2026-04-15 12:04
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The time is long overdue for members of Congress to listen to the American people and end US military aid to the extremist Netanyahu government

I am a proud Jewish-American. My father fled Poland in 1921 to escape poverty and antisemitism. Those in his family who stayed were murdered by the Nazis. Since childhood, I have known very well where antisemitism, racism, fanaticism and demagoguery lead.

So let me be clear. Speaking out against the horrific and inhumane actions of Israel, and its extremist leader, Benjamin Netanyahu, is not antisemitic. Speaking out about the dangerous and destructive role that Israel plays in shaping US foreign and military policy is not antisemitic. It is, in fact, what every member of Congress and every American should be doing.

Bernie Sanders is a US senator, and ranking member of the health, education, labor and pensions committee. He represents the state of Vermont

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 12:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Wall Street Journal: Rivian is joining with Redwood Materials to reuse EV batteries for energy storage -- the largest repurposed-battery energy storage system for an automotive manufacturer in the U.S., executives told The Wall Street Journal. Redwood Materials is a battery-recycling firm started by Tesla co-founder JB Straubel. Once completed later this year, Rivian's plant in Normal, Ill., will draw electricity from more than 100 Rivian EV batteries in an area the size of a small parking lot. It will reduce Rivian's dependence on the power grid during peak demand hours. "It saves Rivian money on what it takes to run the plant. It reduces the demand on the grid, which is great," Rivian Chief Executive Officer RJ Scaringe said in an interview. In the Rivian project, the batteries will come from either its test vehicles or from vehicles that have viable batteries but can no longer drive. Those batteries get sent off to Redwood, which integrates them into power storage units. Both companies declined to specify the cost of this project. The setup is expected to initially provide 10 megawatt-hours of energy, equivalent to about 1,000 home-energy battery storage units linked together, Redwood's Straubel said. "These batteries are already built," he said. "We need to integrate them and connect them together, but that can happen quite fast. They don't have to get imported from some other place." [...] Scaringe said that while branching into battery energy storage systems is "not a focus for us as a business right now," Rivian hopes to do more at its sites with Redwood. "There's hopefully a lot more, and there's going to be a lot of batteries we'll have access to," he said.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 11:58

The latest iteration of the Save America act could disenfranchise millions of voters. Guardian democracy reporters George Chidi and Sam Levine will be taking readers’ questions at 12pm ET (5pm BST) on Wednesday about its implications. Post yours now

Sign in or create your Guardian account to join the discussion

The latest version of the Save America act could, if it is passed, upend voting for all Americans in the middle of a federal midterm election year and create costly, chaotic changes for elections workers. As this explainer by Rachel Leingang sets out: “this year’s version [of Save] includes expansive documentary proof of citizenship requirements and criminal liability for election officials from the initial Save act, in addition to a very strict voter ID requirement for casting a ballot and a provision that requires states to regularly turn their voter rolls over to the Department of Homeland Security.”

George Chidi is the Guardian’s politics and democracy correspondent. His recent reporting has included looking at the states bringing in strict proof-0f-citizenship requirements to register to vote and covering efforts by the FBI to investigate Fulton county in Georgia over the 2020 election, the results of which are still challenged by Donald Trump’s supporters.

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2026-04-15 12:04
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Iran's Fars News Agency says a supertanker sailed through international waters and the Strait of Hormuz with its tracking system switched on, "without any concealment."

2026-04-15 12:04
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All three accounts offer sizable returns for savers who act now, but which type will earn the most interest in 2026?

2026-04-15 12:04
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Dr. Erica Schwartz has emerged as the White House's top pick to lead the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, according to current and former officials.

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President has nominated Kevin Warsh to replace Powell, whom he has repeatedly attacked over interest rate decisions

At a Turning Point USA event in Georgia on Tuesday, vice-president JD Vance was heckled by a protester who seemed to criticized the conflicts in the Middle East, including the war in Gaza.

“Jesus Christ does not support genocide,” the audience member shouted. The vice-president addressed the demonstrator and agreed with their statement, before responding to further comments from the heckler who appeared to say that the administration “supports a genocide in Gaza”.

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 11:48

Pro-Hezbollah media says ceasefire set to begin tonight; Israel ‘not yet decided on issue’, Israeli outlet reports

Donald Trump said the “special relationship” between the US and UK was in a poor state but that it will not have impact on King Charle’s upcoming state visit to America.

In an interview with Sky News, the US president once again criticised Keir Starmer over his policies, particularly on energy and immigration, and reiterated his disappointment that the UK and other Nato allies had not joined his war against Iran when the US “needed them”.

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 11:46

Airport body has asked for power to suspend EES checks requiring personal information and biometrics

Travellers going through some European airports are reportedly waiting up to three hours at border checks because of the EU’s new entry-exit system (EES).

Passengers in airports in countries such as France, Germany, Belgium, Italy, Spain and Greece are waiting several hours at border checks, the Airports Council International (ACI) body has said.

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 11:43

Chancellor tells US audience she is ‘not convinced that this conflict has made the world a safer place’

PMQs is starting soon.

Here is the list of MPs down to ask a question.

I’ll be honest, when people would pop up on social media laying those sorts of charges, they tended to be the sort of people who appear in your timeline trolling. And I just didn’t think it could be credible that [Mandelson] would have had that kind of relationship.

So, the FT did a report, but I don’t remember seeing it in other newspapers. Mandelson still had a podcast. He was appearing regularly on really big news programmes. And so, to be honest, the only time I remember seeing stuff, Mandleson/Epstein, you just think, ‘I haven’t seen that from a credible news source, he hasn’t been questioned, I think that must be overblown’.

I think it stems from the same root cause, which is those women [Epstein’s victims], those girls, not being taken seriously enough, their experiences not mattering enough and being prioritised. And that is exactly the sort of sexism and misogyny at the root of the issue, I’m afraid. And I think all of us have to take responsibility for that.

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 11:39

Brian Cole Jr. faces new charges of attempting to use weapons of mass destruction and committing an act of terrorism while armed.

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Confessions II reunites her with producer Stuart Price and is billed as a study of the dancefloor as ‘a ritualistic space where movement replaces language’

Madonna has announced the release of her 15th studio album, Confessions II: a sequel to Confessions on a Dance Floor, her disco-fabulous 2005 release regarded as one of the jewels of her discography.

The album will be released on 3 July. Details are still relatively scarce beyond that, but like its predecessor, Confessions II is a collaboration with the British producer Stuart Price.

When Stuart Price and I first started working on this record, this was our manifesto:

We must dance, celebrate, and pray with our bodies. These are things that we’ve been doing for thousands of years — they really are spiritual practices. After all, the dance floor is a ritualistic space. It’s a place where you connect with your wounds, with your fragility. To rave is an art. It’s about pushing your limits and connecting to a community of like-minded people.

Sound, light, and vibration
Reshape our perceptions
Pulling us into a trance-like state.
The repetition of the bass, we don’t just hear it but we feel it.

Altering our consciousness and dissolving ego and time.

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 11:23

Cuts by Snapchat’s parent company come in response to a declining stock price and pressure from an activist investor

Snapchat’s parent company plans to lay off 16% of its employees, around 1,000 people, citing “rapid advancements in artificial intelligence”, the social media company told staff on Wednesday in an internal memo. The staff reduction is part of a wave of tech industry layoffs in the past year, with many firms blaming AI for the cuts.

Snap Inc’s layoffs follow demands last month from Irenic Capital Management, an activist investor whose portfolio manager wrote a letter to the Snap Inc CEO, Evan Spiegel, calling on him to reduce costs and headcount while criticizing the company’s current strategy. In Spiegel’s memo to staff, he claimed that the layoffs would move Snap towards profitability and suggested that artificial intelligence could fill the lack of human labor.

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 11:14

Lifestyle influencer died while on vacation with boyfriend, who local officials say has since had his passport ‘withheld’

Ashly Robinson, a US lifestyle influencer, died last week while on vacation in the Tanzanian islands of Zanzibar with her boyfriend, Joe McCann. Robinson’s death on 9 April, just days after her birthday and a marriage proposal from McCann, has sparked suspicion on social media, with users doubtful of the current narrative surrounding her death.

No arrests have been made, and police previously said that McCann was not suspected of wrongdoing. But officials in Zanzibar released a statement on Tuesday saying that McCann’s passport has been “withheld”.

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2026-04-15 12:04
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Bita Hemmati is believed to be the first woman to be sentenced to death over the protests.

2026-04-15 12:04
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Mark Rutte urges members of military alliance to boost backing for Kyiv to $60bn in 2026

Meanwhile, Nato chief Mark Rutte urged members of the military alliance not to “lose sight” of the Ukraine conflict, and to boost their backing for Kyiv to $60bn in 2026, AFP reported.

His comments came at the start of a meeting in Berlin of defence ministers from Ukraine’s key supporters, including Germany and Britain, with the conflict against Russia now in its fifth year.

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2026-04-15 12:04
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Another Haiku monthly activity report, but this time around, there’s actually a big ticket item. Haiku has been in a pretty solid and stable state for a while now, so the activity reports have been dominated by fairly small, obscure changes, but during March a major milestone was reached for the ARM64 port.

smrobtzz contributed the bulk of the work, including fixes for building on macOS on ARM64, drivers for the Apple S5L UART, fixes to the kernel base address, clearing the frame pointer before entering the kernel, mapping physical memory correctly, the basics for userland, and more. SED4906 contributed some fixes to the bootloader page mapping, and runtime_loader’s page-size checks.

Combined, these changes allow the ARM64 port to get to the desktop in QEMU. There’s a forum thread, complete with screenshots, for anyone interested in following along.

↫ waddlesplash

While it’s only in QEMU, this is still a major achievement and paves the way for more people to work on the ARM64 port, possibly increasing its health. There’s tons of smaller changes and fixes all over the place, too, as usual, and the team mentions beta 6 isn’t quite ready yet, still. Don’t let that stop you from just downloading the latest nightly, though – Haiku is mature enough to use it.

2026-04-15 12:04
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Once you start noticing “it’s not X, it’s Y” as you scroll online, you can’t fail to register it. I’ve become so hypervigilant that it has seeped into my subconscious thoughts

If you’ve never seen Jim Carrey’s 2007 psychological thriller The Number 23, then congratulations. It is a film about a man who sees the number 23 so many times that he ends up going bonkers. I used to think this film was stupid. However, now I appear to be living it.

My own personal number 23 is a rhetorical device: “It’s not X, it’s Y.” Everywhere I look, there it is. Whenever I hate myself enough to scroll through Facebook’s wilderness of algorithmically suggested posts, I find myself being smacked in the face with sentences such as: “Self-improvement isn’t a trend, it’s a lifestyle shift,” and “The small wins aren’t just moments, they’re the majority of your life.” Once you notice it, it becomes impossible to ignore. This weekend during a Peloton class (I know, shut up), I heard an instructor bark a variation of “this isn’t X, it’s Y”. Yesterday, a character did the same during a TV show I was reviewing, and I dropped a star from its score in retaliation.

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 11:04

Appointment of Roelf Meyer seen as attempt to improve relations amid false US accusations of ‘white genocide’

South Africa has appointed a former apartheid government chief negotiator during the talks that ended white rule in the 1990s as ambassador to the US, in what is seen as an attempt to improve the deeply strained diplomatic relationship between the two countries.

Roelf Meyer replaces Ebrahim Rasool, who was expelled in March 2025 after he criticised the Trump administration.

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 11:04

Six lenders, including Bank of America, Morgan Stanley and JP Morgan report jump in first-quarter earnings

Big US banks raked in nearly $50bn (£37bn) worth of profits in the first three months of the year, as they benefited from stock market turbulence triggered by the US-Israeli war on Iran.

Wall Street’s largest lenders have reported a jump in first-quarter earnings, reflecting the surge in demand for trading services as investors dumped risky stocks and bonds and sought safer havens for their cash.

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 11:04

The brand launched the Westwood series, a new line of more approachably priced pellet grills with plenty of premium features.

2026-04-15 12:04
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Tech company has signed on to nine deals as it aims to reach net zero carbon emissions by 2040

Amazon has entered power agreements with nine new renewable projects in New South Wales and Victoria, as the technology company seeks to source renewable power for its datacentre operations in Australia.

The nine deals, including one windfarm and 10 solar and battery projects, will take the amount of renewable energy Amazon is sourcing in Australia from 430MW to nearly 1GW.

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2026-04-15 12:04
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I've been collecting people into my human zoo and conducting social experiments. Tell me this is OK.

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A 63-year-old man in Norway appears to be cured of HIV after receiving a stem cell transplant from his brother, who turned out to have a rare mutation that makes immune cells resistant to HIV. "Four years after the transplant, and two years after the man stopped antiretroviral therapy, he still appears to be free of the infection," reports Gizmodo. From the report: According to the report, the man was first diagnosed with myelodysplastic syndrome, a type of cancer that weakens blood cell production from bone marrow, in 2018. Though he seemed to initially respond to treatment, the cancer returned after two years, and doctors decided to perform a stem cell transplant. Because the man also had HIV (diagnosed in 2006), the doctors were hoping to treat both conditions at once, though they knew their chances were low. Most of these cases have involved the use of stem cells taken from people with two copies of a particular mutation in their CCR5 gene, which regulates the CC5R receptor on white blood cells. This mutation, named CCR5-delta 32, makes immune cells naturally resistant to infection from strains of HIV-1 (the most common type of the virus). However, only about 1% of the population carries two copies of the mutation. After initial screening failed to find someone who both possessed the mutation and had compatible bone marrow, the doctors decided to move ahead with the man's brother, who was already known to have compatible bone marrow. But to everyone's surprise, testing on the day of the transplant showed that the brother also had the mutation. Though the man did experience some complications from the procedure, his body successfully started to produce new blood cells with the mutation. The doctors decided to take him off antiretroviral medication two years after the transplant. And in the two years since then, regular follow-up tests have failed to show any signs of the virus in his system. [...] According to AFP, there have only been roughly 10 cases worldwide involving an HIV cure through stem cell transplantation. This is the first to involve a family donor.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 10:59

SINGAPORE and INNSBRUCK, Austria, April 15, 2026 — Horizon Quantum Computing Pte. Ltd., the wholly-owned subsidiary of Horizon Quantum Holdings Ltd. (Horizon Quantum), a pioneer of software infrastructure for quantum applications, and AQT (Alpine Quantum Technologies), a leading European provider of trapped-ion quantum computers, today announced a strategic collaboration to advance the development of real-world quantum computing applications via increased hardware-software integration. By combining advanced hardware capabilities with scalable software infrastructure, the two companies aim to accelerate users’ ability to build real-world quantum applications.

The integration of Triple Alpha—Horizon Quantum’s integrated development environment—with AQT’s trapped-ion quantum processors—a leading modality known for high gate fidelity and low error rates—is intended to enable developers with and without specialised hardware expertise to harness the power of AQT’s systems at various levels of abstraction. Using Triple Alpha, developers can write, compile, and deploy quantum programs directly onto AQT’s processors, accessing the hardware via the cloud.

“AQT’s trapped ion systems provide low error rates and long coherence times, potentially increasing the scalability and reliability of quantum computing,” said Horizon Quantum CEO Dr. Joe Fitzsimons. “Through this collaboration, Triple Alpha users will gain access to AQT’s processors, expanding their options for cutting-edge hardware designed to solve difficult computational problems.”

Horizon Quantum and AQT will engage customers as equals, working together to solve computational problems and achieve joint technical firsts in the fields of quantum computing and software development.

“The Triple Alpha software development environment navigates the diversity and complexity of today’s quantum stack, providing developers with access at multiple levels of abstraction to deliver both programming freedom and fine-grained precision,” said Dr. Thomas Monz, CEO of AQT. “The collaboration with Horizon Quantum provides broad and easy access to AQT’s hardware and leverages synergies between the two companies, which share the common goal of advancing quantum computing in practice.”

Horizon Quantum’s objective is to build the most capable hardware-agnostic software infrastructure. Horizon Quantum believes the collaboration with AQT is an important step towards further broadening the range of hardware architectures supported in Triple Alpha. To accelerate its research and development efforts and further advance Triple Alpha, Horizon Quantum recently listed on Nasdaq under the ticker HQ.

About Horizon Quantum

Horizon Quantum (NASDAQ: HQ) is on a mission to unlock broad quantum advantage by building the software infrastructure that empowers developers to use quantum computing to solve the world’s toughest computational problems. Founded in 2018 by Dr Joe Fitzsimons, a leading researcher and former professor with more than two decades of experience in quantum computing, the company is bridging the gap between today’s hardware and tomorrow’s applications through the creation of advanced quantum software development tools. Its integrated development environment, Triple Alpha, enables developers to write sophisticated, hardware-agnostic quantum programs at different levels of abstraction. Learn more at www.horizonquantum.com.

About AQT

Building on decades of experience in experimental and theoretical quantum information processing in Innsbruck (Austria), AQT develops and builds quantum computers. The company offers ion trap-based quantum computers that fit seamlessly into conventional IT infrastructure and can be operated from any PC or laptop, regardless of location. AQT enables its customers to install quantum computers on site or to explore use-cases via a convenient cloud solution. Researchers and developers are supported by both quantum hardware components as well as complete systems that significantly accelerate the development of quantum solutions. Learn more at www.aqt.eu.


Source: Horizon Quantum

The post Horizon Quantum and AQT Integrate Software Stack with Trapped-Ion Quantum Hardware appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 10:55

US president says he has ‘held back’ on firing the head of the Federal Reserve leading up to end of Powell’s term in May

Donald Trump threatened to fire Jerome Powell if he stays on as US Federal Reserve chair past the end of his tenure and doubled down on a criminal investigation into renovations of the central bank’s headquarters.

As the White House pushes Trump’s new nominee to take charge of the Fed, Kevin Warsh, Powell has a month left in the role. The possibility of Powell staying on as chair past 15 May, the official end of his term, has grown amid mounting scrutiny of Trump’s approach to the Fed in the Senate, which is required to approve Warsh’s nomination.

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 10:53

Take CNET's People's Picks survey and help your favorite pair take the top spot.

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More than 1,000 people were in shelters across Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands as Sinlaku moved away

Super Typhoon Sinlaku hammered the Northern Mariana Islands, flipping over cars, toppling utility poles and ripping away tin roofs.

Authorities were just beginning to assess the damage left behind by the typhoon, which first hit the islands on Tuesday night local time and continued with a barrage of fierce winds and relentless rains for hours on Wednesday. So far, there have been no reports of deaths.

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London police are looking for two people who threw bottles likely containing gasoline at a North London synagogue in what's being treating as an "antisemitic hate crime."

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Seconds after a gunman opened fire at an Oklahoma high school, the school's principal was seen racing into the hallway, pushing the suspect onto a bench and holding him down.

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A Seoul court found Ramsey Khalid Ismael, a self-proclaimed online "troll"​ known as Johnny Somali, guilty of multiple charges.

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Camp’s medical officer testified at a hearing as state health agency reviews camp’s application to reopen this summer

The medical officer for Camp Mystic, the Christian summer camp in Texas where 27 girls and counselors were killed in a catastrophic flood last year, testified this week she has still not officially reported the deaths to the state health agency reviewing the camp’s application to reopen.

Mary Liz Eastland, a member of the family that owns and operates the camp, appeared in court this week as part of a hearing tied to a lawsuit brought by the family of eight-year-old camper Cecilia “Cile” Steward, whose body has not been found. The family is seeking to temporarily close off the camp’s flooded areas to preserve the damage as evidence while their lawsuit proceeds.

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 10:34

President says he gave Britain ‘better deal than I had to’ but ally was ‘not there when we needed them’ on Iran

Donald Trump has threatened to row back on the trade deal the US signed with the UK last year, in his latest salvo against the British government over sharp differences about the US’s approach to the Middle East.

The US president said the economic deal struck with the UK, which cut some of his tariffs on cars, aluminium and steel, was “better than I had to” and that it could “always be changed”.

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The Dolby Atmos receiver includes improved streaming support and extra gaming features.

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2026-04-15 10:26

Regulator says tool, which creates reports for humans to review, has helped classify entire UK catalogue of HBO Max

TV shows including Game of Thrones and Euphoria have received age ratings for the first time in the UK, after the British Board of Film Classification (BBFC) deployed an AI tool to help assess content.

The BBFC has developed a tool to identify content that triggers compliance issues, such as violence, nudity and bad language. The flagged scenes are then passed over to BBFC staff for human review.

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 10:20

Rumors about the reporter and New England head coach Mike Vrabel flew all week. The conclusion to the saga was all too predictable

Dianna Russini, one of the NFL’s most high-profile reporters, is photographed holding hands with New England Patriots head coach Mike Vrabel at a fancy resort in Sedona, Arizona. Rumors fly. Vrabel and Russini, who are both married to other people, issue statements denying the assumptions of something untoward. But the firestorm only grows. Russini resigns from her post at the Athletic, Vrabel continues with his job as usual.

The female reporter’s career is in shambles. Meanwhile, it’s business as usual for the male head coach.

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 10:18

Péter Magyar’s stunning victory in Hungary is a boost for liberal democracy. But don’t bank on similar upsets in upcoming European elections

When future historians come to write about the stunning electoral overthrow of Viktor Orbán on 12 April 2026, let’s hope they devote at least footnotes to zebras and golden toilet brushes. The zebras were spotted by drones on the sprawling grounds of a countryside palace belonging to Orbán’s extended family. The 72 gilded toilet brushes were said to have been bought at a cost of almost €10,000, for a lavish renovation of Hungary’s central bank. For Orbán’s opponents, such excesses became symbols of the rampant corruption among cronies of Orbán’s ruling party Fidesz, which drained Hungary’s economy and earned the country the worst ranking on the crookedness league tables in the EU, as Ashifa Kassam and Flora Garamvolgyi reported.

In the end, it was disgust with corruption and how that corruption affected people’s livelihoods that were the main factors behind Sunday’s election rout. But the landslide achieved by Peter Magyar’s Tisza party – despite an electoral system designed to favour Fidesz – suggests that these eye-popping details were merely the last straws for a population desperate to reclaim their country as a functioning democracy.

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 10:17

Narwhal Labs ad for ‘AI employee’ contains strapline: ‘She outworks everyone. And she’ll never ask for a raise’

A British AI company that recently secured millions of pounds of investment has been accused of running a misogynistic and sexist advertising campaign.

The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) has received at least seven complaints about the campaign by Narwhal Labs, which includes an advert depicting a woman next to the strapline: “She outworks everyone. And she’ll never ask for a raise.”

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 10:07

More than 2,200 ants were found in Zhang Kequn’s luggage at Nairobi airport, with baggage destined for China

A Chinese national has been sentenced to a year in prison and fined by a Nairobi court for attempting to smuggle thousands of ants out of Kenya, a lucrative trade in east Africa that was exposed last year.

The insects are mostly destined for China, the US and Europe, where they become pets and can be worth about $100 each.

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Current conditions make mortgage rates particularly hard to forecast. Here's what some experts are predicting.

2026-04-15 12:04
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U.S. Army Sgt. Celestino Chavez enlisted in the military when he was 17, according to the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency.

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‘Unc’ is meant to disparage older players who favour slow-paced shooters and epic narrative games, but the industry should make games for all generations

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While researching women’s experiences in multiplayer video games recently, I came across this thread on the subreddit about Bungie’s latest live shooter, Marathon. “I’ve played a lot of shooters, and as a feminine-presenting player tbh it’s often a struggle,” it reads. “I’ve heard all the ‘get back to the kitchen’ jokes … ​But Marathon has been completely different, guys. I haven’t had a single issue, people have been incredibly kind and helpful… ​The community feels genuinely welcoming to everyone.”

The top-voted reply? “Benefit of being an unc game.”

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The editor in chief of this blog was born in 2004. She uses the 1997 window manager, Enlightenment E16, daily. In this article, I describe the process of fixing a show-stopping, rare bug that dates back to 2006 in the codebase. Surprisingly, the issue has roots in a faulty implementation of Newton’s algorithm.

↫ Kamila Szewczyk

I’m not going to pretend to understand any of this, but I know you people do. Enjoy.

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2026-04-15 10:00
Jeni Nance

JENI NANCE
Co-Managing Mosaic Editor

The first time I heard about “People We Meet on Vacation” by Emily Henry was at a bookstore with one of my friends. She mentioned it as we passed a section of the author’s books, telling me how the movie was coming out soon. I had never heard of the book or author before, but suddenly, my social media became flooded with trailers for the upcoming movie. 

After watching the initial trailer, I circled back to the topic with the same friend, who told me it was the book that got her out of a reading slump. Being in somewhat of a slump myself, I was excited to pick it up at the bookstore during our next trip, with the goal of finishing it before the movie dropped on Netflix. 

While I didn’t quite make the deadline, finishing the book about 21 hours and 30 minutes post movie release (I’m a slow reader and had work), I still managed to trudge through without encountering any spoilers. 

My initial impression of the book is that it was a fun, cute beach read. It’s an easy read and, depending on how you take corny rom-coms, can have you hooked. While I was cringing almost every other page — and also frustrated with the main female character, Poppy Wright, and her male counterpart, Alex Nilsen — I still was very much entertained. 

I had a few criticisms of the book itself, but most of them were technical errors in the writing. I personally think it could have been polished a little bit more, but I also want to give grace to the author, who clearly has talent. 

My other criticism was that it was hard for me to understand the characters’ personalities. It wasn’t until I watched the movie that I got a clearer picture of their behaviors. In the book, it felt more like a telling, rather than showing. 

With that being said, that’s the only thing the movie had that trumped the book. Working with multiple timelines and moving back and forth between the past and present was interesting and I wondered how all 12 summers were going to be consolidated into one movie. 

Spoiler: they weren’t. 

I honestly expected this, considering what the maximum length for a rom-com typically is, but I expected more from what was shown. Only four past vacations are merely skimmed over and key events are switched to the vacations that are shown. 

This was really frustrating because, as a viewer, how am I supposed to understand how their relationship evolves without seeing the majority of it? It seemed like the producers were more concerned about certain events happening rather than how the characters develop throughout the timeline. 

The little intimate moments between the two main characters were lightly grazed over, if they were even shown at all. Longer, more emotional scenes throughout the past summers would allow the viewer to get a better understanding of how their relationship develops over the course of this decade, even if it means cutting some of the present-day timeline. I’ve said this before about other book-to-movie adaptations I’ve reviewed and I’m starting to see a pattern with all of them: they’re just long trailers for the book.

My biggest problem with the film was how its title didn’t reflect the lesson from the book. In the novel, it’s all about the random people you meet on vacation — the fleeting friendships, yet impactful connections that make the time special. This is displayed in some of the people the main characters meet on their journeys — a water taxi driver, newlyweds, a Norwegian couple, an angry motel owner and a couple of giant dinosaurs (if you know, you know). 

While a couple of these encounters were shown on screen, the rest are simply alluded to, or have disappeared entirely. What’s the point of “People We Meet On Vacation” if one of the book’s main focuses is being taken away? 

While there are holes in the movie adaptation, it is so incredibly funny and one I’d watch again. It’s one of those bad yet guilty pleasure rom-coms that you can’t help but put on for a light movie night. It’s kind of a shame this movie wasn’t in theaters — it deserved its box office moment. However, since it wasn’t featured on the big screen and considering how many elements of the book were missing, it would have done better as a limited series. 

The actors were amazing, and this review is not a reflection on them; they all did an amazing job and arguably saved the film. I’d never seen any of Emily Bader’s (Poppy Wright) projects, but she was perfectly cast. Tom Blyth (Alex Nilsen) is also an incredible actor. 

The one thing that stood out to me was that I was rooting for Alex and Poppy the whole time. In the past, when I was watching rom-coms, I was always thinking, “I wish I were them” or “they’re so lucky,” jealous of the characters’ romance and aware of the fact that I’m chronically single. 

With this movie, I didn’t feel any of that. That tells me that this was one heck of a movie. To watch a romance movie without a twinge of yearning or envy is another level of somewhat uncharted territory for me — opening a door I didn’t know existed — and it felt good. 

I’ll definitely be reading more of Emily Henry’s books because, even though I’m not a big fan of her writing style, the stories she comes up with are nothing short of amazing. Henry also mentioned that all of her other books are being adapted into movies, which I’ll also be watching — I look forward to seeing their outcome. 

I recommend this book for people who need a quick and easy read and are suckers for cheesy romances (and don’t mind cringe). I recommend the movie to people who like good but also kind of crappy rom-coms, that either haven’t read the book or don’t intend to. As for me, I will absolutely be watching this movie again (I’ve already watched it twice).


Book and movie review: “People We Meet on Vacation” by Emily Henry was first posted on April 15, 2026 at 9:00 am.
©2022 "The Review". Use of this feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this article in your feed reader, then the site is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact me at eic@udreview.com

2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 09:56

Rapid data analysis powered by ALCF supercomputers is enabling APS users to adjust experiments on the fly, refine hypotheses, and make the most of their beam time.

April 15, 2026 — At the upgraded Advanced Photon Source (APS), a powerful X-ray light source at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory, new analysis capabilities are changing how experiments unfold. Instead of waiting until an experiment ends, researchers can now use near real-time feedback from the X-ray beamlines to guide their next steps.

APS staff members Suresh Narayanan, Dana Capatina and Matt Spilker monitor live data from the XPCS beamline. Credit: Argonne National Laboratory.

“Coming back to the APS after the upgrade was a completely different experience,” said Ryan Poling-Skutvik, assistant professor of chemical engineering at the University of Rhode Island. ​“Based on the early signals we were getting from our experiments, we were able to bring materials to the wet lab and make new samples to better target the dynamics we were studying. That’s something that’s impossible to do if you don’t have the real-time data.”

After its recent upgrade, the APS produces X-ray beams that are up to 500 times brighter than before, enabling researchers to study materials with higher resolution and at time scales that were previously out of reach. But those enhanced capabilities are also producing more data than its local computing systems can handle.

“When I started using the APS around 2015, the fastest time scales we could probe were on the order of milliseconds,” Poling-Skutvik said. ​“Now we’re collecting data on microsecond time scales, which opens up a much broader view of material behavior. At that rate, you can imagine collecting 10,000 frames in less than a second, which would completely swamp everything. Having analysis proceed at a comparable speed allows us to fully realize the potential of the upgraded beamline technology.”

To make this possible, APS experiments are now tightly integrated with supercomputers at the Argonne Leadership Computing Facility (ALCF). Building on years of collaboration between APS and ALCF, Argonne researchers created an automated pipeline that streams experimental data from the beamlines to ALCF systems for analysis as it is being collected. The APS and ALCF are DOE Office of Science user facilities.

The Argonne team’s work is helping to advance DOE’s Genesis Mission, a national AI initiative to build a powerful scientific platform for accelerating discovery science, strengthening national security and driving energy innovation. In particular, the rapid data analysis capabilities have prepared the way for new efforts under the American Science Cloud (AmSC), a cornerstone of the Genesis Mission. AmSC is an integrated, federated platform that connects AI models, curated scientific data, workflows and computing resources across DOE laboratories.

Linking Light and Compute

The connection between APS and ALCF is powered by the APS Data Management System and Globus. The APS Data Management System provides a uniform way to connect to data from the approximately 100 unique instruments at the APS. It also keeps track of information about data and experiments at the facility. Globus, a research automation and data management platform developed at Argonne and the University of Chicago, handles the movement of data between the APS and the ALCF’s Polaris supercomputer, automatically running analyses and returning results to the beamline while experiments are still underway.

“The actual data collection is triggering all of the data movement — the storage, the access permissions, the processing on Polaris and the transfer back to the APS,” said Thomas Uram, ALCF data services and workflows team lead. ​“All of this is happening without any intervention by the scientists.”

Bringing all the pieces together required extensive collaboration. Teams spanning X-ray science, beamline operations, data management and scientific software worked alongside ALCF staff and Globus developers to map out how each beamline collects data, when to launch processing workflows and how to best integrate APS control systems with Globus and remote supercomputers.

“By combining the expertise of multiple teams with powerful computing resources, we were able to build reliable data processing pipelines that can return analysis results quickly enough to guide experiments as they happen,” said Hannah Parraga, a software engineer at the APS developing scientific data workflows that run on supercomputers for many of the facility’s beamlines.

With this infrastructure in place, researchers visiting the APS are now using the analysis tools across many of the facility’s beamlines, taking full advantage of the brighter X-ray beams and faster detectors provided by the upgrade. While Polaris is the primary system currently supporting APS experiments, researchers will also be able to tap ALCF’s Aurora exascale system and next-generation supercomputers for increasingly data-intensive work.

One of the first beamlines to employ the enhanced computing capabilities is the X-ray Photon Correlation Spectroscopy (XPCS) beamline. XPCS enables scientists to observe how materials behave over time and under different conditions at the nanoscale.

“We’re already seeing how the faster analysis is helping researchers steer XPCS experiments in ways that weren’t possible before,” said Suresh Narayanan, APS physicist and group leader. ​“Our users can adapt their experimental setup on the fly, adjust their hypotheses as new data comes in and make more efficient use of their beam time.”

Probing Soft Materials with Experiment-Time Feedback

Poling-Skutvik’s team is using XPCS to study soft materials, a broad class of materials found in everyday products like shampoos and paints as well as biological systems such as cells and tissues. Understanding their dynamics is essential for designing materials that move and respond predictably under stress.

“What we’re really asking is how can we design these materials to be more functional,” Poling-Skutvik said. ​“One of the biggest challenges is that we don’t have a good understanding of the dynamics that are present inside of these materials.”

The XPCS beamline at the APS enables scientists to probe the nanoscale dynamics of materials, such as liquids, gels and glasses, by measuring how their structure evolves over time. Credit: Argonne National Laboratory.

XPCS is uniquely suited to tackle such problems, allowing researchers to probe motion deep within materials at the length and time scales relevant to soft matter. With faster analysis, Poling-Skutvik’s team can now get early insight into those dynamics while an experiment is happening, rather than reconstructing them after the fact.

This rapid feedback is particularly useful because many soft materials can be synthesized quickly by adjusting physical parameters like salt concentration. During recent experiments, Poling-Skutvik’s team brought a range of candidate materials and used early measurements to guide what they tested next.

“We could make new samples with different molecular weights and concentrations, put them on the beamline to see the dynamics, and then go back to the lab to modify the next samples,” he said. ​“With the ability to process the dynamics really fast, we were able to iterate through multiple designs within a day.”

Making Beam Time Count

Researchers from the University of Texas and the University of Michigan are taking advantage of the rapid analysis capabilities in XPCS experiments involving metal oxide nanocrystals. Their work aims to shed light on how nanocrystals assemble into gel-like networks with tunable optical and electronic properties.

“We have a very good plan going into our experiments, but we like to treat the beam time as this living and breathing thing because XPCS allows you to see things you cannot see anywhere else at conditions you cannot measure anywhere else,” said William Brackett, a graduate student at the University of Texas. ​“You want to be flexible because the data often reveals unexpected or interesting results worth deeper investigation.”

Using the XPCS beamline and rapid analysis, researchers tracked how tin-doped indium oxide nanocrystals form dynamic, covalently linked gels as the material cools from 144 degrees C to 19 degrees C (g2 = intensity correlation; q = scattering vector; Δt (s) = correlation lag time). Image credit: William Brackett, University of Texas.

Before the APS-ALCF integration, the team typically collected data that would be analyzed long after beam time ended. Now, each dataset triggers an automated analysis on Polaris, with results returning to the beamline in minutes. That speed proved especially valuable when studying gel systems that evolved at very different rates.

The team was able to quickly identify whether a gelation process would be fast or slow, enabling them to adjust their experimental plan accordingly. ​“The name of the game when you have beam time is to maximize your efficiency,” Brackett said. ​“We were able to group gels by their gelation time and achieve much higher experimental throughput during our allotted time.”

The quick analysis also helped the team zero in on a narrow temperature window where a material rapidly switches between liquid and gel states. With immediate feedback, they were able to refine their measurements on the spot.

“We needed to figure out how the dynamics evolve in a quickly arresting gel, and that wouldn’t have been possible unless we could have seen the data right then and there,” Brackett said. ​“That allowed us to tweak some of the experiments to isolate the temperatures and get a more resolved idea of what’s going on around that gel point.”

Adapting Experiments as Data Comes in

In another XPCS experiment, researchers from the Olsen Lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) are using the beamline to study complex, disordered materials.

“Our research bridges the realm between protein and polymer dynamics,” said Brian Carrick, a postdoctoral researcher at MIT. Gaining insights into the behavior of these materials could help inform the design of recyclable plastics and self-healing materials.

“We deal with a lot of systems with reversible bonds,” Carrick said. ​“You can think of it like Silly Putty. You can rip it into two pieces and put them back together, and it kind of heals. We’re trying to understand the molecular characteristics of these healing processes so we can make better recyclable materials.”

Before the APS upgrade, experiments often came with limited feedback during beam time. Without the ability to analyze data quickly, Carrick’s team had less visibility into how samples were responding during experiments, including whether the X-rays were altering the materials.

“We’ve tried running these exact same materials on XPCS in the past, but we could never analyze the data in real time,” he said. ​“So, everything we collected was either damaged by radiation, or we just couldn’t get a good enough signal. And since we couldn’t reduce the data on the beamline, we couldn’t really quantify any of it.”

With the enhanced data analysis capabilities in place, that constraint has been removed. ​“We were able to perform a measurement and less than three minutes later get our data back,” Carrick said. This allowed the team to screen samples for stability, tune exposure conditions and decide what to measure next while their experiments were still underway.

“With this kind of real-time analysis, you can start with a hypothesis at point A and then evolve the questions you’re trying to probe as your understanding grows,” Carrick said. ​“Because you have that flexibility and can see your data in real time, you can push the frontier a little bit faster.”

A New Model for Experiment-Driven Discovery

Argonne continues its work to extend these data processing capabilities to more APS beamlines and other experimental facilities, enabling scientists to integrate high performance computing seamlessly into their workflows to speed up the pace of discovery.

At the APS, that shift from delayed analysis to near-instant feedback is already changing how experiments are designed, executed and refined. With computing infrastructure operating smoothly in the background, scientists like Poling-Skutvik can concentrate on their experiments rather than data management and processing.

“The fact that it was so frictionless allowed me to focus on the science I wanted to go after rather than the details of how to manage the data and run the analyses,” Poling-Skutvik said. ​“That’s the best-case scenario — when the infrastructure exists to let you do what you need to do without limiting your ability to do it.”

This work was supported in part by the DOE Office of Science’s Advanced Scientific Computing Research (ASCR) and Basic Energy Sciences programs. Access to ALCF computing resources was provided through the DOE ASCR Leadership Computing Challenge award, ​“Enhancing APS-Enabled Research through Integrated Research Infrastructure,” led by Argonne’s Nicholas Schwarz. Additional funding was provided by DOE’s AmSC project.


Source: Jim Collins, Argonne Leadership Computing Facility

The post Argonne APS Upgrade Links Beamlines to Supercomputers for Real-Time Experiment Feedback appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 09:51

Modern laptops promise a kind of magic. Shut the lid or press the sleep button, toss it in a backpack, and hours, days, or weeks later, it should wake up as if nothing happened with little to no battery drain. This sounds like a fairly trivial operation — y’know, you’re literally just asking for the computer to do nothing — but in that quiet moment when the fans whir down, the screen turns dark, and your reflection stares back at you, your computer and all its little components are actually hard at work doing their bedtime routine.

↫ Aymeric Wibo at the FreeBSD Foundation

A look at how suspend and resume works in practice, from the perspective of FreeBSD. Considering FreeBSD’s laptop focus in recent times, not an unimportant subject.

2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 09:48

The spy tool, known as FISA Section 702, expires Monday. But it currently has opposition from several House factions.

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2026-04-15 09:38

Several shots – including flu and Covid – lost their CDC recommendations under overhauls from the White House

Several shots lost their recommendation from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) after a judge’s stay against changes made by the Trump administration – which may affect access to the shots in some states. And no new vaccine recommendations may be made as long as the vaccines committee is halted.

Access to existing vaccines – and the future development of new vaccines – has been increasingly called into question under the second Trump administration, as the now-halted Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) made controversial recommendations and health officials made unilateral changes to routine vaccines, with long-term and global implications.

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 09:38

Adobe's Firefly AI is getting a new agentic assistant.

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2026-04-15 09:36

Ari Hodara initially thought it might be a hoax after winning raffle he found out about by chance while dining out

A Picasso painting worth more than €1m (£870,000) has been won in a raffle by a software engineer from Paris who thought the whole thing might be a hoax.

Ari Hodara learned he was the winner of the raffle on Tuesday when he answered a video call from Christie’s auction house in Paris. “How do I check that it’s not a hoax?” the 58 year-old asked when he was told he was the new owner of the 1941 work by the Spanish master.

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 09:32

Péter Magyar compares media coverage to Nazi-era Germany and aims to ‘restore its public service character’

Hungary’s prime minister-elect has vowed to suspend state media news coverage, describing it as a “propaganda machine,” when his government takes office around mid-May.

Péter Magyar, whose landslide election victory on Sunday brought an end to Viktor Orbán’s 16 years in power, detailed his plans for the suspension as he gave two tense interviews to public radio and television on Wednesday.

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 09:26

Kirk Moore was injured as he tackled a former pupil who opened fire at Pauls Valley high school

An Oklahoma principal has been praised for preventing a tragedy at his high school by charging and disarming a former student armed with two semi-automatic handguns, an episode captured on dramatic surveillance video.

Kirk Moore, principal of Pauls Valley high school, was shot in the leg as he wrestled the attacker, a 20-year-old said by court documents to be obsessed with the 1999 shooting at Colorado’s Columbine high school in which 12 students and one teacher were killed.

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 09:25

Conflict is pushing up price of energy and food, fuelling higher borrowing costs and hitting growth, report says

The Iran war risks triggering a rise in global debt levels, forcing governments to choose between cushioning a cost of living shock and maintaining sound public finances, the International Monetary Fund has warned.

Against a volatile backdrop of the Middle East conflict, the Washington-based fund said the war could add to the already strained position of government finances throughout the world.

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 09:10

Amazon announces plans to acquire satellite service provider Globalstar in its quest to provide connectivity from space.

2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 09:07

Miami Fire said crews were called to the corner of 9th Street and South Miami Avenue in Brickell after getting reports of a possible overdose of a 20-year-old man.

2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 09:02

The federal government will begin the long-awaited cleanup of a nuclear waste dump outside Apollo in Armstrong County.

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2026-04-15 09:01

Amazon says the slimmer, faster device will start shipping by the end of April.

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2026-04-15 09:00

New AWS and Google Cloud frameworks enable customers to modernize digital infrastructure by making mission-critical software as easy to consume as the cloud itself

LUXEMBOURG, April 15, 2026 — SUSE, a global leader in enterprise open source solutions, has updated its Cloud Elevate Program, a pillar of the SUSE One Partner Program, to simplify buying enterprise software. Customers can now buy SUSE mission-critical software directly through AWS and Google Cloud using their existing cloud credits.

“By expanding the Cloud Elevate Program, we are easing the procurement and consumption process that often slows down new projects,” said Hayley Wienszczak, global head of ecosystem programs, SUSE. “This is about choice: giving our customers and partners the flexibility to buy and run SUSE software wherever they do business, without the headache of traditional billing.”

By introducing new commercial frameworks for AWS and Google Cloud, SUSE is removing the traditional barriers of complex procurement, allowing customers to modernize their digital infrastructure with the same speed and ease as the cloud itself. These changes enable SUSE’s partners to help customers transition to the public cloud while continuing to use their preferred technology stacks and providers.

Modernizing How Enterprises Buy Software

As organizations transition to cloud-native environments, traditional procurement processes create bottlenecks. The expanded Cloud Elevate Program addresses these hurdles directly through two key updates:

  • AWS Private Offers through Distributors: Authorized distributors can now manage custom pricing while keeping billing consolidated under a single AWS account.
  • Google Cloud Marketplace Channel Private Offers: Partners can push discounted, tailored terms directly to a customer’s Google Cloud console.

