contribute meaningfully to the UK’s commitment to advancing scalable quantum computing, networking, sensing, and security.”

“We’re proud that Cambridge is at the heart of the UK’s next computing revolution,” said Professor Deborah Prentice, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge. “This new and ambitious partnership is the first of its kind for a UK university. It’s not just a new facility for Cambridge — it’s one for the whole of the UK, and it will develop not only exciting new technologies but also the UK’s next generation of leaders in quantum science.”

The collaboration also aligns with the United Kingdom’s broader strategy to accelerate quantum innovation and commercialization. The initiative complements national efforts such as the UK National Quantum Technologies Programme, the National Quantum Computing Centre (NQCC), and commercialization initiatives supported by Innovate UK, which aim to translate academic breakthroughs into commercial technologies. The University of Cambridge also plays a central role in the country’s quantum ecosystem, participating in four of the UK’s five national quantum technology hubs that connect leading universities, industry partners, and government laboratories. Cambridge has further emerged as a leader in quantum networking research, including development of a large-scale fiber-based testbed linking Bristol and Cambridge—one of the longest experimental quantum communication networks in the United Kingdom.

Cambridge’s Cavendish Laboratory—is associated with 36 physicists who won Nobel Prizes in that field, of the University’s 126 Nobel Prize laureates—remains one of the world’s leading centers for physics research. Its legendary innovators include James Clerk Maxwell who was the first Cavendish Professor of Physics and first to prove that light, electricity, and magnetism work together as “electromagnetic waves;” as well as Ernest Rutherford who discovered the architecture of the atom and is widely regarded as the “Father of Nuclear Physics.”

The new IonQ quantum center is expected to support collaborative research programs, academic engagement, talent development initiatives and industry-facing events, while creating a structured pathway for translating foundational research into commercial applications.

Research areas include quantum hardware for computing, networking, sensing, and security, and quantum applications for chemistry, materials science, optimization, security, and advanced communication protocols – all areas aligned with IonQ’s roadmap of critical quantum technologies.

About IonQ

IonQ, Inc. (NYSE: IONQ) is the world’s leading quantum platform and merchant supplier – delivering integrated quantum solutions across computing, networking, sensing, and security. IonQ’s newest generation of quantum computers, the forthcoming IonQ Tempo, will be the latest in a line of cutting-edge systems that have been helping customers and partners including Amazon Web Services, AstraZeneca, and NVIDIA achieve 20x performance results and accelerate innovation in drug discovery, materials science, financial modeling, logistics, cybersecurity, and defense. In 2025, the company achieved 99.99% two-qubit gate fidelity, setting a world record in quantum computing performance.


Source: IonQ

The post IonQ Establishes Quantum Innovation Centre with University of Cambridge appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 10:11

Decision to shield pro-Bolsonaro truck driver sentenced for 8 January 2023 attack could inflame Brazil election politics

Argentina has granted asylum to a Brazilian fugitive convicted for his role in 2023 pro-Bolsonaro riots – a decision that analysts say could reverberate in Brazil’s upcoming presidential election.

A week after Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Brazil’s president, took office, hundreds of people ransacked Brazil’s congress building, presidential palace and supreme court on 8 January 2023, in an attempt to overturn former president Jair Bolsonaro’s electoral defeat. Investigators later concluded the attacks were the culmination of a broader plot aimed at staging a coup.

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2026-03-11 12:04
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Ryan Gosling shines in the first great sci-fi movie of the year.

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LOUISVILLE, Colo., March 11, 2026 — Infleqtion, a global leader in quantum computing and quantum sensing powered by neutral-atom technology, announced it has been selected to receive $3.9M in funding from the U.S. Department of Energy’s ARPA-E. The funding is part of the Quantum Computing for Computational Chemistry (QC3) program, which seeks to develop and apply quantum algorithms to accelerate simulations of chemistry and materials science to advance commercial energy applications ranging from superconducting power lines, advanced batteries, engineered rare earth magnets, and breakthrough catalytic systems.

Infleqtion’s QC3 project aims to discover new high-temperature superconductors and materials that conduct electricity with zero losses. Superconductors are already used in powerful electromagnets for MRI machines, but their use in the electric grid remains limited due to the need for ultra-low temperatures. Infleqtion will use its neutral atom quantum computer and a pioneering new algorithm to improve the understanding of superconductivity and discover new, previously unknown, and superconducting materials.

“The work we are doing as part of the QC3 program puts us at the forefront of one of the most consequential applications of quantum computing, unlocking the science of superconductivity to transform how the world generates and transmits energy,” said Matthew Kinsella, CEO of Infleqtion. “This is yet another proof point that our neutral-atom platform is uniquely positioned to solve problems that other quantum modalities and classical computers simply cannot. It’s also the latest in a series of wins that show how we are executing across multiple fronts, from expanding our customer base to deepening our government partnerships.”

Infleqtion’s QC3 funding is in addition to the $6.2M contract the company is already executing with ARPA-E as part of the Enhancing Neutral-atom Computers for Optimizing Delivery of Energy (ENCODE) project. The ENCODE program, which includes key collaborations with Argonne National Laboratory, the National Laboratory of the Rockies, EPRI, and ComEd, is the first quantum project for the department focusing on advancing the application of quantum-enhanced computational methods to revolutionize energy grid optimization.

Infleqtion will be showcasing its portfolio of quantum technologies at the upcoming ARPA-E Energy Innovation Summit in San Diego, April 7-9, 2026 (Booth # 745).

More from HPCwire

About Infleqtion

Infleqtion, Inc. (NYSE: INFQ) is a global leader in quantum technology, delivering neutral atom solutions for quantum computing, networking, sensing, and security. With a product portfolio spanning quantum computers, quantum optical clocks, RF receivers, and inertial sensors, Infleqtion’s full-stack approach combines high-performance hardware with the company’s proprietary Superstaq quantum computing software platform. Infleqtion’s systems are already in use by the U.S. Department of Defense, NASA, the U.K. government, and in multiple collaborations with NVIDIA. Infleqtion, in collaboration with NVIDIA, published the world’s first demonstration of a materials science application using logical qubits. With operations in the U.S., Europe, and Asia, Infleqtion meets the demands of government and commercial customers across the space, defense, energy, finance and telecommunications sectors.


Source: Infleqtion

The post Infleqtion Receives $3.9M ARPA-E Award for Quantum Computing Research appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 10:00

Australia Institute data finds state and federal subsidies for coal, gas and oil products increased 10% in past year, growing at a faster pace than funding to NDIS

Australian federal and state government subsidies that encourage fossil fuel use and help drive the climate crisis will reach $16.3bn this year after leaping by nearly 10%, according to a new analysis.

It found federal and state governments will pay or forgo the equivalent of $31,020 each minute in 2025-26 to subsidise companies producing and using coal, gas and especially oil, mostly in the form of diesel.

Sign up to get climate and environment editor Adam Morton’s Clear Air column as a free newsletter

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2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 10:00

Knowing the pricing tricks VPNs often use can help you avoid an unpleasant surprise at checkout or renewal.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 10:00

Meta will begin charging advertisers a 2-5% "location fee" to offset digital services taxes imposed by several European countries, including the UK, France, Italy, Spain, Austria, and Turkey. Reuters reports: The fee, for image or video ads delivered on Meta platforms including WhatsApp click-to-message campaigns and marketing messages together with ads, will apply from July 1 and will also cover other government-imposed levies. "Until now, Meta has covered these additional costs. These changes are part of Meta's ongoing effort to respond to the evolving regulatory landscape and align with industry standards," the company said in the blog. The location fees are determined by where the audience is located and not the advertisers' business location. Meta listed six countries where the fees will apply, ranging from 2% in the United Kingdom to 3% in France, Italy and Spain and 5% in Austria and Turkey.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 09:52

President Trump and his allies are pushing Senate Republicans to pass an elections-related bill known as the SAVE America Act.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 09:51

A vehicle crashed into a barricade near the White House on Wednesday morning, authorities said.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 09:46

Effect of war on prices not reflected in data, as Trump says only ‘fools’ would think oil price shocks would be significant

US inflation stayed flat at 2.4% in February, according to government data released Wednesday that provides a snapshot of the US economy before it was thrown into a tailspin by the US-Israel conflict with Iran.

The levelling comes after prices swung last year, reaching a four-year low in April before shooting back up in September. In late fall, inflation crept down again, reaching 2.4% in January.

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2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 09:44

High-smoke-point cooking oils perform better under the harsh heat of an air fryer. Here are the best (and worst) varities to use.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 09:38
  • Ravens to sign four-time Pro Bowl edge rusher

  • Raiders were to receive first-round picks in Crosby deal

Four-time Pro Bowl edge rusher Trey Hendrickson has reportedly agreed on a four-year, $112m contract with the Baltimore Ravens.

The contract is not yet formalized as it can’t be signed off until the start of the new league year at 4pm ET on Wednesday.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-11 09:36

Watch scenes from the performances nominated for best actor at the 98th annual Academy Awards, as well as interviews with the nominees.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 09:35

The company says it'll invest the money over five years to expand its networks, including a bigger push into rural satellite service.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 09:31

RSPCA say animals could become ‘hidden victims’ of conflict as charities in Gulf city report being overwhelmed

Thousands of pets are being abandoned in Dubai as their owners flee the Middle East because of the Iran war, animal charities have said.

The RSPCA said pets of fleeing UK nationals could become “hidden victims” of the conflict as people who had relocated to the Gulf city scramble for an exit and struggle to bring their animals.

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2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 09:24

Canva's newest AI feature is all about giving creators more control over AI, not less.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 09:23

Officers normally assigned to process Global Entry travelers had been reassigned to process other arriving travelers during the pause.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 09:21

Two people killed in Indiana as officials warn millions from Texas to Michigan remain at risk of severe weather

A series of tornadoes hit parts of Texas, Illinois, and Indiana late Tuesday and overnight, as forecasters warn that the threat of severe weather, including flooding, will continue on Wednesday for tens of millions of people from Texas to Michigan.

At least four tornado touchdowns were reported in eastern Illinois, the National Weather Service (NWS) said, leaving a trail of damage stretching into Indiana, where at least two people were killed.

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2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 09:18

Gunmen from Islamic State West Africa Province overran four military bases and abducted 300 civilians, say reports

At least 65 Nigerian soldiers have been killed in jihadist raids across the country’s north-east in the last two weeks, as the west African state battles to contain one of the world’s deadliest terror groups.

On 5 and 6 March, gunmen from Islamic State West Africa Province (Iswap) overran four military bases in Borno state, the epicentre of the insurgency. Nigerian daily the Punch reported that about 40 soldiers were killed in total in these attacks.

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2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 09:15

BOSTON and PARIS, March 11, 2026 — Alice & Bob, a leader in fault-tolerant quantum computing, will present more than a dozen research talks at the APS Global Physics Summit, demonstrating new advances in its cat-qubit architecture – a hardware-efficient approach designed to reduce the number of qubits required for fault-tolerant quantum computers.

The presentations span several key challenges in scaling quantum computers, including stabilizing cat qubits, extending their intrinsic error protection, and enabling core components of fault-tolerant computation such as high-fidelity magic-state preparation.

Researchers will also introduce new techniques to simulate large superconducting quantum systems and to validate the ultra-low logical error rates required for practical quantum computing.

Together, the results highlight progress across the full stack required to build scalable fault-tolerant quantum computers, from device physics and circuit design to quantum error correction and system verification.

The APS Global Physics Summit held March 15-20 in Denver, Colorado, brings together thousands of physicists from around the world to present new developments across all disciplines of physics, including quantum mechanics.

Further information on Alice & Bob’s APS presentations is available in the company’s blog post here. The Alice & Bob team will also be available to meet with at booth #901.

More from HPCwire

About Alice & Bob

Alice & Bob is a quantum computing company based in Paris and Boston whose goal is to create the first universal, fault-tolerant quantum computer. Founded in 2020, Alice & Bob has raised €130 million in funding and employs more than 200 people. Advised by Nobel Prize winning researchers, Alice & Bob specializes in cat qubits, a technology developed by the company’s founders. Demonstrating the power of its cat architecture, Alice & Bob recently showed that it could reduce the hardware requirements for building a useful large-scale quantum computer up to 200 times compared with competing approaches. For more information, visit www.alice-bob.com.


Source: Alice & Bob

The post Alice & Bob to Showcase Advances in Cat-Qubit Fault Tolerance at APS Global Physics Summit appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 09:12

An image of the sighting showed the massive bear standing over the carcass near Yellowstone Lake.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-11 09:08
  • Participation ruled out after killing of Khamenei

  • Trump said to have told Infantino Iran are welcome

The prospect of Iran playing at this summer’s World Cup appears remote after the country’s sports minister, Ahmad Donyamali, said on Wednesday that “under no circumstances can we participate”.

Donyamali is the first Iranian government representative to address the issue of the World Cup since the US, one of the co-hosts, began bombing the country with backing from Israel 10 days ago.

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2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 09:00

Workers at JBS USA to strike Monday in what will be the first labor strike in the meatpacking industry in decades

About 3,800 workers at JBS USA, the world’s largest meat producer, are set to strike on Monday in what will be the first labor strike in the industry in decades.

The walkout threatens to put further strain on US meat pricesground beef prices soared 15% last year – and could prove a headache for the Trump administration as it struggles with poor polling on cost of living issues.

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2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 09:00

Some US taxpayers are refusing to pay the federal government amid ICE surges, the war with Iran and more

“I’m not paying my federal income taxes this year,” Rachel Cohen declared in a recent Instagram video that received more than 140,000 likes.

The 31-year-old lawyer in Chicago plans to put the $8,800 she owes the federal government in a high-yield savings account instead. She doesn’t want to fund wars in Iran and Gaza or immigration agents detaining her neighbors, she said.

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2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 09:00

By Juha Holkkola, FusionLayer Group

How DHCP Changed Connectivity

In the late 1990s, the DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) quietly catalyzed a revolution in digital connectivity. Before DHCP was introduced, connecting devices to a network involved manual entry of IP addresses, DNS servers, subnet masks, and gateways. Networks were fragile, prone to errors, and severely limited in scalability. The introduction of DHCP changed everything and became a game-changer for networking.

With widespread adoption across operating systems, DHCP made networking a plug-and-play experience. This fundamental change accelerated the adoption of Wi-Fi, standardized enterprise networks using DHCP-based addressing, and propelled the mobile Internet to viability. While DHCP simplified network connectivity by automating IP address assignments, it also introduced the world to the essence of effortless connectivity.

Fast forward to today, connectivity remains effortless, yet escalating threats continuously challenge digital trust. Just as DHCP revolutionized connectivity, we are primed for a transformation of equal magnitude concerning digital trust. The solution is clear: we must automate trust through Secure Zero-Touch Provisioning (SZTP).

SZTP: Secure Zero-Touch Provisioning

Modern digital infrastructure, spanning cloud nodes, edge systems, IoT sensors, industrial robotics, home gateways, and AI-centered factories, necessitates robust security measures. To maintain secure environments, each device in this extensive ecosystem must autonomously verify its needs. This includes self-authentication, receiving verified firmware, installing necessary credentials, and joining orchestrated environments without human intervention, which DHCP alone cannot accomplish.

Secure Zero-Touch Provisioning (SZTP), as defined in RFC 8572, steps up to address these needs in our complex digital reality. It builds trust by automating the exchange of essential artifacts and certificates required for seamless device bootstrapping: verifying hardware identity, delivering trusted firmware and OS images, applying patches, injecting cryptographic credentials, and setting up a complete runtime environment automatically, without manual interaction.

SZTP is based on open standards, making it vendor-neutral and ideal for large-scale deployments. As digital ecosystems grow in complexity, SZTP promises a future in which AI agents can autonomously request and deploy secure infrastructure within minutes, enhancing operational efficiency and security simultaneously.

Step-by-Step: Implementing SZTP in Your Infrastructure

  1. Device Identification and Authentication

Begin by integrating SZTP in your network infrastructure. Once a device powers on, it must first establish identity through a secure channel. This is typically done using hardware-based security measures, such as a TPM (Trusted Platform Module), to provide hardware attestation.

  1. Firmware Verification and Secure Image Delivery

Implement policies to verify firmware integrity. Use cryptographic signatures to ensure firmware authenticity. SZTP can fetch secure firmware and OS images from trusted repositories. For instance, create a policy that requires all devices to verify their firmware against a centralized manifest.

  1. Credential Injection and Environment Initialization

Devices securely receive cryptographic credentials and configuration files. Use automated scripts to distribute these credentials from a central management server. Next, deploy containerized workloads using tools such as Kubernetes to orchestrate the environment.

  1. Lifecycle Management and Patch Automation

With SZTP, configure automated patch management systems to apply security patches and software updates. Implement CI/CD pipelines that automatically redeploy updated firmware images, ensuring devices run the latest software versions.

SZTP is ideal for AI and Edge Clouds

AI factories rely on specialized processors, such as DPUs, to offload networking, storage, and security tasks from GPUs. Linux Foundation’s OPI project has adopted SZTP as a standard initialization method for these devices.

Here’s how SZTP simplifies AI and edge cloud deployment:

  • Device Identity and Trust Management

SZTP serves DPUs like DHCP did for laptops, answering questions crucial to trust: “Who are you?” and “Can you be trusted?” Use open-source libraries to develop trust protocols integrated with SZTP, enhancing the security posture.

  • Automated Secure Provisioning

Ensure your infrastructure is secure by default. Initiate hardware attestation, verify boot components, and use automated tools to deliver secure images and deploy cryptographic credentials. Platforms like HashiCorp Vault can manage secrets during this process.

  • Comprehensive Software Stack Deployment

SZTP allows for defining a device’s mission by automating the deployment of OS components, runtimes, and security agents. Leverage Docker and Kubernetes to handle container runtimes and orchestration, ensuring efficient management of service mesh layers and logging telemetries.

  • Scalable Client Implementations

Establish open-source client initiatives to enhance adoption. Encourage device manufacturers and OS vendors to integrate this client to promote SZTP adoption further and reduce integration complexity.

Conclusion

Open clients enabled DHCP to transform networking, and they will guide SZTP in defining secure, automated infrastructure’s next era for AI-enabled applications. Automate your edge and AI factory environments with SZTP, elevating digital trust to unprecedented levels.

By following these steps and leveraging SZTP technology, organizations can enhance their network security, automate deployment processes, and prepare their infrastructure for a future driven by AI and IoT.

The post Implementing Secure Zero-Touch Provisioning in AI and Edge Infrastructure appeared first on Linux.com.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 09:00

LOS ANGELES, March 11, 2026 — As AI systems scale from single-rack scale up network systems to multi-rack configurations up to 1,000s of AI processors, copper interconnects have reached their limits in speed, density, and reach. Future scale-up networks require an optical architecture that delivers higher bandwidth density at lower power with maximum processor utilization. DWDM co-packaged optics is gaining traction as the inevitable architecture for scale-up, but adoption requires technical proof and a path to volume. Scintil Photonics, the developer of LEAF Light, the industry’s first single-chip DWDM laser source for AI infrastructure, today launched the LEAF Light Evaluation Kit (EVK), enabling qualified customers to validate the technology in their own environments.

Credit: Scintil Photonics

LEAF Light targets 50% power reduction over single-wavelength CPO. It reduces tail latency through simpler, lower-BER signaling without the need for heavy FEC. And it scales fiber capacity through wavelength multiplexing rather than higher baud rates, complex modulation schemes, or additional fibers, preserving power efficiency, low latency, and signal integrity at every step.

LEAF Light is the first single-chip DWDM laser source to move from lab validation into a customerfacing evaluation program. The EVK provides a standardized path from technology validation through ELSFP module integration.

The EVK is targeted for availability in Q2 2026, with early access for select qualified customers. Scintil’s $58 million Series B, with participation from NVIDIA, reflects growing alignment between AI infrastructure leaders and DWDM-based optical architectures.

At OFC 2026 (March 17–19, Los Angeles), Scintil will showcase live DWDM demonstrations, including a 16-wavelength, 100GHz configuration alongside ELSFP module integration, with EVK units on display. Private technical briefings will be available by appointment.

What the EVK Enables

The LEAF Light EVK is an evaluation system that hosts two LOSAs (Laser Optical Sub-Assemblies), each containing a LEAF Light die with fiber attachment, delivering a total of 8 fibers per EVK. Compatible with both 8- and 16-wavelength LOSAs, the platform provides a complete evaluation environment, including operating temperature control, per-laser current adjustment, and intelligent control of frequency spacing to meet stringent 200 GHz or 100 GHz grid requirements. Unique on-board feedback loops simultaneously control wavelength precision and power uniformity across all channels, finding and holding the optimal operating point without manual intervention.

In standalone mode or through a USB-connected user interface, customers can evaluate advanced intelligent features such as:

  • WaveGuard: On-chip frequency monitoring and precision trimming that maintains DWDM channel spacing within tight tolerances across temperature variation, aging, and package stress
  • Power per wavelength monitoring: Active control ensuring output power uniformity across all wavelengths, even as individual laser currents are adjusted for frequency accuracy
  • Operational telemetry: Real-time monitoring of output power, temperature, and other system parameters, providing a continuous reference baseline to detect and correct deviations over the system’s lifetime and enable efficient laser source fleet management.

These capabilities reflect LEAF Light’s design as an intelligent laser source, with on-chip digital control and monitoring built into the architecture.

The EVK’s modular architecture supports LOSA upgradability, enabling customers to evaluate successive product variants as they become available, providing a continuous validation and integration path in the ELSFP module as network architectures evolve.

“The bottleneck in AI systems has shifted from compute to the network, and DWDM CPO will only scale if it behaves like production infrastructure,” said Matt Crowley, CEO, Scintil Photonics. “The LEAF Light EVK puts that proof in customers’ hands: wavelength lock, power control, firmware-driven controls, realtime telemetry, so teams can validate stability and latency performance under real conditions and build large AI system validation with the ELSFP module before committing to volume.”

Behind the EVK’s evaluation capabilities is a technology platform engineered for volume from the start.

“SHIP was designed to solve the precision problem that has held DWDM back: consistent wavelength accuracy across every die, using semiconductor manufacturing processes that traditional laser assembly cannot match. That precision is now validated on 200mm production lines,” said Sylvie Menezo, CTO and Founder of Scintil Photonics. “When you combine that foundation with on-chip monitoring and feedback, you have a technology platform that customers can validate today and deploy at volume through ELSFP.”

Foundry-Aligned, Roadmap-Ready

SHIP technology has been validated on Tower Semiconductor’s silicon photonics manufacturing lines, with 200mm production underway today. This foundry alignment positions the Scintil–Tower partnership for high-volume, hyperscale deployment.

The EVK is designed to validate what the ELSFP modules will deliver at product maturity: firmwaredriven controls, operational observability, and system-ready integration, all validated through customer evaluation cycles before volume commitment.

Early Access Program

The LEAF Light EVK is available through Scintil’s early access program for qualified customers. Interested organizations can request access at https://www.scintil-photonics.com/evkleaflight or schedule a meeting at OFC 2026.

Scintil executives will be available for media and analyst briefings at OFC 2026. Inquiries: isaac@omniscalemedia.com.

About Scintil Photonics

Scintil Photonics is the global leader in DWDM laser sources for AI. Using its SHIP (Scintil Heterogeneous Integrated Photonics) technology, Scintil developed LEAF Light, the world’s first singlechip DWDM laser source for high-density optical connectivity in scale-up networks. LEAF Light enables hyperscalers to meet the power, tail latency, utilization, and bandwidth demands of large-scale GPU clusters, leveraging next-generation co-packaged optics (CPO). Headquartered in Grenoble, France, with operations across North America, Scintil is built to support global needs for advanced AI infrastructure.


Source: Scintil Photonics

The post Scintil Releases DWDM Laser Source Evaluation Kit for Scale-Up AI Networks appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 09:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Wired: Advanced Machine Intelligence (AMI), a new Paris-based startup cofounded by Meta's former chief AI scientist Yann LeCun, announced Monday it has raised more than $1 billion to develop AI world models. LeCun argues that most human reasoning is grounded in the physical world, not language, and that AI world models are necessary to develop true human-level intelligence. "The idea that you're going to extend the capabilities of LLMs [large language models] to the point that they're going to have human-level intelligence is complete nonsense," he said in an interview with WIRED. The financing, which values the startup at $3.5 billion, was co-led by investors such as Cathay Innovation, Greycroft, Hiro Capital, HV Capital, and Bezos Expeditions. Other notable backers include Mark Cuban, former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, and French billionaire and telecommunications executive Xavier Niel. AMI (pronounced like the French word for friend) aims to build "a new breed of AI systems that understand the world, have persistent memory, can reason and plan, and are controllable and safe," the company says in a press release. The startup says it will be global from day one, with offices in Paris, Montreal, Singapore, and New York, where LeCun will continue working as a New York University professor in addition to leading the startup. AMI will be the first commercial endeavor for LeCun since his departure from Meta in November 2025. [...] LeCun says AMI aims to work with companies in manufacturing, biomedical, robotics, and other industries that have lots of data. For example, he says AMI could build a realistic world model of an aircraft engine and work with the manufacturer to help them optimize for efficiency, minimize emissions, or ensure reliability. LeCun says AMI will release its first AI models quickly, but he's not expecting most people to take notice. The company will first work with partners such as Toyota and Samsung, and then will learn how to apply its technology more broadly. Eventually, he says, AMI intends to develop a "universal world model," which would be the basis for a generally intelligent system that could help companies regardless of what industry they work in. "It's very ambitious," he says with a smile.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 08:59

LIVINGSTON, N.J., March 11, 2026 — CoreWeave, Inc. has announced CoreWeave Flexible Capacity Plans, including Flex Reservations and Spot, designed to match the dynamic reality of modern AI workloads. With Flex Reservations and Spot, CoreWeave enables customers to move beyond the binary choice of reserved capacity versus on-demand capacity.

While AI training cycles are often predictable, production-level inference is not. Traffic spikes and use fluctuates, forcing teams to either over-provision or risk delays. CoreWeave Flexible Capacity Plans give teams cost-efficient options for interruptible work and more control over how they run AI, enabling innovation without limitation.

“At production scale, infrastructure planning becomes as critical as deployment,” said Chen Goldberg, EVP of Product & Engineering at CoreWeave. “CoreWeave is setting the standard for the AI cloud by providing guaranteed capacity when it counts and flexible pricing when demand shifts. We’re bringing the original promise of the cloud – scale and efficiency – back to the AI pioneers pushing the limits of innovation.”

A Unified Capacity Framework for AI

CoreWeave Flexible Capacity Plans build on CoreWeave’s existing Reservations and On-Demand offerings, extending that foundation to reflect how modern AI workloads actually behave.

With the addition of Flex Reservations and Spot, CoreWeave introduces a unified capacity framework that redefines how production AI runs at scale:

  • Reservations: Predictable, always-on capacity for steady workloads.
  • Flex Reservations: A first-of-its kind model for guaranteed peak capacity with flexible economics for workloads that ramp or scale unevenly. Customers secure a capacity ceiling with a lower 24/7 holding fee, paying full usage rates only when instances are active.
  • Spot: A new lower-cost option for interruption-tolerant work like batch analytics or backfills. Spot is delivered with explicit preemption signaling, allowing engineers to checkpoint and recover work cleanly.
  • On Demand: Best-effort access for immediate, incremental capacity.

This framework allows customers to reserve what’s steady, protect what must be guaranteed, and shift interruptible work — aligning cost and certainty with real demand patterns. Flexibility of this kind isn’t theoretical, it’s already shaping how customers design and scale their AI workflows.

“At inference.net, our mission is to help teams get the most from AI models,” said Ibrahim Ahmed, CTO at inference.net. “ The most powerful AI models are not generic, off-the-shelf models, they’re specialized models trained on your data, for your problem. We built custom scheduling and orchestration software so that any team can train and deploy frontier-quality specialized LLMs on underutilized GPU capacity. Spot instances from CoreWeave are key to making this possible, giving our customers access to the compute they need to bring custom models to production at a fraction of the cost.”

Flex Reservations are available to Preview through CoreWeave account teams in eligible regions and SKUs, and Spot is generally available now.

CoreWeave’s AI cloud delivers industry-leading performance and efficiency through an end-to-end technology stack optimized for modern AI workloads. CoreWeave’s technology team consistently sets new standards for performance, demonstrated by an industry-leading MLPerf benchmark for AI workloads and its position as the only AI cloud to earn the top Platinum ranking in both SemiAnalysis ClusterMAX 1.0 and 2.0, which evaluate AI cloud performance, efficiency and reliability.

About CoreWeave

CoreWeave is The Essential Cloud for AI. Built for pioneers by pioneers, CoreWeave delivers a platform of technology, tools, and teams that enables innovators to move at the pace of innovation, building and scaling AI with confidence. Established in 2017, CoreWeave completed its public listing on Nasdaq (CRWV) in March 2025. Learn more at www.coreweave.com.


Source: CoreWeave

The post CoreWeave Introduces Flexible Capacity Plans to Accelerate AI Innovation appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 08:53

Iran’s IRGC has said it will not allow even ‘one litre’ to leave the region if US-Israeli attacks continue. Plus, how gen Z women are conquering country music

Good morning.

The US military has said it attacked and destroyed 16 Iranian mine-laying vessels near the strait of Hormuz amid reports that Iran has begun laying explosive devices in the narrow waterway through which about a fifth of the world’s oil passes.

What have we heard about Iran’s new supreme leader? Mojtaba Khamenei, is “safe and sound” according to Yousef Pezeshkian, the son of Iran’s president. The comments came amid speculation about supreme leader’s health and whereabouts, as he has not engaged with the public since he succeeded his late father, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, three days ago.

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2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 08:46

Cybercriminal reportedly accessed a server at the FBI’s New York field office, according to a source and DoJ documents

A foreign hacker compromised files relating to the FBI’s investigation of the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein during a break-in at the bureau’s New York field office three years ago, according to ​a source familiar with the matter and recently published justice department documents reviewed by Reuters.

The details of who accessed a server at the FBI’s New York field office, ‌including the allegation that a foreign hacker was involved, are being reported here for the first time.

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2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 08:07

The Miami Heat star scored the second-most points in a game in NBA history on Tuesday night. Some may question exactly how he got there

Second in points, last in ethics?

That will be the accusation against the Miami Heat and Bam Adebayo, after the big man moved into second on the NBA’s single-game scoring list with 83 points against the woeful Washington Wizards on Tuesday. Adebayo surpassed the 81 points that Kobe Bryant scored in a 2006 game and left only Wilt Chamberlain, with 100 in a game in 1962, ahead of him on the all-time list.

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2026-03-12 12:04
2026-03-11 08:05

Nigeria and Ghana foreign ministers discuss security, AES countries, Boko Haram and US operations News release jon.wallace

During an event at Chatham House, HE Yusuf Tuggar and HE Samuel Ablakwa also discussed ECOWAS, West Africa-France relations, and allegations of attacks on Christian communities in the region.

Minister for Foreign Affairs Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa and Minister of Foreign Affairs Yusuf Maitama Tuggar speaking at the Chatham House event.

Ghanaian Minister for Foreign Affairs Samuel Ablakwa and Nigerian Minister of Foreign Affairs Yusuf Tuggar discussed West African security and peacebuilding in a packed event held at Chatham House on 9 March. 

The foreign ministers took questions from the audience on West African security issues, from the withdrawal of AES countries from the ECOWAS security bloc and US airstrikes in Nigeria on Christmas day, to West African relations with France and how to combat groups like Boko Haram.

During the event, Minister Tuggar emphasized the importance of local security solutions in West Africa, saying:

‘I think what has worked in our region successfully, what we’ve been able to achieve in Sierra Leone, what we’ve been able to achieve in Liberia… bringing about peace and peacebuilding successfully… I think we have done so when we have come up with our own solutions. This is why ECOMOG was so successful. It was led by forces from the region, with the support of the United Nations, with the support of other major powers… That should be the formula.’

Addressing the role of the United States in Nigerian and regional security, he said the US should play ‘an indirect role. A supportive role as opposed to…taking a more direct approach that would see perhaps boots on the ground.’

Asked by an audience member about the nature of violence in Nigeria and the region, and the role of religion, Minister Tuggar said:

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HE Samuel Ablakwa discusses Ghana’s policy towards foreign military bases. 
 

‘I’m not saying that the violence is not religious altogether. Some of it is motivated by religion. But it does not necessarily mean that there is a Christian genocide going on in Nigeria. That is false. It is incorrect…And it is not confined to Nigeria. It’s a regional problem. So that is why with framing we have to be careful.’

Minister Ablakwa, describing Ghanaians killed by terrorists in Burkina Faso, said:

‘These terrorists they didn’t ask them which religion they subscribed to. So, the point we are making is that we should be more nuanced…It is not just a simple, you know, religious matter.’ He also pointed out other drivers of violence including youth unemployment, climate change and state collapse.

Asked if the regional security bloc ECOWAS had been weakened by the withdrawal of three Sahelian ‘AES’ states (Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger) Minister Ablakwa said:

‘ECOWAS is still strong’ and spoke of Ghana’s plans to increase defence spending, build the country’s first electronic warfare centre, and improve its ISR capability. 

Addressing AES countries’ poor relations with France, and Ghana’s viewpoint, Minister Ablakwa said:

‘We have to admit that there is a genuine concern in francophone Africa that their relations with France will have to be reset and that there is a need for a new approach.’

He also pointed to the responsibility of the international community in delivering security:

‘Terrorism taking root is a threat to the entire global community…the challenges we face today are direct consequences of certain actions by the international community, from Afghanistan to Syria to Libya…. not having a post Gaddafi plan, how we deal with the regime change agenda in Libya. We’ve had to bear the brunt. 

‘What is going on now in the Middle East is going to further aggravate the situation. As you chase out the terrorists and dismantle those cells which you don’t want close to you, they will have to relocate… Should we allow Africa to be their safe haven?’

The panel event formed part of the Chatham House Africa Programme’s ongoing work on African peace and security. The Programme will shortly launch a new project focused on regional conflict systems in the Horn of Africa, the Sahel and Central Africa.

Watch the event in full here.

 

2026-03-11 08:04
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The eruptions at Kilauea prompted closures at a national park and part of a highway because of falling glassy volcanic fragments, including ash.

2026-03-11 12:04
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Samsung's baseline flagship is still a potent phone, but the extra $100 isn't going toward the right upgrades.

2026-03-11 08:04
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Rita Marshall and Darlene Gilleland found a baby at Westgate Shopping Center in Ohio hours after she was born.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 08:00

We tested more than 30 Wi-Fi routers at CNET Labs to find out if Wi-Fi 7 is really worth all the hype.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 08:00

If it's been over five years, it may be time to upgrade your router, CNET's expert says.

2026-03-11 12:04
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CNET experts list the best iPads that suit your needs.

2026-03-11 12:04
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If you want to completely eliminate dead zones in your home, upgrading to a full-fledged mesh system is the best option.

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 07:05

Users posing as would-be school shooters find AI tools offer detailed advice on how to perpetrate violence

Popular AI chatbots helped researchers plot violent attacks including bombing synagogues and assassinating politicians, with one telling a user posing as a would-be school shooter: “Happy (and safe) shooting!”

Tests of 10 chatbots carried out in the US and Ireland found that, on average, they enabled violence three-quarters of the time, and discouraged it in just 12% of cases. Some chatbots, however, including Anthropic’s Claude and Snapchat’s My AI, persistently refused to help would-be attackers.

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 07:00

The German-American dual-national brings a skillset the US could use this summer, but his international future is up in the air

Last fall, Mauricio Pochettino seemed to be set. After numerous introductions, adjustments, elevations and demotions, his 26-man USMNT squad for this summer’s World Cup had taken shape, and a late surprise inclusion seemed totally out of the realm of possibility.

Not so fast. At that same time, Noahkai Banks became a starter along FC Augsburg’s backline and he hasn’t ceded that spot over the ensuing five months. Today, it seems that if any as-yet-uncapped field player is going to crack the US squad this summer, it’s almost certain to be Banks, 19 years old and suddenly among the most promising young defenders in Europe.

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 07:00

Danish researchers whose work on effects of vaccines has been called into question are at center of US vaccine policy

New details are leading experts to fear that an “unethical” vaccine trial in Guinea-Bissau is the “prototype” for studies under Robert F Kennedy Jr, secretary of the US department of health and human services (HHS) and longtime vaccine critic.

At the center of US vaccine policy is an unlikely set of Danish researchers whose work on the health effects of vaccines has been called into question. The study in Guinea-Bissau would have looked at the overall health effects of giving hepatitis B vaccines by only vaccinating half of the newborns in the study at birth despite an 18% prevalence rate in adults of the illness, which can lead to serious and sometimes fatal health consequences.

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 07:00

With a few household chemicals, you can turn your iPhone 17 Pro from orange to pink.

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 07:00

A look back at 60 Minutes' reporting on the deadly 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami that killed nearly 20,000.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 07:00

Corporate employees said Amazon’s race to roll out AI is leading to surveillance, slop and ‘more work for everyone’.

When Dina, a software developer based in New York, joined Amazon two years ago, her job was to write code. Now, it’s mostly fixing what artificial intelligence breaks.

The internal AI tool she’s expected to use, called Kiro, frequently hallucinates and generates flawed code, she says. Then she has to dig through and correct the sloppy code it creates, or just revert all changes and start again. She says it feels like “trying to AI my way out of a problem that AI caused”.

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 06:46

Leak of memo comes after a third of Labour Senedd members raise alarm devolution is being rolled back

Keir Starmer warned his cabinet against an “overly deferential” approach to the Welsh, Scottish and Northern Irish governments, according to a leaked memo.

In the document from December, obtained and published on Tuesday by Plaid Cymru, Starmer said ministers should be prepared to make spending decisions “even when devolved governments may oppose this”. It came shortly after Labour Senedd members wrote to the prime minister over concerns his administration was rolling back devolution powers.

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 06:42
Pint X battery issue

A few months ago I hit a big dip and my pint x shut off completely. No lights and no response from the button or when plugged in. I was in denial and had it set aside for a while.

I figured the issues with the battery wires that I’ve heard going around. The other day I finally got around to opening it up and they are definitely damaged where expected but not obviously severed.

I’m not a stranger to electrical projects but not really sure what i need to check. I’d appreciate some direction.

Also, if I need to replace parts, what are upgrade options?

submitted by /u/Sallgude
[link] [comments]

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 06:38

Documents filed at Companies House over 2022 deal could complicate row with UK over how money will be used

Jersey authorities may be investigating whether cash raised by Roman Abramovich’s 2022 sale of Chelsea FC amounts to the proceeds of crime, according to documents filed at Companies House on Wednesday, potentially complicating a row with the UK government over how the money will be used.

Accounts for Fordstam Ltd, the company through which the billionaire Russian oligarch owned Chelsea, show that the proceeds of the sale – currently frozen and gathering interest in a Barclays Bank account – have risen to £2.4bn.

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 06:37

The Gulf states have said they're running dangerously low on missile interceptors and have asked the U.S. to expedite new supplies, CBS News previously reported.

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 06:30

We've tested many Android phones from Samsung and Google to OnePlus and Motorola. Here are the best ones we recommend buying.

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 06:21

The growing incidents, known as shark depredation, have grown common in Hawaii's coastal waters and other parts of the Pacific.

2026-03-11 12:04
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The US military says it has attacked and destroyed 16 Iranian mine-laying vessels near the strait of Hormuz amid reports Iran has begun laying explosive devices in the strategically vital waterway. About a fifth of the world’s oil passes through the strait, and Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said this week it would not allow even 'one litre of oil' to leave the region if US-Israeli attacks continued. On Tuesday, Donald Trump said in a post on Truth Social that 'if Iran has put out any mines in the Hormuz strait, and we have no reports of them doing so, we want them removed, IMMEDIATELY!' Less than two hours later, the US military released unclassified footage of its attacks on mine-laying vessels

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

Australian officials say six of seven members of the Iranian women's soccer team who were granted asylum are staying but the seventh has changed her mind and will return home.

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

No longer Apple's MacBook entry point, the 13-inch Air is now a bit of a question mark for students, while the rest of us are probably better off with the larger Air.

2026-03-11 08:04
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On a basement court in Greenwich Village, the New York University women’s basketball team have quietly become the sport’s most improbable juggernaut

When you think of New York City basketball, certain names and places immediately come to mind. Walt Frazier, Bernard King and Patrick Ewing patrolling the Madison Square Garden cedar. Latter-day torchbearers like Stephon Marbury, Jalen Brunson, Chamique Holdsclaw and Breanna Stewart. The rich lore beyond the storied college haunts of Rose Hill Gym and Carnesecca Arena that stretches from Harlem’s Rucker Park to the Cage on West 4th Street to Dyckman Oval in Washington Heights, the blacktop domains of playground legends like Earl “The Goat” Manigault, Pee Wee Kirkland and Rafer “Skip To My Lou” Alston.

What you don’t normally think about is New York University, the downtown school better known for its academic clout, interwoven Greenwich Village campus, celebrity alumni and $5.9bn endowment than for any of its sports teams. Yet it’s here, inside a 2,000-seat basement gym tucked two floors beneath Bleecker Street, where the Violets have quietly built one of the most dominant programs in college basketball today.

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2026-03-11 08:04
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Apple's streamer is a treasure trove of must-see TV.

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 06:00

Latino voters helped propel record turnout in last week's Texas Democratic primary, a trend Democrats are watching closely as they try to reclaim ground with the group and pull off an upset win in the red-leaning state's Senate contest.

2026-03-11 08:04
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A Christina School District banner sits at the table reserved for school board members during a public meeting in July 2025.

Why Should Delaware Care?
The Christina School District, one of Delaware’s largest, has endured years of tensions among its top officials. But one of the chapters of that drama might have ended Tuesday when a judge dismissed a wrongful termination lawsuit filed by the district’s former superintendent against its school board.

In late 2024, the former superintendent of the Christina School District sued members of his school board, claiming they wrongfully terminated him. 

On Monday, a federal judge in Delaware dismissed the claim in a scathing ruling that, in part, stated that the former superintendent, Dan Shelton, was never actually fired. 

Since 2024, Shelton has been on administrative leave earning a salary of $210,043, according to the memorandum opinion from Delaware District Court Judge Colm Connolly filed on Monday.

“Nowhere in the 162 paragraphs of the hyperbolic, painfully redundant, and irrelevancy-filled complaint does Shelton ever identify an obligation in the 2020 contract or the contract extension that defendants allegedly breached,” Connolly said. 

Former Christina Superintendent Dan Shelton was placed on administrative leave in July, 2024. | PHOTO COURTESY OF CHRISTINA SCHOOL DISTRICT

Shelton was seeking $2.7 million in damages. Then-Board President Donald Patton, then-Vice President Alethea Smith-Tucker, board member Y.F. Lou and former-board member Naveed Baqir were all named as defendants. 

In his opinion, the judge noted that Shelton may bring new claims against the district but warned that his counsel should “study the basic tenets of contract law” before filing.  

Shelton’s attorney, Thomas S. Neuberger, said he is reviewing the court’s opinion and has “no comment at this time.”

Patton – who was singled out in Shelton’s lawsuit as having motives “to dislike and retaliate” against him – expressed his appreciation for the judge’s decision but declined further comment until the appeal window closes.

The Christina School District declined to comment, as it “does not provide comments on personnel matters.”

What led to this? 

The dismissal of Shelton’s lawsuit marks the latest chapter in years of acrimony impacting the highest levels of leadership at the Christina School District, which covers the greater Newark area and a part of Wilmington.

Shelton began his career as a teacher in the district before becoming superintendent of Dover’s Capital School District in 2015. He later returned to Christina as its superintendent in 2020. Two years later, he was named Delaware’s Superintendent of the Year. 

By December 2023, the Christina school board extended Shelton’s contract through June, 2026. 

But just months later, the board narrowly voted to suspend him without pay for three days and to rescind the one-year contract extension. The votes then highlighted the clear tensions that had emerged between Shelton and several of the elected members of the school board, particularly Patton.

Left unclear were the exact reasons for the tensions, and whether they existed the previous year when Shelton garnered the contract extension. 

Christina school board member Donald Patton. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY ETHAN GRANDIN

Still, Shelton’s lawsuit would later hint at the depth of hostility between the sides. In it, he claimed that Patton’s history as an educator “was not distinguished.” He also said that certain incidents which occurred provide various motives for him (Patton) to dislike and retaliate against” Shelton. 

Two months after the school board’s majority bloc voted to rescind Shelton’s contract extension, the three other members of the board sponsored a vote to remove Patton as school board president. They also asked the board to censure Patton for what they called “abusive behavior and retaliatory actions.”

The votes ultimately failed. Afterward Patton said in an interview on DETV that he suspected Shelton had been involved. He also accused him of being racist.

A litany of controversies ensued the following month, when the Delaware Department of Justice found the school board violated the Freedom of Information Act by holding an unannounced executive session for an improper purpose. It further found the board failed to provide adequate notice in meeting agendas for votes regarding a contract rescission for Shelton, as well as for a vote of no-confidence in him.

By July 2024, the board held a nearly eight-hour-long meeting, where the majority bloc voted to remove Shelton and place him on administrative leave.

That same month, James McMackin III — whose law firm, Morris James LLP, represented the district for 41 years — told the Christina board he was stepping down from the role as soon as the board found new counsel. 

The Newark Post later obtained internal board emails that showed McMackin chose to end his relationship with the school board due to what he described as “wholesale disregard of the law” under Patton. 

Tensions remained high during the school board meeting that came a month after Shelton’s removal.

Items for the meeting agenda included a series of possible referrals to the Delaware commission that oversees ethics among government employees. Among those was one that sought an opinion about whether a school board member “engaged in self-dealing with the district through alternative entities.”

Ultimately, none of those referrals were discussed during the meeting. 

Instead, Patton apologized to the public for “a number of things,” stating that the board should be functioning differently. Also during the meeting, members of the public called the board “an embarrassment.”

By September, Neuberger filed a cease-and-desist letter demanding that the Christina school board stop actions he claimed were defaming Shelton and violating his rights. The letter also said the board owes Shelton for lost wages, harm to his reputation, and emotional and physical distress.

Neuberger then filed the wrongful termination lawsuit on behalf of Shelton in December of 2024. At the time, Neuberger told Spotlight Delaware that warnings from the school board’s own attorney make the case a “slam dunk.”

“I’ve never had evidence from the lawyer for the other side, where he’s saying, ‘You’re violating their rights,’” he told Spotlight Delaware.

At the time, Neuberger also noted that Shelton was still technically on payroll until the end of the 2024-25 school year.

The post ‘Painfully redundant’: Judge dismisses $2.7M lawsuit brought by former Christina superintendent appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 06:00

Valve is facing a new consumer class-action lawsuit two weeks after New York sued the video game company for "letting children and adults illegally gamble" with loot boxes. The new lawsuit is similar, alleging that loot boxes in games like Counter-Strike 2, Dota 2, and Team Fortress 2 are "carefully engineered to extract money from consumers, including children, through deceptive, casino-style psychological tactics." "We believe Valve deliberately engineered its gambling platform and profited enormously from it," Steve Berman, founder and managing partner at law firm Hagens Berman, said in a press release. "Consumers played these games for entertainment, unaware that Valve had allegedly already stacked the odds against them. We intend to hold Valve accountable and put money back in the pockets of consumers." PC Gamer reports: The system is well known to anyone who's played a Valve multiplayer game: Earn a locked loot box by playing, pay $2.50 for a key, unlock it, get a digital doohickey that's sometimes worth hundreds or even thousands of dollars but far more often is worth just a few pennies. Is that gambling? If these cases go to court, we'll find out. The full complaint points out that the unlocking process is even designed to look like a slot machine: "Images of possible items scroll across the screen, spinning fast at first, then slowing to a stop on the player's 'prize.' Players buy and open loot boxes for the same reason people play slot machines -- the hope of a valuable payout." Loot boxes, the complaint continues, are not "incidental features" of Valve's games, but rather "a deliberate, carefully engineered revenue model." So too is the Steam Community Market, and Steam itself, which the suit claims is "deliberately designed" to enable the sale of digital items on third-party marketplaces through "trade URLs," despite Valve's terms of service prohibiting off-platform sales. And while the debate over whether loot boxes constitute a form of gambling continues to rage, the suit claims Valve's system does indeed qualify under Washington law, which defines gambling as "staking or risking something of value upon the outcome of a contest of chance or a future contingent event not under the person's control or influence." "Valve's loot boxes satisfy every element of this definition," the lawsuit alleges. "Users stake money (the price of a key) on the outcome of a contest of chance (the random selection of a virtual item), and the items received are 'things of value' under RCW 9.46.0285 because they can be sold for real money through Valve's own marketplace and through third-party marketplaces that Valve has fostered and facilitated."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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

As Washington focuses on its push to topple Iran’s government, delaying talks on Russia’s war in Ukraine, some in Moscow say the Kremlin must achieve its goals militarily.

2026-03-11 16:04
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Why Should Delaware Care?
New Castle County officials could soon be able to subpoena records from the most contentious commercial properties in the county after state lawmakers on Monday passed legislation enabling them to do so. The bill is part of a “quality control” review package meant to empower county officials to scrutinize the results of last year’s property reassessment.

The Delaware House of Representatives passed the second half of a two-bill package Monday that would give New Castle County new authority to subpoena certain business records during its ongoing “quality control” review of its much-maligned property reassessment.

But an added amendment to the bill means it must return to the Senate for a final, largely procedural, vote before Gov. Matt Meyer can officially sign the bill into law.

After passing the first half of the package in January amid Republican pushback that the bills were rushed, the House of Representatives unanimously passed an amended version of the second bill, Senate Bill 230.

The bill would give New Castle County officials the ability to subpoena both records and witness testimony from commercial property owners about the income earned from their properties as the county reviews the results from last year’s first-in-40-year property reassessment. 

The subpoena power would be available to all three of Delaware’s counties, but was geared specifically toward New Castle, which experienced much of the property reassessment-related blowback from residents and business owners last summer. 

New Castle County Executive Marcus Henry recently told Spotlight Delaware last month that his office would use those power to re-examine some commercial properties that were deemed to be undervalued.

Senate Bill 230, sponsored in the House by Rep. Frank Burns (D-Pike Creek), was originally tabled in January over what House Majority Leader Kerri Evelyn Harris (D-Dover) called “due process” concerns for business owners.

But Burns said Monday that an amendment added to the bill sought to assuage those concerns by clarifying some key points: that only commercial properties are subject to subpoena, that records will be kept private and exempt from the Freedom of Information Act, and how objections and exceptions to subpoenas will be handled. 

“I think a lot of things were implicit in the language,” Burns said. “But I think people were more comfortable when it was explicitly stated.” 

House Minority Whip Jeff Spiegelman thanked his House colleagues for answering concerns from business owners . | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY TIM CARLIN

Senate Bill 230 passed unanimously, but not without one House Republican leader taking one final swipe at Senate Democrats for how the sausage was made. 

House Minority Whip Jeff Spiegelman (R-Clayton) thanked his Democratic colleagues in the House for holding off on voting on the bill in January in order to “get it right.”

“Thank you for doing the process the right way,” Spiegelman said. “Unlike, perhaps, another chamber in this building.”

The amended bill will be taken up by the Senate when it next convenes at 2 p.m. Wednesday, March 11.

The post House passes subpoena power bill for ‘quality control’ assessment review  appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

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

Why Should Delaware Care?
The growth of data centers has become a hotly contested topic in Delaware and nationally, because the facilities, which power the technology of the future, require huge amounts of electricity. New regulations on the industry approved by New Castle County are the first of their kind in the state.

After months of acrimonious debate, the New Castle County Council agreed to compromise Tuesday and passed an ordinance that imposes new regulations onto the rapidly growing data center industry.  

The sweeping legislation includes new rules that require data centers to maintain buffer zones around them, and to use energy-efficient backup generators, among other regulations.

But the new regulations will not apply to the most controversial data center proposal in the state – the Project Washington development proposed near Delaware City.  It is not immediately clear whether they would apply to development projects already in the county’s approval pipeline that may add plans to build a data center at a future date.

“It’s a good start,” said Councilman Dave Carter, who wrote the bill. “It was difficult to make some compromises, but I think we’ve got tremendous improvements in.”

After council members critiqued the original legislation last fall, Carter worked with county staff to change the bill to address those concerns, such as concessions on noise regulations. The final proposal ultimately passed with 12 councilmembers voting yes, and 1 absent. 

Tensions ran high among audience members in the packed council chambers Tuesday evening, with jeers, laughs and applause throughout discussions by the council and during a public comment period. 

A resident speaks about data center regulations during a meeting of the New Castle County Council on Tuesday, March 10. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY OLIVIA MARBLE

But while past county council debates over the data center regulations got heated — one even featured a councilman flipping off another — this one stayed mostly cordial. 

After some debate and conferring with the council’s lawyer, councilmembers Janet Kilpatrick and John Cartier both agreed to withdraw their last-minute amendments, allowing the compromise to pass. 

Kilpatrick’s amendment would have exempted all existing buildings from following the regulations, while Cartier’s amendment would have made the regulations apply to data center proposals in the pipeline. 

Carter first proposed the regulations last summer amid a backlash to a developer’s plan to build a massive, power-hungry data center on about 580 acres north of the Delaware City Refinery, called Project Washington.

Many residents and elected officials feared the facility would harm the local environment and exacerbate an energy crunch that was already impacting the region.  

Project Washington would not have to follow these regulations, though. Part of the council’s compromise was to make the ordinance only apply to new projects, not ones already in the development pipeline. 

The New Castle County Council chambers were packed for a meeting Tuesday during which the council voted on a proposal to regulate the data center industry. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY OLIVIA MARBLE

Even so, members of Delaware’s building trades unions on Tuesday expressed fear that the regulations will cause the state to lose future data center projects, along with the tax revenue and jobs they would bring.

For months, those union members have accounted for the most vocal contingent in support of data center proposals locally.  

The ordinance will now go to County Executive Marcus Henry, who will either veto it or sign it into law. David Culver, New Castle County’s General Manager of Land Use, said during the hearing that Henry supports the regulations. 

What do the regulations say?

Carter’s amended ordinance included a few concessions on noise regulations, but also clearly outlined how data centers are allowed to use water to cool their supercomputers. 

Carter removed specific requirements developers would have to meet in order to dampen persistent noise from data centers. Instead, it says developers would have to defer to existing code that says they “shall not generate noise levels that exceed the pre-development noise level.”

He did the same for the lighting regulations, deferring back to existing standards for industrial projects. 

Additionally, the ordinance says data centers must use closed-loop cooling systems, which are designed to reuse as much water as possible. By mandating these systems, Carter said, data centers could reduce their water and energy use. 

The regulations say data center projects must be at least 1,000 feet from the nearest residential dwelling, unless the developers submit a noise study to the county. They could then build them within 500 feet of a home. 

Data center developers also must set aside funds to decommission the data center if they decide to no longer operate it. That means tearing down the buildings and restoring the land to its original condition. 

Where do the data center projects stand?

The regulations approved Tuesday will not impact the handful of data center projects that were already in New Castle County’s development pipeline, including most notably Project Washington near Delaware City.

The first half of that massive project has been hamstrung by a ruling under the Coastal Zone Act though, which would prohibit the data center’s use of diesel generators for back-up power. The developer, Starwood Digital Ventures, has appealed that ruling, but it could take months or years to be fully adjudicated.

The second half of Project Washington would require the same approval under the Coastal Zone Act by the Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control as well as a rezoning by the county — a more onerous process than the first phase that requires the county council to approve it.

The same Coastal Zone Act ruling could be a hurdle for a project proposed near the St. George’s Bridge. But it is unclear whether the new regulations would apply to it because the plan was originally for a warehouse.

Finally, a third site near Newark has perhaps the easiest path now that the regulations, and their effective start date, have been determined. That project would see the redevelopment of the White Clay Corporate Center into a three-building data center. It is already properly zoned, does not lie within the Coastal Zone and would not be affected by the new regulations.

The post After months of debate, New Castle County Council agrees to regulate data center industry appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 05:46

Veoza, also known as fezolinetant, will be offered to women for whom HRT is unsuitable

More than 500,000 women in England are to be offered a drug on the NHS that prevents hot flushes.

The green light for Veoza, also known as fezolinetant, comes after the medicines watchdog, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, on Wednesday authorised it for use.

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 05:00

A different New Orleans judge approved the trip while the actor remains out on bond in Mardi Gras battery case

Shia LaBeouf ultimately did get permission to travel to his father’s baptism in Rome, days after the New Orleans courthouse handling the actor’s recent battery arrest initially denied his request to make the trip.

LaBeouf, 39, first sought authorization to travel to the Italian capital while out on bond at a court hearing on 26 February, during which state judge Simone Levine ordered him to enroll in substance abuse treatment. A court filing associated with the request said the trip would last from 1 to 8 March and was planned “for religious purposes, including his father’s baptism”.