Using Pre-Committed Cloud Spend

The program also addresses the challenge of managing annual spend commitments with cloud providers. The Cloud Elevate Program allows customers to use pre-committed cloud credits to fund infrastructure projects using SUSE Linux Enterprise Server (SLES) and SUSE Rancher Prime. This eases the procurement process for all parties and accelerates Time-To-Value (TTV) for customers.

Key benefits of this streamlined approach include:

  • 40% Faster Sales: Deals move from initial intent to closing significantly faster.
  • 66% Less Admin Time: Standardized contracts eliminate the need to manage hundreds of individual vendor payments.
  • 20 Days Earlier Deployment: Software is ready for engineering teams nearly three weeks sooner than through traditional channels.

About SUSE

SUSE is a global leader in enterprise open source software, across Linux operating systems, Kubernetes container management, Edge solutions and AI. The majority of the Fortune 500 rely on SUSE to provide resilient infrastructure, enabling IT leaders to optimize cost and manage heterogeneous environments. SUSE collaborates with partners and communities to provide organizations with choices to maximize their current IT systems and innovate with next-generation technologies across traditional on-premises to cloud native, multi-cloud to edge and beyond. For more information, visit www.suse.com.


Source: SUSE

The post SUSE Expands Cloud Elevate Program to Simplify Cloud Procurement on AWS and Google Cloud appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 09:00

Here are our top picks for devices that pause, record and stream free over-the-air television with an antenna.

2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 08:58
  • Ball appeared to trip Bam Adebayo in Tuesday’s game

  • Hornets went on to win play-in game in overtime

Miami coach Erik Spoelstra said LaMelo Ball should have been ejected for tripping Bam Adebayo, leading to an injury that knocked the Heat’s star center out of Tuesday night’s 127-126 play-in tournament loss to the Charlotte Hornets.

Ball fell to the floor after missing a shot on a drive to the basket early in the second quarter, and appeared to reach out and grab Adebayo’s left leg, causing the center to fall on his back. Ball was not called for a foul, and Adebayo remained on the floor as play continued. He eventually walked to the locker room under his own power but did not return.

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 08:47

The European Commission's new app is "technically ready and soon available," says President Ursula von der Leyen.

2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 08:41

Intense heat in cities like New York, Philadelphia and Washington DC is unusual for April, weather experts say

A long-lasting weather pattern is poised to blast hot air like a furnace across the eastern United States, with the unusual heatwave threatening to shatter record high temperatures on Wednesday in big cities including New York, Philadelphia and Washington DC.

The heat is unusual for April, not only because it is scorching much of the nation so early in the year but also for its duration. The near-record temperatures are expected to last into this weekend, forecasters say.

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 08:17

Lebanon–Israel talks must be given a chance Expert comment thilton.drupal

Rare direct talks are unlikely to succeed in the long-term without Hezbollah disarming, but they are a welcome opportunity for the Lebanese state to regain its authority in foreign policy and pursue confidence-building measures with Israel.

The participants in Lebanon-Israel talks in Washington

The US hosted direct talks between Lebanon and Israel in Washington this week against the backdrop of Israel’s ongoing strikes targeting Hezbollah in Lebanon.

The Lebanese and Israeli ambassadors to the US, along with the US ambassador to Lebanon, met in Washington on Tuesday. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio chaired the meeting, which he hailed as a ‘historic gathering that we hope to build on.’ 

The State Department said that both sides agreed to ‘launch direct negotiations at a mutually agreed time and venue.’

While significant hurdles remain, most notably the issue of Hezbollah’s disarmament, these talks should be welcomed as an important initial confidence-building measure that lays the ground for much-needed future negotiations. Importantly, this reasserts the Lebanese state’s independence and authority in foreign policy. 

New cast, same plot?

The talks bring back memories of when the two sides met directly and signed a short-lived accord during Lebanon’s 1975-1990 civil war. 

In 1983, a year after Israel launched an invasion of Lebanon with the aim of expelling Palestinian militants, Lebanese President Amin Gemayel entered into negotiations with Israel. On May 17 of that year, both parties reached an agreement that briefly ended the state of war between the two countries.

However, the agreement lasted only a short while due to opposition from Syrian President Hafez Assad and pro-Syrian factions in Lebanon. 

Today, the threat to Israel from Palestinian militants in Lebanon is gone. So is the Assad regime. But Hezbollah remains a formidable security challenge to Israel. This is despite the group having been severely weakened over the past two years due to Israel decapitating its leadership, penetrating its ranks and degrading much of its military capacity.

But Israel cannot simply oust Hezbollah – a Lebanese party with Lebanese fighters, parliamentarians, ministers and supporters – from Lebanon like it did with the Palestine Liberation Organization in the 1980s. Nor can it disarm Hezbollah without launching another deep and costly ground invasion, with severe consequences for Lebanon.

Hezbollah also has much to lose from a return to civil war.

Instead, Israel says it is trying to create a buffer zone in southern Lebanon – like it did in 1985-2000 – to push Hezbollah away from the border and reduce the threat of missile attacks or ground infiltration. Hezbollah restarted drone and missile attacks against Israel following the US-Israeli war on Iran, the group’s main patron.

These Israeli strikes and evacuation orders have created a dire humanitarian situation in southern Lebanon. More than 80 towns and villages have been emptied and more than 15 per cent of Lebanon’s population displaced. 

Last week, Israel bombed more than 100 targets across the country in 10 minutes, killing hundreds of people. The wave of strikes came despite the US-Iran ceasefire, which Tehran and Islamabad said included Lebanon (a claim rejected by the US).

Hezbollah’s opposition

Lebanese President Joseph Aoun called for direct talks with Israel in March, but until last week Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had refused. 

President Aoun enjoys a popular mandate, but he faces stiff resistance from Hezbollah. The group insists on a ceasefire and an Israeli withdrawal from Lebanese territory as preconditions for talks. 

US Vice President JD Vance said last week that Israel had offered to ‘check themselves a little bit in Lebanon’ to avoid undermining the US-Iran ceasefire. However, Israel has continued to strike southern Lebanon and has intensified its ground operations in the town of Bint Jbeil.

Israel is likely aiming to push the Lebanese government to demonstrate its commitment to disarming the group, which it is committed to under UN Security Council Resolutions 1559 and 1701, as well as the 2024 ceasefire deal. Hezbollah has categorically refused to disarm. 

While Hezbollah’s support base is a minority within Lebanese society, the group has the military and intelligence capabilities to eliminate its domestic political opponents and pressure the Lebanese government, both of which it has done before. 

This week, Hezbollah political council member Wafiq Safa said that his group will not abide by agreements that may result from the talks. During the talks in Washington, the group claimed it launched at least 24 attacks against Israel and Israeli troops. 

Unable to prevent talks

Given these challenges, it’s easy to be pessimistic about the fate of any future negotiations. 

But neither Tehran nor Hezbollah have been able to torpedo the talks so far. In a combative speech, Hezbollah chief Naim Qassem urged the Lebanese government to cancel the talks but was unable to prevent Tuesday’s meeting in Washington.

Politically, Hezbollah doesn’t have the numbers in Parliament to reverse the Lebanese government’s decision. And if it withdraws its ministers from the cabinet in protest, Prime Minister Nawaf Salam can replace them with other Shia figures with no allegiances to Iran.

Last week, Hezbollah’s supporters protested against the government. But the small demonstration appeared to have little participation from Hezbollah’s political allies including Amal, led by Shia Lebanese parliament speaker Nabih Berri. 

Hezbollah could use its weapons against its fellow Lebanese, as it has done previously. But this would be a high-risk move at a time when its ally, Iran, has been severely weakened by the US and Israel.

Hezbollah also has much to lose from a return to civil war. It would likely face armed conflict with the Lebanese army, other Lebanese factions that might seek to re-arm, and fighters loyal to Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa. The near-constant threat from Israeli drones would make it virtually impossible for Hezbollah to mount any effective military campaign in Lebanon. 

Confidence-building measures 

None of this means that Lebanon–Israel talks going forward are likely to yield positive results. 

The current mess is primarily a result of Hezbollah again dragging Lebanon into war with Israel. Moving forward, Israel will expect results, not just speeches, on Hezbollah’s disarmament.

Given the deeply rooted nature of the Hezbollah problem, the only way to approach the next round of negotiations is for both sides to pursue confidence-building measures. The initial meeting in Washington is a welcome and historic first step, but both sides should now take more concrete action.

Israel will expect results, not just speeches, on Hezbollah’s disarmament.

Israel must recognize that this Lebanese government presents the best chance to disarm Hezbollah and disassociate the country from Iran. It should avoid further attacks on state infrastructure and urban centres, and particularly Beirut, which risk civilian casualties, undermine the Lebanese government and bolster Hezbollah’s narrative of resistance. 

The Lebanese government, meanwhile, should make it as difficult as possible for Hezbollah to operate. Politically, it should consider expelling Hezbollah ministers from the cabinet, given that officials from the group have accused the government of treason. Financially, the government must outlaw all of Hezbollah’s financial activities. And militarily, it could instruct the army to deploy in all of Beirut including its southern suburbs, confiscate any arms belonging to Hezbollah in the capital, and arrest anyone endangering civil peace. 

2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-15 09:43

Americans are receiving larger tax refunds this year due to the 2025 "big, beautiful bill," which enacted new tax deductions.

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

Typhoon Sinlaku came ashore on a chain of remote U.S. island territories in the Western Pacific, which includes Guam, on Tuesday. It was a super typhoon at the time.

2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-15 12:00

With the Iran war paused halfway through a 2-week ceasefire, President Trump is again voicing optimism over the potential for a deal to end it for good.

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

Whether you're a vegan looking for easy meals or simply want to eat less meat, these are the vegan meal kits and prepared meal services that taste the best.

2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 08:01

The GoChess Wizard Lite board uses tech to guide you through the rules of the game. You can challenge the board or online players.

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2026-04-15 08:00

The president has reportedly promised mass pardons to administration officials. His misuse of the power goes far beyond what the constitution’s authors intended

Since returning to office, Donald Trump has issued more than 1,800 pardons – to financial fraudsters, drug kingpins, January 6 insurrectionists and others. Unfortunately, Trump’s pardons don’t begin to conform with Alexander Hamilton’s high-minded vision of how presidents would use pardons.

When the US constitution was being written in 1787, Hamilton, a delegate to the constitutional convention, pushed to give presidents a broad pardoning power, saying presidents would use it with “scrupulousness and caution”. But Trump’s use of that power has been anything but scrupulous and cautious.

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With 15,000 satellites crowding the sky and hundreds of thousands more planned, we may soon have a cataclysmic mess overhead.

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The FBI and Department of Justice recently disrupted a Russian attack targeting home and small-office business routers. Here's how to protect yours.

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UK official receiver understood to prefer Blastr as buyer for SSUK’s electric arc furnace in Rotherham and site in Stocksbridge

UK officials have entered exclusive talks with a Norwegian startup to buy the former Liberty Steel works in South Yorkshire, in a significant step towards its rescue.

Norwegian-owned Blastr is understood to be the bidder preferred by the government’s official receiver to take on ownership of the UK’s largest existing electric arc furnace in Rotherham and other works in Stocksbridge, both in South Yorkshire.

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The deployment includes sailors and Marines due to arrive as the administration attempts to enforce a maritime blockade against the regime in Tehran.

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The US federation’s sporting director hired Mauricio Pochettino and Emma Hayes, but it’s too early to judge his larger impact

Sporting directors live in the mid-to-long-term. While the coaches they hire and players they recruit have to deal with the highs and lows of week-to-week performance reviews, the executives watch on and make sure the project hasn’t veered off course. With a club, the rule of thumb is that it can take at least three transfer windows to start seeing tangible evidence of progress under a new sporting director. In international soccer, it often takes multiple cycles.

Matt Crocker arrived at US Soccer in April 2023 pledging to guide the program into a brave new era while acknowledging that initiative would take time to actualize. As it turned out, he never game himself that time. US Soccer announced on Tuesday that Crocker was stepping down as sporting director, and he’s reportedly due to take up a similar position with Saudi Arabia.

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We know you're paying to stream Re:Zero and Dorohedoro right now, but why not supplement your watchlist this week?

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Anas Sarwar says there have been ‘no stitch-ups, no deals, no backroom chats, no back-channel contact with Reform’

Anas Sarwar has dismissed as “a desperate lie from a desperate man” a claim by Reform UK’s Scotland leader, Malcolm Offord, that he offered to do a deal with the hard-right party to keep the Scottish National party out of power.

Offord made the claim on Channel 4’s Scottish leaders’ debate on Tuesday evening, alleging the Scottish Labour leader came “bouncing up” to him at an event in December last year, suggesting they “work together to remove the SNP”.

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The two-night event heads to Las Vegas this weekend.

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I wore both fitness trackers for months to find out what each gets right, and the deal-breakers that get in the way.

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A Pakistani official said he expected talks to restart soon, but it may take longer than Trump suggested. Plus: how to stop catastrophizing? Here’s what experts say

Good morning.

Donald Trump has said that US-Iranian peace talks could resume in Islamabad over the next two days.

Have Israel and Lebanon had talks yet? Yes. The two held negotiations about their conflict in Washington – their first direct talks in more than three decades. The US state department praised the two sides for having “productive discussions” but Hezbollah has said it will not abide by any agreements made by Israeli and Lebanese government negotiators in Washington.

For the latest updates, follow our liveblog.

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The league’s emphasis on youth development has seen its place in the careers of US national team players shift dramatically

When the United States men’s national team traveled to France for the 1998 World Cup, they did so with 16 Major League Soccer players on their 22-man roster. This was very much by design. MLS had kicked off in 1996 as a fulfilled promise made to Fifa by US Soccer for the right to host the 1994 World Cup. The new league then set about hoarding as many national team players as it could.

In a winless and mirthless tournament in 1998, fraught by a fractious camp, the Americans started an MLS player 21 times in their three group-stage matches, for an average of seven per starting lineup. That number has trended down ever since. In the 2002 run to the World Cup quarter-finals, setting the program’s modern high-water mark, an average of 5.4 MLS players made a start in the USA’s five matches. In 2006, it was 3.33. By 2010, that number had sunk to two; and in 2022, it was only one. In Qatar, the USMNT’s final group stage match against Iran was, in fact, the first time the team had started no MLS players at all at a World Cup since the league’s founding.

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Detainees tell of abuse at sprawling Texas facility whose giant generators gobble energy and fuel climate crisis

Dust was everywhere, covering people’s blankets and clogging their airways inside Camp East Montana, the huge tent facility for immigration detention in west Texas, said D, a young Venezuelan man who was held there.

The air conditioning blasted constantly, keeping the living areas inside tents the length of two football fields at what felt like near-freezing temperatures despite the balmy weather outside, and rain leaked through the tarps, so people awoke on wet mattresses, he recalled.

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Sony Pictures chief Tom Rothman urged theater owners to cut down the roughly 30 minutes of trailers and ads before movies. "Get off the ad crack," Rothman told the audience at CinemaCon this week. "Get rid of the endless advertising and substantially shorten the long pre-shows." Variety reports: He noted that frequent moviegoers now show up a half hour late to avoid all the spots (something that reserved seating has made easier than ever before). Rothman said that means many people "don't even see the trailers," which results in "enticements gone to waste." Rothman predicted that the 2026 box office, which has already benefitted from hits like "Super Mario Galaxy Movie" and "Project Hail Mary," will rebound in a big way. But he acknowledged that attendance still trails pre-pandemic levels. Rothman has been a vociferous defender of the big screen, pushing studios to embrace longer windows so that movies will stay in cinemas longer. That was a theme that Rothman returned to at CinemaCon, pressing exhibitors to hold strong and agree not to show movies that quickly appear on streaming services or on-demand platforms. "Enforce longer windows," Rothman said. "Yes, even if that means you cannot play every film." In addition to stumping for exhibition, Rothman has practically begged Hollywood to invest in new stories along with all the franchise fare. In a recent New York Times op-ed, for instance, Rothman, the longest-serving studio chief, wrote, "For all the success of films driven by existing intellectual property, originality is essential to movies. Neither movie theaters nor the art form itself can survive without at least some originality. After all, you can't make a sequel to nothing."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Landmark ruling finds Wright Prospecting successfully made out its contractual claim to 50% of past and future royalties from Hope Downs iron ore project

Gina Rinehart’s Hancock Prospecting has lost its bid to retain royalties from the mammoth Hope Downs iron ore project and will be forced to pay Wright Prospecting half of its royalties from the project, worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

In a landmark ruling in the Western Australian supreme court on Wednesday, justice Jennifer Smith said that Wright Prospecting had successfully made out its contractual claim to 50% of past and future royalties paid from the project.

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Former US Fed chair says lowering rates to reduce debt service cost can lead to inflation getting out of control

The former US Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen has attacked Donald Trump’s push for lower interest rates, comparing it to the actions of a “banana republic”.

The US president has repeatedly urged the central bank to slash interest rates, in the hope of cutting the government’s borrowing costs on its $39tn (£29tn) debt.

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The Cartel del Noreste has been accused of trafficking weapons, drugs and people, and is characterized by its violent practices and extortion.

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Barratt Redrow blames effects of Iran war, and likely impact on mortgage rates and costs, for further reduction

Britain’s largest housebuilder is planning to dramatically cut back on buying new land, blaming the impact of the conflict in the Middle East and putting Labour’s ambitious housebuilding target under more pressure.

Barratt Redrow said it intends to approve between 7,000 and 9,000 plots of land for purchase in its current financial year, far lower than previous guidance of between 10,000 and 12,000.

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Beijing may be reaping some diplomatic benefit but Trump’s war holds risks for its energy security and economy

Two months ago, China’s foreign minister, Wang Yi, promised it would be a “big year” for China-US relations. He was right, but perhaps not in the way he expected.

Wang was speaking before a planned visit by the US president to Beijing in March, which would have been Donald Trump’s first trip to China since 2017. But the trip, and a meeting with his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, was kicked back by several weeks after Trump decided to launch strikes with Israel against Iran, starting a war in the Middle East that has caused a global energy crisis and roiled diplomatic relations across the board.

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The president’s attack on the head of the Catholic church and the AI depiction of himself as a Christ-like figure have not gone down well with one of the largest groups of swing voters in the US

Poor persecuted Donald Trump has frequently portrayed himself as a modern messiah. Some of his supporters, meanwhile, have compared him directly to Jesus. And, to be fair, while the son of God didn’t eat Big Macs on a private jet and encourage his followers to buy AI stocks, there are similarities between the two figures. Namely the miracle-working. The US president may not be able to turn water into wine, but he’s turned public office into a personal goldmine. This week, Trump also managed to transform a staunch atheist (me) into a defender of the Catholic church.

I’m not defending everything, mind you, just Pope Leo XIV’s recent condemnations of war. “God does not bless any conflict,” the pope wrote on X on Friday. “Anyone who is a disciple of Christ, the Prince of Peace, is never on the side of those who … drop bombs.” During Saturday prayers, the pope also called out the “delusion of omnipotence”. While Leo didn’t name names, his statements were widely interpreted as a rebuke of the Trump administration, which has repeatedly framed its warmongering in religious terms.

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There is no justification for a regressive system in which the super-rich contribute less than the rest of us

Today, we have more income and wealth inequality than ever before. New York City’s average household income is $131,000. Without extreme inequality, residents could live reasonably well. Instead, a few people at the top of the income ladder capture enormous wealth, while millions of others struggle just to get by. Some simply can’t make it. For them, New York has become fundamentally unaffordable.

This outsized level of inequality has enormous economic, political and social consequences. It undermines social and political cohesion, erodes trust in institutions and leads people to conclude, correctly, that the system is rigged.

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The United States tolerates Trump’s behavior because of our warped definition of strength

The strongest men I’ve known didn’t behave anything like Donald Trump.

They were capable of restraint, first off. They may have spoken loudly, but they never used volume to enforce authority. None of them thought domination equaled leadership. How silly that would be.

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Staring at your iPhone for a long time could hurt your eyes, but a hidden feature could block your screen until your device is at a safer distance.

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The restaurant’s patriarch, Tanios Abi-Najm, fled war-ravaged Beirut before starting Lebanese Taverna in 1979. He died last week at 94.

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Organizers unveil new drive to reverse decline in union membership as workers seek to combat growing wealth inequality

Leaders of some of the largest unions in the US have unveiled a drive to jumpstart the country’s ailing labor movement and combat growing wealth inequality under Donald Trump.

To make it easier for workers to join a union, and strengthen the hand of new unions negotiating with powerful businesses, a string of prominent organizers joined together to launch Union Now, a non-profit designed to increase labor union density.

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As Americans race to file their federal taxes before Wednesday’s deadline, new analysis breaks down where the money goes

Many US households spent hundreds more tax dollars on the military last year, according to new analysis, as Donald Trump’s plans to dramatically increase federal defense spending faces growing scrutiny.

Millions of Americans will race to file their taxes on Wednesday, the final day for federal returns, amid concern over rising living costs and government spending.

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Bob McCaffrey, whose wife Gayle has never been found, to face murder charges over New Jersey killing of Lisa McBride

A man who was convicted in connection with his wife’s 2012 disappearance in South Carolina has been arrested over the murder of another woman in New Jersey 22 years earlier.

Robert “Bob” McCaffrey Jr, 54, was apprehended in North Carolina, where he had been residing, on suspicion of the 1990 killing of Lisa Marie McBride, 27, in New Jersey, authorities said in a statement.

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While the Lesbian Action Group claims a ‘definite win’, Equality Australia says the judge ‘simply identified legal errors in the tribunal’s reasoning’

A Victorian lesbian group has won a legal appeal in its case to exclude transgender women from its public events after the federal court set aside a decision by the Australian Human Rights Commission (AHRC).

The decision on Wednesday afternoon means the case will return to the administrative review tribunal for another determination. While the Lesbian Action Group called the finding a “definite win”, Equality Australia said the judge “simply identified legal errors in the tribunal’s reasoning”.

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A man stands with his back to the camera in a sparse bedroom. He is framed by an open doorway.
Elmer, a street vendor from Honduras, said he saw three immigrants arrested by federal agents near his shoe stand in Memphis, Tennessee. Kevin Wurm/MLK50/CatchLight Local/Report for America

On an overcast Saturday in February, a street vendor named Elmer lined up dozens of pairs of worn but carefully cleaned tennis shoes on tables next to a convenience store. 

The 44-year-old father from Honduras felt like his head was on a swivel, greeting the handful of shoppers that approached while also scanning the busy thoroughfare behind him. He was ready to serve — or to run.

Last fall, as Elmer and his son were setting up their shoe stand, he said, agents wearing Homeland Security vests arrested two Guatemalan men in a nearby parking lot. A few hours later, the Mexican owner of a taco truck across the street was also detained by immigration authorities. 

Then in December, Elmer’s 19-year-old nephew was taken, too, following a traffic stop; he remains incarcerated in a Tennessee detention center. Elmer worries that he and his son could be next. They fled Honduras seven years ago to escape gang violence and are not authorized to be in the United States. Elmer spoke with MLK50: Justice Through Journalism and ProPublica on the condition that only his first name be used. 

Those around Elmer were swept up as part of President Donald Trump’s September order deploying more than two dozen state, local and federal law enforcement agencies, including the National Guard, to neighborhoods in Memphis, Tennessee. Unlike federal operations in Minneapolis, Chicago and other cities where immigration officers flooded the streets to ramp up deportations, the stated mission of the Memphis Safe Task Force was different: “to end street and violent crime in Memphis to the greatest possible extent.”

But just over a quarter of the more than 5,200 arrests made by the task force in and around Memphis have been for violent crimes, according to an MLK50 and ProPublica analysis of nearly four months of daily arrest reports from October through the beginning of February. The vast majority of violent crime arrests stemmed from outstanding warrants.

And despite casting violent criminals as the task force’s primary target, the operation has swept up more than 800 immigrants whom law enforcement deemed to be unlawfully present in the United States. Of those, just 2% — or 17 — were also arrested for violent crimes, our analysis found. Being unlawfully present on its own is a civil, not a criminal, offense.

More immigration arrests occurred in and around Parkway Village, the neighborhood where Elmer sells shoes, than in any other part of Memphis, according to our analysis. This majority Black community on the outskirts of the city’s core is also one of the fastest growing Hispanic neighborhoods in Memphis. It is dotted with immigrant-owned businesses — barber shops, grocery stores, a tax preparer — that serve a predominantly Spanish-speaking clientele. Other vendors sell tamales and cheese from the trunks of their cars. Overall, 81% of the neighborhood’s task force arrests have been for nonviolent crimes, including immigration violations, drug offenses, theft and illegal possession of weapons.

Trump has repeatedly proclaimed success in Memphis, crediting the task force for a more than 30% decline in homicides, aggravated assaults and sexual assaults compared with the same period last year. 

While some research has shown that a surge in policing could deter crime, Memphis Police Department data indicates that crime had already been dropping steadily since 2023, hitting a 25-year low before the task force began its operations last fall. Criminologists say more analysis is needed to determine how much impact the task force has had on crime rates in Memphis. 

Abigail Jackson, a White House spokesperson, said crime rates continued to drop due to “the great work of President Trump’s task force.”

“Every local leader should want to mimic this success,” she said in a written statement.

Jackson did not answer questions about the gap between the task force’s stated mission to end violent crime and the fact that so few of the immigrants arrested were suspected of committing such crimes. Nor did Brady McCarron, a spokesperson for the U.S. Marshals Service, which leads the task force. Instead, he reiterated Trump’s claims that the task force has restored law and order to Memphis.

“All Memphians are safer today than they were seven months ago because of the Memphis Safe Task Force,” McCarron said in a written statement. “Calls for service are down 18% since last year. Meaning less crimes are being committed that residents must call in for law enforcement response.”

Men with vests reading “Police” and “US Marshal” conduct a traffic stop, speaking with a man outside of their cars in a strip mall parking lot.
Federal agents and the Tennessee Highway Patrol conduct a traffic stop in a Memphis shopping plaza in March. Kevin Wurm/MLK50/CatchLight Local/Report for America

In response to some Memphians saying that the task force’s immigration activity makes them feel unsafe and discourages immigrants from reporting crimes and cooperating with police, McCarron said: “We are aware of concerns raised by community advocates. Our focus remains on removing violent offenders, recovering illegal firearms, and protecting all Memphis residents, including communities who are disproportionately victimized by violent crime.”

What the Trump administration celebrates as a successful crime-fighting campaign, Latino advocacy groups and civil rights organizations argue is a crusade that’s left much of the Hispanic community in turmoil and fear, as it grapples with the social isolation, economic instability and trauma the task force has brought.

The task force has shrunk Elmer’s world to work, church and a drafty rental home near the railroad tracks that he shares with his 20-year-old son, whom he raised alone. 

Three of Elmer’s siblings also live in Memphis, but since the task force arrived, family gatherings have been few. No one wants to risk being detained while driving across town.

During the week, Elmer shops for used Nikes, New Balances and other sneakers at thrift stores, then sells them in front of the neighborhood convenience store on the weekends. Elmer said he used to sell 100 pairs of shoes a week. Now, he’s lucky if he sells 20 — bringing home $500 a month instead of his usual $2,400.

A man’s hand arranges a pair of shoes amid several pairs on a table.
Elmer says he used to sell 100 pairs of shoes a week at his stand in the neighborhood of Parkway Village. But weekly sales have dropped to under 20 pairs. Kevin Wurm/MLK50/CatchLight Local/Report for America

Elmer said his father, a former police officer who had a car rental business in Honduras’ capital city, was gunned down after refusing to pay off a local gang. Elmer tilted his chin up as he spoke to keep tears from falling. 

“Sometimes I ask my son, ‘What would your life be like if we never left?’” Elmer said through a Spanish interpreter. “He answered, ‘I would probably be dead,’” killed by the same gang that took his grandfather.

Ever vigilant still, Elmer has mapped three escape routes from his shoe stand, just in case the task force reappears. As he pointed them out, a Tennessee Highway Patrol SUV flew down the road behind him, lights flashing and sirens blaring. 

On a recent Friday afternoon, while Elmer was working, an unmarked white SUV leaving the parking lot slowed to a stop a few feet from his shoe stand. Immigration officers wearing bulky green vests sat inside the vehicle and stared at Elmer and the Hispanic men standing with him. 

The agents didn’t say a word, Elmer recalled, but “I could feel the intimidation because I know who they are.”

Although it felt like forever, Elmer said, the federal agents only looked at them for 10 or so seconds — long enough for Elmer to abandon the escape routes he had planned and remember his son’s advice: Don’t run, or they may chase you.

So he froze, waiting for the moment to pass.

Violent Crime Campaign Swept Up Immigrants 

Last month, Trump came to Memphis and declared victory from a stage decorated with seized weapons and cardboard boxes stamped “DEA EVIDENCE.” 

“You have now developed a reputation as a city that’s coming back stronger than any city in the country because of what’s happened with crime, and because your political leaders have the courage to do what they did,” Trump told hundreds of National Guard troops, law enforcement officers and local and state Republican leaders gathered in a Tennessee Air National Guard hangar.

President Donald Trump stands in front of a large, cheering crowd, flanked by clapping members of his administration, in a hangar. Behind him is a banner that reads “making America safe again.”
President Donald Trump proclaimed the success of the Memphis Safe Task Force when he visited the city in March. Kevin Wurm/MLK50/CatchLight Local/Report for America

Armored vehicles and a law enforcement helicopter were parked next to the stage, framing the president and other administration officials, including Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller. Miller has worked closely with Tennessee Republicans as they try to pass bills to require courts, public health clinics and law enforcement to cooperate with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The Trump administration has praised the proposed legislation and the task force as possible models for the rest of the country.

The influx of law enforcement has created a political minefield for Memphis Mayor Paul Young, a Democrat in a blue corner of a Republican-led state. Hours after Trump’s appearance, which the mayor did not attend, Young said during a press conference that the task force has “amplified” the work Memphis police had already been doing to reduce crime and that the increased law enforcement presence has led to “greater results,” especially in executing warrants. About half of all task force arrests have been for outstanding warrants.

But Young said he disagreed with the task force’s immigration enforcement role. “That’s not a part of those efforts that I am supportive of,” he told reporters. “I think that immigrants in our community have been a vital part of the growth of our city for the past 10 to 15 years, and we want them to feel welcome in our community.”

A man stands and speaks into a microphone while gesturing with his right hand. A woman in a police uniform and men in suits sit behind him.
Mayor Paul Young, alongside Rev. Rolando Rostro (far left), Memphis Police Chief Cerelyn “C.J.” Davis (left) and the Rev. Zuriel Ondal, speaks at Mullins United Methodist Church in October 2025 during a packed town hall meeting of mostly Hispanic immigrant residents. Andrea Morales/MLK50

For immigrants without proper documentation, some say one of the riskiest things they can do since the task force arrived is to get behind the wheel. Of the task force’s immigration arrests, about 4 out of 5 followed traffic stops, the MLK50 and ProPublica analysis found. The Tennessee Highway Patrol, which leads the task force’s traffic enforcement efforts, usually initiates the traffic stops — often for minor violations such as a broken taillight or windows tinted too dark. Then immigration officers, who are often following the state troopers or riding with them, interrogate the driver and passengers, according to Vecindarios 901, an immigration rapid-response organization that has witnessed dozens of stops. Those who cannot provide proper documentation are arrested. 

The task force did not answer questions about the use of traffic stops as a primary means of arresting immigrants who are not authorized to be in the United States.

As law enforcement descended upon Parkway Village, church attendance dipped, according to a pastor with a primarily indigenous Guatemalan congregation; parishioners too scared to leave home chose instead to submit prayer requests through online services, she said. Pastors have agreed to serve as guardians to their members’ U.S.-born children in case their parents get deported.

Business owners and grocery store workers say sales have plummeted, forcing some to cut back on staffing. In the first weeks of task force operations, Hispanic student attendance at a neighborhood school fell by half, one administrator said.

At another neighborhood school, its communications coordinator, Paola, used to start her workday at the front desk, greeting students. Now she often starts it in her car, shuttling a pair of siblings to school. The 21-year-old from Venezuela stepped in to help after the children’s father was arrested in October during an appointment at immigration court. Their mother is afraid to drive them to school.

Paola and her father worried at first that she, too, might be detained even though she is authorized to work in the United States. She agreed to be interviewed on the condition that only her middle name be used to protect her and her family.

“Our role is not political,” she said. “We are here to care for students and their families.” 

Minutes away off Winchester Road, a busy street in Parkway Village, the Rev. Rolando Rostro is also watching out for his community. Rostro pastors Iglesia Nueva Vida, the largest Hispanic church in the Memphis area, where Sunday attendance fell from 800 to 500 during the first several months of the task force. Parishioners still live in fear, but attendance has gradually increased, he said. “We have to go to church.”

A man stands on a stage in a room decorated with several large crosses. Christmas gifts cover the stage. In the foreground, a person holds a child.
Rostro, on stage, holds a Christmas gift exchange for his congregation at Iglesia Nueva Vida in December 2025. Andrea Morales/MLK50

Alerted to traffic stops through phone calls or an online system set up by Vecindarios 901, Rostro often responds to the scene after state troopers or county sheriff’s officers — followed by federal agents — have pulled drivers over. It’s part of his “assignment” as a pastor during a difficult period for his community, he said; he goes to bear witness and ask that immigrants arrested be released. “The Bible says ask and you will receive,” he said. 

Sometimes, he recognizes his parishioners. 

“Hey, that’s not ‘the worst of the worst,’” Rostro said he has told the law enforcement officers, rebutting the Trump administration’s characterization of the immigrants federal officials are targeting. “I know him. He goes to my church. He’s a good man,” Rostro has said — in hopes that sharing details about the people’s lives would “plant a seed of a different way of seeing things.” 

During Trump’s first administration, Rostro said one of his parishioners was released from ICE detention after he spoke with agents.

But that hasn’t happened this time.

So he checks in with church members who are detained, learning they are held in cold, rat-infested conditions and pressured to return to their home countries. A spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security said ICE has higher detention standards than most U.S. prisons but would not address the conditions at the detention centers in which Rostro’s parishioners are held.

“This is a family community,” Rostro said, “so the breakup of that is very detrimental to the children and to the whole family structure.”

A Community Hub Unnerved

A few miles down the street from the church, Juan Hernandez, who is originally from Mexico, led a reporter through El Mercadito, the sprawling indoor shopping center he opened in 2005. Vendors in the normally bustling commercial hub had few customers to greet one afternoon in early March.

A man sits with his arms crossed on a table in an otherwise empty restaurant.
Juan Hernandez in his restaurant in his shopping center, El Mercadito Kevin Wurm/MLK50/CatchLight Local/Report for America

With dozens of immigrant-run booths selling everything from neon safety vests for construction workers to frilly dresses for little girls, El Mercadito also rents space for events, including lucha libre (Mexican wrestling) and quinceañeras.

But since October, there have been fewer bookings for birthday parties. As shoppers stayed home, some booth owners struggled to keep up with the rent, Hernandez said. Two Guatemalan booth owners were so fearful to come to work that they shuttered their clothing stands.

In the task force’s first weeks, Hernandez tried to calm the fears of shoppers, vendors and his employees at the Mexican restaurant inside the market. He hired private security to guard the doors and to monitor video cameras for signs of task force agents. Then he realized that it was the traffic stops by state troopers that were most often leading to immigration arrests, so he no longer needed the guards.

Two or three times a week, federal agents would show up at his restaurant for breakfast. First one, then a pair, then eight or more, pushing tables together. When they left to get in their cars, Hernandez saw them putting on vests marked HSI: Homeland Security Investigations.

On two occasions, someone — he’s not sure if it was a customer or a booth owner — posted photos of the agents at El Mercadito on social media, as a warning to customers to stay away.

Hernandez understands why people are wary: Two of his friends have been deported by immigration authorities across town, leaving behind teenage children. The sister of one of his servers was detained.

But, as he has explained to his vendors and employees in a meeting, no shoppers or diners means no income for the booth owners or the restaurant. He said restaurant sales have fallen by 40% since the task force’s launch.

“I used to have these feelings of anger like, you know, they are looking for us, and then they come to eat here,” Hernandez said through a Spanish interpreter, but there was nothing he could do. “They were paying for the food, so we have to serve.”

Hernandez typically offers police officers 10% off their checks, but not for this group. “I decided I don’t give discounts to them because of the harm they are doing in our community.”

Hernandez had received amnesty under Republican President Ronald Reagan when he came to the United States more than 40 years ago. He said he’s now been forced to consider the unthinkable.

“I have never had the thought of coming back to my country,” he said. “Now I do — because of the government.”

A man reaches for a silvery curtain hanging between two bright orange columns.
Hernandez shows an event space inside El Mercadito. Kevin Wurm/MLK50/CatchLight Local/Report for America

The post Trump’s Memphis Crime Task Force Arrested Over 800 Immigrants, Records Show. Only 2% of the Arrests Were for Violent Crimes. appeared first on ProPublica.

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2026-04-15 05:23

Deal will create pensions and savings group with 16 million customers and £480bn of assets, while Aegon focuses on US

The Dutch financial services group Aegon has struck a £2bn deal to sell off its almost 200-year-old UK arm to Standard Life, as part of a US push in which the group will be rebranded as Transamerica.

Standard Life, previously known as Phoenix Group, said the deal to buy Aegon UK would create a pensions and savings group with 16 million customers and £480bn of assets under administration.

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2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-15 05:01

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for April 15 No. 569.

2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-15 05:00

In a post-apocalyptic landscape of cutthroat scavengers, surprisingly peaceful players are opting to team up and open up – a phenomenon that’s intriguing game developers and psychologists alike

The video game Arc Raiders is set in a lethal imagining of an apocalyptic future for humanity. Survivors have been forced to live deep underground in colonies while mysterious, murderous AI machines patrol the surface. Only the desolate ruins of former cities survive, and reckless human “raiders” take trips topside to conduct dangerous scavenging missions.

For all the menace of these armed robots, called Arcs, the deadly droids are not the biggest threat in this hugely popular game, which was released late last year and has sold more than 14m copies. Raiders operate with the constant anxiety that another person will shoot them on sight and steal their loot. Mercilessness is rewarded in this kind of competitive, high-stakes world.

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2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-15 05:00

Luther Davis, a national champion with the Crimson Tide, is said to have worn wigs and make-up to secure fraudulent loans

A former University of Alabama football star plans to plead guilty later this month to orchestrating an alleged scheme in which he impersonated NFL players and defrauded lenders out of nearly $20m. The alleged scam is described in detail by the US attorney for the northern district of Georgia, including depictions of the former defensive lineman donning disguises during loan closings.

Luther Davis, a member of the Alabama team that won the 2010 national championship game, along with a partner, CJ Evins, “obtained at least thirteen fraudulent loans totaling more than $19,845,000”, the criminal information filing alleges. A criminal information (CI) document is filed by a US attorney when a defendant agrees to waive the constitutional right to indictment by a grand jury and instead proceed by typically entering a guilty plea; both Davis and Evins are doing so according to the court docket.

Aliya Sports and Sure Sports did not reply to a request for comment for this article.

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2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-15 05:00

What began as a fan-friendly revolution has splintered into a confusing, expensive web of subscriptions, blackouts and ads

There was a moment, perhaps a decade ago, when it felt as if sports broadcasting nirvana was near. A world where ordinary fans could access any game on any device, any time, anywhere.

Or near enough, as cord-cutting devastated traditional cable subscription models and viewers who had long been locked into expensive and restrictive TV packages now had choices. Streaming nurtured a diverse and bespoke landscape.

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2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-15 05:00

Starting next year, about 18.5 million adults will be subject to new Medicaid work rules in 42 states and Washington, D.C. Some Republican-controlled states want to triple the required work period.

2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-15 05:00

A video of Barbara Collins and Chewy gardening together has amassed millions of views on social media.

2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 05:00

A young child with dreadlocks holds onto a tree trunk with one hand and holds a small branch in the other. The tree has light green leaves and pink blooms.
Jovanni Daniels, 8, climbs a tree in Omaha, Nebraska. His mother, Belinda, found out her son had high lead levels when he was young, allowing her to take steps to prevent further damage. Lily Smith/Flatwater Free Press

Belinda Daniels panicked in 2018 when the pediatrician said her 1-year-old son, Jovanni, had lead in his body. The toxic metal could stunt his brain, the doctor told her, but catching it early meant she could prevent more damage.

Daniels moved out of her Omaha, Nebraska, apartment that had chipping lead paint. The doctor continued testing Jovanni periodically while Daniels followed instructions on cleaning, handwashing and keeping Jovanni away from contaminated dirt.

Eventually, the lead level in Jovanni’s blood dropped. While the now-8-year-old has anger and impulse-control issues, Daniels said it could have been a lot worse.

“They told me that the side effects of it would be him being autistic” or having “very delayed behaviors,” she said.

Not every child’s high lead levels are caught as early as Jovanni’s. In Nebraska, it’s largely up to the doctor or health system to decide whether to test a child’s blood for lead. As a result, local public health officials say, not enough kids are getting tested, given Omaha’s lead problems, which include being home to the largest residential lead cleanup site in the country.

For more than a century, smoke from a lead smelter and other factories deposited 400 million pounds of the toxic metal across the city’s east side. That prompted the Environmental Protection Agency to begin investigating the pollution in 1999, and a few years later, the agency declared 27 square miles of east Omaha to be a Superfund site. Over more than two decades, the EPA and the city have dug up and replaced nearly 14,000 yards, from about a third of the site’s residential properties.

A woman lifts a smiling child up while he grabs the monkey bars and swings his feet up onto the play structure.
Belinda Daniels helps her son, Jovanni, climb the monkey bars. She thinks all kids in Omaha should be tested for lead. Lily Smith/Flatwater Free Press

Faced with similar public health concerns about lead, 13 states, including New Jersey, Louisiana and neighboring Iowa, have passed laws requiring universal lead screening, meaning all kids would get a blood test before entering kindergarten.

But not Nebraska.

Most places passed these laws after recognizing that they were reaching too few kids by simply targeting high-risk groups like children who live in old housing. Every state with available data saw increases in the number of kids tested after passing these laws, the Flatwater Free Press and ProPublica found. Some identified more kids with elevated blood lead levels.

A lack of consistent testing nationally leads health officials to miss about half the kids with high levels, according to research by the American Academy of Pediatrics. The academy and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommend testing in areas that have a high prevalence of lead or older housing.

Over the years, Omaha public health officials have raised awareness about blood testing with billboards and community events about the risks of lead. But a bill to require that every child be tested failed in the Nebraska Legislature in 2011. Since then, there have been no efforts to revive it.

Do You Live in the Omaha and Council Bluffs Area? Sign Up for Free Lead Testing of Your Soil.

An Omaha lead smelter spread dust that seeped into the soil and bodies of many residents. The EPA spent decades cleaning up the surrounding area — but not Council Bluffs, Carter Lake or Bellevue.

Naudia McCracken, supervisor of the Douglas County Health Department’s Lead Poisoning Prevention Program, said she is planning to propose an ordinance to the Omaha City Council this summer. That could require health workers to test all kids up to age 7 who live in the Superfund site itself and a broader area east of 72nd Street, generally thought of as the dividing line between the city’s urban east side and suburban west side. Right now, fewer than half of kids under 7 in that area are tested for lead.

As a whole, the county’s testing rate is better than most, CDC data shows. But that’s not comforting to local health workers. “That number is abysmally low,” said Peg Schneider, a physician assistant who has been testing Omaha kids for lead since 1989 and believes every kid should be tested.

A small boy embraces and looks up at a woman smiling down at him. In the foreground, a blurry person wears blue gloves and a purple shirt.
Amber Dawson holds her 4-year-old son, Jahmel, before he is given a blood lead test at Nebraska Medicine’s Fontenelle Health Center in Omaha in January. Rebecca S. Gratz for ProPublica

McCracken said the city “needs to come to grips” with its lead problems. Not only is it home to the Superfund site, but the majority of east Omaha’s housing was built before lead paint was banned, and many residents’ drinking water travels through lead pipes. While Daniels lived in the Superfund site, she believes her baby might have been exposed to the apartment’s lead paint.

Since the cleanup began, the percentage of kids in the Superfund site whose tests showed high lead levels has decreased from 33% in 2000 to 2.4% in 2025. That mirrors national trends over the same time period.

But east Omaha still has a higher rate of children with elevated blood lead levels than the national average, according to the most recent CDC data. 

Without mandatory testing, there’s no way to know if health workers are missing kids with potentially life-changing exposures to lead, said Dr. Jennifer Sample, a Kansas City, Missouri-area pediatrician and former chair of the American Academy of Pediatrics’ Council on Environmental Health and Climate Change. 

“That’s why I support universal testing: so we can actually see where those kids are,” she said. “We need better data.”

Getting an accurate picture of the community’s blood lead levels is not only important for public health. While levels of lead in soil are the main drivers for EPA action, the data on children’s blood lead levels can inform decisions like lowering cleanup thresholds, said Kellen Ashford, an EPA spokesperson. The EPA is currently reassessing the site, and tens of thousands more Omaha properties could be cleaned up.

Jim Woolford, who led the EPA’s Superfund program from 2006 to 2020, worries that if kids with lead poisoning aren’t being tested and the community’s levels appear low, EPA officials may use that data as a reason not to carry out a remediation project that could cost hundreds of millions of dollars.

Instead, Woolford said, they could “declare victory” and “move on.”

A woman sits at a desk with lead information flyers in front of her. Behind her, the wall is decorated with children’s drawings.
Naudia McCracken, supervisor of the Douglas County Health Department’s Lead Poisoning Prevention Program, said Omaha “needs to come to grips” with its lead problems. Rebecca S. Gratz for ProPublica

“That Opportunity Was Lost”

In 1977, Douglas County, which contains Omaha, took advantage of a new federal grant and started a screening program to test kids for lead. By then many communities in the U.S. recognized the dangers of the toxic metal and had begun passing laws to catch and address its effects.

But in Omaha, local officials struggled to test enough kids with limited resources. Four health workers went door to door with suitcases full of swabs and vials. Dr. John Walburn, who treated lead-poisoned kids at the time, tried to convince doctors at Omaha’s clinics and hospitals to test, but, outside poor areas, “they did not see it as their problem,” he said.

After the EPA proved lead contamination was a far-reaching problem and began the Omaha cleanup in 1999, testing increased dramatically as the EPA and local government recommended kids in the Superfund site be screened. But many still went unchecked, said Brenda Council, a longtime lead poisoning prevention advocate in the city.

So when she won a seat in the Nebraska Legislature, she proposed that every child in the state undergo at least one blood lead test before kindergarten unless a health care worker determined the child to be at low risk for lead poisoning using a questionnaire. Some believed the survey would flag too many kids and result in unneeded tests.

“Among the things in that checklist are that they’ve never ingested a nonfood product,” Paul Schumacher, a state senator from Columbus, Nebraska, said at the time. “It would be un-American for a kid not to have eaten dirt or grass at some time in its life.”

A child rides a red bike down a grassy hill, next to concrete stairs and a tree.
Jovanni loves riding his bike, wrestling and playing soccer. Lily Smith/Flatwater Free Press

The bill eventually passed the Legislature but was vetoed by then-Gov. Dave Heineman, who said it was unnecessary and would be too costly. 

“There could have been so much prevention,” Council said. “That opportunity was lost.”

Heineman did not return phone calls, texts or emails requesting comment. Schumacher said in an interview that he still believes a one-size-fits-all approach would test kids unnecessarily but said a local policy for a place with lead issues would make more sense. 

Without universal testing, Nebraska policymakers and health institutions have taken different approaches. The state recommends testing every kid who lives within the Superfund site at ages 1 and 2. Douglas County recommends kids be tested annually until age 7. 

Only 1- and 2-year-olds with Medicaid insurance are required to be tested — and even then, only two-thirds of eligible kids in the county are tested each year, according to state data.

Providers in the biggest medical systems are left to follow individual policies. OneWorld Community Health Centers, which serves primarily low-income and Latino patients in South Omaha, requires its providers to try to test every 1- and 2-year-old. Children’s Nebraska, the state’s only independent pediatric hospital, requires one test by 2 years old. Nebraska Medicine, the state’s largest hospital network, does not have its own policy, according to a spokesperson. But Schneider, the physician assistant at Nebraska Medicine’s Fontenelle Health Center in North Omaha, said she tests kids annually until the age of 5.

A woman with short hair, earrings, a stethoscope around her neck and glasses on top of her head looks directly at the camera.
Peg Schneider, a physician assistant at Nebraska Medicine’s Fontenelle Health Center, runs annual lead tests for kids under 5. Rebecca S. Gratz for ProPublica

In recent years, several states that had similar approaches realized they weren’t catching enough kids with high lead levels. In Maine, more than 160 such children were likely missed due to inconsistent screening across the state, according to a 2019 report by a Maine affordable housing group. Since then, the state has passed a universal testing law and its health department reported that its testing rate, which had been stagnant for years, was now rising. 

Michigan passed a new universal testing law in 2023. The state previously relied on recommendations similar to Nebraska’s, and parents had to push doctors to get their kids tested, said Ellen Vial, a Detroit program manager at the Michigan Environmental Council, which lobbied for the law. She hopes the new law will do as much to prevent exposure there as banning lead from paint did.

Nebraska state Sen. Ashlei Spivey of North Omaha said she’s considering introducing lead-related policies again in the Legislature, such as bills to increase testing, provide tax credits to fix lead paint issues inside homes and enforce the replacement of water service lines that contain lead.

Cleanups and Blood Tests

The EPA has been reexamining Omaha’s Superfund site, particularly how contaminated dirt has to be to qualify for cleanup. One factor that may influence the cleanup decision is local blood lead data. In 2019, the EPA wrote in a review of the Omaha site that its plan “may not protect children,” given that the CDC had lowered the concentration at which it considers someone’s blood lead level “high.” 

Nearly 27,000 Omaha properties could have qualified for cleanup if the EPA applied guidance that had been set under the Biden administration to better match the updated advice on blood lead levels, according to documents obtained by the Flatwater Free Press and ProPublica. But those guidelines were rolled back last fall by the Trump administration, tempering some experts’ expectations and residents’ hopes for additional cleanup. The EPA plans to have updates on its Omaha cleanup plans by the end of the year, agency spokesperson Ashford said. 

Ashford also said the EPA uses local blood lead data, when it’s available, to set or lower cleanup levels. The local data also helps establish whether other remedies are needed, such as interior dust screenings or repainting homes that have lead paint.

But using blood data to understand the prevalence of lead is problematic, said Danielle Land, a University of Iowa public health researcher. Lead only stays in the blood for about 30 days, meaning an exposure can be missed even though it can continue to cause damage. Testing kids in winter when they spend more time inside versus summer when they’re playing outside can also provide different results. Isolating how someone was exposed or whether a cleanup is behind a decline in blood lead levels can be difficult.

Despite those issues, Land said she’s seen declines in the number of kids with high blood lead levels “shape public and institutional narratives” about whether to investigate or fix hazards in places like Flint, Michigan, where millions have been spent replacing lead pipes, or Anniston, Alabama, where the soil was contaminated. In 2018, the EPA said blood lead data in Omaha could shape how the agency conducts cleanups elsewhere.

Industries and local government officials have used low blood lead levels to avoid cleanups before, said Larry Zaragoza, a retired EPA employee who spent decades analyzing and developing policies relating to lead risk. 

In the 1990s, a Colorado county and the state argued against widespread cleanup in the town of Leadville, Zaragoza said. Residents spent years criticizing the EPA’s research and felt the agency was unfairly saddling corporations that owned local mining operations with cleanup costs, news reports show. Cleanups only happened at homes where kids’ blood tests came back as high or where yards contained nearly nine times the levels required to qualify for a cleanup in Omaha. 

Still, the agency needs a way to measure success, said Woolford, the former Superfund program director. The data can be valuable if enough kids are tested and they generally represent the area. 

“You’re going to need, even with all its uncertainties, some indicator of what’s happened over time,” he said.

As Jovanni gets older, Daniels said her fear for his health has dissipated. Her son loves Ferraris and Dodge Challengers. He wrestles, plays soccer and rides his bike. 

But he was also exposed to lead, which can carry lifelong consequences similar to the behavioral issues he’s dealing with. Daniels wonders how many other parents have kids like him but may never know why.

“I think that needs to be standard across the board — all kids getting tested,” she said.

A child wearing a T-shirt, black pants and sneakers runs after a blue ball. Behind him are people sitting on a flight of steps leading out of a brick building.
Jovanni’s mother found out about his lead poisoning early. But since lead testing is not required in Nebraska, it’s largely up to the doctor or health system whether to test a child’s blood for lead. Lily Smith/Flatwater Free Press

The post Omaha Is Home to a Massive Superfund Site. Most Kids Living There Aren’t Tested for Lead. appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-15 04:24

A U.S. blockade in effect since Monday has completely cut off Iran’s sea trade, the U.S. military said after six merchant ships were prevented from leaving Iranian ports.

2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 04:11

The armed and masked off-duty Phoenix, Arizona, cop said he wanted to get kids at a high school ICE protest arrested.

2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-15 03:51

Pyongyang making ‘very serious’ progress on producing weapons, with rapid rise in activity at main nuclear complex

North Korea has made “very serious” progress in its ability to produce more nuclear weapons, the head of the UN’s nuclear watchdog has said, in another sign that the regime is seeking to use its nuclear arsenal to ensure its survival.

North Korea is thought to have assembled about 50 nuclear warheads, although some experts are sceptical of its claims that it is able to miniaturise them so they can be attached to long-range ballistic missiles.

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2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-15 03:51

I’m looking to buy my first one wheel and don’t know which to choose. Looking to ride along the beach and around so cal area. I have experience wakeboarding and snowboarding. Which is best for me right now GT is on sale for only $100 more than XRc.

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2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-15 03:32

John Hancock welcomes findings on ownership of mines and companies although judge says dispute should be determined in private arbitration

Gina Rinehart’s son has said he wants to reunite his family after a landmark court case left a long-running feud over ownership of mines and companies unresolved.

The Western Australian supreme court on Wednesday found Rinehart’s children were at one point set to inherit 49% of her company and said their ownership claims should be determined in separate proceedings.

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2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-15 03:25

CENTCOM commander Adm. Brad Cooper says a blockade of Iranian ports "has been fully implemented," as the U.S.-Iran impasse over control of the Strait of Hormuz continues amid a delicate ceasefire.

2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-15 03:00

Amazon is buying satellite communications company Globalstar for $10.8 billion to expand its Leo satellite-internet network and compete more directly with SpaceX's Starlink. The deal also includes a partnership with Apple to support satellite connectivity for iPhones and Apple Watches, with Amazon planning voice, data, and messaging services starting in 2028. The New York Times reports: Leo was Amazon's move to enter the market for beaming high-speed internet to the ground from orbit. That is an arena dominated by Elon Musk's SpaceX, which operates the Starlink satellite-internet service. Starlink, which has thousands of satellites in orbit, already serves several million customers around the world. This month, SpaceX filed to go public in what is shaping up to be one of the largest-ever initial public offerings. Mr. Musk has valued SpaceX -- which has landed contracts with federal agencies such as NASA and the Department of Defense -- at more than $1 trillion. Other companies are racing to catch up to what Mr. Musk has built for space. Globalstar, founded in 1991, is a Louisiana-based global telecommunications company. It operates networks of low-Earth orbiting satellites to provide internet connectivity to customers. Paul Jacobs, Globalstar's chief executive, said in a statement that together, the two companies "will advance innovations in digital connectivity."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-15 02:32

@lia Glad you're ok overall and hope you heal super fast, falling crosses my mind most rides... Not all of the time but regularly and especially as I've not had one for age. I tend to keep the speed under 15mph in general, I always put my arms out and for me it's the left arm that gets hit. Can't be screwing that up again 😉
Never seem to hit my head though.
Take care.

2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-15 02:00

Chip upgrade brings pro-level power, long battery life and plenty of storage, but the Air now faces real competition

Apple’s latest MacBook Air is its most powerful yet, comes with double the starting storage and is better than ever for getting work done and as the benchmark for a consumer laptop. But this year the new lower-cost MacBook Neo has muddied the waters.

The M5 MacBook Air starts at £1,099 (€1,199/$1,099/A$1,799) for the 13in version, which is £100 or equivalent more than last year’s excellent M4 version, but comes with at least 512GB of storage. It sits above the £599 MacBook Neo and below the £1,699 M5 MacBook Pro, making the Air Apple’s mid-range machine.

Screen: 13.6in LCD (2560x1600; 224 ppi) True Tone

Processor: Apple M5 with eight or 10-core GPU

RAM: 16, 24 or 32GB

Storage: 512GB, 1, 2 or 4TB SSD

Operating system: macOS 26 Tahoe

Camera: 12MP centre stage

Connectivity: wifi 7, Bluetooth 6, 2x Thunderbolt/USB 4, headphones

Dimensions: 215 x 304.1 x 11.3mm

Weight: 1.23kg

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2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-15 01:00

Struggle for justice symbolises limitations of Truth and Reconciliation Commission, whose hearings began 30 years ago

Darkness had fallen on 27 June 1985 when Fort Calata, Matthew Goniwe, Sicelo Mhlauli and Sparrow Mkonto set off on the 150-mile drive back from a meeting of anti-apartheid activists in the South African city of Port Elizabeth, now known as Gqeberha. They never made it home.

About an hour into their journey, as the road wound north from the coast towards their home town of Cradock (now called Nxuba), the four men were pulled over by three white security police officers. They were handcuffed and driven back towards Gqeberha.

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 01:00

Two more candidates have filed for the District 23 state House race, setting up at least a three-way Democratic primary election in September.

2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-15 00:30

Proposed legislation would formalize what officials call an existing “de-facto ban” on Airbnb and similar short-term rentals in Newark.

2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-15 00:00

What it will take to gain the advantage over China.

2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-15 00:00

A U.S. blockade threatens the regime's grip.

2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-15 00:00

Lessons from Hungary for pro-democracy movements worldwide.

2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-14 23:30

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Cord Cutters News: Sony has notified owners of its recent BRAVIA television models that significant changes to the built-in TV Guide for its OTA TV antenna users and related menu features will take effect starting in late May 2026. The update affects a range of premium sets released between 2023 and 2025, marking another instance of feature adjustments for older smart TV hardware as manufacturers shift focus toward newer product lines. The changes primarily target the program guide functionality for over-the-air antenna TV channels received via the ATSC tuner. After the cutoff date, program information may fail to display on certain channels, limiting the guide's usefulness for planning viewing schedules. Users will often see listings only for channels they have recently watched, rather than a comprehensive overview of available broadcasts. Additionally, channel logos that previously appeared in the guide will disappear, and any thumbnail images accompanying program descriptions will no longer load or show. Further modifications will appear in the television's menu system. For users relying on connected set-top boxes, the dedicated Set Top Box menu option will be removed entirely. In its place, a simpler Control menu will surface, streamlining access but eliminating some specialized navigation previously available. Program thumbnails, which provided visual previews in various menu sections, will also cease to appear across affected interfaces. These adjustments stem from Sony's ongoing efforts to manage backend services and data feeds that support enhanced guide features on its Google TV-powered BRAVIA lineup. As television ecosystems evolve rapidly with advancements in processing power, artificial intelligence integration, and cloud-based content delivery, companies periodically retire select capabilities on prior-generation hardware to optimize resources. The 2023 through 2025 models, while still offering excellent picture quality through advanced OLED and LCD panels with features like XR processing, now fall into the category of devices receiving scaled-back support. These are the models impacted: 2025 models: Bravia 8 II (XR80M2), Bravia 5 (XR50) 2024 models: Bravia 9 (XR90), Bravia 8 (XR80), Bravia 7 (XR70) 2023 models: Bravia A95L series

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-14 23:22

Why Should Delaware Care?
Delaware labor officials and the Trump administration are at odds over whether immigration enforcement officials should have access to residents’ sensitive data. A recent ruling could open new avenues for immigration enforcement in Delaware.

Delaware’s top federal judge rejected on Tuesday the state government’s attempt to withhold employment records from a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement investigation of more than a dozen businesses, ordering officials to hand over the data.

In a 27-page ruling that smacks of incredulity in recounting the Delaware Department of Labor’s reasons for not complying with a federal subpoena, Delaware District Court Chief Judge Colm Connolly wrote that “these are not close calls.”

The ruling was largely expected after a hearing earlier this month, when a skeptical Connolly picked apart the state’s arguments and told the defending counsel that her legal brief was not written on her “best day.”

After asserting that complying with the subpoena was in the federal government’s legitimate interests and denying that doing so would endanger Delaware’s unemployment trust fund, Connolly surmised that the non-compliance was simply “a political argument; not a legal one.”

“This court is not the proper forum in which to air [DDOL’s] generalized grievances about the conduct of government. It would be wholly inappropriate for me to consider this line of argument, and I decline to do so,” wrote Connolly, a former U.S. attorney who was appointed to the bench in 2018 during President Donald Trump’s first term.

On Tuesday, it was unclear whether the Department of Labor would appeal the ruling to the Third Circuit. The Delaware Department of Justice, which represented the state during the court hearings, declined to comment and a spokesperson for Gov. Matt Meyer’s office did not respond to a request for comment.

If the department does not appeal the ruling, it’s equally unclear when the department may turn over the records to ICE.

Following Delaware’s passage of a statewide ban on local police cooperation agreements with ICE under the 287(g) program, the successful acquisition of labor data could open a new front in the Trump’s administration’s immigration crackdown in the First State.

Where did this case begin?

The case stems from a subpoena ICE issued to the Delaware Department of Labor in April 2025, seeking wage records for 15 Delaware businesses for the final two quarters of 2024, which the agency suspected of employing undocumented immigrants.

The subpoena, which originated from “hotline tips” that ICE received, sought employees’ names, addresses, wages and Social Security numbers from 15 Delaware businesses, according to court records. ICE’s subpoena efforts align with the Trump administration’s broader strategy of using federal and state agency data to bolster its promised immigration enforcement push.

Attorneys with the U.S. Attorney’s Office argued in court documents that wage records would help ICE further its focus on “worksite enforcement” and may help determine whether employees are using fake Social Security numbers or if employers are paying workers “under the table,” or using cash and without reporting it to the IRS, court records show. 

Assistant U.S. Attorney Claudia Pare asked Connolly to seal the April subpoena when the case was first filed, arguing that ICE did not want to have the 15 business names become public and “prematurely alert” the targets of the agency’s worksite investigations. 

Conversely, Deputy State Attorney Jennifer-Kate Aaronson filed a motion to unseal the subpoena in August. The 15 businesses suspected of hiring undocumented immigrants should have the opportunity to come to court and argue against their information being transmitted to ICE, she said during a previous court hearing. 

Connolly initially declined to rule on those motions, although he said it remained a good decision to keep the subpoena under seal. If suspected businesses are made public and associated with potentially hiring undocumented employees, it could harm their reputation if they’re ultimately found to be innocent, he said.

On Tuesday, the judge likewise denied the state’s motion to unseal the subpoena at the heart of the case.

DOL officials have received at least four subpoenas from ICE since February 2025, Aaronson said during an August court hearing. Department officials complied with one ICE subpoena that sought information about a single individual, Aaronson said.

According to other subpoenas obtained by the News Journal, ICE has also reportedly investigated the potential employment of undocumented workers at a Perdue plant in Seaford along with a fencing company and a northern Delaware restaurant.

Connolly noted in his ruling that prior to 2025, the Department of Labor routinely complied with subpoena requests from ICE and other federal agencies.

The post Judge orders Delaware to turn over labor data to ICE appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-14 23:08
Abandoned and desecrated in Boulder

Just laying on the sidewalk.

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2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-14 22:40

A cross-party effort caused two House members to resign on Tuesday, and the female lawmakers who helped lead that push told CBS News that additional members of Congress could face similar pressure.

2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-14 22:37

For instance, flashing a new bios unto a motherboard on PC, a little complex but can be easily done. Just wondering if the same or similar process could be used On a Future motion controller eliminating the need to buy a vesc upgrade.

Is the hardware itself compatible with the VESC software?

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2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-14 22:30

The black-and-white Mickey-Mouse-with-a-gun game backs up its signature art style with a surprisingly mature detective yarn.

2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-14 22:25

The renovations at the Federal Reserve are the subject of a months-long criminal investigation.

2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-14 22:19

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for April 15.

2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-14 22:12

The chain's North American operator forecast it will open 205 stores in 2026, although those openings will be outpaced by a series of closures.

2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-14 22:07

Passengers can book a four-hour session in the bunk beds from May for Auckland-New York flights but airline cautions against smuggling in children

Economy passengers on Air New Zealand’s ultra-long-haul flight between Auckland and New York can book a spot in the airline’s bunk-bed style sleeping pods from May, which will take to skies in late 2026.

In what the airline says is a world first, six full-length, lie-flat sleeping pods, are squeezed into the aisle of the new Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner. The pods, known as “Skynest”, will include fresh bedding, a privacy curtain, ambient lighting and kit with eye-masks, skincare, earplugs and socks.

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2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-14 21:57

This live blog is now closed.

As both chambers of Congress return to Capitol Hill today, the news of two resignation announcements is not the only thing news occupying lawmakers.

The House still needs to pass a bill to fund several Department of Homeland Security (DHS) subagencies, like the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) and the Coast Guard, amid a record-breaking partial government shutdown.

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2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-14 21:50

Sheinbaum has recently been taking a firmer stance with the US, defying pressures where other countries have caved

The Mexican government has voiced concern about the deaths of its citizens in US custody, with Mexican president Claudia Sheinbaum also pushing back against the Trump administration’s decision to impose an energy blockade on Cuba.

The progressive Mexican leader has walked a careful line with Trump for more than a year, addressing provocations with a measured tone and meeting US requests to crack down on cartels more so than her predecessors, in an effort to offset threats of tariffs and US military action against gangs.

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-14 21:40

Strike marks third deadly attack on vessels in region in four days, and killing of 174 people since September

The US military said it killed four more people in a boat strike in the eastern Pacific Ocean on Tuesday, marking the third deadly attack on vessels in the region in four days.

The US Southern Command, which oversees military operations in Latin America and the Caribbean, announced the killings in a social media post, claiming, without providing evidence, that the men killed were “narco-terrorists”.

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2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-14 21:33

Filing seeks to overturn seditious conspiracy charges of Proud Boys and Oath Keepers members who laid siege to US Capitol in 2021

The US Department of Justice has requested that a federal appeals judge overturn convictions for members of far-right groups Proud Boys and the Oath Keepers, who were previously found guilty of seditious conspiracy in connection with the violent siege of the US capitol in 2021.

Jeanine Pirro, the Donald Trump-appointed US attorney for the District of Columbia, signed separate motions on Tuesday to vacate convictions for a slew of individuals, including the Proud Boys’ leaders Ethan Nordean and Joseph Biggs as well as Stewart Rhodes, a former attorney who founded the Oath Keepers’ militia.

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2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-14 20:58

This live blog has now closed. You can read the latest on the fragile ceasefire between Israel and Iran here

South Korean president Lee Jae Myung has said rising tensions around the strait of Hormuz make it hard to be optimistic about the fallout from the Iran war, warning that high oil prices and supply-chain strains are likely to persist for some time.

Lee told a cabinet meeting on Tuesday the government should treat prolonged disruption in global energy and raw materials markets as a given and reinforce its emergency response system.

For the time being, difficulties in global energy and raw materials supply chains and high oil prices will continue … I ask that we pursue the development of alternative supply chains, medium- to long-term industrial restructuring, and the transition to a post-plastic economy as top-priority national strategic projects.”

Lebanon and Israel have been at war in some form since the early 1980s. You’re not allowed to enter Lebanon if you have an Israeli stamp in your passport. The two don’t have diplomatic relations. So the fact that these talks are happening directly between the two governments is something that’s really astonishing.

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2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-14 20:55

Omaha police fatally shot a woman they say kidnapped a young boy and slashed him across the face before killing her.

2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-14 20:54
Pint vesc/ chi battery question

So I have a pint x that I am about to vesc for a friend, here are the parts

PINT V from float wheel

And the a chi-ve pint x

There is a problem both kits come with a bms and the chi battery I am not sure if it will over load or even work with the pint v kit

submitted by /u/Foreign_Government59
[link] [comments]

2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-14 20:53

U.S. Southern Command posted aerial video on social media Tuesday showing a vessel bobbing in the water before being struck by a projectile and exploding.

2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-14 20:34

Interior minister is ‘highly determined’ to block US rapper from performing in the southern city in June due to his past antisemitic remarks, sources say

Kanye West has announced he will postpone an upcoming concert in France, just after reports emerged that France’s interior minister is seeking to block the US rapper from performing due to his antisemitic remarks.

“After much thought and consideration, it is my sole decision to postpone my show in Marseille, France until further notice,” the rapper, legally known as Ye, wrote on X.

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2026-04-15 08:04
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2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-14 20:10

Microsoft's Surface laptops are now priced higher than some of the best laptops on the market.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-15 05:01

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for April 15, No. 1,761.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-15 05:01

Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for April 15, No. 773.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-15 05:01

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for April 15, No. 1,039.

2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-14 20:03

Earlier this year, the House narrowly defeated a Senate bill on the issue, angering victims' families.

2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-14 19:56

The streaming package costs $20 a month.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 19:45

"People should try to drive less. They should try to conserve energies," Andy Walz told CBS News. "We should be doing that all the time. Energy's essential for people's lives, but we should conserve it."

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 19:38

The Justice Department on Tuesday asked a federal court to vacate Jan. 6 convictions against a dozen former members of the right-wing Proud Boys and Oath Keepers, aiming to wipe away some of the final Capitol riot charges that are still standing.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 19:31

Departures came after lawmakers from both parties threatened to introduce resolutions expelling the two men

The Democratic congressman Eric Swalwell and Republican congressman Tony Gonzales submitted their resignations to the House of Representatives on Tuesday, abruptly ending their political careers amid bipartisan furor over allegations of sexual misconduct against both.

Swalwell resigned at 2pm ET, while Gonazales’s resignation will take effect at 11.59pm on Tuesday evening, according to the House clerk.

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2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 19:31

Ashly Robinson, an influencer who went by Ashlee Jenae online, died on a trip with her fiancé in Zanzibar. Now, her family is searching for answers.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 19:25

The vacuum bends around furniture, and SharkNinja says its dock can hold debris for 45 days.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 19:17

Between a product page leak and a trademark filing, Garmin seems to be cooking up a new recovery-tracking wearable.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 19:06

The FCC has granted (PDF) Netgear the first exemption from its foreign-made router ban, allowing the company to keep selling new consumer router models made outside the U.S. through Oct. 1, 2027. PCMag reports: The Defense Department reviewed Netgear's application for an exemption and found that its products "do not pose risks to US national security." The FCC's order doesn't elaborate on why. Netgear is based in San Jose, California, although its products are made in Asia. The exemption, known as a conditional approval, lasts until Oct. 1, 2027. It covers a large range of future Wi-Fi models from Netgear, spanning the R, RAX, RAXE, RS, MK, MR, M, and MH series, the Orbi consumer mesh, mobile, and standalone routers under the RBK, RBE, RBR, RBRE, LBR, LBK, and CBK series, as well as cable gateways and cable modems under the CAX and CM series. The exemption isn't a full green light for the future product models from Netgear. The FCC says the company still needs to go through the normal Commission-regulated equipment authorization process for each device. The Oct. 1, 2027 date effectively amounts to a deadline for Netgear to receive FCC certification for the router models; each certification is also permanent, enabling the product to be sold in the US on an ongoing basis. This also suggests that Netgear has an 18-month period to receive FCC certifications for future products.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 19:01

Analysis by IFS shows George Osborne’s mortgage schemes launched in 2013 had little effect on social mobility

Higher-income households were the biggest beneficiaries of George Osborne’s Help to Buy mortgage schemes, introduced in the 2010s, according to an analysis by the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) thinktank.

Launched by the Conservative-Lib Dem coalition government in 2013, Help to Buy involved two separate schemes aimed at making home ownership more achievable in a period of rapid house price growth.

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2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 19:01

ASA rules ads on Instagram and Daily Mail website broke ban on promoting items high in fat, salt and sugar

Lidl and Iceland have become the first companies to have ads banned after the introduction of rules cracking down on the marketing of junk food in the UK.

The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) has been policing the ban on ads featuring junk food on TV before 9pm, and in paid online advertising at any time of the day, since 5 January.

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2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 19:01

Air pollution caused by wildfires is another blow to northern Thailand’s tourism industry as businesses suffer amid war in Iran

The Doi Suthep temple in northern Thailand is known for its spectacular views of Chiang Mai and the lush forested mountains that surround it. Over recent weeks, though, visitors can see little of the city beyond a thick cloud of grey haze.

Persistent wildfires have caused intense air pollution across the north of Thailand, forcing three provinces to declare emergencies and triggering spikes in pollution-related illnesses.

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2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 19:01

British aid to double as 19m people face acute hunger, but summit unlikely to end conflict amid Saudi-UAE tensions

The British foreign secretary, Yvette Cooper, will urge Sudan’s warring parties to “cease bloodshed” during a major conference on Wednesday, which analysts believe is unlikely to deliver a significant step towards peace.

The talks in Berlin – held on the third anniversary of the start of Sudan’s ruinous war – are expected to help address a catastrophic funding shortfall that is compounding the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.

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2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 18:59

Massachusetts liberal arts college laments ‘heartbreaking reality’ and says financial pressures to blame

A Massachusetts liberal arts college is set to close permanently due to low enrollment and financial problems.

The board of trustees of Hampshire College, a small liberal arts school in Amherst founded in 1965, pointed to “financial pressures” that have been “compounded by shifting external factors”.

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2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 18:47

French child, six at time of 2019 attack, suffers setback in recovery after January operation

The family of a boy thrown from the 10th-storey balcony of the Tate Modern seven years ago said it feels as though his recovery has taken a “sad step backwards” after surgery.

The unnamed French child was six when he was seriously hurt in an attack by Jonty Bravery at the London attraction in August 2019.

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2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 18:20

Venezuelan oil shipped to the U.S. is providing relief from higher prices caused by the Iran war, according to a senior Chevron executive.

2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-14 18:19

Suit alleges the billionaire’s AI company is illegally spewing toxic pollutants from its datacenter in the Memphis area

A new lawsuit accuses Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence company of illegally spewing toxic pollutants into the Black neighborhoods on the border of Tennessee and Mississippi.

The suit, filed on Tuesday in Mississippi federal court, alleges xAI is violating the Clean Air Act due to emissions from its makeshift power plant in Southaven, Mississippi, which powers its datacenters in south Memphis. The NAACP, represented by environmental groups Southern Environmental Law Center and Earthjustice, says xAI has been polluting the surrounding historically Black communities by using dozens of methane gas generators without permits. The organization is seeking to force the company to stop operating its unpermitted turbines in Southaven.

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2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 18:00

Microsoft has sharply raised prices across its Surface lineup as RAM and component costs keep climbing. "Both its midrange and flagship Surface lines are now significantly more expensive than they were just a few weeks ago, with the flagship Surface Laptop 7 and Surface Pro 11 now starting at $500 more than they launched at in 2024," reports Windows Central. From the report: The Surface Pro 12-inch, which was previously Microsoft's cheapest modern Surface PC at $799, now starts at $1,049. The flagship Surface Pro 13-inch, which originally launched for $999, now starts at an eyewatering $1,499. It's the same story for the Surface Laptop lines, with the entry-level 13-inch model originally priced at $899, now starting at $1,149. The 13.8-inch flagship Surface Laptop launched at $999, but now costs $1,499, with the 15-inch model now starting at $1,599. This means that Microsoft's midrange devices now cost more than the flagships did when they launched in 2024. [...] Microsoft has raised prices for all SKUs on offer, meaning the high end models are now more expensive too. A top end Surface Laptop 15-inch with Snapdragon X Elite, 64GB RAM and 1TB SSD storage now costs a staggering $3,649. To compare, the 16-inch MacBook Pro with an M5 Pro, 64GB RAM, and 1TB SSD is $3,299, and that comes with a significantly better display and much more power under the hood.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 17:55

The bill would block new data centers that draw more than 20 megawatts of power until the fall of 2027. It also calls to study their impact on the electrical grid.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 17:54

Dr. Thomas Shaknovsky, 44, was arrested Monday after a two-year investigation by local, state and medical authorities.

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April 14, 2026 — Today, the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking (EuroHPC JU) inaugurated Lucy, a new EuroHPC quantum computer, located near Paris, in France, marking a significant step in Europe’s efforts to build world-class, sovereign supercomputing infrastructure.

Credit: EuroHPC JU

The inauguration ceremony took place at the Très Grand Centre de Calcul (TGCC) in Bruyères-le-Châtel and was hosted by the CEA, the French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission, together with GENCI (Grand Équipement National de Calcul Intensif).

The event was attended by Anne Le Hénanff, French Minister for Artificial Intelligence and Digital Affairs, Kilian Gross, Director in the Directorate-General Communication Networks, Content and Technology (DG CNECT) at the European Commission and Anders Jensen, the Executive Director of the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking.

Lucy is Quandela’s state-of-the-art photonic quantum computer ‘MOSAIQ-12’ enabling computations with up to 12 physical qubits. The system will be integrated into the Joliot-Curie supercomputer, and will enable researchers and industry to apply quantum accelerated high-performance computing (HPC-QC) in technological and scientific fields such as material science, meteorology, energy, and advanced engineering.

Anders Jensen, Executive Director of the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking stated: “Lucy is the fourth EuroHPC quantum computer to be inaugurated. It brings new quantum capabilities to Europe’s supercomputing ecosystem and marks another important milestone for our technological sovereignty. By bringing together quantum and high-performance computing, EuroHPC JU is enabling researchers and industry to tackle complex challenges and unlock new opportunities for innovation across strategic sectors.”

Anne-Isabelle Etienvre, Administrator General of the CEA, said: “With Lucy, the CEA is giving new concrete expression to its long-standing commitment to quantum technologies. From the invention of the first qubits by our fundamental research teams—an excellence recently recognized at the highest level—to the operation of breakthrough machines at the TGCC, we are demonstrating the strength of our integrated model. This continuity enables us to transform a technological breakthrough into a sovereign industrial tool. Lucy is now at the service of our researchers, as well as the entire European scientific and industrial ecosystem, to explore new computing horizons.”

Michaël Krajecki, CEO of GENCI, commented: “With Lucy, the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking, the CEA, and GENCI are providing European and French scientific and industrial communities with a unique, hybrid, and sovereign quantum computing capability. Freely accessible, Lucy is becoming a cutting-edge sovereign asset for research and innovation. Thanks to Quandela’s photonic technology, hosted at the TGCC, the transition to the industrial scale of the quantum era has never seemed so close. This marks a major milestone for France and for Europe.”

Hosted by GENCI, Lucy is installed and operated at the TGCC, a computing centre of CEA and one of France’s three national supercomputing facilities. The system is supplied by a French-German vendor partnership including Quandela and attocube.

The system is now undergoing final calibration and should be available to European end-users in the coming weeks.

More Details

Lucy is a photonic quantum computer that uses particles of light (photons) as qubits. Photonic systems operate at room temperature and are made of modular, fibered and rack-mounted components, making them easier to integrate with existing HPC infrastructure. Lucy is based on linear optics quantum computing (LOQC), a promising approach that could accelerate applications across a range of scientific and industrial domains.

Owned by the EuroHPC JU, Lucy has a total acquisition cost of EUR 8.5 million, co-funded by the EuroHPC JU (50%) and France (50%).

The EuroQCS-France consortium is led by GENCI as hosting entity and CEA as hosting site, with the University Politehnica of Bucharest (UPB, Romania), Forschungszentrum Jülich (FZJ, Germany) and Irish Centre for High- End Computing (ICHEC, Ireland) as members.

To date, the EuroHPC JU has procured six quantum computers, located across Europe. Three of these systems have already been inaugurated since last year:

  • PIAST-Q in Poznań, Poland in June 2025,
  • VLQ in Ostrava, Czechia in October 2025,
  • Euro-Q-Exa in Munich, Germany in February 2026.

The deployment of these quantum computers across Europe aims to offer the widest possible variety of European quantum computing platforms and hybrid classical-quantum architectures, including analogue quantum simulators based on neutral atoms, trapped ions, superconducting circuits, and photonics to adiabatic systems, enabling the execution of annealing routines. This approach positions Europe at the forefront of this emerging field while providing European end-users with access to diverse and complementary quantum technologies.

In addition to these six systems, two analogue quantum simulators, Jade and Ruby, have been procured under the EuroHPC JU project HPCQS and inaugurated end of 2025 in Germany (Julich Supercomputing Centre, JSC) and France (GENCI).

Procurement processes are also currently ongoing for additional EuroHPC quantum computers to be hosted and operated by SURF in the Netherlands and by LuxProvide in Luxembourg.

About EuroHPC JU

The EuroHPC JU is a legal and funding entity that brings together the European Union and participating countries to coordinate efforts and pool resources with the objective of making Europe a world leader in supercomputing.

To equip Europe with a cutting-edge supercomputing infrastructure, the EuroHPC JU has already procured 12 supercomputers, distributed across Europe including JUPITER in Germany, and Alice Recoque in France, Europe’s first exascale systems.

European scientists and users from the public sector and industry can benefit from EuroHPC supercomputers via the EuroHPC Access Calls no matter where in Europe they are located, to advance science and support the development of a wide range of applications with industrial, scientific and societal relevance for Europe.

Currently, the EuroHPC JU is also overseeing the implementation of 19 AI factories (AIF) across Europe, complemented by 13 AI Factory Antennas, to offer free, customized support to SMEs and startups.

The EuroHPC JU also funds research and innovation projects to develop a full European supercomputing supply chain, from processors and software to applications to be run on these supercomputers and know-how to develop strong European HPC expertise.

With the recent adoption of Council Regulation (EU) 2026/150, the EuroHPC JU’s mandate has been expanded with new action pillars dedicated to the deployment of AI Gigafactories across Europe and the advancement of quantum technologies.


Source: EuroHPC JU

The post EuroHPC Inaugurates ‘Lucy’ Photonic Quantum System in France appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 17:52

DHS accused of false and misleading statements about Carlos Ivan Mendoza Hernandez who was shot in face

Federal officials have arrested a California man who was shot by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents and charged him with “assault” on a federal officer.

Carlos Ivan Mendoza Hernandez, 36, was shot by ICE officers on 7 April in Patterson, a rural town in California’s central valley roughly 80 miles south-east of San Francisco. He was hit by more than six bullets, including in the face, according to his attorney.

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2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 17:50

A scaled-up version of OpenAI's Trusted Access for Cyber program appears to be OpenAI's response to Anthropic's Project Glasswing.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 17:42

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2026-04-14 17:36

James Heaps was first sentenced in 2023 but appeals court found he was denied a fair trial

A former University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) gynecologist pleaded guilty to 13 felony sexual abuse charges on Tuesday in connection with the sexual assault of several patients over his career, and was sentenced to 11 years in prison.

James Heaps was originally sentenced in 2023 to 11 years in prison after being convicted of five counts of sexual battery and penetration involving two patients. That sentence was overturned by an appeals court in February, which ruled that Heaps was denied a fair trial because the judge did not share with his attorneys a note from the court’s foreman sharing concerns about a juror’s English proficiency.

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2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 17:34

Sexual assault allegations leveled against former Rep. Eric Swalwell, D-Calif., stood out for their lurid detail — and because the fallout was unusually swift.

Within hours after the San Francisco Chronicle dropped a story Friday that accused Swalwell of sexually assaulting a former staffer, over a dozen Democrats had pulled their endorsements of the then-frontrunner for governor of California. CNN followed that evening with a story labeling the former staffer’s accusations as rape and revealing that three additional women were accusing Swalwell of sexual misconduct. He suspended his campaign for governor Sunday, and on Monday, he announced his resignation from Congress. He was out Tuesday at 2 p.m. ET.

The outcry made sense, in part, because of the severity of the allegations: The ex-staffer said Swalwell left her vaginally bruised and bleeding; another woman alleged Tuesday that he had drugged her in order to rape her. But the fact that Swalwell, who has denied the allegations, did not remain in Congress while under investigation suggests that American politicians are sensitive to concerns over sexual abuse and misconduct — particularly as the midterms approach against the backdrop of the Epstein files, and Democrats position themselves as defenders of victims as they head into November.

“It’s hypocrisy if they don’t” speak out, said Nina Smith, a Democratic communications strategist and former senior adviser to former Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacy Abrams. 

Smith said that the advocacy from Epstein’s survivors, as well as the people who’ve been speaking out online about Swalwell, helped force lawmakers to take a stand on this issue.

Related

Attorney for Epstein Survivors Warns That Justice Is Impossible With Bondi as AG 

“It has created this watershed moment on the Democrats’ part to address this issue quickly,” she told The Intercept. “Both parties are recognizing that accountability is something that is at the forefront of a lot of voters’ minds.”

In a February poll from Reuters/Ipsos, 69 percent of respondents said the statement that the Epstein files “show that powerful people in the U.S are rarely held accountable for their actions” represented their views “very well” or “extremely well.”

Rep. Summer Lee, D-Pa., said that Democrats have to demonstrate “accountability” even when allegations come up against one of their own.

“The work and bravery of Epstein’s survivors helped expose just how deeply these systems are failing us.”

“Our job is to center the people who were harmed, to take allegations seriously, and to make sure there are real systems for justice,” Lee wrote in a statement to The Intercept. “The work and bravery of Epstein’s survivors helped further expose just how deeply these systems are failing us — all while protecting perpetrators with money, connections, or status. That legacy demands more from all of us right now.”

Still, it’s too soon for Democratic leadership “to be patting themselves on the back,” about Swalwell’s swift rebuke, said Michael Ceraso, a Democratic communications strategist who worked on Pete Buttigieg’s presidential campaign. He pointed to the level of detail and corroboration in the stories that CNN and the SF Chronicle published, arguing the careful reporting “made it fail-safe for political leaders to do the right thing.” 

And that doesn’t excuse the people who had heard the rumors and continued to support Swalwell until the allegations were in a newspaper, Ceraso added. “I would call bullshit on people” within his proximity who are “claiming they didn’t know this,” he said.

There’s been heavy attention on Sen. Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz., who was long known to be a close friend of Swalwell’s. Gallego claimed Tuesday that Swalwell had “lied to” him — but admitted to hearing that his close friend and colleague was “flirty.”

“I definitely look at the world a different way now,” Gallego told reporters. “I certainly am going to make sure that I’m going to take, you know, personal steps and office steps to make sure that we don’t even get close to a gray line.” 

Former San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown also alluded to other members of Congress being aware of Swalwell’s actions. “I’m not surprised frankly, because there have been rumors after rumors after rumors, his colleague in Washington pretty much said that. That’s what Adam Schiff said, that’s what Nancy Pelosi said,” Brown told ABC 7

The Democrats, Lee added, cannot ask voters to trust them on this issue if they fail to hold their members accountable when they engage in abusive behaviors.

“Accountability has to mean something, even when it is uncomfortable, even when it is one of your own, and even when power is involved,” she wrote. “No one and no party should ask for the public’s trust if it is unwilling to hold itself to the same standard.”

The Intercept has not independently verified the allegations against Swalwell. In a statement posted Tuesday, Sara Azari, a criminal defense attorney representing Swalwell, wrote that the former congressman “categorically and unequivocally denies each and every allegation of sexual misconduct and assault that has been leveled against him,” calling the accusations “a ruthless and shameless attempt to smear Congressman Swalwell.”

The Intercept reached out to Swalwell’s communications staff for comment; a reporter for The Hill wrote Tuesday that the relevant staff members no longer work for him. Azari did not immediately respond to The Intercept’s request for comment.

Smith, who spoke out in 2018 about being sexually harassed and assaulted while working in the Maryland state legislature, said she believes that these abuses will continue to happen wherever disparities in power exist. But she was heartened to see how quickly Democrats called out Swalwell, which she said means that survivors have moved the needle on this issue.