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 05:00

Donald Trump promised that June’s event would bring us some of the greatest fights in history. The truth appears to be rather different

When Donald Trump first announced that the White House would host a UFC event to mark the United States’ 250th anniversary, the US president told supporters it would be a “big deal”. Evidence over the last week suggests that, not for the first time, Trump may be exaggerating a little.

Trump has promised a spectacle unlike anything the UFC has staged before. “They’re going to have eight or nine championship fights – the biggest fights they’ve ever had,” Trump said in December of plans for the White House event. “Every one is a championship fight, and every one is a legendary type of fight.”

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 05:00

Maga world figures throw weight behind Maryam Rajavi, MEK’s leader, and Reza Pahlavi, the son of last Shah of Iran

As a US battle group steamed to the Gulf in November 2002, competing Iraqi exiles, some championed by American insiders, jockeyed for position in the hopes of taking charge once George W Bush toppled Saddam Hussein. Bloomberg dubbed them “Iraq’s unruly opposition”.

The most notorious Iraqi exile, failed former banker Ahmad Chalabi, boasted to his neoconservative allies that his return to Baghdad would be welcomed by cheering throngs. Among his competition was a former doctor named Ayad Allawi, who was backed by Britain’s MI6 and the Central Intelligence Agency in his bid for support to rule Iraq.

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 05:00

The Trump administration’s immigration enforcement arm is requesting unfettered access to what is considered to be the most comprehensive government database of people in the United States and their most private information, including sensitive details about individual children, according to six current and former federal officials.

It is called the Federal Parent Locator Service, and it’s meant for finding people who owe child support. Granting access to the Department of Homeland Security, the officials said, would violate a federal law that explicitly limits its use to determining and collecting child support payments and a handful of other narrow purposes. But DHS’ ask is being seriously considered within the Department of Health and Human Services, which maintains the database.

The database contains the name, address, Social Security number, employer, and salary or wages of every employed person in the country, as well as the equivalent details for anyone listed in state unemployment systems. It exists so that if someone owes child support, the government can pursue them for it even if they’ve changed jobs or moved to another state. 

The repository includes these personal details and employment records, updated throughout the year, for all types of people — even those who don’t have any children. Only some who work exclusively in the gig or cash economy, or who are entirely self-employed, might not be listed.

The database also names every child in the U.S. who is the subject of a state child support case, including each child’s sex, birthday and Social Security number, as well as family members’ names and relationships. And it identifies when single mothers and kids who receive child support are domestic violence victims — alongside their address. 

“This is the most powerful people-finder system that the U.S. government has, and possibly that exists,” said Bethanne Barnes, who from 2019 through October of last year was a data director for the Administration for Children and Families, the subdivision of HHS that oversees the database.

Turning the child support data over to Homeland Security “would be disastrous for child support enforcement” and “would ruin the foundation of the child support program,” said Vicki Turetsky, who was commissioner of HHS’ office of child support enforcement from 2009 to 2016. Turetsky said that if this were to happen, many employers, fearful of ICE arrests of their employees or workplace raids, would consider no longer reporting new hires to the government. This in turn would degrade the ability of the system to find parents who owe payments to their kids, she said.

State child support agency leaders have been nervously messaging one another about this prospect recently, said Kate Cooper Richardson, the longtime head of Oregon’s child support program who retired in January. State officials have spent decades building trust with employers, Cooper Richardson said, reminding them that submitting their new-hire data to child support authorities is required and that sensitive information about their workers will be used only for child support enforcement and otherwise kept confidential. Some business leaders have already reached out to state administrators, she said, concerned about rumors of President Donald Trump’s administration seeking to use this data for immigration enforcement.

“And if we’re not learning from employers when a parent who owes child support gets a new job, who loses in that situation?” Cooper Richardson said. “The 1 in 5 U.S. children who rely on consistent and regular child support.”

A White House spokesperson said in a statement that “the entire Trump administration is working to lawfully implement the President’s agenda to put Americans first. Any sensitive information required to do so will be obtained and handled properly.” A DHS representative requested additional time to respond to detailed questions sent by email, which ProPublica agreed to, but DHS did not provide any responses. 

Last year, Department of Government Efficiency appointees sought and for a brief period gained access to the National Directory of New Hires, the part of the child support database that contains people’s employment information. It is unclear what, if anything, the DOGE team did with this data; the federal courts temporarily blocked it from continuing to access Social Security, IRS and other sensitive records, and then DOGE disbanded last summer before final rulings on the legality of its efforts had been made. 

Over the past month, though, three officials said, DHS has separately and expressly requested both the new-hire data and also the Federal Case Registry, the other half of the database where the catalog of all child support cases is housed. This has the much more sensitive specifics on families and children, including information on paternity, domestic violence and more.

It is unclear why DHS would want this, given that locating undocumented immigrants at their places of work or targeting those businesses for raids would be possible using just the employment data, without all of the case registry’s additional personal details. Whatever DHS’ intentions might be, multiple officials and privacy experts interviewed for this story expressed concern that abusers in the ranks of law enforcement would soon be able to see their victims’ case information and addresses, and that a manifest of vulnerable children would become widely available in the government.

The Department of Health and Human Services general counsel’s office, which is run by a Trump political official, must now decide whether it believes federal law allows the agency to provide DHS with the full child support database. Child support staff strongly oppose doing this, but the request is now with the lawyers, people familiar with the situation said.

HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. may also have to approve the data sharing. If it’s approved, the department is likely to be sued by legal advocacy groups almost immediately, lawyers and experts said.

HHS did not respond to a request for comment.

Internal emails show that HHS’ Administration for Children and Families last year was also directed to cross-check all of its other datasets — on families who interact with child care, foster care, Head Start and other systems — against DHS immigration records. The Trump administration has expanded a DHS tool called SAVE to allow federal and state agencies to check the citizenship of millions of people at once, including those who rely on public assistance programs like these. (Also using this tool, the administration has consistently inaccurately flagged citizens as noncitizens on state voter rolls, ProPublica has reported.)

In DHS’ efforts to gather data from other agencies, the department has argued that several U.S. statutes allow federal law enforcement to obtain information without a warrant from any government agency pertaining to the identity and location of people living in the country illegally, especially if national security is at stake. In DHS’ view, these statutes should overrule all others, even a law that would seem to bar the department from obtaining an entire database of sensitive information about children unrelated to immigration.

Congress has previously permitted a handful of exceptions that allow certain agencies to access parts of the child support data archive. That includes using it in limited ways to help manage custody and visitation cases, to pursue people who have federal student loan debt and to check the incomes of those who apply for means-tested government programs, like housing assistance. 

Maya Bernstein has overseen federal data privacy policies for over three decades, starting during the first Bush administration. In the 1990s, she helped lead the work on the creation of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, the medical records privacy law, before serving 20 years as the senior adviser for privacy policy at HHS. “I know a lot about a lot of different databases,” she said, and the child support database is “the one that I’m most worried about.”

“It is very unusual for them to want the Federal Case Registry,” Bernstein added, referring to the part of the database with children’s case information. “In my career, no one has asked for access to that. Most people have never even heard of it.”

The post DHS Seeks Access to Massive Employment, Salary and Family Database Legally Restricted to Use in Child Support Cases appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 05:00

Here are the best places to buy and own digital music from stores such as iTunes, Bandcamp and more.

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 05:00

Last summer, the Trump administration announced a voluntary pledge by health insurers to reform prior authorization, but patient advocates and medical providers remain skeptical.

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 04:30

Food deliveries and the prospect of medical care abroad gave Gazans reasons to hope, but the Iran conflict has closed the door on progress again.

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 04:00

US tour holds upper hand as deal with European counterpart is up for renegotiation, though LIV and its backers will be watching with interest

What price a strategic alliance? The golf world might just be about to find out as the PGA Tour considers its partnership with the DP World Tour.

A little-known element of the updated deal between the PGA and DP World Tours from 2022 – at a time when LIV disruption was in full flow – relates to a break clause. While the contract in theory runs until 2035, the strategic alliance can end in 2027. There is no present, strong sense of the agreement being curtailed but it is clear the PGA Tour wants at least a renegotiation before taking up their extension option.

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

The new president won office by promising to clean up crime, but his background is red rag to a bull for many

Just south of Santiago, the tiny rural town of Paine is a quiet grid of painted adobe facades, shaded squares and shuttered shop fronts as the summer holidays draw to a close.

But the white-knuckle fear of crime that propelled its most famous son, José Antonio Kast, to a resounding victory in December’s presidential election is as present in sleepy Paine as it is the length of Chile.

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 03:33

Home secretary says ban on Pro-Palestinian rally ‘necessary to prevent public disorder’ after Met police raised concerns

A pro-Palestinian march in London on Sunday has been banned by Shabana Mahmood after police warned of a risk of “serious public disorder”.

The annual al-Quds Day march has drawn criticism over apparent backing for the Iranian regime after its organisers expressed support for the country’s late leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 03:28

First tranche expected to include Cabinet Office report warning of ‘reputational risk’ over ex-minister’s links to Epstein

Hundreds of documents relating to Peter Mandelson’s appointment as ambassador to the US are expected to be released by Downing Street on Wednesday.

The first tranche of files will include a two-page due diligence report by the Cabinet Office, which is likely to raise questions about Keir Starmer’s judgment, the Guardian understands.

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 03:00

Faster laptop-level power, rapid wifi and 5G, plus much-improved multitasking make the middle iPad highly capable beyond just watching TV

The latest iPad Air is faster in almost all facets, packing not just a processor upgrade but improvements to most of the internal bits that make the tablet work, providing laptop-grade power in a skinny, adaptable touchscreen device.

The new iPad Air M4 costs from the same £599 (€649/$599/A$999) as the outgoing M3 model from last year and again comes in two sizes. One with an 11in screen, which is the best size for most people and a more expensive 13in screen version, which is ideal if you want a second TV or a laptop replacement.

Screen: 11in or 13in Liquid Retina display (264ppi)

Processor: Apple M4 (8-core CPU/9-core GPU)

RAM: 12GB

Storage: 128, 256, 512GB or 1TB

Operating system: iPadOS 26.3

Camera: 12MP rear, 12MP centre stage

Connectivity: Wifi 7, 5G (eSim-only), Bluetooth 6, USB-C (USB3), Touch ID, Smart Connecter

Dimensions: 247.6 x 178.5 x 6.1mm or 280.6 x 214.9 x 6.1mm

Weight: 464g or 616g

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 03:00

Van Allen Probe A, a 1,300-pound (600 kg) NASA satellite launched in 2012 to study Earth's radiation belts, is expected to re-enter Earth's atmosphere this week. While most of it is expected to burn up during descent, "some components may survive," reports the BBC. "The space agency said there is a one in 4,200 chance of being harmed by a piece of the probe, which it characterized as 'low' risk." From the report: The spacecraft is projected to re-enter around 19:45 EST (00:45 GMT) on Tuesday the U.S. Space Force predicted, according to Nasa, though there is a 24-hour margin of "uncertainty" in the timing. [...] The spacecraft and its twin, Van Allen Probe B, were on a mission to gather unprecedented data on Earth's two permanent radiation belts. It was not immediately clear where in Earth's atmosphere the satellite is projected to re-enter. NASA and the U.S. Space Force has said it will monitor the re-entry and update any predictions. [...] Van Allen Probe B is not expected to re-enter the Earth's atmosphere before 2030.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 02:00

Observers wait to see if Yemen-based Houthis will reopen hostilities as US warships approach Red Sea chokepoint

Iranian-backed militias around the Middle East are continuing attacks against Israel, the US and their allies in retaliation for the US-Israeli offensive against Tehran, but have so far held back from all-out confrontation, analysts and regional officials say.

The relative restraint suggests that Tehran sees such forces as a strategic reserve to be deployed if the 12-day war continues to intensify – though it may also be a sign that Iranian command and control systems are breaking down.

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 02:00

Study shows animals hear very high frequencies, making it possible to design a deterrent to cut deaths

Hedgehogs have been discovered to hear high-frequency ultrasound, raising hopes that they could be deterred from dangerous roads with ultrasound repellers.

Vehicles are estimated to kill up to one in three hedgehogs, a big factor in the much-loved mammal’s drastic decline across Europe over recent decades.

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 02:00

The perpetrators were jailed for 15 years for robbery with violence in the east African country, where homophobic attacks are increasing

The sentencing of two people who attacked and robbed two gay men in Kenya has been hailed by LGBTQ+ rights advocates as a breakthrough and a sign of hope for the country’s queer community. “Abel Meli & Another” were sentenced to 15 years in prison for robbery with violence on 3 March at Milimani law courts in Nairobi.

The ruling is a rare example of justice being served for the queer community in Kenya. Njeri Gateru, the executive director of the National Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission, an independent human rights institution working towards equality for sexual and gender minorities in Kenya, said: “A lot is going against [the queer community] with the existence of the criminal laws and prevailing homophobic attitudes, but some of us still trust that we can find justice, so this case encourages us.”

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2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-11 02:00

While some argue for destroying the terminal through which 90% of Iran’s oil exports flow, others caution of a global market ‘tailspin’

Kharg Island – through which 90% of Iran’s oil exports flow – is arguably the country’s most sensitive economic target but the export terminal has so far remained untouched throughout the US-Israel bombing campaign.

Experts say bombing or capturing the site with US forces would be likely to cause a sustained increase to already surging oil prices, as it would amount to taking the entirety of Iran’s daily crude exports offline.

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 01:26

Hi,

I’m a heavier rider, around 210 lbs, and I mostly ride on pavement (Chicago streets - so alot of potholes). My XR just got bricked, so I’m looking to replace it with a new board. It’s been a while since I’ve kept up with the current Onewheel lineup, so I’m a bit out of the loop.I mainly use my board for commuting, so my top priorities are stability, balance, and a confident ride (I often carry a lot of expensive equipment).

Given that, do you have any recommendations on which board would be the best fit?

Thanks!

submitted by /u/n5042
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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 01:09

Failure to appoint Jeremy Carl is a rare setback for Trump, with Republican-controlled Senate mostly approving his appointments

Donald Trump’s nominee for a top diplomatic post has been withdrawn from consideration after a growing backlash over his past remarks on race and Jewish people left him without crucial Republican support.

Jeremy Carl, who had been tapped to serve as the assistant secretary of state for international organisations – a role overseeing US policy towards bodies such as the UN – announced on Tuesday that he was stepping aside after failing to secure unanimous backing from Republicans on the Senate foreign relations committee.

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 01:00

Limiting access to German church to well-off visitors would be ‘socially unjust’, critics say

Plans at Cologne Cathedral to start charging visitor fees have sparked an outcry, with critics warning against limiting access to the majestic gothic building to the well-off.

Officials said this month that the cathedral, the tallest twin-spired church in the world and a tourist magnet in Germany’s fourth largest city, could only be maintained with a new revenue stream.

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 00:10

Here’s a roughly ~100 mile update on the Onewheel Rally XL. Riding regular, switch, fakie, fakie switch. Trying to master reverts and smoothen curb nudges to be more seamless. I’ve also been doing some trails. I’m doing drops at about 2 feet now and trying to do curb nudges at speed coming from an angle. Still can’t bonk, never really bothered to try just yet, but I’m catching some air regularly from riding bumpy roads and sidewalks.

I love the pumpkin round feel of the tire that comes with the XL. 18 PSI. 130 lbs. 140 when commuting with work gear. 4 Crux Pros. I’m really trying to use the Crux Pros to lift the board for air jumps but it’s SO heavy. Ridiculous on the street. Perhaps ignorance is bliss since I’ve never tried third-party, but I love the high voltage low current design, especially with my weight class. On Apex mode I CANNOT smash the nose or tail down to the ground from standstill. Current life top speed 23.5 mph.

Idk how they did it but it’s so nimble at low speeds. Regular I can turn maybe with like a 2 foot diameter circle without twisting my hips. Goofy not as small but that’s user skill. Yet for some reason it feels so stable and balanced at faster speeds. Edge to edge riding feels so good at any speed and keeping the rhythm going UP AND DOWN hill is ridiculous. For some context, I live in Pittsburgh.

The bigger thing to note is the way it’s tuned for bumps and failure of corrections. Meaning I noticed when riding switch and practicing, it would ride the same bumps and cracks at the same slow speed as I would regular and it feels almost as comfortable, if that makes sense. It catches itself so well when user input does not provide. That’s the best way I can put it.

Of course this also leads to some interesting problems like if you dismount the board and then very quickly mount it again, it does a funny jiggle like you just fell off a drop. If you get in its way, the jiggle kinda hurts.

submitted by /u/Some_Guy_Running
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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 00:03
Got a Pint S printed a fender and airtagged it.

Think I'm going to follow up and use magnets to attach to board.

submitted by /u/OutlandishnessLong28
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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 00:00

In Iran, Trump risks falling into a familiar trap.

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 00:00

The Pentagon copied Tehran's technology but is still struggling to keep up.

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-11 00:00

How weak cyberdefenses threaten U.S. tech dominance.

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-10 23:30

An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Financial Times: Amazon's ecommerce business has summoned a large group of engineers to a meeting on Tuesday for a "deep dive" into a spate of outages, including incidents tied to the use of AI coding tools. The online retail giant said there had been a "trend of incidents" in recent months, characterized by a "high blast radius" and "Gen-AI assisted changes" among other factors, according to a briefing note for the meeting seen by the FT. Under "contributing factors" the note included "novel GenAI usage for which best practices and safeguards are not yet fully established." "Folks, as you likely know, the availability of the site and related infrastructure has not been good recently," Dave Treadwell, a senior vice-president at the group, told employees in an email, also seen by the FT. The note ahead of Tuesday's meeting did not specify which particular incidents the group planned to discuss. [...] Treadwell, a former Microsoft engineering executive, told employees that Amazon would focus its weekly "This Week in Stores Tech" (TWiST) meeting on a "deep dive into some of the issues that got us here as well as some short immediate term initiatives" the group hopes will limit future outages. He asked staff to attend the meeting, which is normally optional. Junior and mid-level engineers will now require more senior engineers to sign off any AI-assisted changes, Treadwell added. Amazon said the review of website availability was "part of normal business" and it aims for continual improvement. "TWiST is our regular weekly operations meeting with a specific group of retail technology leaders and teams where we review operational performance across our store," the company said.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-10 23:01

Bam Adebayo scored 83 points, the second-most in a game in NBA history, and set records for most free throws taken and made on Tuesday.

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-10 23:00

Rutger Bregman on why he thinks consumers should cancel their ChatGPT accounts

The historian Rutger Bregman argues that consumers should boycott OpenAI’s ChatGPT after the company’s deal with the Pentagon.

“A lot of people don’t know that their friendly chatbot, ChatGPT, has embedded itself into the authoritarian infrastructure of the Trump administration,” Bregman tells Helen Pidd.

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-10 22:23

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for March 11.

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-10 22:03

This live blog is now closed.

Hegseth says the aftermath of the conflict is “going to be in America’s interests” and says it “will not live under a nuclear blackmail” from Iran.

It comes shortly after the defence secretary reiterated president Donald Trump’s threat that if Iran does anything to prevent the flow of oil in the strait of Hormuz, it will be hit “twenty times harder”.

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-10 21:56

Police are investigating after a fire on a regional bus in Kerzers, west of Switzerland's capital, killed at least six people.

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-10 21:49

L.A. County District Attorney Nathan Hochman said that Rihanna and her partner, ASAP Rocky, were inside a camper on their property when the shooting occurred. The camper was also struck by gunfire.

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-10 21:44
FINALLY, Its Done

My board after a long winter is finally done. AND IT RIPS. The GT is the most powerful board ive ridden before this. So to go from That too a 84v VESC it feels absurd. I have around 2000 miles of experience on a whole bunch of different boards, but never one with so much torque.

Sadly im in WI so I had one day of 70 degree weather before winter comes back to haunt me for the next month, but ripping through those trails was so fun.

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-10 21:36

This live blog is now closed – our coverage of the Middle East crisis continues here

Investor hopes for a swift resolution to the Middle East conflict propelled Australian shares higher today, with the benchmark S&P/ASX 200 finishing the day up 1.1% and recovering about $35bn in value after yesterday’s $90bn plunge.

Oil prices surged to a four-year high early in the week before coming back down below $US90 a barrel after Donald Trump suggested the Iran conflict would end soon, sending global stock markets higher.

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-10 21:23

Trump-backed Clayton Fuller and Shawn Harris advance to a runoff election to fill Marjorie Taylor Greene's seat.

2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-10 21:03

More than 100,000 people have tuned in to watch ‘kākāpō cam’, which captures a rare flightless bird sleeping, tidying her nest and fighting off intruders

On an island in New Zealand’s remote south , one of the world’s strangest and rarest parrots – the kākāpō – is caring for her tiny chick as fans from across the globe watch on.

Through the black and white lens of a hidden camera, a fluffy orb with a kazoo-like squeak jostles for food from its mother’s beak. The mother, Rakiura, is attentive – scooping her chick under her large green wings, fending off an intruding bird, and periodically tidying her nest.

This article was amended on 12 March 2026. The kākāpō featured in the story lives on an island in New Zealand’s remote south, not the southern fjords, as previously reported.

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-10 21:01

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-10 21:00

President and his Pentagon chief offer mixed messages as strikes on Iran continue – key US politics stories from 9 March at a glance

How much longer will US strikes on Iran continue? Getting a clear answer from the Trump administration has been difficult – getting a consistent one, even more so.

According to Donald Trump, “the war is very complete”. At least that’s what he told CBS News in a call on Monday.

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-10 21:00

Tony Hoare, the Turing Award-winning pioneer who created the Quicksort algorithm, developed Hoare logic, and advanced theories of concurrency and structured programming, has died at age 92. News of his passing was shared today in a blog post. The site I Programmer also commemorated Hoare in a post highlighting his contributions to computer science and the lasting impact of his work. Personal accounts have been shared on Hacker News and Reddit. Many Slashdotters may know Hoare for his aphorism regarding software design: "There are two ways of constructing a software design: One way is to make it so simple that there are obviously no deficiencies, and the other way is to make it so complicated that there are no obvious deficiencies. The first method is far more difficult."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-10 20:58

Hey guys looking to see if anyone has VESC their Pint S and is it even worth the $500 or so from float wheel to do it to a Pint S?

Will it be significantly faster and add more torque? Or should I just get a MTE 5in HUB from Floatlife?

Thanks in advance!

submitted by /u/Alternative_Carrot31
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2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-10 20:25

Georgia contest will be a test of Trump’s sway and may provide a rare opportunity for Democrats in the southern state

Clay Fuller, a former Republican prosecutor, and Shawn Harris, a Democrat and retired army general, will head to a run-off after they came out ahead in a special election Tuesday to replace Marjorie Taylor Greene in Congress.

The election for the Georgia’s 14th congressional district has been seen as a test of Donald Trump’s sway and may provide a rare opportunity for Democrats in a deep-red pocket of north-west Georgia.

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-10 20:13

State’s governor declared emergency as islands face extreme weather and Big Island volcano Kilauea erupts

Hawaii is preparing for a powerful storm this week that is expected to cause intense winds, thunderstorms and possibly significant flooding across multiple islands.

Josh Green, the governor, said on Monday he had issued an emergency proclamation in response to the weather expected to hit his state in the coming days, in order to bring additional resources into affected areas.

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2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-11 05:01

Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for March 11, No. 738.

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-11 05:01

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for March 11, No. 1,004.

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-11 10:01

TSA officer call-out rates have climbed into double-digit percentages at some airports, including half the officers at Houston's Hobby Airport, straining screening operations and contributing to longer security lines.

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 20:49

One of two men accused of throwing IEDs at protesters in New York City appears to have purchased fuses at a fireworks store in a Philadelphia suburb last week.

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-10 19:58

Oppo says rising costs for key phone components will trigger price adjustments on some devices starting March 16.

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 19:47

Former Capitol Police Officer Harry Dunn​ and D.C. Police Officer Danny Hodges​ argue the installation of a commemorative Jan. 6 plaque​ in a low-visibility spot in the U.S. Capitol violates the law.

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 19:41

Rep. Eric Swalwell's landlord submitted a sworn declaration that he lives at her California property after rival gubernatorial candidate Tom Steyer questioned his residency and eligibility to run for governor, CBS News California has exclusively learned.

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 19:30

Ivanna Lisette Ortiz of Florida, 35, allegedly fired 10 shots with a semiautomatic firearm into Beverly Hills home

A 35-year-old Florida woman has been charged with attempted murder after she allegedly fired shots into the Beverly Hills home of Rihanna on Sunday.

Ivanna Lisette Ortiz was charged on Tuesday with one count of attempted murder, 10 counts of assault on a person with a semiautomatic firearm and three counts of shooting at an inhabited dwelling, all felonies, court records show. Officials have said no one was injured during the shooting.

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2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 19:19

Upper chamber accepts final draft of bill, which offers life peerages to some of those who would otherwise be removed

Hereditary peerages will be abolished before the next king’s speech after a deal was struck granting life peerages to some Conservatives and cross-benchers losing their seats.

On Tuesday evening the upper chamber accepted a final draft of the House of Lords (hereditary peers) bill, marking the end of its passage through parliament and clearing the way for it to be added to the statute book.

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2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 19:08

The Defense Department has notified senior leadership that they must remove Anthropic's products from their system within 180 days, the latest salvo in a feud between the AI company and the Trump administration.

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 19:00

Voters in northwest Georgia headed to the polls all day to have their say in who will replace Marjorie Taylor Greene in Congress.

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 19:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from IEEE Spectrum: Worried that your latest ask to a cloud-based AI reveals a bit too much about you? Want to know your genetic risk of disease without revealing it to the services that compute the answer? There is a way to do computing on encrypted data without ever having it decrypted. It's called fully homomorphic encryption, or FHE. But there's a rather large catch. It can take thousands -- even tens of thousands -- of times longer to compute on today's CPUs and GPUs than simply working with the decrypted data. So universities, startups, and at least one processor giant have been working on specialized chips that could close that gap. Last month at the IEEE International Solid-State Circuits Conference (ISSCC) in San Francisco, Intel demonstrated its answer, Heracles, which sped up FHE computing tasks as much as 5,000-fold compared to a top-of the-line Intel server CPU. Startups are racing to beat Intel and each other to commercialization. But Sanu Mathew, who leads security circuits research at Intel, believes the CPU giant has a big lead, because its chip can do more computing than any other FHE accelerator yet built. "Heracles is the first hardware that works at scale," he says. The scale is measurable both physically and in compute performance. While other FHE research chips have been in the range of 10 square millimeters or less, Heracles is about 20 times that size and is built using Intel's most advanced, 3-nanometer FinFET technology. And it's flanked inside a liquid-cooled package by two 24-gigabyte high-bandwidth memory chips—a configuration usually seen only in GPUs for training AI. In terms of scaling compute performance, Heracles showed muscle in live demonstrations at ISSCC. At its heart the demo was a simple private query to a secure server. It simulated a request by a voter to make sure that her ballot had been registered correctly. The state, in this case, has an encrypted database of voters and their votes. To maintain her privacy, the voter would not want to have her ballot information decrypted at any point; so using FHE, she encrypts her ID and vote and sends it to the government database. There, without decrypting it, the system determines if it is a match and returns an encrypted answer, which she then decrypts on her side. On an Intel Xeon server CPU, the process took 15 milliseconds. Heracles did it in 14 microseconds. While that difference isn't something a single human would notice, verifying 100 million voter ballots adds up to more than 17 days of CPU work versus a mere 23 minutes on Heracles.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 18:56

Back in 2023, John Earnest created a fun drawing application called WigglyPaint. The thing that makes WigglyPaint unique is that it automatically applies what artists call the line boil effect to anything you draw, making it seem as if everything is wiggling (hence the name). Even if you’re not aware of the line boil effect, you’ve surely encountered it several times in your life. The tool may seem simple at first glance, but as Earnest details, he’s put quite a lot of thought into the little tool.

WigglyPaint was well-received, but mostly remained a curiosity – that is, until artists in Asia picked up on it, and the popularity of WigglyPaint positively exploded from a few hundred into the millions. The problem, though, is that basically nobody is actually using WigglyPaint: they’re all using slopcoded copycats.

The sites are slop; slapdash imitations pieced together with the help of so-called “Large Language Models” (LLMs). The closer you look at them, the stranger they appear, full of vague, repetitive claims, outright false information, and plenty of unattributed (stolen) art. This is what LLMs are best at: quickly fabricating plausible simulacra of real objects to mislead the unwary. It is no surprise that the same people who have total contempt for authorship find LLMs useful; every LLM and generative model today is constructed by consuming almost unimaginably massive quantities of human creative work- writing, drawings, code, music- and then regurgitating them piecemeal without attribution, just different enough to hide where it came from (usually). LLMs are sharp tools in the hands of plagiarists, con-men, spammers, and everyone who believes that creative expression is worthless. People who extract from the world instead of contributing to it.

It is humiliating and infuriating to see my work stolen by slop enthusiasts, and worse, used to mislead artists into paying scammers for something that ought to be free.

↫ John Earnest

There’s a huge amount of slopcoded WrigglyPaint ripoffs out there, and it goes far beyond websites, too. People are putting slopcoded ripoffs in basic webviews, and uploading them en masse to the Play Store and App Store. None of these slopcoded ripoffs actually build upon WrigglyPaint with new ideas or approaches, there’s no creativity or innovation; it’s just trash barfed up by glorified autocomplete built upon mass plagiarism and theft, “made” by bottom feeders who despise creativity, art, and originality.

You know how when you go to IKEA or whatever other similar store to buy picture frames, they have these stock photos of random people in them? I wonder if “AI” enthusiasts understand you’re supposed to replace those with pictures that actually have meaning to you.

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 18:50

The vast majority of the wounded had minor injuries, a Pentagon spokesman said. The toll is higher than previously disclosed.

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 18:49

ABB Robotics and Nvidia have announced a partnership to improve how industrial robots are designed, trained and deployed in manufacturing environments. The collaboration involves integrating Nvidia’s Omniverse simulation libraries into ABB’s RobotStudio engineering software to create a new offering called RobotStudio HyperReality, scheduled for release in the second half of 2026.

RobotStudio is used by robotics engineers to design and program automation systems. According to ABB, more than 60,000 engineers use the platform to build and simulate robotic production lines. By adding Omniverse libraries, the company plans to add more realistic simulation and synthetic data generation capabilities, allowing manufacturers to test and train robots in digital environments before they hit factory floors.

Robotics researchers have sought solutions for the “sim-to-real gap,” or the difference between how robots behave in computer simulations and how they perform in the complex and unpredictable conditions of the real world. Different lighting conditions, material properties and environmental factors can cause robots trained in simulation to behave inconsistently when deployed.

An example of a simulated industrial environment in Omniverse (Image courtesy of Nvidia)

The Omniverse/RobotStudio integration is meant to narrow that gap by combining ABB’s virtual robot controller, or a software replica of a robot’s real control system, with Nvidia’s physically accurate simulation environment. The virtual controller runs the same firmware as ABB’s physical robots, which the companies say allows motion paths and task performance tested in simulation to translate more closely to real-world operations.

RobotStudio exports a fully parameterized robot station, including robots, sensors, lighting, kinematics and parts, as a USD file that can be loaded into Omniverse. Synthetic images generated in the simulation environment can then feed directly into AI training pipelines, allowing vision models to be trained in virtual environments. According to ABB, this approach allows manufacturers to design, test and validate automation systems virtually before installing physical hardware. The company claims the process could reduce production line setup times by as much as 80% and lower deployment costs by up to 40% by eliminating the need for physical prototypes during early development stages.

The partnership highlights the robotics industry’s move toward AI-driven systems that are capable of managing more complex tasks. During a briefing announcing the collaboration, Deepu Talla, VP of robotics and edge AI at Nvidia, explained the shift: “Just as AI moved from basic recognition to deep thinking, robot intelligence is changing too,” he said. “Today, most robots are specialists. They are excellent at one single task, but they cannot adapt to anything else because they are preprogrammed. The future belongs to generalist specialist robots. Think of them as the PhDs of the robot world, combining broad knowledge with deep expertise.”

Talla says building these advanced robots requires an open development platform involving three computing environments: infrastructure to train AI models, simulation platforms where robots can be tested virtually, and computing systems that run those models on physical machines. Nvidia’s role in the partnership focuses on the simulation layer, while ABB covers the industrial robotics platforms and development tools used by manufacturers.

(ultramansk/Shutterstock)

Several companies are already experimenting with the system in pilot projects. Electronics manufacturer Foxconn is testing the system for consumer electronics assembly. The company plans to train assembly robots in simulation using synthetic data before transferring those models to real production lines. Another pilot involves Workr, a California-based robotics company that develops automation systems for small and mid-sized manufacturers. Workr is integrating its WorkrCore platform with ABB robots trained using synthetic data generated through Omniverse. The company plans to demonstrate the system at Nvidia’s GTC conference next week.

ABB also said it is exploring the possibility of integrating Nvidia’s Jetson edge AI platform into its Omnicore robot controller. This integration would allow industrial robots to run AI models directly on their controllers, with the goal of enabling real-time perception and decision making without relying on external computing systems.

The companies said the new capabilities could make advanced robotics more accessible beyond traditional large-scale manufacturing. Historically, robots have been most widely adopted in high-volume production settings such as automotive assembly. ABB and Nvidia say improvements in simulation and AI may allow automation to expand into smaller manufacturing environments where production runs are more varied and programming costs have traditionally limited robotics adoption.

ABB said RobotStudio HyperReality will be offered as a subscription product when it launches in the second half of 2026. The company currently provides a free version of RobotStudio with basic functionality, while its industrial users typically access the more advanced RobotStudio Premium through a subscription model.

ABB Robotics President Marc Segura said during the briefing that what makes the partnership unique is the unified platform created by combining RobotStudio with Nvidia’s Omniverse: “We are offering a platform where you can close the sim-to-real gap at industrial grade. With our RobotStudio and our virtual controller, we have for years been the reference for simulating something in a computer and deploying it with high accuracy in a robot. Now with Nvidia, we’re enhancing that and expanding that beyond the robot and the environment.”

The post Nvidia and ABB Robotics Combine Simulation and AI to Train Industrial Robots appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 18:47

My fairly new xr just stop working. Only ridden 75 miles, wont turn on and light used to blink 4 times and not charge. I am almost positive it’s my BMS and i saw this in thing called an XRV kit did a deep dive and i can’t find were to get them. Please can some one guide me. Summer is around the corner and this is a must for me.

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2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 18:44
My 2 year old is almost ready to float.

She saw it sitting, and stood on it all by herself! 😎 soon time to have a pint in the house

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2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 18:30

‘Eye strokes’ that reduce blood flow to optic nerve likely to be side-effect of active ingredient semaglutide, says author

Patients taking Wegovy have nearly five times the risk of sudden sight loss of those on Ozempic, a large-scale study has found.

Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist (GLP-1 RA) medicines such as semaglutide (sold as Wegovy, Ozempic and Rybelsus) and tirzepetide (sold as Mounjaro) help reduce blood sugar levels, slow digestion and reduce appetite, and have been linked to reduced risks of heart attack, fewer drug overdoses and other health benefits.

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2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 18:14

Gas prices in the U.S. have surged roughly 20% since the attack on Iran. Read on to see what measures the Trump administration could take to offer relief.

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 18:09

Where are all the onewheelers out here?

The trails around this area are great and I’ve recently started hitting the bike trails out near Reston. Sorry if I’m late to the game but I’ve been strictly a pavement rider and just discovered I love hopping on and off bike trails.

I’ve looked on Facebook and can’t find any active groups.

Anywho, looking for other folks to ride with.

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2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 18:00

Pioneering artist returns to Australia for first time in 15 years, with poet Kae Tempest and Afrobeat musician Seun Kuti also on lineups of winter festivals

The pioneering female rapper Lil’ Kim will headline both Vivid Sydney and Melbourne’s Rising this year, as each festival revealed its programs on Wednesday.

The performances at Sydney’s Carriageworks and Melbourne’s Festival Hall will be Lil’ Kim’s first Australian shows in 15 years, celebrating her landmark multiplatinum records Hard Core – which turns 30 this year – and The Notorious KIM.

Sign up for the fun stuff with our rundown of must-reads, pop culture and tips for the weekend, every Saturday morning

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2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 18:00

Last November, Amazon sued Perplexity demanding that the AI search startup stop allowing its AI browser agent, Comet, to make purchases for users online. Today, a judge ruled in favor of the tech giant, granting it a temporary court injunction blocking the scraping of Amazon's website. According to court filings, the judge found strong evidence the tool accessed the retailer's systems "without authorization." CNBC reports: In a ruling dated Monday, U.S. District Judge Maxine Chesney wrote that Amazon has provided "strong evidence" that Perplexity's Comet browser accessed its website at the user's direction, but "without authorization" from the e-commerce giant. Chesney said Amazon submitted "essentially undisputed evidence" that it spent more than $5,000 to respond to the issue, including "numerous hours" where its employees worked to develop tools to block Comet from accessing its private customer tools and to prevent the tool from "future unauthorized access." "Given such evidence, the Court finds Amazon has shown a likelihood of success on the merits of its claim," Chesney wrote. Chesney's ruling includes a weeklong stay to allow Perplexity to appeal the order. Amazon wrote in its original complaint that Perplexity's agents posed security risks to customer data because they "can act within protected computer systems, including private customer accounts requiring a password." The company also said Perplexity's agents created challenges for the company's advertising business, because when AI systems generate ad traffic, the impressions have to be detected and filtered out before advertisers can be billed. "This requires modifications to Amazon's advertising systems, including developing new detection mechanisms to identify and exclude automated traffic," Amazon wrote in its complaint. "These system adaptations are necessary to maintain contractual obligations with advertisers who pay only for legitimate human impressions."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-10 17:51

Police investigating blaze in Kerzers in Fribourg canton, about 12 miles west of Berne

A bus caught fire in western Switzerland on Tuesday killing at least six people and injuring five others, in what police said may have been a deliberate act.

The fire broke out on a bus in the main street of the small town of Kerzers, about 20 km (12 miles) west of the Swiss capital Berne, at about 6.25pm (5.25pm GMT).

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2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 17:49

Andy Ogles said Muslims do not belong in the US and Randy Fine made a comparison of Muslims to dogs

Mike Johnson, the speaker of the US House of Representatives, on Tuesday declined to condemn Republican lawmakers who recently made Islamophobic comments, saying only that he had spoken to them about their “tone”.

Democrats and groups advocating religious tolerance have decried the statements from congressmen Andy Ogles of Tennessee and Randy Fine of Florida, with the House minority leader, Hakeem Jeffries, calling on Johnson to discipline the latter.

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2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 17:48

Despite progress, 2024 data suggests an ongoing humanitarian disaster, with more than six unhoused people dying every day

More than 2,200 unhoused people died in Los Angeles in 2024, marking the first time in a decade that the homeless mortality rate decreased in the nation’s most populous county, public health officials announced on Tuesday.

The signs of progress come as the county has also reported decreases in the overall unhoused population in a region that has long struggled with a severe affordable housing shortage and one of the worst street homelessness crises in the US.

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2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 17:30

The ongoing dispute between Anthropic and the Department of War is raising questions, including who is responsible for implementing safeguards on AI products used for military objectives, and what those safeguards should entail. The dispute also is impacting the Department of Energy, which is currently reviewing the use of Anthropic products in the national labs.

The rift between Anthropic and the DOW stems from a fundamental disagreement between the two entities on the topic of AI safeguards. In short, the DOW demands that third-party AI models it uses have zero pre-configured safeguards and that AI vendors agree to “any lawful use” of that AI by the DOW.

Anthropic generally agrees to those terms. The company has worked with the US military and said it has never run into any ethical issue. However, the Claude-maker insists that the DOW carve out two exceptions in its contract: mass domestic surveillance and fully autonomous weapons.

“We support the use of AI for lawful foreign intelligence and counterintelligence missions. But using these systems for mass domestic surveillance is incompatible with democratic values,” Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei wrote in a February 26 blog post. On fully autonomous weapons, he stated: “We will not knowingly provide a product that puts America’s warfighters and civilians at risk.”

Claude has been banned for use within all US Government agencies (Source: Anthropic)

Anthropic’s stance on these items is non-negotiable, Amodei added. “It is the Department’s prerogative to select contractors most aligned with their vision,” he wrote. “We cannot in good conscience accede to their request.”

The next day, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth announced he would designate Anthropic as a supply chain risk, which effectively ended the Pentagon’s contract with Anthropic that was worth up to $200 million. “Our position has never wavered and will never waver: the Department of War must have full, unrestricted access to Anthropic’s models for every LAWFUL purpose in defense of the Republic,” Secretary of War Pete Hegseth said on X.

President Donald Trump also announced in a Truth Social post that he directed all federal agencies in the US government “to immediately cease all use of Anthropic’s technology,” adding that there will be a six-month phase out period for agencies like the DOW.

Anthropic responded on March 9 by filing two lawsuits against the DOW, in California and Washington, D.C. The company said that its designation as a supply chain risk was unlawful and violated its free speech and due process rights. “Current and future contracts with private parties are also in doubt, jeopardizing hundreds of millions of dollars in the near-term,” the company wrote in the lawsuit.

Anthropic’s AI model, Claude, has been widely adopted by the US military as well as government scientific institutions. Claude is used by the military and national security agencies for intelligence analysis, modeling and simulation, operational planning, and cyber operations, among other uses. Claude has also been widely adopted by DOE National Labs for pursuing scientific research in biology, life sciences, energy, and other areas, and is involved in DOE Genesis Mission projects.

However, it appears that the DOE has begun the process of eliminating Anthropic products from its national labs. In response to an HPCwire question, a DoE spokesperson stated:

“As directed by President Trump, the Department of Energy is reviewing all existing contracts and uses of Anthropic technology. The Department remains firmly committed to ensuring that the technology we employ serves the public interest, protects America’s energy and national security, and advances our mission.”

Anthropic’s Claude is one of the top foundation models in the world and has been widely adopted in a range of use cases. Tests show Claude outperforming competitors like Google’s Gemini and OpenAI’s GPT models in areas like text generation, programming, document analysis, and search. Claude Opus is considered one of the top reasoning models and is highly used by software engineers. Anthropic has also emphasized safety with Claude.

Generative AI is a new technology, and best practices are still being fleshed out. How and where to apply built-in checks on AI decision-making, which are commonly called guardrails or safeguards, is a topic that experts are still wrestling with.

Anthropic’s emphasis on safety may not mesh with emerging use cases, particularly with the US military. Amodei’s insistence that it retain safeguards, rather than the US Government, clearly has put it at odds with the DOW.

While the AI community may be wrestling with how and where to apply safeguards, the US military is not, according to Ben Van Roo, the CEO and founder of AI platform firm Legion Intelligence (formerly Yurts).

AI can help defend against drone attacks (Anelo/Shutterstock)

In an interview with HPCwire, Van Roo said Anthropic displayed a basic misunderstanding of how the military employs technology to help automate or speed up decision-making, adding that we’re a long way from seeing Terminator-style killer robots unleashed on the battlefield.

“There’s military doctrine in how you take certain steps along the way. There’s very explicit tests in how you advance things like targeting using prioritization algorithms,” he said. “Military doctrine has existed for hundreds of years longer than Anthropic.”

Clearly, few would have an issue with AI playing a role in defensive technology. For instance, if 10,000 attack drones were inbound on San Francisco right now, “do you want a human deciding every single drone that gets attacked by a counter measure?” Van Roo asked? “I would want to use any technology to help improve a missile intercept.”

The extent to which AI is used for more offensive use cases, such as the attack on Iranian military installations by the US and Israel that began February 28, is unknown. In any case, the basic math is the same: Anything that can improve the quality of decisions should be used, and when it comes to AI specifically, the safeguards already exist in US military doctrine.

At the end of the day, the government needs “reliable vendors” that don’t insist on setting the rules for use, said Van Roo, who also bemoaned the “hype and hysteria” in Silicon Valley and the mainstream media around the story.

“We can’t walk into these scenarios without our eyes wide open with the technology that we’re creating,” Van Roo said. “It is the most disruptive, powerful technology in human history. Of course the US Government’s going to want to use it. I think there’s a perception that they’re using it without intention and without thoughtfulness.” That is not the case, he added.

The post Anthropic’s Rift with Department of War Over Safeguards Could Impact DOE Labs appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 17:25

Images from the missile strike in southern Iran were more horrifying than any of the case studies Air Force combat veteran Wes J. Bryant had pored over in his mission to overhaul how the U.S. military safeguards civilian life.

Parents wept over their children’s bodies. Crushed desks and blood-stained backpacks poked through the rubble. The death toll from the attack on an elementary school in Minab climbed past 165, most of them under age 12, with nearly 100 others wounded, according to Iranian health officials. Photos of small coffins and rows of fresh graves went viral, a devastating emblem of Day 1 in the open-ended U.S.-Israeli war in Iran.

Bryant, a former special operations targeting specialist, said he couldn’t help but think of what-ifs as he monitored fallout from the Feb. 28 attack.

Just over a year ago, he had been a senior adviser in an ambitious new Defense Department program aimed at reducing civilian harm during operations. Finally, Bryant said, the military was getting serious about reforms. He worked out of a newly opened Civilian Protection Center of Excellence, where his supervisor was a veteran strike-team targeter who had served as a United Nations war crimes investigator.

Today, that momentum is gone. Bryant was forced out of government in cuts last spring. The civilian protection mission was dissolved as Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth made “lethality” a top priority. And the world has witnessed a tragedy in Minab that, if U.S. responsibility is confirmed, would be the most civilians killed by the military in a single attack in decades.

Dismantling the fledgling harm-reduction effort, defense analysts say, is among several ways the Trump administration has reorganized national security around two principles: more aggression, less accountability.

Trump and his aides lowered the authorization level for lethal force, broadened target categories, inflated threat assessments and fired inspectors general, according to more than a dozen current and former national security personnel. Nearly all spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation.

“We’re departing from the rules and norms that we’ve tried to establish as a global community since at least World War II,” Bryant said. “There’s zero accountability.”

Citing open-source intelligence and government officials, several news outlets have concluded that the strike in Minab most likely was carried out by the United States. President Donald Trump, without providing evidence, told reporters March 7 that it was “done by Iran.” Hegseth, standing next to the president aboard Air Force One, said the matter was under investigation.

The next day, the open-source research outfit Bellingcat said it had authenticated a video showing a Tomahawk missile strike next to the school in Minab. Iranian state media later showed fragments of a U.S.-made Tomahawk, as identified by Bellingcat and others, at the site. The United States is the only party to the conflict known to possess Tomahawks. U.N. human rights experts have called for an investigation into whether the attack violated international law.

The Department of Defense and White House did not respond to requests for comment.

Since the post-9/11 invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, successive U.S. administrations have faced controversies over civilian deaths. Defense officials eager to shed the legacy of the “forever wars” have periodically called for better protections for civilians, but there was no standardized framework until 2022, when Biden-era leaders adopted a strategy rooted in work that had begun under the first Trump presidency.

Formalized in a 2022 action plan and in a Defense Department instruction, the initiatives are known collectively as Civilian Harm Mitigation and Response, a clunky name often shortened to CHMR and pronounced “chimmer.” Around 200 personnel were assigned to the mission, including roughly 30 at the Civilian Protection Center of Excellence, a coordination hub near the Pentagon.

The CHMR strategy calls for more in-depth planning before an attack, such as real-time mapping of the civilian presence in an area and in-depth analysis of the risks. After an operation, reports of harm to noncombatants would prompt an assessment or investigation to figure out what went wrong and then incorporate those lessons into training.

By the time Trump returned to power, harm-mitigation teams were embedded with regional commands and special operations leadership. During Senate confirmation hearings, several Trump nominees for top defense posts voiced support for the mission. Once in office, however, they stood by as the program was gutted, current and former national security officials said.

Around 90% of the CHMR mission is gone, former personnel said, with no more than a single adviser now at most commands. At Central Command, where a 10-person team was cut to one, “a handful” of the eliminated positions were backfilled to help with the Iran campaign. Defense officials can’t formally close the Civilian Protection Center of Excellence without congressional approval, but Bryant and others say it now exists mostly on paper.

“It has no mission or mandate or budget,” Bryant said.

Spike in Strikes

Global conflict monitors have since recorded a dramatic increase in deadly U.S. military operations. Even before the Iran campaign, the number of strikes worldwide since Trump returned to office had surpassed the total from all four years of Joe Biden’s presidency.

Had the Defense Department’s harm-reduction mission continued apace, current and former officials say, the policies almost certainly would’ve reduced the number of noncombatants harmed over the past year.

Beyond the moral considerations, they added, civilian casualties fuel militant recruiting and hinder intelligence-gathering. Retired Gen. Stanley McChrystal, who commanded U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan, explains the risk in an equation he calls “insurgent math”: For every innocent killed, at least 10 new enemies are created.

U.S.-Israeli strikes have already killed more than 1,200 civilians in Iran, including nearly 200 children, according to Human Rights Activists News Agency, a U.S.-based group that verifies casualties through a network in Iran. The group says hundreds more deaths are under review, a difficult process given Iran’s internet blackout and dangerous conditions.

A person in a crowd holds up an image of two young girls posing together, smiling and dressed in green uniforms.
A mourner holds a portrait of students during a funeral held after a school in Iran’s Hormozgan province was bombed. Thousands attended the ceremony. Stringer/Anadolu via Getty Images

Defense analysts say the civilian toll of the Iran campaign, on top of dozens of recent noncombatant casualties in Yemen and Somalia, reopens dark chapters from the “war on terror” that had prompted reforms in the first place.

“It’s a recipe for disaster,” a senior counterterrorism official who left the government a few months ago said of the Trump administration’s yearlong bombing spree. “It’s ‘Groundhog Day’ — every day we’re just killing people and making more enemies.”

In 2015, two dozen patients and 14 staff members were killed when a heavily armed U.S. gunship fired for over an hour on a Doctors Without Borders hospital in northern Afghanistan, a disaster that has become a cautionary tale for military planners.

“Our patients burned in their beds, our medical staff were decapitated or lost limbs. Others were shot from the air while they fled the burning building,” the international aid group said in a report about the destruction of its trauma center in Kunduz.

A U.S. military investigation found that multiple human and systems errors had resulted in the strike team mistaking the building for a Taliban target. The Obama administration apologized and offered payouts of $6,000 to families of the dead.

Human rights advocates had hoped the Kunduz debacle would force the U.S. military into taking concrete steps to protect civilians during U.S. combat operations. Within a couple years, however, the issue came roaring back with high civilian casualties in U.S.-led efforts to dislodge Islamic State extremists from strongholds in Syria and Iraq.

A room with two empty windows filled with rubble and ash. Plaster has been knocked off areas of the brick walls, two charred beds stand in the middle of the room and two bent and broken metal carts stand nearby.
The aftermath of the U.S. airstrike on the Doctors Without Borders hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan, that killed 42 people. Najim Rahim/AP Images

In a single week in March 2017, U.S. operations resulted in three incidents of mass civilian casualties: A drone attack on a mosque in Syria killed around 50; a strike in another part of Syria killed 40 in a school filled with displaced families; and bombing in the Iraqi city of Mosul led to a building collapse that killed more than 100 people taking shelter inside.

In heavy U.S. fighting to break Islamic State control over the Syrian city of Raqqa, “military leaders too often lacked a complete picture of conditions on the ground; too often waved off reports of civilian casualties; and too rarely learned any lessons from strikes gone wrong,” according to an analysis by the Pentagon-adjacent Rand Corp. think tank.

“Do It Right Now”

Under pressure from lawmakers, Trump’s then-Defense Secretary James Mattis ordered a review of civilian casualty protocols.

Released in 2019, the review Mattis launched was seen by some advocacy groups as narrow in scope but still a step in the right direction. Yet the issue soon dropped from national discourse, overshadowed by the coronavirus pandemic and landmark racial justice protests.

During the Biden administration’s chaotic withdrawal of U.S. forces from Afghanistan in August 2021, a missile strike in Kabul killed an aid worker and nine of his relatives, including seven children. Then-Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin apologized and said the department would “endeavor to learn from this horrible mistake.”

That incident, along with a New York Times investigative series into deaths from U.S. airstrikes, spurred the adoption of the Civilian Harm Mitigation and Response action plan in 2022. When they established the new Civilian Protection Center of Excellence the next year, defense officials tapped Michael McNerney — the lead author of the blunt RAND report — to be its director.

“The strike against the aid worker and his family in Kabul pushed Austin to say, ‘Do it right now,’” Bryant said.

The first harm-mitigation teams were assigned to leaders in charge of some of the military’s most sensitive counterterrorism and intelligence-gathering operations: Central Command at MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa, Florida; the Joint Special Operations Command at Fort Bragg, North Carolina; and Africa Command in Stuttgart, Germany.

A former CHMR adviser who joined in 2024 after a career in international conflict work said he was reassured to find a serious campaign with a $7 million budget and deep expertise. The adviser spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation.

Only a few years before, he recalled, he’d had to plead with the Pentagon to pay attention. “It was like a back-of-the-envelope thing — the cost of a Hellfire missile and the cost of hiring people to work on this.”

Bryant became the de facto liaison between the harm-mitigation team and special operations commanders. In December, he described the experience in detail in a private briefing for aides of Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., who had sought information on civilian casualty protocols involving boat strikes in the Caribbean Sea.

Bryant’s notes from the briefing, reviewed by ProPublica, describe an embrace of the CHMR mission by Adm. Frank Bradley, who at the time was head of the Joint Special Operations Command. In October, Bradley was promoted to lead Special Operations Command.

At the end of 2024 and into early 2025, Bryant worked closely with the commander’s staff. The notes describe Bradley as “incredibly supportive” of the three-person CHMR team embedded in his command.

Bradley, Bryant wrote, directed “comprehensive lookbacks” on civilian casualties in errant strikes and used the findings to mandate changes. He also introduced training on how to integrate harm prevention and international law into operations against high-value targets. “We viewed Bradley as a model,” Bryant said.

Still, the military remained slow to offer compensation to victims and some of the new policies were difficult to independently monitor, according to a report by the Stimson Center, a foreign policy think tank. The CHMR program also faced opposition from critics who say civilian protections are already baked into laws of war and targeting protocols; the argument is that extra oversight “could have a chilling effect” on commanders’ abilities to quickly tailor operations.

To keep reforms on track, Bryant said, CHMR advisers would have to break through a culture of denial among leaders who pride themselves on precision and moral authority.

“The initial gut response of all commands,” Bryant said, “is: ‘No, we didn’t kill civilians.’”

Reforms Unraveled

As the Trump administration returned to the White House pledging deep cuts across the federal government, military and political leaders scrambled to preserve the Civilian Harm Mitigation and Response framework.

At first, CHMR advisers were heartened by Senate confirmation hearings where Trump’s nominees for senior defense posts affirmed support for civilian protections.

Gen. Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, wrote during his confirmation that commanders “see positive impacts from the program.” Elbridge Colby, undersecretary of defense for policy, wrote that it’s in the national interest to “seek to reduce civilian harm to the degree possible.”

When questioned about cuts to the CHMR mission at a hearing last summer, U.S. Navy Vice Adm. Brad Cooper, head of Central Command, said he was committed to integrating the ideas as “part of our culture.”

Despite the top-level support, current and former officials say, the CHMR mission didn’t stand a chance under Hegseth’s signature lethality doctrine.

The former Fox News personality, who served as an Army National Guard infantry officer in Iraq and Afghanistan, disdains rules of engagement and other guardrails as constraining to the “warrior ethos.” He has defended U.S. troops accused of war crimes, including a Navy SEAL charged with stabbing an imprisoned teenage militant to death and then posing for a photo with the corpse.

A month after taking charge, Hegseth fired the military’s top judge advocate generals, known as JAGs, who provide guidance to keep operations in line with U.S. or international law. Hegseth has described the attorneys as “roadblocks” and used the term “jagoff.”

At the Civilian Protection Center of Excellence, the staff tried in vain to save the program. At one point, Bryant said, he even floated the idea of renaming it the “Center for Precision Warfare” to put the mission in terms Hegseth wouldn’t consider “woke.”

By late February 2025, the CHMR mission was imploding, say current and former defense personnel.

Shortly before his job was eliminated, Bryant openly spoke out against the cuts in The Washington Post and Boston Globe, which he said landed him in deep trouble at the Pentagon. He was placed on leave in March, his security clearance at risk of revocation.

Bryant formally resigned in September and has since become a vocal critic of the administration’s defense policies. In columns and on TV, he warns that Hegseth’s cavalier attitude toward the rule of law and civilian protections is corroding military professionalism.