“Survivors have been the most powerful piece of holding elected officials and officials accountable. … They are the ones who have continued to fight in a way that has made all of this possible,” said Smith. “Ten years ago, we really just talked about this behind closed doors.”

The post Swift Swalwell Fallout Suggests the Democrats Have Finally Learned From Epstein appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 17:30

Health secretary says NHS is ‘failing women’ and pledges to end ‘gaslighting’ by doctors

Wes Streeting has vowed to stop women being “gaslit” by doctors as he relaunches the women’s health strategy for England.

Speaking before the publication of the renewed strategy on Wednesday, Streeting said the NHS was “failing women” and set out measures to help them access the healthcare they need.

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2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 17:29

Geoscience Australia says aftershocks likely but much lighter and in a smaller area

Part of Australia’s east coast has been shaken by an earthquake that could be felt hundred of kilometres away.

A 4.5-magnitude quake hit at 8.19pm on Tuesday at a depth of 5km about 30km south-west of Orange in central west NSW, near the Cadia goldmine.

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2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 17:28

A few weeks ago, Microsoft made some concrete promises about fixing and improving Windows, and among them was removing useless “AI” integrations. Applications like Notepad, Snipping Tool, and others would see their “AI” features removed. Well, it turns out Microsoft employs a very fringe definition of the concept.

Microsoft seems to have stripped away mentions of the “Copilot” brand in the Windows Insider version of the Notepad app. The Copilot button in the toolbar is gone, and instead, you’ll find a writing icon which will present you AI-powered writing assistance, such as rewrite, summarize, tone modification, format configuration, and more. Additionally, “AI features” in Notepad settings has been renamed to “Advanced features” and it allows users to toggle off AI capabilities within the app.

↫ Usama Jawad at Neowin

If the recent changes to Notepad are any indication, it seems Microsoft is, actually, not at all going to “reducing unnecessary Copilot entry points”, as they worded it, but is merely just going to rename these features so they aren’t so ostentatiously present. At least, that seems to be the plan for Notepad, and we’ll have to see if they have the same plans for the other applications. I mean, they have to push “AI” or look like fools.

I just don’t understand how a company like Microsoft can be so utterly terrible at communication. While I personally would want all “AI” features yeeted straight from Windows, I’m sure a ton of people are just fine with the features being less in-your-face and stuffed inside a normal menu alongside all the other normal features. They could’ve just been honest about their intentions, and it would’ve been so much better.

Like virtually every other technology company, Microsoft just seems incapable of not lying.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 17:22

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 17:19

Find out if your router is banned, when to expect firmware updates and what the latest news on the Federal Communications Commission ban means for your home network.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 17:09

Sharon Simmons was photographed delivering McDonald’s to Trump on Monday but company admits it was a stunt

The DoorDash delivery driver who had a turn in the national spotlight on Monday by bringing a fast-food order to Donald Trump at the White House has publicly touted the president’s so-called “no tax on tips” policy before – causing some to question the encounter’s authenticity and the company to confirm it was a stunt.

Sharon Simmons had lobbied in July 2025 in favor of the policy, which DoorDash supports, testifying in Congress that she was based in Nevada and driving for the delivery platform because her husband’s cancer treatments had made it difficult to make ends meet otherwise.

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2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 17:09

After President Donald Trump said the U.S. Navy would blockade the Strait of Hormuz to prevent the shipment of oil and other goods to and from Iran, Rep. Byron Donalds, R-Fla., defended the decision.

Iran has controlled the vital international shipping route since shortly after the U.S. and Israel launched attacks Feb. 28. When Iran said it would charge tolls for ships attempting to pass, Trump initially condemned the idea, floated a U.S.-Iran tolling "joint venture," then settled on the blockade plan. 

Donalds, who is running for the Republican nomination for Florida governor, reached back to the early 19th century for a precedent, citing a time when Ottoman Empire outposts demanded payments from U.S. shipping vessels in the Mediterranean Sea. The sporadic conflicts between 1801 and 1815 became known as the Barbary wars.

In an April 12 interview on NBC’s "Meet the Press," host Kristen Welker asked Donalds how Trump’s action would lead to the reopening of the strait.

Donalds said, "Our Navy — its creation was actually to free international waters from the Barbary pirates. That’s why we have the U.S. Navy."

Historians who study the period say there are definite echoes between the two conflicts.

"The threat from the Barbary regimes was critical for the creation of the U.S. Navy," said Frederick C. Leiner, author of "The End of Barbary Terror" and "Prisoners of the Bashaw."

Donalds’ office did not respond to an inquiry for this article.

Did the Barbary threat help create the U.S. Navy?

The U.S. had a navy during the American Revolution, but after being saddled with debt from the war and operating under a weak central government, the country decided against maintaining a standing fleet. The continental navy disappeared with the sale of the Alliance warship, a 36-gun frigate, to a private merchant in 1785.

As the United States’ first president under the 1788 Constitution, George Washington did not immediately push to form a new navy. But the piracy threat from the Barbary states — particularly Algiers, Tunis and Tripoli, which were loosely affiliated with the Ottoman Empire — grew during his tenure, and the British no longer had any interest in helping its former colony on the high seas. It wasn’t long before the U.S. decided it needed a naval force.

Historians describe the Barbary states’ actions as a well-developed protection racket. Countries paid hefty monetary "tributes" to the Barbary rulers to secure free passage for their ships through the Mediterranean Sea. Countries that refused to pay would risk being boarded, with crew members held hostage and cargo confiscated. (Technically, this was not "piracy," which is committed by non-state actors; the proper term for such government-backed privateering is "corsairing.")

Initially, the United States decided to pay tribute. But American leaders argued that doing so would inspire more outrageous financial demands. 

As president, Washington successfully lobbied Congress to authorize six ships. But before that order was completed, the U.S. agreed to pay a large tribute to Algiers rather than fight. This eased the pressure for U.S. shippers, so lawmakers cut back the number of ships to three, plus some smaller vessels. 

With this modest navy, the U.S. fought France — an ally during the revolution but a competitor in trade — in what became known as the Quasi War between 1798 and 1801. It was a limited conflict for the brand new naval force, but a real one. 

After Thomas Jefferson became president in 1801, he rejected Tripoli's demand for payment. Tripoli countered by declaring war on the United States. 

"U.S. ships were declared a legitimate target by Barbary pirates operating out of Algiers, Tunis and Tripoli, hence the U.S. Navy's involvement in the area," said historian Adrian Tinniswood, author of "Pirates of Barbary."

Jefferson sent forces to the Mediterranean, and after sporadic combat, hostilities ended four years later with a negotiated settlement in which the United States paid a smaller tribute than had initially been demanded.

As happened in the current Iran war, the U.S. mounted a blockade, with Congress’ authorization. The effort was reasonably successful until a frigate, the Philadelphia, ran aground; its 307-man crew was captured and imprisoned for 19 months. At that point, Jefferson ordered more ships, and the focus turned to securing the crew’s release. Eventually, in 1805, the crew was freed after a U.S. payment of about $50 per man.

The second Barbary war, against Algiers in 1815, was much briefer, aided by the experience of fighting the War of 1812. With a few exceptions, this ended the era of piracy by the Barbary states.

"It is fair to say that the Navy was established as a permanent organization because of the Barbary pirates," said Mark Cancian, a senior adviser with the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

Before the blockade of Iran, the Barbary wars were mostly remembered by modern-day Americans as the source of the lyric "to the shores of Tripoli" in the Marine Hymn.

How similar is the comparison between the two wars?

There are some differences — Iran has not held crews hostage for ransom, for instance — but there is some historical similarity.

In both cases, the U.S. intervened militarily to protect the free passage of goods against a power that sought to exact tolls or tribute. Iran has reportedly assessed tolls on certain vessels passing through the Strait of Hormuz, though the Iranian government has denied doing so in at least some instances.

"Just as seizing ships and holding crew for ransom, as the Barbary states did, is a form of economic warfare, if every ship that passes has to pay money to Iran to assure their safety, that adds a cost," Leiner said. "I can see the comparison as valid."

But there's another dimension of the blockade of Iran that differs from the Barbary wars: The current blockade is "as an element of a broader war with Iran that does not have a Barbary pirate parallel," Cancian said.

Our ruling

Donalds said the U.S. Navy was created "to free international waters from the Barbary pirates."

Historians say this is accurate. The long-running problem from Barbary state attacks on merchant ships drove many of the key decisions in the early United States’ creation of a standing Navy. 

Donalds’ statement is accurate but needs additional information because he did not refer to the 19th century example in isolation; he cited it in the context of today’s situation with Iran, and the two wars have important differences. For example, the Barbary wars involved holding crews hostage for ransom. 

But both the Barbary wars and the Iran war involved the U.S. acting militarily to protect trade from efforts to exact tributes or tolls.

We rate the statement Mostly True.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 17:03

Exclusive: Fiona Hill, a former White House chief adviser, joins ex-Nato chief in criticising Starmer’s leadership on defence

A co-author of Britain’s strategic defence review has joined criticism of Keir Starmer’s leadership on military policy, warning of a “bizarre” lack of urgency in defence planning.

Fiona Hill, a former chief adviser to the White House on Russia, echoed the concerns of George Robertson, her co-author with Gen Richard Barrons on the strategic defence review (SDR), over what he had called the prime minister’s “corrosive complacency”.

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2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 17:00

The search giant is implementing new rules that categorize back-button hijacking as a malicious practice.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 17:00

A proposed California bill would require 3D printer makers to use state-certified software to detect and block files for gun parts, but advocates at the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) say it would be easy to evade and could lead to widespread surveillance of users' printing activity. The Register reports: The bill in question is AB 2047, the scope of which, on paper, appears strict. The primary goal is clear and simple: to require 3D printer manufacturers to use a state-certified algorithm that checks digital design files for firearm components and blocks print jobs that would produce prohibited parts. [...] Cliff Braun and Rory Mir, who respectively work in policy and tech community engagement at the EFF, claim that the proposals in California are technically infeasible and in practice will lead to consumer surveillance. In a series of blog posts published this month, the pair argued that print-blocking technology -- proposals for which have also surfaced in states including New York and Washington - cannot work for a range of technical reasons. They argued that because 3D printers and other types of computer numerical control (CNC) machines are fairly simple, with much of their brains coming from the computer-aided manufacturing (CAM) software -- or slicer software -- to which they are linked, the bill would establish legal and illegal software. Proprietary software will likely become the de facto option, leaving open source alternatives to rot. "Under these proposed laws, manufacturers of consumer 3D printers must ensure their printers only work with their software, and implement firearm detection algorithms on either the printer itself or in a slicer software," wrote Braun earlier this month. "These algorithms must detect firearm files using a maintained database of existing models. Vendors of printers must then verify that printers are on the allow-list maintained by the state before they can offer them for sale. Owners of printers will be guilty of a crime if they circumvent these intrusive scanning procedures or load alternative software, which they might do because their printer manufacturer ends support." Braun also argued that it would be trivial for anyone who uses 3D printers to make small tweaks to either the visual models of firearms parts, or the machine instructions (G-code) generated from those models, to evade detection. Mir further argued that the bill offers no guardrails to keep this "constantly expanding blacklist" limited to firearm-related designs. In his view, there is a clear risk that this approach will creep into other forms of alleged unlawful activity, such as copyright infringement. [...] Braun and Mir have a list of other arguments against the bill. They say the algorithms are more than likely to lead to false positives, which will prevent good-faith users from using their hardware. Many 3D printer owners also have no interest in printing firearm components. Most simply want the freedom to print trinkets and spare parts while others use them to print various items and sell them as an income stream.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 16:45
Updates to my trail board in progress

Updates to my trail board:

Improved suspension system

Variable tire gap for different size tires

Thor301

Higo HG-F.M-L1019D motor connector

Improved battery cable with nomex sheath

Higher current AMX-80 80A automotive fuse

I'm in the process of switching all my motors to the higo connector. I like the compactness of the connector and I'm planning for the sidewinder motor.

The Thor301 has a smaller footprint than the little FOCer which allows a smaller enclosure and gives more room for my front foot. This required a redesign of the esc enclosure and front foot plate.

I found that my simplified board design allows for movement of the footpads and bumpers to allow larger tires. I just added more holes to my rails and I can slide the footpads forward or back. The board will be the length of a pint for for growler tires, up to the length of extended rails for BTG.

Suspension system has been working well. I had a failure not long ago that I fixed by beefing up the brackets. I also improved the damping. It feels so smooth it's still a little scary to me.

Updating my fuse from ATO blade fuses which cap out around 50A to AMX-80 80A automotive fuse. Since my board is powered by a backpack battery it just makes sense to fuse the battery in case a conductor finds it's way into the connector when disconnected from the board.

I've been leaning on Send Cut Send for laser cut parts. They are so economical and it saves me a lot of time. I just have them do the cutting, bending and pilot holes. Then I finish up with the countersinks, fasteners, and final holes sizes myself. In this build I'll be buying a heat sink, front foot plate, rear foot plate, and rear bumper for under $200.

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-14 16:40

Happy World Quantum Day. Quantum computers remain limited by noise, instability, and the challenge of error correction in real time. Nvidia’s latest answer is Ising, a new open model family introduced today that is designed to bring AI-driven control to quantum hardware.

The Ising family includes models for quantum processor calibration and error-correction decoding, two of the current bottlenecks in scaling quantum systems. The models are designed to interpret measurement data, calibrate quantum hardware, and process errors fast enough to support real-time correction, tasks that are currently handled through a mix of human-guided calibration and classical decoding algorithms.

According to Nvidia, the Ising family has debuted with two model types:

  • Ising Calibration: A vision language model that can rapidly interpret and react to measurements from quantum processors. The company says this enables AI agents to automate continuous calibration and reduces the time needed from days to hours.
  • Ising Decoding: Two variants of a 3D convolutional neural network model, optimized for either speed or accuracy, to perform real-time decoding for quantum error correction. Nvidia claims Ising Decoding models are up to 2.5x faster and 3x more accurate than pyMatching, the current open source industry standard.

(Shutterstock)

In a press briefing, Nvidia described Ising Calibration as a 35-billion-parameter vision-language model trained to interpret measurement data and automate the full calibration workflow. Conventional approaches rely on physicists or predefined calibration workflows to tune systems before each run, but Ising Calibration is designed for continuous recalibration as hardware drifts over time. Nvidia said the approach is intended to scale to much larger systems, where manual calibration becomes impractical as qubit counts move from the hundreds into the thousands and beyond.

For error correction, Nvidia introduced Ising Decoding as a complementary layer rather than a replacement for existing methods. The model acts as a pre-decoder that uses neural networks to process syndrome data, or the error signals derived from qubit measurements, and correct a large portion of errors before passing the processed syndromes to traditional algorithms like pyMatching. This hybrid approach is meant to improve speed and accuracy while remaining compatible with existing error-correction pipelines. Nvidia said the models operate at microsecond timescales, fast enough to support real-time correction across multiple qubit modalities.

Nvidia also explained how the models are meant to scale with system size. In the briefing, Nvidia said its decoding approach can generalize as systems scale, without requiring retraining. The company demonstrated the models at code distances up to 31, which is a metric tied to how well a system can suppress errors and a key step toward large, fault-tolerant quantum machines. That corresponds to a regime associated with hundreds to thousands of physical qubits per logical qubit, depending on the error-correction scheme, placing the work closer to the scale targeted in current quantum roadmaps.

“Today, the very best quantum processors make an error about once in every 1000 operations, which is amazing, but to become useful accelerators for scientific and enterprise problems, that number needs to become one in a trillion or even less,” said Sam Stanwyck, Nvidia’s director of quantum product, in the briefing. “The good news is that AI can be the answer for how you manage that noise at scale, and it has the potential to enable very rapid progress in closing that gap.”

(Shutterstock)

In the press briefing, Stanwyck explained how calibration and error correction are “AI-shaped problems,” meaning they involve high-throughput, real-time data processing well suited to GPU-accelerated AI workloads. The goal is to integrate these models into hybrid quantum-classical systems, where GPUs handle control, decoding, and optimization alongside the quantum processor.

“This is the path to quantum GPU supercomputing, which is a quantum accelerator, integrating with the GPU supercomputer, solving valuable problems,” he said.

An important part of Nvidia’s strategy with Ising is that the models are fully open, including training data, frameworks, and workflows for fine-tuning and deployment. The company says a shared foundation is needed more than ever in quantum computing, where hardware architectures, noise characteristics, and error-correction methods vary widely across systems.

“Developers can fine-tune these for their specific hardware and noise characteristics, follow our recipes to integrate these with their agents, use our frameworks to train their own open models, or build on our research to do their own,” Stanwyck said. “It’s everything you need to make this capability yours. And quantum teams have been building this kind of tooling and capability in-house, but now there’s an open foundation they can all build on.”

Nvidia said Ising Calibration is already being used by a range of hardware and research organizations, including Atom Computing, IonQ, IQM Quantum Computers, and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory’s Advanced Quantum Testbed. Ising Decoding is also being evaluated by universities and national labs, including the University of Chicago, UC Santa Barbara, Sandia National Laboratories, and Yonsei University.

The company expects the Ising family to expand over time, with future models potentially addressing other parts of the quantum computing stack, such as circuit optimization, noise characterization, and system-level control. In the short term, Stanwyck said adoption will likely be uneven, as calibration is more immediately applicable than large-scale error correction, depending on where hardware teams are in their roadmaps.

(Credit: Nvidia)

“There are plenty of quantum builders, not to mention quantum research groups, who aren’t yet ready to tackle error correction at scale,” Stanwyck said. “That may be a little bit more gated by quantum hardware roadmaps before Ising Decoding is useful, and I’d expect that Ising Calibration, once it can be fine-tuned for different types of calibration processes that different quantum processor builders need, will be a lot more universally useful, at least right away.”

Stanwyck said Nvidia’s larger goal is to accelerate progress toward practical quantum systems.

“We’ve made everything open because we expect this to be a new baseline, where every quantum builder can use these with the ecosystem to make progress together,” he said. “What we’re hoping for with this is that our AI leadership is going to directly accelerate the path to useful quantum computers. The same GPUs that are running the world’s AI can run the control plane for quantum hardware.”

The post Nvidia Launches Ising Open Models for Quantum Calibration and Error Correction appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 16:26

Millions of people using Android mobile devices could receive a payout, according to the settlement website.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 16:23
  • Photos prompted investigation by The Athletic

  • Russini seen as one of NFL’s top reporters

NFL reporter Dianna Russini has resigned from The Athletic less than a week after photos of her and New England Patriots coach Mike Vrabel prompted an internal investigation at The New York Times-owned sports outlet.

The New York Post last week published the photos of Vrabel and Russini at an Arizona resort and said they were taken before the NFL owners meetings that began in Phoenix on 29 March.

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2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 16:23

In 2023, 36 million Xfinity customers had personal information stolen by data thieves.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 16:11

From emotionally moving to adventurous to hilarious, these are some of the streaming service's best.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 16:09
New onewheel vesc, need help

Hi everyone, I just bought a Onewheel VESC.

The seller advertised this: "Onewheel GT with VESC system. New 18s2p molicel p45b 21700 battery (homemade with pure 0.2 nickel), 30 km range and more, depending on weight and riding style, Vesc Little Forcer 3.1 controller (firmware 6.06 installed). New, only needs lights if desired, motor with very few km, all sensor and motor phase wiring replaced, with charger and freebies as available!! such as XR rails, 3D printed XR boxes, another foot sensor, etc., works very well, very slim and very maneuverable (€1000)."

What can I expect from this Onewheel? Range (78kg)? Safety? Top speed? I'm new to the VESC world, what should I worry about first?

I appreciate everyone's help. good races

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2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 20:38

US president says negotiations could restart in Islamabad under ‘fantastic’ Pakistani army chief Asim Munir

Middle East crisis – live updates

Donald Trump has said that US-Iranian peace talks could resume in Islamabad over the next two days, and complimented the work of Pakistan’s army chief as mediator.

The US president was speaking on Tuesday to a New York Post reporter who had gone to Islamabad for the first round of ceasefire talks over the weekend. After an interview discussing prospects for negotiations, the reporter said the president had called her back “with an update”.

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2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 23:39

Lonna Drewes came forward Tuesday with the allegations after the California Democrat announced he would resign from Congress.

2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 16:20

Secretary of State Marco Rubio hosted ambassadors from the two neighboring states in what was described as a working group aimed at reaching a ceasefire.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 16:02

Amazon announces plans to acquire satellite service provider Globalstar in its quest to provide connectivity services from space.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 16:01

See maps of how Texas, California, Missouri and North Carolina redistricting pushes could play out, based on the 2024 election results.

2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 16:00

alternative_right shares a report from 404 Media: An independent privacy audit of Microsoft, Meta, and Google web traffic in California found that the companies may be violating state regulations and racking up billions in fines. According to the audit from privacy search engine webXray, 55 percent of the sites it checked set ad cookies in a user's browser even if they opted out of tracking. Each company disputed or took issue with the research, with Google saying it was based on a "fundamental misunderstanding" of how its product works. The webXray California Privacy Audit viewed web traffic on more than 7,000 popular websites in California in the month of March and found that most tech companies ignore when a user asks to opt-out of cookie tracking. California has stringent and well defined privacy legislation thanks to its California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) which allows users to, among other things, opt out of the sale of their personal information. There's a system called Global Privacy Control (GPC), which includes a browser extension that indicates to a website when a user wants to opt out of tracking. According to the webXray audit, Google failed to let users opt out 87 percent of the time. "Google's failure to honor the GPC opt-out signal is easy to find in network traffic. When a browser using GPC connects to Google's servers it encodes the opt-out signal by sending the code 'sec-gpc: 1.' This means Google should not return cookies," the audit said. "However, when Google's server responds to the network request with the opt-out it explicitly responds with a command to create an advertising cookie named IDE using the 'set-cookie' command. This non-compliance is easy to spot, hiding in plain sight." The audit said that Microsoft fails to opt out users in the same way and has a failure rate of 50 percent in the web traffic webXray viewed. Meta's failure rate was 69 percent and a bit more comprehensive. "Meta instructs publishers to install the following tracking code on their websites. The code contains no check for globally standard opt-out signals -- it loads unconditionally, fires a tracking event, and sets a cookie regardless of the consumer's privacy preferences," the audit said. It showed a copy of Meta's tracking data which contains no GPC check at all.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 15:59

This year marks the ten-year anniversary of Singularity, the project that became Apptainer, and it is worth pausing to recognize what that decade actually meant.

I have been thinking a lot lately about origins—the moment a problem is so pervasive that the solution instantly transforms an entire ecosystem. A notable example is how containers were aggressively and pervasively adopted within research and academia.

Back in the mid 2010’s, scientists were beginning to embrace containers (Docker) for their work, but high-performance computing (HPC) systems utilized a fundamentally incompatible architecture, leaving researchers without the portability they desperately needed. Recognizing that a solution built specifically for the rigorous constraints of HPC was essential, I set out to create one.

The resulting solution was immediate and universal. This wasn’t gradual uptake; it was an incredible adoption of an urgently required solution that, within months, spread from zero to virtually the entire ecosystem of national labs and supercomputing centers. That is how containers came to HPC, and how everything that followed became possible.

Docker served as the inspiration for an HPC-specific containerization technology

Before we get to Apptainer, we have to go back to Singularity.

The Problem That Refused to Stay Quiet

High-performance computing had a portability problem. Researchers spent weeks configuring software environments locally that could not be reproduced on an HPC resource, much less portably or reproducibly between systems. Experiments could not be replicated. Collaboration stopped at the software boundary instead of the scientific one.

Docker made containers accessible by providing well understood interfaces as well as build and mobility APIs and standards for containers, but Docker was not built for HPC. It consisted of privileged daemons, root-owned runtimes, security models designed for enterprise workloads: none of it belonged on a shared research system where a single misconfiguration affects thousands of users. HPC administrators faced a binary choice. Open the door to Docker and accept the risk of everyone having root and circumventing the resource manager, or keep it closed and leave researchers to fight the same environment problems indefinitely.

I was working at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in 2015 when I decided to see if I could prototype a solution. I built Singularity to solve the actual problem: define a software environment once, run it anywhere, without privilege escalation, without a daemon, and without asking a system administrator to trade security for portability.

The solution mattered to everybody.

The Big Bang of HPC Containers

Apptainer helps simplify the management of HPC resources

What happened next was not gradual adoption, it was immediate and global uptake. Researchers and system administrators at national laboratories, universities, and supercomputing centers found Singularity and understood immediately the painpoint that it solved for them. Within months, Singularity ran on some of the most powerful systems in the world: national labs, TOP500 clusters, academic HPC centers serving thousands of researchers across every major scientific discipline.

The impact was concrete. Weeks spent on environment configuration became hours. Multi-institution collaborations that had stalled over software reproducibility found a path forward. Bioinformatics pipelines, molecular dynamics simulations, climate models, particle physics workflows, genomics analysis: all of it ran portably, reproducibly, securely, and at scale.

Singularity was not a container tool adapted for HPC. It was the first container tool built for HPC. That is why it spread the way it did.

An Act of Stewardship

As Singularity grew, I made a decision to offer the project to the Linux Foundation to provide it a permanent home to always be governed by the community it served. It was accepted and renamed to Apptainer.

The name change confused some people. It should not have. Renaming the project was an act of love for what it had become. I wanted Apptainer to outlast any single company, contributor, or business decision (which is why Rocky Linux is also not owned by a company, not even mine!). The Linux Foundation provided exactly what the project needed. Apptainer 1.0 shipped in 2022: mature, stable, community-governed, and built to last.

More recently, Apptainer joined the Linux Foundation’s High Performance Software Foundation (HPSF), a broader effort to sustain the open source software stack that scientific computing depends on. The foundation under it keeps getting stronger.

What 10 Years Reveals

Apptainer proved something the HPC community knew but could not always articulate. Scientific computing has requirements that legacy infrastructure was not designed to meet. Portability, security, and reproducibility was just the beginning. It was the view point that was needed to see what the future of high-performance computing looks like and the urgency for it.

The Question Apptainer Made It Possible to Ask

Containers solved portability and reproducibility, but this was not the whole problem.

As HPC workloads grew more complex and AI entered the picture, a new set of requirements emerged. New types of orchestration and meta-orchestration for large-scale heterogeneous compute environments. Scheduling and management across distributed infrastructure, lowering the barrier for users, and scheduling resource consuming services like inferencing and Jupyter Notebooks alongside compute and MPI jobs where data is a tier 1 resource requirement.

That question is now the defining challenge of HPC and AI infrastructure. The next advance in scientific and AI computing is not faster hardware alone. It is a modern computing architecture that gives users the ability to orchestrate that hardware intelligently, at scale, without surrendering control over data, environment, or security. Apptainer proved that building for the actual problem produces results that outlast any single tool, company, or era. The same principle points the way forward.

One Long View

I have spent decades working on software that researchers depend on to do science that matters. Apptainer runs on the fastest machines in the world. The science it enabled spans every major scientific discipline. The governance model I chose for it means it will continue to run for the next decade and the one after that.

What started as a solution to a portability problem became the architecture for reproducible science. What started as a single tool became a community. What started as one answer is now the foundation for the next generation of innovation.

That is a good decade’s work. The next one has already started.

About the author:  Gregory Kurtzer is the CEO and Founder of CIQ and the original creator of Singularity and Apptainer. Join the Apptainer community at https://github.com/apptainer/apptainer

The post Ten Years of Apptainer/Singularity: A Look Back at the Big Bang of HPC Containers appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 15:57

The House of Representatives is set to vote Wednesday on renewing a spy power that grants the Trump administration warrantless access to thousands of Americans’ communications.

While uniting against President Donald Trump on many fronts, Democrats are split on what to do over the domestic spying power — and the party’s leadership isn’t giving much guidance, according to a congressional notice obtained by The Intercept.

Clark gave straight up-or-down recommendations on many other pieces of legislation, but not the spying law.

In the notice laying out leadership’s advice on bills up for a vote this week, Democratic Whip Katherine Clark simply explained that the relevant top committee leaders were split. House Intelligence Committee Ranking Member Jim Himes supports a clean reauthorization of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, while Judiciary Committee Ranking Member Jamie Raskin wants further reforms.

Clark gave straight up-or-down recommendations on many other pieces of legislation, but not the spying law.

With leadership silent, progressive activists are trying to step into the void to pressure members. They say Trump’s disregard for the rule of law in his second term means that representatives should only vote for the law with reforms. Government officials have engaged a pattern of abuses at the Justice Department.

Centrists on two key committees, on the other hand, say that modest changes enacted in 2024 went far enough and Congress should give Trump the so-called “clean” reauthorization he has requested.

“They, I don’t think, have a stance on this,” Jake Laperruque, deputy director of the Center for Democracy and Technology’s security and surveillance project, said of the Democratic leadership. “I would hope the gutting of oversight systems and what we have seen at DOJ and politicization there would push them against that — but we don’t know yet.”

With Republicans themselves divided, the margin within the Democratic caucus could prove crucial.

Rather than advising members how to vote, however, Democratic leaders is stepping aside. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., has said that he personally supports reforms but has not signaled that he will pressure his caucus. (Jeffries’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.)

The debate concerns Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which last came up for renewal in April 2024.

The law allows intelligence agencies to hoover up ostensibly “foreign” communications, such as text messages and emails, and then search them for information about Americans. Intelligence agencies conduct thousands of these “backdoor” searches every year.

Safeguards are supposed to ensure that the National Security Agency and FBI are only searching for information on genuine national security threats. Past reviews of the program have regularly found violations, however, including instances where spy agencies searched for information on Black Lives Matter activists and even members of Congress.

Related

Dan Goldman Supported Warrantless Spying on Americans. Now His Primary Opponent Is Hitting Him for It.

During the last reauthorization, Congress enacted a handful of reforms meant to put tighter rules into place for when intelligence agencies can search through the collected data, and to ensure that there are more after-the-fact audits. Since then, a review by an inspector general found a steep decrease in the number of apparent violations.

Supporters of a “clean” reauthorization say those reforms went far enough. Opponents say they still want Congress to force intelligence agents to go to a court to ask for a warrant.

Grassroots Opposition?

Progressive groups are trying to exert grassroots pressure. They targeted Himes, the centrist supporter of the “clean” renewal, at a town hall in his district last month, asking him to withdraw his support for the spying law.

Related

NSA Won’t Say If It Automatically Transcribes American Phone Calls in Bulk

Himes, however, has not budged, saying that he is confident that there have been no abuses under Trump. For his part, Himes is lobbying his fellow members: He convinced House Foreign Affairs Committee Ranking Member Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., to support a clean reauthorization.

On the other side of the debate, Raskin has pointed out that Trump has gutted key oversight bodies, including the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board. Advocates have also pointed more recently to a secret court opinion, reported by the New York Times, which found significant problems with how the government is tracking its searches of information about Americans.

“These models give a lot of leverage to analysts working inside the national security establishment.”

Prior FISA renewal fights have rarely drawn the kind of in-person, grassroots activism on display at the Himes town hall. Advocates said that what has changed this time around are growing concerns about how spy agencies can use artificial intelligence to search through reams of information on foreigners and Americans.

“These models give a lot of leverage to analysts working inside the national security establishment,” Dave Kasten, the head of policy at the AI safety nonprofit Palisade Research, said on a call with reporters on Tuesday, “which certainly can be both a good thing and a bad thing, depending on the uses to which they are put.”

Further fueling those concerns is the fact that federal intelligence agencies increasingly rely on information obtained through commercial data brokers, which the government contends does not require a warrant even when it pertains to U.S. citizens.

Aside from committee leaders, the FISA reauthorization fight has also split some of the powerful Democratic caucuses.

The Congressional Black Caucus is poised to support a “clean” reauthorization, The American Prospect reported Monday. The caucus did not respond to a request for comment.

In contrast, the chairs of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus, the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, and the Congressional Progressive Caucus released a letter on Tuesday calling for “meaningful” reforms.

In addition to a warrant requirement for “backdoor” searches, progressives are also pushing to limit when and how intelligence agencies can use information obtained from commercial data brokers.

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Democrats Might Save Mike Johnson’s Push to Give Trump Domestic Spying Power

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., has pointed to the pending April 20 expiration of Section 702 as the reason that Congress needs to urgently renew the law. Progressives, though, pointed out that the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court effectively provided the spy agencies with a yearlong extension of their spying powers, regardless of what Congress does.

In a rare cross-chamber letter on Monday, Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., urged representatives to wait before reauthorizing the program.

“[T]here are multiple issues related to Section 702 that the American people and many Members of Congress have been left in the dark about,” he said, “including a FISA Court opinion from last month that found major compliance problems. These matters should be declassified and openly debated before Section 702 is reauthorized.”

The post Dem Leaders Aren’t Even Bothering to Rally Caucus Against Trump Domestic Spying Powers appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-04-14 16:04
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A $12,000 CD account offers a good balance of profitability and flexibility. Here's what it can earn in interest now.

2026-04-15 12:04
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Why Should Delaware Care?
ChristianaCare is Delaware’s largest hospital system. It is one of the state’s largest private employers, as well as a powerful political entity. Its current CEO announced she is retiring before the end of the year, and that her successor is rising from within the hospital’s own ranks. 

Dr. Janice Nevin, the longtime president and CEO of Delaware’s largest hospital system, ChristianaCare, announced Tuesday that she is retiring at the end of the summer.

Nevin, who served in the top executive role for more than 12 years, will end her tenure as the hospital expands its reach and continues its fight against state regulations.

Jenn Schwartz, the hospital’s executive vice president and chief strategy officer, will take her place in September. 

In a statement announcing her retirement, Nevin said working as ChristianaCare’s CEO was the “greatest honor” of her career. 

“Together, we have built an organization defined by love and excellence, and by an unwavering commitment to improving the health and well-being of those we are privileged to serve,” Nevin wrote. 

Nevin’s announcement comes as the hospital expands both in and out of state and braces for federal cuts to Medicare and Medicaid, all while engaging in a bitter fight in the statehouse to oppose proposed primary care price cap legislation

When asked why Nevin was retiring, a spokesperson said the decision was planned, and it followed a “long and extraordinary tenure.” The hospital did not make Schwartz available for an interview on Tuesday.

Still, Nevin will leave the role after having committed nearly $1 billion to health care infrastructure investments across Delaware. She also maneuvered the hospital closer to the Philadelphia market with clinics in the nearby suburbs and by securing a pediatric partnership with the prestigious Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. 

Nevin also gave the state a political black eye, coming out on top of a legal fight that led to the watering down of a hospital oversight board by removing its ability to veto hospital budgets it deemed excessive

Who is Schwartz?

The incoming CEO, Schwartz, has worked for the hospital since 2018 in various legal roles. Before starting at ChristianaCare, she worked for various legal firms across New Jersey. 

Jenn Schwartz, ChristianaCare’s executive vice president and chief strategy officer, will take over as CEO in September, following Janice Nevin’s retirement. | PHOTO COURTESY OF CHRISTIANACARE

According to her LinkedIn, Schwartz also worked for the Lourdes Health System based in Camden, N.J., for more than a decade. 

She left Lourdes shortly before it was acquired by regional health system Virtua Health, which also had a proposed merger deal with ChristianaCare last year. That deal ultimately fell through at the end of 2025. 

Combining the current ChristianaCare and Virtua Health footprints would have created a system covering more than 10 contiguous counties in New Jersey, Delaware, Pennsylvania and Maryland, with more than 600 facilities, nearly 30,000 employees and more than 500 residents and fellows.

The deal also would have required numerous regulatory sign-offs in both states, pitting potential hurdles to completing the deal. That included a review by attorneys general in Delaware and New Jersey because both systems are not-for-profits.

At ChristianaCare, Schwartz was hired as the health system’s chief legal officer in 2018, only holding that position for a year before being promoted to chief strategy officer. Schwartz held that position for nearly seven years before the hospital promoted her again to serve as executive vice president. 

In the press release announcing the leadership transition, Schwartz said she looks forward to stepping into the role and advancing the mission of the hospital. 

“This is an organization where purpose and performance are inseparable, and where caregivers bring our values to life in meaningful ways every day,” Schwartz said. 

ChristianaCare President and CEO Dr. Janice Nevin talks with then-U.S. Sen. Chris Coons and Rep. Lisa Blunt Rochester in 2021 about the system’s COVID response. | PHOTO COURTESY OF COONS OFFICE

A changed ChristianaCare

Originally from England, Nevin came to Delaware as a teenager to attend the prestigious St. Andrew’s School in Middletown.

She later graduated from Harvard University and began her medical career at Thomas Jefferson University Medical College in Philadelphia. She moved to ChristianaCare in 2002 to become chair of the Department of Family and Community Medicine.

Nevin would later serve as executive director of ChristianaCare’s Wilmington Campus, where she led a $210 million transformation of the site. In 2014, she was named the first female CEO in the health system’s history.

Over the last decade, Nevin has changed the system in small and big ways, including removing the space in its name from Christiana Care to ChristianaCare and acquiring its first out-of-state hospital in Elkton, Md.

She also was a significant voice during the COVID pandemic, requiring that ChristianaCare staff be vaccinated to work with the public and encouraging the public to follow suit while also discussing the mental toll that the pandemic played on her workforce. The hospital famously was where then-President-elect Joe Biden received his first dose of the COVID vaccine on live TV.

By the time COVID ended, however, relationships had strained, and ChristianaCare became the first health system in Delaware to host a unionization movement among physicians. Nearly two years after the union won its vote, the health system has yet to ratify its first contract with them.

A legacy of expansion

At the end of the summer, Nevin will step down having left a legacy of regional expansion. But she also will leave ahead of a slew of challenges likely to upend hospital revenues statewide. 

In recent months, the hospital has announced expansions both in and out of the state after saying last summer it would spend $865 million on new health facilities in the coming years. 

In February, the health care giant announced it aims to open a new $65 million campus in Georgetown. Months before that, it said it was building a health center dedicated to treating cancer in Middletown.

The health care system expects its new Georgetown facility — which would offer emergency beds, behavioral health care, specialty care and primary care — to open by 2028. It is partnering with health care-focused developer Emerus Holdings to build the facility at 20769 DuPont Blvd., just south of the Bridgeville Road intersection. 

After the failed bid to merge with Southern New Jersey’s Virtua Health, the Georgetown plans could indicate that ChristianaCare sees more opportunity in its own backyard, and is willing to disregard the loose geographic monopolies that health care systems have enjoyed in Delaware for decades. 

“This new campus will help close gaps in access by bringing high-quality, equitable and more convenient care directly into the community that needs it most,” Nevin said in a statement in February. “Our goal is simple: ensure that every Delawarean can access the care they need, in the right place at the right time.”

ChristianaCare plans to build this $65 million micro hospital campus in Georgetown, but it will be up to regulators as to whether to allow it. | PHOTO COURTESY OF CHRISTIANACARE

ChristianaCare’s new facility would also come as federal funds begin to flow into Delaware’s southern counties to support rural health, and the hospital system continues its expansion both in and outside the state.

Last month, ChristianaCare announced it is building a new $75 million inpatient rehabilitation facility for patients in need of physical, speech and occupational therapy near its Newark hospital.

The new 92,000‑square‑foot facility would open in the summer of 2028, offering 73 beds for rehabilitation services and creating 122 new jobs.

Its Middletown cancer center, which is slated to open in May 2027, would solidify its foothold in the suburbs south of the C&D Canal. The $92 million health center would bring primary care, behavioral health, pediatrics, neurology and cardiovascular care, among others.

Since 2020, ChristianaCare also has ventured deeper into the suburban Philadelphia health market, purchasing defunct hospitals and building its own in the surrounding towns. The hospital system announced last year it would partner with the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, better known as CHOP, leaving Delaware’s chief pediatric hospital, Nemours Children’s Health, on the sidelines.

Political fights

Nevin and ChristianaCare recently pulled away with a political win after a lawsuit they filed in 2024 to strip a hospital oversight board of its most powerful enforcement mechanism yielded a change to the law, watering down the power of that board. 

Delaware senators held their first debate last month over a health care reform proposal that would prioritize investments for primary care. But even though the bill made it out of committee, it still must overcome powerful and well-funded opposition. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY NICK STONESIFER

Still, the system has another fight ahead before Nevin’s retirement. 

In March, Delaware legislators introduced Senate Bill 1, a primary health care reform bill with price cap provisions. Soon after the state introduced the bill, the state’s hospital systems began their opposition campaign in force. 

If the law passes as is, it would put a ceiling on how high hospitals can charge patients covered by state-regulated insurance plans for care. The bill is currently awaiting a hearing in the Senate Finance Committee. 

Nevin and the state’s hospital apparatus at large will likely continue to press ahead with their lobbying efforts against the bill in the coming months.

The post ChristianaCare CEO Nevin to retire, hospital names successor appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

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Six in 10 Americans say they pay more than their fair share in taxes, recent polling shows. Only one-third believe they pay the right amount.

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A majority of investor-owned utilities surveyed by PowerLines said data centers are a top driver of capital spending.

2026-04-14 16:04
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Democratic Rep. Eric Swalwell and GOP Rep. Tony Gonzales officially submitted their resignation letters to the House clerk on Tuesday.

2026-04-14 20:04
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The AI boom first came for GPUs, and that was followed by a surge in demand for memory. Now the AI boom is impacting the market for CPUs, which is facing supply shortages and price hikes that could impact organizations looking to build and launch AI products, as well as anybody else who requires a CPU.

“Over the last six months we’ve seen the entire cloud market run out of CPUs,” SemiAnalysis Founder Dylan Patel said recently. “There’s no capacity anywhere, and that’s causing a lot of instability.”

For instance, Microsoft’s GitHub version control website has become unstable lately, and developers who use it are running into errors, Patel said. That’s because “Microsoft sold all the CPUs that they had spared to other people, either internally used for their lab, but more so for external labs,” he said. “They’ve signed deals with Anthropic and OpenAI, so they have no CPUs left.”

AWS is also feeling the CPU crunch, even though it has increased the volume of CPUs by 3X over the past year, Patel said. In his annual letter to shareholders, Amazon CEO Andy Jassey wrote: “…[T]wo large AWS customers have already asked if they could buy *all* of our Graviton instance capacity in 2026 (Graviton is our widely-adopted custom CPU chip)—we can’t agree to these requests given other customers’ needs, but it gives you an idea of the demand.]”

“There is no capacity anywhere,” SemiAnalysis Founder Dylan Patel said in an interview

Patel made his comments during an on-stage interview with Ivan Burazin at the Daytona Compute Conference last month. During the interview, which you can view here, he elaborated on the causes of the CPU shortage.

CPUs have always played a role in AI,, and have been used for tasks like storage, data pre-processing, pre-training, and checkpointing during AI training runs, Patel said. “But it was pretty light,” he said.

Then in early 2025, something changed: the emergence of reasoning models. Suddenly, we had much more capable AI models, and that capability is driving demand for CPUs.

Instead of using regex to do a simple check of a model, customers are now running much more elaborate checks on models, he said.

“You’re doing code unit test and compilation,” he said. “You’re running agentic flows where it’s actually calling databases and stuff. Or you’re interfacing with some environment that is heavy on CPU, like a physics simulation or a biology simulation.

“You just kept stepping into more and more complicated things, where the model outputs to check it, this reinforcement learning environment, and then goes back and trains on it,” Patel continued. “And this loop has gotten tighter and tighter over the last couple of years.”

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang poses with his “inference king” belt from SemiAnalysis at GTC 26

We’ve been tracking this trend of CPUs becoming cool again here at HPCwire. We’ve watched the processing demands of AI evolve, as AI inference overtook AI training in importance. We’ve seen new server stacks emerge for the two stages of AI inference, prefill and decode stages, which have significantly different requirements.

We’ve seen Nvidia respond to these changing dynamics by delaying the launch of the Rubin CPX GPU, which it announced just seven months ago for AI inference, and instead pile its chips on other processor types, including the Groq LPU that it spent $20 billion to acquire the IP rights to, as well as its new Vera ARM CPU, both of which the company is counting on to drive “inference king” economics.