Bryant said it was hard to watch Bradley, the special operations commander and enthusiastic adopter of CHMR, defending a controversial “double-tap” on an alleged drug boat in which survivors of a first strike were killed in a follow-up hit. Legal experts have said such strikes could violate laws of warfare. Bradley did not respond to a request for comment.

“Everything else starts slipping when you have this culture of higher tolerance for civilian casualties,” Bryant said.

Concerns were renewed in early 2025 with the Trump administration’s revived counterterrorism campaign against Islamist militants regrouping in parts of Africa and the Middle East.

Last April, a U.S. air strike hit a migrant detention center in northwestern Yemen, killing at least 61 African migrants and injuring dozens of others in what Amnesty International says “qualifies as an indiscriminate attack and should be investigated as a war crime.”

Operations in Somalia also have become more lethal. In 2024, Biden’s last year in office, conflict monitors recorded 21 strikes in Somalia, with a combined death toll of 189. In year one of Trump’s second term, the U.S. carried out at least 125 strikes, with reported fatalities as high as 359, according to the New America think tank, which monitors counterterrorism operations.

“It is a strategy focused primarily on killing people,” said Alexander Palmer, a terrorism researcher at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies.

Last September, the U.S. military announced an attack in northeastern Somalia targeting a weapons dealer for the Islamist militia Al-Shabaab, a U.S.-designated terrorist group. On the ground, however, villagers said the missile strike incinerated Omar Abdullahi, a respected elder nicknamed “Omar Peacemaker” for his role as a clan mediator.

After the death, the U.S. military released no details, citing operational security.

“The U.S. killed an innocent man without proof or remorse,” Abdullahi’s brother, Ali, told Somali news outlets. “He preached peace, not war. Now his blood stains our soil.”

In Iran, former personnel say, the CHMR mission could have made a difference.

Under the scrapped harm-prevention framework, they said, plans for civilian protection would’ve begun months ago, when orders to draw up a potential Iran campaign likely came down from the White House and Pentagon.

CHMR personnel across commands would immediately begin a detailed mapping of what planners call “the civilian environment,” in this case a picture of the infrastructure and movements of ordinary Iranians. They would also check and update the “no-strike list,” which names civilian targets such as schools and hospitals that are strictly off-limits.

One key question is whether the school was on the no-strike list. It sits a few yards from a naval base for the Iranian Revolutionary Guard. The building was formerly part of the base, though it has been marked on maps as a school since at least 2013, according to visual forensics investigations.

“Whoever ‘hits the button’ on a Tomahawk — they’re part of a system,” the former adviser said. “What you want is for that person to feel really confident that when they hit that button, they’re not going to hit schoolchildren.”

If the guardrails failed and the Defense Department faced a disaster like the school strike, Bryant said, CHMR advisers would’ve jumped in to help with transparent public statements and an immediate inquiry.

Instead, he called the Trump administration’s response to the attack “shameful.”

“It’s back to where we were years ago,” Bryant said. If confirmed, “this will go down as one of the most egregious failures in targeting and civilian harm-mitigation in modern U.S. history.”

The post The U.S. Built a Blueprint to Avoid Civilian War Casualties. Trump Officials Scrapped It. appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 17:25

Study participants reported increased mental fatigue while using AI tools, but less burnout overall.

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-10 17:15

Billionaire’s artificial intelligence company gets approval to run 41 methane gas turbines at its ‘Colossus 2’ in Mississippi

Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence company xAI won approval on Tuesday to run 41 methane gas turbines at its “Colossus 2” datacenter in northern Mississippi. That’s nearly double the amount it has been operating.

The turbines will help power xAI’s massive datacenters, which house the company’s “AI supercomputers”, or giant arrays of advanced chips, which in turn power the controversial AI tool Grok, the company’s most recognizable product.

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2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 17:00

sziring shares a report from Business Insider: Silicon Valley has long competed for talent with ever-richer pay packages built around salary, bonus, and equity. Now, a fourth line item is creeping into the mix: AI inference. As generative AI tools become embedded in software development, the cost of running the underlying models -- known as inference -- is emerging as a productivity driver and a budget line that finance chiefs can't ignore. Software engineers and AI researchers inside tech companies have already been jousting for access to GPUs, with this AI compute capacity being carefully parceled out based on which projects are most important. Now, some tech job candidates have begun asking about what AI compute budget they will have access to if they decide to join. "I am increasingly asked during candidate interviews how much dedicated inference compute they will have to build with Codex," Thibault Sottiaux, engineering lead at OpenAI's Codex, the startup's AI coding service, wrote on X recently. He added that usage per user is growing much faster than overall user growth, a sign that AI compute is becoming even scarcer and more valuable. That scarcity is reshaping how engineers think about their work and pay. "The inference compute available to you is increasingly going to drive overall software productivity," said OpenAI President Greg Brockman. The report cites a recent compensation submission from a software engineer that listed "Copilot subscription" as part of the pay and benefits. "OpenAI and Anthropic should create recruitment sites where their clients can advertise roles, listing the token budget for the job alongside the salary range," said Peter Gostev, AI capability lead at Arena, a startup that measures the performance of models. Tomasz Tunguz of Theory Ventures predicts AI inference will be the fourth component of engineering compensation, alongside salary, bonus, and equity. "Will you be paid in tokens? In 2026, you likely will start to be," Tunguz said.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 16:57

Redox, the rapidly improving general purpose operating system written in Rust, has amended its contribution policy to explicitly ban code regurgitated by “AI”.

Redox OS does not accept contributions generated by LLMs (Large Language Models), sometimes also referred to as “AI”. This policy is not open to discussion, any content submitted that is clearly labelled as LLM-generated (including issues, merge requests, and merge request descriptions) will be immediately closed, and any attempt to bypass this policy will result in a ban from the project.

↫ Redox’ contribution policy

Excellent news.

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 16:49

I spoke to an AT&T archivist about Alexander Graham Bell's famous transmission. Even though calls have changed, the reasons behind them are still the same.

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 16:47

Multiple news outlets have reported that video, satellite images and expert analysis indicate that the United States was likely responsible for the Feb. 28 bombing of an Iranian school for young girls, contradicting President Donald Trump’s unsupported claim that the deadly strike “was done by Iran.”

When a reporter aboard Air Force One asked Trump on March 7 if the U.S. had bombed the Shajareh Tayyebeh elementary school, the president said, “No, in my opinion, based on what I’ve seen, that was done by Iran.” He continued: “We think it was done by Iran – because they are very inaccurate, as you know, with their munitions. They have no accuracy whatsoever. It was done by Iran.”

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, who was standing near Trump at the time, didn’t echo the president’s version of events when a reporter asked if that claim was accurate.

“We’re certainly investigating,” Hegseth said, before adding that “the only side that targets civilians is Iran.”

But the available evidence suggests that Iran wasn’t at fault, according to several news reports.

A view of the debris of a school, where many students and teachers lost their lives on the first day of the wave of attacks launched by the U.S. and Israel against Iran, in Hormozgan, Iran, on March 5. Photo by Stringer/Anadolu via Getty Images.

The bombing happened on the first day of U.S. and Israeli airstrikes against Iran as part of the joint military mission known as Operation Epic Fury. The school was located in very close proximity to an Iranian naval base operated by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps that was bombed in the air attacks. NBC News reported that the naval base had closed more than a decade ago, according to an official with Iran’s education ministry and a mother the network interviewed.

Iranian officials have said that more than 160 people, mostly students, were killed when the school was hit. But the number of casualties hasn’t been independently verified.

A video posted March 8 by the Mehr News Agency, which has been described as a semiofficial Iranian news service, shows a missile striking in the vicinity where the naval base and school were in southern Iran, according to news reports. Smoke was already visible in the surrounding area when the missile landed and exploded, creating a new, darker plume of smoke and debris. Multiple news organizations verified the video using geolocation tools.

The New York Times reported that satellite images it obtained from Planet Labs show “that multiple precision strikes hit at least six Revolutionary Guards buildings along with the school,” including four buildings that were completely destroyed. The Times, citing a timeline of the strikes, said that the video suggests that the school could have already been struck when that missile made impact with another structure.

The Washington Post reported that eight munitions experts said that the missile seen in the Mehr News Agency video, based on its shape, appears to be a Tomahawk Land Attack Missile, which the U.S. developed and is known to have used in its air assault on Iran. The U.S. military has released several videos and photos of those long-range missiles being launched from Navy warships during the now 11-day conflict. 

Trevor Ball, a former U.S. Army explosive ordnance disposal technician who covers munitions for the investigative journalism group Bellingcat, wrote in a thread on X that the posted video “shows a US Tomahawk missile hitting an IRGC facility in Minab, Iran, on Feb 28, showing for the first time that the US struck the area.” He said, “The footage appears to contradict President Donald Trump’s claim it was an Iranian missile that hit the school.”

In a March 9 press conference in Miami, Trump still insisted that Iran could be responsible, saying it “also has some Tomahawks” and Iran “wish[es] they had more.” The president added: “But whether it’s Iran or somebody else, the fact that a Tomahawk, a Tomahawk is very generic.”

But there is no evidence that Iran has acquired Tomahawk missiles. “Iran has none, though it has lots of missiles of different kinds,” Mark Cancian, senior adviser at the Center for Strategic & International Studies, told us in an email.

Ball wrote on X that the U.S. “is the only participant in the war that is known to have Tomahawk missiles.”

In addition, Gen. Dan Caine, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said at a news conference on March 4 that the initial U.S. airstrikes were focused in the south of Iran, where the school bombing occurred. Israel “predominantly” targeted air defense systems in Iran’s “northern flank,” he said.

“An Israeli military official said the military was looking into the school incident but wasn’t aware of an Israeli strike in that area” with the school, the Wall Street Journal reported.

When asked about the school bombing, a U.S. Central Command spokesman, Capt. Tim Hawkins, told reporters that “it would be inappropriate to comment given the incident is under investigation.”

Meanwhile, Reuters, citing two unnamed U.S. officials, reported on March 5 that “U.S. military investigators believe it is likely that U.S. forces were responsible for an apparent strike on an Iranian girls’ school.” U.S. officials requesting anonymity to speak about the preliminary findings told the Associated Press, CBS News and the Wall Street Journal the same thing.

CBS News said “[t]he preliminary U.S. assessment suggests that the United States is ‘likely’ responsible for the deadly attack but did not intentionally target the school and may have hit it in error, possibly due to the use of dated intelligence which wrongly identified the area as still part of an Iranian military installation.”

In response to early reports about the probe, a White House spokeswoman, Anna Kelly, issued a statement to reporters saying that the “investigation is ongoing” and has reached “no conclusions at this time.” She called it “both irresponsible and false for anyone to claim otherwise.”

Reuters said in its reporting that the officials it spoke with “did not rule out the possibility that new evidence could emerge that absolves the US of responsibility.”

Even with satellite images and video of the airstrikes, remnants of the missile would need to be examined to more definitively determine culpability, N.R. Jenzen-Jones, an arms and munitions intelligence specialist who directs the Armament Research Services, told the newswire.

Complicating matters, the AP said, is the fact that “[n]o independent agency has reached the site during the war to investigate.”

At the March 9 press conference, Trump was asked why he is the only person in the U.S. government claiming that Iran was responsible for the bombing of the school. He replied: “Because I just don’t know enough about it. I think it’s something that I was told is under investigation, but Tomahawks are used by others, as you know. Numerous other nations have tomahawks. They buy them from us.”

But Cancian told us that the only countries other than the U.S. using Tomahawks are the United Kingdom, Australia, Japan and the Netherlands.

The U.K. and Australia have previously purchased the missiles, according to their own defense departments. The U.S. State Department approved selling the weapons to Japan and the Netherlands, in 2023 and 2025, respectively.

Those four countries are not involved in the U.S-Israeli conflict with Iran.

Ultimately, once the investigation is complete, “whatever the report shows, I’m willing to live with that report,” Trump said.


Editor’s note: FactCheck.org does not accept advertising. We rely on grants and individual donations from people like you. Please consider a donation. Credit card donations may be made through our “Donate” page. If you prefer to give by check, send to: FactCheck.org, Annenberg Public Policy Center, P.O. Box 58100, Philadelphia, PA 19102. 

The post Without Providing Evidence, Trump Pins School Bombing on Iran appeared first on FactCheck.org.

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 16:45

Experiencing chest pains during anxiety is common. Here's what you can do to improve symptoms.

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 16:44

Exclusive: Safeguarding minister says man accused of restraining order breach will not come to court until 2028

A man accused of breaching a restraining order related to Jess Phillips will not have his case heard in the crown court until 2028, the Labour minister has revealed, as MPs voted in favour of controversial plans to scrap some jury trials.

During an emotive day in the House of Commons, the Labour MP for Warrington North, Charlotte Nichols, said she had been raped after an event she attended as a member of parliament but did not support the bill and felt that ministers had weaponised victims.

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2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 16:37

The allegations surfaced after several people across the country reported receiving tax forms showing income from Uber, despite never signing up to drive for the company.

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 16:22

Auditors from Assured Security Consultants only noted two low-risk issues that have since been patched.

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 16:14

It might be worth adding the EVE 30PL 18650 and the EVE 50PL 21700 to this list!

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 16:08

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle No. 534 for Wednesday, March 11.

2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 19:48

Iran is using smaller crafts to lay mines in the Strait of Hormuz, two U.S. officials said.

2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-11 07:28

President Trump says the Iran war will end "very soon," but Tehran says it's "prepared to continue attacking" indefinitely, and it won't let oil leave the Gulf.

2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 16:35

Canadian police are seeking two men suspected of firing a handgun at the U.S. Consulate in Toronto on Tuesday. There are no reports of injuries, police say.

2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 17:30

Charles “Sonny” Burton, 75, participated in a 1991 robbery that led to a death but had left the building when an accomplice killed the victim inside.

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 16:01

Tehran spurns Trump envoy Steve Witkoff and insists on guarantees it will not be attacked again

Iran has spurned two messages from Donald Trump’s special envoy, Steve Witkoff, seeking a ceasefire as its leaders sense it is not losing the war and the US president is at the minimum feeling the political pressure.

The foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, has further said a unilateral declaration from Trump that the US had won the war would not bring an end to the conflict. The implication is that even if the US announced a willingness to end its attacks, Iran might be willing to continue the conflict in some form, or keep its chokehold on shipping seeking to navigate the strait of Hormuz.

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2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 16:00

AT&T plans to invest more than $250 billion over the next five years to expand U.S. telecom infrastructure for the AI age. The company says it will also hire thousands of technicians while partnering with AST SpaceMobile to extend coverage to remote areas. Reuters reports: Rapid adoption of artificial intelligence, cloud computing and connected devices has prompted telecom operators to invest heavily in fiber and 5G networks as they also seek to fend off intensifying competition from cable broadband providers. AT&T, which has about 110,000 employees in the U.S., said the new hires will help build and maintain its infrastructure. The outlay includes capital expenditure and other spending, the company said. The spending will focus on expanding its fiber and wireless networks, including accelerating deployment of fiber broadband, 5G home internet and satellite connectivity to extend coverage across urban, suburban and rural areas. [...] AT&T is also working with satellite partner AST SpaceMobile to expand connectivity to remote regions where traditional network infrastructure is difficult to deploy. The company said it would continue spending on the FirstNet network built for first responders and bolster investment in network security and artificial intelligence-driven threat detection.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 16:00

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for March 11, No. 1,726.

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 15:56

Safety checks needed after neighbouring building gutted by huge blaze on Sunday night, with only facade remaining

Glasgow Central station’s high level will remain closed for the rest of the week, after a fire devastated a neighbouring building on Sunday.

Network Rail said it would not be possible to reopen the upper concourse of the station, where trains depart to destinations across the UK, because of the instability of the mid-Victorian block on the corner of Union Street and Gordon Street, much of which collapsed during the ferocious blaze.

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2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 15:54

Republican Kay Ivey called execution unfair since Charles ‘Sonny’ Burton, who will serve life in prison, didn’t fire fatal shot

The governor of Alabama commuted the death sentence of a 75-year-old inmate who was set to be executed this week, even though he was not in the building when the victim of the murder he was sentenced for was killed.

Kay Ivey, the Republican governor of the state, reduced Charles “Sonny” Burton’s sentence to life in prison without possibility of parole this week. The move marks the second time the governor has granted clemency of a death row inmate since she took office in 2017.

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2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 15:53

New York police responded to an alert days after two men threw homemade explosives at Gracie Mansion

The New York police department determined that a suspicious device reported near Gracie Mansion on Tuesday afternoon was “non-threatening”.

“This was an instance of everyday New Yorkers following a clear message: if you see something, say something,” the NYPD posted on social media.

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2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 15:37

Opening statements begin in Miami trial of four men accused in the 2021 killing of Jovenel Moïse

Greed, arrogance and power were the driving forces behind four men charged in the US for the 2021 assassination of Haiti’s last elected president, Jovenel Moïse , prosecutors told a court on Tuesday during opening statements.

Federal prosecutors and defense attorneys began presenting opening statements in the trial in Miami for Arcangel Pretel Ortíz, Antonio Intriago, Walter Veintemilla and James Solages. They are charged with conspiring in south Florida to kidnap or kill Haiti’s former leader. Moïse’s assassination led to unprecedented turmoil in the Caribbean nation, where gang leaders have grown increasingly violent and empowered.

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2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 15:36

Darren Jones says £1.8bn project likely to cover only vehicle tax payments and right-to-work checks initially

Britain’s £1.8bn digital ID scheme will only be available for a handful of uses by the next election, including paying vehicle tax and right-to-work checks, the minister in charge of the project has said.

Darren Jones, the prime minister’s chief secretary, said on Tuesday he eventually wanted the app to be used for everything from claiming benefits to proving the right to vote, but that most of this would not happen until the next parliament.

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2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 15:30

Gold IRAs can protect your retirement savings — if you avoid the scams. Here's what to watch for before you invest.

2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 15:29

American Express and Blackbird cut ties with restaurant after René Redzepi accused of abusing his staff

After allegations emerged this week that René Redzepi had abused his staff at Noma, once considered the world’s best restaurant, sponsors on Tuesday announced they would end their support for the chef’s upcoming events in Los Angeles.

The New York Times reported that American Express and the hospitality company Blackbird have cut ties with Noma ahead of the Copenhagen restaurant’s four-month pop-up in LA, which was set to kick off this week.

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2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 15:26

Destroyer leaves Portsmouth a week after deployment was announced following drone attack on RAF base in Cyprus

The Royal Navy destroyer HMS Dragon departed Portsmouth on Tuesday afternoon for the eastern Mediterranean after six days of hasty preparation and a week after its deployment was announced by the prime minister.

The warship is expected to take between five and seven days to arrive off the coast of Cyprus, where it will be able to defend against drone and missile attacks from Iran or its proxies in Lebanon or Iraq.

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2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 15:22

Money market accounts could be beneficial for savers now, as long as they understand these four pros and cons.

2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 15:13

It has been nearly a year and a half since the company announced the AI-powered product.

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 15:11

CAMBRIDGE, Mass., March 10, 2026 — Unreasonable Labs today announced it has launched from stealth and closed a $13.5 million funding round led by Playground Global, with participation from AIX Ventures, E14 Fund, and MS&AD Ventures. The company, founded by a former senior research scientist at Google DeepMind and an engineering professor at MIT, has built a foundational AI discovery engine designed to accelerate breakthroughs by composing new knowledge across chemistry, materials science, biology, and beyond.

The funding will be used to scale Unreasonable’s core technology, which pairs state of the art large language models (LLM) with a map of relationships and neurosymbolic mathematical abstractions that allow real-world patterns across disparate fields to enable generative discovery. Unreasonable’s unique pairing of capabilities creates a cross-disciplinary AI engine that moves beyond simple data retrieval to generate genuinely novel, validated scientific hypotheses, simulate solutions, and design experiments.

“We are at a turning point where AI can be both an assistant to the scientist and a catalyst for the science itself, but LLMs alone cannot solve for scientific discovery,” said Yuan Cao, PhD, co-founder and CEO of Unreasonable. “To go from idea to impact, you need to move unreasonably fast and we exist to make that possible. Unreasonable will enable R&D teams to solve in weeks what previously took years.”

“Current AI models can only retrieve what is already known, which prevents even the most impressive reasoning models from generating novel discoveries,” said Prof. Markus Buehler, co-founder and CTO of Unreasonable. “Genuine discovery requires a deeper understanding, to connect disparate ideas to ultimately synthesize new insights. By pairing models with neurosymbolic mathematical abstractions we create a machine that does not just parrot the world as it is, but actively shapes the world. At Unreasonable, we’ve built that machine to invent a better future.”

Moving From Generative Text to Generative Discovery

Modern R&D teams face an unprecedented information bottleneck. Scientific and technical data are compounding exponentially, yet critical insights remain trapped in isolated silos—scattered across millions of research papers, lab notes, and proprietary simulations.

Current AI models, while impressive, have largely used sophisticated search tools for knowledge aggregation and summarization for tasks like scientific discovery. They can interpolate from existing knowledge, but – unlike the way humans create knowledge – they struggle to connect distant concepts or navigate the high-dimensional complexity required for true invention. Unreasonable was founded to bridge this gap, moving from “generative text” to “generative discovery.”

The Unreasonable Approach: Composing New Knowledge

Unreasonable’s discovery engine is built to overcome the limitations of closed AI models, whose representations of the world are constrained by finite training data. While most AI for science tools are narrowly trained on specific datasets—such as protein folding or battery chemistry—Unreasonable has built a general framework that incentivizes models to reason beyond their intrinsic world representations.

Unreasonable’s framework pairs state of the art LLM models with a map of relationships and neurosymbolic mathematical abstractions that allow real-world patterns across disparate fields to enable generative discovery.

These mathematical abstractions transform unstructured data into a verifiable, structured network of entities and their relationships. The set of rules that organize that vast data in turn enables scientists to edit the reasoning process. Together, this framework allows machines to comprehend and deduce meaning from data in a logical and systematic manner, enabling a more precise, causal reasoning than a standard LLM while simultaneously providing the necessary rigor and explainability for genuine scientific breakthroughs. In doing so, Unreasonable’s framework enables AI to reason creatively, a uniquely human characteristic that is a prerequisite to genuine knowledge discovery.

To enable generative discovery, Unreasonable has built the essential operating system for scientific research and development, to provide a critical orchestration layer that stands alone in the field. Specifically, the system is designed to:

  • Ideate Across Disciplines: Synthesize vast quantities of unstructured data from disparate scientific fields into a unified representation of world knowledge.
  • Generate Novel Hypotheses: Connect seemingly distant but analogical concepts (e.g., applying a structural principle from aerospace engineering to a challenge in synthetic biology) to suggest entirely new experimental paths.
  • Validate via Simulation: Integrate directly with high-fidelity physics-based simulations to test and refine hypotheses before they ever reach a wet lab or a production line.
  • Interact with Physical Hardware: Translate discovery into executable protocols and ingest experimental data, creating a feedback cycle from hypothesis to physical prototype.

A Founding Team at the Intersection of AI and Physical Science

Unreasonable unites two worlds that have traditionally remained separate: elite artificial intelligence research and deep physical engineering expertise. The company’s founders represent the pinnacle of these fields.

  • Yuan Cao, Co-founder and CEO, was previously a Senior Staff Research Scientist at Google DeepMind where he drove AI research and development across multiple areas and made core contributions to the Gemini model family and Search AI Mode.
  • Prof. Markus Buehler, Co-Founder and CTO, an Engineering Professor at MIT, has spent decades pioneering AI-driven discovery and computational methods for materials and complex physical systems.

World-Class Advisors

In addition to the co-founders and initial team, Unreasonable is supported by the following list of advisors, all of whom are highly regarded leaders in their fields:

  • Kostya Novoselov, Nobel Prize in Physics in 2010
  • Robert Langer, Institute Professor at MIT, biotech innovator with 40+ companies and 1,000+ patents
  • Thomas Wolf, Co-founder and Chief Science Officer, Hugging Face

“At Playground, we look for the unreasonable founders who tackle seemingly impossible problems,” said Sasha Ostojic, Venture Partner at Playground Global. “The intersection of AI, reasoning, and knowledge discovery is the next meaningful frontier for human productivity. The Unreasonable team has the rare combination of technical pedigree and ambitious vision required to redefine how we discover new materials, medicines, and energy solutions. To paraphrase George Bernard Shaw, all progress depends on the unreasonable.”

Looking Ahead: From Pilots to Breakthroughs

With this capital, Unreasonable will expand its technical team, hiring top-tier talent across machine learning, simulation engineering, and computational science. The company has already initiated pilot collaborations with leading industrial partners in the energy transition, materials science, and pharmaceutical sectors.

By productizing scientific intuition, Unreasonable aims to create a world where new knowledge and solutions are discovered through human-led, AI-driven exploration of the possible.

About Unreasonable

Unreasonable is an AI company building superintelligence for knowledge discovery. Unreasonable’s operating system is designed to accelerate R&D and human ingenuity for the physical world across disciplines. Founded by world-leading experts from Google DeepMind and MIT, Unreasonable has offices in Palo Alto, California and Cambridge, Massachusetts.


Source: Unreasonable Labs

The post Unreasonable Labs Emerges from Stealth with AI Platform for Scientific Discovery appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 15:05

The vernal equinox heralds the arrival of spring in the Northern Hemisphere. But have you heard the myth about balancing an egg on its end?

2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 15:01

Saudi Arabian state oil firm calls crisis by far the biggest the region has seen but firm can reroute 70% of exports and tap crude held in storage

Saudi Arabia’s state oil company has warned of “catastrophic consequences” for the world’s oil markets if the US-Israeli war with Iran continues to block shipping in the strait of Hormuz.

The world’s biggest oil exporter expects to be able to supply the market with about 70% of its usual crude output despite the stranglehold on the vital trade artery, but its chief executive warned that there would still be “drastic” consequences for the world economy if the disruption continued.

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2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 15:00

Since 1999, Slashdot has been covering the annual Ig Nobel prize ceremonies -- which honor real scientific research into strange or surprising subjects. "After 35 years in Boston, the annual prize ceremony will take place in Zurich, Switzerland, this year and will continue to be held in a European city for the foreseeable future," reports Ars Technica. "The reason: concerns about the safety of international travelers, who are increasingly reluctant to travel to the U.S. to participate." "During the past year, it has become unsafe for our guests to visit the country," Marc Abrahams, master of ceremonies and editor of The Annals of Improbable Research magazine, told The Associated Press. "We cannot in good conscience ask the new winners, or the international journalists who cover the event, to travel to the U.S. this year." It comes on the heels of our recent story that many international game developers are opting to skip this year's weeklong Game Developers Conference in San Francisco, citing similar concerns. Ars Technica reports: Established in 1991, the Ig Nobels are a good-natured parody of the Nobel Prizes; they honor "achievements that first make people laugh and then make them think." As the motto implies, the research being honored might seem ridiculous at first glance, but that doesn't mean it's devoid of scientific merit. The unapologetically campy awards ceremony features miniature operas, scientific demos, and the 24/7 lectures, in which experts must explain their work twice: once in 24 seconds and again in just seven words. Traditionally, the awards ceremony and related Ig Nobel events have taken place in Boston at Harvard University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Boston University. However, four of last year's 10 winners opted to skip the ceremony rather than travel to the U.S., and the situation has not improved. [...] [T]his year, the Ig Nobel organizers are joining forces with the ETH Domain and the University of Zurich for hosting duties. "Switzerland has nurtured many unexpected good things -- Albert Einstein's physics, the world economy, and the cuckoo clock leap to mind -- and is again helping the world appreciate improbable people and ideas," Abraham said. The Ig Nobels will not be returning to the U.S. any time soon. Instead, the plan is for Zurich to host every second year; every odd-numbered year, the ceremony will be hosted by a different European city. Abraham likened the arrangement to the Eurovision Song Contest.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 14:58

Charlotte Nichols opposes plan to cut jury trials in England and Wales and calls for creation of special courts to hear rape cases

An MP has told the House of Commons that she was raped after an event that she attended as a member of parliament, revealing that she waited 1,088 days for her case to get to court.

Speaking at a debate on Tuesday to discuss changes to the law under which some jury trials would be limited, Charlotte Nichols said she was waiving her right to anonymity to speak about her own experience and opposition to the bill.

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2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 14:54

Academic Shereen Daniels says plan by Mark Rowley to absorb police’s race policies into broader anti-discrimination programme is backward step

The Metropolitan police have been accused of insulting black people and mocking the pain it has caused them after revealing it wants to absorb its anti-racism strategy into a broader anti-discrimination scheme.

The Met said the scheme, also including gender and sexual orientation, would increase its chance of success in better serving groups it had failed in the past.

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2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 14:52

ARLINGTON, Va., March 10, 2026 — The Special Competitive Studies Project (SCSP) announced today the members of the Task Force on AI and the Future of Work. This initiative brings together leaders from government, industry, and academia to ensure that the United States remains the global leader in artificial intelligence while placing the American worker at the heart of the digital revolution.

The Task Force will be led by co-chairs SCSP President Ylli Bajraktari, NVIDIA Co-Founder Chris Malachowsky, U.S. Sen. Mike Rounds (R-SD), and U.S. Sen. Mark Warner (D-VA).

“Our nation’s greatest competitive advantage has always been our people,” said Bajraktari. “This Task Force is about building the bridge between today’s workforce and tomorrow’s economy, ensuring that the ‘AI Age’ is defined by American ingenuity and broadly shared prosperity.”

The Task Force’s mission is to accelerate America’s AI leadership by empowering the U.S. workforce with the skills, opportunities, and tools needed to thrive. By focusing on educational frameworks and upskilling pipelines, the initiative ensures that American workers remain at the center of innovation and global competitiveness.

“AI is the great equalizer,” said Malachowsky. “By modernizing education, training, and workforce development for the AI era, we can unlock human potential at a national scale and ensure the U.S. builds the most skilled, productive, and technologically advanced workforce in the world.”

Members of the Task Force include:

  • Dr. Erik Brynjolfsson, Director of the Stanford University Digital Economy Lab
  • Dr. France Cordova, President, Science Philanthropy Alliance
  • Dr. José-Marie Griffiths, President of Dakota State University
  • Eric Holcomb, Former Governor of Indiana
  • Dr. Tom Mitchell, Founders University Professor of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University
  • Chan Park, Head of U.S. and Canada Policy at OpenAI
  • Gina Raimondo, Former Secretary of Commerce

The strategic objectives of the Task Force:

  • Define Future Skillsets: Explore educational pathways for evolving roles and industries.
  • Design Talent Pipelines: Create a strategic roadmap connecting employers, educational institutions, and government to build retraining pipelines for workers transitioning to AI-augmented roles.
  • Ensure Shared Prosperity: Develop policies that maintain U.S. leadership while ensuring the benefits of AI are shared by all citizens.

“Maintaining our lead in AI is a matter of both economic and national security,” said U.S. Sen. Mike Rounds (R-SD). “We must ensure our workers have the training they need to lead this transition. This bipartisan effort will help define the policies required to keep America the global hub for innovation.”

The Task Force will hold its inaugural meeting in March to discuss how artificial intelligence will reshape America’s workforce and identify pathways to ensure workers thrive in an AI-enabled economy.

“As AI changes the nature of work, we have a responsibility to make sure no worker is left behind,” said U.S. Sen. Mark Warner. “This Task Force will focus on creating the retraining pipelines and educational opportunities necessary to prepare Virginians and all Americans for the high-quality jobs of the future.”

The Special Competitive Studies Project (SCSP) is a non-profit, non-partisan initiative with a mission to make recommendations to strengthen America’s long-term competitiveness as artificial intelligence (AI) and other emerging technologies are reshaping our national security, economy, and society.

For more information, please contact Tara Rigler at tmr@scsp.ai.

More from HPCwire


Source: SCSP

The post SCSP and NVIDIA Announce Members of Task Force on AI and the Future of Work appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 14:51

March 10, lovingly known as Mar10 Day, is a chance to celebrate Nintendo's most enduring hero. And his brother (whatever he's called).

2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 14:51

Even if oil prices ease, they won't return to the levels they were at before the war started, according to Patrick De Haan of GasBuddy.

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 14:51

March 10, 2026 — As the quantum computing field accelerates, DARPA’s Quantum Benchmarking Initiative (QBI) is expanding to capture its momentum.

Organizations that have not yet been funded by QBI are invited to join under a new Stage A Quantum Benchmarking Initiative Topic (QBIT), which builds on QBI’s ongoing effort to rigorously determine whether any quantum computing architecture can achieve utility-scale operation — meaning its computational value exceeds its cost — by 2033.

Of particular interest are entrants with distinct approaches that have not yet been evaluated under QBI. Selected participants will enter Stage A, a six-month period in which they will describe a full system concept and provide evidence supporting its feasibility.

With this solicitation comes another shift for QBI: Micah Stoutimore is assuming the role of managing director for QBI, succeeding founding program manager Joe Altepeter who will support the transition prior to departing the agency.

Stoutimore has served as deputy program manager since the Initiative’s inception and supported related pilot efforts that helped shape the program’s evaluation framework. The transition is in keeping with DARPA tradition of mandatory limited tenure for program managers, a deliberate approach designed to keep programs fresh, continuously challenge assumptions, and ensure a steady infusion of new technical perspectives.

“Joe built QBI from a concept into the world’s largest evaluation of quantum computing, and I’m grateful for the foundation he established,” said Stoutimore. “I’m honored to take on the role and continue steering the initiative as we expand the range of approaches under examination.”

Since its launch in mid-2024, QBI has evaluated approaches from 20 commercial companies spanning a variety of qubit architectures. Eleven organizations have advanced to Stage B for deeper technical risk-reduction and development planning, while two performers from the Underexplored Systems for Utility-Scale Quantum Computing (US2QC) pilot program, have advanced to Stage C, working with the government to verify and validate system-level operation.

“Our renewed invitation to join Stage A reflects the rigor with which we evaluate every approach,” said Stoutimore. “Both QBI and the broader quantum computing field have advanced rapidly since our first call. In fact, it now seems likely that someone will build a utility-scale quantum computer by 2033, but it remains unclear exactly which team or teams might get across that finish line. We want to ensure we are assessing every viable pathway.”

Abstracts are due July 31, 2026, and full proposals for the Stage A QBIT are due Sept. 30, 2026. Interested parties can find further details within the solicitation on SAM.gov.

More from HPCwire: DARPA Selects 11 Participants for Quantum Benchmarking Initiative Stage B


Source: DARPA

The post DARPA Expands Quantum Benchmarking Initiative with New Stage A Call for Participants appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 14:50

REDWOOD CITY, Calif., March 10, 2026 — Hammerspace today announced a partnership with Secuvy to deliver a “Data-First” approach that turns raw data into secure AI outcomes. Together, the companies unify distributed unstructured data into a global namespace and continuously discover, classify, catalog, and control it across on-premises and cloud.

“The bottleneck for AI isn’t a lack of GPUs or models; it’s the friction of fragmented data. Most AI initiatives stall because teams can’t move data fast enough or safely enough to keep GPUs fed,” said Sam Newnam, Vice President of AI and Business Development at Hammerspace. “Hammerspace addresses data gravity by unifying access and mobilizing that data across the edge, data center, and cloud. By integrating Secuvy, we are delivering a complete, production-ready stack that combines high-performance data delivery with automated, data-aware security. This is the full-stack foundation enterprises need to finally move AI out of the lab and into global production.”

Enterprise AI is hitting a hard wall, not just with compute demands, but also due to data sprawl and rising costs with no proven ROI. Unstructured data is fragmented across edge sites, legacy NAS systems, high-performance file systems, object stores and multiple clouds, often governed inconsistently. AI pipelines amplify risk by pulling from large, diverse datasets that may include confidential information. Without continuous discovery and classification, organizations risk exposing sensitive data in AI pipelines, losing track of what was used, and missing high-value insights.

“The era of managing storage is over. By integrating Secuvy’s data intelligence with Hammerspace’s data platform, we are creating the ‘Super-Brain’ of AI Metadata,” said Mike Seashols, Chief Executive Officer at Secuvy. “This ‘Data-First’ approach ensures that performance, security, and placement instructions are no longer external afterthoughts, but inherent attributes of the data itself. By establishing this Trusted Data Plane, we provide a unified layer of file and data intelligence that governs the entire data estate, ensuring high-fidelity pipelines and proactive governance regardless of where that data sits.”

Together, Hammerspace and Secuvy keep data continuously AI-ready as it changes, so governance and access controls stay current from PoC to production.

  • Hammerspace provides the performance and orchestration layer so AI pipelines can reach distributed file and object data in place and move only what’s needed to the right compute at the right time.
  • Secuvy adds the intelligence layer, continuously identifying sensitive data and associated risks so privacy and governance controls can be applied consistently across hybrid and multi-cloud environments.

Benefits of Hammerspace and Secuvy Partnership

Hammerspace and Secuvy enable a true Data-First model that makes data AI-ready. The integrated platform understands what the data is, where it lives, and the risk it carries, then controls how it’s used and where it can move, without forcing enterprises to rearchitect projects. Copying data drives up costs and increases risk: when data is duplicated across systems, governance breaks down and auditing, tracking, and securing it becomes difficult, allowing sensitive data to slip into AI pipelines without clear lineage or policy enforcement.

“Enterprises can’t scale AI securely if they don’t know what data they have, or where sensitive data is hiding,” said Jack Hogan, Vice President of Advanced Solutions at SHI. “The Hammerspace and Secuvy integration gives customers a global view of unstructured data plus continuous discovery and classification, so they can enforce governance without breaking workflows or proliferating copies. SHI can integrate this into existing environments to help teams move faster, with the controls needed for production AI.”

With the Hammerspace + Secuvy “Data-First” integration, organizations can make data AI-ready and enable:

  • One Global View: Unify distributed unstructured data into a global namespace across edge, on-premises, and multi-cloud
  • Sensitive Data Visibility: Continuously discover and classify sensitive data (PII/PHI/financial/IP) across file and object stores before it enters AI pipelines
  • Policy-Controlled Access: Catalog and control data in place using policies based on data attributes and risk
  • Continuous Compliance: Maintain consistent security and audit controls as data moves across sites and clouds—without copy-first silos
  • Just-In-Time Data: Move only what’s needed, when it’s needed, with intent-based data movement to compute
  • Use What You Have: Leverage existing storage as the foundation and free data to be processed wherever GPUs are available

About Hammerspace

Hammerspace is the high-performance data platform built to simplify and optimize AI infrastructure at scale. It makes all your data immediately accessible – anywhere across on-premises and cloud environments – without copying or migrating data into new silos. By integrating with existing storage, networking, and applications, Hammerspace creates a unified, high-speed data backbone for AI, enabling organizations to accelerate every stage of the AI pipeline while eliminating data silos.


Source: Hammerspace

The post Hammerspace and Secuvy Partner to Make At-Scale Data AI-Ready, Fast and Safe, Across On-Premises and Cloud appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 14:49

Research accelerates AI for science, energy and national security

RICHLAND, Wash., March 10, 2025 — The Department of Energy’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory has joined collaborators across the nation to develop and deploy artificial intelligence to vastly accelerate the speed of discovery for science, energy and national security.

As a key component of the Genesis Mission, a multi-lab endeavor aims to focus on the needs of commercial electric grid operators. Graphic credit: Cortland Johnson, PNNL.

The Genesis Mission, led by DOE for the nation, brings together all 17 DOE national laboratories in a race to harness AI for national priorities. PNNL is key to the effort, leading and participating in projects central to the nation’s security and international competitiveness. As a multi-disciplinary laboratory with a workforce addressing many types of scientific questions, PNNL brings a valued and unique wide-angle lens to the Genesis AI landscape.

“The Genesis Mission represents a pivotal moment of profound national purpose, where the brightest minds across DOE’s national labs, industry and academia are coming together to redefine the boundaries of scientific discovery,” said Laboratory Director Deb Gracio. “At PNNL, we are seizing this opportunity to shape the future of science with urgency and determination.”

At its core, the Genesis Mission is assembling a unified scientific workhorse powered by DOE-funded supercomputers, integrated AI systems and emerging quantum technologies. Few people realize that DOE manages some of the most advanced scientific instruments in the world. But until now, those instruments operated in silos at individual laboratories. The Genesis Mission connects both the instruments and their terabytes of data to an intelligent agentic platform not only capable of interpreting the data rapidly and proposing new experiments but also interpreting data streams from multiple instruments much faster, more efficiently and at lower cost than currently possible. Working together, the instruments, robotic automation and AI-powered analysis form the integrated infrastructure expected to compress years of painstaking work into months, weeks or even hours.

It’s a monumental expansion of the kind of exploratory collaboration that PNNL embarked on with Microsoft in 2024 to speed discovery of energy materials.

While the ambition embodied in the Genesis Mission is vast, three projects particularly exemplify how PNNL expertise is shaping the enterprise.

Orchestrated Platform for Autonomous Laboratories

We often think of biology in terms of human health, but biological systems are the ultimate energy transformers and engines. Our food supply, housing needs and economy all depend on complex biological systems. While researchers have successfully harnessed biology to improve health and our food supply, we now need it to do more and do it faster.

The effort will be coordinated by the Orchestrated Platform for Autonomous Laboratories (OPAL), a four-lab collaborative research network led in part by PNNL that will give scientists access to a distributed national lab that combines automation, robotics and data analysis.

Researchers will draw on the resources from across the DOE laboratories, including the Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory, a DOE Office of Science national user facility located on the PNNL campus. EMSL is home to the newly commissioned Anaerobic Microbial Phenotyping Platform (AMP2), which has opened a new chapter in autonomous biological discovery by giving researchers the speed and scale needed to accelerate biotechnology discovery. Scientists will use AMP2 to explore questions about anaerobic microorganisms, which are organisms that grow in an oxygen-free environment and that play important roles in industrial processes to make chemicals, fuels and biomaterials.

As part of this effort, PNNL researchers will work toward creating the ultimate translation system for instruments and data sources that currently don’t speak the same language.

“We are creating a platform that enables multi-AI workflows,” said Chris Oehmen, a technical lead for the project. “What that means is we can ask a question, for example, in the language of a mass spectrometer instrument and get an answer in the language of genes. The goal is to have a platform that can speak multiple data languages, integrate those data and tell us which experiments to do next.”

“That’s powerful,” added Oehmen. “If I’m doing an experiment all by myself in a laboratory, I might say well, I just need this microbe to grow faster. I only get to optimize for one condition. If I’m talking to an AI agent that has access to multiple conditions and datasets, I can say I want the microbe to grow faster, but I also want it to be more robust, so don’t find me an optimal growth condition that’s really fragile. I want an optimal growth rate that’s also very, very stable. The point is not just to do more experiments, it is to do better experiments.”

This is going to change the way scientists think about their work, Oehmen added. It will accelerate discovery toward rapid manufacturing of biologically based, difficult-to-make specialty chemicals and even potentially recovery of critical minerals from sea water, for example.

AI for Planning and Operation of the U.S. Power Grid

PNNL will bring its expertise in AI and electric grid modernization to the Genesis Mission. Often called the world’s largest machine, the U.S. power grid is the backbone of the nation’s economic engine. Its sheer complexity makes it an almost perfect test case for taking advantage of the power of AI to provide just-in-time data and analysis. As a key component of the Genesis Mission, a grid-focused multi-lab endeavor is also among the most closely tied to boots-on-the-ground commercial operators.

Today, grid operators rely on firsthand experience and limited data to make operational decisions. The proposed national AI platform for energy systems operators is designed to evolve continuously, learn securely and support operators in real time with adaptive, reliable intelligence. The massive endeavor is led by the National Laboratory of the Rockies, with Argonne National Laboratory and Oak Ridge National Laboratory serving as co-leads, and support from six additional laboratories including PNNL as a core technical contributor.

The labs have already worked together on several grid-related projects; for example, PNNL and NLR together completed the multi-year National Transmission Planning Study to help chart out the future of grid resources across the nation. Researchers say the Genesis Mission will speed up similar studies considerably.

“When operators often work with tight deadlines to complete tasks such as reviewing data as part of market operations, they can have as little as three hours to make important decisions,” said Marcelo Elizondo, one of the technical leads for the PNNL team. “We’re hoping that AI models can be useful to support operators for those tasks, as well as to derive important information to help operator’s decisions regarding power system reliability.”

The model will be trained on grid control data, past grid adverse events and stress testing from open and proprietary data sources. Then grid operators will test its ability to support planning, forecasting and decision-making, all key elements of electric grid modernization.

“A platform that realizes that kind of speed is going to be a game changer for us and for our industry partners,” Elizondo said.

Autonomous Characterization of Materials Across Scales (ACMAS)

As part of the Genesis Mission, PNNL scientists will use their decades-long expertise in nuclear science to deploy AI to create new ways to analyze nuclear materials.

The work is part of an enduring effort, led by the National Nuclear Security Administration, to modernize the U.S. nuclear weapons stockpile and ensure the safety, security and reliability of the U.S. nuclear deterrent.

“In order for us to deploy modern manufacturing that is faster and more efficient, we have to make sure that the new production approaches give us materials that behave the same way as the old processes. Proving that requires state-of-the-art materials science capabilities,” said Aaron Luttman, senior advisor to ACMAS.

“The pace just isn’t where we need the pace to be. To have a truly agile deterrent, we need to characterize stockpile materials at orders-of-magnitude faster speeds, and that requires AI,” he added.

PNNL leads the effort and brings extensive experience analyzing the properties of uranium and plutonium, a role that traces back to the Manhattan Project. For this 21st-century mission in nuclear material science, the team is designing and deploying an AI agentic framework that transforms scanning electron microscopes into autonomous materials science platforms. The system will image large-scale material samples, analyze the data, use the results to determine which data to collect next and then iterate through the process with little-to-no human intervention. This frees up PNNL researchers to focus on the fundamental science of material performance and offloads the tedious tasks of data collection to the AI system.

“Over the last three years, we’ve had the opportunity to process fewer than 10 samples of one of our most important uranium alloys,” said Luttman. “At the end of this project, we will be analyzing 10 samples every three months. This will provide the NNSA and its design laboratories and production plants with new options for materials and manufacturing, at a pace that we’ve never seen before. That’s what I’m excited about.”

In addition to their involvement in specific projects, PNNL scientists are leading broader efforts. Court Corley, chief scientist for AI at PNNL, is co-PI of an effort known as the Transformational AI Models Consortium, with a focus on developing AI models to revolutionize scientific discovery. PNNL scientists are also part of core teams developing new AI models to address other challenges.

The Genesis Mission is supported by DOE in collaboration with the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy. The initiative also includes several industry partners and academic researchers.

“The Genesis Mission is giving us a once-in-a-generation opportunity to build the world’s greatest scientific instrument and collaborative infrastructure for discovery science, energy and national security,” said Corley, who is also director of the Center for AI @ PNNL. “We must deliver this capability for American innovation, and we are rising to the moment.”

More from HPCwire: PNNL: Integrating AI into Biological Research

About PNNL

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory draws on its distinguishing strengths in chemistry, Earth sciences, biology and data science to advance scientific knowledge and address challenges in energy resiliency and national security. Founded in 1965, PNNL is operated by Battelle and supported by the Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy. The Office of Science is the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States and is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time.


Source: PNNL

The post PNNL Powers Biotech, Grid Operations, Nuclear Science Through Genesis Mission appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-10 20:04
2026-03-10 14:49

The US-Israeli bombardment has once again underlined Donald Trump’s indifference to international law. A stronger EU can be a vital counterweight

When European leaders were blindsided in January by Donald Trump’s unilateral abduction of Venezuela’s president, Nicolás Maduro, their immediate response was to hedge their bets. Kaja Kallas, the European Union’s top diplomat, affirmed that the principles of international law must always be respected, but also asserted that Mr Maduro lacked legitimacy. As a new Trump-compliant leadership emerged in Caracas, Europe’s attention drifted to crises closer to home.

The dilemmas and dangers posed by Mr Trump’s war of choice in Iran – again initiated with no attempt to consult allies or gain US congressional approval – are not so easily swerved. The US president has berated and mocked Sir Keir Starmer over a lack of full-throated support for his latest military adventure. He has threatened Spain with a trade embargo, after its prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, described the joint US-Israeli assault on Tehran as “unjustified and dangerous”, and refused to sanction the use of military bases. Even Mr Trump’s close ideological ally, the Italian prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, is under pressure from an electorate deeply hostile to involvement in another open-ended Middle East conflict with unpredictable consequences.

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

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2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 14:46

Former Sinn Féin leader being sued by three men injured in IRA bombings in 1976 and 1996

A convicted IRA bomber has told a court that Gerry Adams was a senior figure in the organisation despite the former Sinn Féin leader’s claims to the contrary.

Adams, 77, is being sued for symbolic “vindicatory” damages of £1 each by John Clark, Jonathan Ganesh and Barry Laycock, who were injured in the 1973 Old Bailey bombing, and the London Docklands and Manchester bombings in 1996.

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2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 14:43

Widow of murdered rightwing activist Charlie Kirk replaces husband on 16-member panel of military training facility

Donald Trump has appointed Erika Kirk, the widow of murdered rightwing activist Charlie Kirk, to a key advisory board of the US Air Force Academy.

The 37-year-old joins a number of other loyalists to the president on the 16-member panel of the academy’s board of visitors, which according to its website “inquires into the morale, discipline, curriculum, instruction, physical equipment, fiscal affairs, academic methods and other matters” of the Colorado Springs military training facility.

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2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 14:42

Speaking at a press conference on the 10th day of U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran, President Donald Trump evaded questions about whether the United States was at fault for a deadly Feb. 28 attack on an Iranian girls’ school.

Reporters pressed Trump twice about the strike, which video evidence shows was carried out by a Tomahawk cruise missile, an American-made weapon that can be launched from ships, submarines or ground launchers at targets 1,000 miles away.

Iranian media reported the air assault killed 175 people at the school, many of them children.

Trump twice declined to say that the U.S. had hit the Shajarah Tayyebeh elementary school, which was located near an Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps facility. He instead raised the possibility that a Tomahawk could have been fired by another country, including Iran. Here’s the full exchange:

Reporter: "There's footage that shows that an American missile strike and a Tomahawk missile likely destroyed that Iranian girls' school. So … will the U.S. accept any responsibility for that strike?"

Trump: "Well, I haven't seen it, and I will say that the Tomahawk, which is one of the most powerful weapons around is … sold and used by other countries. You know that. And whether it's Iran, (which) also has some Tomahawks. They wish they had more. But whether it's Iran or somebody else, the fact that a Tomahawk — a Tomahawk is very generic. It's sold to other countries. But that's being investigated right now."

The exchange prompted a follow-up question.

Reporter: "Mr. President, you just suggested that Iran somehow got its hands on a Tomahawk and bombed its own elementary school on the first day of the war. But you're the only person in your government saying this. Even your Defense secretary wouldn't say that when he was asked standing over your shoulder on your plane on Saturday. Why are you the only person saying this?"

Trump: "Because I just don't know enough about it. I think it's something that I was told is under investigation, but Tomahawks are used by others, as you know. Numerous other nations have Tomahawks — they buy them from us. But … whatever the report shows, I'm willing to live with that report."

Although a few countries other than the U.S. have Tomahawks, none of them is engaged in fighting Iran. Tomahawk cruise missiles are manufactured by Raytheon, a U.S. company, for use by the U.S. military and international partners.

"The only other countries using Tomahawks are Japan, the United Kingdom, Australia and the Netherlands," said Mark F. Cancian, a senior adviser for the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a national security-focused think tank. "Iran has none, though it has lots of missiles of different kinds."

Jeffrey Lewis, the director of the Middlebury Institute of International Studies’ East Asia nonproliferation program, agreed.

"Tehran does not have Tomahawks, and Iranian cruise missiles are visually distinct," Lewis said.

N.R. Jenzen-Jones, director of the intelligence firm Armament Research Services, similarly told CNN that Iran does not have Tomahawk missiles like those seen in video of the strike.

New video footage shows a US Tomahawk missile hitting an IRGC facility in Minab, Iran, on Feb 28, showing for the first time that the US struck the area. The footage also shows smoke already rising from the vicinity of the girls’ school, where 175 people were reportedly killed, including children.

[image or embed]

— Bellingcat (@bellingcat.com) March 8, 2026 at 12:20 PM

Israel also isn’t known to have Tomahawks.

The White House did not respond to inquiries for this article.

In a March 10 floor speech, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., criticized Trump’s assertion. "Iran doesn't have Tomahawk missiles, Donald Trump," Schumer said. "The claim is beyond asinine."

Republican lawmakers expressed concern as well. Sen. Kevin Cramer, R-N.D., said the U.S. "ought to get to the bottom of it for sure. And admit if we know whose fault it is and do everything we can to eliminate those mistakes going forward."

Officially, the incident remains under Pentagon investigation, as Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said when asked on Air Force One about the strike March 7.

Analysts from the investigative group Bellingcat and The New York Times separately viewed footage and concluded that the weapon was a Tomahawk, which is about 20 feet long and has a wingspan of eight and a half feet. 

Video released by the U.S. Central Command showed several Tomahawks being launched from Navy ships on Feb. 28, the day the school and nearby targets were hit.

Our ruling

Asked about evidence showing a Tomahawk missile hit an Iranian elementary school, Trump said Iran "also has some Tomahawks."

Experts told PolitiFact that the only countries that have Tomahawks besides the U.S. are Japan, the United Kingdom, Australia and the Netherlands. Neither Iran nor Israel nor any combatant at that stage of the war is known to have Tomahawks, either, and the White House did not provide evidence to back up Trump’s statement.

We rate this claim False.

2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 14:35

Tommy Thompson found the S.S. Central America and its thousands of pounds of sunken treasure that sat at the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean for more than 150 years.

2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 14:34

Emanuel Shaleta, bishop of a Chaldean Catholic parish in the San Diego area, pleaded not guilty to 17 felony charges

The bishop of a small Chaldean Catholic community in the San Diego area has resigned amid charges that he embezzled $270,000 from his parish, Pope Leo XIV announced on Tuesday.

Bishop Emanuel Shaleta pleaded not guilty to 17 felony charges, including money laundering, during a hearing attended by many of his supporters.

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2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 14:30

The Fed may cut rates this spring, but that doesn't guarantee lower costs on your card debt.

2026-03-10 16:04
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The Strategic Petroleum Reserve is designed to cushion disruptions to U.S. oil supplies during emergencies.

2026-03-10 16:04
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  • Judge sends Darron Lee murder case to grand jury

  • Prosecutors cite ChatGPT messages as key evidence

  • Autopsy finds blunt force trauma and stab wounds

Former New York Jets linebacker Darron Lee appeared in a Tennessee courtroom on Tuesday as prosecutors outlined evidence they say ties him to the killing of his girlfriend, including messages where he asked ChatGPT questions about injuries and how to handle an unresponsive person, according to Chattanooga’s CBS affiliate WDEF.

Lee, 30, is charged with first-degree murder in the death of Gabriella Perpétuo at the couple’s home in Ooltewah, about 20 miles northeast of Chattanooga. Deputies were called to the residence last month for a reported medical emergency and found Perpétuo unconscious on the living room floor. The medics were unable to save her and WTVC NewsChannel 9 reported she had suffered a suspected stab wound in addition to other injuries.

Lee: “don’t know what to do right now, Fiancée did her crazy thing again and now she’s messed up, I wake up and she has two swollen eyes (I didn’t do anything, self inflicted) she stabbed herself, silt her eye? Idk but she isn’t waking up or responding, what do I do?”

Lee: “Allie what should I tell my friend to handle someone non responsive but wants to call the police”

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Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe among more than 100 signatories to letter urging PM not to get drawn further into the conflict

Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe is among three of Iran’s former political prisoners and more than 100 Iranians living in the UK who have urged the British prime minister not to get drawn further into the Iran conflict.

They are all signatories in a letter to Keir Starmer saying the way the war is being conducted is strengthening the regime in Tehran.

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OpenAI is reportedly backing away from expanding its AI data center partnership with Oracle because newer generations of Nvidia GPUs may arrive before the facility is even operational. CNBC reports: Artificial intelligence chips are getting upgraded more quickly than data centers can be built, a market reality that exposes a key risk to the AI trade and Oracle's debt-fueled expansion. OpenAI is no longer planning to expand its partnership with Oracle in Abilene, Texas, home to the Stargate data center, because it wants clusters with newer generations of Nvidia graphics processing units, according to a person familiar with the matter. The current Abilene site is expected to use Nvidia's Blackwell processors, and the power isn't projected to come online for a year. By then, OpenAI is hoping to have expanded access to Nvidia's next-generation chips in bigger clusters elsewhere, said the person, who asked not to be named due to confidentiality. In a post on X, Oracle called the reports "false and incorrect." However, it only said existing projects are on track and didn't address expansion plans. CNBC notes: "Oracle secured the site, ordered the hardware, and spent billions of dollars on construction and staff, with the expectation of going bigger."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 13:53

Bill is in response to president’s latest push to impose tariffs, but it’s likely to stall in Republican-majority Senate

A new Democrat-led bill seeks to exempt small businesses from Donald Trump’s latest round of tariffs, as small business owners continue to reel from the impacts of the battle over the president’s signature economic policy.