We’ve watched as Arm Holdings emerge from the sidelines last month with its very first piece of silicon, the AGI CPU, which it co-designed with Meta to serve the booming AI inference market. We saw chipmaker d-Matrix buy GigaIO’s data center business earlier this month to extend its reach beyond its PCI-attached AI accelerator, and just last week we watched as SambaNova and Intel hooked up last week to create a new blueprint for building massively scalable systems for AI inference.

While GPUs and other AI accelerators dominated the first stage of the AI boom, leading to GPU giant Nvidia becoming the most valuable company in the world, the current stage of AI requires oodles of CPUs to handle the wide variety of computing tasks that come with running AI inference at scale.

Intel and AMD have nearly sold out of server CPUs for the entire year and are considering a 10% to 15% priced hike, KeyBanc analysts John Vinh and Ryan Rosumny wrote in a January report.

Intel’s stock is up 211% over the past 12 months, while AMD’s stock is up 169%. While Intel’s Xeon CPU still control’s the lion’s share of the server market, AMD’s EYPC CPU has made big strives and now accounts for 41% of the server market.

Demand for server CPUs is bleeding over into other segments. PC makers like Dell and HP reportedly are struggling to get CPUs for home and office computers, as the lead time for CPUs has jumped from two weeks to six months.

In some cases, there just aren’t any CPUs to be had. “If money can solve the problem, that would be great,” an executive for a gaming PC brand told Nikkei Asia. “What we worry about is that even if we pay more, we still cannot get more. The CPU shortage is getting more serious day by day, no less than the memory chip situation.”

Related Items:

SambaNova and Intel In Latest AI Inference Chip Tie-Up

Arm Flexes with New Data Center CPU for AI Inference

AI Boom Comes for CPUs, Which Are ‘Cool Again’

The post Need Some CPUs? Good Luck With That appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 15:22

Grand jury brings manslaughter charge over fatal 2024 operation where patient died on table

A surgeon in Florida has been indicted for manslaughter after he wrongly removed a patient’s liver instead of his spleen during an August 2024 procedure.

Thomas Shaknovsky, 44, was indicted by a grand jury in Tallahassee on Monday after prosecutors said he botched the surgery of 70-year-old William Bryan, of Muscle Shoals, Alabama.

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The upcoming iOS update could also bring end-to-end encrypted RCS messaging to your device.

2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 15:03

Experts say climate pattern could supercharge extreme weather events and push temperatures to record highs

There is a high likelihood that the phenomenon known as “El Niño” will emerge this summer – and it could be exceptionally strong. A so-called “super El Niño” could supercharge extreme weather events and push global temperatures to record heights next year if it develops, according to experts.

Meteorologists are keeping a close eye on the climate patterns developing in the Pacific Ocean that will enable stronger predictions about what’s to come in the year ahead.

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-14 15:03

Studio and television business, ESPN, certain corporate functions and more to see workforce reduced, source says

Walt Disney’s new chief executive, Josh D’Amaro, announced layoffs in an email to employees on Tuesday, as he looks to streamline the company’s operations.

About 1,000 positions will be eliminated, according to a person familiar with the development.

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2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 15:01

With the army’s size halved since the cold war, UK ambitions to be globally deployable do not match the reality, experts say

If Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022 was a wake-up call for Nato, the war in the Gulf has brought some harsh realities home to the British public about the state of the UK’s armed forces.

While air defence systems and fighter jets were already in place or deployed relatively swiftly, the time it took to send a single destroyer to Cyprus in the form of HMS Dragon focused minds on Britain’s military readiness and capabilities.

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2026-04-14 16:04
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Measure by Jamie Raskin follows statements by Trump about annihilating Iran and post depicting himself as Jesus

House Democrats on Tuesday proposed creating a commission that would work with JD Vance to remove Donald Trump from office under the 25th amendment, should they determine he is no longer fit to serve.

The measure, introduced by Jamie Raskin, the top Democrat on the House judiciary committee, follows a series of statements from Trump, including his recent warning that Iran’s “whole civilization will die” if it did not capitulate to his demands, and a social media post that depicted him as Jesus Christ.

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Google is rolling out a Chrome feature called "Skills" that lets users save Gemini prompts as reusable one-click workflows they can run across multiple tabs. The feature also includes preset Skills from Google. It's launching first for Chrome desktop users set to US English. The Verge reports: Once you have access to the feature, it can be managed by typing a forward slash ( / ) in Gemini and clicking the compass icon. AI prompts can be saved as Skills directly from your Gemini chat history on desktop, where they'll then be available to reuse on any other desktop devices that are signed into the same Google account on Chrome. The aim is to spare Chrome users from having to manually retype frequently used Gemini prompts or having to copy and paste them over from a saved list. Some of the Skills made by early testers include commands for calculating the nutritional information of online recipes and creating a side-by-side comparison of product specifications while shopping across multiple tabs, according to Google. The company is also launching a library of preset Skills that you can save and use instead of making your own. These ready-to-use Skills can also be customized to better suit your needs, providing a starting point without requiring you to create your own from scratch.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Hands hold a closed vial full of green liquid.
An employee holds a sample of cannabis in the process of being tested at Kaycha Labs, a Denver facility that can test for contamination and the presence of illegal synthetic compounds. Stephen Swofford/The Denver Gazette

Colorado regulators announced on Monday that they plan to crack down on companies that illegally sell cheaper and potentially hazardous hemp products as marijuana.

The state’s Marijuana Enforcement Division said it had detected “regulatory compliance issues” that threaten to unravel the marijuana industry in the nation’s first legal retail market.

These issues “present serious risks to public safety, market integrity and the tax revenue framework that supports Colorado’s regulated cannabis industry,” the agency stated in an industry bulletin.

A Denver Gazette and ProPublica investigation in January reported that, despite Colorado being one of the first states to ban the sale of intoxicating hemp products, the legislature and regulators failed to adopt many regulations that other states have employed to keep hemp products off marijuana dispensary shelves.

Creating the liquid distillate for vapes and edibles from hemp is much cheaper than using marijuana, giving companies a competitive advantage.

But regulators say they’re worried because manufacturers rely on toxic and potentially hazardous chemicals to convert the nonintoxicating compound CBD that is prevalent in hemp into THC, the psychoactive compound that makes people feel high. Regulators have banned such chemical synthesis because they say they fear chemical residues could remain in finished products, imperiling consumers.

Colorado manufacturers have exploited gaps in the state’s testing and enforcement system to continue using hemp to make products marketed as marijuana, even though doing so is against state law, according to regulatory investigations, previous agency bulletins and testimony and lab results contained in several lawsuits.

In 2024, state investigators found that one popular brand of marijuana vapes sold in dispensaries was not only derived from hemp, but also contaminated with methylene chloride, a chemical often used to convert CBD from hemp into THC. It is prohibited by Colorado’s marijuana regulators and banned for most uses by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency because it can cause liver and lung cancer and damage the nervous, immune and reproductive systems.

Ware Hause, the company that manufactured those vapes, surrendered its marijuana license in response to the investigation. Ware Hause’s owner, Thanh Hau, and the company’s lawyer have declined to comment.

Congress passed a law last November banning nearly all intoxicating hemp products throughout the country starting this fall, but it’s unclear how the government will implement that ban, and hemp manufacturers are pushing to overturn it.

In December, President Donald Trump issued an executive order telling his aides to work with Congress on developing regulations that could allow some hemp products.

Colorado’s Marijuana Enforcement Division announced in the Monday bulletin that agency officials had “identified and investigated evidence” indicating marijuana businesses are using illicit practices and banned methods to manufacture products instead of relying on marijuana, which is supposed to be tracked for safety.

The Colorado Hemp Association and the Colorado Hemp Education Association did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Beyond the safety issues, the bulletin also noted that some marijuana manufacturers and cultivators are avoiding marijuana tax obligations through “a pattern of noncompliance” in the sales transactions they report to the state’s “seed-to-sale” tracking system, which follows marijuana from initial planting to the sale of pot, vapes and other products in dispensaries.

Companies are misreporting their bulk marijuana sales at nominal prices, in some cases as low as $1 a pound for unprocessed marijuana material, the bulletin stated. Those products typically fetch as much as $600 a pound on the open market, depending on the category of marijuana, according to industry insiders.

Such fraudulent reporting has robbed the state and local governments of millions of dollars in marijuana tax revenue, industry insiders say, though there’s no official estimate.

The agency said it would pursue emergency rules to address such problems. Suspicious and anomalous transactions and inventories the state detects will prompt investigations, the bulletin stressed. Companies caught using hemp or other illicit material they pass off as marijuana face “immediate product embargo, license suspension or revocation, significant monetary penalties and referral to law enforcement,” the regulators warned.

The Denver Gazette and ProPublica have attempted to track anomalous transactions, but the Marijuana Enforcement Division has maintained that the sales transaction records, even those that don’t identify companies, are not public. 

Marijuana industry representatives met with division regulators late last month to press for a more aggressive response to hemp substitution from the agency, even though it could affect some companies in the industry. The representatives argued that bad actors are unfairly driving down prices and shifting the tax burden to manufacturers and cultivators who are trying to follow the rules. The bulletin was released a couple of weeks after that meeting.

“The division is also exploring additional modifications to its testing and screening protocols to detect” illicit products and banned methods, and it may require additional lab testing “of products throughout the supply chain as needed,” the agency’s bulletin stated.

The post Colorado Marijuana Regulators Pledge Crackdown on Intoxicating Hemp appeared first on ProPublica.

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The company refines its dual-refresh esports monitor, the InZone M10S 2, with speed bumps and other tweaks.

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April 14, 2026 — DARPA has launched the Heterogeneous Architectures for Quantum (HARQ) program, an effort aimed at overcoming one of the most persistent barriers in quantum computing: how to move beyond single-technology systems to achieve and scale practical, high-impact applications.

Despite rapid progress across the quantum ecosystem, most current approaches are built around a single type of quantum bit (qubit), which is the basic unit of quantum information. This constraint forces researchers to design entire systems around the limitations of one technology. The resulting homogeneous model stands in stark contrast to classical computing, which derives its power from heterogeneity through the integration of specialized processors such as CPUs, GPUs, and ASICs, each optimized for specific tasks. HARQ is challenging the quantum community to take a similar approach.

At its core, HARQ seeks to establish a new paradigm: heterogeneous quantum computing architectures that combine different qubit types, each selected for what it does best, into a single system.

“Qubit technologies each have their own distinct advantages, but no single approach can deliver everything needed for large-scale, high-performance quantum systems. HARQ is asking the community to shift away from a ‘one-qubit-to-rule-them-all’ mindset,” said DARPA Program Manager Justin Cohen. “We aim to define what a truly heterogeneous quantum architecture looks like and to develop the interconnects that make those systems possible. If successful, this approach could provide a far more efficient path to scaling quantum computing and unlock applications that remain out of reach today.”

To realize this vision, 19 performer teams* from 15 organizations will work on one of two parallel workstreams:

  • Multi-qubit Optimized Software Architecture through Interconnected Compilation (MOSAIC) is centered around developing software frameworks and circuit compilers that can optimize a quantum algorithms’ performance and resources by using diverse qubit types. As its name suggests, the goal is to create compiled “mosaics” of physical circuits that are significantly more efficient than those produced by single-platform systems.
  • Quantum Shared Backbone (QSB) is focused on the hardware challenge of creating high-fidelity interconnects that support communication between different types of qubits. These efforts aim to enable technologies that link disparate qubit platforms within a single system.

From Experimentation to Application at Scale

For quantum developers, HARQ represents a call to rethink system design beyond a single qubit type. For prospective users across industry, government, and national security, it signals a path forward from experimentation to operational capability.

Over the next 24 months, HARQ performers will collaborate through intensive technical interchange and co-design efforts to develop the architectural principles, tools, and components needed for these systems. By demonstrating the feasibility and scalability of a heterogeneous approach, HARQ aims to lay the groundwork for larger-scale demonstrations and future quantum infrastructure investments, and pave the way for a new generation of quantum machines with the power to accelerate discoveries in materials science, chemistry, medicine, and beyond, providing a decisive advantage for national security.

Performer Teams

Mosaic

  • Infleqtion
  • MemQ
  • Q-CTRL
  • University of Michigan
  • University of Pennsylvania

QSB

  • Australian National University
  • Carnegie Mellon University
  • École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL)
  • Harvard University
  • IonQ
  • Stanford University
  • University of California Berkeley
  • University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

*17 of the 19 teams are on contract; two are still in negotiation. DARPA will update this announcement once those agreements are signed.

More from HPCwire: DARPA Details HARQ Effort to Advance Heterogeneous Quantum Systems


Source: DARPA

The post DARPA Launches HARQ Program to Advance Heterogeneous Quantum Architectures appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 14:51

Refugee Council criticises Labour’s decision, saying military sites are unsuitable and ‘more expensive than hotels’

Hundreds of asylum seekers have been removed from government-funded hotels while others have been sent to live in army barracks, the Home Office has announced.

Eleven “asylum hotels” in England, Scotland and Northern Ireland have been closed, as first reported by the Guardian, and more will close “in the coming weeks”. About 350 claimants have been moved to the Crowborough military camp in east Sussex, described by a spokesperson as “basic accommodation”.

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At $200, they're pricey if all you want is a basic wired model. But the open-back design has its benefits.

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The lead U.S. negotiator, Vice President JD Vance, has sought a moratorium on uranium enrichment of at least 20 years. Tehran’s offer would last up to five.

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2026-04-14 14:31

Trawler set off from Bangladesh and reportedly capsized due to heavy winds, rough seas and overcrowding

About 250 people are missing after a boat carrying Rohingya refugees and Bangladeshi nationals capsized in the Andaman Sea, according to the UN’s refugee and migration agencies.

The agencies said the trawler carrying more than 250 men, women and children reportedly sank due to harsh weather and overcrowding. It had departed from Teknaf in southern Bangladesh and was bound for Malaysia.

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2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 14:30

A total of 150 candidates have submitted paperwork, but here are the frontrunners for the election

The race is on to succeed Gavin Newsom, the California governor with presidential ambitions whose term runs out this year – and it’s off to an unexpected and messy start.

On 13 April, the early frontrunner, congressman Eric Swalwell, suspended his bid for the role, following allegations of sexual misconduct. With less than two months until election day, it’s unclear whether another Democrat will race to the top in reliably blue California.

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2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 14:26

Growth forecasts cut for US and global economy, while UK suffers sharpest downgrade in G7

A further escalation in the Iran war could trigger a global recession that would affect the UK more than any of the other G7 nations, the International Monetary Fund has warned.

Against an increasingly volatile backdrop, the Washington-based fund said the economic damage from the Middle East conflict was steadily rising as it cut its growth forecasts for 2026 based on the impact of the war so far.

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2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 14:22

Nearly two dozen Samsung phones and tablets are now more expensive. And this is just the beginning.

2026-04-14 16:04
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Brookhaven Lab researchers built superconducting quantum devices using a new material and a technique adapted from electronics manufacturing processes

April 14, 2026 — Beginning in the 1950s, silicon transformed the electronics industry by enabling smaller and faster devices that could be reliably manufactured at scale. More than six decades later, silicon-based semiconductors remain at the heart of many modern technologies, including so-called “classical” computers.

This scanning electron microscope image shows a superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) made with a silicon-compatible class of materials called transition metal silicides. Built upon a silicon substrate, the SQUID includes two layers of superconducting platinum silicide connected by a constriction junction. Credit: Brookhaven National Laboratory.

In pursuit of new quantum technologies, scientists and engineers have turned to specialized materials for building qubits — the fundamental components of quantum systems. For example, many qubits are made from superconducting materials deposited on sapphire substrates. But transitioning from laboratory demonstrations to scalable systems will require scientific and manufacturing infrastructure capable of supporting robust and reliable qubit fabrication.

Marking a milestone toward bridging that gap, researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Brookhaven National Laboratory have built superconducting quantum interference devices (SQUIDs) using a silicon-compatible class of materials called transition metal silicides. The research was conducted as part of the Co-design Center for Quantum Advantage (C2QA), a recently renewed National Quantum Information Science Research Center led by Brookhaven Lab.

“Making quantum devices with transition metal silicides is an approach that’s designed to feed right into the engine that’s been used for semiconductor technology,” said Charles Black, C2QA director, deputy associate laboratory director for Brookhaven’s Energy and Photon Sciences Directorate, and co-lead author on the paper that recently published in Nano Letters.

The researchers collaborated closely with NY Creates, a C2QA partner, to develop a fabrication process informed by advanced microelectronics manufacturing techniques. Using the lithography and etching capabilities available in the nanofabrication facility at the Center for Functional Nanomaterials (CFN) — a DOE Office of Science user facility at Brookhaven Lab — the researchers adapted a technique that is regularly used to synthesize the transition metal silicides used in microprocessors.

“We took this manufacturing-friendly approach so that, in the future, we could implement it at larger scales in the NY Creates facility,” explained Mingzhao Liu, a senior scientist at CFN, C2QA researcher, and co-lead paper author.

In this work, the researchers fabricated each SQUID with two superconducting constriction junctions, rather than using more conventional Josephson junctions, which have two superconducting layers separated by an insulator. The authors previously proposed that this architecture, in which the superconducting layers are connected by a thin wire, has potential to make transmon qubits more amenable to mass production. This new work marks their first experimental demonstration of constrictions in functioning quantum devices.

The SQUIDs served as a diagnostic tool, offering insights into how the constriction junctions were operating. Using CFN’s low-temperature measurement capabilities, the researchers cooled the devices to ultracold temperatures as low as 350 millikelvin and measured how current flowed through the SQUIDs under different applied magnetic fields.

“We learned that the design of the device as a whole can dampen the performance of the constriction junction,” Liu said. “But overall, the experiments showed us that the constriction junctions exhibit key properties, like nonlinearity, that are required for high-performing qubits.”

This transmission electron micrograph with false color shows a cross section of a platinum silicide nanowire. Researchers from Brookhaven National Laboratory fabricated the sample by depositing platinum (not shown) on a silicon substrate (blue), which is partially covered by silicon dioxide (green). When heated, platinum and silicon react only where they are in direct contact to form platinum silicide (black), and any remaining platinum is removed with an acid. Credit: NY Creates Metrology Department.

From Nanoscale Measurements to Center-Wide Collaboration

Advances like this are enabled by the integrated, multidisciplinary approach inherent to C2QA. By uniting expertise and infrastructure from national laboratories, universities, applied research and development organizations, and industry, the Center is accelerating progress toward high-performing qubits made from manufacturable, silicon-based materials.

Ekta Bhatia, NY Creates research scientist in quantum technologies and co-author on the paper remarked, “This publication reflects the power of our strong partnership with Brookhaven under C2QA and accelerates the development of scalable quantum computing. We look forward to building on this work with Brookhaven to drive quantum innovation together.”

Beyond the Brookhaven-NY Creates collaboration, other C2QA researchers continue to deliver breakthroughs in silicon-based quantum devices. In November 2025, for example, C2QA researchers at Princeton University reported record-breaking coherence times in superconducting qubits built on top of silicon substrates, demonstrating that silicon-based platforms can rival and surpass more traditional sapphire platforms.

By approaching the scaling problem from several perspectives — including device design, materials science, and large-scale manufacturing — C2QA researchers are delivering a synergistic impact that is greater than the sum of their individual achievements.

Black said, “We’re developing a pipeline to take advantage of the strengths of each C2QA partner — and making strides toward scalable quantum systems.”

C2QA is supported by the DOE Office of Science.

Brookhaven National Laboratory is 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. For more information, visit science.energy.gov.


Source: Danielle Roedel, Brookhaven National Laboratory

The post Brookhaven Lab: A Silicon-Compatible Path Toward Scalable Quantum Systems appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 14:04

With an e-reader, you can have entire library at your fingertips anywhere you go. We've tested and picked the top e-readers available to deliver the best reading experience.

2026-04-14 16:04
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  • Uzbek grandmaster wins Candidates with round to spare

  • Sindarov, 20, to face India’s Gukesh for world title in fall

Javokhir Sindarov will challenge for Gukesh Dommaraju’s world chess championship this fall after clinching the Candidates tournament with a game to spare on Tuesday afternoon in Cyprus.

The 20-year-old Uzbek grandmaster closed out an emphatic victory in the 14-game double round-robin with a tame 58-move draw playing with the black pieces against Dutch star Anish Giri, moving to 9½ points and leaving the world No 9 two adrift with one round remaining.

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2026-04-14 16:04
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In the US, the birth rate for 15- to 19-year-olds dropped 7% last year. But what seems like good news for society has been lamented by some leading Maga figures

Teenagers these days, eh? Instead of having unprotected sex and popping out babies, they’re wasting their time on TikTok, or something. According to a recent report, the teenage birth rate in the US fell by 7% in 2025. While this might seem like a positive development, it has been a cause of dismay among the Maga-adjacent crowd.

Take Fox News, which ran a segment framing the drop in teen pregnancies as alarming. “We still have 3.6 million births a year,” noted the medical analyst Marc Siegel. “But the problem is teens and young adults. From ages 15 to 19, the fertility rate is down 7%, and it’s down 70% over the last two decades, meaning we’re telling people that are young not to have babies, to wait until they’re in a more stable life situation.” I’m sorry, that’s a problem?

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2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 14:02

A former Nato chief demands more cash while fixing Britain’s global role. Before billions are spent, ministers must define the purpose of its military

George Robertson’s claims about the prime minister’s “corrosive complacency” over Britain’s safety made headlines. But it is a howl of pain, not a sober security analysis. The former Nato secretary general and author of the government’s strategic defence review (SDR) wants Downing Street to back his view of Britain’s role in the world – as Robin to America’s Batman – with billions of pounds of cash. But his argument takes for granted what should be under scrutiny: Britain’s global military role itself.

Donald Trump’s threats over Greenland, his disregard for international law and his U-turn over the Chagos deal expose the fragility of Britain’s defence assumptions. Before spending billions, those commitments must be re-examined. Lord Robertson’s claim of a £28bn black hole assumes that the current strategy is the correct one. But if that strategy – with its emphasis on global deployment and alliance commitments – is open to question, then the funding gap may reflect overstretch rather than insufficient spending.

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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2026-04-14 16:04
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ARLINGTON, Va., April 14, 2026 — To help secure the backbone of U.S. energy and defense, Accenture Federal Services will lead a high-velocity engineering and integration sprint to deliver an early capability for the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Genesis Mission. This sprint will focus on advancing the Critical Mineral and Materials to Unlock Supply (CM2US) initiative, which is led by DOE’s National Laboratories in partnership with Accenture.

In a powerful alliance with all U.S. Department of Energy National Laboratories and commercial leaders like Databricks Federal, Accenture Federal Services is building a scalable digital infrastructure to accelerate the delivery of the American Science and Security Platform.

This early capability will operationalize AI-powered workflows together with DOE mission data for the Genesis Mission’s Critical Mineral Supply Challenges, allowing CM2US scientists and engineers to collaborate on real-world data and research challenges – using advanced technologies – as soon as early summer to secure the nation’s most vital supply chains.

“The Genesis Mission is a generational opportunity that demands bold action and Accenture Federal Services is well-positioned to deliver it,” said Ron Ash, CEO of Accenture Federal Services. “Together with our partners, we are rapidly turning vision into reality—standing up a live, secure, AI‑ready environment where researchers can detect risks, model scenarios, and strengthen America’s critical mineral supply chain with unprecedented velocity. When world‑class science becomes real‑world mission advantage at speed and scale, the nation wins.”

“Databricks Federal is proud to support the Genesis Mission and the Department of Energy’s goal to double the pace of American scientific discovery,” said Rory Patterson, Chairman of the Board of Databricks Federal. “As a company founded by researchers, we understand that breakthroughs require more than just compute—they require an open, unified data and AI platform. By bringing data engineering, analytics, and AI into a single governed environment, we are helping the DOE National Laboratories turn massive datasets into mission-critical insights at the speed of innovation.”

“We are laying the groundwork for a scalable solution that will power scientists across the U.S. to deliver insights and outcomes at a pace that I never thought possible. What we have been able to achieve in weeks is something that I didn’t think possible in years—until now,” said Frank Alexander, Senior AI Scientist at DOE’s Argonne National Laboratory.

This rapid progress reflects the power of a unified ecosystem of DOE’s National Labs together with top commercial innovators collaborating to build a common platform that advances the Genesis Mission challenge at mission scale to meet the program’s ambitious timelines.

“Energy security starts with visibility, speed and strategic partners,” said Angie Sheffield, Director of AI Strategy for Energy at Accenture Federal Services. “By empowering researchers to connect DOE’s world-class instruments and peerless scientific datasets with commercial AI technologies in an integrated platform, CM2US moves beyond automation to intelligence – so we can discover, decide, and deliver faster on a supply chain that powers American industry.”

These efforts mark a decisive step toward delivering the Genesis Mission’s Initial Operating Capability and securing America’s critical mineral future, bringing a new model for American scientific leadership and energy security closer to reality.

About Accenture Federal Services

Accenture Federal Services is a US subsidiary of Accenture LLP that government agencies choose to drive impactful change. Our 15,000 people are committed to powering reinvention for the federal government with the same commercial technology, competitive drive and technical edge that is transforming global industry—ensuring that federal enterprises can be as modern, fast, and efficient as the country it serves. See how we reinvent at www.accenturefederal.com.

About Accenture

Accenture (NYSE:ACN) is a leading solutions and services company that helps the world’s leading enterprises reinvent by building their digital core and unleashing the power of AI to create value at speed across the enterprise, bringing together the talent of our approximately 786,000 people, our proprietary assets and platforms, and deep ecosystem relationships. Our strategy is to be the reinvention partner of choice for our clients and to be the most client-focused, AI-enabled, great place to work in the world. Through our Reinvention Services we bring together our capabilities across strategy, consulting, technology, operations, Song and Industry X with our deep industry expertise to create and deliver solutions and services for our clients. Our purpose is to deliver on the promise of technology and human ingenuity, and we measure our success by the 360° value we create for all our stakeholders. Visit us at accenture.com.


Source: Accenture

The post Accenture Federal Services to Deliver Early Operating Capability for DOE’s Genesis Mission CM2US appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 14:00

Is a CD or high-yield savings account better for savers combating rising inflation now? Here's what to consider.

2026-04-14 16:04
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Kimberlee Williams, who lived in Oklahoma, was jailed after being accused of crimes in Maryland, a state she told investigators she had never visited.

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A Chicago concert superfan Aadam Jacobs who has recorded more than 10,000 shows since the 1980s is working with Internet Archive volunteers to digitize the collection before the cassettes deteriorate. "So far, about 2,500 of these tapes have been posted on the Internet Archive, including some rare gems like a Nirvana performance from 1989," reports TechCrunch. From the report: For many of these recordings, Jacobs was using pretty mediocre equipment, but the volunteer audio engineers working with the Internet Archive have made these tapes sound great. One volunteer, Brian Emerick, drives to Jacobs' house once a month to pick up more boxes of tapes -- he has to use anachronistic cassette decks to play the tapes, which get converted into digital files. From there, other volunteers clean up, organize, and label the recordings, even tracking down song names from forgotten punk bands. The archive is available here.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 13:58

DETROIT, April 14, 2026 — The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and Argonne National Laboratory have selected 20 universities to participate in the EcoCAR Innovation Challenge and announced the two vehicle platforms chosen for the program.

Credit: EcoCAR Innovation Challenge

Managed by Argonne, the EcoCAR Innovation Challenge is the 15th installment of DOE’s Advanced Vehicle Technology Competitions (AVTC) series, which challenges university students to design and build intelligent mobility solutions and innovative products using emerging technologies, such as artificial intelligence for engineering tools, machine learning, and exascale computing.

Two industry leaders, General Motors (GM) and Stellantis, have joined the Challenge as sponsors, along with technology partner MathWorks, forming a coalition of government and industry partners focused on cultivating the next generation of auto-industry innovators. This is the first collaboration between two major automakers in the same series in more than 25 years.

“The Innovation Challenge is an investment in the next era of the American workforce,” said Assistant Secretary of Energy (EERE) Audrey Robertson. “This unprecedented collaboration between GM and Stellantis underscores the importance of building a skilled US workforce and promoting innovation. We hope to fast-track technological breakthroughs, improve the competitiveness of the American auto industry, and expand the range of options available to American consumers.”

In addition to their use of emerging technologies, participating teams will explore modifications to the vehicle propulsion system to optimize efficiency through the design and integration of electric motor systems and team-built, high-voltage batteries. GM and Stellantis will each sponsor one of the two competition tracks, which provide distinct engineering challenges and vehicle platforms that reflect the choices available to North American customers.

“EcoCAR develops engineers who understand how to integrate software, controls, advanced powertrains, and the customer experience into a single system,” said Ken Morris, Senior Vice President of Product Programs, Product Safety, Integration and Motorsports at General Motors. “We’re proud to support this competition and to help students build the practical expertise that the auto industry needs right now and we are excited to announce GM has selected the 2026 Chevy Blazer EV to provide to teams.”

“Tomorrow’s mobility solutions will be shaped by teams who can take on real-world challenges, innovate across disciplines and provide practical, intelligent results for our customers,” said Micky Bly, Senior Vice President, Global Propulsion Systems Engineering – Stellantis N.V. “EcoCAR gives students that experience, and we’re excited to support their development by providing the 2026 Jeep Cherokee hybrid, which will offer meaningful technical and learning engagement for the teams.”

“Students learn best by building, and EcoCAR lets them build using the same Model-Based Design and simulation workflows widely used in industry,” said Lauren Tabolinsky, Senior Manager, Student and Academic Global Programs at MathWorks. “We’re proud to support a program that helps bridge academic learning with engineering practices that translate directly to the workplace.”

The Universities Selected to Participate in the EcoCAR Innovation Challenge:

  1. California State University, Los Angeles – Stellantis Track
  2. Colorado School of Mines – Stellantis Track
  3. Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University – General Motors Track
  4. Georgia Institute of Technology – General Motors Track
  5. Louisiana State University – Stellantis Track
  6. McMaster University – General Motors Track
  7. Mississippi State University – General Motors Track
  8. The Ohio State University – Stellantis Track
  9. Pennsylvania State University – General Motors Track
  10. Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology – Stellantis Track
  11. Texas A&M University – Stellantis Track
  12. The University of Alabama – General Motors Track
  13. University at Buffalo – Stellantis Track
  14. University of North Carolina at Charlotte – Stellantis Track
  15. University of Tennessee, Knoxville – Stellantis Track
  16. University of Waterloo – Stellantis Track
  17. University of Wisconsin-Madison – General Motors Track
  18. Virgina Polytechnic Institute and State University – General Motors Track
  19. Western Michigan University – General Motors Track
  20. West Virginia University – General Motors Track

Additional EcoCAR Innovation Challenge sponsors announced today include Caterpillar, Siemens Digital Industries Software, dSPACE, Bosch, Altec, Hesse, and Volta Foundation.

About EcoCAR Innovation Challenge

The EcoCAR Innovation Challenge is a DOE-sponsored Advanced Vehicle Technology Competition managed by Argonne National Laboratory. The program challenges university teams to apply cutting-edge engineering to real vehicles while developing the technical, leadership, and project management skills needed for careers in automotive engineering, transportation, and advanced manufacturing.

Media Contacts

Kimberly DeClark, Argonne National Laboratory, kdeclark@anl.gov, 202-441-0096
Dale Jewett, Stellantis, dale.jewett@stellantis.com, 586-201-1247
Jack Crawley, General Motors, jack.crawley@gm.com, 248-219-4969
Tim Morin, MathWorks, timmorin@mathworks.com, 508-647-3048


Source: EcoCAR Innovation Challenge

The post DOE and Argonne Join GM, Stellantis and MathWorks to Launch EcoCAR Innovation Challenge appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 13:57

CHEYENNE, Wyo., April 14, 2026 — Microsoft Corp. today announced its intent to purchase approximately 3,200 acres of land to develop a datacenter in Cheyenne, Wyoming. This expansion builds on Microsoft’s existing datacenter footprint in Cheyenne, strengthening Southeast Wyoming’s role as a growing hub for technology-driven economic activity, innovation and job creation.

Credit: Shutterstock

“Since the development of our first datacenter in 2012, Microsoft has been working to strengthen, not strain, the community of Cheyenne,” said Bowen Wallace, Corporate Vice President, Datacenters-Americas Region, Microsoft. “We’re excited to continue our growth in the state bringing more investment, opportunity and tax revenue to the community we’ve been a part of for more than 14 years.”

The future expansion is made up of two parcels, approximately 200 acres located in Bison Business park on Wapiti Trail east of S Greeley Highway, and 3,000 acres in Southeast Cheyenne, adjacent to the 200-acre parcel accessible through Wapiti Trail, both located southeast of downtown Cheyenne.

Today’s announcement represents the start of what the company expects to be a multiyear planning and development process. There are many steps in that process, including several that require public hearings. Microsoft welcomes these formal opportunities to engage with the community and looks forward to additional informal opportunities to hear directly from residents, and ultimately ensure development plans, operations and community investments are aligned with local values, aspirations, strengths and needs.

Microsoft has committed over $68M in completed and future off-site infrastructure improvements across Cheyenne. Projects like roadway and storm sewer improvements, trail roadway and greenway improvements, new pump stations, and improved municipal water infrastructure are critical for datacenter operation, but they also make up the infrastructure systems that Cheyenne residents use every day.

“This is the latest in a long line of investments that Microsoft has brought to the city of Cheyenne as a member of our community since 2012,” said Mayor Patrick Collins. “Microsoft recognizes the strength of our city’s workers, infrastructure and economy. This expansion represents the next decade of opportunity and tax revenue that secures the quality of life that residents of our city enjoy.”

In any future development, the community of Cheyenne can expect the following:

Microsoft will pay its way to ensure datacenter development doesn’t increase electricity prices. Microsoft and Black Hills Energy have developed an innovative utility partnership in Wyoming, in which power acquisition is guided by the Large Power Contract Service (LPCS) tariff. The tariff requires Microsoft to directly pay for all the infrastructure upgrades and power procured by the utility necessary to serve its load.

“We have been a proud partner with Microsoft for more than a decade in Cheyenne, providing energy solutions and mission‑critical electric reliability to its data center operations,” said Wes Ashton, Black Hills Energy Vice President of Utilities in Wyoming and South Dakota. “That partnership supports economic growth in Wyoming, and our flexible and innovative tariff provisions allow us to meet Microsoft’s expanding energy needs while protecting base retail customers from rate impacts.”

Microsoft will continue to work to bring additional wind and other carbon-free electricity to the Western Electricity Coordinating Council (WECC), ensuring that every kilowatt hour the company’s operations consume that comes from a fossil fuel source is matched one for one with carbon-free energy the company procures.

Microsoft will minimize its water use and replenish more water than what is used. The chips housed within a datacenter produce heat. Microsoft’s existing facilities in Wyoming leverage direct evaporative cooling to cool those chips. This design uses water for cooling less than 10% of the year, with the latest datacenter designs going even further, in some cases eliminating the need for ongoing access to water for cooling after an initial fill. At the same time, Microsoft will continue to work to replenish water in the Mississippi-Missouri and Colorado River Basins. This work will build on both existing and future replenishment projects Microsoft has funded in Cheyenne that are expected to restore an estimated 566M gallons of water with the help of partners like Trout Unlimited, Frog Creek Partners, the Laramie County Conservation District and the U.S. Forest Service.

Microsoft will create jobs for residents. This infrastructure build-out will require thousands of skilled tradespeople during construction. For more than a decade, nearly 2,000 of them have already played a part in building Microsoft’s existing datacenter footprint, and this expansion represents years of additional work. Electricians, plumbers and pipefitters, carpenters, structural iron and steel workers, concrete workers, and earth movers will build a career developing the next generation of infrastructure in Cheyenne.

In addition to careers in construction, this expansion represents hundreds of full-time opportunities in areas like information technology (IT), security and maintenance to operate these facilities. Microsoft is working to make sure that members of the local community are prepared to step into these full-time roles. In 2019, Microsoft launched a Datacenter Academy in partnership with Laramie County Community College (LCCC). On the campus of LCCC, the Academy includes a working laboratory and has trained over 1,000 students.

This expansion isn’t just about the over 220 full-time Microsoft employees currently working in Cheyenne, or the hundreds more expected in the years ahead. It’s about the broader opportunity that this investment can help unlock across the region with jobs in other industries like power generation and transmission, retail, maintenance and repair, real estate, and other local industries and careers that will benefit from Microsoft’s presence for the next decade and beyond.

Microsoft will add to the tax base. One of the most tangible benefits from datacenter development, but invisible to those driving nearby, is improvements to community schools, hospitals and services due to property taxes paid by datacenter operators to the local municipality. In 2025, Microsoft datacenters contributed over $11M to the Laramie County tax base, supporting the budgets for local hospitals, schools, parks and libraries. Last year, Microsoft was the No. 1 taxpayer in the city of Cheyenne and No. 2 taxpayer in Laramie County. This property tax revenue will continue to grow with the envisioned development on these new sites.

Microsoft will strengthen the community by investing in local IT training and nonprofits. Microsoft’s commitment to Cheyenne is reflected in sustained, multiyear community investment. Since 2018, Microsoft has supported 56 community projects from 28 local organizations supporting education, workforce development and community services. Collectively, Microsoft has already donated $4.7 million to local organizations and nonprofits, including through programs like Microsoft TechSpark. Working with Laramie County Community College, and local organizations like Rooted in Cheyenne, the Boys and Girls Club of Cheyenne, the Wyoming Community Foundation, and many others, Microsoft will continue to invest in the Cheyenne community and support high-impact opportunities that advance prosperity in Wyoming.

Microsoft is committed to being a good neighbor and active community member anywhere that it builds, owns or operates facilities. Today’s announcement may not provide all  the answers to the questions residents of Cheyenne will have. More specific information will be shared during the multiyear planning and development process. We look forward to growing together.


Source: Microsoft

The post Microsoft Eyes New 3,200-Acre Datacenter Development in Wyoming appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-14 13:56

Experts say China is backing attempts at global governance, while US has set up race between profit-hungry companies

China is now the “good guy” on AI rather than Donald Trump’s US, where the technology is being pursued in a dangerous “wild west” manner, a former UN and UK government adviser has told MPs.

Prof Dame Wendy Hall, who was a member of the UN’s AI advisory board and co-wrote a review of AI for Theresa May’s government, told the House of Commons business and trade committee that China was backing multinational attempts to introduce global governance of AI, in contrast to America, which had set up a race between profit-hungry companies that relied on hype.

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2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 13:54

If you have a question about women's health, Oura's new AI model can answer it. This is what you need to know about privacy and access.

2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-14 13:50

The unpopular war with Iran and stubborn affordability issues have given Democrats cause to be more hopeful about their chances of flipping key seats — and maybe even winning control of the Senate.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 13:48

The Trump administration is ramping up its boat strike campaign, conducting three strikes in the space of three days. The U.S. has now conducted 50 strikes in its campaign of targeting civilian vessels in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean. The death toll now exceeds 170.

On April 11, the U.S. conducted attacks on two boats in the Pacific Ocean, killing two people in the first strike and leaving one shipwrecked. The search for that survivor has been abandoned and that person is presumed dead. Three people were killed in the second strike that day. These attacks were followed by another strike in the Eastern Pacific on April 13 that killed two more people.

Related

Trump Calls His Enemies Terrorists. Does That Mean He Can Just Kill Them?

As part of Operation Southern Spear, the U.S. military has now destroyed 51 vessels and killed 171 civilians. The Trump administration claims its victims are members of at least one of 24 or more cartels and criminal gangs with whom it claims to be at war but refuses to name.

The boat strikes recently moved to land as so-called “bilateral kinetic actions” along the Colombia–Ecuador border. “The joint effort, named ‘Operation Total Extermination,’ is the start of a military offensive by Ecuador against transnational criminal organizations with the support of the U.S.,” Joseph Humire, the acting assistant secretary of war for homeland defense and Americas security affairs, announced last month.

“There’s a danger that these lawless killings just become background noise.”

“There’s a danger that these lawless killings just become background noise,” Brian Finucane, a former State Department lawyer who is a specialist in counterterrorism issues and the laws of war, told The Intercept in the wake of the 50th boat strike. “The U.S. Congress remains the institution best situated to bring these to halt — if not now, then at least after the midterms. And members of Congress and 2028 hopefuls should be vowing accountability for those who participated in unlawful killings.”

Finucane and other experts in the laws of war, as well as members of Congress, from both parties, say the strikes are illegal, extrajudicial killings because the military is not permitted to deliberately target civilians — even suspected criminals — who do not pose an imminent threat of violence. The summary executions are a significant departure from standard practice in the long-running U.S. war on drugs, in which law enforcement agencies detained suspected drug smugglers and brought them to trial on criminal charges.

After blowing up one of the boats on Saturday, U.S. Southern Command sent a message to the Coast Guard alerting them to “a person in distress in the Pacific Ocean,” Coast Guard spokesperson Kenneth Wiese told The Intercept.

The Coast Guard “immediately commenced search efforts,” calling on ships in the area to divert to search for the survivor of the U.S. attack. The next day, a French-flagged cargo ship, MV Marius, diverted to the scene but “completed its search with negative results and departed the area due to operational and fuel constraints,” according to the Coast Guard. On Monday, a U.S.-flagged research vessel, RV Sikuliaq, “completed two search patterns provided by the Coast Guard with negative results.” The same day, at 10:43 Pacific time, the Coast Guard suspended its efforts after having found “no signs of survivors or debris.”

Most boat strike survivors have been purposefully killed or left to drown by the United States. Two survivors, for example, clung to the wreckage of a vessel attacked on September 2, 2025, for roughly 45 minutes. Adm. Frank Bradley — then the head of Joint Special Operations Command — sought guidance from his top legal adviser, Col. Cara Hamaguchi, the staff judge advocate at the secretive JSOC. He then ordered a follow-up attack, first reported by The Intercept in September, that killed the shipwrecked men.

Search efforts for survivors have seldom resulted in rescues. After a U.S boat strike on December 30, a Coast Guard plane did not head toward the site of the attack for almost two days, reporting from Airwars and The Intercept revealed. A total of 11 civilians died following that attack— including eight who jumped overboard.

The Coast Guard atypically rescued the survivor of a March 19 attack that killed two civilians. The Costa Rican press recently identified the deceased as Ecuadoran citizens Pedro Ramón Holguín, 40, and Carlos Manuel Rodríguez Solórzano, 34. The injured man was identified as José David Torres Hurtado, 21, a Colombian national. He reportedly remains hospitalized in the burn unit at San Juan de Dios Hospital, “where, according to medical reports, his condition is critical but stable,” said Costa Rican authorities.

The Intercept reported on Monday that the U.S. is waging a pressure campaign against the leading pan-American human rights watchdog to squash a potential investigation into the illegal boat strike campaign. After a recent meeting of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, the State Department pushed the organization to shift its focus to other issues instead of the U.S. campaign of extrajudicial killings.

The post The U.S. Is Still Routinely Killing Civilians in Boats appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 13:46

David Hinton will receive only his £400,000 salary this year after thousands of customers were left without water

The chief executive of South East Water has said he will forgo his bonus in an act of penitence for “unacceptable outages” that left thousands of customers in Kent and Sussex without water.

David Hinton told MPs on the environment, food and rural affairs select committee that he had decided not to accept an additional “performance payment” this year. Instead, he will receive only his £400,000 salary.

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2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 13:45

Lonna Drewes alleges Democratic congressman drugged and raped her at Beverly Hills hotel

Another woman has come forward to accuse Eric Swalwell of sexual assault, claiming the California Democrat drugged and raped her in 2018.

At a press conference in Beverly Hills on Tuesday, Lonna Drewes said she was working as a model in Beverly Hills, was interested in local politics, and owned a fashion software company when she met the now 45-year-old congressman.

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2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 13:40

Traeger's premium pellet grills typically cost $1,000 or more. The Westwood Series is the brand's most approachable line to date.

2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 13:29

Trump Mobile now features a third design of the T1 phone, alongside images and videos of Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr. There's still no release date.