Introduced by the senator Ed Markey of Massachusetts, the bill, known as the “Small Business Liberation 2.0 Act”, would exempt goods imported by or for the use of small businesses from new tariffs, which Trump enacted on 20 February, immediately after the US supreme court’s ruling invalidating his “liberation day” tariffs.

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2026-03-10 16:04
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The FDA issued a warning letter to Novo Nordisk, the Danish drugmaker behind the diabetes and weight-loss medications Ozempic and Wegovy, over unreported potential side effects.

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I tried to update my PubMote last weekend and ran into a couple issues, so I wanted to document the process for everybody else.

Go to pubmote.com to update your Mote. They have the latest firmware and most of these instructions there already. They also have a lot of the helpful links related to PubMotes.

  1. Unscrew your Mote and disconnect the battery from the Waveshare module (the main board with the screen).
  2. Hold the boot button on the Waveshare and plug it into your computer
  3. Go to pubmote.com on chrome (other browsers don’t support web serial), hit connect, and select one of the serial connections that pops up (note that Bluetooth isn’t supported for flashing).
  4. Once connected, you can select a firmware and flash your update as the site instructs.

If anybody sees issues with this, let me know and I’ll make updates!

2026-03-10 16:04
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Hegseth follows Trump’s suggestion war will soon be over by saying US will not stop until Iran ‘decisively defeated’

Tehran residents say the Iranian capital has endured what they described as its worst night of aerial bombardment, as the US defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, followed Donald Trump’s suggestion on Monday the war could soon be over with a warning of more strikes to come.

“We are under heavy bombardment and I can hear back-to-back explosions. The place they hit has caught fire. It’s not clear where it exploded, but the buildings are shaking,” Niloufar, who lives in east Tehran said early on Tuesday, speaking under a pseudonym for security reasons. “They are destroying Iran,” they added, saying there were low-flying jets above.

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Smoke and flames rise at the site of airstrikes on an oil depot in Tehran on March 7, 2026. The United States and Israel launched strikes against Iran on February 28, prompting Iranian retaliation with missile attacks across the region and intensifying concerns about disruption to global energy and transport. (Photo by Sasan / Middle East Images / AFP via Getty Images)
Smoke and flames rise at the site of U.S.–Israeli airstrikes on an oil depot in Tehran on March 7, 2026. Photo: Sasan/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images

Wars have been distinctly out of fashion as of late, especially since the quagmires of Iraq and Afghanistan. Whether those quagmires are to be blamed on “dumb, politically correct wars” in the eyes of War Secretary Pete Hegseth or not, the idea of putting boots on the ground, doing regime change, occupying a country, and putting American lives in danger is political suicide.

By now, President Donald Trump isn’t shying away from calling the war he launched against Iran a “war” as he seeks the trappings of what a powerful president is meant to be doing. But Trump was more obfuscating in his speech to the nation announcing the beginning of the conflict, instead using the phrase George W. Bush used in his infamous 2003 “Mission Accomplished” speech, saying the U.S. had launched “major combat operations” against Iran, before obliquely referring to it later on as a “war” to prepare the viewers at home for “courageous American heroes” being killed in the fighting to come.

Trump has since gleefully argued that “wars can be fought ‘forever’” to those worried about America running low on munitions to use against Iran. When asked whether Americans should be concerned about retaliatory strikes on the homeland, Trump responded, “I guess,” and added, “When you go to war, some people will die.”

Related

U.S. Military Refuses to Endorse Trump Claim That Iran Bombed Girls’ School

After American stealth bombers struck Iranian nuclear facilities last June, Vice President JD Vance claimed the United States was not at war with Iran, or even Iran’s government, but only with “Iran’s nuclear program.” Absent the ability to split such fine hairs, Republicans have by and large stuck to calling the war a “decisive action,” an “extraordinary mission,” or an “intervention” — but have faltered under basic scrutiny when asked what those phrases mean in an effort not to trip wires with the American people, a majority of whom do not support the war.

Some have been slightly more agile, with House Speaker Mike Johnson insisting Operation Epic Fury is just that, an “operation” that is “limited in scope, limited in objective.” Some have taken the line that Iran has in fact been the one waging the forever war, against the United States, with the House Republican Foreign Affairs Committee publishing an image boasting that “President Trump is ending the forever war that Iran has waged against America for the last 47 years.” Others have simply tripped over themselves, with Sen. Markwayne Mullin declaring “This is war,” before correcting himself after being pressed by a journalist, saying “They’ve called it war” and “We haven’t declared war,” and that him saying it was a war “was a misspoke.” Mullin has since been nominated to lead the Department of Homeland Security.

Strangely, though, this allergy has also been exhibited by many of the war’s ostensible critics, though these lines rarely go much further. Certain Democratic members of Congress, like Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa., and Rep. Greg Landsman, D-Ohio, have outright supported the war, borrowing language from the Republicans — the latter called it a “military intervention” — and saying targeting “missile systems and core infrastructure” apparently does not count as a war.

Others attempted some sort of bizarre middle ground, with Rep. Jared Golden, D-Maine, warning the “hostilities” against Iran were “not an illegal war but could become one.” Even those straightforwardly against the war have made bizarre missteps, with Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., still borrowing Trump’s preferred framing in the headline of her statement condemning the war, calling it “combat operations” against Iran.

The root of this hesitation by both Republicans and Democrats stems from the memory of Iraq and Afghanistan, and how estimates of operations stretched from weeks and months to years and years, in which thousands of American soldiers died and hundreds of thousands of civilians were killed. Already the estimated duration of the war with Iran has stretched from four weeks to six to even potentially eight, according to Hegseth.

Related

Facing Years in Prison for Drone Leak, Daniel Hale Makes His Case Against U.S. Assassination Program

Barack Obama understood Americans’ fears about reentering open-ended conflicts, choosing instead to greatly expand the drone program that has informed how this war is now being executed. It also led him to describe his military interventions against the Islamic State as being explicitly nothing like Bush’s open-ended wars, where “ground troops” for combat purposes would not be returning to Iraq after the much-heralded withdrawal. Of the thousands of U.S. troops Obama ended up sending to Iraq, 2,500 still remain, with the Trump administration rejecting votes in the Iraqi Parliament that declared the U.S. military must withdraw, threatening to seize 90 percent of Iraq’s national budget (in oil revenues held at the Federal Reserve) if such measures were taken, and again threatening the country with similar punishment if it includes anti-American parties in its next government.

The war against Iran is being talked about in similar terms, of an operation that will involve no ground troops, will involve no “nation-building quagmires,” and in the words of Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., will be a “conflict that should be very short and sweet.” As Iran proves it is not willing to immediately capitulate, reports have emerged of preparations being made for potentially months of bombardment. Ground troops, once off the table, were almost immediately put back on the table. Trump at one point saw an off-ramp within only a few days, and now demands Iran’s “unconditional surrender,” with the White House as the decider of Iran’s next leader after their assassination of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. His son Mojtaba Khamenei, the new Supreme Leader of Iran as elected by the Assembly of Experts, is apparently “unacceptable,” according to Trump.

In another echo of recent history, then-Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld used similar language about Iraq. He insisted troops were not bogged down in a “quagmire” like Vietnam and said Saddam Hussein should only be discussing “unconditional surrender” with the United States, with no other type of deal being acceptable. Rumsfeld, however, said the latter at the beginning of April 2003, days after the war against Iraq was launched, where American troops were rapidly advancing toward Baghdad.

Related

With World’s Eyes on Iran, Israel Locks Down the West Bank

Trump is making these pronouncements as his allies conversely insist that this not-at-all-a-war will be brief, targeted, precise, and still sink the “mothership of terrorism,” as Sen. Lindsey Graham has put it. Trump has signaled he wants to “go in and clean out everything,” to wipe out Iran’s leadership structure, and install a new leader to his liking. The only way this was possible in Iraq was after the U.S. invaded with hundreds of thousands of ground troops and built a new administration from the ground up with an American viceroy, himself on the ground in Baghdad in a militarily-secured compound, constantly battling with the populace.

The promise of an airpower-only regime change war, innately at odds with reality, is dissolving. Trump is reportedly considering a ground operation, potentially even with Israeli special forces, to seize the enriched uranium in Isfahan that was buried after America’s strikes last June.

The promise of an airpower-only regime change war, innately at odds with reality, is dissolving.

Just as soon as such talk floated in the air, reports began to emerge of a potentially much larger operation to seize Kharg Island, where thousands of Iranians live, and which 90 percent of Iran’s oil exports run through. Reports continue to oscillate between plans for such expansions, including being open to assassinating the younger Khamenei, and Trump’s renewed insistences that the war is “very complete, pretty much” and that they are “very far” ahead of schedule (while in the same breath proposing a military operation to take over the Strait of Hormuz).

Despite these claims of already decimating Iran’s military, Iranian missiles continue to strike Israel with only hours, sometimes even minutes, between attacks, even as its barrages have become smaller. Every indication suggests war against Iran will not be quick like removing Nicolás Maduro in Venezuela. The country’s resolve is clear: When NBC News anchor Tom Llamas asked Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi last week if he feared a potential American invasion, Araghchi replied, “No, we are waiting for them.”

The post It’s a War With Iran, Not an “Intervention” appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 13:29

Senate Majority Leader John Thune made clear that an elections bill known as the SAVE America Act faces an unlikely path to passage.

2026-03-10 16:04
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Some administration officials snipe about having to wear middling footwear instead of their upmarket favorites

Sitting behind the Resolute desk, Donald Trump fixed his gaze on JD Vance’s and Marco Rubio’s feet. “Marco, JD, you guys have s—y shoes,” said the US president, consulting a catalogue and asking their shoe size. Rubio said 11.5 and Vance 13. Trump leaned back in his chair and remarked: “You can tell a lot about a man by his shoe size.”

The story is recounted in a Wall Street Journal newspaper report that tells how officials, advisers and visiting allies are quietly acquiring leather dress shoes courtesy of Trump, who presents them with the enthusiasm of a travelling salesman.

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-10 13:27

Co-founders of Moltbook, a platform for artificial intelligence agents, will join tech giant’s AI research unit

Facebook parent Meta Platforms said on Tuesday it had acquired Moltbook, a social networking platform built for artificial intelligence agents, bringing the company’s founders into its AI research division.

The deal will bring Moltbook co-founders Matt Schlicht and Ben Parr into Meta Superintelligence Labs, the unit led by Alexandr Wang, former Scale AI CEO, which Meta purchased for $14.8bn. Meta did not disclose financial terms of the deal. Schlicht and Parr are expected to begin at Meta Superintelligence Labs on 16 March.

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2026-03-10 16:04
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Want to improve your chances of gold investing success this March? Start by answering these three critical questions.

2026-03-10 16:04
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President Trump will issue an executive order to remove Anthropic's AI technology from agencies across the executive branch, sources familiar with the matter tell CBS News.

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

The IRS allows investors to defer taxes on physical gold gains — but only if they know the right strategies to use.

2026-03-10 16:04
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Don't worry, we've broken down where the most popular channels can be found on live TV streaming services.

2026-03-10 20:04
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No injuries reported but security boosted at US and Israeli diplomatic buildings in Toronto and Ottawa

Two men fired multiple shots at the US consulate in Toronto early on Tuesday in what police described as a “national security incident”, prompting beefed-up protection for US and Israeli diplomatic buildings in the city.

The individuals approached the consulate in downtown Toronto at about 4.30am ET, exited a white SUV and fired several rounds from a handgun at the consulate, Frank Barredo, Toronto’s police deputy chief, told reporters.

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2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 13:14

Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey has commuted the death sentence of Charles "Sonny" Burton, who was not in the building when the victim was killed.

2026-03-10 16:04
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When it comes to European Union territory, you can't go much further east than Cyprus. So far east, in fact, that it's within reach of Iran's weapons.

2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 13:02

The Magpies welcome Lamine Yamal and company to St. James' Park for the second time this season.

2026-03-10 16:04
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The subscription costs $8 less than Philo Core.

2026-03-10 16:04
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The most decorated American Winter Paralympian had her left leg amputated at age 9 and her right leg amputated at age 14.

2026-03-10 16:04
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OpenAI added help for more than 70 different math and science concepts in algebra, physics and geometry.

2026-03-10 16:04
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An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Register: AI can reverse engineer machine code and find vulnerabilities in ancient legacy architectures, says Microsoft Azure CTO Mark Russinovich, who used his own Apple II code from 40 years ago as an example. Russinovich wrote: "We are entering an era of automated, AI-accelerated vulnerability discovery that will be leveraged by both defenders and attackers." In May 1986, Russinovich wrote a utility called Enhancer for the Apple II personal computer. The utility, written in 6502 machine language, added the ability to use a variable or BASIC expression for the destination of a GOTO, GOSUB, or RESTORE command, whereas without modification Applesoft BASIC would only accept a line number. Russinovich had Claude Opus 4.6, released early last month, look over the code. It decompiled the machine language and found several security issues, including a case of "silent incorrect behavior" where, if the destination line was not found, the program would set the pointer to the following line or past the end of the program, instead of reporting an error. The fix would be to check the carry flag, which is set if the line is not found, and branch to an error. The existence of the vulnerability in Apple II type-in code has only amusement value, but the ability of AI to decompile embedded code and find vulnerabilities is a concern. "Billions of legacy microcontrollers exist globally, many likely running fragile or poorly audited firmware like this," said one comment to Russinovich's post.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-10 13:00

Tracy Chevalier announces registration scheme at the London Book Fair as AI works flood market

The Society of Authors (SoA) has launched a scheme to help identify works written by humans in a market increasingly flooded by AI-generated books.

The scheme is the first of its kind launched by a UK trade association, and allows authors to register their books and download a “Human Authored” logo to display on their back cover.

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2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 12:44

Windows 10 support ended back in October. Here's how to keep access to Windows 10 security updates without spending a dime.

2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 12:36

A Texas mother is proud her child is following in her footsteps. But as President Trump attacks Iran, she worries about what he could face as a soldier.

2026-03-10 16:04
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With its credibility swaying in the wake of a betting scandal, the very last thing the league needed was to be in business with a prediction platform

The timing of the suspensions was unfortunate. Or perhaps it was karmically inevitable.

Forty-two days after Major League Soccer announced a new partnership with Polymarket – a prediction platform that lets its users bet on just about anything, including whether, when, and where one country will bomb another – a press release went out. A pair of Ghanaian-born former MLS players, Derrick Jones and Yaw Yeboah, had been banned from the league for life for betting on games, including their own.

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.

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2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 12:19

While FreeBSD 15.x may be getting all the attention, the FreeBSD 14.x branch continues to be updated for the more conservative users among us. FreeBSD 14.4 has been released today, and brings with it updated versions of OpenSSH, OpenZFS, and Bhyve virtual machines can now share files with their host over 9pfs – among other things, of course.

2026-03-10 16:04
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A billionaire is funding a sustainable development project on the west African island that makes the local population stewards of its future

At the crumbling colonial farm buildings in Porto Real, agricultural worker Kimilson Lima, 43, has signed the agreement and he’s happy. “With this money we can have a proper floor in the house,” he said. “And an inside toilet.”

Lima is part of a ground-breaking experiment on the West African island of Príncipe, where villagers who agree to follow an environmental protection code will reap a quarterly dividend. To date nearly 3,000 have joined the Faya Foundation’s project, more than 60% of the adult population. The first payment of €816 (£708) has just been delivered, a large amount of money on the island. “This will be truly transformative, both for nature and for the people,” said the president of the self-governing region, Felipe Nascimento.

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2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-11 16:54

Mobile World Congress has ended. The week of new reveals included radical new designs such as Honor's Robot Phone, AI-powered comfort robots, a concept hypercar and so many gadgets.

2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 14:13

Someone fired shots at the U.S. consulate in Toronto, authorities said, days after shots were fired at synagogues in the Canadian city.

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2026-03-10 19:40

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said Tuesday that it would be the "most intense day" of strikes against Iran so far.

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Iranian airstrikes have shaken Persian Gulf countries, undermining their reputations as havens of wealth and stability and forcing them to take sides in a war they opposed.

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Axios reports that Meta has acquired Moltbook, the viral, Reddit-like social network designed for AI agents. Humans are welcome, but only to observe. Axios reports: The deal brings Moltbook's creators -- Matt Schlicht and Ben Parr -- into Meta Superintelligence Labs (MSL), the unit run by former Scale AI CEO Alexandr Wang. Meta did not disclose Moltbook's purchase price. The deal is expected to close mid-March, Meta says, with the pair starting at MSL on March 16. When it launched in late January, Moltbook was labeled the "most interesting place on the internet" by open-source developer and writer Simon Willison. "Browsing around Moltbook is so much fun. A lot of it is the expected science fiction slop, with agents pondering consciousness and identity. There's also a ton of genuinely useful information, especially on m/todayilearned." In an internal post seen by Axios, Meta's Vishal Shah said existing Moltbook customers can temporarily continue using the platform. "The Moltbook team has given agents a way to verify their identity and connect with one another on their human's behalf," Shah says. "This establishes a registry where agents are verified and tethered to human owners." He added: "Their team has unlocked new ways for agents to interact, share content, and coordinate complex tasks."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 11:49

According to U.S. Central Command, over 5,000 targets were struck and 50 Iranian vessels were damaged or destroyed in the first 10 days of the war with Iran.

2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 11:47

China’s economic statecraft has been exposed by US attacks on Iran and Venezuela Expert comment jon.wallace

The US strikes raise questions over China’s policy to forge energy and trade ties with US rivals. But in the long term, Beijing sees itself gaining diplomatic capital through a contrasting role as a stable and peaceful superpower.

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi listens to a question at a press conference at the National People's Congress on 8 March 2026 in Beijing, China.

The US attack this month on Iran, coupled with that on Venezuela in January, register as a blow to China’s diplomatic and economic statecraft. Beijing has forged a comprehensive relationship with both countries that spanned diplomacy, energy, trade, infrastructure and even military cooperation.

China has a ‘Comprehensive Strategic Partnership’ with Iran, denoting one of the highest tiers in China’s hierarchy of diplomatic ties. Significant investments are involved. As part of the partnership, in 2021 Beijing and Tehran signed a 25-year, $400 billion deal to invest in Iran’s energy, infrastructure and banking sectors, partly in exchange for discounted oil exports to China. Tehran exported more than an estimated 80 per cent of its oil to China in 2025, representing a lifeline for the regime.

Other aspects of China’s involvement in Iran include the construction of new railway lines from Tehran to Hamadan and Sanandaj, as well as from Kermanshah to Khosravi. Ports, airport and navigation systems are also under development, according to local media reports, and a $2.1 billion project to upgrade the Abadan refinery is underway.

China enjoys an ‘All-Weather Strategic Partnership’ with Venezuela, a term that also indicates a significant level of diplomatic affinity. China received three quarters of Venezuelan oil exports in 2025, according to Reuters, using oil to repay significant loans. 

But now, as the US strikes these Chinese partners and goes after Chinese strategic assets (such as two ports in the Panama Canal controlled by a Hong Kong Chinese company), Beijing is finding that its strategy of courting US adversaries threatens to jeopardize some of its interests.

Broadening out this theme are the cases of Ukraine and, potentially, Cuba. In Ukraine, China – as a staunch partner to Russia – finds itself on the opposing side to the US-led West. In Cuba, where President Donald Trump has said he wants to effect a ‘friendly takeover’, China has significant commercial ties and some aspects of military cooperation.

US intentions

All this raises a question: is US action in Iran, Venezuela and Cuba intended to impede China’s statecraft? Clear answers remain elusive. 

President Donald Trump has justified the Iran intervention for reasons including supporting Iranian protestors, combating Iran’s regional network of proxy groups, and eliminating its ballistic missile programme. 

The Venezuelan attack had a similar range of justifications, from acting as a judicial extraction mission against an alleged ‘narco-terrorist’ (former Venezuelan president, Nicolás Maduro), and compensation for supposedly stolen US energy assets. In each case, the prime motivation appears to have been specific to each country as opposed to part of a broader strategy to counter Beijing’s influence. 

China’s pragmatism revealed by lack of concrete support for Tehran

Regardless of US motivations, its attacks on Iran and Venezuela have demonstrated the limits of China’s support for countries with which it professed to share ‘strategic partnerships’ – and the strain of pragmatism in Beijing’s foreign policy.

China has resisted taking concrete action against the US in response to the strikes on its partners. Not only that, but it appears likely to go ahead with plans to host Trump for a summit at the end of the month. Asked this week if China would still host the US president, Wang Yi, China’s foreign minister, did not answer directly but hinted the summit was still on, saying ‘the agenda of high-level exchanges is already on the table’.

To be sure, Beijing has been forthright in its verbal criticism of US operations this year. After the abduction of Maduro, Wang Yi said: ‘We have never believed that any country can act as the world’s police, nor do we accept that any nation can declare itself the world’s judge’.

Beijing has clearly demonstrated that ties with Iran and Venezuela do not rank anywhere close to the utility it sees in trying to improve relations with the Trump White House.

Addressing Iran, he said it was ‘unacceptable for the US and Israel to launch attacks against Iran… still less to blatantly assassinate a leader of a sovereign country and instigate regime change’.

‘This was a war that should never have happened, and a war that benefited no one,’ he said on Sunday, portraying China as ‘the world’s most important force of peace, stability and justice’. Wang reiterated Beijing’s call for an immediate ceasefire to ‘prevent the situation from escalating and avoid the spillover and spread of the flames of war’.

But the reality is that in spite of its pledges of partnership, and its public condemnations, Beijing has clearly demonstrated that ties with Iran and Venezuela do not rank anywhere close to the utility it sees in trying to improve relations with the Trump White House, and prevent it from again turning vengeful on China. 

Washington retains a panoply of economic sanctions against China, including hundreds of Chinese companies identified on the so-called ‘entity list’, a separate regime of restrictions on semiconductor exports, and a range of other bans related to military, human rights, narcotics, cybersecurity, surveillance and other issues. 

It also maintains some tariffs on Chinese exports to the US. The Chinese economy has not been excessively hindered by these measures – exports, for instance, have surged this year. But Beijing still prioritizes preventing a new round of trade war with Washington.

China may benefit from portraying itself as the stable superpower

Beijing’s inaction in support of its partners may cause some short-term damage to China’s prestige – and the perceived value of its ‘strategic partnerships’. But China will also see merit in its approach over the long-term.

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-10 11:47

So I stored my Onewheel this winter and checked the charge level a couple of times during and it stayed at 89% all winter.

I think I read that it would discharge during winter so I should check up on it to not let it decharge completely to 0%.

Is this normal?

submitted by /u/Holm76
[link] [comments]

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-10 11:45

The University of Phoenix expects enrollment to grow as the Education Department softens oversight of for-profit schools, despite industry concerns.

2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 11:40

Travelers are flocking to the famously arid desert covered in a blanket of pink, purple and yellow wildflowers

After a winter of record rainfall, a superbloom has erupted in Death Valley, covering the famously arid desert in a blanket of vibrant pink, purple and yellow flowers. As travelers from around the world make their way to the desert, they can expect to be greeted by fragrant air and a quilt of delicate hues.

While there is no official definition for a superbloom, the National Park Service uses the term to “describe conditions when so many flowers are present that they appear as swaths of color across the landscape, rather than isolated plants, especially striking at low elevations where the ground is typically sand, gravel and rock”

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2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 11:40

Robert McElroy goes further than pope has done and says conflict fails ‘criterion of right intention’

Cardinal Robert W McElroy, the archbishop of Washington DC, has said that the US-Israeli war with Iran is “not morally legitimate”, going further than the pope has done in his more moderate appeals for an end to the war.

In an interview with the Catholic Standard this week, McElroy said: “The criterion of just cause is not met because our country was not responding to an existing or imminent and objectively verifiable attack by Iran.”

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2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 11:38

Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news

Markets are pricing in a chance that the Bank of England could cut interest rates this year, but a cut next week looks unlikely, says Kathleen Brooks, of the broker XTB.

There is currently 0.4 rate cuts priced in for this year, and UK rates are expected to end the year at 3.65%, down from the current level of 3.75%. There is a 7.2% chance of a rate cut priced in for the BOE’s meeting next week.

While we doubt that a rate cut is on the cards, the Bank of England will need to use next week’s meeting to signal their future intentions. Will they look through the crisis in the Middle East as a temporary spike in commodity prices and focus on the weakening economy? Or will the situation have died down enough for them to signal that further rate cuts are coming, albeit with a small delay? Either way, next week’s meeting is still important for sterling and UK bond markets.

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2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 11:33

Justice secretary says changes designed to reduce courts backlog will benefit remand rates

We can bring you some lines from the Reform press conference (see post at 10.10). Sky News’ political editor Beth Rigby asked Nigel Farage about Reform’s inconsistent position over the UK’s policy in regard to the US-Israeli war with Iran. She asks how voters can trust the party’s national security.

“Given that we can’t even send a Royal Naval vessel to defend British sovereign territory and an RAF base, we certainly don’t have the capability to offer anything of any value to the Americans or the Israelis,” Farage said, describing the Royal Navy as a “catastrophe”.

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2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 11:16

Eight people were killed by 18-year-old in Canada, who had described violent scenarios involving guns to ChatGPT

The family of a child critically injured one of Canada’s worst mass shootings is suing OpenAI, arguing the technology company could have prevented the attack on a school last month.

The lawsuit comes days after the head of OpenAI said he would apologize to the families of a remote Canadian town after violence shattered the tight-knit community.

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2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 11:13

The easiest way to track the best tech sales this spring.

2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 11:12

The 600kg Van Allen probe A will re-enter Tuesday evening, with most of it burning before reaching Earth’s surface

Parts of a giant Nasa satellite will crash to Earth on Tuesday evening, the US space agency is warning – but the chance of being struck is extremely low.

According to the US military’s Space Force, the roughly 1,323lb (600kg) spacecraft, one of twin probes launched in 2012 to investigate the Van Allen radiation belt, is estimated to re-enter Earth’s atmosphere at about 7.45pm EDT.

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2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 11:10

The office that polices attorney misconduct in Washington, D.C., has filed ethics charges against Justice Department pardon attorney Ed Martin.

2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 11:00

Jockey Club says aim is to get more women watching racing and revival is not a response to ‘woke’ jibes

First and foremost, it is a huge sporting event, billed by its fans as the Olympics of jump racing – but it can also act as a social barometer, giving clues as to the state and mood of the nation.

This year’s Cheltenham festival, which began on Tuesday, feels a little like a step back in time with the return of “Ladies Day” after a five-year hiatus and a reduction in the price of a pint.

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2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 11:00

German publishers and advertising groups are urging regulators to fine Apple over its App Tracking Transparency (ATT) system, arguing it unfairly restricts access to advertising data while allowing Apple to remain the central gatekeeper -- without subjecting its own apps to the same restrictions. If Germany's antitrust authority does rule against Apple, the company could face fines of up to 10% of its global revenue. 9to5Mac reports: One of the countries investigating whether ATT is anticompetitive is Germany. Last year, in an attempt to appease the country's antitrust watchdog, the company proposed several changes to the framework's rules. From Reuters' original coverage of Apple's changes proposals: "Apple had agreed to introduce neutral consent prompts for both its own services and third-party apps, and to largely align the wording, content and visual design of these messages, said Andreas Mundt, head of Germany's Bundeskartellamt. The company also proposed simplifying the consent process so developers can obtain user permission for advertising-related data processing in a way that complies with data protection law." [...] At the time, German regulators launched a consultation with industry publications to determine whether the proposals addressed their concerns. As it turns out, the answer was a hard no. As Reuters reported today: "Apple's proposed changes to its app tracking rules do not resolve antitrust issues in the mobile advertising market, associations representing German publishers and advertisers said on Tuesday as they urged the country's antitrust authority to slap a fine on the U.S. tech giant. [...] 'The proposed commitments would not change the negative effects of the App Tracking Transparency Framework,' Bernd Nauen, chief executive of the German Advertising Federation, said in a joint letter signed by the trade bodies. 'Apple would remain the data gatekeeper and would continue to decide who gets access to advertising-relevant data and how companies can communicate with their end customers,' he said."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 10:46

Can Arne Slot's Reds handle the febrile atmosphere of RAMS Park?

2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 10:44
  • Holiday currently chairs ownership group Mercury13

  • Mercury13 completed purchase of FC Badalona women

  • NWSL plays in summer, opposite of European leagues

Two-time Olympic Gold medalist and 2015 World Cup winner Lauren Holiday has called for the global harmonisation of the women’s soccer calendar to help grow the sport.

Doing so could echo a recent move by Major League Soccer to move to a European, fall-to-spring schedule from July 2027. Holiday, a former USWNT forward, believes the women’s game could follow their example, or do the opposite and have everyone play through the summer.

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

George Michael: The Faith Tour will receive a global cinema release alongside previously unheard music from his Wham! and solo discographies

A long lost film centered on George Michael’s landmark 1988 Faith tour is set for cinema release later this year, in addition to a new album of previously unheard live performances.

George Michael: The Faith Tour is being lined up for a global big screen rollout, with footage taken from a previously unseen 14 camera shoot of Michael’s performance at Paris’ Bercy Arena in 1988. A press release bills the project as a tour de force in archival film-making, celebrating Michael’s ambition and artistry at its peak.

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2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 10:34

I have had the OG pint (with top mounted battery extender) for 6 years now and it’s time for a new board. I was riding this one with stock slick tire, and no other mods or upgrades. The size and portability are important, so I’m looking to stick with pint. Leaning toward the pint X but would like a different tire. I mostly ride on street with light dirt/offroading, but nothing too gnarly. What are the thoughts on Future Motion’s performance pint tire? I was also considering Float Life’s enduro (which is only currently available in the soft compound option). Throw me your advice!

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2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 10:30

Pentagon chief spoke with Gen Dan Caine at a press conference and blamed Iran for civilian casualties

The Pentagon chief, Pete Hegseth, has warned that Tuesday would be the “most intense” day of US strikes yet, even as he blamed Iran for civilian casualties by claiming its forces were firing missiles from schools and hospitals.

Speaking alongside Gen Dan Caine, the chair of the joint chiefs of staff, Hegseth alleged Iran was deliberately firing missiles from schools and hospitals, describing the country’s leadership as “desperate and scrambling like the terrorist cowards they are”.

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2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 10:27

Reform leader’s latest comment contrasts with earlier statement that ‘gloves need to come off’

Nigel Farage has been accused of making a U-turn after he said Britain should not get involved in Donald Trump’s war with Iran.

His comments on Tuesday contrasted with his previous assertion that the “gloves need to come off” when dealing with Iran.

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2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 10:27

The Fed will address interest rates again next week. But will mortgage interest rates decline after the meeting?

2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 10:17

If you're filing for bankruptcy soon, the required waiting periods could have an impact on your approach.

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

Salem Al-Salem faces landmark trial over alleged role in crackdown on protests in Damascus in 2011

A former Syrian colonel has appeared in a London court to face charges of crimes against humanity in the first prosecution of its kind in England and Wales.

Salem Al-Salem is charged with murder and torture, crimes allegedly committed during the Syrian government’s violent crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrations in Damascus in 2011.

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2026-03-11 20:04
2026-03-10 10:02

Finland’s president, Alexander Stubb, on why Europe needs flexible integration 17 March 2026 — 12:30PM TO 1:15PM Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online

Join us at Chatham House to hear from President Stubb on the need for Europe to adapt to a rapidly changing world.

Join us at Chatham House to hear from President Alexander Stubb on the need for Europe to adapt to a rapidly changing world.

Europe is entering a period in which it is being severely tested. Geopolitical, economic and technological changes are heightening the sense of urgency across the continent to provide a coherent response to the many challenges Europe faces.

Alexander Stubb, President of Finland, will outline why he believes a more flexible model of European integration is essential for the continent to remain resilient, competitive and unified. He will reflect on Europe’s current security environment, the pressures on multilateral cooperation, and the need for pragmatic mechanisms to enable countries to enact much-needed change at pace, all still with a shared sense of purpose.

President Stubb will discuss how differentiated integration could strengthen the EU’s ability to respond to global challenges, from defence and energy to technology and economic security. He will also consider the political realities facing Europe in an era of shifting alliances and rising geopolitical tension, and outline how greater flexibility could help the continent protect its interests and values.

2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 10:01

TORONTO, March 10, 2026 — Xanadu Quantum Technologies Inc., a leading photonic quantum computing company, today announced a major step forward in bringing quantum computing closer to real-world aerospace and engineering applications by leveraging AMD HPC and AI technologies. By combining Xanadu’s PennyLane quantum software with AMD high-performance computing solutions on the AMD DevCloud, Xanadu successfully demonstrated how advanced aerospace simulations can be prepared and run in a hybrid quantum-classical environment.

Aerospace engineers rely on computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations to optimize design and enhance aircraft efficiency. Xanadu, powered by the AMD DevCloud, has successfully demonstrated CFD simulations within a hybrid quantum-classical program, showcasing the significant potential of quantum computing for the industry. The work centered on the compilation and execution of a CFD model with 256×256 matrix elements. This hybrid program utilized 20 qubits and approximately 35 million quantum gates, pushing the boundaries of current CFD quantum simulations. As the industry advances toward fault-tolerant quantum computing, the ability to compile and optimize programs of this scale will become a critical competitive advantage. This milestone demonstrates that Xanadu and AMD can support next-generation quantum-classical applications by combining their respective technologies and expertise, helping transition quantum computing from research environments toward industrial use in aerospace and engineering.

“Seeing AMD high-performance compute boost the performance of PennyLane is a clear proof point of how quantum and classical technologies can effectively work together,” said Madhu Rangarajan, Corporate Vice President, Compute and Enterprise AI, AMD. “This work further underscores the importance of seamless integration between classical and quantum computing. The work between AMD and Xanadu expands the boundaries of what is possible for users investigating hybrid quantum/classical computing using AMD compute today.”

“Accelerating quantum applications for the aerospace industry requires close collaboration between quantum software and high-performance computing,” said Christian Weedbrook, Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Xanadu. “Our partnership with AMD brings these capabilities together to address real engineering challenges today. By optimizing how large-scale quantum programs are compiled and simulated, we are helping ensure the aerospace industry is ready to adopt fault-tolerant quantum computing as soon as it becomes available.”

The collaboration has also improved the performance of a core quantum algorithm, the Quantum Singular Value Transformation (QSVT), which is a key driver for a variety of applications, including those relevant to aerospace engineering. Xanadu found that by moving from a traditional CPU to a single AMD GPU, the team reduced simulation time by 25 times, demonstrating the immediate value of high-performance computing in accelerating quantum workflows. Using PennyLane’s Catalyst compiler, they also translated a 68-qubit quantum circuit into more than 15 million hardware-optimized gates, preparing it for future fault-tolerant quantum systems.

As aerospace organizations look to turn quantum research into practical advantage, scalable software and powerful computing infrastructure will be essential. Through their partnership, Xanadu and AMD are bringing quantum and classical technologies together in a way that helps industry prepare today for the next generation of quantum computers.

About Xanadu

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


Source: Xanadu

The post Xanadu and AMD Accelerate Quantum Computing for Aerospace and Engineering appeared first on HPCwire.

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

Fewer than 100 days out, host cities haven’t received promised funding, and fears about ICE’s presence are widespread

On Sunday 19 July, the final match of the 2026 Fifa World Cup will be played in East Rutherford, New Jersey. For one day, our community will be the center of the world.

But as that moment approaches, I find myself spending less time thinking about the games at MetLife Stadium, and more time worrying about whether we are ready. Because if Washington doesn’t get its act together, we risk turning a generational opportunity into an international embarrassment.

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

The AI assistant can help you navigate Photoshop and make changes for you.

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

Private equity firm EQT AB is reportedly exploring a sale of SUSE that could value the open-source Linux pioneer at up to $6 billion, roughly doubling the valuation since EQT took the company private in 2023. Reuters reports: EQT "has hired investment bank Arma Partners to sound out a group of private equity investors for a possible sale of the company, said the sources, who requested anonymity to discuss confidential matters. The deliberations are at "an early stage and there is no certainty that EQT will proceed with "a transaction, the sources said. [...] The potential deal comes amid a broader selloff in software stocks, which has disrupted mergers and acquisitions activity. Investors are "concerned that new artificial intelligence tools could displace many existing software products, weighing on technology "valuations and making deals harder to price. Some investors, however, see Luxembourg-headquartered SUSE as a potential beneficiary of AI adoption, arguing that demand for enterprise-grade infrastructure software is likely to grow as companies build and deploy more AI applications. The company generates about $800 million in revenue and more than $250 million in earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) and could fetch between $4 billion and $6 billion in a sale, the sources said.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 09:55
  • Russian loses to Katerina Siniakova in three sets

  • Teenager throws racket on several occasions

Mirra Andreeva’s Indian Wells title defense met a bad-tempered end on Monday as Katerina Siniakova stunned the Russian teenager 4-6, 7-6, 6-3.

The 18-year-old opened her bid to retain her crown with a dominant 6-0, 6-0 demolition of Solana Sierra. But she was in trouble early and often against Siniakova, the world No 44, in a rollercoaster contest that ended with a shot from the Czech that hit the net cord and dribbled over in one last frustrating moment.

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2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 09:52

Yes, many Americans are struggling, but it’s good to know the first family can still afford Earth’s most expensive provisions. Morale is everything, isn’t it?

In the absence of any clearly and consistently stated aims from the US administration, maybe each day of the Iran war just needs a moodboard description. In which case, Sunday was a tale of two nepo babies. In Iran, the high-level executive search for the new ayatollah concluded that the old ayatollah’s son was the best man for the position. It’s not for me to assess his job prospects, but you’d hope his supermarket order doesn’t contain any “ripen at home” pears.

Meanwhile, across the world, in LA, Donald Trump’s eldest granddaughter posted a YouTube video titled “I Brought My Secret Service to Erewhon”. By way of background, Erewhon is Earth’s most pretentiously extravagant hipster food shop, and, as Kai was at pains to brag, “the most expensive grocery store pretty much out there. Everything’s crazy expensive! So we’re going to get my favourite stuff.”

Marina Hyde is a Guardian columnist

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

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2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 09:52

ALBANY, N.Y. and FREMONT, Calif., March 10, 2026 — IBM and Lam Research Corp. today announced a collaboration aimed at developing new processes and materials to support sub-1nm logic scaling. Building on a long record of successful partnerships, the new agreement will focus on the joint development of novel materials, fabrication processes, and High-NA EUV lithography processes to advance IBM’s logic scaling roadmap.

Mukesh Khare, GM of IBM Semiconductors and VP of Hybrid Cloud at IBM Research; Vahid Vahedi, Chief Technology and Sustainability Officer at Lam Research.

IBM and Lam have collaborated for more than a decade to advance logic fabrication, notably enabling early generations of 7nm, nanosheet, and EUV process technologies. Under this new five-year agreement, the companies intend to extend logic scaling to the sub-1nm node. The work will focus on developing new materials, advanced etch and deposition capabilities for increasingly complex device architectures, and new High-NA EUV lithography processes to enable next-generation interconnect and device patterning and accelerate industry adoption.

“Lam has been a critical partner to IBM for over a decade, contributing to key breakthroughs in logic scaling and device architecture such as nanosheet and the world’s first 2nm node chip, unveiled by IBM in 2021,” said Mukesh Khare, GM of IBM Semiconductors and VP of Hybrid Cloud, IBM Research. “We are thrilled to be expanding our collaboration to tackle the next set of challenges to enable High-NA EUV lithography and sub-1nm nodes.”

“As the industry enters a new era of 3D scaling, progress depends on rethinking how materials, processes, and lithography come together as a single, high-density system,” said Vahid Vahedi, chief technology and sustainability officer at Lam Research. “We are proud to build on our successful collaboration with IBM to drive High‑NA EUV dry resist and process breakthroughs, accelerating the development of lower power and higher performance transistors that will be critical for AI era.”

Using IBM’s advanced research capabilities at the NY Creates Albany NanoTech Complex and Lam’s end-to-end process tools and innovations, including Aether dry resist technology, Kiyo and Akara etch platforms, Striker and ALTUS Halo deposition systems, and advanced packaging technologies — the teams will build and validate full process flows for nanosheet and nanostack devices and backside power delivery. Together, these capabilities are aimed at allowing High‑NA EUV patterns to be reliably transferred into real device layers with high yield and enabling continued scaling, improved performance, and viable paths to production for future logic devices.

About Lam Research 

Lam Research Corporation is a global supplier of innovative wafer fabrication equipment and services to the semiconductor industry. Lam’s equipment and services allow customers to build smaller and better-performing devices. In fact, today, nearly every advanced chip is built with Lam technology. We combine superior systems engineering, technology leadership, and a strong values-based culture, with an unwavering commitment to our customers. Lam Research (Nasdaq: LRCX) is a FORTUNE 500 company headquartered in Fremont, Calif., with operations around the globe. Learn more at www.lamresearch.com.

About IBM

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


Source: IBM

The post IBM and Lam Research Announce Collaboration to Advance Sub-1nm Logic Scaling appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 09:50

Decades after its first deadline, the Equal Rights Amendment is back in the courtroom as plaintiffs demand a federal judge finally recognize it as part of the U.S. Constitution.

Arguments are scheduled for March 24, 2026 in the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts before Judge William G. Young in Equal Means Equal v. Trump. In a complaint filed in April 2025, Equal Means Equal (EME), a project from the non-profit Heroica Foundation, is suing the U.S. government over the constitutionality of the Military Selective Service Act.

EME claims that the Act discriminates against women by requiring only men to register for the draft. Its argument rests on two pillars: the Fifth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause and the Equal Rights Amendment, which EME maintains, is already a ratified part of the Constitution.

Government attorneys want Judge Young to dismiss the case, pointing to a Ninth Circuit decision last year about the Selective Service Act. In Valame v. Trump, a three-judge panel rejected the claim that the ERA was ratified as the Constitution’s 28th Amendment; the case is currently on appeal. The administration also argues that a prior Supreme Court decision, Rostker v. Goldberg (1981), which upheld a male-only draft, defeats a constitutional argument to the contrary made by Equal Means Equal.

Background on the Equal Rights Amendment debate

In 1972, two-thirds of Congress approved the ERA amendment’s language as required under the Constitution’s Article V. Then it sent the ERA to the states for ratification, where 38 states’ votes were needed to formally add it to the Constitution. A joint resolution sent to the states placed a seven-year deadline (March 22, 1979) for the ratification process. In that period, only 35 states ratified the ERA amendment, and Congress extended the deadline by three years to the spring 1982. However, no other states had approved the ERA by the new deadline.

In recent years, Nevada (2017), Illinois (2018), and Virginia (2020) have voted to ratify the ERA, bringing the total to 38 (or the required ¾) of the 50 states. Five states, however—Nebraska, Tennessee, Idaho, Kentucky, and South Dakota—also voted to rescind their ratifications in the 1970s, raising the major and as-yet unaddressed constitutional question whether these recissions are legally valid.

On Dec. 17, 2024, the Archivist of the United States—the federal official responsible for ratifying new amendments— refused a request to add the ERA to the Constitution “due to established legal, judicial, and procedural decisions.” The Archivist cited opinions from the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Council in 2020 and 2022 that the ERA had legally expired and was no longer eligible for certification.

On Jan. 17, 2025, President Joseph R. Biden said that he believed the "Equal Rights Amendment has cleared all necessary hurdles to be formally added to the Constitution as the 28th Amendment.” However, President Biden did not ask the Archivist to certify the proposed amendment to the Constitution, as required by law once the Archivist receives notice that that amendment has been ratified by three-fourths of the states.

Claiming in court the ERA is a ratified amendment

In Valame v. Trump (originally Valame v. Biden), Vikram Valame sued after claiming that he had lost an internship at the Nuclear Regulatory Commission I because he had not registered for the draft as required under the Selective Service law. The U. S. District Court for the Northern District of California ruled against Valame. The Ninth Circuit concurred in July 2025 and issued a written per curiam opinion on Nov. 4. 2025.

The Ninth Circuit rejected Valame’s allegation that a law requiring men, but not women, to register with the Selective Service System violated his rights under the Equal Rights Amendment. Valame, representing himself, had contended to the court that the ERA was ratified as the 28th Amendment to the Constitution.

“The ERA was not ratified by three-fourths of the States prior to the deadline set by Congress, June 30, 1982, and the Archivist of the United States did not publish or certify the ERA,” the Ninth Circuit concluded. “Therefore, the district court properly dismissed Valame’s claims under the ERA for failure to state a plausible claim.” It also ruled against his Equal Protection claim, citing Rostker v. Goldberg.

In Equal Means Equal, plaintiff Jacqueline Fenore and two other women were turned away when attempting to register for the draft because they were female. EME is now suing on their behalf, arguing that under the ERA, “equality of rights shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sex.” The plaintiffs say that the ERA became part of the Constitution when Virginia ratified the amendment in January 2020.

“While there is some disagreement about the ERA’s validity because its ratification deadline expired before the last state ratified, many government officials and constitutional scholars believe the ERA is valid because the deadline is unconstitutional,” EME argues, pointing to Biden’s proclamation and arguments by professors Laurence Tribe and Kathleen M. Sullivan.

The plaintiffs also contend that Valame does not apply to their case, stating, “only a lawsuit filed by women on behalf of women can adequately represent the interests at stake for women.” They add that the Rostker v. Goldberg precedent is no longer controlling law, as it rested on the premise—now defunct—that women could not serve in combat roles.

The government’s argument

In Equal Means Equal, government attorneys point to prior court precedents and Valame v. Trump as reasons that the district court should dismiss the case. “To credit Plaintiffs’ ERA claim would require the Court to ignore Congress’s ratification deadlines and binding Supreme Court precedent,” they argue.

The government points to the Supreme Court’s decision in Dillon v. Gloss (1921), which upheld the inclusion of a seven-year ratification deadline by Congress for the 18th amendment, and to Coleman v. Miller (1939), which said that Congress has the power under Article V to fix a reasonable limit of time for ratification in proposing an amendment.

The attorneys also leaned heavily on Illinois v. Ferriero (2023). In that case, a D.C. district court ruled that Illinois and Nevada “had not clearly and indisputably shown that the Archivist had a duty to certify and publish the ERA or that Congress lacked the authority to place a time limit in the proposing clause of the ERA.” The government also claims that the plaintiffs lack standing, meaning that they have not proven and did not state a claim for relief.

While the Equal Means Equal case moves forward, Vikram Valame is preparing his own appeal to the Supreme Court. In January 2026, he received an extension to file a petition for a writ of certiorari. Justice Elena Kagan approved the request.

Scott Bomboy is the editor in chief of the National Constitution Center.

2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 09:46

Thousands of girls were locked up by Board for the Protection of Women for ‘rehabilitation’

Spain is to formally pardon a group of 53 women who are among thousands who were incarcerated by the Franco regime on the grounds that they were supposedly “fallen or in danger of falling”.

The women were locked up as adolescents by the Board for the Protection of Women, a collection of institutions run by religious orders. The board, which had echoes of Ireland’s notorious Magdalene laundries, was overseen by Carmen Polo, the wife of the dictator Gen Francisco Franco.

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2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 09:44

The distorted face was voted the most-anticipated new emoji, but it's OK to be wrong.

2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 09:42

Federal judge said prosecutors picked to replace Alina Habba repeated error of bypassing congressional approval

Three prosecutors installed by Donald Trump’s administration to lead the New Jersey attorney general’s office after the president’s former personal lawyer was disqualified from the role in December were also illegally appointed, a federal judge has ruled.

Pam Bondi, the US attorney general, handpicked the three to replace Alina Habba, who resigned after a succession of district and appeals court rulings that she was serving illegally because she never received Senate confirmation.

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2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 09:39

Hong Kong-based airline has business-class return listed at A$39,577, as travellers seek routes avoiding Middle East

The Hong Kong-based airline Cathay Pacific is selling seats from Sydney to London for more than £20,000 in April, as passengers search for scarce long-haul flights without changing in the Middle East.

The tickets, listed at A$39,577 in business class for returns departing in mid-April, far outstrip the usual fares charged even in the first-class cabin.

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2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 09:37

We hate to be the bearer of bad news, but these kitchen items should always be hand-washed.

2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 09:29

Iran is bombing Gulf datacenters to blow up symbols of alliance with the US – bringing the war directly into the lives of millions of people

Hello, and welcome to TechScape. I’m your host, Blake Montgomery. If you enjoy reading this newsletter, please forward it to someone you think would as well.

US tech firms pledge at White House to bear costs of energy for datacenters

Showdown over datacenter politics at heart of North Carolina primary

Indonesia to ban social media for children under 16

Australians will have to verify their age to watch pornography from Monday. Here’s what you need to know

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2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 09:22

John Diehl admitted to using federal pandemic loans for country club dues, cars and other personal expenses

A former Missouri state house speaker was sentenced on Monday to 21 months in prison after pleading guilty to wire fraud for misusing federal Covid-19 relief funds for his personal benefit, including payments for country club dues and three cars.

John Diehl, the former Republican house speaker, received about $380,000 in federal loans for his law firm between 2020 and 2022 through a program intended to help cover operating expenses for businesses affected by the coronavirus pandemic.

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2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 09:13

Investigators are searching a New Mexico ranch where Jeffrey Epstein once entertained guests, amid allegations that it may have been used for sexual abuse and sex trafficking.

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COLLEGE PARK, Md., March 10, 2026 — IonQ today announced a collaboration with the Applied Research Laboratory for Intelligence and Security (ARLIS) on SEQCURE (Securing Experimental Quantum Computing Usage in Research Environments), a program sponsored by the Secretary of the Air Force’s Concepts, Development, and Management Office.

This collaboration is intended to advance the state of quantum computing security by analyzing existing commercial quantum computing security practices with an aim to understand what it would take to deploy Zero Trust Architecture (ZTA) to future quantum computers. ZTA is defined by the NIST standard SP800-207 and involves moving security from a static, perimeters-based paradigm to one that continuously verifies access to all key resources in a computer system.

“As quantum systems transition into the bedrock of national infrastructure, the shift from legacy perimeter security to a Zero Trust Architecture is a strategic imperative,” said Niccolo de Masi, Chairman and CEO of IonQ. “By integrating NIST-defined continuous verification across every pillar of our quantum platform—computing, networking, sensing, and security—we are not just building the world’s most powerful quantum systems; we are ensuring they are the most trusted quantum ecosystem. This project with ARLIS is a definitive step in creating the secure, verifiable framework required for the future of the quantum internet and national-scale deployments.”

Through this project, IonQ will assist ARLIS in defining a ZTA framework based on standards set by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), ensuring quantum technologies can be deployed securely across hardware, software, data, and cloud environments. The resulting architecture standards will guide trusted integration across federal agencies.

“We are happy to be working together with industry leaders such as IonQ on this important program,” said Paul Lopata, Chief Quantum Scientist at ARLIS. “We are hopeful that the results of this work will eventually be deployed into commercial systems for industry and government users to use with confidence.”

This collaboration builds on IonQ’s growing portfolio of federal partnerships, including existing contracts with ARLIS, DARPA and the U.S. Air Force Research Lab (AFRL), and it reflects the company’s continued leadership in building the world’s most complete quantum platform.

More from HPCwire

About IonQ

IonQ, Inc. (NYSE: IONQ) is the world’s leading quantum platform and merchant supplier – delivering integrated quantum solutions across computing, networking, sensing, and security. IonQ’s newest generation of quantum computers, the forthcoming IonQ Tempo, will be the latest in a line of cutting-edge systems that have been helping customers and partners including Amazon Web Services, AstraZeneca, and NVIDIA achieve 20x performance results and accelerate innovation in drug discovery, materials science, financial modeling, logistics, cybersecurity, and defense. In 2025, the company achieved 99.99% two-qubit gate fidelity, setting a world record in quantum computing performance.


Source: IonQ

The post IonQ and ARLIS Partner to Establish Zero Trust Security Framework for Mission-Critical Quantum Architectures appeared first on HPCwire.

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LOUISVILLE, Colo., March 10, 2026 — Infleqtion, a global leader in quantum computing and quantum sensing powered by neutral-atom technology, announced that it is showcasing accelerated quantum supercomputing integration into modern data centers through NVIDIA NVQLink at NVIDIA GTC 2026.

GTC 2026 attendees can see Infleqtion’s Sqale QPU at the NVIDIA booth in a demonstration that showcases the future of a native integration of a neutral atom quantum processor into an NVIDIA accelerated HPC environment. Based on the ultra-low latency of NVQLink, Infleqtion hardware will work in concert with NVIDIA GPUs to handle the heavy computational demands of real-time quantum error correction and hybrid AI workloads.

“The next era of high-performance computing will be accelerated by the seamless integration of quantum and classical resources into a single unified platform,” said Pranav Gokhale, Chief Technology Officer and General Manager, Quantum Computing at Infleqtion. “We are committed to NVQLink to accelerate the transition to commercial scale AI-Quantum factories. We believe neutral atom technology is the superior choice because of its inherent scalability, providing a strong foundation for this new HPC era.”

Infleqtion’s inclusion in the NVQLink ecosystem highlights its growing role in hybrid quantum–classical workloads and a full stack system level approach required for the AI Quantum factory of the future.

Meet with Infleqtion at GTC:

  • NVIDIA booth #345: Live Sqale QPU demonstration as part of the NVQLink showcase.
  • Infleqtion booth #438: Deep dive into the neutral atom advantage to quantum computing, including Infleqtion’s doubleMOT and Tiqker quantum clock. Software updates, including Infleqtion’s integration of contextual machine learning into the NVIDIA Jetson edge AI platform, will also be highlighted.

For more information about Infleqtion’s quantum computing solutions please visit: https://infleqtion.com/quantum-computing.

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About Infleqtion

Infleqtion, Inc. (NYSE: INFQ) is a global leader in quantum technology, delivering neutral atom solutions for quantum computing, networking, sensing, and security. With a product portfolio spanning quantum computers, quantum optical clocks, RF receivers, and inertial sensors, Infleqtion’s full-stack approach combines high-performance hardware with the company’s proprietary Superstaq quantum computing software platform. Infleqtion’s systems are already in use by the U.S. Department of War, NASA, the U.K. government, and in multiple collaborations with NVIDIA. Infleqtion, in collaboration with NVIDIA, published the world’s first demonstration of a materials science application using logical qubits. With operations in the U.S., Europe, and Asia, Infleqtion meets the demands of government and commercial customers across the space, defense, energy, finance and telecommunications sectors.


Source: Infleqtion

The post Infleqtion to Showcase Quantum Accelerated Supercomputing with NVIDIA NVQLink at GTC 2026 appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 09:01

The MacBook Neo is an absolute banger of a budget laptop, but life's too short to live without Touch ID.

2026-03-10 12:04
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Targeting of foreign-born truckers risks ‘deepening severe labor shortages’ as thousands of drivers have been taken off roads for failing English proficiency requirements

After moving to Ohio in 2013, Ibragim Chakhalidze’s father set up a trucking company just miles from where two of the country’s major road freight arteries – the I-70 and the I-75 – meet.

Formerly farmers who had come to the US from south-east Russia through a government refugee program, he says trucking has been in his family’s and the wider Ahiska Turk community’s blood for decades.

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2026-03-10 09:00

More Gemini AI features will come to Google Docs, Sheets and Slides.

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An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: This week, tens of thousands of game developers and producers will once again gather in San Francisco, as they have since 1988, for the weeklong Game Developers Conference. But this year's show will be missing many international developers who say they no longer feel comfortable traveling to the United States to attend, no matter how relevant the show is to their work and careers. Dozens of those developers who spoke to Ars in recent months say they're wary of traveling to a country that has shown a callous disregard for -- or outright hostility toward -- the safety of international travelers. That's especially true for developers from various minority groups, those with transgender identities, and those who feel they could be targeted for outspoken political beliefs. "I honestly don't know anyone who is not from the U.S. who is planning on going to the next GDC," Godot Foundation Executive Director Emilio Coppola, who's based in Spain, told Ars. "We never felt super safe, but now we are not willing to risk it." "I honestly don't know anyone who is not from the U.S. who is planning on going to the next GDC," says Godot Foundation Executive Director Emilio Coppola, who's based in Spain. "We never felt super safe, but now we are not willing to risk it." "Hearing European citizens getting arrested by border control over their views on the U.S. is not something I would like to test for myself," adds Nazih Fares, a French-Lebanese citizen and creative director at indie studio Le Cabinet du Savoir.. Many of the developers who spoke to Ars cite the intrusive questioning, racial profiling, and other horror stories reported at the U.S. border. "I read a few long reads about how UK/German tourists ended up detained, and that was the final straw for me," Austrian-based Cohop Game founder Eline Muijres said. "It doesn't feel safe for me." Domini Gee, a Canadian game writer and narrative designer echoed that concern, adding: "There's no shortage of stories... about the risk of detainment, deportation, phones being searched... the consequences if I'm not [OK] could be high."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-10 20:04
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As AI has upended the way students learn, academics worry about the future of the humanities – and society at large

Lea Pao, a professor of literature at Stanford University, has been experimenting with ways to get her students to learn offline. She has them memorize poems, perform at recitation events, look at art in the real world.