2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 13:27

Chancellor faced with fund’s forecast that impact of Iran war will leave Britain as G7’s biggest loser

The Iran war is bad news for the global economy. But for some countries, the unfolding conflict is having a bigger impact than for others. The International Monetary Fund’s verdict is that Britain is the G7’s biggest loser.

Amid the rising damage from the Middle East war, the Washington-based fund warned UK economic growth rate would be 0.5 percentage points lower this year than it had predicted back in January – the biggest downgrade among the club of wealthy nations.

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2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 13:19
  • Mascherano coached one full season with Messi in Miami

  • Inter Miami have been off to a slow start in 2026

Javier Mascherano has stunningly stepped down as Inter Miami’s manager, just months after leading the team to their first MLS title.

In the club’s announcement of the move, Mascherano said he was leaving for “personal reasons,” though later on the announcement specifies that his coaching staff will also depart the club.

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2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 13:18

The family of Marie-Thérèse, from Brittany, fear for her health after she was cuffed and placed in a detention centre

An 86-year-old French woman who moved to the US to marry her 1950s sweetheart is being held in a crowded detention centre in Louisiana after she was arrested by immigration agents and cuffed by her hands and feet.

The family of the woman, named only as Marie-Thérèse, said they feared for her health as French consular officials attempted to secure her release. One of her sons told the Ouest-France newspaper that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) had treated his mother like a hardened criminal.

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2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 13:12

Virginia signs national popular vote bill into law, joining interstate compact with 17 other states and District of Columbia

A national majority vote for president is one step closer to reality after the Virginia governor, Abigail Spanberger, signed the national popular vote bill into law, joining an interstate compact with 17 other states and the District of Columbia.

Under the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact, states would assign their presidential electors to the winner of the popular vote, regardless of the results within the state. The compact takes effect when states representing a majority of electoral votes – 270 of 538 – pass the legislation and thus would determine the winner of the presidential contest. With Virginia, the compact now has 222 electors.

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2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 13:11

Remarks come as Italian PM suspends defence agreement with Israel amid growing domestic pressure over conflict

Donald Trump lashed out at one of his closest allies on Tuesday, saying Italy’s Giorgia Meloni lacked courage in light of her failure to join the US in attacking Iran.

“I’m shocked at her. I thought she had courage, but I was wrong,” the US president said in an interview with the Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera.

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2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 13:06

Flock Safety is setting up camears and drones across the country. I spoke to cities fighting back against the AI surveillance, privacy advocates and Flock itself.

2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 13:05

Thousands face power outages and a number of schools close across region as forecasters warn of hail and flooding

A day after severe storms damaged communities in the Plains and the midwest, forecasters warned that storms could bring giant hail, tornadoes and severe wind gusts to the regions again on Tuesday afternoon and evening.

Authorities in Kansas reported several people with minor injuries after storms passed through on Monday. Three people were left with minor injuries in rural Franklin county, about 50 miles (80km) south-west of Kansas City, according to the sheriff’s office. In the town of Ottawa, officials said there was structural damage, but no deaths or injuries. A National Weather Service survey team will assess damage in the Ottawa area on Tuesday to determine whether a tornado passed through there, according to Chelsea Picha, a meteorologist with the weather service’s office in Topeka.

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2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 13:03

Several state houses have introduced bills that would heavily curtail your use of 3D printing. We want to know how you feel about that.

2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 13:00

Google is launching a new feature, Skills in Chrome, that allows you to save and reuse your go-to AI prompts.

2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 13:00
Kayla Belfont

KAYLA BELFONT
Staff Reporter

Lauren Boyer

LAUREN BOYER
Opinion Columnist

Fools in the Sun formed on the university’s campus last October. The band already has more than 2,500 followers on Instagram and has celebrated their one-year anniversary. 

“What’s kind of ridiculous is the amount of growth we’ve had,” Tyler Urie, the band’s drummer, said. “Like, if I’m being completely honest, I never thought we’d really play more than three shows a semester, right?”

Urie, a senior at the university, has been making electronic dance music (EDM) for as long as he can remember. Ever since he was a child, Urie could recall being surrounded by instruments to play with.

Other band members include Stephen Oneto, Andy Stefancik, Nicole Koehler, Dylan Ngo and Coleman Walsh. 

In addition to a variety of musical genres, the band’s wide range of experiences and interests also influenced the unique sound they create.

“As for the music that we write, I think it’s kind of a blend of all of the different music genres that have influenced us growing up,” Oneto said.

Oneto, a senior majoring in entrepreneurship, plays guitar and piano for the band. Stefancik, who also plays the guitar and piano, started playing the saxophone in middle school and picked up the piano during the pandemic. Now a senior, he is pursuing degrees in meteorology and climate science.

Koehler, who sings for the band, is a public relations communication major. She began her musical career in musical theater. Ngo sings, plays guitar and is a senior majoring in liberal studies with a medical scholars concentration at the university. 

Like Koehler, he has experience in musical theater, along with Walsh, who is a senior majoring in cognitive science and computer science and plays bass and piano for the band. 

After Ngo’s freshman year, the idea for a band was planted. 

“It was more just something fun to do,” Ngo said. “I actually taught Stephen guitar during the summer after freshman year of college and he started getting really good and we started playing together where we would hang out back at home,” Ngo said. “And that kind of became like, a routine thing whenever we would hang out. 

Stefancik, whom Ngo met in college, was already in a band, and they initially considered joining him. Instead, Ngo and Oneto formed their own group, with Stefancik later joining them. 

“We started one ourselves, just out of pure creativity and interest,” Ngo said.

Urie joined the band at Stefancik’s invitation, as the two knew each other through their fraternity. Oneto said Walsh was brought on after they reached out to him, while Koehler, a high school classmate of both Oneto and Ngo, joined a few months later. 

“Our dynamic works really well with all of us,” Khoehler said. “We all genuinely like it. So if it gets to a point where it’s obtainable to continue, then we would love to.”

According to Koehler, writing music is something they do as a group. Urie added that he keeps a journal of song ideas. Despite having different majors and interests outside of the band, they all have a lot in common musically, making the band a fun outlet for all of them. 

Regarding their inspiration, many band members got their start at home. 

Urie shared that his parents are not musical people, yet they always encouraged him to play music.

“My dad played guitar,” Stefancik said. “He bought me, like, this little ukulele I had, and I bang around on that when I was, like, four. So I was always kind of around music, but I didn’t really start thinking seriously about it.”

Oneto shared that his mom got him into piano lessons as a kid, and despite complaining about it at the time, he is grateful that the experience led him to becoming a member of the band.

Their music takes inspiration from The Backseat Lovers and Kings of Leon, according to Koehler.

“Probably if those two had a baby,” Oneto said. “But the main theme is it doesn’t really matter the genre. It’s more about, do people know the words and do people want to sing along to it and dance to it when they’re hanging out with their friends, having a good time?”

The band members shared that their participation in Fools in the Sun has transformed their outlook on life.

Urie originally planned to major in music, then changed his mind. He regrets that decision, as he feels that his current major, cybersecurity engineering, is not as fulfilling, but he is grateful that the band allowed him to get back into doing music.

“I’m happy that I can provide that kind of enjoyment to people because at the end of the day, I love playing music and I think everyone else here, we really don’t do it for ourselves,” Urie said. “We can just do it because people really like it. I mean, I’d love to continue after college.”

Oneto was on the same page.

“The goal is for all of our free time to be spent working towards making this our career,” Oneto said. “So this is just going to be the side gig, side hobby until it doesn’t have to be that anymore, and it can be our full-time job.”

Urie believes that the band is the best thing that has happened to him during his time in college and thinks that without the band, he would not know what he wanted to do post-graduation.

“The closer I get to having a job, the more I’d rather do this as a job,” Oneto said. “Every day that passes makes me want to make the band work professionally even more.” 

“We actually have something here that we could turn into something special and take it and run with it,” Oneto said. For now, Fools in the Sun is planning on staying in the area and releasing an EP. 

In the long run, the band hopes to expand, even if that means relocating.

“We are about hitting our peak of how much … we can grow at this point,” Urie said.

Luckily, it seems their original music will soon be available digitally. Despite their many other time commitments, the band remains strongly committed to its work and its future together. The band plans to release an EP soon, which will include original work.

“I just think it’s a really cool thing to do what you love and share it with other people that love it as well,” Oneto said. “And that was the initial motivation behind wanting to play live, whether it was in a band or just me and him playing guitar and singing, like, just being able to share our passion with other people and rope people into what we love.”


Artist spotlight: Fools in the Sun was first posted on April 14, 2026 at 12:00 pm.
©2022 "The Review". Use of this feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this article in your feed reader, then the site is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact me at eic@udreview.com

2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 13:00

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer said social media platforms should remove addictive infinite-scroll features for young users as Britain considers new child-safety measures. "We're consulting on whether there should be a ban for under 16s," Starmer told BBC Radio. "But I think equally important, the addictive scrolling mechanisms are really problematic to my mind. They need to go." Reuters reports: Britain, like other countries, is considering restricting access to social media for children and it is testing bans, curfews and app time limits to see how they impact sleep, family life and schoolwork. Social media companies had designed algorithms that were intended to encourage addictive behavior, and parents were asking the government to intervene, Starmer said. [...] More than 45,000 people had already responded to its consultation on children's online safety, the UK government said, adding that there was still time to contribute before a deadline of May 26. "We want to hear from mums and dads who are worried about the amount of time their children spend online and what they are viewing," Technology Secretary Liz Kendall said on Monday. "We want to hear from teenagers who know better than anyone what it is like to grow up in the age of social media. And we want to hear from families about their views on curfews, AI chatbots and addictive features."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 12:59

Parent company of non-profit news website Baltimore Banner announces it acquired paper for undisclosed sum

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, which has roots that date back to 1786, was set to close next month, in a major blow to the city and a sign of the distressed state of local news. Not any more.

On Tuesday, the Venetoulis Institute for Local Journalism, the parent company of the Baltimore Banner non-profit news website in Maryland, announced it had acquired the Post-Gazette for an undisclosed sum.

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2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 12:54

PARIS and DUBLIN, April 14, 2026 — Bull, a leader in advanced computing and AI, and Equal1, a global pioneer in silicon-powered quantum computing, today announced the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to advance the next generation of hybrid quantum-classical technologies with European solutions.

Credit: Bull

At a time when quantum computing is transitioning from promise to practical reality, Bull and Equal1 share a common objective to accelerate the adoption of quantum‑enhanced computing for industrial and scientific applications. By enabling seamless hybridization between classical HPC and quantum computing, the partnership aims to lower the barrier for industrial and scientific adoption of quantum-accelerated workloads.

The partnership brings together Bull’s world-class supercomputing infrastructure and quantum emulation expertise with Equal1’s breakthrough silicon-spin quantum computers. By interfacing Equal1’s hardware directly with Bull’s Qaptiva platform, the companies offer quantum computing capabilities in existing AI and HPC data centre environments, enabling users to develop, test and optimize quantum algorithms and use cases while mitigating the uncertainty and error rates of current‑generation quantum hardware.

The collaboration focuses on three core pillars:

  • Technical Integration: Developing a seamless connector between Equal1’s rack-mounted quantum servers and Bull’s Qaptiva software stack to enable high-speed hybridization between classical supercomputers and quantum processors.
  • Joint R&D: Advancing research in silicon-spin qubit characterization and physics to drive the development of scalable, energy-efficient quantum-on-chip technology.
  • Sovereign European Projects: Collaborating on European Union-led quantum initiatives to strengthen the continent’s technological sovereignty in the global quantum race.

Bruno Lecointe, SVP, Global Head of HPC, AI and Quantum at Bull, said: “The convergence of high-performance computing and quantum technologies is redefining how we address the world’s most complex challenges, Ten years after launching the first quantum emulator of the market, innovation has always been part of Bull’s DNA and we remain committed to designing hybrid architectures that help translate emerging technologies into operational capability By integrating Equal1’s silicon-spin quantum servers into our Qaptiva ecosystem, we are enabling a seamless bridge between HPC, quantum emulation and quantum execution. This alliance ensures our customers can leverage quantum-centric supercomputing to achieve real-world outcomes with unprecedented efficiency and performance.”

Jason Lynch, CEO of Equal1, commented: “By building quantum processors on standard silicon, we are turning quantum from bespoke laboratory hardware into deployable infrastructure. This collaboration with Bull is a vital step in bridging the gap between breakthrough hardware innovation and industrial workloads. Together, we are positioning our joint solutions as the standard for high-performance computing, enabling seamless integration into existing data centers and driving a more sustainable digital future.”

Under the terms of the MoU, the parties will establish a framework for technical exchange and joint project evaluation, initially focused on advancing physics-based simulations and large-scale datacenter infrastructure.

About Bull

Leveraging nearly a century of innovations, Bull is a global leader for High-Performance Computing, Artificial Intelligence and Quantum technologies with c.720m€ in revenue and 3,000 professionals operating in 32 countries. Built on an open, end-to-end and trusted approach, Bull designs, deploys and operates hardware, software and strategic services that unlock enterprise value, accelerate scientific research and advance society. Driven by world-class R&D, backed by 1,600 patents, manufacturing excellence and data sciences expertise, Bull enables nations and industries to fully control their AI and data and to drive progress for the benefit of the planet.

About Equal1

Equal1 is a global leader in silicon-powered quantum computing technology. Headquartered in Dublin, the company delivers the world’s first rack-mounted, hybrid quantum-classical computer using silicon-spin quantum processors. Its flagship Bell-1 Quantum Server is designed for seamless integration into standard datacenter environments, providing a scalable path to millions of on-chip qubits.


Source: Bull

The post Bull and Equal1 Partner to Accelerate Hybrid Quantum-HPC Integration in Europe appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 12:53

County officials review whether ICE’s warrantless raid and forced transport of a St Paul US citizen broke law

Authorities in Minnesota are investigating the detention by federal immigration officers of a US citizen as a possible kidnapping, burglary and false imprisonment.

The arrest of ChongLy “Scott” Thao, 56, by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in January became symbolic of Operation Metro Surge, the Trump administration’s brutal crackdown in the twin cities of Minneapolis and St Paul.

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2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 12:53

Warsh's wealth far outstrips that of outgoing Fed Chair Jerome Powell, whose most recent disclosure shows he is worth at least $19.5 million.

2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 12:43

With the ejection of Trumpian hero Viktor Orbán, Hungarians demanded a restored democracy. Now, Europe must support them

To be in Budapest last Sunday evening was to see history again being made on the Danube. As rapturous crowds gathered on the riverbank opposite the brightly illuminated parliament building, chanting “Ria-ria Hungaria!” and “Hungary-Europe!”, we all knew that the implications of the dramatic election victory for the Tisza party of Péter Magyar go far beyond this one central European country. The result is very good news for Ukraine and the European Union. It’s correspondingly bad news for the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, and the US president, Donald Trump, those twin backers of Viktor Orbán’s regime. The critical question now is whether Hungary can be the first country in the world to emerge from such a far-reaching populist erosion of democracy – the “Orbánisation” Trump is trying to emulate in the US – and whether Europe has the political will and imagination to enable it to succeed.

Already on Friday evening, standing amid a huge crowd of young people at a “system-changer” concert on Heroes’ Square, I felt the energy for change. In the very square where, back in 1989, I watched a fiery young student leader named Viktor Orbán call for the end of the weary old communist regime and for the Russians to go home, I now saw a new generation of Hungarians calling for the end of a weary old regime led by this same Orbán and his Fidesz party. “Filthy Fidesz!” they cried and, yes, “Russians go home!” For everyone knows that today’s Orbán is Putin’s man in Brussels.

Timothy Garton Ash is a historian, political writer and Guardian columnist. His book The Magic Lantern contains an eyewitness account of the young Orbán’s 1989 appearance in Heroes’ Square

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2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 12:40

Meg O’Neill to return to upstream and downstream divisions after shift away from low carbon push

BP’s new boss has set out plans to reinstate the company structure the fossil fuel supermajor ditched six years ago as part of its failed attempt to reorganise the business to pursue a green agenda.

Meg O’Neill told staff that the 117-year-old company would return to a “simpler, stronger” two-business arrangement including an upstream oil and gas production unit and a downstream business focused on refining and distributing fuels and retail activities.

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2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-14 12:30

The US blockade of ships using Iranian ports has come into force but several Iran-linked tankers have passed through the strait of Hormuz since it began. The blockade is designed to put pressure on Iran, whose economy is dependent on oil and gas exports. It comes after peace talks between Washington and Tehran at the weekend ended without a deal.

Lucy Hough speaks to the Guardian’s diplomatic editor, Patrick Wintour

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2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-14 12:20

Deal, subject to regulatory approval, would give Bezos firm access to Globalstar’s network of two dozen satellites

Amazon said on Tuesday it would acquire a satellite company in an $11.57bn deal, bolstering its own fledgling space business as it looks to take on Elon Musk-led bigger rival Starlink.

The deal gives Amazon access to Globalstar’s network of two dozen satellites, boosting the tech giant’s ambitions to challenge SpaceX unit Starlink, which currently has about 10,000 units in orbit.

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2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 12:19

COLLEGE PARK, Md., April 14, 2026 — IonQ today announced it has achieved a foundational technical milestone by photonically interconnecting two independent trapped-ion quantum systems. This achievement marks the first demonstration of connected, commercial quantum computers, a critical step toward scaling quantum computation beyond a single processor.

By successfully linking two remote quantum systems, IonQ has validated the generation, transmission, and detection of photons used to enable quantum entanglement between two commercial IonQ computers at a distance for the first time. This major commercial result reinforces prior lab demonstrations and the theory of using photonic links to interconnect separated trapped-ion platforms while preserving the coherence necessary for advanced quantum operations.

“Achieving this photonic interconnect milestone is a pivotal moment in our roadmap as we move from individual quantum processors to distributed, networked architectures,” said Niccolo de Masi, IonQ’s CEO. “Scaling quantum computation beyond the limits of a single chip is essential for realizing a future quantum internet. This demonstration proves that our trapped-ion platform is uniquely suited for the high-fidelity networking required to solve the world’s most complex problems.”

The successful demonstration of these network qubits underscores the repeatability and reliability of IonQ’s hardware as the company transitions toward fault-tolerant, modular systems.

This research was, in part, funded by the U.S. Government through an agreement with the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL). The project highlights IonQ’s ongoing engagement with federal and defense partners to advance national security and scientific research capabilities including its advancement to Stage B of DARPA’s quantum benchmarking initiative; the launch of its IonQ Federal division; the appointment of former Chief of Space Operations for the U.S. Space Force, General John Raymond to its Board of Directors; and its world record achievement in quantum computing performance – 99.99% two-qubit gate performance.

About AFRL

The Air Force Research Laboratory, or AFRL, is the primary scientific research and development center for the Department of the Air Force. AFRL plays an integral role in leading the discovery, development and integration of affordable warfighting technologies for our air, space and cyberspace forces. With a workforce spanning across nine technology areas and 40 other operations around the globe, AFRL provides a diverse portfolio of science and technology ranging from fundamental to advanced research and technology development. For more information, visit www.afresearchlab.com.

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 IonQ Tempo, is the latest in a line of cutting-edge systems that have been helping customers and partners including Amazon Web Services, NVIDIA, and AstraZeneca 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 Demonstrates Photonic Interconnect Between Two Quantum Systems appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-15 08:00

You can also celebrate the start of the NHL playoffs with EA Sports NHL 26.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 13:01

U.S. District Judge James Boasberg launched a criminal contempt inquiry after he said officials defied an order to turn around flights of Venezuelan migrants bound for El Salvador.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 17:40

Mark Meadows is asking the Justice Dept. to reimburse him for legal fees he incurred in multiple federal and state investigations of President Trump, sources said.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 12:14

Body camera video shows a St. Louis police officer shoot Emeshyon Wilkins in the back of the head as he fled, contradicting an earlier police statement.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 19:30

Brian Hooker, whose wife disappeared during a nighttime boat ride​ in the Bahamas, said he wants to believe his wife is still alive and plans to go back out to look for her as soon as possible.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 14:15

The chairs of three GOP-led House committees say ActBlue "may have deliberately" withheld some documents from their probe into fraudulent political donations.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 12:01

Before you file your 2025 tax return, make sure you know the changes that could put more money back in your pocket.

2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 12:01

Arne Slot's Reds need to overturn a two-goal deficit at Anfield.

2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 12:01

Hansi Flick's team needs to overturn a two-goal deficit at the Metropolitano Stadium.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 12:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Bloomberg: Alphabet's Google is facing billions of dollars in potential damage claims as part of mass arbitration tied to the company's online search and advertising technology businesses, which courts have ruled were illegal monopolies. Advertisers are banding together to seek payouts through mass arbitration proceedings. While many companies that displayed ads purchased through Google -- including USA Today Co. and Advance Publications -- have sued for damages since the rulings in 2024, advertiser contracts with the search giant require mandatory arbitration over legal disputes. In arbitration, legal disputes are handled by a mediator, a process that tends to favor companies in individual claims. Mass arbitration -- where 25 or more claims against the same company are pooled together -- have become more common and provide a greater likelihood of settlement awards for claimants. Ashley Keller, a Chicago lawyer whose firm has handled mass arbitrations against DoorDash, Postmates and TurboTax-maker Intuit, said he's already signed up a "significant number" of advertisers to participate in claims against Google. The first of those are expected to be filed this week. "Two federal judges have already adjudicated Google to be a monopolist," Keller said in an interview with Bloomberg. "It seems sensible to seek redress." Keller, who is also representing Texas and other states in a lawsuit against Google for monopolization of advertising technology, estimates potential claims for online search and display ads could reach $218 billion or more, based on calculations from an economist his firm has hired. Similar mass arbitrations have lasted 12 to 24 months between the filing of claims and resolution, he said. "Given the nature of these matters, we cannot estimate a possible loss," Google said in a recent corporate filing. "We believe we have strong arguments against these open claims and will defend ourselves vigorously."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 12:00

Congressman says keeping gas supplies at home could lower costs for Americans amid price hikes sparked by war

Amid historic jumps in gas prices triggered by the US-Israeli war on Iran, the California congressman Ro Khanna is to introduce legislation on Tuesday that would ban the export of gasoline during price spikes.

“The country is crying out for a new energy policy,” said Khanna in an interview with the Guardian, “that doesn’t have us subject to the whims of the profits of big oil companies.”

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2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 12:00

For the fifth and final time, The Boys are back.

2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 11:48

Critics warn of ‘absolute disaster for the flying public’ if two air travel giants try to combine

The CEO of United Airlines is said to have pitched a blockbuster merger with American Airlines during a meeting with Donald Trump, floating the combination of the world’s two largest carriers.

Scott Kirby, who leads United, raised the prospect during an encounter with the US president in late February, Reuters reported, citing two unnamed sources. Such a deal would overhaul the global air travel industry – and would likely face intense competition scrutiny.

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2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 11:45

Ron Prosor says verbal attack on Friedrich Merz referencing Nazi regime ‘erodes the memory of the Holocaust’

Israel’s envoy to Germany has criticised a far-right Israeli cabinet member who made historically charged accusations against the German chancellor, Friedrich Merz, saying the attack “[eroded] the memory of the Holocaust”.

In a rare rebuke of a top Israeli official by an active ambassador, Ron Prosor said he wished to “unequivocally condemn” Bezalel Smotrich’s tirade against Merz, in which he made reference to the Nazi regime and said: “You will not force us into ghettos again.”

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2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 11:37

The contest to replace Gavin Newsom was already bizarre – now after the downfall of its apparent frontrunner, the state’s Democrats are scrambling

Democrats were already fretting about the California governor’s race a tangle of candidates with strong resumes but little star power all vying to lead the country’s most populous state – and the world’s fourth largest economy.

Then on Sunday, the closest claim the Democrats had to a frontrunner in the unsettled governor’s race, Eric Swalwell, suspended his campaign, amid allegations of sexual assault and misconduct, which the US representative forcefully denied and vowed to fight. On Monday, Swalwell, facing the threat of an expulsion vote, announced he would resign his seat in Congress.

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2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 11:36

Byelection wins and defections push Canada’s Liberals into majority government under the prime minister

Mark Carney has said he will govern with “humility, determination and a clear understanding of what this moment demands” after his Liberals swept three byelections Monday evening, forging a parliamentary majority just more than a year after he took power.

Carney has achieved only the third majority government in two decades – and has done so in a highly unusual fashion, cobbling together both ballot box wins and defections from rival parties.

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2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 11:30

Chancellor ‘frustrated and angry’ at the effect on UK firms and families and says US went into war without a clear exit plan

Q: Why are you calling for an inquiry into Nigel Farage’s investment in a bitcoin firm?

Davey said that, in investing in crypto, Farage, the Reform UK leader, seemed to be copying Donald Trump. He said he thought MPs should be banned from promoting financial services or products.

[Farage is] now promoting this business. The question is, is he persuading people to put money into a risky business?

And the conclusion I draw from this example is that we need to change the rules for MPs. MPs should not be allowed to promote specific financial services or products in the way we’re seeing Nigel Farage doing.

We need to get together as a country. The defence challenges for our country are so serious, with war on our continent for the first time for a long time, with Russia invading Ukraine, surely that’s been the wake up call that we needed. The government hasn’t gone as fast as it should have given those circumstances.

Continue reading...

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 11:22

Considering borrowing from your home equity? Here are the home equity loan and HELOC interest rates to know first.

2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 11:21

Expansion of funding, workforce and commercial engagement demonstrate increasing market and ecosystem maturity

WASHINGTON, April 14, 2026 — The global quantum technology industry made a significant stride toward maturity in 2025 and will continue its rapid growth trajectory, with revenues on track to double by 2028, according to the State of the Global Quantum Industry 2026 report released by the Quantum Economic Development Consortium (QED-C).

In 2025, the global quantum market reached $1.9 billion to include quantum computing at $1.4 billion and quantum sensing at $470 million, the global pure-play quantum workforce grew 14%, and private venture capital investment more than doubled.

According to the report, measurable technical progress, increased public and private investment, and a growing base of commercial and institutional participants were the key drivers of growth last year. Unlike previous years, industry momentum is no longer confined to research milestones alone, but is reflected in investment, workforce growth, and a sustained increase in revenue across regions and technology segments.

“Global public and private funding grew significantly in 2025, with governments and venture capital investors increasing commitments and companies hiring more workers,” said QED-C Executive Director Celia Merzbacher. “This year’s report underscores that the quantum technology industry is growing and maturing and is viewed around the world as strategically important.”

Market Growth Projection

The quantum computing market is projected to grow at a 30% annual rate to reach $3 billion by 2028, with a higher growth trajectory anticipated once quantum advantage is demonstrated for business-relevant problems. Quantum sensing is similarly expected to grow at a 32% annual rate, reaching $1.1 billion by 2028. Markets for quantum communications and security products are at an earlier stage. The total global market for quantum technologies is expected to double, exceeding $4 billion by 2028.

Composition

The QED-C report identified 7,418 quantum-engaged organizations worldwide at the end of 2025, including 556 pure-play quantum companies. The number of new pure-play companies founded in 2025 is up slightly from 2024, with mergers and acquisitions continuing as a means to expand capabilities: addressing gaps in market access, enabling technologies, or products. The quantum computing segment exhibits an increasingly multinational character.

Revenue

Overall, revenue at quantum computing-related companies is expected to accelerate. More than half of companies anticipate at least an 11% increase in revenue from 2025 to 2026, doubling from 2024 to 2025, with 37% of companies surveyed projecting more than 25% increase in revenue.

Investment

Public funding commitments for quantum research and innovation increased by more than $12.7 billion over the past year, reaching an estimated $56.7 billion total. Private venture capital investment in the quantum industry was $4.9 billion in 2025, more than doubling last year’s record high. Most global venture capital remains concentrated in the United States. U.S.-headquartered quantum companies raised more than $2.7 billion in venture capital in 2025, about $1 billion more than last year.

Workforce

Workforce expansion further underscores the sector’s evolution toward broad commercial scale. SGQI estimates that the global pure-play quantum workforce reached nearly 16,500 professionals in 2025, an increase of 2,000 workers in a single year, alongside sustained growth (11%) in job and internship openings. ​ There was also a shift toward business-oriented roles, indicating a focus on commercialization and scalable execution. ​

Patents

While the U.S. leads in virtually all other survey categories globally, including new quantum startups with 19 in 2025, China led global quantum-related patent filings with 54% of the total filed last year. ​Total patent filings grew by 31% from 2024 to 2025, suggesting an intensified focus on innovation and commercialization. The U.S. remains the second-largest jurisdiction for patent filings.

The QED-C State of the Global Quantum Industry 2026 report provides a data-driven perspective on the industry’s composition, investment, market size, workforce, and intellectual property. The data on which the report is based was current as of the end of 2025, with historical and forward-looking comparisons made where possible. The full report can be downloaded here.

About QED-C

The Quantum Economic Development Consortium (QED-C) is the world’s premier  association of pioneers in the quantum technology marketplace. Members of QED-C  enable the real-world application of quantum technology, and, in turn, grow a robust  commercial industry and supply chain. Sitting at the intersection of tech, academia, business, entrepreneurship, and  policymaking, QED-C is uniquely able to foster the collaborations the industry needs.  QED-C is where experts and organizations share knowledge and collectively shape how quantum technology will grow. QED-C is managed by SRI. More information: https://quantumconsortium.org.


Source: QED-C

The post QED-C Report: Global Quantum Computing Market to Double by 2028, Reaching $3B in Revenue appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-14 11:07

From Destruction to Recovery: Building Ukraine’s Future Prosperity 14 May 2026 — 14:00 TO 19:15 BST Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House

Half day conference on the war-time recovery of Ukraine and necessary policies to support its long-term prosperity building on the experience and analysis of both Chatham House and the EBRD.

Half day conference on the war-time recovery of Ukraine and necessary policies to support its long-term prosperity building on the experience and analysis of both Chatham House and the EBRD.

Chatham House in partnership with the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development is convening a high-level conference to discuss the roadmap for Ukraine’s economic recovery. The destruction caused by the Russian invasion is staggering. After four years of war the total cost of reconstruction and recovery in Ukraine is almost $588 billion. Sustaining economic stability in war time and preparing for the most ambitious economic recovery project of the century, require effective collaboration of Ukrainian state, western donors, private sector and wider civil society. Ukraine’s integration with the EU and deep structural reforms could catalyse economic growth and enable social recovery and industrial reconstruction.

  • How can Ukraine and its international partners develop security arrangements that provide credible long term assurances and strengthen regional stability?
  • Which reforms could strengthen Ukraine’s economic growth and support a more predictable and competitive business environment? How to sustain momentum on the way to full membership in the EU?
  • How can Ukraine position itself competitively in emerging European value chains?

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 11:02

The MoD shows little sign of learning from its mistakes – no wonder the Treasury is reluctant to agree to its demands

George Robertson, Tony Blair’s first defence secretary, a former Nato secretary general and an author last year of the latest in a series of evasive strategic defence reviews, accused Keir Starmer on Tuesday of a “corrosive complacency towards defence”. He said the prime minister was not willing to make the “necessary investment”.

Lord Robertson could have directed his fire elsewhere. He must know that no government department has been so complacent in the face of years of devastating evidence of waste, profligate contracts, and policy decisions that have avoided confronting new but increasingly clear security threats to Britain and other western countries.

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2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 11:00

While Samsung's OLED is still the king of picture quality, Micro RGB has its own perks.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 11:00

Researchers at the University of Southern California say they've developed a memristor memory device that continued operating at 700 degrees Celsius. "And crucially, 700 degrees was not the limit, it was simply as hot as their testing equipment could go," adds ScienceAlert. "The device showed no signs of failing." From the report: The device is called a memristor and it's a nanoscale component that can both store information and perform computing operations. Think of it as a tiny sandwich with two electrode layers on the outside and a thin ceramic filling in the middle. The team built theirs from tungsten, the metal with the highest melting point of any element, combined with a ceramic called hafnium oxide, and with a layer of graphene at the bottom. Each material can withstand enormous heat. Together, they turned out to be extraordinary. What makes graphene the key ingredient is the way it interacts with tungsten at the atomic level. In a conventional device, heat causes metal atoms to drift slowly through the ceramic layer until they bridge the two electrodes, short circuiting everything and leaving the device permanently broken. Graphene stops that process dead. Its surface chemistry with tungsten is ... almost like oil and water. Tungsten atoms that drift toward the graphene find they simply cannot take hold, no anchor, no short circuit, no failure. The team used advanced electron microscopy and quantum level computer simulations to understand exactly why, turning a single lucky result into a repeatable principle. The findings have been published in the journal Science.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 10:57

Ukrainian leader hopes for ‘pragmatic’ and ‘friendly’ relations with new government in contrast with hostility of previous pro-Russian regime

in Berlin

At his press conference with Zelenskyy, Germany’s chancellor Friedrich Merz also welcomed Péter Magyar’s decisive victory, saying it would have “implications for our support for Ukraine”.

“More Hungarians than ever before cast their votes. By an overwhelming majority, they voted not only to oust a government, but to oust an entire system.”

“Volodymyr Zelenskyy and I also discussed this. The funds for military support must now be disbursed quickly. Ukraine needs them urgently.”

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2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 10:45
  • Crocker hired Emma Hayes and Mauricio Pochettino

  • Sporting director duties to be split in the meantime

US Soccer sporting director Matt Crocker is leaving his post with less than two months to go until the 2026 World Cup, US Soccer announced on Tuesday. The Guardian can also confirm Fox Sports’ earlier reporting that Crocker is taking up a similar role with the Saudi Arabia football federation.

US Soccer said Crocker’s duties will be shared by chief operating officer Dan Helfrich, assistant sporting director Oguchi Onyewu, women’s youth national team head of development Tracey Kevins, and “the broader sporting leadership team.”

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2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 10:43

Zack Coughlan accused of killing fellow student Jamie Collins, who was found dead at property they shared in Filton

A man has been charged with stabbing his university housemate to death at their house share in Bristol last week.

Jamie Collins, 21, a robotics student at the University of the West of England, was found dead in the rear garden of a property in Filton with “a number of stab wounds” in the early hours of 9 April.

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2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 10:30

Video shot in the town of Fallon showed shattered glass and food scattered on the floor in the aisles of a grocery store

A magnitude 5.7 earthquake struck a rural part of Nevada east of the state’s capital of Carson City on Monday.

The temblor hit just before 6.30pm, the US Geological Survey (USGS) said. It was centered 12.9 miles (21km) east of the town of Silver Springs at a depth of 3.1 miles (5km).

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2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 10:21

Anyone have firsthand experience with the Lowboy Wood Flared footpads? Specifically curious about concave depth vs plastic version.

I prefer flat vs concave, and the regular lowboy (hard or soft) are fine. Mild concave, comfortable, no issues. But I’d like wider.

I bought a Lowboy Soft Flared, not realizing it’s much more concave than the lowboy, and the soft compound makes the edges flex inward under load which is uncomfortable for my foot.

The wood flared looks flatter in product photos but when I asked FM support they said it’s the same geometry as the plastic flared — but they admitted they were guessing and hadn’t actually checked.

Looking for someone who has actually ridden the wood flared and can compare it to either the plastic flared or regular plastic Lowboy.

Or, if you have wood flared lowboy, could you

Specifically — if you have the wood flared, could you measure the thickness at the edge of the pad? That would tell me objectively how much concave there actually is. Even a rough measurement with a ruler would be super helpful.

Thanks

I’ll be mounting on my XR classic with recurve rails.

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2026-04-14 16:04
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SANTA CLARA, Calif., April 14, 2026 — NVIDIA today announced the world’s first family of open source quantum AI models, NVIDIA Ising, designed to help researchers and enterprises build quantum processors capable of running useful applications.

Leading quantum enterprises, academic institutions and research labs adopting Ising include Academia Sinica, Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Infleqtion, IQM Quantum Computers, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory’s Advanced Quantum Testbed and the U.K. National Physical Laboratory (NPL). Credit: NVIDIA.

To achieve useful quantum applications at scale, significant breakthroughs are needed in quantum processor calibration and quantum error correction. AI is key for turning today’s quantum processors into large-scale, reliable computers. Open models empower developers to build high-performance AI while maintaining total control over their data and infrastructure.

Named after a landmark mathematical model that dramatically simplified the understanding of complex physical systems, the NVIDIA Ising family provides high-performance, scalable AI tools for quantum error correction and calibration — two of the most critical challenges in building hybrid-quantum classical systems.

Ising models run the world’s best quantum processor calibration and enable researchers to tackle much larger, more complex problems with quantum computers by delivering up to 2.5x faster performance and 3x higher accuracy for the decoding process needed for quantum error correction.

“AI is essential to making quantum computing practical,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA. “With Ising, AI becomes the control plane — the operating system of quantum machines — transforming fragile qubits to scalable and reliable quantum-GPU systems.”

The quantum computing market is expected to surpass $11 billion in 2030, according to analyst firm Resonance. This growth trajectory is highly dependent on continued progress in addressing critical engineering challenges, such as quantum error correction and scalability.

NVIDIA Ising includes state-of-the-art customizable models, tools and data that accelerate quantum processors:

  • Ising Calibration: A vision language model that can rapidly interpret and react to measurements from quantum processors. This enables AI agents to automate continuous calibration, reducing the time needed from days to hours.
  • Ising Decoding: Two variants of a 3D convolutional neural network model — optimized for either speed or accuracy — to perform real-time decoding for quantum error correction. Ising Decoding models are up to 2.5x faster and 3x more accurate than pyMatching, the current open source industry standard.

Ecosystem Adoption

Leading enterprises, academic institutions and research labs are adopting Ising for quantum computing development.

Ising Calibration is already in use by Atom Computing, Academia Sinica, EeroQ, Conductor Quantum, Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Infleqtion, IonQ, IQM Quantum Computers, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory’s Advanced Quantum Testbed, Q-CTRL and the U.K. National Physical Laboratory (NPL).

Ising Decoding is being deployed by Cornell University, EdenCode, Infleqtion, IQM Quantum Computers, Quantum Elements, Sandia National Laboratories, SEEQC, University of California San Diego, UC Santa Barbara, University of Chicago, University of Southern California and Yonsei University.

In addition, NVIDIA is providing a cookbook of quantum computing workflows and training data along with NVIDIA NIM microservices, equipping developers to fine-tune models for specific hardware architectures and use cases with minimal setup. The models can also run locally on researchers’ systems, protecting proprietary data.

NVIDIA Ising complements the NVIDIA CUDA-Q software platform for hybrid quantum-classical computing and integrates with the NVIDIA NVQLink QPU-GPU hardware interconnect for real-time control and quantum error correction, providing researchers and developers with a full suite of tools needed to turn today’s qubits into tomorrow’s accelerated quantum supercomputers.

Get Started with NVIDIA Open Models

NVIDIA Ising joins NVIDIA’s open model portfolio, which includes NVIDIA Nemotron for agentic systems, NVIDIA Cosmos for physical AI, NVIDIA Alpamayo for autonomous vehicles, NVIDIA Isaac GR00T for robotics and NVIDIA BioNeMo for biomedical research.

These open models, data and frameworks are available on GitHub, Hugging Face and build.nvidia.com.

About NVIDIA

NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) is the world leader in AI and accelerated computing.


Source: NVIDIA

The post NVIDIA Debuts ‘Ising’ AI Models for Quantum Calibration and Error Correction appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 10:17

COLLEGE PARK, Md., April 14, 2026 — IonQ announced that it has been awarded a contract in the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA)’s Heterogeneous Architectures for Quantum (HARQ) program.

As a part of HARQ, IonQ plays a critical role in enabling a new class of networked quantum computers that combine distinct qubit types—such as trapped ions, neutral atoms, and/or superconducting qubits—into an interconnected, high-performance architecture taking advantage of each modality’s strengths. This effort seeks to leverage advances in photonic integration and quantum interconnects for reliable communication between diverse qubit species.

“We’re pleased to be selected for DARPA’s HARQ program. IonQ’s pioneering quantum interconnect technology can enable modular scalability not only for ion traps, but for a wide range of quantum technologies,” said Niccolo de Masi, Chairman and CEO of IonQ. “We look forward to collaborating with DARPA to strengthen national security by developing the quantum platform which can serve as a backbone for networking and scaling quantum systems – across qubit types – for advanced public and private sector applications.”

IonQ’s contribution to the HARQ program focuses on quantum memories, which are the core chips around which IonQ’s quantum interconnect systems are built. Fabricated out of quantum-grade synthetic diamond, IonQ’s memories are field-leaders in networking applications ranging from datacenter-scale interconnects to advanced long-distance entanglement distribution networks, and are well-suited to supporting HARQ’s ambitious ultimate speed and fidelity targets.

IonQ’s involvement in HARQ supports the company’s mission to deliver on its aggressive commercial and technical goals. In 2025, the company achieved a world record 99.99% two-qubit gate fidelity and reached the #AQ 64 milestone on its IonQ Tempo system three months ahead of schedule. In 2025, IonQ also achieved the first qubit to photon frequency conversion in a field deployable system, ensuring real-world quantum networks on existing standard fiber optic commercial infrastructure.

More from HPCwireDARPA Details HARQ Effort to Advance Heterogeneous Quantum Systems

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 IonQ Tempo, is the latest in a line of cutting-edge systems that have been helping customers and partners including Amazon Web Services, NVIDIA, and AstraZeneca 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 Selected for DARPA’s HARQ Program appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 10:17

Facebook and Instagram parent company Meta changed its speech rules to add new restrictions around posts including the word “antifa,” according to documents reviewed by The Intercept.

This spring, Meta quietly revised its Community Standards policy, an internal company document dictating what its billions of global users can and cannot say online. The latest tweaks can be found in a chapter on “Violence and Incitement,” where a subsection titled “Other Violence” spells out, among other rules, the company’s bans on ads for assassins. It’s in this subsection where Meta last month published a revision to include new limitations for users who mention antifascism.

Policy documents reviewed by The Intercept show the company now treats any “Content that includes the word ‘antifa’ as a potential rules violation if that word appears along with what Meta deems a “content-level threat signal” — meaning a statement that the company believes implies violence.

In some cases, the content that Meta considers a threat signal is commonsensical. If, for instance, a user mentions bringing a weapon to an event, the company flags it as a threat signal. But in other cases, Meta’s process for identifying threat signals is more vague. Under the new rules, Meta might trigger a threat signal when a user posts a “visual depiction of a weapon,” a “reference to arson, theft, or vandalism,” or “military language,” if accompanied by the word “antifa.”

If “antifa” is mentioned in the context of “references to historical or recent incidents of violence” — a category so sprawling that it includes “historic wars” and “battles” —  that post will also be penalized. Should Meta apply this rule as written, the company could, for instance, restrict posts comparing the antifascist nature of World War II to the contemporary antifa movement.

Potential penalties for violating Community Standards range from a full account ban to comments being hidden or suppressed.

The policy change follows years of Meta and its chief executive Mark Zuckerberg’s pivot of political convenience toward President Donald Trump and his base. Following Trump’s second electoral victory, Meta quickly changed its speech rules to allow for anti-transgender slurs and dehumanization of immigrants, The Intercept previously reported, aligning the company with longtime MAGA culture war grievances.

Related

A Redditor Criticized ICE. Trump Is Trying to Unmask Them by Dragging the Company to a Secret Grand Jury.

Asked about the new restrictions on the word “antifa,” Meta spokesperson Erica Sackin pointed to a March transparency report that noted the company would “remove QAnon and Antifa content when combined with content-level threat signals.” The report does not explain what those signals are. Meta did not respond when asked if the company had discussed its antifa speech rules with the Trump administration.

Meta largely outsources the enforcement of its Community Standards rules to low-paid contractors whose interpretation and application of the policies can vary. The company’s automated, algorithmic content moderation systems are also famously glitchy. This combination can result in erratic censorship, particularly when political ideology is classified as violent or terroristic.

The new rules around saying “antifa” on Facebook and Instagram comes amid efforts by the White House to crack down on left-wing political organizing under the guise of national security. Though antifa is a contraction of the word antifascism and not an actual group, Trump last September signed an executive order designating the leaderless decentralized movement as a domestic terrorist organization. A subsequent executive memorandum, NSPM-7, again singled out “antifa” ideology as a cause of “domestic terrorism and organized political violence.”

Prior reporting by The Intercept has shown Meta historically hews closely to federal terrorism labels. Meta in 2020 announced it would tackle the leftist bogeyman under its “Movements and Organizations Tied to Violence” policy alongside QAnon, the right-wing mass delusion that helped foment the January 6 effort to overturn the results of the presidential election by force. Though self-identified antifa adherents have taken part in acts of property damage during protests, analyses repeatedly show that left-wing violence in the United States is a relatively small and rare threat compared to right-wing extremist groups and militias.

The post Facebook and Instagram Tighten Censorship Rules for Saying “Antifa” appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 10:15

I did the math to see how much a new fridge saves compared to a 10-year-old model, and how long it'll take to pay back the upfront cost.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 10:13

Party says plan for ‘radical change’ will be funded in part through higher taxes on aviation, gambling and landlords

The Scottish Greens have called for free bus travel, thousands of extra teachers and doctors and a universal basic income among hundreds of uncosted manifesto pledges.

The party is enjoying a bounce in Scottish opinion polls, with some putting it ahead of Labour, driven partly by the surging support for the Green party of England and Wales under the leadership of Zack Polanski.

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2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 10:08

CHICAGO, April 14, 2026 — memQ, an industry leader in quantum networking solutions for distributed quantum computing, announced today that the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has selected the company to develop a hardware- and network-aware quantum compiler as a part of its Heterogeneous Architectures for Quantum (HARQ) program. Announced via a program solicitation last year, HARQ aims to “assess the plausibility of heterogeneous [quantum computing] architectures and test whether they are inherently more scalable than homogeneous architectures”. memQ believes this effort can transform how quantum computing systems are designed and scaled by enabling qubit-agnostic, multi-modality, scale-out configurations that are modular, scalable, and optimized for real-world deployment.

“The entire memQ team is honored to be selected for participation in this critical program,” stated Manish Singh, Chief Product Officer at memQ. “Much as DARPA’s Quantum Benchmarking Initiative was key to ensuring a path to utility scale for quantum computers, the HARQ program will catalyze the modularity, scale, and resource optimization needed to realize the full potential of quantum computing.”

The DARPA HARQ program solicitation highlights the facts that “present-day roadmaps focus on homogenous architectures where the entire system is designed around a single qubit species,” and “no known qubit excels at all compute functions.” While different qubit modalities have different strengths, today’s quantum compute architectures largely limit the objectives of commercial scale, utility, and feasibility. Instead, HARQ teams are expected to leverage a multi-modality, ‘right qubit type for the right task’ approach to address the program’s two core focus areas: developing heterogeneous compiler tools to potentially cut resource demands by a factor of 1,000; and engineering high-fidelity, high-speed quantum interconnect components.

memQ will lead a multi-organization team to deliver a heterogenous quantum compiler that provides an optimized mapping and partitioning of logical circuits over heterogenous quantum processors connected with quantum networking links. The compiler will develop logical and physical qubit-level interfaces between qubit modalities that are hardware- and network-aware, and will assign the workload in an optimized manner, leveraging the hardware platform heterogeneity to enable scale and performance beyond the reach of monolithic and homogeneous quantum processors. The team includes members from qBraid, as well as researchers from MIT, Yale, and the University of Chicago.

“qBraid was founded to democratize quantum computing in order to drive both innovation and adoption across government and industry,” said Kanav Setia, CEO of qBraid. “Working with memQ – a leader in qubit-agnostic quantum networking – and leading researchers from MIT, University of Chicago, and Yale fits perfectly with our mission and our platform.”

“Heterogeneous quantum processors require careful design of logical-level interfaces that bridge differences between qubit platforms while preserving the computational advantages each modality offers,” said Liang Jiang, Professor at the University of Chicago. “Quantum error correction is central to making these interfaces practical, and I look forward to bringing that perspective to the HARQ program through our collaboration with memQ.”

This work will complement and build upon memQ’s xDQC efforts announced earlier this year, as well as the company’s experience in producing their xQNA portfolio for quantum networking, which includes chip-scale solutions for quantum network interface controllers (QNICs), quantum memory modules (QMMs), and quantum control systems (QCS).

More from HPCwire: DARPA Details HARQ Effort to Advance Heterogeneous Quantum Systems

About memQ

Founded in 2021 as a technology spin-out from the University of Chicago, memQ is dedicated to enabling the scalable implementation of quantum computing through standards-based connectivity across optical connections between quantum computers anywhere. The company’s portfolio provides secure connectivity and control across local, campus, metro, and wide-area quantum compute resources with high-fidelity and low-loss, regardless of qubit structures employed. More information is available at www.memq.tech.


Source: memQ

The post DARPA Selects memQ for Quantum Compiler Work Targeting Heterogeneous Systems appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 10:02

Regan Prater admits to setting blaze at Highlander center and bid to aid Hezbollah. His sentencing is set for September

A man linked to white supremacist movements pleaded guilty on Monday to setting a fire that destroyed an office at a historic social justice center in Tennessee with ties to champions of the US civil rights movements, a court document shows.

Regan Prater also pleaded guilty to attempting to aid a foreign terrorist organization for efforts to provide the militant group Hezbollah “a list of personally identifiable information for individuals purportedly affiliated with the government of Israel”, according to a criminal information filed in February.

Continue reading...

2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 10:00

Bambu Lab's latest 3D printer isn't about chasing the fastest prints. It's about making smart choices.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 10:00

Workslop refers to AI-generated work that seems polished but is flawed and in need of heavy corrections

Ken, a copywriter for a large, Miami-based cybersecurity firm, used to enjoy his job. But then the “workslop” started piling up.

Workslop is an unintended consequence of the AI boom. It’s what happens when employees use AI to quickly generate work that seems polished – at least superficially – but is in fact so flawed or inaccurate that it needs to be heavily corrected, cleaned up or even completely redone after it’s passed on to colleagues.

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-14 10:00

In a hectic scene, three officers with guns, helmets and camouflage gear are a blur of motion on a sidewalk, and all three are moving in different directions. Behind and beside them are people in street clothes, including one person who has fallen on the sidewalk. They are holding a phone and an agent is standing over them.
National Guard members arrest a protester in front of the Metropolitan Detention Center in Los Angeles in June 2025. Benjamin Hanson/Middle East Images/Getty Images

The National Guard soldiers in desert camo piled out of unmarked vans in East Los Angeles last June, cordoning off East Sixth Street, a residential street lined with single family houses, and blocking a nearby road leading to an elementary school.

A squad of federal agents moved in flinging flash-bang grenades — explosives designed to disorient — into a small home before storming inside. They’d come for Alejandro Orellana, a Marine Corps veteran and UPS employee accused of being a central figure in a secret confederacy of insurrectionists. A news video had shown the 30-year-old distributing water, food and face shields to people protesting the Trump administration’s immigration roundups in Los Angeles.

Bill Essayli, a former state legislator who leads the federal prosecutor’s office in Los Angeles, joined the raid along with a Fox News crew.

With cameras rolling, Orellana, his parents and brothers were led out in handcuffs as agents searched their home.

On Fox News, Essayli, sporting a blue FBI windbreaker, hyped the arrest of Orellana, a quiet, wiry man with a long mane of coal-black hair. “It appears they’re well-orchestrated and coordinated, and well-funded,” he said. “And today was one of the first arrests — first key arrests — that we did.”

Essayli would charge Orellana with conspiracy — under a federal statute typically used to build cases against drug traffickers and organized crime — and with aiding and abetting civil disorder.

Within weeks, the prosecutor’s marquee case would quietly fall apart. Agents who searched Orellana’s house found little that could be considered incriminating, and prosecutors never charged anyone else as part of the supposed conspiracy. By late July, they moved to have the charges dismissed.

It wouldn’t be the only such case.

A man with his hair tied back looks past the camera.
Alejandro Orellana was arrested under the federal conspiracy statute, but within weeks the case fell apart. FRONTLINE

Over the past 10 months, President Donald Trump’s administration has made much of its success in sweeping through U.S. cities, capturing unauthorized immigrants and arresting people who publicly oppose the operations, routinely accusing dissenters of being domestic terrorists or extremists. Federal agents have arrested hundreds of U.S. citizens like Orellana — including protesters, activists observing the immigration enforcement operations, bystanders and, in some cases, the family members of people targeted for deportation.

Less clear to the public is what has happened to those charged.

To find out, ProPublica and FRONTLINE combed through social media, court records and news stories. Reporters identified more than 300 protesters and bystanders who were arrested by federal agents during immigration sweeps and were accused of crimes such as assaulting or interfering with law enforcement. 

But over and over those accusations fell apart under scrutiny. Our reviews of court files found that statements made by the arresting officers were repeatedly debunked by video footage. In more than a third of the cases, prosecutors quickly dismissed charges that couldn’t be substantiated, refused to file charges at all, or lost at trial. The tally of cases that end this way will likely climb as many of the arrests remain unresolved.

“What’s happening now is not comparable to anything that’s happened in the past,” said

Cuauhtémoc Ortega, the chief federal defender for the Central District of California, who personally represented Orellana and other protesters. “We’ve never had a situation where it seems like you arrest first and then try to justify the reasons for the arrests later.”

The Department of Homeland Security, which includes Border Patrol and Immigration and Customs Enforcement, did not respond to repeated requests for comment on the arrests and declined to answer detailed questions from ProPublica and FRONTLINE.

But in a statement in response to an earlier story, DHS said, “The First Amendment protects speech and peaceful assembly — not rioting. DHS is taking reasonable and constitutional measures to uphold the rule of law and protect our officers.”

Given the unprecedented nature of the urban sweeps, it is difficult to compare the rate of failed cases to another time period or context. But current and former federal prosecutors and other legal experts said having that number of arrests come to nothing is particularly striking in the federal system, where U.S. attorneys usually secure convictions or guilty pleas in more than 90% of the cases they bring; only 8.2% of federal criminal cases were dismissed in 2022, according to data compiled by that court system.

The failures highlight the challenges of sending large numbers of federal agents into major cities to conduct roving immigration sweeps: They aren’t accustomed to dealing with crowds of angry protesters 

Border Patrol agents are typically stationed at the border where their day-to-day work entails scooping up people who have crossed illegally. ICE agents, who often work in urban settings, had little prior experience handling hostile crowds. And FBI agents, who have aided in the immigration sweeps, would normally spend months or years painstakingly amassing evidence before making arrests.

That lack of experience in street policing and crowd control, coupled with the Trump administration’s demand for huge numbers of deportations, led agents to make a wave of unjustified arrests, legal experts say.

To be sure, protesters have often engaged in hostile behavior, hurling expletives, getting in agents’ faces and occasionally becoming violent. A woman in Minnesota is accused of biting off part of an agent’s finger during a scuffle after the killing of Alex Pretti in late January; in Los Angeles, an officer outside an immigration detention facility suffered a dislocated finger after a protester allegedly grabbed his bulletproof vest and shook him. 

But the agents’ conduct has also frequently been violent. As ProPublica and FRONTLINE reported last year, they have routinely shot pepper balls or tear gas at protesters in ways that violate their own rules, causing severe injuries to demonstrators in several cities. 

“The agents, they don’t know how to operate in these situations,” said Christy Lopez, a former Justice Department attorney who spent years investigating misconduct by law enforcement. Their behavior, she said, “is on par with the worst protest policing and just law enforcement that I’ve seen from any department, even in their worst days.

In its earlier statement, DHS said that “rioters and terrorists” have repeatedly attacked immigration agents, but ICE and Customs and Border Protection personnel “are trained to use the minimum amount of force necessary to resolve dangerous situations to prioritize the safety of the public and themselves.”

The arrests are not without consequence. Even unsuccessful prosecutions can be costly and emotionally taxing for defendants, said Jared Fishman, a former career prosecutor in the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division. The aggressive tactics of the agents and the gleeful social media posts by DHS accusing protesters of serious crimes, Fishman said, affect people’s willingness to publicly challenge the mass deportation policies. 

“If the goal of the Trump administration is to keep people out of the streets, then it doesn’t matter if the people are getting convicted,” said Fishman, now the executive director of the Justice Innovation Lab, a nonprofit focused on creating a more equitable and effective justice system. “I’m sure it’s having a chilling effect.”

After reviewing data and some court records for ProPublica and FRONTLINE, Fishman said, “The numbers seem to indicate a pattern and practice of illegal arrests.”

“We Must Identify Him”

The crackdown on protesters began in June of 2025, when the Department of Homeland Security launched its wave of major immigration sweeps in Southern California. The campaign was led by Gregory Bovino, a veteran Border Patrol chief who normally presided over a remote stretch of sand and scrub deep in the state’s Imperial Valley.

Bovino from the start encouraged his agents to shut down or arrest protesters.

“Arrest as many people that touch you as you want to. Those are the general orders, all the way to the top,” Bovino told his officers, footage from an agent’s body-worn camera shows. “Everybody fucking gets it if they touch you.”

He went on to remind them that their actions should be “legal, ethical, moral” while encouraging them to use so-called less lethal weapons on protesters.

“We’re gonna look at shipping tractor trailers full of that shit in here,” he said. 

Bovino’s forces repeatedly fired tear gas canisters and rubber bullets at the heads and faces of demonstrators and journalists. 

Bovino’s aggressive tactics sparked intense opposition from Angelenos, including those gathered in the streets in front of the sprawling federal office complex in downtown Los Angeles on June 9. 

That day Orellana drove his Ford F-150 pickup truck loaded with bottled water, snacks and cardboard boxes containing Uvex brand face shields — clear plastic masks designed to protect industrial workers from flying debris and chemical splashes — to the protest.

When he arrived in front of the federal building, another person hopped into the bed and began handing out the supplies to protesters gathered outside the entrance.

Orellana told FRONTLINE and ProPublica that he decided to help distribute the supplies after watching federal agents fire tear gas and rubber bullets into crowds at an earlier demonstration.

“A bunch of us took it upon ourselves to, you know, go downtown and give out these resources — the food, water and of course the PPE,” he said, referring to personal protective equipment.

Video and photos quickly made their way onto social media. An X user with more than 30,000 followers posted a photo of Orellana. “A photograph of the man delivering boxes of gas masks to the rioters has emerged,” wrote the poster. “We must identify him, so we can track down who is funding this coordinated attack.”

From there the thread was picked up by the conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, who has a vast audience on the platform. Jones, who repeatedly claimed that financier and philanthropist George Soros was funding the protests, eventually named Orellana as the driver of the pickup. More than two million people saw the post. 

Within 48 hours, the soldiers and federal agents arrived to arrest Orellana.

A man wearing a face mask sits in the driver’s seat of a truck with cardboard boxes in the bed. People are surrounding the truck and one person is crouched in the bed going through the boxes.
Two agents with blurred faces, one of whom has an FBI jacket on, escort a man in handcuffs.
Fox News showed Orellana sitting in his truck, first image, while people hand out bottled water, snacks and face shields he brought to the protest, and also covered his later arrest, second image. Via Fox News

Over the next five months, they arrested more than one hundred U.S. citizens in Los Angeles and other cities in Southern California — most of them demonstrators — charging them with assaulting federal law enforcement personnel or interfering with agents’ activities. Others were accused of damaging government property. At least 16, like Orellana, were charged with conspiracy, which can carry a sentence of up to six years in prison.

ProPublica and FRONTLINE found that more than a third of those cases crumbled. In eight instances, juries acquitted defendants at trial. But more frequently, prosecutors dropped charges when the claims made by immigration officers and agents didn’t match video evidence or other inconsistencies emerged. In several cases, prosecutors declined to file charges at all. 

There have been some successful prosecutions: 32 of the 116 people whose arrests in California we reviewed have been convicted, many pleading guilty to misdemeanor charges. And in late February, jurors convicted two activists on stalking charges after they livestreamed themselves following an immigration agent to his home; the pair were acquitted of conspiracy.

Today 38 cases are still pending.

Essayli has stated on social media that his office brought more than 100 cases and secured convictions in more than half of them. When asked about the discrepancy between his claims and the data compiled by ProPublica and FRONTLINE, he declined to comment. 

“The U.S. attorney’s office does not lose cases because they’re bad lawyers,” said Carley Palmer, who spent eight years as a federal prosecutor in the office Essayli now runs. “They are excellent trial attorneys. So if they’re losing a case, it may mean that the evidence isn’t there, or it may mean that the community doesn’t believe it should be a federal crime.”

Palmer, who is now in private practice, said the glut of protest and low-level criminal immigration cases have shifted resources away from the complex prosecutions the DOJ is uniquely equipped to handle: environmental crimes, public corruption, financial fraud, cyberscams, civil rights violations.

Essayli declined to be interviewed for this story or an accompanying FRONTLINE documentary set to air Tuesday. He was appointed by the Trump administration in early 2025, but he has never been confirmed by the Senate, raising ongoing questions about the legality of his role as top prosecutor for the region. His office did not respond to detailed questions sent by email.

Like Orellana, Julian Pecora Cardenas, 31, was charged with conspiracy last summer after following a convoy of federal agents in his car.

On the morning of July 5, Pecora Cardenas followed vans full of Border Patrol agents after they left a Coast Guard station in San Pedro, south of Los Angeles, livestreaming their movements on Instagram. “It’s every citizen’s duty to conduct oversight of their government,” he said. “I was within my First Amendment rights.”

After roughly 30 minutes, the agents stopped, pulled Pecora Cardenas from his Hyundai and slammed him to the pavement. “I honestly thought it was going to be like a George Floyd moment,” Pecora Cardenas recalled in an interview, alleging that multiple agents pinned him to the asphalt with their knees. He suffered a concussion, needed stitches over his left eye and wore an orthopedic collar to stabilize his injured neck.

A man with his hair in two small braids looks into the camera. He’s wearing a collared shirt and suit jacket.
Julian Pecora Cardenas was charged with conspiracy last summer after following a convoy of federal agents in his car. Carlos Jaramillo for ProPublica

Federal prosecutors charged Pecora Cardenas and another activist with conspiracy to impede the federal agents, saying that they “were illegally maneuvering their vehicles through traffic, stop lights, and stop signs to stay behind the agent’s vehicles,” that they tried to block the Border Patrol vehicles, and that they created “hazardous conditions on the road.”

Pecora Cardenas’ own video of the day’s events told a different story. The footage, which ProPublica and FRONTLINE have reviewed, contradicts the claims that the men had interfered with the agents. Within days of seeing the images, Essayli’s office jettisoned the charges “in the interest of justice.”

Pecora Cardenas hasn’t tried to observe federal agents or participate in a protest since his arrest. “I don’t want to be assaulted again. I don’t want to wind up back in federal prison for something that I didn’t do.”

“They Were Just Randomly Grabbing People”

When Bovino, the Border Patrol chief, left California and took his forces to Illinois last fall, their focus on protesters intensified.

In roughly one month, federal agents arrested more than a hundred American citizens, many of them activists participating in demonstrations or documenting the movements of immigration agents as their convoys of rented SUVs rolled through the streets of Chicago and surrounding communities.

But Justice Department prosecutors in Chicago had less success prosecuting those arrested than their peers in California.

On the morning of Oct. 3, 2025, about two hundred demonstrators gathered near the ICE facility in Broadview, a small town in the western suburbs of Chicago. Tucked away in a quiet industrial park, the nondescript building had become the locus of ongoing protests since Bovino and his forces had arrived in Illinois.

Then-Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, accompanied by a DHS video team, was on site that day wearing a baseball cap and a black ballistic vest.

Also present was Benny Johnson, a prominent podcaster and online influencer who is close to the Trump administration. Johnson, who had brought his own camera crew to shoot video for his YouTube channel and other social media accounts, was effectively embedded with Noem, Bovino and the immigration agents.

At about 9 a.m., Bovino and a phalanx of heavily armed agents in combat gear began striding down Harvard Street toward the protesters. “Walk slowly,” Bovino told his men.

Without a bullhorn or any sort of amplification, Bovino informed the crowd that they were being dispersed. Then he and his colleagues began shoving people to the ground and arresting them.

In a matter of minutes, a dozen protesters had been handcuffed. Three arrestees interviewed by ProPublica and FRONTLINE told us they were confused because they’d been standing in a “free speech zone” set up by state officials. 

“I felt somebody grab my shoulder and pull me to the ground,” said Juan Muñoz, a business owner and elected leader in nearby Oak Park Township. “And once I fell onto my back, that’s when I saw it was Greg Bovino.”

Kyle Frankovich, a Harvard data scientist and Chicago resident, was also arrested. “They were just randomly grabbing people,” he recalled. “There was nowhere to go, people were falling all over the place, and several of the people they arrested simply had the misfortune of tripping over all of the other protesters” as federal agents surged into the crowd.

Frankovich said FBI agents who questioned him asked who had paid for him to participate in the demonstration and who “covered the transportation cost for you to be here today.”

Johnson’s video team and a DHS camera crew filmed the arrested protesters as they were lined up outside the ICE building, while Noem looked on. DHS posted photos of Frankovich in handcuffs on X and Facebook with the message, “We will NOT allow violent activist to lay hands on our law enforcement.”

Johnson, who has more than more than 4 million followers on X and more than 6 million subscribers on YouTube, posted a video on X panning across the arrested protesters and wrote: “I saw dozens of Democrat domestic terrorists arrested today for VIOLENT ASSAULT on federal law enforcement. Every activist here attacked ICE agents in broad daylight just for enforcing American law.” He made the same claim in a nearly 13-minute-long YouTube video.

Such social media content had become a central feature of the Trump administration’s deportation campaign. DHS, Border Patrol and a raft of allied social media influencers regularly produced slick videos showing agents in action: riding in helicopters, striding through city streets clutching rifles, breaking down doors, and apprehending immigrants and activists. 

But on that day in Chicago, DHS had strayed far from the facts. And so had Johnson, a 38-year-old former journalist who turned to social media after being embroiled in plagiarism scandals at BuzzFeed and the Independent Journal Review. 

After about eight hours in custody, Frankovich, Muñoz and nearly all the others were released without charges. In the end, only one person would be prosecuted.

Neither DHS nor Johnson have taken the posts down. Johnson did not respond to emailed requests for comment.

The lone person charged with a crime that day was Cole Sheridan, who was accused of attacking Bovino and sending him to the hospital with an injured groin muscle.

Sheridan spent three and a half days in jail — “probably the most unpleasant thing I’ve ever had to experience,” he said in an interview with FRONTLINE and ProPublica — before being released.

In court, a prosecutor said that Sheridan had thrown a punch at Bovino and pushed him, transcripts show.

The evidence presented by the Justice Department, though, was slim. Bovino didn’t wear a body camera, so prosecutors relied on video from the body camera of Border Patrol agent Jason Epperson. But it didn’t show Sheridan assaulting anyone — though he did call Bovino “a fucking idiot.” In statements to investigators, Bovino and Epperson had offered conflicting accounts of the encounter.

About a month after Sheridan was arrested, prosecutors moved to dismiss the case after a bystander video surfaced showing clearly that Sheridan hadn’t assaulted Bovino.

“I don’t know if I’ve ever experienced something truly that bizarre and absurd as, like, seeing a law enforcement agent concoct a narrative to arrest me, to press charges against me,” said Sheridan, who describes himself as intensely private and was initially reluctant to talk publicly about his arrest. “That was extremely unnerving.”

He remains worried that he’ll be harassed or even physically attacked because of the inflammatory social media posts about him. “What a farce. Every element of it felt staged,” he said. 

In a statement to ProPublica and FRONTLINE, Chicago U.S. Attorney Andrew Boutros said, “Our willingness to be open-minded and dismiss cases — or not file charges in the first place — reflects our commitment to do the right thing even in those cases where a crime was committed and the conduct in question clearly falls outside any protected First Amendment activity.” He declined to comment directly on Sheridan’s case.

FRONTLINE and ProPublica showed video of Sheridan’s arrest to Lopez, the former Justice Department attorney. “It’s just a gross abuse of power,” she said. “And we’ve almost normalized that this is how federal law enforcement behaves now. They just arrest people.”

Of the 109 arrests that ProPublica and FRONTLINE documented in the Chicago area, federal prosecutors dropped charges in at least 75 cases.

Felony Charges Downgraded

When Bovino and his forces arrived in North Carolina last November, they were greeted by protesters opposed to the deportation sweeps, as they had been in previous cities.

Heather Morrow was one of them. She had joined a small group of demonstrators, chanting and banging on metal dishes outside an immigration facility in Charlotte when ICE officers confronted the group. 

They handcuffed Morrow, 45, and another activist, stuffed them in the back of a federal vehicle and, according to Morrow, kept them there for hours before finally taking her to jail.

“I was so traumatized,” Morrow, a school bus driver and dog boarder, said in an interview. “I didn’t expect them to be so overly aggressive. I really showed up there expecting conversation, making them come to their senses.”

After a full day and night in custody, she was released to face federal felony assault charges. A Department of Justice press release accused her of attacking an ICE officer just as he showed up for his work shift, grabbing his shoulders and trying to jump on his back.

But a shaky phone video circulating on social media showed what appeared to be a very different scene. In it, an officer comes from behind and abruptly tackles Morrow to the pavement. The video doesn’t show her assaulting anyone.

When prosecutors saw the video, they dumped the felony charges. But they promptly filed a new misdemeanor case against Morrow and the other activist, alleging the pair impeded ICE officers and failed to follow their orders. It took a month for Morrow to get her phone back from federal custody, while her other confiscated possessions, including her keys, have been lost, Morrow’s attorney said. Because she’s on pretrial probation, the federal government has seized her passport. Morrow has pleaded not guilty, and her case is ongoing.

A woman with pink hair looks into the camera. She is wearing a sweatshirt that says “Abolish ICE, Kidnapping Humans Isn't Cool, It’s Evil.”
Heather Morrow Juan Diego Reyes for ProPublica

In Handcuffs and Intimidated

In early January, Bovino arrived in Minneapolis with his social media team. Within weeks, two activists — Renee Good and Alex Pretti — were shot and killed by immigration agents. The Trump administration immediately portrayed Good as an extremist; Bovino claimed that Pretti was planning to kill federal personnel when he was shot to death.

The killings, which sparked national outcry, would prompt the administration to recalibrate. By Jan. 26, Bovino had been demoted and sent back to his home station in the California desert. 

But immigration agents continued to roam the Twin Cities, and activists continued to get arrested.

Civil rights attorneys from around the country gathered in a Minneapolis conference room on Jan. 30 to discuss those arrests.

During a break for lunch, Jon Feinberg, president of the National Police Accountability Project, stepped out of the room and spoke to reporters. “To be charged with a federal crime is something that is life-altering,” said Feinberg, who is based in Philadelphia. “The consequences of being accused and possibly convicted of a federal offense are devastating, especially when people have not engaged in criminal conduct from any reasonable person’s perspective.”

ProPublica and FRONTLINE have identified nearly 80 arrests stemming from the Minnesota immigration sweeps. Most of the cases are still ongoing, though a handful have been dismissed. 

Daniel Rosen, the U.S. attorney for Minnesota, did not respond to requests for comment.

One of those arrested was Rebecca Ringstrom, who lives in Blaine, a quiet suburb north of Minneapolis.

Ringstrom, 42, is a member of an activist group that tracks immigration agents as they move around Blaine. “There was a vehicle with four agents inside that I could see. All four were in tactical gear,” she said in an interview with ProPublica and FRONTLINE. “I was able to look at the plate and see that it was a confirmed ICE vehicle.”

Behind the wheel of her Kia, she began following them; Ringstrom insists her driving was safe and lawful. But in a matter of minutes, she’d been arrested and accused of interfering with federal law enforcement.

Ringstrom said an agent at the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building, where she was briefly held after her arrest, said he wished he’d arrested her — because he would’ve made the experience more unpleasant and violent. “There was no reason to say that. I’m already here. I’m in handcuffs. It’s just a way to intimidate,” she recalled.

She was charged with interfering with a federal agent and issued a notice of violation — essentially a ticket — for the misdemeanor offense. Since then, Ringstrom has lined up a pro bono lawyer, but she has also lost her job, “likely due to the ongoing coverage” of her arrest.

She is scheduled to make her first court appearance later this month. 

The post Caught in the Crackdown: As Arrests at Anti-ICE Protests Piled Up, Prosecutions Crumbled appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 09:55

Oprah Winfrey chose Maria Semple's book "Go Gentle" as her latest book club pick. Read a free excerpt here.

2026-04-14 12:04
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Here's a reader's guide for "Go Gentle" by Maria Semple

2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 09:53

Decision to reduce duty-free quotas by 47% aimed at curbing Chinese imports

The EU is to go ahead with plans to double tariffs and halve quotas on imports of steel from July, in a move designed to curb Chinese imports but which could damage UK exports to the bloc.

The decision by EU lawmakers and member states after late night talks on Monday, will reduce duty-free quotas by 47%. Exact country allocations have yet to be determined.

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2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 09:50

Catholic vice-president effectively tells Leo to stay in his lane after pope criticized the White House over the Iran war

JD Vance has weighed in on Donald Trump’s feud with Pope Leo, effectively telling the pontiff to stay in his lane after the head of the Catholic church criticized the White House over the Iran war.

“It would be best for the Vatican to stick to matters of morality, to stick to matters of what’s going on in the Catholic church and let the president of the United States stick to dictating American public policy,” the vice-president – a Catholic convert himself – said in an interview on Fox News on Monday night.

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2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 09:41

An 18-year-old attacker, armed with a shotgun, fired randomly inside a vocational high school, wounding 10 students, four teachers, a canteen employee and a police officer, the local governor said.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 09:35

Looking to buy a home? Want to refinance your existing home? These are the mortgage interest rates to know today.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 09:27

So, given that fungineers seems like out of stock is their stock in trade, floatwheel is compatible with nothing and is some crypto scam, gosmilo will catch fire if stared at too intently, and future motion will sell me something only slightly underpowered if I take out a second mortgage… it seems like an upgrade is the only way forward.

Upgrade also seems to be a euphemism for “replace every major subsystem at once”. That being said I currently possess an out of box XRC. It has straight rails but wtf rails seem like they’d more comfortable and feel less spooky. Is there either:

1) an order to upgrade individual subsystems (controller, battery, motor, bms) that would lead to better performance while still being able to test if the new part is the problem (if you replace everything troubleshooting is hard).

2) a known upgrade suite that is XRC friendly

3) a good mechanic in the Chicago area or willing to ship there who would accept fat stacks to keep my living room table free of debris and my multimeter in comfortable retirement (board garage, please accept my emails, will bestow praise)

Thank you reddit peeps for volunteering your knowledge to the unwashed.

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2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 09:13

Kevin Warsh, seeking to replace Fed chair Jerome Powell, had to file financial disclosures for Senate approval

Kevin Warsh, the former Federal Reserve governor chosen by Donald Trump to lead the central bank, has submitted financial disclosures that suggest he holds assets worth well over $100m.

The document is required for his nomination to advance through the Senate, beginning with a yet-to-be-scheduled hearing.

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2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 09:10

Nonstick pans have their place in the kitchen, but certain foods are better served by a different surface. Here are five things a cooking instructor says to avoid.

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New six‑country study offers solutions to bridge higher education and the workforce.

HOBOKEN, N.J., April 14, 2026 — Pearson and Amazon Web Services, Inc. (AWS) have announced the launch of new global research revealing the misalignments between higher education and employers that are slowing progress in building an AI-ready workforce.

The report, AI Readiness: Building the Bridge from Higher Education to Work, draws on more than 2,700 survey responses from learners, higher education leaders, and employers across six countries, including the U.S., U.K., Brazil, Saudi Arabia, Vietnam, and Malaysia, and is supplemented by in-depth interviews with higher education leaders. The findings provide rare insight into the perceptions from all along the learning‑to‑work continuum.

Key findings include:

  • 53% of employers say their primary challenge is finding graduates with the right AI skills.
  • 78% of higher education leaders believe they’re meeting employer expectations.
  • 14% of current graduates report they have achieved a high level of proficiency in applying AI tools to a professional workflow.

This data comes at a moment when artificial intelligence is reshaping entry‑level roles, the durability of skills is rapidly decreasing, and workforce readiness is at risk worldwide. While AI adoption is accelerating across industries, the research shows that AI readiness is breaking down at the point of execution, where learning must translate into applied workplace capability, rather than from a lack of ambition or access.

“This AI readiness research with Pearson reveals that our primary opportunity is to help translate AI tool engagement into real workplace capability. AWS is committed to working alongside our education partners to ensure every learner develops AI literacy, in addition to the judgment, adaptability, and hands-on experience employers need,” said Kim Majerus, Vice President of Global Education and U.S. State & Local Government at AWS.

“It is clear that basic AI literacy is no longer enough. Schools that lead in AI readiness today will shape the future of workforce readiness tomorrow. Building an AI-ready workforce depends on structured, shared systems that amplify human skills and connect curriculum to real work. Pearson and AWS are working together to bridge the gap between higher education and employers and help prepare the workforce of tomorrow,” said Tom ap Simon, President of Higher Education and Virtual Learning at Pearson.

AI readiness doesn’t emerge by accident. It depends on structured, shared systems that connect curriculum to real work. Readiness is built where learning and work connect.

To help leaders across education and enterprise move from diagnosis to action, the report introduces the AI Readiness Friction Framework, a practical tool that identifies six compounding frictions that slow progress across the education‑to‑work pathway. The report also provides concrete actions to be taken to remediate each friction point:

  • Pace Friction: The widening gap between the speed of AI-driven workplace change and the slower cadence of curriculum and institutional decision-making.
  • Connection Friction: Weak feedback loops between education and employers, reducing alignment between workforce needs and learning design.
  • Capability Friction: Uneven faculty and instructor AI capability, limiting consistent integration of AI into learning experiences.
  • Governance Friction: The absence of clear, practical guidance translating AI access into responsible, governed practice, resulting in shadow AI use that carries risk into the workplace.
  • Experience Friction: A disconnect between access to AI tools and structured opportunities to practice, apply, and demonstrate real-world capability.
  • Skills Friction: Misalignment between the capabilities graduates demonstrate and the applied judgment, adaptability, and collaboration employers require in AI-enabled roles.

By combining Pearson’s expertise in education systems, assessment, learning science, credentialing, and workforce skills with AWS’s deep insight into how AI is built, deployed, and governed in modern organizations, the report offers a shared framework to help institutions and employers align around a common definition of AI readiness and a clearer path forward.

AI Readiness: Building the Bridge from Higher Education to Work is available beginning today. Pearson and AWS are hosting a launch event at the 2026 ASU+GSV Summit.

About Pearson

At Pearson, our purpose is simple: to help people realize the life they imagine through learning. We believe that every learning opportunity is a chance for a personal breakthrough. That’s why our c. 18,000 Pearson employees are committed to creating vibrant and enriching learning experiences designed for real-life impact. We are the world’s lifelong learning company, serving customers in nearly 200 countries with digital content, assessments, qualifications, and data. For us, learning isn’t just what we do. It’s who we are. Visit us at plc.pearson.com.

About Amazon Web Services

Amazon Web Services (AWS) is guided by customer obsession, pace of innovation, commitment to operational excellence, and long-term thinking. By democratizing technology for nearly two decades and making cloud computing and generative AI accessible to organizations of every size and industry, AWS has built one of the fastest-growing enterprise technology businesses in history. Millions of customers trust AWS to accelerate innovation, transform their businesses, and shape the future. With the most comprehensive AI capabilities and global infrastructure footprint, AWS empowers builders to turn big ideas into reality.


Source: Pearson

The post New Pearson and AWS Global Research: 53% of Employers Struggle to Find AI-Ready Graduates appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 09:01

Sitting between Sonos's larger Move 2 and the smaller Roam 2, the $299 Play is the Goldilocks of Sonos portable speaker options, earning a CNET Editors' Choice award.

2026-04-14 12:04
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The Deebot X12 OmniCyclone uses pressurized water sprayers to pretreat dried-on stains and to clean its roller mop scrubber.

2026-04-14 12:04
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The new Mission 1 series goes hard on slo-mo, low-light performance and cinematic shooting.

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These goodies just might become your air fryer's new besties.

2026-04-14 12:04
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What are some of your biggest laundry faux pas? We asked an expert.

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2026-04-14 09:00

As treasurer Jim Chalmers weighs ‘extreme uncertainty’, one economic scenario sees global growth plunging to just 2% in 2026

The International Monetary Fund has warned the US-Israel war on Iran risks creating an “energy crisis of an unprecedented scale” that could tip the global economy towards recession.

The grim warning contained in the IMF’s latest World Economic Outlook comes as Jim Chalmers prepares to attend the organisation’s spring meetings in Washington DC this week, where he said he would be “joining with other countries continuing to call for an enduring end to the war”.

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2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 09:00

Trump’s EPA chief Lee Zeldin’s presence shows how much influence climate deniers now have, experts say

As scientists confirmed that March was the United States’ most abnormally hot month in recorded history, dozens of climate deniers gathered to promote misinformation and tout their newfound influence on federal policy.

At a conference hosted by the prominent science-denying thinktank the Heartland Institute last week, a crowd of mostly middle-aged men in suits claimed the world is finally waking up to the idea that the climate crisis does not exist.

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2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 09:00

LOUISVILLE, Colo., April 14, 2026 — Infleqtion, a global leader in quantum computing and quantum sensing powered by neutral-atom technology, announced it will host leaders across the quantum ecosystem in Colorado this week to accelerate collaboration and commercialization of quantum technologies. Timed to follow World Quantum Day, the one-day event titled, “Next Level: The Intersection of Quantum, Capital, Supply Chains and Open Source,” will convene engineers, supply chain experts, security professionals and investors to explore the critical building blocks needed to scale quantum from research to real-world impact.

“World Quantum Day is a reminder that we are living through one of the most consequential technological transitions in history. Quantum is reshaping how we compute, communicate, secure and power the world, and much of that work is happening right here in Colorado,” said Mathew Kinsella, CEO of Infleqtion. “Bringing together this community of founders, investors and technologists is essential as we keep moving quantum from scientific promise to lasting economic impact.”

As the quantum industry enters a new phase of maturity, collaboration across the ecosystem, from hardware and software to capital formation and supply chains, is essential. Infleqtion has positioned itself at the center of this shift, leveraging its full-stack approach and growing global footprint to help unify stakeholders across the quantum value chain.

Infleqtion’s neutral atom quantum computing systems, along with its quantum sensing and networking technologies, currently serve governments, enterprises and research institutions worldwide. The company’s integrated hardware and software platform is designed to accelerate the path to commercially viable quantum computing.

The Colorado event will feature panel discussions and networking opportunities focused on:

  • Capital and commercialization: How investment is shaping the next phase of quantum growth
  • Supply chain readiness: Building the infrastructure required for scalable quantum systems
  • Open-source innovation: Enabling broader access and faster development across the ecosystem
  • Cross-industry collaboration: Aligning stakeholders to unlock real-world applications

Confirmed speakers include leaders from across the quantum and investment communities, including Max Perez, vice president of strategic initiatives at Infleqtion.

The April 16, 2026 event is sponsored by GadellNet and Boulder Associates, and hosted in partnership with the Colorado Office of Economic Development and International Trade, Savills and Startup Grind Denver.

For more information or to register, please visit the Next Level: The Intersection of Quantum, Capital, Supply Chains, and Open Source website.

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 to Host Colorado Quantum Event Focused on Commercialization and Collaboration appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 09:00

New damage hero Sierra is the headliner, but she's only the tip of the iceberg in terms of fresh new stuff for season 2.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 08:49

Brian Hooker told police that Lynette Hooker fell overboard and that strong currents carried her away

Police in the Bahamas have released without charges a Michigan man who said his wife disappeared after falling overboard from a small boat in waters off the Caribbean island country, authorities said on Monday.

Brian Hooker, of Onsted in southern Michigan, had been in police custody since 8 April – five days – after being questioned by authorities.

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2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 08:44

The Middle East on fire, a spat with the pope – and he posts himself as Potus Almighty. Will his disciples now see that their messiah has feet of clay?

You hear such a lot from Maga Republicans about how liberals think Trump voters are stupid. But not nearly enough about the far more salient point: that Donald Trump thinks Trump voters are stupid. Naturally, nobody deplores his own people as passionately as a populist, but even by those exacting historical standards Trump really does regard his supporters as a honking great throng of halfwits. How else to explain his seemingly retrofitted claim yesterday that the AI picture he posted of himself as Jesus was “me as a doctor”. Er, no. After it incensed leading figures in the Christian right, which makes up a large part of his voter base, the US president later deleted it, lamenting of these idiots that he “didn’t want anybody to be confused. People were confused.” Yeah, people are stoopid.

Alas, as you’ve no doubt seen, controversy still attends this image Trump shared on his Truth Social/True Sociopath platform. It depicts Trump in Jesus robes and holding a glowing orb of something – presumably heavenly light or radioactive material he omitted to tell Congress about – which he is transmitting restoratively into the forehead of some midwestern Lazarus. I’m sure we’d all love to know how the AI prompt for it could be “show me Donald Trump as a doctor”, or indeed how the LLM of choice would react when called out on its subsequent error. “You’re right – I overstated that. I shouldn’t have implied the US president is a benign deity who can raise the dead. To clarify – he’s a malignant narcissist and a tumour on the world. Thanks for catching that.”

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2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 08:29

Loss of closest European ally will force Kremlin to consider whether non-autocratic states can ever be reliable partners

The Kremlin said on Tuesday it was pleased that Hungary’s prime minister-elect, Péter Magyar, appeared open to pragmatic dialogue, as Moscow adopts a wait-and-see approach after the election loss of its closest partner in Europe, Viktor Orbán.

“For now, we can note with satisfaction, as far as we understand, his [Magyar’s] willingness to engage in pragmatic dialogue,” said the Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov. “In this instance, there is mutual willingness on our part, and we will then proceed to take our cue from the specific steps taken by the new Hungarian government.”

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2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 08:17

Iran says Americans will be hit with higher fuel prices due to the blockade. Plus, summers are growing longer globally

Good morning.

The US has begun blocking ships from using Iranian ports in the Gulf, transforming the US-Israeli war against Iran into a test of economic endurance.

How could Centcom enforce the blockade? It is unclear, but as a missile strike on a tanker attempting to break the blockade could cause an environmental disaster, it is possible that US forces could try to board and seize any vessel not obeying their instructions.

Follow the latest updates on our live blog.

Did Swalwell also face expulsion? Yes, there were bipartisan calls for it. Swalwell acknowledged the threat of removal from office, saying: “Expelling anyone in Congress without due process, within days of an allegation being made, is wrong. But it’s also wrong for my constituents to have me distracted from my duties. Therefore, I plan to resign my seat in Congress.”

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

If your smartwatch or smart ring is giving you health anxiety or hypochondria, these are the steps experts recommend you take.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 10:09

Hui Ka Yan expresses remorse in trial proceedings after collapse of world’s most indebted property developer

A former steelworker who rose to become one of China’s richest people has pleaded guilty to charges including fundraising fraud after the collapse of Evergrande, the world’s most indebted property developer.

The property group’s founder, Hui Ka Yan, “pleaded guilty and expressed remorse” in trial proceedings at a court in China’s southern city of Shenzhen against him and Evergrande, the court said in a posting on its official WeChat account. He also pleaded guilty to misuse of funds and illegally taking public deposits.

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2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 19:47

The best time to see Earthshine is a few days before and a few days after each new moon during the spring.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 14:50

The report claims the Justice Department under Merrick Garland "violated the rights of Americans" by only applying the law to support those in support of abortion rights, not those who worked at anti-abortion rights facilities.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 15:00

Even with a U.S. blockage, geography gives Iran an edge in the Strait of Hormuz, shaping control of a vital global chokepoint.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 19:04

The owners of Camp Mystic, where 27 campers and counselors died, want to reopen. The family of Cile Steward, 8, the only girl whose body wasn’t found, sued to stop them.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 08:04

2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-14 08:00

Large language models aren’t trained on real-life conversations. As we encounter their language, it could affect our own

Because of the way they are trained, large language models capture only a slice of human language. They’re trained on the written word, from textbooks to social media posts, and our speech as captured in movies and on television. These models have minimal access to the unscripted conversations we have face to face or voice to voice. This is the vast majority of speech, and a vital component of human culture.