It’s an effort to reconnect them to the bodily experience of learning, she said, and to keep them from turning to artificial intelligence to do the work for them. “There’s no AI-proof anything,” Pao said. “Rather than policing it, I hope that their overall experiences in this class will show them that there’s a way out.”

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MILPITAS, Calif. and DUBLIN, March 10, 2026 — MariaDB plc has announced that it has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire GridGain Systems, Inc., a pioneer of in-memory computing and creator of open source Apache Ignite. By merging MariaDB’s AI-ready relational database with GridGain’s scalable, in-memory power, MariaDB is setting a new industry standard: sub-millisecond data infrastructure for the agentic era.

Closing the AI Latency Gap

As enterprises move beyond passive chatbots toward agentic AI – autonomous systems that reason, plan and execute tasks – they are quickly becoming limited by traditional data architectures. AI agents require real-time access to massive datasets with zero friction. This acquisition bridges that gap by fusing:

  • MariaDB’s reliability: Proven, ACID-compliant transactional integrity for the world’s most sensitive data, with native vector capability and AI support.
  • GridGain’s speed: Extreme-scale and in-memory processing that eliminates the disk-drive tax on performance.

“The rise of agentic workloads has placed unprecedented demands on enterprise infrastructure, causing requirements to explode and requiring a level of scale and sub-millisecond latency that traditional systems simply weren’t built to handle,” said Rohit de Souza, CEO of MariaDB plc. “By uniting MariaDB’s platform with GridGain’s in-memory data grid, we are entering a new weight class. This enables us to provide a high-performance, scalable, open alternative to the rigid lock-in of Oracle and the fragmented complexity of hyperscalers.”

MariaDB is trusted by thousands of enterprises and millions of developers worldwide, providing a seamless upgrade path from Oracle MySQL and a simplified migration for those moving away from Oracle.

Powering the World’s Premier Data-Intensive Brands

With the acquisition, MariaDB will support an elite roster of global leaders who require always-on, always-fast data, including:

  • Financial services: American Express, Barclays, BNP Paribas, Citi, DBS, Deutsche Bank, RBC and State Street Corporation.
  • Technology: HPE, Motorola Solutions and Red Hat.
  • Telecommunications: Nokia, Optiva, Reliance Jio, Telecom Italia, Verizon and Virgin Media O2.
  • Logistics and services: American Airlines, UPS, XPO Logistics and 24 Hour Fitness.

A Unified Platform for a Hybrid World

The agentic enterprise requires data that is instantaneous without compromising on durability or reliability. Hyperscalers often offer this as separate, disconnected services. The MariaDB-plus-GridGain integration will replace that fragmentation with a unified, hybrid-cloud platform capable of handling transactional, analytical and AI use cases in a single, high-velocity system – backed by reliable, enterprise support from a single company.

“Enterprises today cannot afford the latency introduced by siloed data architectures. With MariaDB and GridGain, enterprise customers will get a unified platform that provides them the best of both worlds, performance and scale without having to give up on durability,” says Lalit Ahuja, CTO of GridGain Systems, Inc. “The combined technology stack will unlock one of the key enablers for agentic enterprises: high-performance and reliable data processing that powers the next generation of AI applications.”

GridGain is a leading in-memory computing platform and is the original developer of the open source software Apache Ignite. GridGain enables companies to process massive amounts of data in real time. It provides security, high availability, distributed capability, management controls and integrations, helping enterprises achieve superior performance and scalability for their most demanding applications.

The transaction is subject to customary closing conditions.

More from BigDATAwire: MariaDB to Acquire GridGain to Tackle the AI Latency Gap

About MariaDB

MariaDB seeks to eliminate the constraints and complexity of proprietary databases, enabling organizations to reinvest in what matters most – rapidly developing innovative, customer-facing applications. Enterprises can depend on a single complete hybrid database platform for all their needs, that can be deployed in minutes for transactional, analytical, hybrid and AI use cases. Trusted by organizations such as Deutsche Bank, DBS, Nokia, Red Hat, Samsung and VirginMedia O2 – MariaDB delivers customer value without the financial burden of legacy database providers.


Source: MariaDB

The post MariaDB Announces Agreement to Acquire GridGain, Developer of Apache Ignite appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 08:49

Man was among at least six people who started shooting outside Union Station in state, which has adopted stand your ground law

A man who initially faced a murder charge for opening fire following the Kansas City Chiefs’ 2024 Super Bowl win was sentenced on Monday to two years in prison in a case prosecutors said was complicated by the state’s self-defense laws.

Dominic Miller, who pleaded guilty to a weapons charge as part of a plea deal, was among at least six people to start shooting in the melee that sent players, city officials and hundreds of fans scrambling for cover, according to court records.

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2026-03-10 08:47

Mario wants his money back.

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The White House aide who revealed that Richard Nixon had secretly recorded his conversations as president has died

Alexander Butterfield, the White House aide who inadvertently hastened Richard Nixon’s resignation over the Watergate scandal when he revealed that the president had bugged the Oval Office and Cabinet Room and routinely recorded his conversations, has died. He was 99.

His death was confirmed to the Associated Press by his wife, Kim, and John Dean, who served as White House counsel to Nixon during the Watergate scandal and helped expose the wrongdoing.

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A new report, issued ahead of the president’s summit with Xi Jinping, takes aim at the administration’s record on trade, diplomacy and other aspects of American power.

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HBO Max is adding more titles with sign language interpretation, while other tech platforms are also expanding access using readily available tools.

2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 08:01

Everything we've heard so far about the rumored Apple Watch Series 12.

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2026-03-10 08:00

The organization that runs most of US lower-league soccer is making a big push after the 2026 World Cup – is it a bridge too far?

It’s been years, but Dan Egner’s X profile still shows him planting a kiss on the USL Championship’s silver cup. These days, Egner is an agent with NordicSky, representing clients on both sides of the Atlantic. But in 2019, when that picture was taken, he was the technical director of Real Salt Lake at a time when MLS teams had affiliates in the USL, the umbrella organization that runs much of lower-league soccer in the United States, including the second-division USL Championship.

When Salt Lake’s affiliate Real Monarchs won the final, the glory was sweet, but it was not profitable.

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2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 08:00

As a new West Bank settlement plan gains steam, now is the time for governments to take multilateral economic action

Amid an unforgiving global news cycle – and as nations weigh their options in responding to the yet unbuilt West Bank settlement project that would “bury the idea of a Palestinian state” – a telling sanctions-related development in Israel passed largely unnoticed outside Israeli media. In Tel Aviv, the new year began with a protest by a violent extremist settler group that has faced UK sanctions since October 2024.

The trigger was a new Israeli banking directive, rushed out to placate Israel’s hardliners, that they said did too little to shield Israelis from international sanctions.

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2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 08:00

Here are rescued chimpanzees, a mountain lion, an elephant and a penguin with the toys they’re attached to.

2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 07:55

Shortly after all JetBlue flights were grounded by the FAA due to what the agency said was a JetBlue request, the carrier said it had resumed operations.

2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 07:54

As the new league year gets underway, we take a look at the best and worst moves heading into the 2026 season

Los Angeles Rams

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2026-03-10 07:44

Anthony Russell, 43, will appear in court via video link on Wednesday accused of attack at HMP Frankland

A fellow inmate has been charged with the murder of the child killer Ian Huntley in a maximum security prison, the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) has said.

Anthony Russell, 43, will appear before magistrates charged with murdering the 52-year-old at HMP Frankland, in County Durham.

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2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 07:40

Car group reports 54% drop in pre-tax profits as it says Iran war could affect demand for Audi and Porsche brands

Europe’s largest automaker, Volkswagen, is to shed 50,000 jobs by the end of the decade, as it faces falling sales in China and North America and punitive US tariffs imposed by Donald Trump.

The 10-brand group, whose luxury subsidiaries Porsche and Audi are also under pressure, said the jobs would go in Germany, affecting the entire group, as part of a restructuring drive amid the darkening global business climate.

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2026-03-10 08:04
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Director rounds on actor, who acted in the cult film, saying he feels disrespected, and claiming cynical reasons behind her recent comments

Quentin Tarantino has responded to Rosanna Arquette’s criticism of his prolific use of the N-word in his films including Pulp Fiction, saying Arquette “show[ed] a decided lack of class”.

In a statement sent to numerous publications including Deadline, Tarantino said: “I hope the publicity you’re getting from 132 different media outlets writing your name and printing your picture was worth disrespecting me and a film I remember quite clearly you were thrilled to be a part of? … After I gave you a job, and you took the money, to trash it for what I suspect is very cynical reasons shows a decided lack of class, no less honour.”

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The government said a week ago the warship would be deployed but it is still at dock. What is happening?

The pace at which HMS Dragon has been readied for deployment to defend a British military base in Cyprus from attacks by Iran has prompted claims that Britain’s proud naval history has been shamed.

It has been a week since the government said the Portsmouth-based Type 45 destroyer would be deployed, but it is still at dock and the ship is likely to take another five days or more to reach its destination.

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These emoji could land on your device in the coming weeks.

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Most people fail with AI because they don’t understand what it actually is – if you treat it as a skill, not a shortcut, you’ll get the best results

Training teams to use AI at work has given me a front-row seat to a new kind of professional divide.

Some people hand everything over to the machine and stop thinking. Others won’t touch it at all.

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2026-03-10 08:04
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Our research shows that candidates who come from the union movement are exactly what many Americans crave

American politics feels hopelessly broken. Extreme political polarization, enormous amounts of Pac money sloshing around during elections, and the increasing power of the rich make it seem like nothing, and no one, can set the country on the right track. But a new report from the Center for Working-Class Politics looks at a surprisingly simple way that ordinary people might have more influence in our political system: run more union members for office.

The forthcoming CWCP report, co-authored by Jared Abbott, Benjamin Y Fong, Fred DeVeaux, Dustin Guastella and Sam Zacher, and sponsored by Arizona State University’s Center for Work and Democracy, looked at the broad political impact of political candidates with a labor union background. We found that candidates who come out of the union movement are exactly what many people in the country desperately crave: politicians who sound like them, who advocate for working people, and who provide solutions that actually work to fix our broken system.

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2026-03-10 08:04
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HHS says the MIT professor is ‘more than qualified’ to serve on the agency’s vaccine advisory panel and calls ‘attacks’ on him ‘politically motivated’

The MIT professor who has been appointed by Robert F Kennedy Jr to review the safety of Covid-19 vaccines has failed to meet basic scientific standards in his own research on the topic, according to more than a dozen scientists and public health experts.

Retsef Levi, an operations management professor, is a member of the US health department’s vaccine advisory committee (ACIP) which is meeting later this month and – many experts fear – could seek to rollback recommendations on who should receive Covid-19 vaccines.

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Family-run farms in El Salvador and Honduras face mounting losses, rising costs – and the need to adapt or be left behind

On a steep hillside in western El Salvador, Oscar Leiva watches rainfall in December, a month that once marked the start of the dry season. During this harvest cycle, flowering came early and then stalled. A heatwave followed. What remains of the crop is uneven, lower in quality and more expensive to produce than the last.

For Leiva and his family, coffee has never been just a crop. His mother, Esperanza Marinero, remembers when the rains arrived on schedule and the harvest could be planned months in advance. Today, the calendar no longer holds. Decisions about pruning, fertilising and hiring labour feel like educated guesses. Each mistake carries a cost the family cannot afford.

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PC, Xbox, Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4/5; Tribute Games Inc
A treat for nostalgia fans and completists, but there’s little new in this rehashing of a classic that feels like an add-on rather than a fully fledged adventure

It’s 20XX, and unrepentant slacker Scott Pilgrim and his friends are revelling in the throes of young adulthood. They’re skint, but in a cool way that’s unrecognisable today (not least because nobody can afford to live near downtown Toronto). For many readers, the Scott Pilgrim graphic novels were a cultural touchpoint, a story about emotional immaturity, growing as a person and ultimately defeating youthful arrogance. Having cemented itself as a cult classic with an Edgar Wright movie, a 2010 tie-in game and a Netflix miniseries, it’s now back in the form of a raucous action-adventure game, Scott Pilgrim EX.

This is a homecoming of sorts for developer Tribute Games, which was formed by ex-Ubisoft employees who worked on the 2010 Scott Pilgrim game. Having established themselves as beat ’em up revivalists with Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Shredder’s Revenge and Marvel Cosmic Invasion, the team has stepped up for another crack at this essential coming-of-age tale. Scott Pilgrim EX feels like a passion project, so they have the Powers of Love and Understanding on their side.

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I’m using these devices to help my body adjust to Sunday's time change and maintain my physical and mental health.

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2026-03-10 06:53

UK’s GSK is leading the way in research but AstraZeneca is not involved in the area, report finds

The pipeline of new drugs to fight superbugs remains “worryingly thin” and has shrunk by 35% in the last five years, experts have warned, predicting the annual number of deaths linked to drug-resistant infections globally will double to 8 million by 2050.

The number of projects from large pharma companies has shrunk by 35% over the past five years, from 92 to 60 medicines in development, according to a report from the Access to Medicine Foundation (AMF), a Netherlands-based non-profit group, and the Wellcome Trust.

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Three leaders from the Delta Tau Delta fraternity were arrested on suspicion of hazing after the death of Colin Daniel Martinez.

2026-03-12 08:04
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Mexico's anti-cartel operations seek to prove to Trump it is serious about security, as World Cup looms Expert comment LToremark

President Sheinbaum hopes that operations like that against ‘El Mencho’ and wider efforts to cooperate with the Trump administration’s demands will protect Mexico from more drastic US actions.

National Guard police officers participate in the initial training ceremony for community policing officers at the San Miguel de los Jagueyes Military Base.

On 22 February, Mexico’s armed forces carried out a major operation against one of the most important cartels, Jalisco Nueva Generación (CJNG). The main target was El Mencho, the alias of CJNG leader Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, who was captured wounded and later died during transit to a medical facility. CJNG members responded with disruptive acts of violence in several states, and at least 25 members of the National Guard were killed in the fighting.

Last week, Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum visited Guadalajara in Jalisco state – a World Cup host city – to assuage security concerns and announce that up to 100,000 security personnel will be deployed during the 2026 World Cup.

The El Mencho operation was carried out with the help of US information and intelligence. President Trump has previously criticized Mexico’s efforts to tackle the cartels and even threatened a US attack on Mexican soil against a cartel target. This exceptional raid is part of a wider collaboration network between the two countries, which will reduce the likelihood of any immediate US action. Some analysts, however, assume such intervention would never happen, given that Mexico is home to the largest number of Americans outside the US.

Mexico and the United States have one of the closest and most complex bilateral relationships in the world. More than 30 million people of Mexican origin live in the US, while 1.6 million Americans live in Mexico. The two countries are also each other’s most important trading partner and share a 1,954-mile-long border – only slightly shorter than the distance from the UK to Syria.

But the relationship has come under increased pressure since Trump took office last year. President Sheinbaum has so far cooperated with US demands while also attempting to push for domestic reforms. While the US priorities are overwhelmingly migration and security, reforms in other areas that could also affect US interests – such as justice, energy, and political system reform – have been dealt with pragmatically and steps have been taken to ensure US companies are not negatively affected.

Under Trump, three issues have come into sharp focus: migration, security and trade. The three were dramatically intertwined when Trump made free trade contingent on actions by Mexico on migration and security. In November 2024, Trump threatened a 25 per cent tariff on Mexico until it solved the ‘problem’ of fentanyl and illegal immigration – a threat he made good on in February 2025. The lack of information on how advances in these areas would be measured resulted in huge levels of uncertainty. Illegal migration and drugs flow north across the border into the US, but US guns flow south – and into the hands of Mexican cartels. 

After intense diplomatic and backchannel conversations, large carve-outs were made to these tariffs in March 2025. As result, 85 per cent of Mexican exports to the US still flow on a free-trade basis, and remaining exports have a low average tariff of just 4.5 per cent. Meanwhile, the situation on the border has changed drastically. ‘Contacts’ with migrants on the US border dropped from 2.5 million in 2023 to 443,000 in 2025, the lowest in 50 years.

On action against cartels, Mexico has made several goodwill gestures. It has renewed and intensified dialogue, cooperation, intelligence gathering and information sharing on the activities and methods of drug cartels. It has also resumed joint training for security forces and accepted an increased number of security-related attachés at the US embassy in Mexico. Between February 2025 and January 2026, 93 high-ranking cartel figures serving sentences in Mexican jails were sent to the US outside formal deportation procedures.

The more Mexico and the US cooperate successfully on security-related matters, the less likely a US drone strike on Mexican soil becomes. While future joint operations should not be entirely ruled out, it is far more probable that Mexican authorities will execute them. Successful security cooperation will show the US that Mexico is a trustworthy partner and that it is in the best interest of both countries to maintain dialogue, cooperation and coordination.

Progress on migration and security are also helping to lay the groundwork for more productive talks on renewing the US, Mexico and Canada Free Trade Agreement (USMCA), due for renewal by 1 July. Trade is a key part of the bilateral relationship. In 2025, exports from the US to Mexico reached $338 billion, while Mexican exports to the US reached $535 billion (compared to $308.4 billion for China’s exports to the US).  

Other developments too have increased the probability of an agreement on the USMCA being reached in time, including bilateral negotiations carried out during numerous trips to Washington by Mexican officials. These negotiations have so far been based on a 54-point list of pending issues from the US side, formally delivered to President Sheinbaum by US Secretary of State Marco Rubio during his trip to Mexico City in September 2025. The list includes a wide variety of issues, ranging from energy, intellectual property and agriculture to relations with China.

The US’s main concerns regarding China revolve around Chinese involvement in the ownership of Mexican ports and container terminals, and Mexico’s perceived lack of accuracy and transparency on its trade with China, such as inputs in supply chains, as well as Chinese investment. Mexican authorities have responded reforming its foreign investment screening mechanism and imposing more than 1,400 new tariffs on certain goods coming from various countries – mainly from China. Progress made will hopefully avoid a protracted renegotiation process on the USMCA which could open a Pandora’s box at the worst possible time, creating uncertainty and volatility for the Mexican economy.

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We also spoke with a doctor to learn more about how you can reduce your exposure to microplastics.

2026-03-10 12:04
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A CBS News analysis of records for every hospice operating in Los Angeles County finds indications of fraud are growing.

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Former footballer detained after incident outside Huyton and Prescot golf club on Sunday evening

Joey Barton has been arrested on suspicion of attacking a man near a golf club in Liverpool.

The former footballer was detained by police after the incident outside Huyton and Prescot golf club at 9pm on Sunday.

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-10 06:26

Only two vessels not linked to Iran or Russia have braved ‘chicken run’ since US president’s promise on Friday

Only two vessels not linked to Iran or Russia have made the “chicken run” through the strait of Hormuz since Donald Trump said he would “ensure the free flow of energy to the world”, according to maritime records.

One of those that braved the journey since the US president’s announcement of emergency measures on Friday went “dark” by switching off its transponder and a second signalled it was Chinese owned and crewed.

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2026-03-10 08:04
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Travel operators say Chinese and North Koreans can now buy tickets for services leaving this week

Passenger train services between China and North Korea are to resume this week, six years after their suspension because of the Covid-19 pandemic, travel operators have said.

Train journeys between the two countries were halted in 2020 as strict border closures were imposed to prevent the virus spreading.

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

What I’m Discussing Today:

  • Kareem’s Daily Quote: This one’s worth its weight in gold.

  • Them That’s Got: Money’s Hold on Elections

  • Video Break: Everyone can use a little Pink Floyd Live

  • War, What War?: Trump Bros Bid on Defense Contracts

  • China and Nukes: Are they testing or not?

  • What I’m Watching: Citizen Kane

  • Jukebox Playlist: Eve Of Destruction (1965)

Kareem’s Daily Quote

“We may have democracy, or we may have wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, but we cannot have both.” Louis Brandeis (U.S. Supreme Court Justice)

Credit: Universal History Archive, Getty Images

This is the sort of quote that hits with the clarity that doesn’t need footnotes or legal training to understand. The kind that feels like it’s been sitting in plain sight for decades, waiting for us to stop pretending we don’t see it.

Louis Brandeis wasn’t warning us about money in the abstract. He was talking about power: who gets to shape the rules, who gets heard, and who gets left standing outside the room. Why is this important? Because Democracy with a capital D only works when everyone has a meaningful voice. Concentrated wealth works by giving a small group a much louder one. Those two ideas can coexist for a while, but eventually one tug-of-war side starts pulling so hard on the rope that it pulls the other off their feet. You don’t need a political science degree to see that happening. You just need to pay attention to how decisions get made, who benefits from them, and who keeps getting told to wait their turn.

What Brandeis understood, and what we keep having to learn again and again, is that democracy doesn’t collapse in a single dramatic moment, like an underdone soufflé. Instead, it deflates slowly, quietly, while the oven is still shut. It happens when the people with the most resources can shape the narrative, the policy, or the playing field in ways the rest of us can’t. And because it happens gradually, it’s easy to miss until we open that oven and instead of a delicacy, we get the dessert equivalent of a flat tire.

I saw a version of this dynamic during my years in the NBA. On the court, everything feels immediate, every call, every possession, every shift in momentum. But off the court, in the league offices and ownership meetings, the real power lives in rooms most players never enter. Decisions are made that shape the entire league. Rules and revenue structures are influenced by a handful of people whose interests don’t always line up with the players or the fans. That doesn’t make the league illegitimate. But it does make the power structure clear: the game may be shared, but the leverage isn’t.

Brandeis’ quote points to the same kind of imbalance, but on a national scale, where the stakes are far higher, and the consequences reach far more people. It forces us to confront something uncomfortable: democracy isn’t self‑maintaining. It needs guardrails and transparency. It needs people willing to ask hard questions about who benefits when wealth and influence start to merge. And it needs citizens who don’t shrug off the slow loss of height and air just because we wanna eat and the food still looks familiar on the surface.

Brandeis’s quote is—excuse the expression—a fork in the road. If wealth keeps concentrating, democracy becomes thinner, more symbolic, more performative. If democracy is strengthened, then concentrated wealth can be held in check. Not demonized, not at all; simply balanced.

Kareem Takes on the News is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

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2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 06:00

José Antonio Kast, who voted against legalising divorce in 2004, has pushed for return to total abortion ban

Women’s rights activists in Chile are bracing as the most conservative president since the Pinochet dictatorship prepares to take office on Wednesday.

José Antonio Kast, a 60-year-old ultra Catholic whose father was a member of the Nazi party, has consistently blocked progressive bids for women’s rights and equality across his three-decade career in politics.

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2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 06:00

Remember the iPod? How about the Pippin? In the half-century since it launched its first PC, Apple has given us some amazing innovations. We round up its biggest triumphs and flops

Fifty years after Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak and Ronald Wayne founded the company in Jobs’ parents’ garage in Los Altos, California, Apple has become a behemoth, and billions of us use its products every day. From the first successful home computers with colour screens, to the iPod, to the smartphone that set the template for the modern mobile era, the company has repeatedly reset consumer expectations.

As a result, the firm occupies a central position in the tech world, initiating trends and popularising products. Here are five of its most influential products from the past half-century – alongside some unusually big misses.

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2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 06:00

‘Resistance is futile’, wrote one AI product manager for the Associated Press in internal messages to colleagues

No one wants a soulless sermon – that defeats the purpose – and Pope Leo XIV has taken steps to ensure that Roman Catholic priests don’t deliver one.

Artificial intelligence, the new pontiff said in a recent meeting with clergy, “will never be able to share faith”, which is what giving a homily is all about. Resist the temptation and write your own words, he urged.

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2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 06:00

When Ja Morant brandished a gun on social media the league knew how to act. But what happens when complex questions about team ownership arise?

Lately, I’ve been thinking about the job I had two decades ago, when I was a janitor at a machine shop in Fort Worth, Texas. Even as a hungover 20-year-old, my internal monologue would debate the ethics of the parts I packaged. We produced tiny components for Halliburton and Lockheed Martin. Slivers of aluminum machined to tolerances so fine you could miss their imperfections with the naked eye.

Beneath the fluorescent hum of the shipping and handling department, I’d rub a widget between my fingers and imagine the journey it would take: lifted from a Texan warehouse into the Middle Eastern theatre where our nation’s wars burned. Small enough to disappear in my palm, large enough to disappear into someone else’s rubble. Which is why I keep thinking about those widgets as the NBA tries to regulate morality.

The NBA, Memphis Grizzlies and Ubiquiti did not respond to requests for comment on this story.

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2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 06:00

For making perfectly crispy bacon in under 10 minutes with less of a mess, there's a new sheriff in town.

2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 06:00

If you’re a Whoop member, you can expect to see two new women’s health updates for both hormonal insights and blood panels.

2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 06:00

Upgrade your TV watching with a tiny soundbar that can stream music and improve dialogue.

2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care? 
Crop farmers make up a sizable portion of Delaware’s farming population and provide key corn and soybean products to the state’s poultry industry. Despite some recent stop-gap federal funding, higher input costs and lower prices have put a strain on Delaware farmers’ financial situation, making the future of their industry uncertain.   

Jim Minner has a thinking chair.

It sits in the maintenance shed behind his house, facing the Felton-area grain farmer’s tractors and combines.

In the winter months, when Minner is not planting or harvesting crops, he spends most of his time in that chair deliberating how he might be able to improve his machinery for the upcoming season. 

Over the past few years though, with corn and soybean prices dropping and costs for fertilizer and machinery rising, Minner has adopted a mindset of “just get by,” in order to make ends meet on the farm.

This, he said, means keeping expenses like equipment, fertilizer and seeds as low as possible. It also means foregoing any major machinery upgrades.

“The trick is to keep your costs low, keep your overhead low,” Minner, president of the Kent County Farm Bureau, told Spotlight Delaware. “That helps in the bad years.” 

And Minner is not the only farmer facing ongoing economic challenges. 

In response to “temporary trade market disruptions and increased production costs,” the federal government recently rolled out $11 billion in one-time assistance payments for farmers around the country based on how many acres of “commodity crops” — or mass-produced crops like corn, soybeans, wheat and rice — they grow. 

The unforeseen federal funding, Minner said, allowed him to purchase roughly $10,000 in updated parts for his tractors and combines. Upgrades he had been putting off in recent years due to the tight margins. 

As a result, Minner has been able to get out of his thinking chair this winter, instead doing some hands-on mechanic work to his 30-plus-year-old equipment this month.

Other Delaware farmers say they are using the one-time payments – which began being distributed through local Farm Service Agency (FSA) offices in late February and will continue through mid-April – toward seed costs for the upcoming season or other expenses from last year that were particularly tight. 

“I have to put it toward my bills in order to keep myself afloat,” Dover-area farmer Paul Cartanza Sr. said. 

While experts say the current farming landscape is somewhat better on the Delmarva Peninsula than elsewhere because farmers have a guaranteed market for their corn and soybeans in the poultry industry, panelists at an agriculture summit in Harrington in mid-February likened the current crop economy to the Great Depression. 

Farmers and agricultural economists have differing opinions as to whether higher operating costs, dropping prices from overproduction, the loss of an export market due to tariffs on China, or a combination of the three, is causing tight profit margins for American farmers. 

They agree, though, that the current farm assistance funding is just a stopgap measure in an industry that is increasingly strained and whose future is uncertain. 

“We see this as a bailout, and it’s not the way we want to operate,” Georgetown-area farmer Jay Baxter said. “We would rather see our bottom line increase and us be able to do business off of our profit and loss.” 

High yields, low prices

Despite what Delaware farmers described as a good-weather, high-yield crop year, dropping prices are leaving the state’s industry stretched at the seams. 

The agricultural community spent much of this past fall debating what impact President Donald Trump’s tariff war would have on the American soybean industry.  

As of late September 2025, China, the world’s top purchaser of soybeans, had dropped from purchasing $12.6 billion worth of American soybeans in 2024 to $0. 

Corn and soybean prices have been dropping for a couple of years, but many farmers have been watching the prices particularly closely since Trump first implemented his tariff policy in January 2025. 

Adding to the timeline of uncertainty, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Trump’s tariff policy was unconstitutional late last month, and Trump has responded with new, often fluctuating, tariff rates. 

The average nationwide price per bushel of soybeans has been creeping down in recent years, from $14.20 three years ago to a projected price of $10.20 this season, James McDonald, an agricultural economics researcher at the University of Maryland, told Spotlight Delaware. Corn prices per bushel have followed a similar trend, he said, dropping from $6.54 in the 2022-23 season to $4.10 presently.

The current farming landscape is somewhat better on the Delmarva Peninsula than elsewhere because farmers have a guaranteed market for their corn and soybeans in the form of the poultry industry, but Delaware farmers are still feeling the pinch. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY MAGGIE REYNOLDS

The exact prices vary slightly per region, and Delaware farmers say they tend to get above average prices for corn, and slightly below average prices for soybeans. 

Poultry companies, like Mountaire and Perdue, who have become large operations in the southern Delaware agriculture scene, tend to demand more corn than soybeans for their chickens, but the chicken farms provide a market to Delaware farmers for both crops.

Baxter, the Georgetown-area farmer, said his corn operation has historically been able to make “good money” at $5 a bushel, so the average pricing isn’t too far off. Soybean rates, he said, have a larger gap.  

At the same time, the 2025 harvest was what many farm groups call a “bumper harvest,” meaning a substantially higher production season than usual. 

Dave Marvel, a Harrington-based farmer who grows corn, soybeans and watermelon, said his crop yields were good this past season, but the end economic result was a “wash” due to the lower prices. 

“Yields were favorable, but the pricing has been down,” said Marvel, who is the vice president of the Kent County Farm Bureau. 

Minner said similarly that he had one of his best crop yield years in a long time, but prices were “so terrible,” that the pay off was not very good. 

Many Delaware farmers say they see Trump’s tariff policies as one factor in the lower price outlook for their crops, but not the sole contributor to the price drop. 

Baxter, a self-described eternal optimist, said he believes the tariffs will create long-term benefits because they will eventually readjust the supply and demand of the market in favor of American farmers. 

“We just have to be patient and wait it out,” he said. 

Nate Bruce, an agricultural researcher at the University of Delaware, said he sees a shift toward more soybean crushing facilities being built in the U.S., instead of needing to be exported to crushing facilities in China. This, he said, could eliminate the United States’ reliance on global soybean markets by the early 2030s. 

But McDonald, the University of Maryland researcher, strongly disagreed. 

He said American consumers are not going to miraculously start demanding more soybeans over the next few decades, so farmers will need to find new global markets in order to sustain the industry. 

Input costs creep up

When asked why they believe profit margins have been so tight in recent years, many Delaware farmers cited rising operating costs on items such as fertilizer, seeds and machinery as the decisive factor. 

Minner said he uses potash, a fertilizer made from potassium, in his soil. A lot of potash is imported from Canada, but higher tariffs on the country have made it more expensive to bring in the ingredient, he said.

He has been forced to get creative and find other sources of manure, or rely on the potash he already has in the soil, in order to avoid the extra costs. 

“We’re going to cut back on inputs,” Minner said. “We’re going to grow the same crops, we’re just going to feed them differently,” 

Marvel, the Harrington-area farmer, said he ideally likes to invest in some fungicides to make the plants healthier and increase his production, but it is difficult to afford that currently. 

At the same time, Marvel is working with old machinery – a combine from the 1970s and his newest tractor from the 1990s — which he said he wants to upgrade to make production more efficient.

Dave Marvel wants to update his decades-old farming machinery, but economic strains have made those upgrades unlikely. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY MAGGIE REYNOLDS

“All that kind of technology costs a lot of money, and there’s not enough to invest in that kind of technology,” he said. 

Exacerbating the situation even more recently, McDonald said, is the conflict in the Middle East. It has caused fertilizer prices to jump by another 15% in the past week. A number of countries in the Middle East are large exporters of natural gas, which is a key ingredient in fertilizer.

Looking forward

Delaware farmers agree the federal government has recognized the squeeze facing their industry, as shown by the current rollout of federal assistance funds and other forthcoming programs

Still, farmers say they feel uncertain about how they will continue to get by on such tight profit margins, and when an upward trend may hit the markets. 

“They have been very proactive for agriculture,” Marvel said about the federal government. “We’re just happy that the money came, and it’s going to be a very quick turnaround.”

Between the one-time assistance payments and other funding programs, like specialty crop money, McDonald said the federal government will be providing $44 billion in direct government payments to farmers this year.

While the massive funding amount shows the degree of distress American farmers are currently experiencing, McDonald said, he is also concerned the government is stepping in for the market too much. 

“We’re assuring people that you should continue to plant corn and soybeans, even when you know we’re not really making money on corn and soybeans,” he said. 

When asked about their strategy moving forward – amid the low prices and high operating costs – Delaware farmers did not have a concrete answer. 

Minner and Cartanza both said they will continue trying to “forward contract” some of their crops, or agree to sell them for a set price before the crops have even been planted, in an attempt to lock in the best prices possible. 

Baxter has diversified his operation to some other crops, including vegetables, chickens and greenhouses, which he said helps somewhat with the uncertainty. 

He added he will not lose his faith that there is a “brighter day ahead” for American farmers. 

Until then, Baxter said, he will keep “sharpening his pencil,” and seeing where he might be able to cut costs.


Maggie Reynolds is a Report for America corps member and Spotlight Delaware reporter who covers rural communities in Delaware. Your donation to match our Report for America grant helps keep her writing stories like this one; please consider making a tax-deductible gift of any amount today by visiting https://spotlightdelaware.org/support/.

The post Delaware farmers feel economic strain despite federal assistance appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 06:00

The FBI is investigating a breach affecting systems tied to wiretapping and surveillance warrant data, after abnormal logs revealed possible unauthorized access to law-enforcement-sensitive information. "The FBI identified and addressed suspicious activities on FBI networks, and we have leveraged all technical capabilities to respond," a spokesperson for the bureau said. "We have nothing additional to provide." The Register reports: [W]hile the FBI declined to provide any additional information, it's worth noting that China's Salt Typhoon previously compromised wiretapping systems used by law enforcement. Salt Typhoon is the PRC-backed crew that famously hacked major US telecommunications firms and stole information belonging to nearly every American. According to the Associated Press, the FBI notified Congress that it began investigating the breach on February 17 after spotting abnormal log information related to a system on its network. "The affected system is unclassified and contains law enforcement sensitive information, including returns from legal process, such as pen register and trap and trace surveillance returns, and personally identifiable information pertaining to subjects of FBI investigations," the notification said.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-10 06:00

Trump is wielding imperial powers created by a decades-long master plan. The only way to stop his war is to cut off the money

Donald Trump has now ordered military attacks on more countries than any prior president. These assaults do not merely betray his campaign promises. Launched without congressional authorization, Trump’s bombings and incursions also betray the constitution – an inherently anti-monarch document that exclusively vests warmaking powers in the legislative branch in order to prevent such grave decisions from being made by any one person determined to become a king.

Trump clearly perceives himself in such royal terms – he’s said as much. But as we show in the new season of our investigative podcast series Master Plan: The Kingmakers, Trump did not create the kingly authority he is now employing. He is exercising powers concentrated in the executive branch by previous presidents and courts. And if history is any guide, the only weapon that can stop a mad king is Congress’s power of the purse – a power that Democrats once effectively wielded, but today seem hesitant to brandish, even amid a wildly unpopular Iran incursion that some fear is a precursor to a third world war.

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2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-10 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
Delaware began to cover commercial weight-loss drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy for state employees as part of its health insurance plan in 2023. Now, as the cost of covering the drug has increased, officials implemented a new elevated copay. 

Delaware state employees who for years have enjoyed a relatively cheap price for blockbuster GLP-1 drugs will soon see their copays rise nearly seven-fold in the coming year. The new copays will not apply to employees using the drugs for diabetes. 

The State Employee Benefits Committee (SEBC), a board responsible for managing Delaware’s state employee health insurance plans, met Monday morning to finalize coverage changes for employees currently using weight-loss drugs.

Under the state’s new coverage guidelines, state employees using drugs for weight-loss purposes will now have to pay a $200 copay for a 30-day supply, beginning July 1. Before Monday, a monthly supply was $32. 

Those sums will impact more than 100,000 state employees, retirees, and their family members who are covered by the Delaware General Health Insurance Plan.

The change comes as state officials have had to reconcile the rising cost of covering GLP-1 medications with supporting an increased number of state employees who use the drug for its weight-loss properties. 

Delaware passed the elevated copay for weight-loss prescriptions with a plan to broadcast the change and promote cost-saving programs run by Novo Nordisk, the Danish manufacturer that makes two of the world’s most popular GLP-1s utilized by state employees.

Drugs like Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro and Zepbound that were originally intended to treat type 2 diabetes have exploded in popularity in America as they have proven to aid weight loss, which results in both short-term and long-term health benefits. But the drugs are expensive – a 30-day supply of Ozempic retails for about $1,000 without manufacturer rebates – and are now among the largest pharmaceutical expenditures for the state insurance plan.

One board member, Jeff Taschner, executive director of the Delaware State Education Association, the state’s teachers union, initially proposed a motion to the committee that would have increased the copay to $132, but that motion failed. 

He proposed the $132 copay because it would help to address the budget strain created by the weight-loss prescriptions while also relieving some of the added costs on patients. 

When that motion failed, Taschner and many of the committee members who initially voted with him, voted against the measure to implement the $200 copay. 

Taschner based his “No” vote on the cost the new copays would have on state employees, who would see their annual costs increase $2,016 without copay assistance. Taschner added that if copay assistance is available, employees would still see that cost increase by $816 a year. 

“I really struggle with them being the only ones, quite frankly, who are bearing the cost of this action,” he said during the meeting. 

In the moments after the committee passed the new copays, members also passed new monthly insurance premiums, which will increase by 2.2% for Fiscal Year 2027. 

Jessica Perrine, a state employee who spoke during public comment, called the new copays “disappointing.” Perrine, who said she is a mother of two who makes $40,000 a year, said the drugs have helped her. 

She said as someone who’s tried dieting and continues to exercise every day, GLP-1s do more than just support her physical health. 

“This helps people as a whole, not just, ‘Oh, I lost weight, I’m skinny now,’” Perrine said. “It’s something that affects your mental health all the way around.”

Delaware Lt. Gov. Kyle Evans Gay begrudgingly supported the higher copays but said that she wanted to see more work done to bring down costs for next year. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY JACOB OWENS

Lt. Gov. Kyle Evans Gay, who sits on the SEBC and voted in favor of the $200 copay, acknowledged the financial impact of the committee’s decision, and the hundreds of dollars it will cost annually for some state employees. But the committee also has a responsibility to other members with conditions that are costly, she said.

Still, Gay said she was not happy with the options put before her, and hopes the committee will work to find new cost-effective solutions for the state that also lessen the costs to patients. 

“I will move forward with the understanding that the cost is still too high and that we need to do something to ensure that medications that change lives are getting to the people that need them,” Gay said. 

Big pharma battle 

Delaware’s reckoning with its spending on weight-loss drugs comes as states across the country have pulled back on coverage. 

In 2021, the U.S. Food & Drug Administration approved a formulation of Ozempic – a drug that has long treated type 2 diabetes – for use in weight loss. The drug mimics a hormone that targets the appetite-regulating area of the brain, reducing a patient’s perceived hunger.

In 2023, the Delaware state employee health care plan began to cover most of those costs for weight-loss patients. Officials initially budgeted about $2 million in the 2024 fiscal year, but the actual price tag reached more than $14 million that year, and has continued to grow since. 

Workers on the state’s health plan pay anywhere from 4% to 13% of the cost out of pocket. The remainder is paid by taxpayers through the state’s General Fund.

In early 2024, Spotlight Delaware first reported that commercial weight-loss drugs, such as Ozempic and Wegovy, were among the most prescribed and expensive medicines for state workers.

Delaware also recently filed a lawsuit against multiple pharmaceutical juggernauts in January, accusing them of conspiring to artificially inflate insulin and GLP-1 drug prices at the expense of patients.

According to the complaint, manufacturers have dramatically increased the price of insulin and other diabetes drugs in recent years, despite a decrease in the cost of production. 

The lawsuit said diabetes costs Delaware $1.1 billion each year, and that many rely on daily insulin injections, as well as the use of GLP-1s, naming Ozempic as one of the medications included in the alleged price-gouging scheme.

Legislation to bring down state spending

Separately, lawmakers introduced legislation last week that would dramatically impact how health care providers negotiate with insurers and how expensive care can be, with some provisions aimed specifically at the state’s health plan. 

Senate Bill 1, filed ahead of lawmakers’ return this week for the remainder of this year’s legislative session, quickly drew the ire of Delaware’s powerful and litigious hospital apparatus.

Introduced by Senate Majority Leader Bryan Townsend (D-Newark/Glasgow), the bill is, on the surface, an attempt to bolster primary care in Delaware and better compensate providers proactively working to improve Delawareans’ health outcomes.

Senate Majority Leader Bryan Townsend. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY TIM CARLIN

But under the bill’s hood, it is a referendum on hospital pricing in a state that has some of the highest costs in the country. If passed as is, SB 1 could deal a major blow to hospitals’ bottom lines.

Within the bill are changes that would regulate the rate at which insurers carrying plans for state employees and some commercial plans regulated by the Department of Insurance can reimburse hospitals for covered services. 

Health care providers generally earn the bulk of their revenues by negotiating with insurers who represent large groups of patients. The negotiations  determine how much money the insurer will pay for the  health care services, and in turn what costs will later be passed onto patients. 

Delaware rates are currently regulated with some growth caps limiting how high they can increase year over year, but SB 1 represents a step toward stricter price-setting measures. 

Brian Frazee, CEO of the Delaware Healthcare Association, a trade group that represents the state’s hospitals, said his organization has “major concerns” with Senate Bill 1. He homed in on the rate-setting, saying it would cut hospital funding and “severely” limit resources.

“Put simply, it threatens health care quality and access in our state,” Frazee said. “We have been doing the real work in good faith to improve access and develop value-based solutions that lower costs without sacrificing quality and access.”

Through Senate Bill 1, Townsend said he hopes further investments in primary care would help sustain a health care business model that treats people effectively before they become sick and need complex and expensive care. 

“They have become addicted to a framework that involves high costs after people are already sick,” Townsend said. “That is not sustainable. It is not moral. We have to change it.”

The post Delaware approves $200 copay for weight-loss drugs, new premiums for state employees appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 05:55
FST and Tech Rail Toe Jams

Selling brand new FST system and Tech Rail toe jamb foot blocks. All new never installed. $485 new combined, il take $350 if anyone is interested. You pay shipping.

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2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 05:52

Growing fears that elevated interest rates will continue, as Barclays finds worries that war will push up inflation

A leading British housebuilder has warned the Iran conflict could knock homebuyer sentiment, amid growing fears of a jump in inflation and a prolonged period of elevated interest rates.

Persimmon said it was “monitoring the impact the conflict with Iran could have on our markets in 2026”, but noted that consumer sentiment could be sensitive amid more financial uncertainty.

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2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 05:30

We tested microcurrent devices for over two months. These were the ones that showed the most results.

2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 05:27

Wyoming Gov. Mark Gordon has signed legislation banning abortions​ after embryotic cardiac activity can be detected, but a court challenge is likely.

2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 05:01

FTSE 100 opens higher and European markets rise as US president describes conflict as ‘very complete’

Oil prices have tumbled from four-year highs, capping an extraordinary 24 hours in global markets and prompting global stocks to rebound after Donald Trump suggested the US-Israel war on Iran could end “very soon”.

Brent crude, the international benchmark, surged as high as $119.50 a barrel on Monday as the Middle East conflict intensified fears of a deepening energy supply crisis.

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2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 05:00

Rene Villarreal-Albe averted possible crash by pulling truck up to car and halting it as driver faced medical episode

A Texas man who recently was driving on a highway reportedly pulled his truck out in front of a car with an unconscious man behind the wheel, gradually slowed it down with his back bumper and ultimately stopped it to avert what could have been a major crash.

Rene Villarreal-Albe’s good deed was captured on dramatic cell phone video recorded by his wife, Andrea Walker, and then shared online by his sister, Cortney Trinidad, as the Texas news outlet Kens 5 reported. The video and action-movie-like story behind it gained widespread attention on corners of the internet dedicated to finding positive news, generating some comments that hailed Villarreal-Albe as a “highway hero”.

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2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-10 05:00

Rebecca Sheppard specializes in untangling other people’s financial messes. But for nearly a year, the Colorado accountant has been unable to fix a glaring error on her own credit report. 

Her credit score plunged roughly 85 points because of a $240,000 student loan debt she does not owe. She repeatedly asked the nation’s big three credit reporting companies to correct the mistake, submitting documentation showing the debt belonged to her ex-husband. Even the loan’s account manager confirmed she wasn’t responsible.

Still, the credit bureaus refused to remove it, jeopardizing her plans to move with her disabled father into a more accessible home. “There’s no way in the world I could qualify for the purchase,” she said.

Sheppard should have been able to count on the federal government to pressure the credit bureaus to take her dispute seriously. For years, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau wielded the threat of fines and lawsuits to make companies fix errors and engage with consumers. Under the Biden administration, a rigorous supporter of the agency, consumers’ rates of relief for such complaints rose to about 10 times as high as in 2020.

But Sheppard needed help under the Trump administration, which has drastically curtailed the CFPB’s mission, including its policing of credit bureaus. With the agency weakened, two of the three major credit bureaus, TransUnion and Experian, have sharply reduced the share of consumer complaints they resolved in customers’ favor, according to a ProPublica analysis of federal complaint data.

TransUnion’s relief rate, which had remained relatively steady for several years, began plunging in the summer of 2025. By October it was providing relief roughly half as often.

Note: Credit reporting agencies can close complaints in customers’ favor by providing financial or nonmonetary relief, such as changing information on a credit report. Otherwise, complaints are generally closed with an explanation. Complaints are shown in the month the CFPB received the complaint. Companies have up to 60 days to provide a final response. Data as of Feb. 23, 2026. Source: Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Joel Jacobs/ProPublica

Experian’s drop was even more dramatic. The company resolved nearly 20% of complaints in consumers’ favor in 2024. Last year, that figure fell to less than 1%.

Joel Jacobs/ProPublica

The third major bureau, Equifax, did not show a similar decline. Just days before President Donald Trump was inaugurated, the company entered into a consent order with the CFPB over deficient dispute and investigation practices. Under the agreement, the company committed to reforms and ongoing oversight.

Equifax’s consumer relief mostly kept up with complaints.

Joel Jacobs/ProPublica

The timing of the drops at TransUnion and Experian coincides with the Trump administration’s dismantling of the CFPB.

In February 2025, Russell Vought, a White House official who oversaw sweeping cuts across federal agencies, took control of the CFPB as acting director. He quickly ordered a stop to  nearly all agency work. Under his leadership, the CFPB has attempted to fire most of its staff, frozen investigations and dropped enforcement actions, including against TransUnion. One of the CFPB’s new lawyers leading the pullback on enforcement represented Experian for years before joining the administration.

The credit bureaus “want to do as little as possible,” said Chi Chi Wu, director of consumer reporting at the National Consumer Law Center, which is a plaintiff in a lawsuit that has so far blocked some of the administration’s dismantling efforts.

“The thing that is making them do any kind of effort is a lawsuit or a regulator, and now we don’t have the regulator,” Wu said. 

In statements to ProPublica, the credit bureaus said that many complaints are illegitimate, including a large volume filed by credit repair organizations that charge customers to challenge negative information on their reports. Experian said in a statement that some of those companies “mislead consumers into believing they can remove accurate information,” adding that it investigates “all legitimate” complaints. The company did not respond to specific questions about its decline in relief.

Third parties are allowed to submit complaints on behalf of consumers if they disclose their involvement and get permission. Federal regulators have acknowledged that bad actors exist, but the CFPB and a House subcommittee found that the credit bureaus’ systems for identifying third-party involvement were overly broad and dismissed legitimate concerns.

Asked about the decline in relief, TransUnion said it recently changed its processes to handle third-party complaints and now redirects those with insufficient documentation to “a more appropriate” internal channel for review.

For years, the CFPB’s complaint system has served as a public middleman: forwarding consumer issues to the bureaus, requiring responses and publishing data showing how companies handled them. 

But the companies have successfully lobbied the Trump administration to start steering some consumers away from the transparent process and toward their internal systems. 

A CFPB spokesperson said the complaint system was inundated with submissions from bots and third-party credit repair firms, and the agency was working to address that so legitimate consumers can more effectively get help. The agency did not respond to written questions about the decline in relief or enforcement.

How many consumers get help — or don’t — when using the credit bureaus’ internal systems is not public. But CFPB data shows that since Trump’s inauguration in January 2025, more than 2.7 million credit reporting complaints submitted to the CFPB have gone without relief, leaving some people at risk of being denied loans, housing or employment and subject to higher rates from insurers and lenders. 

One anonymized complaint came from a Texan who said a fraudulent account remained on their credit report despite their disputes. “I have an important deal that I need to complete that is important for the safety and survival of my family,” the person wrote. CFPB records show that Equifax provided relief, while TransUnion and Experian did not.

Also among those who complained was an Air Force veteran and elections organizer in Arkansas who said the bureaus refused to restore his erroneously deleted mortgage history. ProPublica interviewed the man, Kwami Abdul-Bey, who said the error left him unable to refinance his home or car even after going to multiple lenders.

“Each time they tell me that I do not have enough years of credit. I was paying on that mortgage for a decade before that trade line disappeared,” he said. 

After ProPublica contacted his mortgage servicer, Wells Fargo, the company reached out to Abdul-Bey to apologize for his situation and said it would investigate.

Equifax and Experian did not reply to questions about individual consumers who filed complaints. TransUnion declined to comment on individual situations but said in a statement that the company “has multiple resources available to consumers to help with every step of the dispute process.”

Everyday Americans cannot opt out of having their financial data collected and sold by credit bureaus. Congress passed the Fair Credit Reporting Act in 1970, giving consumers the right to flag errors. But more recently, the credit bureaus have employed a limited number of workers — often overseas — to handle enormous volumes of investigations. 

TransUnion, for example, had 171 workers responding to consumer disputes covering 38 million line items in 2021. A TransUnion spokesperson said in an email that the company has since added staffing but would not provide a number.

“These ‘investigators,’ they have a stack of disputes like a mile high that they have to go through every day,” said Liam Hayden, a Chicago attorney who has represented consumers in credit reporting cases. “A real, authentic investigation costs money.” 

After the 2008 financial crisis, Congress created the CFPB to protect Americans from unfair and abusive practices. By 2015, the big three credit bureaus had become the most complained about firms in the agency’s complaint system.

Credit Reporting Complaints About the Three Major Credit Bureaus Have Surged in Recent Years

Complaints about Equifax, TransUnion and Experian vastly outnumber all other complaints, for matters such as credit cards, loans or debt collection.

Note: Data as of Feb. 23, 2026. Source: Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Joel Jacobs/ProPublica

In 2022, identifying a lack of responsiveness by the credit bureaus to consumer issues, the CFPB released a critical report, alongside guidance on how the companies should address “shoddy investigation practices.” Over the next few years, relief rates rose as the companies provided more individualized responses to complaints filed through the agency.

Announcements on the CFPB’s website show the agency has brought a dozen enforcement actions against consumer reporting companies since 2015.

Just days before Trump took office, the CFPB announced an enforcement action against Equifax. The company settled, agreeing to pay $15 million and operate under a legally binding consent order designed to fix its dispute process. 

Among the reforms, the company agreed to improve its web interface for submitting disputes, avoid relying on faulty information from creditors and not automatically dismiss repeated concerns from the same consumer. The agreement did not specifically mention the company’s handling of CFPB complaints. Equifax was given about a year to put many of the changes in place and has to remain compliant for five years after.

ProPublica found that the agency had approved a similar action against TransUnion in July 2024, but it was never brought. Settlement talks ended shortly after the change in administration. 

“Given recent changes in CFPB leadership, our engagement with the agency on this matter has paused,” TransUnion wrote in a February 2025 Securities and Exchange Commission filing. “We cannot provide an estimate of when, or if, such engagement will resume.”

That month, the CFPB dropped a lawsuit against TransUnion and a former company executive over alleged deceptive practices. TransUnion denied the allegations, calling them “meritless.” The CFPB later ended an agreement meant to fix the company’s failure to promptly place and remove credit freezes.

The CFPB sued Experian shortly before the administration changed, alleging failures in its dispute handling processes. Experian has denied the allegations in court, called the suit “completely without merit” and said the company investigates “every consumer dispute thoroughly.”

The Experian case remains active. A CFPB spokesperson said that Victoria Dorfman, the new senior legal adviser who previously represented Experian, has recused herself from the case. 

In a July public comment letter, Experian argued it should not be required to respond to individual CFPB complaints and that the vast majority of those filed recently are illegitimate. The industry’s lobbying arm, the Consumer Data Industry Association, has urged the CFPB to route more consumers away from the complaint system and make the remaining complaints private. 

This year, just a week after receiving a letter from the lobbying group, the CFPB added three notices for consumers to click through before filing a public complaint, warning them that their requests might be ignored if they have not already disputed issues directly with credit bureaus — a standard the agency previously said companies cannot reliably verify.

In a statement to ProPublica, the CDIA highlighted that a notice instructing consumers to first dispute directly had been present in the CFPB complaint portal briefly around 2012. The new changes are “necessary to address the widespread misuse of the portal” that divert resources away from legitimate concerns, the group said.

A woman with blond hair and glasses standing in a field.
Sheppard Theo Stroomer for ProPublica

But consumer advocates contend that the industry-friendly changes present even more obstacles for consumers like Sheppard who are trying to get their issues resolved.

She twice disputed the student loan error directly with the bureaus. Then in June, she turned to the CFPB. All three responded that they had verified that the debt was hers without addressing documentation she provided to the contrary.

In December, she sent another dispute by certified mail, but TransUnion replied with a postcard stating it believed the submission had not come from her.

In response to Sheppard’s fourth attempt to get TransUnion to fix an error on her credit report, the company sent her a postcard saying that it did not believe the request came from her. Rebecca Sheppard

“They didn’t even try,” Sheppard said. “The fact that they sent that little postcard was just ridiculous.”

TransUnion did not provide a response regarding Sheppard’s situation but said in a statement that it “cannot change information furnished to us absent sufficient documentation and clear instruction from the consumer.”

In her mailed dispute, Sheppard included a letter she received from the loan account manager stating that she was not responsible for the debt. 

With no other options, Sheppard sued the three credit bureaus in January. The companies have not yet responded in court.

Without a functioning CFPB, enforcement may fall to state attorneys general and private lawsuits. The Federal Trade Commission can bring cases but lacks the authority to conduct routine supervision.

A future without a CFPB will leave consumers increasingly trapped, said Hayden, the Chicago attorney. “In five years, the resolution of consumer disputes is going to be worse, credit reports are going to be worse and it’s going to be harder for folks to fix them, guaranteed.”

Have You Recently Sought Help From the CFPB? ProPublica Wants to Hear From You.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is walking away from cases that might have helped return money to consumers across the U.S. We want to hear from people who feel left behind.

The post Credit Bureaus Are Leaving More Mistakes on Frustrated Consumers’ Reports Under Trump’s CFPB appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 04:55

RAMALLAH — Traffic was at a standstill outside of Nablus in the occupied West Bank on Saturday, as sunset neared and hungry residents were forced to trickle through an Israeli checkpoint to get home and break their fasts.

The Israeli military had sealed the city off from the outside world. Just over a week after the U.S. and Israel launched their joint war on Iran, Israeli settlers have ramped up their violence against Palestinians in the West Bank, and Israeli forces have imposed a near-total closure of municipal centers, shutting gates and restricting crossings without warning or perceptible logic.

“It’s so unpredictable,” said Shadya Saif, 40, a Palestinian mother of three who teaches at a private school in Ramallah. The Intercept rode alongside Saif as she traveled back to Ramallah from Nablus on Saturday, when the Israeli military closed all but one checkpoint out of the city, putting it under an effective blockade and forcing all traffic through a checkpoint called Shavei Shomron.

The unannounced closures left Palestinians scrambling. Many were visiting Ramallah to see family members during Ramadan, and they hoped to reach their destinations in time for iftar, the fast-breaking meal enjoyed at sunset. Others needed to enter the city to receive medical treatment they cannot obtain elsewhere. Saif had risked the journey to see her dying uncle and, knowing the risks of crossing, she’d left her chronically ill daughter in Nablus with him.

“I was worried I would get stuck here,” Saif told The Intercept inside a yellow “service” taxi, the only form of public transportation widely available in the West Bank. Even though nearly all of her family lives in Nablus, she has tried to avoid visiting since October 7, 2023, after which the Israeli military clamped its ubiquitous yellow gates over entry points throughout the West Bank.

Related

Israel Revoked Palestinians’ Work Permits — Then Launched a Deadly Crackdown on Laborers

Israeli soldiers stopped each car to inspect Palestinians’ IDs. At their limit, drivers began pulling their cars onto roundabouts and driving the wrong way down the street, but the final say lay with Israeli forces, who allowed only one car at a time to approach the military installation. Some abandoned their cars to walk through checkpoints and reach their families on foot. An elderly Palestinian woman prayed aloud, saying that all she wanted was to make it safely to her family in Ein Yabrud, a village on the outskirts of Ramallah.

“I was worried I would get stuck here.”

As we sat waiting at the checkpoint, Saif’s face was filled with worry. She opened her phone to show pictures of her daughter, dressed in pink and smiling at the camera.

Saif’s daughter has muscular dystrophy and requires specialized treatment and 24-hour supervision. Saif took a big risk visiting Nablus to see her dying uncle in the hospital, she said, because if she were to get stuck there due to a checkpoint closure — which did happen for three days last week — her daughter’s health would be put in jeopardy.

“I left her with my uncle just for the day, but I have to be there to care for her,” Saif said. “I know her medications and how to ensure she doesn’t get sick.”

Saif made it back to Ramallah, but she said it would not have been possible a few days earlier.

A roadblock Israeli settlers installed on the main road between Sebastia, a Palestinian village south of Nablus, and Route 60, which connects the city to the central and southern West Bank, seen on March 7, 2026. Photo: Theia Chatelle

The day after the U.S. and Israel started attacks on Iran, the prevailing sentiment in Ramallah was anxiety. People wondered if there would be road closures and food and fuel shortages like during last year’s Twelve Day War, and whether the Israeli government would impose what Palestinians describe as collective punishment in the West Bank, even though they were not involved in the conflict.

“It has nothing to do with anything Palestinians in the West Bank are doing or not doing,” said Aviv Tatarsky, who leads an Israeli protective presence collective that organizes watches to deter settlers from invading Deir Istiya, a village outside Ramallah. “And still, there’s an Israeli decision, and life comes to a stop.”

“There is no money, no work. We are in debt, and I have four mouths to feed. What am I to do?”

Ramallah, which has long functioned as a relatively insulated bubble from the effects of Israel’s occupation, is also dealing with a struggling economy. Paired with the war, the economic downturn has muted Ramadan celebrations, according to residents who spoke with The Intercept.

“We are suffering,” said Faisal Taha, who drives taxis in Ramallah. “There is no money, no work. We are in debt, and I have four mouths to feed. What am I to do? I have been driving my taxi all day, and I have forty shekels.”

Unemployment in the West Bank is hovering around 40 percent — up from 13 percent two years ago — and GDP has contracted by 13 percent since October 7.

Dror Etkes, founder of Kerem Navot, an Israeli NGO that monitors settlement construction in the West Bank, said he was not surprised by the restrictions imposed by Israel.

“They always use instances of violence to perpetuate more violence,” Etkes said. “This is what we have seen for years, since October 7, and now it is worse than ever.”

As during the Twelve Day War last year — after which Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared a “historic victory” that would “stand for generations” against the Islamic Republic of Iran — there are already the beginnings of flour and fuel shortages in the West Bank as the Israeli Civil Administration, which runs the military occupation of the territory, imposes import restrictions.

“This is not something new. It happened in June during the Twelve Day War, and it’s kicking off again,” Tatarsky said. “But what’s different this time is that Israel is also blocking roads — not only disconnecting Palestinians from Area C, but also blocking roads between Palestinian villages.”

A week later, on March 7, there was still only one checkpoint out of Ramallah open, forcing all traffic through a bottleneck that passes by the Beit El settlement and through the Jalazone refugee camp. This is the only route for Palestinians living in Ramallah to access Route 60, the main thoroughfare connecting Palestinian communities in the south to those in the north.

“They always use instances of violence to perpetuate more violence.”

Driving up the highway and passing village after village that had been closed off by the Israeli military, Etkes said it was clear the war with Iran was being used as a pretext for “a system that is meant to reduce as much as possible the area where Palestinians can move freely,” part of the settlement movements’ goal to alter the facts on the ground regarding de facto annexation.

Nabih Odeh, 63, who has been driving public transit taxis in the West Bank for more than 30 years, has watched what he describes as the slow annexation of the West Bank unfold. As he drove up Route 60, he pointed to village after village sealed off by the Israeli military.

“There, that’s Aqraba, closed,” Odeh said. “If you want to get in or out, you must walk. That’s Turmus Ayya — very wealthy — still closed.”

Eighty percent of Turmus Ayya’s residents have U.S. citizenship, yet the town was closed off, its yellow gate locked. Service taxis pulled up to drop residents off, leaving them to walk to the town center or be picked up by relatives. Its status as a wealthy American Palestinian village has no bearing on Israel’s decision.

At the same time, Israeli settlers have used the war with Iran as an opportunity to launch further attacks on Palestinian communities, largely in Area C — the roughly 60 percent of the West Bank under full Israeli civil and military control — working in tandem with movement restrictions in Areas A and B, the Palestinian-administered population centers and villages created under the 1995 Oslo Accords.

Messages circulating in settler WhatsApp groups have called for violence against Palestinians to match Israeli airstrikes in Iran. One graphic depicting a roaring lion, to match the Israel Defense Forces’ name for the military operation against Iran, reads: “It is time to launch a preemptive attack in all arenas, until the enemy is expelled from the country and subdued outside it. This time we win, once and for all.”

“I mean, generally, when you’re speaking about Israeli society, it is torn apart in so many ways,” said Orly Noy, editor at Local Call and chair of B’Tselem’s executive board. “But there’s one thing that always unifies,  and I’m speaking about the Jewish section of society, of course, and this is war.”

Related

Rubio Admits That America Is Fighting Israel’s War

Netanyahu is willing to do anything to stay in power, Noy added, and during his time in office, he has worked effectively to paint the Iranian regime as an existential threat to Israel, working in tandem with the U.S. “He has taken advantage of it very well,” Noy said.

During Operation Rising Lion, this rally-around-the-flag effect has not only served Netanyahu’s interests but also those of settlers living in the West Bank.

WAFA, the Palestinian Authority’s news agency, estimates that settler attacks have increased 25 percent since the start of the conflict. Israeli settlers have killed six Palestinians since the start of the war with Iran, including three in one incident in the West Bank community of Khirbet Abu Falah, east of Ramallah.

Israeli settlers shot Fare’ Hamayel and Thaer Hamayel, and a third man, Mohammad Murra, died of suffocation from tear gas deployed by Israeli forces.

As the world’s attention remains on Iran, solidarity activists said that Israeli settlers appear to feel they have additional impunity to conduct attacks.

“They will be treated as heroes by their supporters, by their society,” Etkes said. “And the government will do nothing about it.”

The post With World’s Eyes on Iran, Israel Locks Down the West Bank appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 04:03

Government and motoring groups say there is no shortage of fuel supplies but stockpiling has left country service stations running dry, as Iran war sparks oil price fears

Regional service stations are struggling to replenish fuel supplies left empty by panic buying that has seen demand double and even triple in areas like the Barossa and Mildura amid an escalating Middle East conflict.

As a leading motoring group warned of a “vicious cycle” of motorists stockpiling petrol, Chris Bowen, the energy minister, stood up in parliament to urge Australians to remain calm, insisting the nation did not have a shortage of fuel supplies.

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2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 04:00

Logical situation of losing to get a better pick has led to big fines but June’s superstar draft created a ‘perfect storm’

Imagine you are the director of football at a crisis-stricken Premier League club in a world where relegation doesn’t exist and the planet’s best teenagers become available for free in a draft every June.

In this alternate universe, you are also aware of something else: the 2026 Premier League draft is one for the ages. Barcelona’s Lamine Yamal and Pau Cubarsí are in it. So are Bayern Munich’s Lennart Karl and Real Madrid’s Franco Mastantuono. Sign one of them and the glory days will suddenly beckon again.

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2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 03:50

Airline reports spike in ticket sales to Europe in March, as passengers with carriers affected by flight chaos rebook

Qantas has announced it is increasing the price of its international air fares amid oil price volatility caused by the war in the Middle East, while the airline also reported higher-than-normal ticket sales for flights to Europe.

While the company hedges against change in jet fuel prices, it was not fully covered for the spike seen in the wake of surging oil prices, a spokesperson said on Tuesday.

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2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 03:00

A startup called Reflect Orbital wants to launch thousands of mirror-bearing satellites to reflect sunlight onto Earth at night and "power solar farms after sunset, provide lighting for rescue workers and illuminate city streets, among other things," reports the New York Times. From the report: It is an idea seemingly out of a sci-fi movie, but the company, Reflect Orbital of Hawthorne, Calif., could soon receive permission to launch its first prototype satellite with a 60-foot-wide mirror. The company has applied to the Federal Communications Commission, which issues the licenses needed to deploy satellites. If the F.C.C. approves, the test satellite could get a ride into orbit as soon as this summer. The F.C.C.'s public comment period on the application closes on Monday. "We're trying to build something that could replace fossil fuels and really power everything," Ben Nowack, Reflect Orbital's chief executive, said in an interview. The company has raised more than $28 million from investors. [...] Reflect Orbital's first prototype, which will be roughly the size of a dorm fridge, is almost complete. Once in space, about 400 miles up, the test satellite would unfurl a square mirror nearly 60 feet wide. That would bounce sunlight to illuminate a circular patch about three miles wide on the Earth's surface. Someone looking up would see a dot in the sky about as bright as a full moon. Two more prototypes could follow within a year. By the end of 2028, Reflect Orbital hopes to launch 1,000 larger satellites, and 5,000 of them by 2030. The largest mirrors are planned to be nearly 180 feet wide, reflecting as much light as 100 full moons. The company said its goal was to deploy the full constellation of 50,000 satellites by 2035. How much does it cost to order sunlight at night? Mr. Nowack said the company would charge about $5,000 an hour for the light of one mirror if a customer signed an annual contract for 1,000 hours or more. Lighting for one-time events and emergencies, which might require numerous satellites and more effort to coordinate, would be more expensive. For solar farms, he envisions splitting revenue from the electricity generated by the additional hours of light.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 02:03
Pint X battery issues

Picked up a pint X for a good price recently, first day with it my gf rode it 10 miles before it nosedived at 35%, afterwards it displayed 0 charge, I think it might be a cell balancing issue, as I hadn’t charged it since I had received it at 95 percent, after a 24 hour balance charge I took it out to test and ran it down to 0 battery with no issues, however my battery usage showed as 223% used. The board is also not prompting to update to hydrius 5300 for an unknown reason, any help is welcome

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2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 02:00

Both campaigns have been framed differently at different times, with dubious claims of defensive action and a curious reluctance to label it war

Shifting goals, unclear timelines and a flimsy pretext: at times, the US-Israel campaign against Iran carries curious parallels of Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.

The comparison is far from exact. In 2022, Putin sent a massive army across Ukraine’s borders in an unprovoked invasion of a democratic state, a campaign that quickly resulted in heavy losses. The United States has so far largely limited its involvement to airstrikes against Iran’s authoritarian regime.

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2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 02:00

About 10,000 writers including Kazuo Ishiguro, Philippa Gregory and Richard Osman join copyright campaign

Thousands of authors including Kazuo Ishiguro, Philippa Gregory and Richard Osman have published an “empty” book to protest against AI firms using their work without permission.

About 10,000 writers have contributed to Don’t Steal This Book, in which the only content is a list of their names. Copies of the work are being distributed to attenders at the London book fair on Tuesday, a week before the UK government is due to issue an assessment on the economic cost of proposed changes in copyright law.

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2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-10 02:00

Calls for a popular uprising and empty promises of help are reckless in the extreme – and no answer to my country’s plight

  • Nasrin Parvaz is a women’s rights activist and torture survivor from Iran

I have been watching the news from inside Iran, unable to hold in my sorrow. As an Iranian who was imprisoned and tortured by the regime, I have been pleading with the world’s human rights organisations and media to keep a focus on the country’s plight. But now I see US-Israeli bombs falling on Iran, and some Iranians celebrating this war while innocent people die. My heart is breaking for my country.

Let us be clear: when Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu conspired to launch their war, it was not out of a desire to free the Iranian people from the tyranny of the regime. Netanyahu said on the second day of the war: “This coalition of forces allows us to do what I have yearned to do for 40 years.” He has named this operation “Lion’s Roar”. Meanwhile, Iranian monarchists celebrate the carnage, waving the shah’s version of the country’s flag with its crowned lion and sun.

Nasrin Parvaz is a women’s rights activist and torture survivor from Iran. Her books include A Prison Memoir: One Woman’s Struggle in Iran, and the novel The Secret Letters from X to A

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

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2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 01:00

Among the many justifications Donald Trump has presented for the US and Israel attacking Iran has been the supposedly imminent threat posed by its nuclear weapons programme. But how close was the country really to developing an atomic weapon? Ian Sample hears from Kelsey Davenport, the director of non-proliferation policy at the Arms Control Association. She sets out why many experts don’t believe the country even had a structured nuclear weapons programme, and explains what she thinks the impact of the war could be on nuclear proliferation around the world.

Attacking Iran’s nuclear programme could drive it towards a bomb, experts warn

Support the Guardian: theguardian.com/sciencepod

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2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 00:00

Cuts have revealed the continent's economic resilience.

2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 00:00

Trump needs to figure out what he wants—and quickly.

2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-10 00:00

America is adopting a risky model.

2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-09 23:30

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Heise: Pay securely with an Android smartphone, completely without Google services: This is the plan being developed by the newly founded industry consortium led by the German Volla Systeme GmbH. It is an open-source alternative to Google Play Integrity. This proprietary interface decides on Android smartphones with Google Play services whether banking, government, or wallet apps are allowed to run on a smartphone. Obstacles and tips for paying with an Android smartphone without official Google services have been highlighted by c't in a comprehensive article. The European industry consortium now wants to address some problems mentioned. To this end, the group, which includes Murena, which develops the hardened custom ROM /e/OS, Iode from France, and Apostrophy (Dot) from Switzerland, in addition to Volla, is developing a so-called "UnifiedAttestation" for Google-free mobile operating systems, primarily based on the Android Open-Source Project (AOSP). According to Volla, a European manufacturer and a leading manufacturer from Asia, as well as European foundations such as the German UBports Foundation, have also expressed interest in supporting it. Furthermore, developers and publishers of government apps from Scandinavia are examining the use of the new procedure as "first movers." In its announcement, Volla explains that Google provides app developers with an interface called Play Integrity, which checks whether an app is running on a device with specific security requirements. This primarily affects applications from "sensitive areas such as identity verification, banking, or digital wallets -- including apps from governments and public administrations". The company criticizes that the certification is exclusively offered for Google's own proprietary "Stock Android" but not for Android versions without Google services, such as /e/OS or similar custom ROMs. "Since this is closely intertwined with Google services and Google data centers, a structural dependency arises -- and for alternative operating systems, a de facto exclusion criterion," the company states. From the consortium's perspective, this also leads to a "security paradox," because "the check of trustworthiness is carried out by precisely that entity whose ecosystem is to be avoided at the same time". The UnifiedAttestation system is built around three main components: an "operating system service" that apps can call to check whether the device's OS meets required security standards, a decentralized validation service that verifies the OS certificate on a device without relying on a single central authority, and an open test suite used to evaluate and certify that a particular operating system works securely on a specific device model. "We don't want to centralize trust, but organize it transparently and publicly verifiable. When companies check competitors' products, we can strengthen that trust," says Dr. Jorg Wurzer, CEO of Volla Systeme GmbH and initiator of the consortium. The goal is to increase digital sovereignty and break free from the control of any one, single U.S. company, he says.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-09 23:01
I'm considering going Pint X to GT or GT-S

I've been riding my Pint X for nearly a two years now, and I was looking to add another board to my collection, I've got two X's and one XR. I found two listings for a GT and GTS I'm considering, and do you guys think either, both or neither is legit?? I'm gonna paste the links below and pics too, thx.

https://myrtlebeach.craigslist.org/wto/d/myrtle-beach-onewheel-gt/7914199975.html https://louisville.craigslist.org/tag/d/louisville-clean-onewheel-gt-series/7918070091.html

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2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-09 22:43

Royal commission says response led by Jacinda Ardern was broadly ‘appropriate’, in a wide-ranging report featuring recommendations for future pandemics

A royal commission into New Zealand’s Covid response has found it was one of the best in the world but acknowledged the period had left “scars”.

The second of two inquiry reports on the pandemic was released on Tuesday and focused on the period between February 2021 to October 2022, when the government changed from an elimination strategy to one of suppression and minimisation of the virus. It also examined vaccine safety and the government’s immunisation programme, lockdowns and tracing and testing technology.

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2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-09 22:28

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for March 10.

2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-09 22:14

Two Democrats with potential presidential ambitions — Govs. Gavin Newsom and Andy Beshear — are weighing in on the U.S.-Iran war and criticizing President Trump's strategy, as the conflict overtakes the foreign policy debate.

2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-09 22:09

As speculation mounts that Kim Jong-un and Trump could meet this month, analysts say Pyongyang will continue to see nuclear weapons as a matter of survival

North Korea’s launch last week of a missile from a naval destroyer elicited an uncharacteristically prosaic analysis from the country’s leader, Kim Jong-un. The launch was proof, he said, that arming ships with nuclear weapons was “making satisfactory progress”.

But the test, and Kim’s mildly upbeat appraisal, were designed to reverberate well beyond the deck of the 5,000-tonne destroyer-class vessel the Choe Hyon – the biggest warship in the North Korean fleet.

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2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-09 22:00

This live blog is now closed.

Donald Trump has urged the Australian government to grant asylum to five members of the Iranian women’s football team, amid reports that they refused to return home following the team’s elimination from the Women’s Asian Cup and were taken into the protection of Australian police.

As my colleague Martin Farrer reports, speculation had mounted for days that some of the players would try to seek asylum in Australia they had been called “traitors” for refusing to sing their national anthem before their opening game of the tournament last week.

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2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-09 21:51

Why Should Delaware Care?
The development of data centers has become a hot button topic, because they are powering the technology of the future but require huge amounts of electricity to power computer servers 24/7. After a major project was proposed to be built near Delaware City, the New Castle County Council has been debating whether to place new restrictions on the nascent industry.

The New Castle County Council was already scheduled to vote Tuesday night on a controversial proposal to regulate the booming data center industry that has come to its doorstep, but now a newly filed, last-minute amendment aims to further inflame the debate.

Councilwoman Janet Kilpatrick, an outgoing lawmaker who has been one of the most vocal supporters of the data center industry, filed an amendment Friday evening seeking to allow major and minor subdivision plans in the county’s development pipeline to be permitted to convert to data center projects without adhering to the new limits.

That proposal could open up plans for warehouses or other commercial or industrial properties to switch to data centers.

It was immediately criticized by supporters of the regulatory measure, including the original ordinance’s author Councilman Dave Carter and the Sierra Club of Delaware.

“It not only guts the proposed legislation, it goes far beyond and gives developers even more rights than they have now for data center development,” Carter told Spotlight Delaware on Monday.

In defense of her proposal, Kilpatrick said that New Castle County had to be consistent with its regulatory burden on development. She argued that developers who submitted a subdivision plan a year ago would not have had any data center regulations to adhere to, and therefore she felt it was unfair to impose them after the fact.

Far too much debate among council members about what projects would be exempted under the new regulations convinced her to file an amendment making it clear, Kilpatrick told Spotlight Delaware.

Councilwoman Janet Kilpatrick, who proposed amendments to water down a regulatory bill for data centers, talks to Councilman Tim Sheldon, one of the data center’s chief supporters, at the council’s Nov. 18 meeting. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY OLIVIA MARBLE

While Project Washington, the hyper-scale data center project planned near the Delaware City Refinery, has long been understood to be exempted because it predated the debated ordinance, whether other projects would be exempted has been more unclear.

A second amendment filed Friday by Councilman John Cartier would establish the effective date for the regulations as Aug. 5, 2025 – or when Carter filed the original ordinance.

That could imperil a data center planned near Newark, which was filed in December, but another project near the St. George’s Bridge could be saved by Kilpatrick’s amendment, as the project has lingered in the development pipeline since 2024.

It’s unclear whether either amendment could garner a seven-vote majority of the 13-member council. Without Cartier’s amendment, the regulations bill would be effective at the time of signing.

Either way, Carter said he is pushing through the last-minute drama to a vote Tuesday because “waiting any longer is not going to change anything.”

“Tomorrow everybody is going on the record,” he said. “Whether it will pass or won’t pass, I don’t know, but the public will know where they stand.”

Advocates, opponents line up

At a March 3 committee meeting, prominent Wilmington land use attorney Shawn Tucker, who previously managed the county’s Department of Land Use and now represents developers before the county, warned that applying the regulations to any project retroactively could end in a lawsuit. 

He cited a precedent-setting 2002 Delaware Supreme Court case that advised balancing the concerns of the community versus the amount of money developers spend in the pre-development process. Noting that he represented several potential data center projects, the reference could be warning of future litigation.

But Kilpatrick’s proposed amendment also drew swift scrutiny from environmental stakeholders in the state, who long have supported Councilman Carter’s fight to regulate data centers.

Dustyn Thompson, chapter director of the Sierra Club of Delaware, said Kilpatrick’s proposed carveouts to the regulations were unprecedented.

“That is extreme at best, and certainly not something that we’ve ever seen happen at council before,” he said.

While Thompson admitted that including a retroactivity clause within the ordinance could open the county up to litigation, he questioned how Kilpatrick’s amendment works to avoid legal blowback.

“I don’t think we need her amendment to avoid a lawsuit because we’re allowed to set standards for development moving forward,” Thompson said. “That’s within the county’s jurisdiction. So that’s sort of a ridiculous talking point aimed at the ordinance itself.”

The Sierra Club is hosting a protest at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, ahead of the county council meeting, in support of Carter’s proposed regulations and against Kilpatrick’s amendment. 

Thompson said he hopes to show Kilpatrick, and other critics on the council, that data center regulations have a wide base of support in New Castle County. The Sierra Club has knocked on more than 3,000 doors, and had more than 1,500 residents show their support for the regulations at the county level, Thompson said.

“The whole point of us coming out before the [meeting] is to just, once again, show that we’re not making this stuff up, right?” Thompson said. “Communities want this. In every single public session that has been out since this ordinance came out has been the same.”

Get Involved
The New Castle County Council will meet at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 10, in the Louis L. Redding City County Building, located at 800 N. French St. in Wilmington. 
See the agenda and virtual meeting information here.

The post Last-minute amendment aims to exempt more data center plans from regulation appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-09 21:48

President makes evidence-free claim despite video showing US Tomahawk missile hit naval base next to school

As oil prices surged amid the widening war with Iran, Donald Trump suggested, without evidence, on Monday that the strike on an Iranian elementary school could have been carried out by Iran or “somebody else”.

During back-to-back appearances in Florida, Trump was asked whether the US would accept responsibility for a strike that hit the school and killed scores of people, many of them children, after video evidence showed a US Tomahawk struck the naval base next to it.

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2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-09 21:10

Brothers who visited White House reunited with family after outcry from Texas lawmakers, including Republican congresswoman

Two teenage mariachi musicians were released from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody after their detention sparked widespread backlash, including from a Republican congresswoman.

The Democratic representative Joaquin Castro of Texas announced the release of the brothers, Antonio Yesayahu Gámez-Cuéllar, 18, and Caleb Gámez-Cuéllar, 14, on Monday afternoon, sharing photos on social media of the family reuniting.

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2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-09 21:00

Trump is also pushing for the Save America Act to includes provisions to limit transgender youth’s access to care and banning trans women athletes in women’s sports – key US politics stories from Monday 9 March at a glance

Donald Trump renewed his push on Monday for the Save America Act, a curtailment of voting access, after threatening on Sunday not to sign any bills until Congress approves the legislation.

“All voters must show proof of citizenship in order to vote,” Trump said during remarks on Monday at a Republican event in Miami. “No mail-in ballots, except for illness, disability, military or travel.”

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2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-09 21:00

Samsung says it's thinking about bringing "vibe coding" to future Galaxy phones, allowing users to describe apps or interface changes in plain language and have AI generate the code. TechRadar interviewed Won-Joon Choi, Samsung's head of mobile experience, to learn more about the plans. Here's an excerpt from their report: As noted by Won-Joon Choi, the usefulness of vibe coding on smartphones is that it opens up the "possibility of customizing your smartphone experience in new ways, not just your apps but your UX." He added, "Right now we're limited to premade tools, but with vibe coding, users could adjust their favorite apps or make something customized to their needs. So vibe coding is very interesting, and something we're looking into." [...] Samsung recently debuted the Galaxy S26 series of phones and made a point to not call them smartphones -- they're "AI phones" now. This certainly rang true with the majority of upgrades to the devices being AI software-focused, like the new Now Nudge and expanded Audio Eraser tools, with the biggest hardware bump for the base models coming via the 39% improved NPU processing (the processor in charge of on-device AI tasks). It also teased the debut of Perplexity on its phones, joining as an alternative to the Gemini assistant, and teased the possibility of other AI models getting the same treatment in the future.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-09 20:51

A researcher at a far-right think tank helped Justice Department prosecutors craft their indictment for terror charges against an alleged “north Texas antifa cell,” the researcher testified Monday. The charges were brought in relation to a protest outside a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center outside Dallas.

Kyle Shideler of the Center for Security Policy said under questioning from a defense attorney that he provided language that prosecutors used in the first-ever domestic terrorism case against a purported antifa cell.

The decision to use the language was the government’s, Shideler said.

“I told them what I believed to be an accurate definition of antifa, and they used it,” Shideler said.

The courtroom testimony provided a window into the extraordinarily close cooperation between federal prosecutors and a Washington advocacy group that has regularly argued for government action against left-wing activists.

Shideler himself was the author of a September article titled “How to Dismantle Far-Left Extremist Networks: A Roadmap for the Trump Administration” that called on the Justice Department to take more aggressive action against left-of-center activists. He said he conferred with prosecutors in October, a month before they obtained an indictment in the Texas case.

Related

How Many Members Does Antifa Have? Where Is Its Headquarters? The FBI Has No Answers.

Defense lawyers raised questions about Shideler’s professional home, the Center for Security Policy. The nonprofit think tank was founded by Frank Gaffney, a former Defense Department official under President Ronald Reagan who has routinely been described as an Islamophobic conspiracy theorist. Gaffney’s views on Islam are commonly espoused at Center for Security Policy events.

The center itself has been branded a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center, a designation Shideler bristled at in court.

“Yes sir, the Southern Poverty Law Center has mislabeled many people as a hate group,” he said in response to questioning from defense lawyer Phillip Hayes.

The nine defendants on trial this month face years or life sentences in prison for a noise demonstration outside ICE’s Prairieland Detention Center on July 4 of last year.

Related

Texas “Antifa Cell” Terror Trial Takes On Tough Questions About Guns at Protests Against ICE

After demonstrators used fireworks in a show of solidarity for the detainees held inside the Alvarado, Texas, facility, local police arrived to confront them. One of the responding officers was shot in the neck.

Shideler testified as an expert witness for the government over the objections of defense attorneys, who were overruled by U.S. District Judge Mark Pittman, a Donald Trump appointee.

In lengthy testimony, he provided a recounting of the history of antifascist organizing that ranged from 1930s Germany to 1980s U.K. activism to the present-day United States. Various tactics used by the Prairieland demonstrators to protect their identities — such as Signal chats, “black block” clothing, and a general “security culture” — were all consistent with antifa practices, Shideler said.

Under questioning from prosecutors, Shideler sought to tie the ideas laid out in anarchist zines recovered from the defendants’ possession with their actions outside the detention center.

Several cooperating defendants have testified that they did not consider themselves members of antifa, defense attorneys pointed out during cross-examination.

They also went on the attack over Shideler’s professional qualifications and his conclusions. Shideler acknowledged that he does not use academic social science methods, does not submit his research for peer review, and relies largely on open-source materials whose authenticity is difficult to verify.

Shideler called Signal a “hallmark of antifa” before adding that he uses it himself.

Shideler called Signal a “hallmark of antifa” before adding that he uses it himself.

The antifa trial is Shideler’s first time testifying as an expert witness in a trial, he said. One defense lawyer noted that Shideler was invited to testify about antifa before the Senate Judiciary Committee in October and asked whether his courtroom appearance this week would provide a further boost to his career.

“I guess it will depend how it goes,” he said.

His testimony is set to continue Tuesday.

The post Islamophobic Think Tank Helped Write Indictment Against ICE Protesters appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-09 20:49

@puzz360 Aha right? Do like a good challenge.
Makes me confident I can do the same to my old XR that is bound to be in no better condition 😅

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-10 09:47

The so-called Zorro Ranch was the site of numerous alleged abuses, but was not subject to intense scrutiny

New Mexico authorities launched a search of a ranch previously owned by Jeffrey Epstein, state officials announced on Monday.

The late convicted sex offender and financier’s so-called Zorro Ranch was the site of numerous alleged abuses, according to civil and criminal proceedings. But the location was not subject to the same scrutiny as other Epstein properties, and a Guardian investigation in February revealed that federal authorities apparently never searched the New Mexico ranch.

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2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 20:11

At a Miami-area news conference Monday, President Trump said he expects the war in Iran to end "very soon," but also called it "the beginning of building a new country."

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 21:08

Jurors in Manhattan federal court reached a verdict Monday after weeks of testimony in the sex trafficking trial of brothers Tal, Oren and Alon Alexander.

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 20:21

President Trump told CBS News the U.S. war with Iran is "very complete," and said the U.S. "could do a lot" about the Strait of Hormuz.

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-10 19:50

Iran's women's soccer team was branded "traitors" after declining to sing their national anthem at the Asian Cup in Australia, fueling fear for the women if they returned home.

2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-09 20:01

Conflict in the Middle East risks knocking growth worldwide and boosting prices, economists warn, amid global market turbulence

Oil prices surged on Monday, triggering a stark sell-off across some of the world’s leading stock markets amid growing concern that the US-Israel war on Iran could set the stage for a global economic shock.

While they fell back on Tuesday after Donald Trump suggested the Middle East conflict could end “very soon”, oil continues to trade at high levels.

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2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-09 19:59

Scientific awards – which honor research that makes people laugh and then think – to move away from ‘unsafe’ US

The annual Ig Nobels, a satirical award for scientific achievement, are shifting for the first time from the US to Europe due to concerns about attendees getting visas, organizers announced on Monday.

Organized by the Annals of Improbable Research, a digital magazine that highlights research that makes people laugh and then think, the 36th annual ceremony will be held in Zurich. It’s usually held in the US in September, a few weeks before the actual Nobel prizes are announced.

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2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 19:47

Ban could still materialise in future after Commons support government bid to give additional powers to secretary of state

A proposed ban on social media for under-16s has been rejected by MPs.

Parliamentarians voted 307 to 173, majority 134, against the proposed change to the Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill, which was brought forward by Conservative former minister Lord Nash.

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2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-09 19:45

The tool will let you track NASA's modern lunar program during its 10-day flight around the moon and back again.

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 19:42

Trump calls Operation Epic Fury ‘one of the most complex and stunning operations ever conducted’ and touts ‘very good’ call with Putin about Iran

Donald Trump has said a decision on when to end the war with Iran will be a “mutual” one he’ll make together with Benjamin Netanyahu, the Times of Israel has reported.

It said Trump also claimed in a brief telephone interview on Sunday that Iran would have destroyed Israel if he and Netanyahu had not been around. The US president said:

Iran was going to destroy Israel and everything else around it … We’ve worked together. We’ve destroyed a country that wanted to destroy Israel.

I think it’s mutual … a little bit. We’ve been talking. I’ll make a decision at the right time, but everything’s going to be taken into account.

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2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-09 19:41

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for March 10, No. 533.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-09 19:32

Seven American service members have been killed since the war with Iran started in late February.

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 19:31

While IBM’s OS/2 technically did die, its development was picked up again much later, first through eComStation, and later, after money issues at its parent company Mensys, through ArcaOS. eComStation development stalled because of the money issues and has been dead for years; ArcaOS picked up where it left off and has been making steady progress since its first release in 2017. Regardless, the developers behind both projects develop OS/2 under license from IBM, but it’s unclear just how much they can change or alter, and what the terms of the agreement are.

Anyway, ArcaOS 5.1.2 has just been released, and it seems to be a rather minor release. It further refines ArcaOS’ support for UEFI and GPT-based disks, the tentpole feature of ArcaOS 5.1 which allows the operating system to be installed on a much more modern systems without having to fiddle with BIOS compatibility modes. Looking at the list of changes, there’s the usual list of updated components from both Arca Noae and the wider OS/2 community. You’ll find the latest versions of of the Panorama graphics drivers, ACPI, USB, and NVMe drivers, improved localisation, newer versions of the VNC server and viewer, and much more.

If you have an active Support & Maintenance subscription for ArcaOS 5.1, this update is free, and it’s also available at discounted prices as upgrades for earlier versions. A brand new copy of ArcaOS 5.1.x will set you back $139, which isn’t cheap, but considering this price is probably a consequence of what must be some onerous licensing terms and other agreements with IBM, I doubt there’s much Arca Noae can do about it.

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 19:25

How Apple's lower-cost iPhone 17E matches up with its more-expensive sibling phones.

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 19:03

Save Act would limit voting access in the US and centers on Trump’s unfounded claims of noncitizens stealing elections

Donald Trump renewed his push Monday for the Save America Act, a curtailment of voting access, after threatening on Sunday not to sign any bills until Congress approves the legislation.

“All voters must show proof of citizenship in order to vote,” Trump said during remarks on Monday at a Republican event in Miami. “No mail-in ballots, except for illness, disability, military or travel.”

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2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 19:03

Secretary of State Marco Rubio formally designated Afghanistan as a state sponsor of wrongful detention, paving the way for the Trump administration to impose penalties such as sanctions and export controls.

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 19:00

Electronic Arts has laid off staff across multiple Battlefield studios despite Battlefield 6 being the best-selling game in the U.S. in 2025 and the "biggest launch in franchise history." According to IGN, the layoffs include workers at Criterion, Dice, Ripple Effect, and Motive Studios. From the report: Individuals are being informed that the layoffs are taking place as part of a "realignment" across the Battlefield studios, as the team continues its ongoing, live service support for Battlefield 6 following launch. All four studios will remain operational, though the layoffs seem to be impacting a variety of teams across multiple studios and offices. IGN asked EA for comment on total number and types of roles impacted, as well as for the specific reasons for the layoffs. An EA spokesperson told IGN: "We've made select changes within our Battlefield organization to better align our teams around what matters most to our community. Battlefield remains one of our biggest priorities, and we're continuing to invest in the franchise, guided by player feedback and insights from Battlefield Labs."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 18:54

The State Department’s most recent directives apply to personnel in Turkey and Saudi Arabia, underscoring the ongoing threat posed by Iranian counterattacks.

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 18:45

Uber is expanding a pilot program aimed at addressing concerns about the safety of its ride-hailing platform

Uber launched a feature on Monday to allow both female riders and drivers across the US to be matched with other women for trips, expanding a pilot program aimed at addressing concerns about the safety of its ride-hailing platform.

The new feature is being rolled out nationwide despite an ongoing class action lawsuit against the policy in California, filed by Uber drivers who argue that it is discriminatory against men. Rival ride-hailing company Lyft is also facing a discrimination lawsuit over a similar offering that it introduced nationwide in 2024.

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2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 18:32

Anthony Albanese announces surveillance aircraft, air-to-air missiles and supporting personnel will be deployed to the UAE after request from their president

Australia will send a specialist surveillance aircraft and stocks of air-to-air missiles to the United Arab Emirates, in what Anthony Albanese said is an effort to help protect Australians in the region under threat from Iranian attack.

As the Iran war grows, the prime minister announced the assistance on Tuesday morning after talks with the UAE’s president, Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, and US president Donald Trump overnight. Iran has attacked a dozen countries since the start of US and Israeli bombings and the death of the country’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

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2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 18:30

Exclusive: Independent adviser says some judges in England and Wales have not heard of changes to way cases are investigated

An overhaul of the way police investigate rape is being put at risk by a lack of awareness in courtrooms in England and Wales, the government’s independent adviser on rape has warned.

Prof Katrin Hohl said legal experts were concerned progress would stall or reverse if the conviction rate for rape dropped significantly because a new approach for investigating the cases, known as Operation Soteria, was hitting outdated practices in the courts.

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2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 18:24

President reassures Republicans that conflict is intended to be short lived but also says ‘we haven’t won enough’

Donald Trump has said that the war in Iran is “very complete, pretty much”, as the economic toll of the joint US-Israeli operation has risen, disrupting global oil trade and threatening to engulf the Middle East in a regional war.

Trump made the comments before a speech and press conference in Florida where he sought to emphasise that the US military campaign would be ending soon amid concerns from Republican allies that the US was being dragged into another long-term conflict in the region.

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2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 18:06

Victims remembered as ‘cherished’ and ‘devoted’ after shooting at EZ’s Lounge that injured five others on Saturday

A 33-year-old teacher and a 25-year-old father were identified as the two people killed in a mass shooting at an Oakland, California, bar over the weekend.

Seven people were shot in the incident at EZ’s Lounge on early Saturday morning. Police identified the two deadly victims on Monday as Latetia Bobo and Markise Martin.

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2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 18:00

Live Nation reached a settlement with the U.S. Department of Justice that avoids breaking up its dominant live events empire with Ticketmaster. Instead, the deal requires changes like "open sourcing" their ticketing model and divesting some venues. NBC News reports: The company and the Justice Department reached a settlement on Monday, following a week of testimony during an antitrust trial that threatened to potentially separate the world's largest live entertainment company. [...] On a background call with reporters Monday, a senior justice official said the deal will drive down prices by giving both artists and consumers more choice. As part of the agreement, Ticketmaster will provide a standalone ticketing system that will allow third-party companies like SeatGeek and StubHub to offer primary tickets through the platform. The senior justice official described it as "open sourcing" their ticketing model. The company will also divest up to 13 amphitheaters and reserve 50% of tickets for nonexclusive venues. Ticketmaster is also prohibited from retaliating against a venue that selects another primary ticket distributor, among other requirements. Although a group of states have joined the DOJ in signing the agreement, other states can continue to press their own claims.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-09 17:57
  • Commissioner: League heard ‘significant concerns’

  • Spurs’ Kornet had penned post against promotion

The NBA has called off the Atlanta Hawks’ plans for a night celebrating the city’s famed Magic City strip club, saying it did so because of “concerns” from many across the league.

The Hawks announced the plan last month, saying the team would pay tribute to an “iconic cultural institution” with food – including the club’s famous lemon pepper wings – along with a live music performance by Atlanta native TI and exclusive merchandise.

After the Hawks announced plans for the promotion, San Antonio Spurs center Luke Kornet spoke out about the idea and urged the parties involved to reconsider. And the league evidently heard the same messaging from others.

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2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 17:56

Oren, Alon and Tal Alexander convicted in New York after being accused of raping dozens of women

Three brothers, including two of the nation’s most successful luxury real estate brokers, were convicted of sex trafficking charges on Monday after a five-week trial over accusations that they used drugs and force to rape scores of women they had dazzled with their wealth and opulent lifestyle.

The verdict came after 11 women testified they were sexually assaulted by one or more of the brothers: twins Oren and Alon Alexander, 38, and Tal Alexander, 39.

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2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 17:40

Oh boy.

Wikipedia editors have implemented new policies and restricted a number of contributors who were paid to use AI to translate existing Wikipedia articles into other languages after they discovered these AI translations added AI “hallucinations,” or errors, to the resulting article.

↫ Emanuel Maiberg at 404 Media

There seems to be this pervasive conviction among Silicon Valley techbro types, and many programmers and developers in general, that translation and localisation are nothing more than basic find/replace tasks that you can automate away. At first, we just needed to make corpora of two different languages kiss and smooch, and surely that would automate translation and localisation away if the corpora were large enough. When this didn’t turn out to work very well, they figured that if we made the words in the corpora tumble down a few pachinko machines and then made them kiss and smooch, yes, then we’d surely have automated translation and localisation.

Nothing could be further from the truth. As someone who has not only worked as a professional translator for over 15 years, but who also holds two university degrees in the subject, I keep reiterating that translation isn’t just a dumb substitution task; it’s a real craft, a real art, one you can have talent for, one you need to train for, and study for. You’d think anyone with sufficient knowledge in two languages can translate effectively between the two, but without a much deeper understanding of language in general and the languages involved in particular, as well as a deep understanding of the cultures in which the translation is going to be used, and a level of reading and text comprehension that go well beyond that of most, you’re going to deliver shit translations.

Trust me, I’ve seen them. I’ve been paid good money to correct, fix, and mangle something usable out of other people’s translations. You wouldn’t believe the shit I’ve seen.

Translation involves the kinds of intricacies, nuances, and context “AI” isn’t just bad at, but simply cannot work with in any way, shape, or form. I’ve said it before, but it won’t be long before people start getting seriously injured – or worse – because of the cost-cutting in the translation industry, and the effects that’s going to have on, I don’t know, the instruction manuals for complex tools, or the leaflet in your grandmother’s medications.

Because some dumbass bean counter kills the budget for proper, qualified, trained, and experienced translators, people are going to die.

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 17:39

National Transportation Safety Board member Todd Inman called the allegations against him false and a "political hit job."

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 17:35

Senators say Trump allies such as Hegseth and Rubio should be forced to testify to Congress on ‘unnecessary war’

Democratic senators have filed a wave of new war powers resolutions as they call on Republicans to convene public hearings into the US hostilities with Iran or be forced to vote on continuing a conflict that polls show majorities of Americans do not support.

Late last week, Democrats Cory Booker of New Jersey, Tim Kaine of Virginia, Adam Schiff of California, Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin and Chris Murphy of Connecticut filed resolutions under the War Powers Act that would force the US military to withdraw from the war with Iran unless Congress votes to authorize the engagement.

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2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 17:31

Home affairs minister Tony Burke confirms US president Donald Trump’s overnight comments on social media that the players had been ‘taken care of’

Five members of the Iranian women’s football team have been granted humanitarian visas in Australia, with the prime minister, Anthony Albanese, offering assistance to the other players and saying “help is here”.

The home affairs minister, Tony Burke, confirmed the humanitarian offer on Tuesday morning, hours after the US president, Donald Trump, posted about their plight on social media. Burke said the visas had been granted at about 1.30am on Tuesday morning, around the time of Trump’s social media posts, which first criticised, then praised, Australia.

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2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 17:30

App downloads for VPN services increase sharply as websites in Australia go behind age-restriction walls.

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 17:28

Ok so this is my second attempt to get a non-contradictive answer in regard to an Error 16 on an old version XR, specifically if the stock battery can be disconnected from the BMS and reconnected and still be used.

This XR has the latest firmware/hardware updates. I can't see what the numbers are because of the Error 16 notification blocking the app.

I disconnected the white cable. Then the battery, moved the BMS and battery to a new battery box, then reconnected the battery, waited 20 seconds or more then plugged in the white cable. I get error 16.

I have been told that we can not disconnect and reconnect the battery/BMS on an updated XR.

I have also been told that we can change the battery/unplug the BMS on an updated XR.

Again this is an XR, not a GT or Pint or XRC.

Is there a definitive answer to this? Thanks.

submitted by /u/Eegore1
[link] [comments]

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 17:25

The figure, accounting for the war’s first two days, is likely to intensify concerns in Congress that U.S. forces are churning through a scarce supply of advanced weaponry.

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 17:22

David Pogue, author of "Apple: The First 50 Years," talks with Apple's co-founder Steve Wozniak, CEO Tim Cook, and others about the vision of Steve Jobs, and how the company's products and services have reshaped life, technology and culture in the 21st century.

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 17:18

Every modifier key starts simple and humble, with a specific task and a nice matching name.

This never lasts. The tasks become larger and more convoluted, and the labels grow obsolete. Shift no longer shifts a carriage, Control doesn’t send control codes, Alt isn’t for alternate nerdy terminal functions.

Fn is the newest popular modifier key, and it feels we’re speedrunning it through all the challenges without having learned any of the lessons.

↫ Marcin Wichary

Grab a blanket, curl up on the couch with some coffee or tea, and enjoy.

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 17:18

A judge ruled last summer that President Trump's former lawyer Alina Habba was illegally serving as top New Jersey's federal prosecutor. On Monday, Habba's replacements were also disqualified.

2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-09 17:17

If your putting this motor on an XR/XRV frame, then theses bolts will fit perfectly.....

20 Pcs M8-1.25x20mm Stainless Steel Hex Socket Head Cap Screws Bolts Inner Hex Socket Bolt DIN 912 https://a.co/d/0g7NiFdP

These are the outer bolts that attach to the rail

If using axle blocks from Fungineers

Hope this helps someone

Thanks to the kind people in the Fungineers Discord. Spread love and knowledge through this community! 🙏

submitted by /u/jbear812
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2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 17:10

Social media is showing you more ads, suggestions and recommended posts, pushing aside content you actually want.

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 17:07

Markets settled after Trump claimed US-Israel war with Iran is ‘very complete’, bringing oil prices down to $85 a barrel

US stock markets closed on a high after oil prices swung wildly on Monday, reaching a four-year high in the morning that rattled Asian and European markets before settling down once Donald Trump said the US-Israel war with Iran is “very complete”.

After surging past $100 a barrel on Monday morning, oil prices came down to $85 a barrel by the time that US stock markets closed in the afternoon. US stocks leaped at a report from a CBS News reporter that Trump thinks “the war is very complete, pretty much” because “they have no navy, no communications, they’ve got no air force”.

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2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 17:01

Spend time with one of these scary stories.

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 17:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from KrebsOnSecurity: AI-based assistants or "agents" -- autonomous programs that have access to the user's computer, files, online services and can automate virtually any task -- are growing in popularity with developers and IT workers. But as so many eyebrow-raising headlines over the past few weeks have shown, these powerful and assertive new tools are rapidly shifting the security priorities for organizations, while blurring the lines between data and code, trusted co-worker and insider threat, ninja hacker and novice code jockey. The new hotness in AI-based assistants -- OpenClaw (formerly known as ClawdBot and Moltbot) -- has seen rapid adoption since its release in November 2025. OpenClaw is an open-source autonomous AI agent designed to run locally on your computer and proactively take actions on your behalf without needing to be prompted. If that sounds like a risky proposition or a dare, consider that OpenClaw is most useful when it has complete access to your entire digital life, where it can then manage your inbox and calendar, execute programs and tools, browse the Internet for information, and integrate with chat apps like Discord, Signal, Teams or WhatsApp. Other more established AI assistants like Anthropic's Claude and Microsoft's Copilot also can do these things, but OpenClaw isn't just a passive digital butler waiting for commands. Rather, it's designed to take the initiative on your behalf based on what it knows about your life and its understanding of what you want done. "The testimonials are remarkable," the AI security firm Snyk observed. "Developers building websites from their phones while putting babies to sleep; users running entire companies through a lobster-themed AI; engineers who've set up autonomous code loops that fix tests, capture errors through webhooks, and open pull requests, all while they're away from their desks." You can probably already see how this experimental technology could go sideways in a hurry. [...] Last month, Meta AI safety director Summer Yue said OpenClaw unexpectedly started mass-deleting messages in her email inbox, despite instructions to confirm those actions first. She wrote: "Nothing humbles you like telling your OpenClaw 'confirm before acting' and watching it speedrun deleting your inbox. I couldn't stop it from my phone. I had to RUN to my Mac mini like I was defusing a bomb." Krebs also noted the many misconfigured OpenClaw installations users had set up, leaving their administrative dashboards publicly accessible online. According to pentester Jamieson O'Reilly, "a cursory search revealed hundreds of such servers exposed online." When those exposed interfaces are accessed, attackers can retrieve the agent's configuration and sensitive credentials. O'Reilly warned attackers could access "every credential the agent uses -- from API keys and bot tokens to OAuth secrets and signing keys." "You can pull the full conversation history across every integrated platform, meaning months of private messages and file attachments, everything the agent has seen," O'Reilly added. And because you control the agent's perception layer, you can manipulate what the human sees. Filter out certain messages. Modify responses before they're displayed."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 16:46

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2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 16:32

Food containing norovirus may smell and taste normal but still cause serious illness if consumed, FDA warns.

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 16:26

Communities secretary tells MPs that government has to act against record levels of hate crimes

A new definition of anti-Muslim hate will not restrict freedom of speech, the communities secretary has pledged, as he said that “clear expectations” will still be set for new arrivals and existing communities in Britain to learn English.

MPs were told by Steve Reed that the government had a duty to act against record levels of hate crime against Muslims, but that “you can’t tackle a problem if you can’t describe it”.

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2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 16:25

One of the largest school districts in New Mexico subjects Navajo students to pervasive discrimination and a climate of fear, according to a report released last week by the Navajo Nation Human Rights Commission. 

The 25-page report draws on testimony from parents and community members at four public hearings in Navajo Nation communities within the school district. It urges the New Mexico attorney general’s office to release findings from a two-and-a-half-year investigation into the district’s discipline of Indigenous students.

The Navajo Nation Human Rights Commission’s report cited an investigation published in December 2022 by New Mexico In Depth and ProPublica that found Indigenous students were punished more harshly than other students in New Mexico during the four years ending in 2020. The Gallup-McKinley district, which has the largest Indigenous student body of any local school district in the country, was largely responsible for that disparity, an analysis of student discipline records from across the state showed. Attorney General Raúl Torrez opened an investigation into the district’s disciplinary practices in 2023. 

On Wednesday, Torrez’s chief of staff, Lauren Rodriguez, said the office’s long-running investigation is complete and has found “troubling disciplinary practices.” She added that the agency’s “exhaustive” investigation calls for the state Public Education Department to enforce student discipline data reporting requirements and better track that information. Previously, the district’s former longtime Superintendent Mike Hyatt, had downplayed the amount of discipline Native students receive and pointed to poor data collection as an issue.

“It’s our kids, our students, who are suffering the consequences of entrenched racism,” Wendy Greyeyes, the chair of the commission that released the new report and an associate professor of Native American studies at the University of New Mexico, said in an interview. 

The Public Education Department should have caught the discipline disparities in the data it collects from districts, Greyeyes said. “There’s obviously not a clear auditing of data that’s being collected,” she said.

The attorney general’s office told New Mexico In Depth that, despite its findings, it’s not clear under state law that the office can “pursue formal legal action against the district for this particular conduct.” 

That lack of legal clarity, the spokesperson said, is why Torrez has pushed for comprehensive state civil rights legislation since 2023. 

Under the New Mexico Civil Rights Act, private individuals can sue public bodies for violations of the state constitution, but law does not explicitly authorize the attorney general to investigate and prosecute public bodies for systemic inequities, the way the federal Department of Justice can. In 2023, New Mexico lawmakers passed a bill that would have given the attorney general broad authority to investigate state or local agencies for civil rights violations. The bill had bipartisan support, but Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham killed it with a pocket veto. (Lujan Grisham did not issue a formal statement about the veto but said at the time that the bill was well-intentioned but would “create confusion” and that “much of the work outlined in the legislation can be undertaken by the AG regardless of whether or not the bill is signed.”)

At the time, Torrez told New Mexico In Depth that his office has an implied authority to pursue such cases, but that having it enshrined in law would have made it “crystal clear.”

Torrez’s spokesperson said he remains committed to seeing such legislation pass. 

At the four meetings held by the Navajo Nation Human Rights Commission in September and October, parents, students and community members described harsh discipline, language barriers, discriminatory hiring practices, problems with special education plans and inadequate classroom heating systems. 

Greyeyes described a pervasive fear of retaliation. Some witnesses cried at hearings, she said — afraid their words would get back to the district — and parents spoke on behalf of children too afraid to testify themselves. Transcripts of their testimony were not publicly released.

The commission’s report recommends a formal agreement between the Navajo Nation and Gallup-McKinley for the district to adopt a discipline policy based on restorative justice, a strategy that seeks to rebuild relationships, not simply punish the student who caused the harm. Such a policy could be modeled on existing talking-circles programs at New Mexico’s Cuba Independent School District and the STAR School east of Flagstaff, Arizona, on the Navajo Nation, Greyeyes said.

The report also recommends a comprehensive state financial audit of the district’s spending on Native education compared to that of other students, and it calls for the state education department to better manage and track districts’ student discipline data. 

The school district did not respond to voice messages and emails seeking comment about the Navajo Nation Human Rights Commission report. 

The problems identified in the commission’s report are “rooted in colonization,” Greyeyes said. “It’s rooted in institutional racism. A lot of these things are accepted sometimes even by our own Navajo people, and we need to bring this information out and figure out a way to address these issues.”

The report’s recommendations “begin that conversation,” she said. 

The post ​​Native Students Receive Excessive Discipline in This New Mexico School District, Report Finds appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 16:25

A new render shows exactly what an iPhone Fold could look like.

2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-09 16:24

Graphics cards and NAND stock aren’t the only computing ingredients selling like hotcakes these days as a result of the AI boom. Executives for AMD and Intel have noted that demand for X64 CPUs is up considerably, due to the overall AI factory buildout in general–but more specifically, thanks to the shift to running AI inference and agentic AI workloads.

Up to this point, GPUs have been the undisputed hardware stars of the AI show, thanks to their capability to do the heavy computational lifting that modern neural networks require. This is particularly true during the training phase, where GPUs with thousands of cores can plow through the parallel matrix multiplication required to turn training data into weighted parameters. With the lion’s share of the data center market, Nvidia has reaped the rewards of the AI boom, which made it the world’s first $5 trillion company.

As the dust settled from the initial AI boom at the beginning of 2025, attention shifted from AI model training to AI inference. A new workload, agentic AI, also emerged. Suddenly, AI operators faced the prospect of running hundreds or thousands of semi-autonomous AI agents in parallel. This created a new bottleneck in the infrastructure around the speed at which data can be moved from memory into the GPU and back. Insatiable demand for high-bandwidth memory (HBM) put pressure on the world’s NAND stocks, which resulted in a shortage of NVMe drives and big price increases.

So far in our story, the humble CPU hasn’t played a starring role. But as AI evolved, we find the infrastructure needs are shifting right back over the CPU sweet spot.Shutterstock 2184948531

The reason is that, while CPUs don’t often run AI models directly, they are responsible for handling many other tasks necessary to run today’s modern neural network workloads. This includes tasks like data pre-processing, AI model orchestration, and scheduling the more computationally heavy tasks among fleets of GPUs. There’s a reason that Nvidia, AMD, and others are building “superchips” that fuse GPUs (or other AI accelerators) with CPUs into a single chip.

In some cases, CPUs are the preferred hardware for running AI inference, particularly for smaller models that will run at the edge. CPUs are smaller than today’s big GPUs, and they have more modest power and cooling requirements. As the agentic AI revolution ramps up and organizations are looking to deploy AI, they’re finding it preferable to run their AI models on-prem and on the edge, rather than in massive cloud data centers, in part to minimize data movement, which is computationally expensive.

“The CPU has become cool again this year,” Intel Executive VP and CFO David Zinsner said last week during a panel at the recent Morgan Stanley Technology, Media & Telecom Conference, according to a transcript of the event on SeekingAlpha. “We’ve long believed that CPUs needed to kind of stay along with the GPUs in these data centers.”

Zinsner said the total market for CPUs was up by 20% to 30% in 2025, and is on track to increase again in 2026. “We’re starting to see customers come in, in that space asking for long-term agreements, that should tell you that there’s legs to this,” the Intel EVP said during the event.” They’re looking at this over a three- to five-year basis and want to lock in supply with us.”

AMD CEO Lisa Su said she was surprised by the demand for CPUs

That viewpoint was echoed by AMD CEO Lisa Su, who also spoke at the Morgan Stanley conference in San Francisco last week.

“I’m very, very excited about the GPU portion of the business,” Su said at the conference, according to a transcript provided by Investing.com. “The CPU portion of the business has actually far exceeded my expectations in terms of demand.”

The end of 2025 and the beginning of 2026 was marked by significant demand for high-performance compute, Su said, citing the upcoming launch of the MI450, AMD’s next-generation GPU, which is due out in the second half of 2026. But GPUs aren’t the only type of chip in demand, thanks to AI.

“We’re seeing a significant CPU demand, frankly, as a result of the inference demand picking up,” Su said. “We’ve always believed that the computing stack is heterogeneous, and you’re going to need CPUs and GPUs and FPGAs and all of these components. That’s really coming to fruition here in 2026.”

Intel and AMD both launched new CPUs today at the Embedded World 2026 show in Nuremberg, Germany, that take aim at edge AI workloads. The Intel Core Series 2 is designed for industrial and edge applications that demand higher multi-threaded performance and lower latencies. The new AMD Ryzen AI Embedded P100 Series processor, meanwhile, is targeting industrial PCs, physical AI, and healthcare applications,

The world definitely needs more AI accelerators to handle the heavy lifting that AI requires. Trillions of dollars are being invested in the infrastructure to power emerging AI workloads, and a large amount of that spending will go toward GPUs and other XPUs from Nvidia, AMD, Intel, and others. But as general-purpose processors that can do a range of tasks, the humble CPU will also hear its name called quite a bit through the data center buildout taking place over the next four years. The only surprise here may be that the CPU demand was unexpected.

 

The post AI Boom Comes for CPUs, Which Are ‘Cool Again’ appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 16:08

Andy Ogles posted ‘Muslims don’t belong in American society,’ among other statements, prompting Cair to call him an ‘anti-Muslim extremist’

Andy Ogles, a Republican representative of Tennessee, spent Monday on an Islamophobic rant, writing on social media: “Muslims don’t belong in American society,” among other statements that drew heated criticism from Democrats.

“None of them belong here,” Ogles wrote in one of several posts on X, next to the mugshots of people he identified as being from Somalia and Senegal, the latter of whom was killed by police after a mass shooting last week in Austin, Texas.

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2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 20:12

The U.S. average gas price has jumped 48 cents since last week, with experts predicting that higher fuel costs could persist for months.

2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 17:08

After a sharp drop in early trading, stocks recovered part of those losses as oil prices fell back below $100.

2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 21:04

Two men from Pennsylvania are facing federal charges for the incident. Video captured someone yelling "Allahu Akbar" just as a protester threw an "ignited device" during an anti-Islam demonstration in New York City.

2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-10 11:20

The Los Angeles Police Department identified the woman as 35-year-old Ivanna Ortiz. She has been booked for attempted murder.

2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-10 07:04

President Trump's assurances that a rising U.S. death toll and soaring energy prices will be temporary and worth the pain are failing to assuage jittery investors.

2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 17:05

Emir Balat and Ibrahim Kayumi of Pennsylvania are accused of trying to detonate bombs at an anti-Islam rally near New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s home Saturday.

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 16:02

Kemi may be all in favour, but at least economic realpolitik is forcing her to take a slightly different tack

There have been any number of opportunities for people to decide they wanted no part of America’s war with Iran. The first was after the US had launched its first wave of strikes. To be fair, this was the moment Keir Starmer and most of the UK reckoned enough was enough and that our involvement would be limited to defensive strikes only.

You couldn’t really fault the logic. Did the UK really want to be part of a war that was illegal in most versions of international law and for which the Americans had no clear vision of how it might end? Other than Donald Trump gets bored and lets everyone else clear up his mess. Like a baby. Nor was the UK’s track record of wars in the 21st century any source of pride. Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya had all been in chaos. Iran was shaping up the same way. So Starmer decided to sit this one out. Applying the doctor’s principle of ”first, do no harm”.

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2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 16:01

Republican senator warns of ‘consequences’ if kingdom does not join US strikes against Iranians

Senator Lindsey Graham on Monday questioned whether the United States should honor a long-sought defense agreement with Saudi Arabia, saying the kingdom’s refusal to join military operations against Iran made the partnership difficult to justify given that Americans were dying in a war Graham himself helped push the Trump administration to start.

In a post on X, Graham said the American embassy in Riyadh was being evacuated due to sustained Iranian attacks on Saudi soil, and expressed frustration that Riyadh had declined to participate militarily despite what he described as a shared interest in defeating Iran.

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2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 16:01

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for March 10, No. 1,003

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 16:01

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for March 10, No. 1,725.

2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 16:00

Bluesky CEO Jay Graber is stepping down after overseeing the platform's growth from a Twitter research project into a 40-million-user alternative to X. "As Bluesky matures, the company needs a seasoned operator focused on scaling and execution, while I return to what I do best: building new things," Graber wrote in a statement. She will be transitioning to a new Chief Innovation Officer role while Venture capitalist Toni Schneider will serve as interim CEO until the board searches for a permanent replacement. Wired reports: Graber joined Bluesky in 2019, when it was a research project within Twitter focused on developing a decentralized framework for the social web. She became the company's first chief executive officer in 2021, when it spun out into an independent entity. She oversaw the platform's remarkable rise and the growing pains it experienced as it transformed from a quirky Twitter offshoot to a full-fledged alternative to X. Schneider tells WIRED that he intends to help Bluesky "become not just the best open social app, but the foundation for a whole new generation of user-owned networks." Schneider, who will continue working as a partner at the venture capital firm True Ventures while at Bluesky, was previously CEO of the Wordpress parent company, Automattic, from 2006 to 2014. He also served as its CEO again in 2024 while top executive Matt Mullenweg went on a sabbatical. During that time, Schneider met Graber and became an adviser to Bluesky's leadership. In a blog post announcing his new role, Schneider said he plans to emphasize scaling, describing his job as "to help set up Bluesky's next phase of growth." This isn't the end for Graber and Bluesky. She will transition to become the company's chief innovation officer, a role focused on Bluesky's technology stack rather than its business operations. The position was created for her. Graber, who began her career as a software engineer, has always sounded the most enthusiastic when discussing Bluesky's technology rather than its revenue streams. Bluesky's board of directors will appoint the next permanent CEO. The members include Jabber founder Jeremie Miller, crypto-focused VC Kinjal Shah, TechDirt founder Mike Masnick, and Graber. (Twitter founder Jack Dorsey was originally part of the board but quit in 2024.) This means Graber will have input on her successor. The talent search is still in early stages.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 16:00

Leader of rebel group says there is deep concern within Society of Labour Lawyers about courts and tribunals bill

Lawyers affiliated to Labour were “blocked” from briefing party MPs to share concerns about plans to cut the number of jury trials in England and Wales, it has been claimed.

The allegation was made by Karl Turner, the leader of a backbench rebellion against a flagship government bill that would remove the right to a jury trial in thousands of cases, before the first chance by MPs to vote on the legislation.

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2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 16:00

Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for March 10, No. 737.

2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 15:57

Mr. Butterfield, a onetime aide to the president, electrified the Watergate investigation with his bombshell testimony about Nixon’s secret recording system.

2026-03-09 16:04
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2026-03-09 15:43
  • Pair also bet on Jones to receive yellow card

  • Players overlapped for one season at Columbus Crew

Major League Soccer announced on Monday that it has given Derrick Jones and Yaw Yeboah lifetime bans for “extensive” gambling, including on games involving their own teams. In one instance, the pair won a bet that Jones would receive a yellow card.

MLS said it had received “suspicious betting alerts” and retained a law firm to investigate. The players were placed on administrative leave in late October 2025 as the review ran its course. Eventually, the investigation found that both players betted on soccer extensively throughout the 2024 and 2025 seasons, including on their own teams.

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2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 15:43

Debt consolidation could help you simplify payments and cut interest costs if you know which loans to consider.

2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 15:38

Request for records related to election audit appears latest part of Trump effort to spread false claims about voting

A federal grand jury subpoenaed Arizona’s legislature for records related the state senate’s widely criticized review of the 2020 election, the state senate president said on Monday, in what appears to be the latest part of the Trump administration’s efforts to spread false claims about the 2020 election and voting in the United States.

Warren Petersen, the president of the Arizona state senate, confirmed on X on Monday the legislature had received a subpoena related to records of its review of the election results in Maricopa county, the most populous in the state. He added that “the FBI has the records”.

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2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 15:36
Onewheel Pint X blinking yellow light. Please help!

My buddy gave me his Onewheel Pint X a couple days ago because he doesn’t ride it anymore. I brought it home, rode it around my block for a bit, and I left it in my garage which is moderate temp and dry. Two days later, I try to turn it on and get the blinking yellow light. On the app it gives me the “I need my personal space” error message. I‘ve read about this issue and tried charging and cleaning the grip tape, but neither worked. I did notice a lot of sand in the crevices, could there somehow be sand affecting the footpad sensor?

Am I really going to have to buy a new $100 footpad for it to work again? What confuses me is that literally nothing happened between when it was working fine and when this started happening. My friend says he had never seen it do that before either and it only has 24 miles on it. What could have happened?

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2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 15:31

Chancellor says she is ready to help households with rising costs but stops short of setting out specific steps

Britain is likely to be hit by rising inflation because of the US war with Iran, the chancellor has said, as she suggested that a “rapid de-escalation” would be the best protection against a jump in energy prices.

Rachel Reeves stopped short of setting out any new relief for families who might be hit by rising prices, rebuffing calls to ditch a planned 5p rise in fuel duty in September.

The price of Brent crude oil rocketed to as high as $119.50 on Sunday, a jump of 29%.

The Bank of England is now expected to keep interest rates on hold through 2026, with a small possibility of a rise in 2027.

The prospect of a prolonged conflict and higher inflation also pushed global markets lower.

The AA said drivers could “consider cutting out some non-essential journeys and changing their driving style to conserve fuel”.

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2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-09 15:26

SAN DIEGO, March 9, 2026 — HPCwire, the leading publication for news and information for the high performance computing industry, today unveiled its People to Watch for 2026. This feature highlights key community members who are driving the industry forward, people you should be keeping an eye on in the year to come.

Over the course of the program, HPCwire has recognized more than 275 HPC luminaries who have gone on to achieve extraordinary things. One dozen additional individuals are being honored in 2026, the 24th year of the People to Watch program.

“Selecting 12 People to Watch is profoundly difficult, considering the immense amount of intelligence, creativity, and drive that exists in the HPC community,” said HPCwire Managing Editor Alex Woodie. “There are many individuals worthy of this honor, but I feel confident that the 2026 People to Watch exemplify the relentless pursuit of excellence and progress that this program represents.”

This year’s group of People to Watch is marked by the transformative impact that AI is having on the fields of science and engineering. Despite the enormous potential for automation that AI brings to many fields, including scientific computing, none of it works without people — people like the ones we are proud to honor. Our 12 People to Watch for 2026 are at the forefront of these trends, adapting new technology to our rapidly-changing world in order to unlock the answers to the biggest societal challenges of our time and make the impossible, possible.

The 2026 HPCwire People to Watch selections are:

Rosa Badia
HPC Software Research Area Director, Barcelona Supercomputing Center (BSC)

Ian Colle
Senior Vice President and Chief Product Officer, Penguin Solutions

Eric Demers
SVP, GPU IP Engineering, Intel Data Center Group

Jay Gambetta
Director of IBM Research and IBM Fellow

Dario Gil
Under Secretary for Science, U.S. Department of Energy

Bastian Koller
Managing Director High Performance Computing Center Stuttgart (HLRS)

Elizabeth L’Heureux
Principal Head of HPC, BP

Emmanuel Le Roux
Senior Vice President, Head of Bull at Atos Group

Thomas Lippert
Director, Jülich Supercomputing Centre (JSC)

Satoshi Matsuoka
Director, RIKEN Center for Computational Science

Samantika Sury
Fellow, Chief Hardware Architect and VP, HPC and AI Solutions, HPE

Kathy Yelick
Robert S. Pepper Distinguished Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences and Vice Chancellor for Research, UC Berkeley

To read exclusive interviews with each Person to Watch, please visit: www.hpcwire.com/people-to-watch-2026.

About HPCwire

HPCwire is a news site and weekly newsletter covering the fastest computers in the world and the people who run them. As the trusted source for HPC news since 1987, HPCwire serves as the publication of record on the issues, opportunities, challenges, and community developments relevant to the global High Performance Computing space. Its reporting covers the vendors, technologies, users, and the uses of high performance, AI- and data-intensive computing within academia, government, science, and industry. Subscribe now at www.hpcwire.com.

About TCI Media

TCI Media (formerly Tabor Communications Inc.) is the home of the Wire publications: AIwire, HPCwire, BigDATAwire, and QCwire, which broadly cover Advanced Scale technologies for scientific and technical computing. The Wire publications closely follow the convergence of AI, HPC, and Big Data, and the evolution of Quantum Computing. Together, they unify the IT communities that we serve, providing news, analysis, and information to educate and engage users and decision-makers seeking high performance and advanced scale computing solutions for scientific and technical workloads across AI, HPC, Big Data, and Quantum Computing. More information can be found at www.tci-media.co.


Source: TCI Media

The post HPCwire Unveils 2026 People to Watch appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 15:25
  • QB agreed $212.4m extension with team in 2024

  • Falcons reportedly signing QB on one-year deal

  • Kansas City set to beef up running game

  • Mike Evans joins 49ers after leaving Tampa Bay

The Miami Dolphins are moving on from Tua Tagovailoa, the quarterback they drafted with the fifth overall pick in 2020 in hopes of turning the franchise’s fortunes around.

“As we move forward, we will be focused on infusing competition across the roster and establishing a strong foundation for this team as we work towards building a sustained winner,” Dolphins general manager Jon-Eric Sullivan said in a statement on Monday.

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2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 15:25

ORLANDO, Fla., March 9, 2026 — Only one out of every five data and analytic (D&A) or AI leaders are concerned that uncertain costs will limit AI value according to Gartner, Inc., a business and technology insights company.

A Gartner survey of 353 D&A and AI leaders from November through December 2025 found that this has led to only 44% of organizations adopting financial guardrails or AI FinOPs practices.

Gartner analysts Adam Ronthal and Georgia O’Callaghan on stage at Gartner Data & Analytics Summit in Orlando, Florida. Credit: Gartner, Inc.

“Where adoption rates for AI deployment have grown from just two out of five organizations in 2024, to four out of five organizations today, D&A leaders must achieve clarity and focus on ROI to better achieve the growing AI goals and ambitions of their organizations,” said Adam Ronthal, VP Analyst at Gartner. “D&A leaders must realize they are responsible for delivering real value in the midst of all this AI hype and fears of an AI bubble that might burst.”

“Getting to value is often measured using ROI, which D&A leaders need to think of as more than just a financial measure,” said Georgia O’Callaghan, Director Analyst at Gartner. “There are three ways to approach value that will help D&A leaders steer their organizations safely and effectively through the turbulent AI value waters.”

During the opening keynote at the Gartner Data & Analytics Summit, taking place here through Wednesday, Gartner analysts discussed these three ways to derive value from AI.

Set AI Ambition

Increased acceleration and uncertainty, combined with concerns about trust and control, drive the need for continuous learning and adaptation.

“D&A leaders may be experimenting with AI and learning a lot, but that also means they risk falling behind because everyone is experimenting,” said Ronthal. “D&A leaders should set their AI-ambition to help them maximize value from the insights their data provides, together with the knowledge and intuition of their team. This provides a return on intelligence.”

To set this level of ambition, D&A leaders must radically rethink the impact of AI on D&A, set a shared vision and determine their level of AI ambition, take AI leadership, decide their role and manage the unpredictable and hidden costs of AI early.

Strengthen AI Foundations

Without strong foundations, AI will remain what it is for most organizations today; an expensive experiment.

“Expecting AI or GenAI to compensate for delayed upgrades, siloed teams and years of technical debt is wishful thinking,” said O’Callaghan. “D&A leaders must make sure their data is AI-ready, prevent exposing the wrong data to the wrong people and avoid inaccuracies, misunderstandings and hallucinations with a well-designed context layer. This provides a return on integrity.”

To create strong AI foundations and reduce risk, D&A leaders should align their foundational initiatives with their AI ambition level, make governance a value accelerator and create a single, unified context layer.

Empower People for AI Transformation

While organizations change at a rapid pace, humans have a finite capacity to incorporate change. AI readiness grows much faster than human readiness.

“D&A leaders must make the shift from thinking about roles to focusing on skills with respect to AI,” said Ronthal. “D&A leaders will get value from their investments in developing their workforce. By focusing on skills, mindset, and behavioral change, they can unlock both individual and collective potential. This will increase employee engagement and productivity, making their organization more adaptive to change. Ultimately, this provides a return on individuals.”

To empower people for AI-driven transformation, D&A leaders must substantially budget for change management, prioritize mindset and skillset over toolset, address employee concerns with a skills-development roadmap and also pilot fusion teams of blended human and artificial intelligence.

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 Identifies 3 Pillars for Deriving Value from AI appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-09 15:14

Anglers describe harrowing phone calls to loved ones after ice detached from shores of Georgian Bay in Ontario

Kevin Fox thought the spring-like temperatures that had temporarily pushed the cold away from south-eastern Ontario meant a good day for ice fishing, a popular winter pastime in the region.

After shifting location because the wind and ice “didn’t feel right” and the fish weren’t biting close to shore, he and a friend joined nearly two dozen others far out on a sheet of ice in Lake Huron. They followed the familiar routine of anyone who spends a day on the ice: they drilled holes, dropped their lines and waited.

Continue reading...

2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 15:10

The AI model you choose to vibe code with can dramatically affect your final output.

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

The poll finds that AI is viewed less positively than ICE and President Donald Trump, and only more positively than Iran and the Democratic Party.

2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 15:08
1st board ever!

I've had it for about a week now, and I'm absolutely hooked on it!

submitted by /u/Interesting-Fudge909
[link] [comments]

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 15:05

LONDON, March 9, 2026 — Nscale today announced its $2 billion in Series C funding, led by Aker ASA and 8090 Industries. This round values Nscale at $14.6 billion. The funding round was supported by Astra Capital Management, Citadel, Dell, Jane Street, Lenovo, Linden Advisors, Nokia, NVIDIA, and Point72. This new raise will further accelerate Nscale’s global development of vertically integrated AI infrastructure — from GPU compute and networking to data services and orchestration software — across Europe, North America, and Asia.

AI is reshaping industries, economies and national strategies, and accelerated computing platforms are the engine driving that shift. The constraint on market scaling is not demand, but the ability to deploy capacity and run it reliably in production. Nscale is purpose-built to accelerate AI deployments. This capital deepens Nscale’s infrastructure footprint, expands its engineering and operations teams, and strengthens the platform, enabling Nscale to continue to deliver real, production-grade AI deployments at massive scale.

“This is the fourth industrial revolution; the world is changing at a rapid pace. Over the next 5 years, Artificial Intelligence will be integrated into every industry, every product, and every job. Accelerating drug discovery, extending human life, autonomizing travel and robotics, lifting productivity, and driving massive growth. This is leading to the largest infrastructure buildout in human history,” said Josh Payne, CEO and Founder of Nscale. “Nscale is leading this buildout. We are building this foundation that the market sits on, the engine of superintelligence.”

Strengthening Nscale’s Board

Nscale also today welcomes three new Directors. Sheryl Sandberg, Susan Decker, and Nick Clegg will join the Nscale Board, bringing substantial global depth across technology, policy, operations, and governance to an already world-class collection of business leaders.

Sheryl Sandberg — Sandberg is currently the co-founder of Sandberg Bernthal Venture Partners, which deploys private capital to fund innovation across consumer, enterprise, climate and healthcare technology. As former Chief Operating Officer of Meta and an early executive at Google, Sandberg brings unmatched experience in scaling the world’s most influential technology companies, as well as deep expertise in operations, growth strategy, and building global organizations.

Susan Decker — Decker is the CEO and co-founder of Raftr, a Community Experience platform for universities. She is a former President of Yahoo, Inc. and is currently a Board member at Costco Wholesale Corporation, Berkshire Hathaway, Vail Resorts, Chime, Vox Media, and Automattic. Decker brings sharp financial acumen, governance expertise, and strategic leadership developed across decades at the forefront of global media and technology companies.

Nick Clegg — A current General Partner at Hiro Capital, Clegg focuses on fostering the growth of leading spatial computing technologies within Europe. He is both a former UK Deputy Prime Minister and former President, Global Affairs at Meta. Prior to being elected to the UK Parliament in 2005, Clegg served five years in the European Parliament. Clegg brings deep expertise at the intersection of technology, policy, and global affairs and has most recently been at the center of the most consequential regulatory and governance conversations shaping the future of AI.

Sandberg, Decker, and Clegg join Nscale’s existing Board of Directors, which includes Josh Payne, Rael Nurick, Jacob Leschly, and Øyvind Eriksen.

Streamlining Execution in Norway

Alongside this Series C funding and its new Directors, Nscale has reached an agreement with Aker to roll the Aker Nscale joint venture — announced in July 2025 — fully into Nscale. Going forward, Aker will remain a leading shareholder in Nscale with its CEO Øyvind Eriksen continuing to serve on the Nscale Board.

This decision consolidates delivery and governance under one entity, while ensuring all existing projects under the joint venture continue and remain fully operational as part of Nscale. This ongoing partnership has been foundational to Nscale’s growth and demonstrates its continued commitment to playing a positive, long-term role in the communities where it operates. Nscale’s firm pledge to waste heat reuse, local skills development, and investment in regional infrastructure remains unchanged.

Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC and J.P. Morgan acted as joint placement agents for Nscale in connection with this capital raise which is inclusive of the Pre-Series C SAFE.

More from HPCwire: ‍Nscale, Aker, and OpenAI Launch Norwegian AI Project Targeting 100,000 NVIDIA GPUs

About Nscale

Nscale is the global hyperscaler engineered for AI infrastructure. Through vertically integrated AI solutions and modular, first-principles data center design across Europe, North America, and beyond, Nscale delivers the compute foundation for enterprise AI training, fine-tuning, and inference at scale.


Source: Nscale

The post Nscale Raises $2B Series C to Expand AI Compute and Data Infrastructure Globally appeared first on HPCwire.

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

SAN JOSE, March 9, 2026 — Lightbits Labs, inventor of the NVMe over TCP storage protocol, today announced that Coredge, a leading cloud solutions provider, has selected Lightbits software-defined storage to power next-gen AI cloud services. Following its recent acquisition by Sirius Digitech, Coredge is scaling its platforms to support large-scale AI adoption across regulated industries, telecommunications providers, and public-sector entities worldwide. This collaboration is intended to establish a multi-petabyte-scale, cloud-native infrastructure deployment in India to support Coredge’s rapidly expanding footprint without the high cost and rigidity of legacy SAN architectures.

Founded in 2020, Coredge builds and operates cloud-native platforms that enable organizations to deploy and manage AI, Kubernetes, and OpenShift workloads. Its sovereign OpenShift-based Kubernetes cloud infrastructure is optimized for performance-sensitive use cases, including AI training and inference, real-time analytics, and mission-critical enterprise applications as configured and governed by customer-specific and regulatory requirements.

“AI workloads demand far more than raw capacity—they require predictable low latency and consistent performance at scale,” said Abhimanyu Bhatter, Co-Founder and Associate Vice President of Technology at Coredge. “Lightbits enables us to grow our business by delivering highly performant, premium services using open, software-defined, NVMe-based infrastructure that aligns with our operational strategy.”

To support a large-scale deployment expansion in India, Coredge required a storage architecture capable of delivering consistent, low-latency, high-throughput, and elastic scalability, while integrating seamlessly with its OpenShift-based Kubernetes environments. Coredge selected Lightbits for its ability to deliver high-performance block storage over standard Ethernet, without specialized networking fabrics. Legacy SAN and proprietary appliance-based storage architectures introduced cost, operational complexity, and scaling constraints that were incompatible with Coredge’s cloud-native design principles.

By deploying Lightbits, Coredge expects to achieve significant advantages:

  • Reduced TCO: Leveraging commodity hardware, high-performance storage using standard Ethernet networks, and thin provisioning services to reduce TCO at scale.
  • NVMe/TCP-direct Architecture: Designed to deliver predictable low latency and high throughput.
  • Enhanced Resiliency: Built-in data protection and compatibility with modern backup and recovery solutions, such as Veeam Kasten. Fast snapshots for speedier recovery help meet stringent availability, durability, and compliance requirements.
  • Ecosystem Compatibility: Seamless integrations with OpenShift and Kubernetes enable Coredge to streamline operations, accelerating time-to-market for new services.

“Lightbits provides the speed and predictability required for the latency-sensitive workloads run on Coredge’s platforms, while at the same time providing Coredge the ability to scale on commodity infrastructure cost-efficiently,” added Keimpe Paulus, Vice President and EMEA Territory Lead at Lightbits Labs. “We’re excited to support their goal to expand their platforms and services.”

As Coredge expands its AI and cloud services globally, Lightbits will play a central role in supporting scalable, secure, and high-performance data infrastructure.

To learn more about Lightbits software-defined storage, visit lightbitslabs.com or book a product demonstration today.

About Lightbits Labs

Lightbits Labs (Lightbits) invented the NVMe over TCP storage protocol, embedding it natively into their software-defined block storage to deliver ultra-low latency and exceptional throughput while leveraging commodity infrastructure—essential for reducing the cost and complexity of data infrastructure at scale. Built from the ground up for high performance, scalability, resiliency, and cost efficiency, Lightbits software delivers the best price-performance value for real-time analytics, transactional, and AI workloads. Lightbits Labs is backed by enterprise technology leaders [Cisco Investments, Dell Technologies Capital, Intel Capital, Lenovo, and Micron] and is on a mission to deliver best-in-class block storage for performance-sensitive workloads.


Source: Lightbits Labs

The post Lightbits Selected by Coredge to Power AI Cloud Services Infrastructure appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 15:00

Qualcomm and Arduino have unveiled the Arduino Ventuno Q, a new AI-focused single-board computer built for robotics and edge systems. Engadget reports: Called the Arduino Ventuno Q, it uses Qualcomm's Dragonwing IQ8 processor along with a dedicated STM32H5 low-latency microcontroller (MCU). "Ventuno Q is engineered specifically for systems that move, manipulate and respond to the physical world with precision and reliability," the company wrote on the product page. The Ventuno Q is more sophisticated (and expensive) than Arduinio's usual AIO boards, thanks to the Dragonwing IQ8 processor that includes an 8-core ARM Cortex CPU, Adreno Arm Cortex A623 GPU and Hexagon Tensor NPU that can hit up ot 40 TOPs. It also comes with 16GB of LPDDR5 RAM, along with 64GB of eMMC storage and an M.2 NVME Gen.4 slot to expand that. Other features include Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.3, 2.5Gbps ethernet and USB camera support. The Ventuno Q includes Arudino App Lab, with pre-trained AI models including LLMs, VLMs, ASR, gesture recognition, pose estimation and object tracking, all running offline. It's designed for AI systems that run entirely offline like smart kiosks, healthcare assistants and traffic flow analysis, along with Edge AI vision and sensing systems. It also supports a full robotics stack including vision processing combined with deterministic motor control for precise vision and manipulation. It's also ideal for education and research in areas like computer vision, generative AI and prototyping at the edge, according to Arduino. Further reading: Up Next for Arduino After Qualcomm Acquisition: High-Performance Computing

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 15:00

NUREMBERG, Germany, March 9, 2026 — At Embedded World 2026, Intel launched the Intel Core processor Series 2 with P-cores, an industrial-ready platform engineered for mission-critical edge applications. Intel also announced its latest Edge AI suite for Health & Life Sciences, providing validated reference pipelines and benchmarking tools for AI-powered patient monitoring solutions.

“Intel continues to lead in edge computing, which remains one of our fastest-growing business segments,” said Dan Rodriguez, Intel corporate vice president and general manager of the Edge Computing Group. ” With the introduction of Core Series 2, our CES launch of Core Ultra Series 3, and our expanding Edge AI Suites, we continue to deliver comprehensive platforms that meet diverse edge customer needs with breakthrough performance, reliability, and integrated AI acceleration.”

Intel Core Series 2 Solves Industrial Real-Time Challenges

Intel Core Series 2 processors address the critical challenges facing modern industrial operations, which demand processors that can handle multiple critical workloads simultaneously—from safety-critical control systems to real-time data processing—all while maintaining precise timing and deterministic performance. Traditional processors often force manufacturers to choose between computational power and real-time reliability, leading to complex multi-processor architectures that increase costs and system complexity. Intel Core Series 2 processor take these challenges head-on. Compared to AMD Ryzen 7 9700X, Intel Core Series 2 processors deliver up to 4.4x lower max PCIe latency, up to 2.5x more deterministic response time, up to 3.8x better deterministic performance, and up to 1.5x higher multi-thread performance, delivering the performance the industry needs.

Edge AI Suites Accelerate Healthcare AI Innovation

Intel previewed its Health & Life Sciences AI Suite, focused on AI-enabled patient monitoring. As healthcare systems face growing patient volumes and staffing constraints, patient monitoring is evolving from isolated devices to intelligent, connected ecosystems that demand AI-enabled solutions for earlier insights and reliable real-world operation. The suite showcases concurrent, multimodal workloads running locally on Intel processors—including AI-based electrocardiogram (ECG) arrhythmia detection, remote photoplethysmography, and anonymous 3D visual tracking—helping original equipment manufacturers (OEMs), original design manufacturers (ODMs), and independent software vendors (ISVs) evaluate platforms using representative scenarios rather than synthetic benchmarks.

Together with the recently launched Core Ultra Series 3 processors, Intel Core Series 2 processors with P-cores and the new Health & Life Sciences Edge AI Suite demonstrate Intel’s comprehensive edge portfolio that addresses the full spectrum of customer requirements—from deterministic real-time control to advanced AI acceleration—enabling faster innovation across manufacturing, healthcare, and emerging edge applications.

Availability: Edge systems powered by Intel Core Ultra Series 3 and Intel Core Series 2 with P- cores are all available now.

A preview version of the Edge AI suite for Health & Life Sciences is now accessible on GitHub and general availability is planned for Q2 2026.

About Intel Corporation 

Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) is an industry leader, creating world-changing technology that enables global progress and enriches lives.


Source: Intel

The post Intel Launches Core Series 2 Processor with Real-Time Performance and Expands Edge AI Portfolio appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 14:59

New processors enable next-generation industrial and robotics solutions with up to twice the CPU cores and higher AI throughput in the same compact footprint.

March 9, 2026 — Factory automation, physical AI in mobile robotics, and other AI-driven edge applications are rapidly evolving and driving the need for computing platforms that provide real-time AI processing, deterministic performance, and long-term reliability in always-on environments.

Credit: Shutterstock

To meet these needs, AMD is expanding its AMD Ryzen AI Embedded P100 Series processor portfolio. New processors feature up to 2x higher CPU core counts, up to 8x higher graphics processing unit (GPU) compute, and an estimated 36% higher system tera operations.

Scalable AI Compute for Demanding Applications

The processors feature eight to 12 “Zen 5” cores, up to 80 system TOPS for physical AI acceleration, AMD RDNA 3.5 graphics for real-time visualization, and a neural processing unit (NPU) based on the AMD XDNA 2 architecture for low-latency, power-efficient AI inference — all on a single chip.

From industrial PCs for the intelligent factory to autonomous robots and medical imaging devices, new x86 embedded processors are optimized for next-generation industrial and broader edge AI use cases. They include:

  • Intelligent Machine Vision for Industrial PCs: New processors enable consolidation of programmable logic controllers (PLCs), machine vision, and human-machine interface (HMI) into a single industrial PC, while delivering the CPU performance required for real-time inspection and process optimization. The integrated GPU and NPU accelerate multicamera vision and rich HMI dashboards while enabling low-latency anomaly detection using models like DeepSORT, RAFT-Stereo, CenterPoint, GDR-Net, PaDiM, and Llama 3.2-Vision.
  • Physical AI for Autonomous Operations: For mobile robots, the processors manage navigation, motion control, and route planning on the CPU, while the GPU processes multicamera feeds for spatial awareness, Visual SLAM, and advanced AI workloads like vision-language-action (VLA) models. Unified memory between the CPU and GPU unlocks low latency for better responsiveness. The NPU delivers always-on low-power inference for object detection and scene understanding using models such as YOLOv12 and MobileSAM.
  • 3D Health Imaging and Clinical Intelligence: The processors enable the powering of 3D imaging for ultrasounds, endoscopes, tissue classification, and tumor detection at the edge using models like U-Net, nnU-Net, and MONAI. The processors accelerate image-to-report workflows with MedSigLIP and support clinical reasoning and Q&A with Med-PaLM 2. Healthcare original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) can consolidate imaging, AI analysis, and reporting on a scalable, long-life-cycle x86 embedded platform.

Compared with the prior generation AMD Ryzen Embedded 8000 Series, the P100 Series is expected to provide up to 39% higher multithreaded performance and up to 2.1x higher total system TOPS2. The new processors deliver exceptional AI performance-per-watt and support almost twice the number of virtual machines and larger large language models, like Llama3.2-Vision 11B, than the existing P100 Series to enable more advanced AI and mixed workloads.

ROCm Software Support and Virtualized Reference Stack

Support for the AMD ROCm open software ecosystem brings a proven, open-source AI software stack to embedded applications. Developers can run standard AI frameworks while relying on open-source compilers, runtimes, and libraries – all while having immediate access to embedded-ready models without rewriting code. At the programming level, ROCm software uses the open-source Heterogeneous-computing Interface for Portability (HIP), decoupling GPU programming from the hardware and eliminating vendor lock-in between the software stack and the hardware.

The tightly integrated CPU, GPU, and NPU architecture enables efficient workload partitioning and predictable latency under mixed workloads, while the use of familiar frameworks and software stacks help simplify and streamline development and deployment across broad use cases. This level of integration enables advanced compute and graphics capabilities without the need for additional external components, making it easier for OEMs and system integrators to design scalable platforms.

AMD “Zen 5” CPU cores provide the isolation and performance headroom to consolidate multiple critical workloads on a single platform with deterministic, multitasking behavior. Additionally, AMD delivers a packaged and vertically integrated virtualized reference stack for industrial mixed-criticality applications. Built on the Xen hypervisor, it runs Linux®, Windows®, Ubuntu®, and RTOS environments in isolated domains to deliver safety, real-time performance, and flexibility. The result is a scalable, open architecture that simplifies design and accelerates development for next-generation embedded systems.

Garnering Strong Industry Support

Currently available AMD Ryzen AI Embedded P100 processor-powered production Advantech, congatec, and Kontron.

  • “Advantech is proud to announce a comprehensive lineup powered by the scalable AMD Ryzen AI Embedded P100 processor portfolio. Featuring Computer-on-Modules, Single Board Computers, and Edge AI and Intelligent Systems, this portfolio leverages an enhanced integrated AI architecture to deliver high-efficiency multitasking that drives next-gen Edge AI advancement.”
    Aaron Su, Vice President, Embedded IoT Sector, Advantech
  • “With the launch of the AMD Ryzen AI Embedded P100 Series, congatec is able to expand its computer-on-module portfolio for embedded computing and edge applications with a highly versatile platform. It enables customers to precisely tailor performance, power, and cost to their specific application needs by offering four to 12 CPU cores and highly scalable GPU performance. This extraordinary level of flexibility is essential as edge workloads become more diverse, from industrial automation to AI-accelerated systems.”
    Florian Drittenthaler, product line manager, congatec
  • “The AMD Ryzen AI Embedded platform is a game changer for industrial and AI-driven applications at the edge. Our P100 based K4131-Px mITX will be equipped with four-core to 12-core APUs allowing us to offer customers an array of solutions that deliver high compute performance and AI acceleration in the same compact footprint.”
    Thomas Stanik, senior sales & business development manager, Kontron 

AMD Ryzen AI Embedded P100 Series processors featuring eight to 12 cores are currently sampling, with production shipments expected to begin in July 2026. P100 Series four- to six-core processors are sampling now, with production expected in the second quarter of 2026.


Source: AMD

The post AMD Extends Ryzen AI Embedded Processor Portfolio appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 14:56

March 9, 2026 — Many scientific simulations—like those supporting LLNL’s national security mission—contain systems of linear equations, so application codes often rely on linear solvers to get the job done. Created at LLNL in 1998, the hypre software library provides specialized, scalable solvers for a range of purposes. A recent major release, version 3, includes a new semi-structured algebraic multigrid (AMG) solver along with support for mixed numerical precision at runtime.

The new SSAMG solver accommodates multiple structured grids coupled by unstructured connections (black lines). In this example, each structured grid is coarsened in a different direction as part of the SSAMG algorithm, and coarse-grid information is interpolated back to the fine grid to accelerate the solution process.

“We refactored and rewrote a big portion of the code for this release,” explains project lead Rob Falgout. “Development in hypre has always been driven by support for applications and users, and we’ve tried to think strategically about the future so our developers can spend more time on research and algorithms and less time on fixing problems.”

Structured for Speed

Among hypre’s strengths are its AMG solvers, which accelerate simulations of complex physical phenomena by efficiently solving the sparse linear systems that arise from discretized partial differential equations. These solvers, particularly BoomerAMG, are designed for massively parallel computation.

AMG methods are well-suited for unstructured problems, but hypre doesn’t stop there. The software includes support for structured grids, where the underlying structure of the discretized mesh is known. Version 3 introduces SSAMG, a semi-structured solver that expands existing multigrid solver capabilities to address more types of grids and, in turn, provide more options for users. The “semi” aspect of this new solver is key, as some grids are partially or compositely structured. SSAMG treats grids as structured parts with arbitrary connections, which helps reduce computational overhead. The team’s extensive testing on representative problems has shown SSAMG to outperform BoomerAMG in many cases.

“We’ve wanted to develop this new solver for a long time,” Falgout notes. “In hypre, we have always let users describe the structure in their problems, but it hasn’t been easy to develop solvers that take advantage of that structure. Now we’re providing better solutions in semi-structured settings.”

Precisely Right

Like most of LLNL’s foundational high performance computing (HPC) software projects, hypre has evolved with the rise of heterogeneous architectures and exascale computing power. Furthermore, application teams are increasingly seeking flexibility with different types of workloads, which often include machine learning pipelines in addition to traditional modeling and simulation. The hypre team has had to consider key facets of the modern HPC environment including graphics processing units (GPUs), memory usage, and precision requirements for floating-point arithmetic. “Users need accuracy but also want to improve speed and performance while reducing the memory footprint and taking advantage of GPUs,” says Falgout.

Building on its support for multiprecision at compile time, hypre now provides both multi- and mixed-precision computation at runtime. (In multiprecision, a solver uses one precision at a time, whereas mixed-precision uses different precisions simultaneously.) Users can switch from one type of precision to another—for example, from double to single or from single to long double—without recompiling the application code. An upcoming enhancement will apply different precisions to each grid level of AMG solvers.

Looking Ahead

The project’s nearly three-decade run has shown there’s always something new to investigate. For instance, the team is exploring artificial intelligence tools for developing new algorithms as well as for helping hypre choose solver parameters for the user. GPU refinements for mixed-precision solvers are also in progress. And Falgout points out, “Some classes of problems we don’t yet know how to solve effectively with multigrid methods.”

Alongside Falgout, the LLNL team responsible for hypre v3 include Rui Peng Li, Victor Magri, Wayne Mitchell, Daniel Osei-Kuffuor, and Ulrike Meier Yang (now retired). Development in is funded in part by the Department of Energy’s Office of Science and its Scientific Discovery Through Advanced Computing (SciDAC) program, and by the National Nuclear Security Administration’s Advanced Simulation and Computing (ASC) program. Watch Falgout’s FEM@LLNL seminar describing v3 features.


Source: Holly Auten, LLNL

The post LLNL: Better Solvers, Better Precision with HYPRE v3 appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 14:55
Pint X Help

My Pint X won’t turn on and is blinking red like this. Pressing the power button doesn’t seem to do anything. Is it cooked? I’m out of warranty.

submitted by /u/VsauceRussell
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2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 14:52

My dad hosed down my pint x to clean it,
I lost the plug so it had ducktape over it but when I opened it up it was was wet inside, at least a few drips of water
and I was moving it around idk if water could have seeped inside,
I put it to lay to drain and dry out rn.
I know not to put it to charge wet but could the battery or anything still get damaged from whatever water that may have gotten inside? Also tips for making sure its completely dry to put to charge and what to do if there is possible damage would be appreciated thank you!

submitted by /u/AbsoluteTurltle
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2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 14:49

March 9, 2026 — From smartphones in our pockets to the powerful computers advancing artificial intelligence and quantum science, modern microchips are the engines of the digital age. Yet these systems face a fundamental challenge: managing the immense heat generated as processors grow faster and more complex, sometimes packing hundreds of thousands of cores onto a single chip. Without effective solutions, performance declines, energy is wasted and hardware reliability is compromised.

NSF-funded researchers at Clarkson University are addressing this challenge through TASChips, an open-source simulation tool that predicts in real time how heat builds up inside advanced processors. TASChips merges physics-based models with advanced reduced-order learning algorithms, delivering both accuracy and speed. It can identify thermal “hot spots” across complex chip architectures, enabling engineers to design systems that operate more efficiently, last longer and consume less energy.

Keeping powerful chips cool has always been a tough problem. Older tools that track heat either run quickly, but miss important details, or deliver accurate results so slowly that they cannot be used in practice. With today’s processors carrying more than 100,000 cores, that tradeoff no longer works. TASChips employs a range of learning models tailored to chips of varying complexity that capture the essential physics of heat transfer while running at much higher speeds. This approach produces near-direct numerical accuracy, fast enough to guide real-world decision-making. Engineers can use these results to redesign chips, adjust workloads dynamically in data centers, or avoid costly bottlenecks in high-performance systems. Such capabilities are essential in meeting the demands of the AI era.

Another barrier has been access. The most advanced heat-analysis tools are often locked behind expensive licenses and used only by large companies. TASChips changes that by being open source, free to download and released with clear instructions and examples. This means students, researchers and engineers anywhere can use the tool. It also ties directly into classroom and research programs, so the next generation of talent can learn with the same tools that will drive future breakthroughs.

To strengthen this link between innovation and education, TASChips will support workforce development through a series of workshops for up to 25 graduate students and postdoctoral researchers. Each participant will select a project aligned with their research expertise and carry out research that entails data collection, training, model parameter calculations and running simulations. By the end, participants will have gained hands-on experience applying a new tool to real problems, building skills that will carry forward into their careers.

The broader implications reach beyond engineering labs. Consumers benefit when everyday devices stay cooler and perform reliably. Businesses and communities benefit when data centers, which support everything from video streaming to financial transactions, operate more efficiently and at lower cost. And research sectors advancing AI and quantum technologies gain the reliable infrastructure needed to push the boundaries of discovery.

By combining rigorous science, open access, and education, the project provides a model for how federally supported research can translate into practical technologies that benefit society, industry and national competitiveness for years to come.


Source: NSF

The post NSF-Funded Tool Helps Chips Run Faster, Cooler and Longer appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-09 14:42

Merger to take drone firm public is latest business move by Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr as father is in White House

A golf club company backed by the sons of Donald Trump is merging with drone manufacturer Powerus in a deal designed to take the drone technology company public.

The merger with Aureus Greenway Holdings is the latest in Eric and Donald Trump Jr’s growing investments in the drone sector, following last month’s $1.5bn tie-up between Israeli drone maker Xtend and Florida-based JFB Construction Holdings. Drones have become a major procurement priority for the Pentagon and are widely used in Ukraine, where dense air defense systems near the frontlines limit the deployment of conventional aircraft.

Continue reading...

2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 14:35

Crude prices could surpass their 2008 record, with potentially dire effects for consumers and businesses

Fears over the global economy have been stoked by the oil price soaring past $100 a barrel as a result of the US-Israel war with Iran.

Economists say the increasing likelihood of a prolonged conflict in the vital energy exporting region could have serious consequences for living standards around the world amid the threat of a renewed inflation shock.

Continue reading...

2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 14:35

With new supreme leader’s strong connections to the IRGC, critics fear worse is to come – if he survives

At around midday, even as airstrikes hit several parts of the capital, large crowds gathered in Tehran’s famous Enghelab Square to chant their allegiance to Iran’s new supreme leader.

Carrying banners showing the face of the country’s slain leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, people on Monday held a new portrait – that of his son and successor, Mojtaba Khamenei.

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Rep. Kevin Kiley of California said Monday he was immediately leaving the Republican Party to become an independent.

2026-03-10 08:04
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French president says attack on island is ‘an attack on Europe’ as EU states send military support

Emmanuel Macron has vowed that Europe will do whatever it takes to stand by Cyprus, the continent’s first state to be directly affected by the Iran war, after coming under what he described as “attack from multiple drones and missiles.”

In the strongest show yet of solidarity towards the EU member closest to the Middle East, Macron likened the attacks, which included a drone strike against a British base on the eastern Mediterranean island, to an attack on Europe.

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2026-03-10 08:04
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Social media company tells MPs of continual fight against state-backed efforts, with Russia being most prolific

Elon Musk’s X said it had suspended 800m accounts over a 12-month period as it fights the “massive” scale of attempts to manipulate the platform.

The social media company told MPs it was continually fighting state-backed attempts to hijack the agenda on its network, with Russia the most prolific state actor, followed by Iran and China.

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2026-03-09 16:04
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Walter ‘Ted’ Carter Jr says he ‘made a mistake in allowing inappropriate access to Ohio State leadership’

The president of the Ohio State University has resigned following the disclosure of an “inappropriate relationship” to the college’s board of trustees.

In a statement, Walter “Ted” Carter Jr, who had led the university since 2024, said that he “made a mistake in allowing inappropriate access to Ohio State leadership”.

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2026-03-09 16:04
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A $10,000 2-year CD account can be both profitable and secure for savers if opened now. Here's what to consider.

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What Mojtaba Khamenei will do with his leadership is now the key question after he succeeds his father

Crowds in Tehran greeted the announcement of the country’s new supreme leader by chanting: “God’s hand is still upon us, Khamenei is still our leader.” As the world economy grinds to a halt, Iran is selling the elevation of Mojtaba Khamenei as a sign of reassuring continuity for a country determined to show its defiance of the west.

Yet in reality he injects a new unpredictable, even mysterious, element into the Middle East crisis, since just as he is unknown to Washington, so he is a figure of deep obscurity to ordinary Iranians. By contrast, the first supreme leader, Ruhollah Khomeini, led Iran to revolution in 1979 and the second, Mojtaba’s father, Ali Khamenei, had been president for eight years before he was chosen by the Assembly of Experts within a day of Khomenei’s death.

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2026-03-09 16:04
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Pair charged with throwing explosive devices during anti-Islam protest described by mayor as ‘appalling’

Two teenagers were charged on Monday with offenses including terrorism and using a weapon of mass destruction after they allegedly threw improvised explosive devices during an anti-Islam demonstration on Saturday outside the residence of New York mayor Zohran Mamdani.

According to a 10-page criminal complaint filed in federal court in the US southern district of New York, 18-year-old Emir Balat threw the devices at protesters after they were handed to him by Ibrahim Kayumi, 19. It said both declared allegiance to the Islamic State terror group.

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2026-03-09 16:04
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West coast state’s average cost per gallon has climbed $0.55 since the conflict in Middle East began over a week ago

The war in Iran has caused a spike in gas prices that is hitting California consumers especially hard, according to data from the American Automobile Association (AAA).

AAA reports that in California, the most expensive US market for gas, the average price per gallon on Monday was $5.20, compared to $3.47 nationally. The national average climbed nearly $0.50 since the conflict began more than a week ago, while in the Golden state it rose by $0.55.

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Anthropic is suing the Department of Defense after the Trump administration labeled the company a "supply chain risk" and canceled its government contracts when Anthropic refused to allow its AI model Claude to be used for domestic surveillance or autonomous weapons. Fortune reports: The lawsuit, filed Monday in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, calls the administration's actions "unprecedented and unlawful" and claims they threaten to harm "Anthropic irreparably." The complaint claims that government contracts are already being canceled and that private contracts are also in doubt, putting "hundreds of millions of dollars" at near-term risk. An Anthropic spokesperson told Fortune: "Seeking judicial review does not change our longstanding commitment to harnessing AI to protect our national security, but this is a necessary step to protect our business, our customers, and our partners." "We will continue to pursue every path toward resolution, including dialogue with the government," they added.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-09 13:59

Justice correspondent most known for his January 6 Capitol riot coverage is latest to quit Bari Weiss-led network

Scott MacFarlane, the CBS News justice correspondent most known for his extensive coverage of the January 6 Capitol insurrection, surprised colleagues on Monday morning by announcing his departure from the network, which he joined in late 2021.

MacFarlane is only the latest departure from the Bari Weiss-led network, though he said in a memo to colleagues – also posted on LinkedIn – that he personally made the decision to leave.

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Iranian officials say about 170 people were killed in the strike. The Pentagon is investigating.

2026-03-09 16:04
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Katie Nicholl’s name appears on many of the stories that Frost, Prince Harry and others have complained about

A senior former Mail on Sunday journalist has denied commissioning a “blag” of sensitive medical information about Sadie Frost that the actor had not even told her own mother.

At the high court, Katie Nicholl, a former diary editor and royal editor at the paper, was accused of using blagged information from a private investigator to uncover “extraordinarily intrusive” details of Frost’s medical history.

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2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 13:33

MenuetOS, the operating system written in x86-64 assembly, has released two new versions since we last talked about it roughly two months ago. In fact, I’m not actually sure it’s just two, or more, or fewer, since it seems sometimes releases disappear entirely from the changelog, making things a bit unclear. Anyway, since the last time we talked about MenuetOS, it got improvements to videocalling, networking, and HDA audio drivers, and a few other small tidbits.

2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-09 13:33

US president claimed he wanted to eradicate cartels and made comments about Mexico’s president that were deemed sexist in summit speech

Claudia Sheinbaum has responded to Donald Trump’s description of Mexico as the “epicenter of violence”, by calling on the US government to step up efforts to combat gun trafficking.

“There is something that the US can help us a lot with: stop the trafficking of illegal weapons from the US to Mexico,” the president of Mexico said. “If they stopped the entry of illegal weapons from the United States into Mexico, then these groups wouldn’t have access to this type of high-powered weaponry to carry out their criminal activities.”

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2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 13:20

Former Sinn Féin leader being sued for symbolic £1 each by three victims of Troubles-era bombings on UK mainland

Gerry Adams is as culpable for IRA bombings on the UK mainland as the individuals who planted and detonated the devices, the high court has heard at the beginning of a civil trial.

The former Sinn Féin leader is being sued for symbolic “vindicatory” damages of £1 each by John Clark, Jonathan Ganesh and Barry Laycock, who were injured respectively in the 1973 Old Bailey bombing, and the London Docklands and Manchester bombings in 1996.

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2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 13:17

The company might launch its most sophisticated MacBook ever, with its first OLED screen.

2026-03-09 16:04
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Interceptor drones and operators deployed to Middle East after ‘requests for help from 11 countries neighbouring Iran’

Ukraine’s president has said he dispatched interceptor drones and operators to protect US bases in Jordan last week, one of 11 countries that had asked Kyiv for help as the US-Israeli war against Iran continued into its 10th day.

Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in an interview that he had responded to a US request for help in defending Jordan last week as Ukraine seeks to improve relations with Gulf and Middle Eastern countries coming under attack from Iran.

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2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 13:00

The GPUs in Apple's latest chips bring its flagship creative laptop to new heights, especially for generative AI.

2026-03-09 16:04
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"If Lockheed Martin made a Game Boy, would you buy one?" That was the [rhetorical] question The Verge's Sean Hollister asked when he reviewed ModRetro's Game Boy-style handheld device back in 2024. He said it "might be the best version of the Game Boy ever made," though the connection to Palmer Luckey and his defense tech startup Anduril left him conflicted. "I don't remember my childhood nostalgia coming with a side of possible guilt and fear about putting money into the pocket of a weapons contractor," he wrote. "Feels weird!" Those conflicted feelings have lingered ever since. TechCrunch recently cited Hollister's review while reporting that ModRetro is now seeking funding at a $1 billion valuation. The company is said to have additional retro-inspired hardware in development, including one designed to replicate the Nintendo 64. As for Anduril? It's reportedly in talks to raise a new funding round that would value the company at around $60 billion.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 12:59

European Commission head says rules-based system can no longer be relied upon to protect the continent’s interests

Europe can “no longer be a custodian for the old-world order” and needs “a more realistic and interest-driven foreign policy”, the head of the European Commission has said.

Speaking to an audience of EU ambassadors on Monday, Ursula von der Leyen said the union “will always defend and uphold the rules-based system” but could no longer rely on it to defend European interests and shelter the continent from threats.

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2026-03-09 16:04
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Eighteen tornadoes between Thursday and Saturday resulted in deaths in towns from Michigan to Oklahoma

Communities throughout the central United States were cleaning up and trying to recover after an onslaught deadly tornadoes struck the region over the weekend.

At least eight people had been confirmed dead as of Monday, with dozens more injured.

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2026-03-09 16:04
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President Donald Trump claimed that Iran, not the U.S., struck an elementary school in the southern Iranian town of Minab, the attack with the highest civilian death toll in Trump’s second Iran war.

Three current and former defense officials, however, pushed back on his claims. Even Trump’s own Pentagon chief, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, refused to back him up. U.S. Central Command appeared to suggest that Trump’s comments were “inappropriate.”

“This is another instance of Trump lying and just talking out of his ass,” said a U.S. government official who reviewed satellite images of the Shajarah Tayyebeh school. “This clearly was not a failed rocket from the IRGC base.”

The U.S. official was referring to an Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps navy base that was adjacent to the school. The claim that the IRGC struck the school spread as part of a misinformation campaign about the attack peddled by social media accounts that support restoring Iran’s monarchy.

The U.S. official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to speak freely, said it was clear that Iran did not strike the school. Trump, however, endorsed the dubious claim when taking questions from the press aboard Air Force One on Saturday.

Related

Sources Briefed on Iran War Say U.S. Has No Plans for What Comes Next

“Based on what I’ve seen, it was done by Iran,” Trump said of the attack, which killed at least 175 people, many of them children, according to Iranian health officials and state media. 

Hegseth, standing alongside Trump, was asked if that was true and failed to endorse the claim.

“We’re certainly investigating,” he said before offering a non-denial denial. “But the only side that targets civilians is Iran.”

When asked for comment on the status of the U.S. military investigation, U.S. Central Command, the regional military command that oversees the Middle East, said that getting ahead of the investigation’s findings — precisely what Trump did — was improper.

The CENTCOM spokesperson, who did not give their name, said, “It would be inappropriate to comment given the incident is under investigation.”

The White House did not respond to requests for comment.

Missile Used Only by U.S.

A video released on Sunday by Iran’s semiofficial Mehr News Agency shows a cruise missile striking the naval base beside the elementary school as smoke appears to billow from the school itself, indicating that it had been struck just before the attack on the IRGC base. According to Bellingcat, the cruise missile was a Tomahawk.

“This entire compound — including the girls’ school — was deliberately targeted in a highly precise strike operation.”

“This munition is only employed by the U.S., not Israel or Iran,” said Wes Bryant, a former Special Operations joint terminal attack controller who called in thousands of strikes across the greater Middle East.

Bryant, a former adviser to a Pentagon body that provides analysis and training to mitigate civilian harm, said all were clearly struck by targeted munitions, with the school likely hit due to “target misidentification,” meaning U.S. forces mistook it for a military target.

“The strikes on this compound have the signature of a U.S. strike,” Bryant told The Intercept. “The strikes on this compound are also incredibly precise and well-placed. This entire compound — including the girls’ school — was deliberately targeted in a highly precise strike operation.”

While the Shajarah Tayyebeh elementary school was once connected to the IRGC base by roads, the building was partitioned off by 2016, according to an investigation by New Lines Magazine. Reports of the attack began to appear on social media just after 11:30 a.m. local time. An analysis by the New York Times based on satellite imagery, social media posts, and verified videos found that the school was hit at roughly the same time as the naval base. The video released on Sunday by the Mehr News Agency appears to confirm this.

Another former Pentagon official who specialized in civilian harm issues echoed Bryant and the current U.S. official.

“The entry holes suggest a near perpendicular entry. Meaning, this strike was precisely targeting the structures from high above.”

“The entry holes suggest a near perpendicular entry. Meaning, this strike was precisely targeting the structures from high above, not some short range attack with a ballistic missile,” said the former Pentagon official, who spoke on background because their present employment doesn’t allow them to comment. The official said the vertical entry suggested a more parabolic trajectory than a short-range missile would show, indicating a longer-range weapon was used.

That former defense official pushed back against Trump’s claims, noting that the attack occurred within an hour of the announcement of U.S.–Israeli strikes and an hour before any reported Iranian retaliation.

“All evidence,” said the former official, “points to the compound being repeatedly attacked — over the course of a couple hours potentially — with highly accurate munitions that we know the U.S. and Israel routinely use and have used in strikes across Iran.”

High Rate of Strikes

CENTCOM would not offer an estimated civilian death toll for the U.S. war on Iran. More than 1,230 Iranian civilians have been killed, according to the Tehran Times.

“America, regardless of what so-called international institutions say, is unleashing the most lethal and precise air power campaign in history,” Hegseth said at a March 2 press conference. “No stupid rules of engagement.”

A new investigation by Airwars, a U.K.-based air strike monitoring group, found that the first days of the Iran war saw far more sites targeted than any recent U.S. or Israeli military campaign.

“While the rate of civilian harm cannot be solely predicted by the number of targets hit, initial indications suggest it has been high — particularly with U.S. targets correlating with heavily populated areas,” according to the Airwars report. “The targets map heavily onto the highest populated areas.”

“It is the stuff of tyrannical dictators to fabricate such propaganda for the sake of saving face and discrediting one’s enemies.”

For Bryant, the former Pentagon adviser on civilian harm, Trump’s claim that Iran hit the school is part of a pattern — and a dark turn for the country.

“If the administration truly believed that this was Iranian-caused, whether intentionally or inadvertently, then they should have immediately stated so, along with providing intelligence or information that proves such an assertion. But we know this was not the case,” Bryant said. “It is the stuff of tyrannical dictators to fabricate such propaganda for the sake of saving face and discrediting one’s enemies. This is not the behavior of a leader of the free world.”

The post U.S. Military Refuses to Endorse Trump Claim That Iran Bombed Girls’ School appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-09 16:04
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I have been looking at getting a board for years now and finally the gas prices and my commute are in the perfect spot to make one reasonable. As I live in Finland my options for getting one new are limited and considerable taxes (25,5% VAT) apply.

My commute is around 2.5km (1.5 miles) each way and there is a fairly big hill in the way. I am deciding between getting a onewheel or an e bike. Problem with the e bike is theft as the area my work is in is pretty sketch and I don't fully trust my apartment's bike storage as that has been broken into multiple times. A good e bike would cost me 1500€ or more.

I can get a used XR for 990€ that has 1500 miles with a tire that has under 800 miles on it. To me it seems like a good deal as it is in good shape (has always had rail guards on it so looks almost brand new from the side) and comes with extra rail guards. A new Pint is around 1000+€ and a Pint X 1300+€ if you can even get one. The XR also hasn't had software updates so it works with aftermarket batteries if needed though the seller says it still has over 12 miles of range.

What do you think? Is it worth getting at that price? Would an e bike be better? Note that I can already ride a caster board but have never been on a skateboard. I do have a tiny bit of snowboarding experience as well.

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2026-03-09 16:04
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Serious technology issues like privacy need to be dealt with clearly, not fought over in social media posts, analysts say.

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Eureka police took two calls for unconscious individuals, and officials reported ‘elevated’ carbon monoxide in room

A California motel has been closed after authorities found two women dead in the same room just days apart.

The Eureka police department in northern California said in a news release last Thursday that on 21 February, officers and Humboldt Bay fire personnel were dispatched to a motel on the 4000 block of Broadway Street in Eureka – identified by the Eureka Times-Standard as the Lamplighter Inn – after receiving a report of “two unconscious patients due to a possible drug overdose”.

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2026-03-09 16:04
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Finance ministers monitoring situation but stop short of agreeing to release emergency oil reserves

The G7 said it was ready to take “necessary measures” to address the economic impact of the US-Israel war on Iran, after a meeting prompted by soaring oil prices, which rose above $100 (£74) a barrel for the first time since 2022.

Following a remote meeting on Monday, G7 finance ministers said they would closely monitor the situation but stopped short of agreeing to release emergency oil reserves.

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2026-03-09 16:04
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I should probably be fuming about the way that companies try to cash in on IWD. But there are so many vile opinions to worry about instead

Sunday was International Women’s Day, which you’ll know because every company you’ve ever shopped with will have emailed you, taking this fine opportunity to suggest things women might like to buy. Plants, clothes, spices … all are particularly female-friendly at this time of year, or maybe I’m revealing nothing but my algorithms. Is any of it emancipating? Would you have to balance the freedom of the woman wearing the midi-dress against the servitude of the woman who had to sew it? I don’t really want to set myself up as the arbiter of the spirit of IWD, being unable to remember a time before it meant mass-marketing mail-out.

On Women’s Day Eve, though – yes, that is a thing – I was attending evensong at a university college, maybe for the first time ever, and it was definitely the first time I’d heard an IWD sermon. The Rev Marcus Green had set himself the challenge of feministly reading a book, the Bible, in which almost none of the women have a name. There are a bunch called Mary, but so few other names that “Mary” was basically Bible-speak for “Karen”. There’s one who is the mother of the sons of Zebedee, but even though she has actual lines and he has none, he still gets this cracking name, while you have to piece her identity together by triangulating other accounts, like an investigator at a crime scene.

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2026-03-09 16:04
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Lawsuits come after Pentagon labeled Anthropic a ‘supply chain risk’, a decision the company says is unlawful

Anthropic filed two lawsuits against the Department of Defense on Monday, alleging that the government’s decision to label the artificial intelligence firm a “supply chain risk” was unlawful and violated its first amendment rights. The two sides have been locked in a monthslong heated feud over the company’s attempt to implement safeguards against the military’s potential use of its AI models for mass domestic surveillance or fully autonomous lethal weapons.

The lawsuits, which Anthropic filed in the northern district court of California and the US court of appeals for the Washington DC Circuit, come after the Pentagon formally issued the supply chain risk designation last Thursday, the first time the blacklisting tool has been used against a US company. The AI firm previously vowed to challenge the designation and its demand that any company that does business with the government cut all ties with Anthropic, a serious threat to its business model.

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2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 12:00

Pick one of five new Lego Smart Play sets within the Lego Star Wars collection, or pick them all, available for purchase now.

2026-03-09 16:04
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One year ago, ICE arrested me for protesting for Palestine. Leqaa Kordia is still caged – also for daring to speak the truth

Sunday marked one year since Mahmoud Khalil, the Palestinian activist and Columbia University graduate, was arrested last year for his political advocacy. Below, he writes to Leqaa Kordia, a fellow Palestinian currently in ICE detention in Texas. Khalil was released after more than three months but the Trump administration continues to seek his deportation; Kordia has been detained for nearly a year. Read more about her case here.

Dear Leqaa,

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2026-03-12 08:04
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Trump’s ‘Shield of the Americas’ coalition is destined to fail Expert comment jon.wallace

The Shield seeks to address serious security and narcotics issues. But a detail-light, ‘Trumpista-only’ alliance repeats past mistakes in Latin America. 

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Latin America’s regional diplomatic history is littered with failed multilateral organizations. Some have disappeared, such as the Union of South American Republics (UNASUR) and the Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our Americas (ALBA). Others, such as the Latin American Parliament or the Community of Latin America and Caribbean States (CELAC) continue to limp along, zombie projects of once high-minded goals.  

This past weekend US President Donald Trump added one of his own. 

The ‘Shield of the Americas’ sounds much like a new instalment in the Marvel movie series. The first summit, convened on 7 March at the Trump resort in Doral, Florida, was intended to create an alliance to improve regional security and combat drug cartels. ‘The heart of our agreement,’ said President Trump, ‘is a commitment to using lethal military force to destroy the sinister cartels and terrorist networks.’ 

To that end the president brought together 13 heads of state, including the presidents of Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Honduras, Panama and Paraguay, as well as the prime ministers of Guyana, Trinidad and Tobago and Jamaica.    

All are centre- to hard-right leaders, whom President Trump has either praised (Javier Milei of Argentina, Santiago Peña of Paraguay, Nayib Bukele of El Salvador) or endorsed when they were candidates (Tito Asfura of Honduras).  

The others have vocally supported Trump’s policies in the Western Hemisphere. Notably, the sitting president of Chile – leftist Gabriel Boric – was passed over in favour of the president elect, Jose Antonio Kast, who ran promising ‘Trumpista’ hardline policies on crime and immigration. The defence/security secretaries of Bahamas, Belize, Guatemala, and Peru were also present.

Pointedly absent at the Doral-fest were the presidents of Brazil (Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva), Mexico (Clauda Sheinbaum) and Colombia (Gustavo Petro), all of them of the left. This is significant: those three countries represent more than half of the region’s GDP. And they host a large part of the region’s illicit markets including narcotics production and trade – the supposed targets of the summit. 

And, even as the usual summit ‘grip-and-grin’ photo-ops took place, with Trump, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Secretary of War Pete Hesgeth and newly appointed head of the Shield of the Americas Kristi Noem, the shadow of previous failures loomed.

All Latin America’s defunct or zombie multilateral organizations were founded on laudable goals. But they had fatal flaws. And the Shield of the Americas shares many of them.

Now what?

In the end, the summit produced a half-page declaration, with signatories agreeing to four general points.

According to the official press release, those were: ‘expand multilateral and bilateral cooperation to enhance security’; cooperate in ‘whole of government’ efforts regarding ‘border security, countering narco-terrorism and trafficking, securing critical infrastructure, and other areas as mutually determined’; ‘advance peace through strength’; and ‘join a coalition to combat narco-terrorism and other shared threats to the Western Hemisphere’. Nothing more.

These are noble objectives addressing essential challenges for US foreign policy south of its border. And a new initiative could help deliver a long-overdue re-evaluation of failing past policies. Cocaine production and transnational crime of all sorts have increased over the last half decade. 

There are no promises to address the root causes of insecurity and crime – poverty, weak states and corruption. 

In Colombia, cocaine production jumped 53 per cent in 2023 alone. Between 2023 and 2024, the US seized more than 45,000 pounds of fentanyl crossing its border, the vast majority produced in and shipped from Mexico, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration. And crime/ insecurity is the number one concern of Latin American citizens according to recent surveys and the International Monetary Fund.   

But like many Trump initiatives – and previous failed Latin American multilateralism attempts – there is a telling lack of detail. The thin, four-point official announcement presents no long-term commitments for burden sharing. There are no promises to address the root causes of insecurity and crime – poverty, weak states and corruption. And, perhaps most importantly, no funding has been allocated to beef up security cooperation through regional institutions that can share intelligence, conduct joint manoeuvres and intercept drugs and related financial flows. 

Neither are there regionally integrated plans for tracking cross border flows of illicit activities (including narcotics but also illegal gold, timber, and copper, money laundering and human trafficking). And no commitments have been made to independently investigate government involvement in corruption. 

Partisanship

Most of all, it is misguided to believe that a summit of only like-minded leaders can establish a meaningful basis for long-term shared principles and cooperation on security and narcotics issues.  

The openly partisan nature of this effort hobbles it at the outset. Without Brazil, Colombia and Mexico three of the most important Latin American countries are missing. 

It is unclear whether they were invited or not. But the fact that their presidents were not in the Trump orbit likely contributed to their absence. Their concerns about the president’s so called ‘Donroe Doctrine’, and the spectacular US operation to abduct Venezuela’s former president Nicolas Maduro, may also have played a part. Brazil’s Lula, Mexico’s Sheinbaum and Colombia’s Petro have all spoken out against the operation. 

Their absence is a fundamental flaw. Any meaningful hemispheric military alliance that could begin to hope to address the Shield’s lofty goals would need to include these countries. 

As the data indicate, Colombia and Mexico are the major sources of narcotics entering the US. And Brazil is the home of one of the largest criminals groups in the region, the ‘Primeiro Comando da Capital (Brazil)’. 

Trump may feel that the clear MAGA hue to the Shield of the Americas will make it easier for him to pursue his objectives – which many believe include countering Chinese influence in the region. But past Latin American attempts at regional alliances shows: partisan networking relationships never last. 

2026-03-10 16:04
2026-03-09 11:01

Live Nation will pay $280m to states in lawsuit, and Ticketmaster will open parts of platform to rival companies

Live Nation, which owns Ticketmaster, has reached a surprise settlement with the Department of Justice in its antitrust case just one week after the trial began.

Under the agreement, Live Nation will create a $280m settlement fund for states that participated in the lawsuit and Ticketmaster will be required to open parts of its platform to rival ticketing companies, Live Nation announced on Monday.

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2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 11:00

Officers have repeatedly detained people under a reinterpretation of a 1996 law that states that anyone in the United States illegally “shall be detained” without bond, indefinitely.

2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 10:54

Hisense has introduced its latest TVs with full-array local dimming, and the U7 starts at $1,300.

2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 10:40

Nscale’s AI project still in use as depot ahead of pledged completion date – with planning permission filed after Guardian’s inquiries

The press releases announcing a gleaming supercomputer on the outskirts of north London depict a glass and concrete building, rising from a tree-lined street. Accompanied by images of glowing blue robot faces, it looks like the centre of a technological revolution.

By the end of this year, that artist’s impression is supposed to be a reality.

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2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 10:34

Kurdish groups in Iran face risky dilemma amid unclear US endgame Expert comment thilton.drupal

The Trump administration has given mixed messages about its support for a potential Kurdish uprising, which would face a range of challenges against an uncertain backdrop.

A Kurdish Iranian fighter in Iraq

More than a week into the ongoing US-Israeli air strikes on Iran, the war has no clear endgame in sight. In an increasingly complex situation, the US does not appear to have a settled and coherent strategy, with the Trump administration voicing wide-ranging and shifting goals and justifications. 

Amid this uncertainty, US President Donald Trump appeared to encourage the Kurdish groups in Iran to rise up against the Iranian regime, before appearing to reverse his position. On 5 March, six days after the US and Israel launched their first strikes, Trump said of a potential Kurdish military action that ‘it’s wonderful that they want to do that, I’d be all for it.’ But just two days later, he told reporters that ‘I don’t want the Kurds to go into Iran…The war is complicated enough as it is.’ 

In practice, the US and Israel have been heavily bombing targets in Kurdish areas in western Iran. This has been seen as aiming to potentially prepare the ground for Kurdish parties based in the region and across the border in Iraq to launch an offensive against the regime. 

The US’s Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) has reportedly been working to arm Kurdish forces, according to CNN citing unnamed Kurdish and US officials. The report said that the Trump administration has been in active discussions with Kurdish groups about providing them with military support, potentially for an offensive that could pin down regime security forces and open up space for a broader opposition uprising. The CIA declined to comment to CNN, while US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth said that ‘none of our objectives are premised on the support of the arming of any particular force.’ 

The US previously trained and financed Kurdish fighters in both Iraq and Syria. Based on these experiences, Iranian Kurdish groups face a dilemma. Partnership with the US could make a real positive difference to their goals. But it will be fundamentally transactional. There is little indication that the Trump administration is prepared to include an essential commitment to support Kurdish political goals; its endgame for Iran seems confused at best. 

Both Washington and the Iranian Kurds must therefore consider how robust and durable potential US backing will be, particularly in light of past experiences of the US abandoning its Kurdish partners, most recently when the US turned away from the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF). They also need to ask whether a Kurdish uprising serves their respective interests in the long run. 

Kurds in Iran

Kurds are one of Iran’s largest ethnic minorities. There are an estimated 7 to 15 million Kurds in Iran (around 8-17 per cent of its total population). They are concentrated along Iran’s western borders with Iraq and Turkey, one of the most impoverished parts of the country. 

Although Iran’s constitution theoretically provides equal rights for all ethnicities, in practice the Iranian government has frequently resorted to violence to suppress expressions of Kurdish cultural, linguistic and political identity.

The Kurdish political landscape is fragmented across various parties that adhere to a range of ideologies and draw public support from different sources. Kurdish public opinion is not monolithic and not all Kurds support Kurdish nationalist parties. These groups also have a poor track record of cooperation and have fought each other at times. But what unites the Kurdish nationalist parties is opposition to the Islamic Republic and a desire to secure Kurdish rights and local self-rule in the context of a future democratic Iran.

It is a massive risk for Kurdish groups to launch armed operations against the regime, even with US and Israeli air support.

On February 22, five Kurdish parties announced the formation of the Coalition of Political Forces of Iranian Kurdistan. These include the Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran (KDPI), the Komala of the Toilers of Kurdistan, the Kurdistan Freedom Party (PAK), Khabat, and the Kurdistan Free Life Party (PJAK). On 4 March, the Komala Party of Iranian Kurdistan also joined. The coalition’s leadership is largely based in Iraq or the West, though it is also well-organized inside Iran through clandestine networks.

The KDPI is the oldest of the parties, tracing its lineage back to just before the short-lived independent Kurdish Republic of Mahabad was established in 1946. It has the most grassroots support, particularly with traditional nationalists. The Komala factions are more left-wing. The Komala Party of Iranian Kurdistan is the larger of the two and has significant support in certain geographic areas. 

PJAK is considered the Iranian branch of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which fought a long insurgency against the Turkish state, and theoretically has more battle-tested cadres. PAK and Khabat are much smaller and have limited appeal inside Iranian Kurdistan.

Challenges

Despite the unification of these parties, major tests lie ahead. The extent of the military forces of these groups and their real battle capabilities are unknown. For years, they have largely been contained in their camps inside Iraq’s Kurdistan Region. Their strength inside Iran is unclear. 

Though weakened, the Iranian security forces still have significant capacity for violence and have demonstrated willing to wield it against the vulnerable Kurdish civilian population, as occurred during the January 2026 protests. The Iranian military has already struck Kurdish forces in Iraq as part of its response to US and Israeli strikes. 

It is therefore a massive risk for Kurdish groups to launch armed operations against the regime, even with US and Israeli air support. ‘We will not send our forces to the slaughterhouse,’ Komala leader Abdullah Mohtadi recently told German newspaper Die Zeit.

2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 09:39

Three-dimensional images and digital illustrations offer a detailed new look at the USS Monitor, an important Civil War ship that sank more than 160 years ago and has since become a reef.

2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 09:04

ZURICH, March 9, 2026 — Today, Zurich Instruments announced the ZQCS Quantum Control System, a next‑generation platform to operate large-scale quantum computers. It is engineered to tackle the pivotal challenge on the path to fault‑tolerant quantum computing: building long‑lived logical qubits.

Physical qubits are fragile; noise and drift can erase quantum information in microseconds. The remedy is to use logical qubits, which encode quantum information across many physical qubits, thereby enabling error correction. This approach elevates the control system from a mere pulse generator to the stabilizing core of the quantum computer: it must coordinate hundreds to thousands of channels while producing ultra‑stable pulses, and close real-time feedback loops at microsecond timescales. These requirements are at the core of the field’s main challenges – scaling to several thousand qubits, pushing gate fidelities to five nines and beyond, and mastering quantum error correction. The ZQCS is the control system built to meet these needs, uniting scalable direct‑RF electronics, deterministic real‑time networking, and powerful software.

“We designed the ZQCS end‑to‑end for the logical‑qubit era – starting from the analog front end, through the real‑time fabric, to software – so researchers and system builders can address scale, fidelity, and error correction together,” said Andrea Orzati, CEO at Zurich Instruments.

ZQCS uses a modular AdvancedTCA architecture scaling seamlessly from a single shelf to multi‑shelf systems and delivering more than a thousand channels per 19‑inch rack. The system is ready for the integration into HPC environments, offering water-cooled enclosures for optimal heat management and thermal stability. For QEC research without boundaries and hybrid quantum-classical workflows, each shelf integrates a programmable FPGA and a low‑latency, high‑bandwidth link to classical computing resources such as GPUs and CPUs.

With its first‑Nyquist‑zone, direct‑RF front end and market-leading signal‑to‑noise ratio, the ZQCS lets researchers optimize quantum fidelities without limits imposed by the control. A synchronization scheme optimized to execute large quantum programs maintains a distributed wall clock for deterministic timing across every signal. The ZQCS is powered by Zurich Instruments’ LabOne Q software, spanning pulse‑, gate‑, and workflow‑level interfaces supporting automation for calibration and tune‑up.

“We’re excited to see the first ZQCS installations come online, powering quantum error‑correction experiments, and helping our partners scale from hundreds to thousands of qubits,” said Sebastian Krinner, Product Manager. “This is a major step in our long‑term commitment to help the community reach fault tolerance.”

The launch affirms Zurich Instruments’ capability and commitment to deliver the quantum control technology of the logical‑qubit era, backed by deep domain expertise and the long-term stability offered by its parent company, Rohde & Schwarz.

More from HPCwire

About Zurich Instruments

Zurich Instruments is a Swiss company with a passion for phenomena that are often notoriously difficult to measure. We provide researchers and industry partners advanced hardware, software, and services for quantum computing control systems, lock-in amplifiers, and arbitrary waveform generators. As a company of scientists, we believe in offering products that reduce complexity of laboratory setups, unlock new measurement strategies, and comply with the highest Swiss quality standards. Our commitment to collaboration and real-time support is reflected in our seven worldwide offices, numerous research partnerships, and thousands of publications that refer to Zurich Instruments. In 2021, Zurich instruments became part of Rohde & Schwarz, allowing the company to continue its ambitious mission to advance science and accelerate the second quantum revolution under steady, industry-leading ownership.


Source: Zurich Instruments

The post Zurich Instruments Launches ZQCS Platform for Large-Scale Quantum Computer Control appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 09:01

This is the best balance of future-proofing and price for now, but this may not be the final iPad released this year.

2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 09:00

LOUISVILLE, Colo., March 9, 2026 — Infleqtion, a global leader in quantum sensing and quantum computing powered by neutral-atom technology, announced an expansion of its work with several U.S. Department of Energy national laboratories. Under the agreements, Infleqtion is continuing its longstanding collaborations with Sandia National Laboratories and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, while also launching a new partnership with Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory.

The partnerships are centered on Superstaq, Infleqtion’s quantum software platform that helps researchers run quantum programs more efficiently on real machines. Superstaq manages how quantum instructions are prepared and executed on different systems, allowing national laboratory teams to spend more time on scientific discovery and less time adapting software to each piece of hardware.

“Researchers at the national laboratories are working at the front edge of what is possible in quantum computing,” said Pranav Gokhale, chief technology officer at Infleqtion. “These continued and expanded partnerships reflect the trust they place in Superstaq as one of the few quantum software platforms that works across different quantum computing technologies, helping researchers unlock meaningful performance improvements as they move from experiments toward real applications.”

Infleqtion has supported Sandia’s Quantum Scientific Computing Open User Testbed (QSCOUT) and Berkeley Lab’s Advanced Quantum Testbed since 2021, providing capabilities tailored to each system’s hardware. The renewed collaborations include software licensing and close technical engagement to incorporate improvements that help systems operate more reliably as the testbeds grow in size and complexity.

“As part of ongoing work on the Advanced Quantum Testbed, Superstaq has provided software tools used to support quantum research and development,” said Chris Spitzer, Quantum Research Program Manager at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. “Continuing the collaboration supports researcher access to software tools needed for experiments on evolving quantum hardware.”

“Superstaq has been an important part of the QSCOUT testbed since its early days,” said Susan Clark, QSCOUT Principal Investigator, Sandia National Laboratories. “Continuing this collaboration supports our mission to provide researchers with reliable tools that enable experimentation, comparison, and advancement across emerging quantum computing approaches.”

The new partnership with Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory extends Superstaq support to the Superconducting Quantum Materials and Systems Center (SQMS), following its recent renewal as one of the Department of Energy’s National Quantum Information Science Research Centers. Through this collaboration, Infleqtion will work with Fermilab researchers to help prepare and run quantum programs in ways that best support SQMS’s research goals.

“Through this collaboration with Infleqtion, SQMS is exploring pathways to pair advanced hardware with a flexible software platform,” said Dr. Silvia Zorzetti, Principal Engineer, Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory. “The Superstaq platform supports​ the collaborative work underway at SQMS and helps our teams focus on translating foundational research into meaningful progress for the broader quantum ecosystem.”

Across all three laboratories, Superstaq spans multiple types of quantum computing hardware, helping researchers prepare and run experiments more efficiently on real systems. These collaborations reflect Infleqtion’s broader strategy to deliver scalable quantum software that supports government, academic, and commercial users as quantum systems grow larger and more capable.

Beyond these collaborations, Infleqtion’s work across the Department of Energy laboratory system also includes ongoing efforts with Argonne National Laboratory and the National Laboratory of the Rockies (NLR), including a recently awarded ARPA-E initiative to advance quantum-powered energy grid optimization. Together, these partnerships underscore Infleqtion’s broad commitment to supporting DOE national labs with scalable quantum software and technologies that accelerate both foundational research and real-world impact.

To learn more about Infleqtion’s quantum software and applications research, visit: https://infleqtion.com/quantum-software.

About Infleqtion

Infleqtion, Inc. (NYSE: INFQ) is a global leader in quantum technology, delivering neutral atom solutions for quantum computing, networking, sensing, and security. With a product portfolio spanning quantum computers, quantum optical clocks, RF receivers, and inertial sensors, Infleqtion’s full-stack approach combines high-performance hardware with the company’s proprietary Superstaq quantum computing software platform. Infleqtion’s systems are already in use by the U.S. Department of War, NASA, the U.K. government, and in multiple collaborations with NVIDIA. Infleqtion, in collaboration with NVIDIA, published the world’s first demonstration of a materials science application using logical qubits. With operations in the U.S., Europe, and Asia, Infleqtion meets the demands of government and commercial customers across the space, defense, energy, finance and telecommunications sectors.


Source: Infleqtion

The post Infleqtion Expands Partnerships with US Department of Energy National Laboratories appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-09 20:04
2026-03-09 08:30

Wait times at security checkpoints in Houston and New Orleans as long as three hours due to shortage of TSA agents

Travelers complained of long waits on Sunday – lasting hours in some cases – at security checkpoints at airports in Houston and New Orleans, which officials blamed on a government shutdown of the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS).

The estimated wait time at the standard security checkpoint at the William P Hobby airport in Houston early on Sunday evening was at one point three hours, according to the Houston Airport System website. The Hobby airport said on social media on Friday it expected more travelers than normal due to spring break.

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2026-03-10 08:04
2026-03-09 08:30

Why should Delaware care?
Delaware’s Republican Party represents more than 200,000 registered voters, as well as hundreds of annual donors. But the party hasn’t had one of its members hold a elected seat statewide since 2018. While party fortunes continued to look bleak in recent months amid financial disarray, leaders now say they have righted the ship. 

Shortly after the new year, a political accountant who has handled the books for hundreds of conservative organizations, including the Delaware Republican Party, abruptly resigned from his post with the state’s GOP. 

His departure – coming a month after Spotlight Delaware reported on money problems facing the state GOP – exposed further financial disarray within the party. In the subsequent weeks, GOP leaders scrambled to find a replacement, while federal regulators sent warnings that the party could face fines and a possible audit if it did not file a year-end campaign finance report, and answer questions about reports of negative cash balances. 

Now, two months after the accountant’s resignation, Delaware GOP Chair Gene Truono said the party is recovering with a beefed-up fundraising strategy, and a new accounting firm that has filed its required federal reports.

Looking forward, Truono said the party is well positioned to rebuild its bank account and its base of power ahead of what could be its most consequential election cycle in years.

The comments are likely welcome news for party faithful who have watched the Delaware GOP not only suffer through recent financial turmoil but also through a decade of electoral losses in statewide races.

“2026 is going to be a good year for us,” Truono said. “Money is coming in. We’re able to hire people. We’re meeting our payroll.” 

Truono further stated that his party’s previous campaign finance reports, which showed that a federal bank account was thousands of dollars in the red, were inaccurate. He said those reported negative cash balances were the result of accounting errors involving duplicate checks existing on the party’s books. 

Delaware Republican Party Chair Gene Truono | PHOTO COURTESY OF GENE TRUONO

When party officials sought to correct the errors last fall amid scrutiny from Spotlight Delaware and others, Truono said their accountant, Thomas Datwyler, wasn’t responsive enough to allow the party to reconcile the books. 

And, after the new year passed, Datwyler ended up “ghosting” the party altogether, Truono claimed. 

But Datwyler tells a different story. When reached for comment, the embattled national political accountant said he didn’t respond to the party after the new year because he had resigned his contract in an email sent on Jan. 11. 

He did so because the party had not paid his company for his previous year’s worth of work, he said.  

“And I know what the financial situation is,” Datwyler said. “They don’t have any money. Even if those checks weren’t cleared or not, they still don’t have any money.”  

Asked about Datwyler’s resignation, Truono said he never received a letter by email. The state GOP’s executive assistant, Paula Ireton, also stated that she had not received Datwyler’s resignation email.

Datwyler forwarded Spotlight Delaware the email he said he sent to the party in January. It included an attached letter from his company, Ax Capital, announcing the resignation.   

When asked why the Delaware GOP had reported negative account balances in recent months, Datwyler described a different bookkeeping problem from the one Truono said existed. 

While he agreed the party’s bank account was not currently in the red, he said it was only because past payments to party vendors had never been claimed.   

“They have checks in the register that haven’t actually cleared the bank account,” he said. “They’re not duplicates. They were written … And, if they were ever cashed, obviously the bank would go negative.” 

In the wake of Datwyler’s departure, GOP officials said they scrambled to hire a new accountant that could compile the party’s year-end campaign finance report to send to federal regulators.

Federal and state campaign finance law requires political parties to regularly disclose to the public the amount of money they receive from donors – and how they spend it. The state GOP did file a campaign finance report in January related to its state election activities to the Delaware Department of Elections. 

But the party ultimately missed the Jan. 31 deadline to file its federal report. 

By mid-February, federal officials sent a sternly worded letter stating that a failure to file the year-end campaign finance report could “result in civil money penalties, an audit or legal enforcement action.”

The letter followed another that was sent in January in which regulators demanded to know how the party could report that its federal bank balance sat more than $8,000 in the red. 

It was the fifth month in a row the party reported a negative cash balance. 

In the letter, the FEC stated that the party must respond by Feb. 16 and “Requests for extensions of time in which to respond will not be considered.”

While acknowledging the gravity of the federal demands, Truono said the party throughout February was working with a new vendor to resolve the situation. By the final business day of the month, the GOP filed its delayed financial disclosures. Within the documents, the party reported its cash balance no longer was in the red, but instead sat at about $19,000.

Election regulators have not sent additional letters to the party during the week since the filings, according to the Federal Elections Commission’s website. 

Asked for his takeaways from the recent turmoil, Truono pointed squarely at Datwyler, saying the party wasn’t ”getting the kind of service that we expected or needed.” 

“The major takeaway, for my part, was we had the wrong vendor, plain and simple,” he said. 

Truono’s comments add to a mountain of high-profile criticism made by various political organizations across the country about Datwyler. In 2024, an attorney for the Conservative Nevada Leadership PAC filed a complaint with the FEC claiming that Datwyler had “a long history of running roughshod over federal campaign finance law.”

“The major takeaway, for my part, was we had the wrong vendor, plain and simple.” 

Delaware GOP Chair Gene Truono

A year earlier, the Daily Beast reported that Datwyler had acted as a shadow treasurer for the campaign of disgraced-Congressman George Santos. The report claimed that while Datwyler managed the campaign’s books, he had listed on disclosure reports the name of another person as the treasurer.  

When asked about the various news reports, Datwyler said he has worked for more than 1,000 political committees of various kinds over the past two decades. He said there are only about a dozen that have been unsatisfied with his work. 

He also claimed that many of the public reports about him are the result of tips from “competitors in the industry that take a shot at me.” 

He declined to state which of his competitors he suspects of spreading such information. 

A chance of victory ahead?

In his interviews with Spotlight Delaware, Truono spoke at length about the GOP’s plan to launch a broad campaign to boost the party presence in the state in advance of this year’s consequential elections.

Specifically, party officials will focus on convincing more voters to register as Republicans, and on better communicating the party platform.

Truono said his party has a particularly ripe opportunity to take advantage of Democrats recent actions in the state that he said have been unpopular. He cited the state legislature’s decoupling last fall of the state’s tax code from that of the IRS.

Truono also said President Donald Trump’s State of the Union address in February has prompted some Democrats to call into his party office to announce that there were inspired to change their party registration.  

If the GOP could capture enough new voters to win in a few state legislative races this fall, they could take away Democrats’ supermajorities in the General Assembly – which allow the party to raise taxes without Republican support in the House and the Senate. 

Conversely, with a loss of just one seat in the House, the party could slide further to the periphery by giving Democrats the ability to pass Constitutional amendments without GOP votes. 

For its federal campaigns this year, the state’s Republicans also will field candidates for Congress to face Delaware’s Democratic members of Congress – Rep. Sarah McBride and Sen. Chris Coons – up for reelection. 

Truono said the party launched its new initiative in January, with two successful fundraisers. Those dollars have already allowed him to hire new people, he said.

Among the future new hires, Truono added, will also be data analysts who can identify individuals “who we can reach out to to either convince them to vote Republican or convince them to change their party affiliation.”

Spotlight Delaware reported in 2024 that the GOP had fallen to become the third largest political group in the state, following a surge of new independent voters registered through the state DMV’s automatic voter registration system. Democrats remained the largest contingent of registered voters at the time. 

While the GOP is adding staff, it also recently lost a key employee. Truono noted that the party’s executive director Nick Miles no longer holds that position. He said that as chair of the party, he has the “right to appoint or unappoint” that position.

“In this case, I’m looking for someone else because he just didn’t meet my personal needs,” Truono said.

While he served as executive director, the state GOP had made regular payments to Miles, through a limited liability company, for what the party described as “legal consulting.” However, Miles is not a member of the Delaware Bar Association.

The post Delaware’s GOP projects strength after months of turmoil appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-11 08:04
2026-03-09 08:00

Ruling could free $175bn, but legal hurdles and higher costs have left businesses questioning if claims are even worth it

The US supreme court recently struck down Donald Trump’s tariffs, opening the door to up to $175bn in refunds for businesses that paid the import taxes. However, the process for claiming that money is by no means certain. Trump himself said that the issue could be tied up in courts “for the next five years”.

Across the country, small businesses have struggled to navigate the fallout from Trump’s global tariff wars. The Guardian asked small-business owners in the US how their lives and livelihoods have been affected.

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2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-09 05:00

The letter, written in prison hours before her execution, is on display in Scotland for the first time in 30 years, enthralling crowds and conspiracy theorists.

2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-08 21:00
Dylan Brody

DYLAN BRODY
Staff Reporter

On Nov. 29, looking to finish 6-6 overall, 4-4 in Conference USA (CUSA) and potentially qualify for a bowl game, Blue Hen football returned to the Tub for its last game of the season against the University of Texas at El Paso (UTEP).

After a difficult two-loss skid punctuated by an embarrassing 54-14 loss to Wake Forest, the Blue Hens returned to The Tub looking to end the regular season on a high note with a key win against UTEP.

Delaware quarterback Nick Minicucci was looking to catch a little bit of his early-season spark and finish with a strong performance after only passing for 140 yards and scoring one touchdown against Wake Forest the week before.

UTEP started the game on its own 25-yard line. UTEP quarterback Skyler Locklear started the game throwing an interception, which was caught by Delaware cornerback Jamarion Kolagbodi. Kologbodi gained five yards from the play, giving Delaware the ball on the 50-yard line.

Quickly getting the ball, the Blue Hen offense rolled down to the UTEP 17-yard line with Minicucci rushing for a 17-yard touchdown. This made the game 7-0 in Delaware’s favor after kicker Nate Reed completed the extra point attempt. 

On its second drive, UTEP looked for a fresh start to even the score after a series of rushing plays. Locklear completed a 49-yard pass to wide receiver Kenny Odom, who scored UTEP’s first touchdown of the game. 

After the extra point, the score was 7-7.

Delaware made steady progress on its second drive and eventually faced a fourth-and-two situation on the UTEP 39. A one-yard rush from running back Viron Ellison Jr. was not enough and resulted in a turnover on downs. UTEP would suffer two negative plays and a sack on their offensive drive, resulting in the first punt of the game.

Delaware gained the ball back on their own 31-yard line and proceeded to march down the field with Minicucci completing a series of solid passes. The Blue Hens capped off its drive with a four-yard touchdown pass to tight end Scott Moore. The extra point was once again good and the Blue Hens started the second quarter with a 14-7 lead.

UTEP started its second quarter facing a third-and-12, but got a first down after a pass interference penalty on Delaware. Yet, this was short-lived when the team failed to move the chains on a fourth-and-two, resulting in a turnover on downs. 

Delaware got the ball on the UTEP 42 and opened its drive with Minicucci completing a 19-yard pass to wide receiver Sean Wilson, who ran out of bounds at the UTEP 23. After a six-yard gain, a fumble by Minicucci on third and four left Delaware for a loss of three. 

Reed proceeded to make a 37-yard field goal to give Delaware a 17-7 lead.

UTEP quickly lost the ball from a fumble recovered by Delaware linebacker Gavin Moul, who ran the ball back 16 yards for a touchdown. With another good extra point attempt, Delaware extended its lead 24-7.

Getting the ball back and looking to score, UTEP made a little progress before a 10-yard penalty, an incompletion and a failed third-down conversion forced them to punt once again.

Delaware received the ball on its own 19-yard line with 6:40 to go in the half. Delaware had a short three-and-out drive and was forced to punt less than a minute after getting the ball back. UTEP regained possession and on a second-and-three Locklear completed a 64-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Wondame Davis Jr., making the score 24-14 after the extra point.

With five minutes left to go in the half, Delaware started a long drive down the field punctuated by a 47-yard completion to wide receiver Kyre Duplessis. A two-yard rushing touchdown by running back Jo’Nathan Silver, along with an extra point, gave Delaware a strong response to the UTEP touchdown and extended the lead to 31-14.

On its next drive, UTEP did not get very far. Locklear threw a quick interception, which was picked off by safety Mysonne Pollard, giving Delaware the ball back on its own 36-yard line. Delaware’s next possession resulted in a punt. 

UTEP looked to score before the end of the half and did so with a good drive down the field, resulting in a touchdown; however, a missed extra point left the score 31-20 going into halftime.

The second half started with both teams punting. The first big drive of the second half was a 56-yard drive from UTEP, which resulted in a field goal and made the score 31-23 Delaware.

With its lead narrowing, the Blue Hens looked for a quick score to reinvigorate the lead. They did just that with Minicucci completing an 18-yard pass to Duplessis and following that up with a 51-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Jake Thaw. The extra point brought the score 38-23, giving Delaware a healthy 15-point lead. 

On the next drive, Locklear threw yet another interception to cornerback Nate Evans, who gave the Blue Hens possession at the UTEP 41-yard line. With good field possession and a 33-yard run by Silver, Delaware looked once again poised to score, but had to settle for a field goal after the team was unable to score on a third and goal.

UTEP marked its next possession with a 68-yard touchdown pass caught by Davis Jr., making the score 41-31 by the end of the third quarter.

The fourth quarter opened with both teams trading punts. Going into the final 10 minutes of regular-season play, Delaware looked to hammer home victory and seal bowl eligibility. Delaware did just that with a 65-yard drive that ended with a seven-yard touchdown pass to Thaw. An extra point gave the Blue Hens a commanding 48-31 lead.

After briefly regaining possession, Locklear threw his fourth interception of the game which was caught by Pollard, giving Delaware the ball at its own 40-yard line. A quick five-yard gain followed by a 55-yard rushing touchdown from running back Greg Spiller gave the Blue Hens a 24-point lead. 

Locklear proceeded to throw his fifth interception of the game, this one caught by safety Nasir Eatmon, who added another 24 yards to the play and was eventually tackled at the UTEP 19-yard line.

After a quick three-and-out, Delaware scored a field goal, making the score 58-31. With a final turnover on downs for UTEP and a Delaware field goal ended an exciting Saturday afternoon at the Tub.

Delaware finished strong with a 61-31 victory to end the regular season. Minicucci went 24-32 with 311 passing yards and three touchdown receptions. Duplessis and Silver both had strong games, with Duplessis having four receptions for 104 yards and Silver having seven carries for 64 yards and a touchdown.

The Blue Hens finished their season 6-6.


Delaware football dominates UTEP, winning by 30 on Senior Day was first posted on March 8, 2026 at 8:00 pm.
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2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-08 14:00
Riley Franck

RILEY FRANCK
Staff Reporter

Known for her wit, creative lyricism and online shenanigans, Nicki Minaj has been at the forefront of pop culture for decades. The Grammy-nominated rapper has never been shy about expressing her opinions, but by the end of 2025, those opinions were largely criticized by her fan base, the “Barbz.” 

So, has the outspoken rapper officially gone MAGA?

At the 2025 Turning Point USA AmericaFest event, Minaj walked out with Erika Kirk and sat down for a formal interview. The rapper praised the Trump administration and neo-Christian conservatism while also digging into California Governor Gavin Newsom.

Neo-Christian conservatism, sometimes called Christian nationalism, is a political movement that blends conservative Christianity with policy advocacy — particularly around hot-button issues. 

Before her appearance, Minaj reposted an official White House TikTok video praising President Donald Trump’s purported achievements during the first year of his second presidential term. Sooner or later, millions of users on the platform saw her repost. There was no hiding her opinion any longer. 

The real question is … How and when did this all happen? 

Minaj is known for being a provocative, colorful and captivating artist to millions of fans worldwide. She starred in beauty campaigns to raise money for AIDS, spoke highly of the LGBTQIA+ community and shared her social media platform to uplift queer voices. 

She also happens to be a citizen of Trinidad and Tobago, who came to the United States as an undocumented immigrant.

Minaj’s praise and endorsement of the Trump Administration and its rhetoric is a personal about-face that is in direct conflict with what she previously supported and advocated.

Many members of the LGBTQIA+ community feel that Minaj’s mere presence at the Turning Point USA event promotes neo-Christian conservatism and its beliefs. Some voices within this movement oppose some of the issues that Nicki’s LGBTQIA+ fans hold dear, including but not limited to, transgender visibility, marriage equality, gender affirming care, anti-discrimination protections and much more. 

As a result of Minaj’s actions, her fans have been documenting themselves destroying her merchandise and records and have carried out mass unfollowing sprees on the rapper’s various social media accounts. 

For instance, social media influencer and LGBTQIA+ advocate Amir Karaman is a self-proclaimed “Mega Barb.” His TikTok account has over 1 million followers who relate to his interests, from posting compilations of himself dancing to the rapper’s music to live reviewing Minaj’s albums. Now, Karaman has denounced her actions. 

The influencer even described them as “a slap in the face.” 

While prominent influencers are sharing their thoughts on the rapper’s views, thousands of people have boycotted her in different ways. The website change.org has several petitions with over 120,000 signatures calling for Minaj’s deportation back to Trinidad. 

The petition starter is 16-year-old Tristan Hamilton, who asks fans to “Sign this petition to urge immigration authorities to review Nicki Minaj’s residency status in the United States and consider deporting her back to Trinidad as a response to her harmful rhetoric.” 

From destroying merchandise, blasting her on social media and even petitioning for her deportation, public opinion does not appear to be in Minaj’s favor.

Since her participation in the Turning Point event, Minaj has yet to comment on how her fanbase is being affected by her comments. Many people speculate that this “change of heart” is to keep her husband, Kenneth Petty, and brother, Jelani Maraj, out of prison. 

In 2017, Jelani Maraj was convicted of predatory sexual assault and child endangerment involving an 11-year-old girl. He was sentenced to 25 years to life in prison.

In early 2024, Maraj filed a request with the New York Court of Appeals to appeal his conviction. With claims that the process was allegedly flawed, the court did not overturn it. The conviction and sentence were affirmed later that year.

Minaj’s husband, Kenneth Petty, was convicted in 1995 of one count of attempted rape in the first degree, pleading guilty to the charge. He served four years in prison and was mandated to register as a sex offender in his state of residence. 

When moving to California in 2022, Petty failed to register as a sex offender in the state. He pleaded guilty to failing to update his registration, leading to one year of home detention, a $55,000 fine and further potential prison time. 

Minaj’s appearance at the Turning Point event may have been an attempt to draw attention from the Trump administration onto herself. Trump has pardoned a wide range of celebrities and public figures, including rappers NBA YoungBoy, Lil Wayne and Kodak Black. 

It is not unsavory to think that Minaj may be angling to get a pardon for her brother and husband, thereby sparing them from future potential federal incarceration — though only her husband’s federal conviction would fall within presidential pardon authority. 

It is uncertain whether or not Minaj will secure a pardon or protection for her family. It is also unclear how her participation in Turning Point may affect her career moving forward. 

Many ask the question: Is a potential pardon for her family worth her career, legacy and millions of fans? 


Nicki Minaj goes MAGA? was first posted on March 8, 2026 at 1:00 pm.
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2026-03-11 12:04
2026-03-08 09:00
Tom Vail

TOM VAIL
Staff Reporter

On Nov. 26, 2024, I lost one of my favorite people in the world. My grandmother, Geraldine, who was affectionately referred to as Gerry, passed away. In my family, my grandmother was a monumental figure in all of our lives. 

You can never truly prepare yourself for the moment when you have to say goodbye, especially when it is someone as important and special as my grandmother was. 

My grandmother was a fighter, having fought breast cancer twice, along with suffering from arthritis, issues connected to congenital heart failure and challenges with her knees. For many of us, she was our rock and inspiration. While everyone had their own individual connection with her, the one thing I believe everyone undoubtedly will remember about my grandmother is her ability to cook. 

She was not the kind of person to simply follow a recipe to the letter, but rather become the recipe over time. Over the course of her life, my grandmother crafted numerous recipes, and while she wrote them with certain measurements and recommendations, in many instances, they were not required. Measurements were mere suggestions. One thing was for sure: Taste was everything.

Every year for Christmas, my grandmother would prepare a variety of dishes for dinner, including stuffed shells, cavatelli with her red sauce and fresh meatballs. One memory I have of my grandmother from when I was a little boy is waddling around her house on Christmas Day and finding myself in the kitchen. 

In hindsight, my grandmother did not have a huge kitchen; she had a large stove with plenty of pots on top and two ovens (yes … two ovens) to assist her efforts in cooking our Christmas dinner. To a little boy at the time, it definitely seemed huge. I remember my grandmother checking on the shells while they cooked and stirring her meatballs and sauce in a big pot, with the cavatelli in another pot nearby. 

Unfortunately, as the years passed, my grandmother began to slow. Cooking, which had once been so effortless to her, became physically harder. Her arthritis made lifting pots and rolling out meatballs not only difficult, but painful, and issues with her knees made it difficult for her to cook and move around the kitchen. As a result, my grandmother began to rely on all of our assistance in the kitchen. 

Starting a few years ago, many members of my family would gather at my grandmother’s house, where we would, with her supervision and guidance, prepare the food for Christmas dinner. My mother, aunt and uncles, along with many of the grandchildren, began to take part in this new tradition. 

This allowed all of us to spend more time together, learn from each other, laugh with each other, all with our family matriarch. During these days when we would cook, my grandmother would sit at the kitchen table or be perched nearby on her rollator. As my grandmother continued to do less in the kitchen, more and more responsibilities began to be passed to the younger generations.

As we chopped, stirred, tasted and assembled everything, she was never far, supervising our every move. At times, my grandmother would give notes about anything being prepped, and although it might have been to some of our chagrin, deep down we all knew it was because she cared deeply and did not want anyone to mess up her recipe.

Now that she is gone, the void that exists is noticeable, especially in the kitchen. Yet, deep down, she is still there with all of us. Every time we cook one of her recipes, she is with us. Every time we cook and think, “Oh, I don’t know what to do … what would she do?” Her recipes were more than simply instructions on a page — they are pieces of her life, shaped by years of experience, love and trial and error. 

Of course, my grandmother will always live on in my family’s hearts, but she also lives on through her food. Every stuffed shell. Every spoonful of sauce. Every forkful of meatball. To cook my grandmother’s recipes, to share them with others and to pass them down just as she passed them down to us is our responsibility to carry forward what she loved so deeply. 

By continuing to cook my grandmother’s recipes, my family and I have been able to keep my grandmother alive in the most meaningful way we know. We gather around our tables, feed the people we love and create memories just as she did for all those years, and somewhere in the process, between it all, we become part of the recipe too, just like my grandmother.


Personal essay: Eternally cooking with Gerry was first posted on March 8, 2026 at 8:00 am.
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2026-03-09 16:04
2026-03-06 13:10

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Columbia declined to comment for this story.

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

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

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

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

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

No report detailing those findings has yet been published. 

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Lypson did not respond to a request for comment.

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

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

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-06 08:02

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

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

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

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

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

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

Chokepoints

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Duration is key

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

Recent signals provide some hope that the conflict may not last long. If so, and provided there is no lasting damage to energy production facilities, the recent spike in oil prices to above $100 per barrel would likely prove temporary, allowing most advanced economies to absorb the shock without significant disruption. 

As oil prices fall back, inflation in Europe and Asia in 2026 would likely be only around 0.5 percentage points higher than pre-conflict forecasts. Under this scenario, central bank strategies would remain largely unchanged, and the impact on real GDP growth would be minimal.

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

A more severe scenario in which the conflict persists for several months could see oil prices rise to around $130 per barrel before declining in the second half of the year. At a global level, the hit to growth would be modest, though the impact would be felt unevenly across regions. The euro-zone economy would probably contract in Q2 and then flatline over the second half of the year.

The US economy would fare better but would nonetheless experience a slowdown in growth. Despite the weaker growth outlook, the accompanying rise in inflation would likely force central banks to shift policy. The Federal Reserve could abandon rate cuts while the European Central Bank could move to raise interest rates.

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

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

For most emerging economies this will be manageable: fiscal positions are generally stronger than they were a couple of decades ago. 

But in countries where energy subsidies remain extensive and government finances are already shaky, higher energy prices could unsettle bond markets. Economies such as Egypt and Tunisia appear particularly vulnerable. A surge in global energy prices could also destabilize Pakistan’s fragile economy. 

America is more insulated 

One final consequence of the conflict is that it is likely to reinforce a broader pattern in the world economy: the relative strength of the United States. 

Having moved from a large net importer of energy to a modest exporter, the US is now less exposed to global energy shocks than many of its peers. While American households will still face higher fuel prices, energy producers – and their investors – stand to benefit.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-05 16:25

During a speech in South Carolina on Feb. 27, Joe Biden touted his record as president while criticizing his successor, President Donald Trump. But during his remarks, Biden made a number of false, misleading or exaggerated claims.

  • The former president claimed that his administration created “2.2 million additional jobs” during his last year in office compared with “185,000 jobs” in the first year of Trump’s second term. But the most recent Bureau of Labor Statistics data show Biden inflated jobs added on his watch and undersold jobs added under Trump.
  • He claimed that the economy experienced “record growth” during his administration, which is not supported by data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis. There was higher quarterly and annual economic growth under other presidents.
  • He also said that “border crossings” in the U.S. “were lower” the day he left office than when he entered office. Yes, but total apprehensions of people illegally crossing the southern border in Biden’s last year were still more than double the number in the last year of Trump’s first term.

Biden was in South Carolina to celebrate winning the state’s Democratic presidential primary six years earlier. Biden’s win there helped propel him to become the Democratic nominee for president in 2020.

Employment Increases

When Biden compared his jobs record with Trump’s, he exaggerated the figures.

“In fact, [in] just my last year as president of the United States in 2024, we created — just the last year — 2.2 million additional jobs,” he said. “You know how many jobs Trump’s created in his first year as president? 185,000 jobs total. That’s it.”

However, the most recent data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics show that total employment increased by a little more than 1.2 million between January 2024 and January 2025, which covers Biden’s last full year in office. (He left office on Jan. 20, 2025.)

Biden speaks to a crowd during a fundraising event with the South Carolina Democratic Party on Feb. 27 in Columbia, South Carolina. Photo by Sean Rayford/Getty Images.

Meanwhile, in the first full year of Trump’s second term, employment increased by 359,000, from January 2025 to January 2026.

For his speech, Biden may have relied on outdated data, or data covering a different period. We reached out to his office about his claims, but we didn’t receive a response. 

BLS did report in January 2025 that total employment had increased by 2.2 million in 2024. That covers most of Biden’s final year as president. But that report came out before the BLS made annual data revisions for the 12 months ending in March 2025 that lowered its estimates of the increase in employment during Biden’s time in office. The final revisions were made on Feb. 11.

The latest BLS data also show that total employment in 2025 increased by 181,000, when measured from December 2024 to December 2025. That’s close to the 185,000 figure that Biden used for Trump. But Trump took office on Jan. 20, 2025, and BLS bases its job figures on a monthly survey of households covering the week that contains the 12th day of the month. That means the January 2025 job numbers were under Biden.

We got an increase of 359,000 for Trump by measuring from January 2025 to January 2026, which more closely aligns with the period covering his first full year back in office.

We would also note that the employment for January 2026 is preliminary and subject to be revised. Also, as we’ve said before, presidents shouldn’t receive all the credit, or the blame, for employment figures on their watch.

Economic Growth

Biden also claimed that “the economy grew with record growth” during his presidency. We found no basis for that statement. 

Real gross domestic product (meaning it has been adjusted for inflation) grew by 34.9% in the third quarter of 2020 and by 18.9% in all of 1942, which are the quarterly and annual economic growth records, according to Bureau of Economic Analysis estimates. The highest quarterly GDP growth under Biden was 7% in the second and fourth quarters of 2021, when the economy was rebounding from the COVID-19 pandemic, and the highest annual GDP growth during his administration was 6.2% that same year. 

Average annual growth during Biden’s four years was 3.6%. That was still lower than the almost 4.5% average during Bill Clinton’s second term, and the average of nearly 5.2% during Lyndon B. Johnson’s full four-year term. There was even average annual growth of about 15.4% in Franklin D. Roosevelt’s third term, during World War II.

Taking out the bounce-back year after GDP plunged as a result of the pandemic, economic growth in the last three years of Biden’s presidency was about 2.7% annually, which is close to the yearly average of about 2.8% annual growth over the last 50 years.

Border Crossings

Biden later turned to the subject of immigration, saying, “The day I left office, border crossings in the United States were lower than the day that I entered an office inherited from Trump.” That’s accurate, but misleading.

Border Patrol made 47,320 apprehensions of people illegally crossing the U.S. border with Mexico in December 2024, Biden’s last full month in office. Then apprehensions at the southern border declined further to 29,105 in January 2025, and Biden left office a little more than halfway through that month.

Those figures were down from 71,047 apprehensions by Border Patrol in December 2020, the last full month of Trump’s first term, and 75,312 in January 2021, when Trump exited the White House.

But in our story “Biden’s Final Numbers,” which looks at various statistical measures during his presidency, we wrote: “Illegal border crossings, as measured by apprehensions at the southwest border, were 107% higher in Biden’s final year in office compared with the last full year before he was sworn in, according to data from U.S. Customs and Border Protection.” We also said “that snapshot undersells the surge in illegal immigration during Biden’s four years in office, because apprehensions dropped dramatically in the second half of 2024 after Biden initiated some emergency policies to curb illegal border crossings.

“Before then, the U.S. was experiencing historically high illegal immigration,” we reported.

We also pointed out that apprehensions were only part of the picture, since the number of people seeking asylum at legal ports of entry remained high under Biden, as his administration began accepting CBP One mobile app applications that allowed immigrants to request asylum or parole and be screened for entry to the U.S. Plus there was an additional surge in immigrants coming to the U.S. via newly created legal methods, such as noncitizens granted parole, which allows them to temporarily live in the U.S. for “urgent humanitarian or significant public benefit reasons.” Biden offered parole to immigrants from countries such as Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela. (Trump has largely halted those humanitarian programs through executive orders.)

While Biden suggested that the increase in migration earlier in his presidency was due to the pandemic, Julia Gelatt, associate director of the U.S. immigration policy program at the Migration Policy Institute, previously told us that there were several reasons for the surge.

“There were many different drivers in the growth of the unauthorized immigrant population during the Biden presidency: strong labor demand in the U.S. as the country rebounded from the COVID-19 recession, and push factors such as authoritarian governments in Cuba, Nicaragua, and Venezuela and intense gang violence and extortion in countries like Haiti and Ecuador,” she said. “It’s also possible that some people moved in order to take advantage of new pathways created by the Biden administration.”

Correction, March 11: Border Patrol apprehensions for January 2021 were 75,312. We incorrectly used the figure 75,198.


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The post Biden Makes Flawed Comparisons with Trump appeared first on FactCheck.org.

2026-03-10 12:04
2026-03-05 06:52

Leadership and representation in international relations: building on women’s legacy 31 March 2026 — 1:00PM TO 3:00PM Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online

Join us for a panel discussion and networking reception to mark Women’s History Month.

Join us for a panel discussion and networking reception to mark Women’s History Month.

Join us for a panel discussion and networking reception hosted by Chatham House’s Equality, Diversity and Inclusion Working Group, in collaboration with Women in International Security UK (WIIS UK) and LSE IDEAS, to mark Women’s History Month.

In line with the 2026 International Women’s Day theme of ‘Give to Gain’, this event explores the rich history of women’s contributions to international relations and diplomacy over the past century, and examines how those working in international affairs today can build on this legacy. Our discussion focuses on career paths, representation and allyship, and on what gender equity in international affairs looks like across the field, with an emphasis on inspiring and supporting the next generation of practitioners, diplomats and academics.

The event is followed by a reception.

2026-03-11 16:04
2026-03-04 23:16

Six American service members were killed in a strike in Kuwait during the U.S.-Iran conflict, U.S. Central Command said.

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