There’s a risk to this. The increased use of large language models means we humans will encounter much more AI-generated text. We humans, in turn, will begin to adopt the linguistic patterns and behaviors of these models. This will affect not just how we communicate with one another, but also how we think about ourselves and what goes on around us. Our sense of the world may become distorted in ways we have barely begun to comprehend.

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2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 07:43

Child killer attacked at workshop at HMP Frankland with metal bar and died in hospital

An inquest into the death of the Soham murderer, Ian Huntley, has heard he was struck over the head multiple times with a metal bar in prison.

Huntley, 52, was an inmate in the maximum security prison HMP Frankland in Durham, where he was allegedly attacked in a workshop on 26 February.

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2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 07:42

United CEO Scott Kirby​ floated the idea to Trump administration officials of United merging with American Airlines, according to sources familiar with the situation.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 07:34

Lisa Nandy says there are no grounds to refer Axel Springer deal to Ofcom, ending almost three years of uncertainty for titles

The culture secretary has cleared Axel Springer’s £575m takeover of the Telegraph, paving the way for the end of almost three years of uncertainty over the ownership of the titles.

Lisa Nandy said that she does not believe there are grounds to intervene and refer the deal to the media regulator, Ofcom, for an in-depth regulatory investigation.

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2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-14 07:16

Why Should Delaware Care? 
A Dover YMCA expansion is intended to reach more youth in Delaware’s capital city. It remains to be seen, however, whether the new programming will provide enough support as city leaders face growing resident concern about youth gang activity and calls to address frequent shootings. 

As local elected officials stood together last week to celebrate the Dover YMCA’s youth programming expansion, some are skeptical about the community center’s ability to adequately serve the capital city’s most vulnerable kids.

YMCA leaders unveiled last Thursday a new “Discovery Center” — a renovated kids’ area featuring a ninja warrior course, a “makerspace” for art projects and room for expanded summer camp offerings — which they said will help the organization double the number of kids it serves daily this summer. 

The expansion comes at a time when advocates are sounding the alarm about gun violence and youth gang activity in Dover. The YMCA will now be able to more than double the number of children it serves in its summer camp programs.

But some community organizers are skeptical the initiative will reach those who most need it. 

Despite an expansion of the YMCA’s financial assistance program as a part of its new youth-focused initiative, activists say monetary and transportation barriers will make getting buy-in from at-risk communities difficult. 

“These programs happen, and they don’t get to those kids that really need the resources,” Kaligah Parker, a community organizer who works on gun violence prevention, told Spotlight Delaware. 

The YMCA of Dover on South State Street is the only YMCA in Kent County, serving more than 6,000 people a year. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY MAGGIE REYNOLDS

City leaders like Mayor Robin Christiansen, however, say they are less worried about the specifics of who will use the YMCA’s expanded programming and more hopeful about the opportunities it will provide for bridging community divides. 

“The kid over on the West Side who hates the kid on the East Side, can come here and swim and say, ‘Hey, he’s just like me,’” the mayor said. “Programs like these change hearts and minds.” 

The Dover Police Department did not respond to Spotlight Delaware’s request for data on the number of gun violence deaths in recent months, but community organizers said the YMCA’s new offerings come as they anticipate a summertime uptick in crime and gun violence. 

Chelle Paul, an activist who works with at-risk youth in Dover, has sent emails to city officials at least once a week since February about shootings in the city, calling on the government to take action. 

“These shootings have continued as projected, and residents are frustrated by the lack of visible, proactive action,” Paul wrote in an email to city leaders on April 2. “Many feel the city is responding reactively rather than preventing incidents before they occur.” 

Christiansen, however, said he believes the city has the problem under control through its “fluid, rapid response, reactive and proactive” policing approach — and with programs like the YMCA youth offerings. 

The YMCA’s youth programming expansion follows a separate initiative earlier this year geared toward kids in Delaware’s capital city.

Dover’s Opioid Use Disorder Task Force, which met in the fall and winter to discuss how the city should use its portion of the state’s opioid settlement funds, recommended directing the $250,000 it will receive this year toward a youth-focused campaign

The Discovery Center at the YMCA of Dover features a ninja warrior room, among other offerings. | PHOTO COURTESY OF YMCA OF DOVER

Discovering the Discovery Center

A group of YMCA leaders, city officials and state legislators convened on April 9 to unveil the new childrens’ space and promote the broadened summer camp programming. 

John Rice, director of the Dover YMCA, said his goal with the Discovery Center concept is to serve more families and provide innovative and engaging activities for kids in Kent County. 

The organization will now be able to serve 60 kids a day during its after-school and summer camp programs, compared to a 25-child capacity before the expansion, he said.

Dover YMCA Director John Rice IV said the expansion will allow his organization to more than double the number of children served in summer camps. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY MAGGIE REYNOLDS

A spokesperson for the YMCA of Delaware declined to say how much money the organization spent on the Discovery Center expansion, but noted that the funds came from a mix of “private and public donor support,” including the Draper Holdings Charitable Foundation, an offshoot of the local media conglomerate family, and Bally’s Casino in Dover. 

Rice added that the funding from Bally’s will allow about 30 kids whose families might not have been able to otherwise afford it to now attend its summer camps.   

A number of Dover-area lawmakers spoke at the Discovery Center ribbon cutting, including State Sen. Trey Paradee (D-Dover) and House Majority Leader Kerri Evelyn Harris (D-Dover), who said they are drafting legislation aimed at making summer camps more affordable and accessible for working families. 

Paradee, who is a co-chair of the powerful Joint Finance Committee, told Spotlight Delaware they are aiming to file that bill — which will propose using money from the state’s purchase of care childcare subsidy program to fund kids’ summer camp participation — within the next week. 

“We have to support organizations like the Y that provide other outlets for kids besides playing video games, besides being on their phone, and besides being on the street and getting into trouble,” he said. 

Dover-area community activist Chelle Paul said she is concerned that the financial cost and lack of transportation for YMCA programs will limit their impact. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY MAGGIE REYNOLDS

The community responds

While elected officials are applauding the YMCA expansion as a valuable step toward providing more youth activities and resources in Dover, community organizers have more questions about the best ways to reach vulnerable youth. 

Parker, the gun violence advocate, said he has been working to inform Dover families about summer camp opportunities and other places they can send their kids outside of school, but many of the families he works with do not even know of the opportunities. 

“A lot of kids and families in those urban communities will never even know that the YMCA is doing a camp,” Parker said. 

Raphael Travis, an education and human development professor at the University of Delaware, said programs like the Dover YMCA’s new expansion are valuable to the community, but the challenge is getting the word out to the most vulnerable individuals.

Getting the information out, Travis said, can sometimes be done effectively through “credible messengers,” or trustworthy adults in the community. 

“The challenge comes when it is so externally driven – not out of ill-intent – but if the people leading those efforts are too removed, and they don’t have that relationship,” Travis said. 

Paul, the local activist who works with at-risk youth, said she thinks spaces like the Dover YMCA have great potential to get kids off the streets and engaged in other activities. 

But she is not convinced the YMCA’s financial assistance is enough to make its programs accessible to many families. She said some parents also may face transportation barriers to getting their kids to the community center. 

The YMCA of Delaware spokesperson said the organization does not currently offer transportation for kids to get to camp and after school programs, but it is “exploring that for the future.” 


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 Dover YMCA expands programming amid calls to address youth violence appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 07:11

Alexandre Ramagem was sentenced to 16 years in prison for his role in the coup attempt by supporters of former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 07:10

Military has described devastating attack that killed up to 200 people, many of them civilians, as a ‘precision airstrike’

Survivors and observers have questioned the Nigerian military’s rationale for a devastating airstrike on a busy market that killed as many as 200 people, many of them civilians.

The hit on Jilli market on the border of the north-eastern Borno and Yobe states on Saturday is the latest in a string of attacks by the country’s air force over the past decade with a high civilian death toll.

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2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 07:02

A top UN official has criticised lack of global urgency as reports confirm the world’s largest humanitarian crisis is worsening

Efforts to end Sudan’s catastrophic war have been criticised as “unacceptable” by the country’s top UN official as a series of new reports confirm that the world’s biggest humanitarian crisis is worsening.

Speaking to the Guardian on the eve of the third anniversary of the war, Denise Brown expressed her concern over the apparent lack of political urgency to end a conflict that has forced 14 million Sudanese to flee their homes. Tens of thousands of people are missing.

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2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 07:00

First the administration sought to defund Title X. Now it’s reimagining what it stands for

The Trump administration, dominated by religious anti-abortion conservatives and reeling in money from a new wave of pronatalist tech reactionaries, has long been considering ways to persuade, pressure and cajole women into having more babies. The Dobbs decision overturning Roe v Wade in 2022, in which Donald Trump’s three first-term supreme court appointees cast decisive votes, was a first step; later, after he returned to office, Trump reportedly fielded proposals for $5,000 “baby bonuses” – not quite enough to raise a child, one notices – and “motherhood medals” for fertile women that are similar to awards dispensed by the Nazi regime.

Now, it’s seeking out a new tactic: removing birth control access. This month, the Trump administration renewed its attacks on Title X, the federal reproductive health program that provides birth control to an estimated 2 million low-income Americans. In the White House’s proposed budget, funding for the program was eliminated altogether. Then, the Title X administrators at the Department of Health and Human Services announced new guidance to the program’s partner providers, the clinics and medical practices that actually dispense the medication and care. The program was changing, the providers were told. For decades, Title X had been a contraception program. Now, it was going to be reimagined as a pro-conception one.

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2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 07:00

Experts say any short-term financial benefit will be outweighed by long-term health costs related to obesity

Faced with high demand for GLP-1 drugs, some American cities and states that previously covered the cost of the weight-loss medication for low-income residents and public employees have now started to restrict or eliminate coverage.

The pullback stems from the dramatic increase in public spending on drugs such as Ozempic and Wegovy in recent years.

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2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 07:00

This year’s conference had plenty of newsworthy aspects, but it’s a mystery why the press fails to talk about it

The 72nd meeting of the Bilderberg group, the elite and secretive policy conference that is the longtime subject of endless conspiracy theories, was held at the weekend in Washington DC. A security cordon went up around the opulent Salamander hotel for the notoriously media-shy summit, which was packed as ever with prime ministers, military leaders, tech billionaires and the heads of giant investment companies.

Bilderberg, which since the 1950s has been the intellectual engine room of Nato, took place this year at a time of immense crisis and uncertainty for the alliance. In recent weeks, with Trump threatening at every turn to withdraw from the “paper tiger” of Nato, the “Trans-Atlantic Defence-Industrial Relationship” (as it’s called on the agenda) has reached a strained breaking point.

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2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 07:00

You just need the right cooking gadgets to set yourself up for success, whether you want to lose weight or gain muscle.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 07:00

J. Allen Hynek started as an Air Force consultant brought in to help explain away early UFO reports, but over time he grew frustrated with what he saw as the government's effort to minimize unexplained cases rather than seriously investigate them. Longtime Slashdot reader schwit1 shares an article from Popular Mechanics, in collaboration with Biography.com, that argues Hynek's shift from skeptic to advocate helped shape modern ufology, and that the Air Force's attempts to control the narrative may have deepened the public distrust and conspiracy thinking that followed. From the report: Do you think the U.S. government is hiding, and possibly reverse-engineering, extraterrestrial technology? Think again. Or better yet, don't think about it at all. Nothing to see here. That's the underlying message of a report released in 2024 by the Department of Defense. The 63-page "Report on the Historical Record of U.S. Government Involvement with Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAP) " concludes that the DoD's All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) "found no evidence that any [U.S. Government] investigation, academic-sponsored research, or official review panel has confirmed that any sighting of a UAP represented extraterrestrial technology." The AARO, as The Guardian summarizes, is "a government office established in 2022 to detect and, as necessary, mitigate threats including 'anomalous, unidentified space, airborne, submerged and transmedium objects.'" This report came on the heels of, and in contradiction to, what was arguably the most high-profile hearing on UAPs -- formerly known as unidentified flying objects, or UFOs -- in decades: the August 2023 testimony of "whistleblower" Dave Grusch. [...] The 2024 AARO report stated that during the time Hynek was working with Project Blue Book [the U.S. Air Force's best-known UFO investigation program], "about 75 percent of Americans trusted the [US government] 'to do the right thing almost always or most of the time.'" But, the report noted, since 2007, that number has never risen above 30 percent. "This lack of trust probably has contributed to the belief held by some subset of the U.S. population that the USG has not been truthful regarding knowledge of extraterrestrial craft." Ultimately, the Air Force's efforts to stifle Hynek -- pressuring him to offer the public standard responses to questions he wasn't even allowed to ask -- appears to have backfired. Ironically, the Air Force's attempts to quiet suspicions only fueled them, leading to more conspiracy theories and distrust. People came to believe that the government was hiding the truth, contrary to Hynek's actual revelation: that, in reality, the people at the top may not care much about finding the answers after all.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 07:00

Rising temperatures and extreme drought are driving more destructive spring fires across the Great Plains. This year, forces aligned to create the perfect storm in Nebraska

In a normal year, the vast grasslands that roll across the American Great Plains would be starting to green. But at the center of the US, where most of the nation’s beef producers graze their herds, this spring brought fire instead of moisture, leaving more than a million acres black and barren.

Multiple blazes raged across Nebraska, where the records for the annual acreage burned were obliterated in a single month. The state logged the largest blaze ever recorded when the Morrill fire cascaded across more than 642,000 acres (260,000 hectares) before it was contained in March.

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2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 07:00

Our Place's new rice cooker comes in five colors, including a limited-edition pistachio.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 06:59

A Los Angeles Unified School District strike​ has been avoided and schools are open Tuesday after the district and the Service Employees International Union reached an agreement.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 06:58

Pedro Sánchez’s wife, Begoña Gómez, and two others charged after investigation triggered by group with far-right links

Begoña Gómez, the wife of Spain’s prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, has been charged with embezzlement, influence peddling, corruption in business dealings and misappropriation of funds at the end of a two-year investigation by a judge in Madrid.

Gómez, 55, has been accused of using her influence as the wife of the socialist prime minister to secure and manage a post at Madrid’s Complutense University, and of using public resources and personal connections to further her private interests.

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2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 06:55

The price of U.S. crude rose to $104.24 a barrel following the blockade announcement and Brent crude oil, the international standard, rose to $102.29.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 06:49

Adam Mitula is acting as election agent for Reform candidates in three wards in Tameside area for 7 May polls

A Reform UK activist in the Gorton and Denton byelection who was suspended over racist and antisemitic comments has been named as the election agent for three of the party’s candidates in Manchester ahead of polls on 7 May.

Adam Mitula, an interim campaign manager in the Tameside area, confirmed in February that he had been suspended as a party member “pending investigation”.

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2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 06:45

Ahmed Shihab-Eldin was arrested after reporting on friendly fire incident during US conflict with Iran

The detention of a prize-winning international journalist over his reporting of a friendly fire incident in Kuwait is raising questions about the crackdown on freedom of speech across the Middle East as a result of the US-Israel war with Iran, the Committee to Protect Journalists has warned.

Ahmed Shihab-Eldin, born in the US and a Kuwaiti national, was arrested on 3 March during a brief visit to Kuwait. He published footage of a US air force F- 15 E Strike Eagle crashing in al Jahra west of Kuwait city. On his Substack he said the pilot and weapons officer had successfully ejected and survived. He added that video circulating online showed local residents assisting one of the crew in a civilian truck.

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2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 06:31

Annika Albrecht, Ally Sammarco and influencer Cheyenne Hunt, who helped get their stories out, spoke with CBS News about the unraveling of the Democratic congressman's political career.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 06:02

What I’m Discussing Today:

  • Kareem’s Daily Quote: When opportunity doesn’t come a’ knockin’

  • A Negotiation That Fell Apart Before It Began: Playing the same game

    while hoping for a different outcome.

  • The Pressure to Stay Silent: And the choice to speak up.

  • The Wellness Industry: Sorry, we’re not a one-size-fits-all country.

  • What I’m Watching: Outcome

  • Jukebox Playlist: Darling, You Know I Love You

Kareem’s Daily Quote

“Poverty is not a lack of character. It is a lack of opportunity.”Attributed to Muhammad Yunus

Free food is distributed to residents in need at a weekly food bank at Our Lady of Refuge Church in Brooklyn on February 28, 2024. Credit: Getty Images

“Attributed” because, in fact, Muhammad Yanus didn’t say it—though his philosophy could excuse us for thinking that he did, since his mantra was that poverty is system-created and not a personal failing. Then in 2017, Dutch historian Rutger Bregman wrote a book, Utopia for Realists, in which he said that “Poverty is not a lack of character. It’s a lack of cash.” Which I think is an excellent way of saying the same thing.

But whoever said it and however they said it, the point remains. In spite of the stories we love to tell about “character,” grit, hustle, the whole “pull yourself up by your bootstraps” thing, the poor always seem to be right there in the wings, ready to mar this Pollyanna view. The comforting idea of success—that it’s a reward for being a good, hardworking person—falls apart the second we spend five minutes with someone who is doing everything “right” but still can’t catch a break.

The fact that poverty might not be a lack of character but a lack of opportunity is so obvious that it could be on a poster in a high school hallway. But the older I get, the more I realize that the most obvious-sounding things are usually the most accurate.

If you scratch the surface, do you really see want as a lack of character? Is that what you see in the single mom pulling double shifts and still making it to the school play? Is that what you see in the kid studying on a city bus because her apartment is too loud to think? Is that what you see in the guy at the warehouse who’s up at 4 a.m. every single day, not because he’s “crushing his goals,” but because the rent is due on the first and the electric company doesn’t care if he’s exhausted? If success was actually measured by character, these people would be running the world.

But opportunity? That’s a different story. Real, structural opportunity is handed out pretty unevenly, and that’s the part we hate talking about. It’s much easier to praise someone’s “resilience” than to actually fix the systems that are forcing people to be resilient in the first place.

Think about how early the deck gets stacked. If you’re born into a stable home with great schools and parents who have the time to help you with your math homework, you’re starting the race miles ahead of a kid born into a zip code where the school is crumbling and the rent takes up 60% of the family income. Or with parents who are functionally illiterate and couldn’t help with homework if they tried. Both kids might be just as smart and just as driven, but one is running a clear track while the other is running through a swamp with a backpack full of bricks.

And yet, when things go wrong, we’re so quick to judge. We talk about “poor choices” or “lack of discipline,” as if the entire global economy is just one big self-help seminar. We treat poverty like a personal failing instead of the predictable result of things like stagnant wages, insane housing and food costs, and massive wealth gaps. It’s a convenient story to tell because it lets the rest of us off the hook. If poverty is your fault, then I don’t have to do anything to help you, or to help change the system that allowed this disparity. The medical bills that wiped out five years of savings in one afternoon. Childcare that costs more than the job pays. Your fault, not mine.

The truth is that for most people, the line between “doing okay” and a total crisis is paper-thin. One bad transmission, one layoff, one sick kid…and the whole house of cards comes down. Poverty isn’t a personality trait. It’s usually just timing.

The irony is that people living in poverty often have plenty of character. They have to be experts at stretching a dollar, improvising, and finding a way to keep moving when the world keeps saying “no.” If you could pay the rent with “grit,” they’d all be millionaires. But character doesn’t pay the bills; opportunity does. And opportunity isn’t something you get just by being “virtuous.”

That’s a tough pill to swallow, but it’s also hopeful. Because if poverty isn’t a personal failure, then we don’t have to wait for people to “fix themselves.” We can start by fixing the system. We can choose to build opportunity instead of just telling people to work harder. The world doesn’t have a shortage of character; it has a shortage of people who care enough about their neighbors to decide that we’re all in this together.

Kareem Takes on the News is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

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As talks to end the U.S.–Israel war on Iran break down and President Donald Trump demands a naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, journalist Amy Goodman says that in times of war and conflicts, “What I care about is the answer, and I care that people in this country don’t get health care at the same time that money goes to kill others in another country.”

This week on The Intercept Briefing, Goodman speaks to host Akela Lacy about a new documentary called “Steal This Story, Please!” The documentary follows Goodman’s life, journalism career, and the building of the independent news program “Democracy Now!” which just celebrated its 30th year. Recalling times when networks used their video footage, says Goodman, “I encourage that. Steal this story, please. It’s a failure if it’s an exclusive. We are covering these critical issues of the day, and we want to ensure that these stories get out because independent media is essential to the functioning of a democratic society.”

Many journalists and news outlets don’t ask tough questions to maintain what she calls the “access of evil — trading truth for access,” and to that, Goodman says, “Then it’s not worth being there at all. It’s our job to hold those in power to account.” 

She adds, “We can’t have weapons manufacturers, who provide millions to networks to advertise determining our coverage of war. We can’t have oil, gas, and coal companies determining our coverage of climate change, or banks and other financial institutions determining how we cover inequality. We need an independent media.”

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, your host, and a senior politics reporter at The Intercept. We’re bringing you a very special episode today. If you know anything about independent media, you’ve likely heard of the famous show “Democracy Now!” and its intrepid and fearless host Amy Goodman

[Clip from “Steal This Story, Please!”] 

Rush Limbaugh: Radical leftist TV program called “Democracy Now!” …

Unknown speaker: I’m not asking again. That way, or you get arrested.

Amy Goodman [montage]: From ground zero … From East Timor … As we deplane in Haiti … From Georgia’s death row prison… We’re in occupied Western Sahara … We’ve walked across the border … We’re in the middle of Trump Tower … This is “Democracy Now!,” the war and peace report. I’m Amy Goodman.

AL: “Democracy Now!” has opened the door for so many independent media outlets doing investigative reporting and asking tough questions, including The Intercept and many other outlets that we admire. Amy Goodman is a journalist who I have incredible respect and admiration for. And today, I had the distinct pleasure of interviewing her about a documentary on her life’s work.

We’re also joined by one of the filmmakers of the documentary, which is out now — “Steal This Story, Please!” — which follows Amy’s life and career in journalism and the building of the independent journalism Goliath that is “Democracy Now!”

Amy Goodman, welcome to The Intercept Briefing.

Amy Goodman: Akela, it’s an honor to be here.

AL: Tia Lessin, welcome to the show.

Tia Lessin: Thanks so much for having us.

AL: Amy, as someone who has long covered U.S. wars and global conflicts, what do you make of how mainstream media is covering the U.S.–Israel war on Iran? Is it any different from how the media covered the 2003 Iraq War, which is something that comes up a lot in the documentary?

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AG: Akela, our motto is “Go to where the silence is.” And that’s what the rest of the media, I think, too often misses. When it came to 20 years ago, the U.S. invasion of Iraq, hearing the voices of everyday Iraqis — almost absent from the mainstream media. And today, as Israel and the United States attack Iran, hearing the voices of people in Iran and the Iranian diaspora.

I am particularly moved by those who stood up against the regime, those who were imprisoned against the regime, those thousands of people. Of course, there are thousands who’ve lost their lives, but those who survived their fierce criticism of what the U.S. and Israel has been doing. It’s really important that we understand history, how the rest of the world sees us.

In the case of Iran, 1953 would mean nothing to most people in the United States. But for the people of Iran, the seminal moment when their leader — their democratically elected leader, Mohammad Mossadegh — was overthrown by the U.S. and Britain really ultimately for BP at the time, for British Petroleum. That led to this series of events that led to the shah and his secret police known as the SAVAK, which then led to the overthrow and the Iranian revolution in 1979. Many of those who fought the shah would then be imprisoned under the ayatollah.

It’s people who’ve been fighting for democracy who say bombing their country — let me quote President Trump — “to the Stone Ages,” will not further democracy in Iran. That’s what we so often don’t hear is the Iranian people.

AL: Recently, when we saw all this coverage of the U.S. rescue mission of this downed airman, as this incredible feat that took the brawn and the American ethos of war fighting. That was a quote that I heard from a mainstream analyst about this event that had wall-to-wall coverage on the networks —

AG: Let me say something Akela. 

AL: Go ahead, please. 

AG: When you talk about the airmen, the lives of these service members matter — of every one of them — as do the lives of civilians here in this country in Israel and Iran. It is critical that we understand what’s happened to hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of U.S. soldiers, once President Trump announced — along with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu — this unprovoked war on Iran. It’s critical to understand that a number of U.S. service members have died

You know how reporters were castigated when they raised the service members. It is really important to question, because we’re talking about lives — life and death — whether we go to war, which is why it’s critical for Congress to debate this issue and determine whether the U.S. should go to war. We have to be able to discuss these issues, and the media is the place to do it. I see the media as a huge kitchen table that stretches across the globe that we all sit around and debate and discuss the most important issues of the day: war and peace, life and death. Anything less than that is a disservice to the service men and women of this country. Anything less than that is a disservice to a democratic society.

“I see the media as a huge kitchen table that stretches across the globe that we all sit around and debate and discuss the most important issues of the day.”

AL: This is a good segue to touch on the title of the documentary, which is “Steal This Story, Please!” which speaks to the idea that you want mainstream media to start covering the topics that you cover that they might ordinarily ignore or gloss over. But that even when they do, they don’t always connect the dots to what’s driving these issues or to these questions that you’re asking about accountability. The premise that that this was an unprovoked war is lost in a lot of this coverage, even if some of it has been relatively critical. 

So I just wonder if you could speak to how it’s beneficial for all of us when the media does pay attention to these issues. But what difference does it make if they’re not connecting it to these broader questions of accountability and power?

AG: Tia Lessin and Carl Deal, the filmmakers who made “Steal This Story, Please!” chose that. It’s our motto at “Democracy Now!” We have a few mottos. To be the exception to the rulers. That’s our job in the press. The other is to go to where the silence is. Because the fact of the matter is, it’s not really silent there. People are organizing, they’re raucous, they’re rowdy, but it doesn’t hit the corporate media radar screen. 

When it comes to stealing this story, please — because we are forever polite — covering these stories like as they covered in the film, the standoff at Standing Rock. We should not have been the only journalist there covering when hundreds of Indigenous people, Native Americans, First Nations people from Canada, Indigenous people from Latin America, and their non-native allies started taking on the Dakota Access Pipeline.

We were there at one moment when they saw bulldozers excavating their burial grounds. And they were concerned about the pipeline going under the Missouri River, the longest river in North America, endangering the lives of millions of people. That’s what they were concerned about.

They saw these bulldozers. They went on the property, and the DAPL — Dakota Access Pipeline — guards unleashed dogs on the protesters. They were biting them. They called themselves water protectors, not protesters. We captured that dog with its mouth and nose covered in Native blood, and we posted online what was taking place. Within 24 hours, 14 million views.

Any corporate executive, so many. When I go into the network studios, — not only Fox; but MSNBC at the time, now MSNow; CNN — saying, why don’t you cover climate change more for these decades? The executives say it doesn’t capture enough eyeballs. Well, I think any of these executives would drool for that kind of response. Fourteen million views.

“It’s a failure if it’s an exclusive. … We want to ensure that these stories get out.”

People really do care. But because we’re the only ones there, all the networks took our video, and I encourage that. Steal this story, please. It’s a failure if it’s an exclusive. We are covering these critical issues of the day, and we want to ensure that these stories get out because independent media is essential to the functioning of a democratic society.

AL: Tia, I want to bring you in here, too. You opened the film with Amy holding a microphone, following a Trump official, persistently asking him questions about why he’s at a climate conference when Trump has called climate change a hoax, among other environmental policy questions.

[Clip of film]

AG [in film]: Hi, I’m Amy Goodman from “Democracy Now!” Can you tell —

P. Wells Griffith III, then-Trump climate adviser: I’ve gotta go to another meeting.

AG [in film]: Can you tell us what you think about President Trump saying climate change is a hoax? You could answer the question, are you not speaking to the press here?

PWG: Excuse — I’m sorry, I’m running late for a meeting. Thanks.

AG [in film]: Right, but you weren’t running late when you were just standing there. 

[Clip end]

AL: Tell us about that scene, and why you chose to open with it.

TL: It was quintessential Amy Goodman there. She was going up and down the stairs, in and out of corridors, following, chasing after the Trump administration’s representative to the conference who would not stop to answer her questions. And she was just doing what a good reporter does, and she was unstoppable.

“She’s doing this for us. She is working in the public interest to get these answers from elected officials, from corporate CEOs.”

She understood that her listeners wanted to know these answers, and she was going after them. To me, it just showed everything you need to know about Amy Goodman. And it really, I think, makes the audience root for her because she’s doing this for us. She is working in the public interest to get these answers from elected officials, from corporate CEOs.

We see that throughout the film: She’s often chasing after billionaires and politicians, and oftentimes getting answers that no one else is, to questions that no one else is asking. I will say, we were going to call the film “Chasing Amy,” or “Amy Chasing” or “Chasing Amy Chasing,”

AL: I love that. “Amy Chasing –––.” Fill in the blank. [laughs]

TL: The title was already taken. But I will say that, to go back to your previous question, I think of the words that Amy’s co-host Juan González said to us when we were talking to him about the coverage of the Iraq War in 2003, or let’s say the invasion of Iraq. And the cheerleading that the commercial media did, “Democracy Now!”’s reporting was pretty unique in raising questions that journalists weren’t asking. They were taking Bush’s proclamations at face value.

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Twenty years later, lots of mea culpas on the part of the press, “we were wrong.” Even people like David Remnick, we’re sorry we were wrong. Juan González put it perfectly when he said, to paraphrase him, it’s not enough to say 20 years later we were wrong. You need to stop the injustice when it’s happening, or at least report on it.

That is something Amy does and Juan does and her team does every single day. 

[Break]

AL: There was a ton of discussion in Trump’s first term about how the media should cover someone like him. And we didn’t see many journalists doing what we saw you doing, which is, and we don’t see that today really, running people down and asking them hard questions. Often I feel like nowadays that’s associated with — I have images in my head of viral videos of reporters trying to do gotcha questions, and that’s not the kind of journalism that we’re talking about.

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We’re talking about finding people in power and asking them hard questions. So I’m wondering if you could talk a little bit about what mistakes you think journalists made in covering Trump in his first term, and whether you think that we’ve learned anything from that in this second term?

AG: I think that journalists engage in the what I call “access of evil” — trading truth for access — playing on the old “axis of evil” term. This goes way back, and it’s not just with Republican presidents, it’s with Democratic presidents as well. You don’t ask a tough question because you’re afraid you then won’t be called on again. But I say, then, it’s not worth being there at all. It’s our job to hold those in power to account. 

Trump is “doing that to intimidate because there’s a bigger question he doesn’t want asked.”

Right now, the stakes are so high. When President Trump tries to censure AP for not going along with Trump and calling the Gulf of Mexico “the Gulf of America.” Or his particular attack on women journalists, and particularly women of color, is grotesque. Every single time, the entire press corps should walk out, or object when he calls on the next person, when he says “Quiet, piggy” or talking about the “ugly” reporter. It’s critical reporters stand together. He’s doing that to intimidate because there’s a bigger question he doesn’t want asked, whether it’s about the Epstein files or grifting. 

The amount of money his family is making, especially now during the second term, we’re talking conservatively about billions of dollars. The Wall Street Journal has done great reporting on this; the New York Times has done great reporting on this. “Democracy Now!,” I always say we prevent stories from being “priv-ished.” The word is published and maybe a story is published, but often it’s behind the refrigerator ads or it just doesn’t get a lot of attention in print, and to broadcast it is really important. Raising these issues continually. 

Trump is a master of media manipulation. He sues the media. He sued “60 Minutes” for editing a Kamala Harris interview. We all do interviews for an hour, then cut it down to 10 minutes. It’s our job. Unfortunately, we don’t have limitless time.

So of course in that lawsuit, I think “60 Minutes” and CBS would’ve won, but their owners were engaged in trying to merge two corporations, Paramount and Skydance, and it wasn’t worth it to them to go through this exercise that would antagonize President Trump. So they essentially paid him off. They say the money goes to the Trump library. What was it? $15, $16 million. But what they get in return is something like a $6 billion, $7 billion merger approval. 

ABC’s George Stephanopoulos saying that President Trump was found civilly liable for rape. This was in the case of E. Jean Carroll, who President Trump had a trial and was found guilty of sexual assault. The judge in the case said in common parlance, that would be rape. I think George Stephanopoulos and ABC would’ve won. But again, their corporate owners wanted a larger corporate merger — I think it was between Nexstar and Tegna — and it was worth billions of dollars.

So paying $15, $16 million to the so-called Trump library was pennies for them. 

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Now, this is extremely serious, especially for less financially well-off networks; you can’t afford these kinds of lawsuits. So it was a real lesson to everyone, and it’s absolutely critical that they be fought.

AL: Talking about this solidarity, or lack thereof rather, in the White House press corps around setting norms around how to handle an official like Trump. There’s a scene from the documentary I have in mind where you’re in the White House briefing room, and you’re asking tough questions about the U.S. arming and training the Indonesian military that carried out the massacre in East Timor that you were present for.

[Clip from film]

AG [in film]: Will President Clinton push for the sale of F-16s to Indonesia when Congress returns in January? José Ramos-Horta says it’s like selling weapons to Saddam Hussein.

Mike McCurry, White House Press Secretary: That’s not the view of the United States government. We make arms transfers of that nature when they’re in the interest of the United States.

AG: You’re supporting the military dictatorship by doing it.

MM: Well, you’re also advancing U.S. strategic interests in the region.

[Clip ends]

AL: The press secretary sort of makes a joke at your expense, and you see the rest of the reporters start laughing with him. What was that experience like being surrounded by that press corps? Did you ever question your approach? How was that for you?

AG: This was about the 1991 massacre, which Indonesian soldiers armed by the United States with M-16s. Indonesia invaded East Timor December of 1975, and they would go on to occupy East Timor for two decades. They killed off a third of the population. 

My colleague, journalist Allan Nairn, and I survived a massacre on November 12, 1991, which the Indonesian soldiers opened fire on innocent Timorese civilians. They killed over 270 of them. They beat us to the ground. They fractured Allan’s skull. They put the guns to our heads, U.S. M-16s. And only when we convinced them that we were from the United States — the same place their weapons were from — did they pull the guns off our heads, and we were able to get away in a Red Cross Jeep with dozens of Timorese jumping on top of us, on top of the van to flee this killing field. 270 Timorese killed in one day. But ultimately during that time, 1975 to 2002, a third of the population of East Timor was killed.

So when I came back to the United States after the ’91 massacre, that was President Clinton, and the press spokesperson was Mike McCurry. Congress had decided to cut off military training aid to Indonesia, the fourth most powerful army in the world — armed, trained and financed by the United States overwhelmingly. They cut off IMET, that’s international military education and training, funding. And the question was President Clinton going to restore it. And I kept asking that question to get an answer, and when I asked it again and said I know about the massacre, I survived that massacre, he ultimately said, “The turnip is dry.”

I don’t know if that was a code I was supposed to give to another country. But that’s when all the journalists laughed. Because a lot of times the administration can use peer pressure, but I don’t care about that. What I care about is the answer. And I care that people in this country don’t get health care at the same time that money goes to kill others in another country. So we just persisted.

AL: What have you learned from being that person in the room, particularly surrounded by people who often have that access, but don’t use it to ask tough questions?

AG: You just have to keep going. It’s like talking about the corporate media for 30 years. “Democracy Now!” has just celebrated its 30th anniversary.

AL: Congratulations. 

AG: We had a great time recently at Riverside Church, that amazing place where Dr. Martin Luther King gave his speech against Vietnam in 1967, a year to the day before he was assassinated, against the war in Vietnam. The mainstream media, like Life Magazine said he had done a [disservice] to his cause and his people; that he sounded like he was reading a script from Radio Hanoi because he was against the war in Vietnam, he should stick to civil rights. Even those in his inner circle, some felt that way. But MLK persisted, and he said, no, these issues are connected. So in the same way the corporate media goes after him, it’s really important to see and cover these leaders who either their speeches, their messages don’t get heard, or they get misrepresented.

But for 30 years, we’ve been criticizing the corporate media. Today, there are many journalists within the corporate media who might have bristled in the last 30 years at what we said, but now are saying, “You didn’t say enough.”

Look at the Washington Post newsroom. It’s been cut by a third by a tech billionaire owner Jeff Bezos, who founded Amazon, bought the Washington Post, is trying to curry favor with President Trump, stood behind him with the other tech billionaires when he was inaugurated. And now has sliced and diced this newsroom to the horror of not only great journalists at the Washington Post, but to people who live in a democratic society and who do believe, go by that motto of the Washington Post, that “Democracy dies in darkness.” The U.S. has now attacked Iran, and almost the entire Middle East division of the Washington Post is gone. The reporter in Ukraine, she gets an email that she’s laid off as she’s covering the war on the front lines. 

These are really serious times. It’s critical we continue to sound the alarm and build independent media, a media that’s brought to us by those who are hungry for authentic voices. In the case of “Democracy Now!,” it’s the listeners, it’s the readers, it’s the viewers. And for 30 years, we have depended on this global audience. Many of whom we reach on the internet at democracynow.org and now on social media platforms.

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Because we can’t have weapons manufacturers, who provide millions to networks to advertise, determining our coverage of war. We can’t have oil, gas, and coal companies determining our coverage of climate change, or banks and other financial institutions determining how we cover inequality. We need an independent media.

“We can’t have oil, gas, and coal companies determining our coverage of climate change, or banks and other financial institutions determining how we cover inequality.”

TL: And that very same week that Jeff Bezos lays off how many hundreds of Washington Post reporters, columnists, editors is the same week that the documentary about Melania Trump comes out. It came out on Amazon, they put it in the theaters. How much did they spend on it? $30 million to make it, an additional $45 million to market. Or is it the other way around, I can’t —

AG: $40 [million].

TL: Either way, it’s an obscenity. First of all, it’s just a commercial for Melania and her fashion industry. But worse than that, it’s just a bribe to the Trump administration. So the fact that those two things happened at the same time, I think, is just, it’s outrageous.

AL: Amy, you created “Democracy Now!” at a time when corporations were building these huge monopolies, privatizing news media. For both of you though, can you talk about — we keep talking about independent media, but I wonder if you could talk about what does that actually mean to you, and what it was like being an independent journalist in that media landscape at the height of all these consolidations?

AG: We’re the same then that we are now, and it is independent. I found at the beginning of my career, WBAI in New York, part of the Pacifica Radio Network, which was founded in 1949 in the Bay Area by a man named Lew Hill, who was a war resistor, came out of the detention camps and said, there’s got to be a media outlet that’s not run by corporations that profit from war.

Or as George Gerbner, founder of the Cultural Environment Movement, former dean at the Annenberg School for Communication, said, a media not run by corporations that have nothing to tell and everything to sell that are raising our children today.

So we started with this deep belief that independent media serves a democratic society. It has just become increasingly corporatized to the point where many of those within these corporate structures are saying they’re losing their jobs and are saying we can’t sound the alarm loud enough. At this point, a lot of the legacy media is, to say the least, losing its power, is diminishing. A lot of these newspapers are going by the wayside, and it’s an enormous loss. 

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We’re speaking to you actually on Local News Day, a very important day because we have lost so much local news. That’s where everything starts. When you care about what your city council decides or your school board decides, and then you go to a larger level. A lot of our stories — international, national stories — start with local news coverage that we read about and find the people who are closest to the story. Not these pundits, who know so little about so much explaining the world to us and getting it so wrong. 

“Social media platforms are extremely important in challenging the traditional gatekeepers, but they can also be a global rumor mill.”

We need to hear more of that. I don’t know the form, the social media platforms and the kind of journalistic formations that will be, but we have students coming to “Democracy Now!” every day, classrooms watching the broadcast in the morning, 8 to 9, and talking with them after. And I say there couldn’t be any more noble profession than journalism. I’m not sure the different shapes it will take, but I can just say, “You should do it.”

We need to be fair. We need to be accurate. You’re entitled to your own opinions but not your own facts. It is critical that we understand that the internet is extremely important, and social media platforms are extremely important in challenging the traditional gatekeepers, but they can also be a global rumor mill, and we have to ensure authenticity and truth.

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AL: I’m not sure that the average person totally understands the effect that corporatization of media has on the journalism itself. I think a lot of us have been inured to the idea that because Politico Playbook is sponsored by BP, that doesn’t necessarily affect the journalism. But I think that’s —

TL: And it’s not only journalism. It is certainly journalism, but it’s not only journalism. I think about the world of documentary filmmaking: The number of platforms and outlets that our work airs on has shrunk in this media consolidation. So that means that not only are there less commissions and less money for making films, but the films that we make, that I make, the political documentaries don’t get funded, particularly by commercial media that is looking for corporate sponsors or is accountable to their corporate boards that are trying to kiss up to Donald Trump. 

In this case, I think we’re finding a very narrow market for political films. In our case, we are distributing “Steal This Story, Please!” independently, and we’re excited about doing that. We have seen time and time again on the festival circuit, there is an appetite for political content for films that speak to this moment, for this film about Amy Goodman and “Democracy Now!” and independent media. And I think a lot of the distributors would have you believe that all that audiences care about are true crime stories and celebrity biopics. We are out to prove them wrong.

“A lot of the distributors would have you believe that all that audiences care about are true crime stories and celebrity biopics. We are out to prove them wrong.”

AL: The film “Steal This Story, Please!” is screening in theaters across the country. Visit stealthisstory.org to find showtimes near you. Amy and Tia, thank you so much for joining me on The Intercept Briefing. It’s been an honor to speak with you both.

AG: Thank you so much.

TL: Really appreciate the time. Thank you so much.

AL: Before we go, we’d love it if you help The Intercept Briefing, win its first Webby Award for best news and politics podcast. I’ve already heard from at least one listener who told us that they voted for us, in addition to my fiancé. So please vote for us! We’ll add a link to vote in our show notes. We thank you so much for your support. 

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. Fei Liu is our product and design manager. Nara Shin is our copy editor. Will Stanton mixed our show and legal review by David Bralow. 

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Until next time, I’m Akela Lacy.

The post Amy Goodman on the Media’s “Access of Evil” appeared first on The Intercept.

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

Decisions at the latest Democratic National Committee meeting emphasized the disconnect between the party’s leadership and its base

When the Democratic party’s governing body adjourned its meeting on Saturday in New Orleans, supporters of Palestine and an end of the genocide in Gaza had few reasons to celebrate. The Democratic National Committee had refused to give any ground to the large majority of the party’s voters with distinctly negative views of Israel.

Last summer, a Quinnipiac Poll found that 77% of Democrats agreed that “Israel is committing genocide”. Last month, an NBC poll found that 67% of Democrats felt more sympathetic to Palestinians than Israelis, compared with 17% who felt more sympathetic to Israelis.

Continue reading...

2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-14 06:00

Hungary election: Orbán has been defeated – but will Orbánism survive? Expert comment LToremark

Péter Magyar and his Tisza party have won a landslide victory, ending 16 years of Viktor Orbán’s rule. But to what extent voters have also rejected Orbán’s model remains to be seen.

Peter Magyar, leader of the Respect and Freedom Party (Tisza), celebrates with supporters after claiming victory in the general election in Budapest, Hungary.

In Sunday’s election, Péter Magyar’s Tisza party won nearly 70 per cent of the seats in Hungary’s parliament, putting an end to Viktor Orbán’s 16-year rule. This landslide victory is not just a change of government, but a historic rejection of the most entrenched political system in the European Union (EU). The political model of Orbán and his Fidesz party had looked durable because it successfully fused political authority, institutional control and a powerful national narrative. 

So why did voters turn against Orbán? While his campaign asked voters to think geopolitically (and not always in the most honourable fashion) – war or peace, Brussels or sovereignty, Ukraine or Hungarian stability – voters were more concerned with issues closer to home, such as economic stagnation, inflation and falling living standards. This shows that Orbán may have lost his populist touch because he clearly lost sense of his voters’ concerns. His defeat sends a warning to populists across Europe that even systems built to last can be beaten when economic concerns drown out their grand narratives.

Will Orbán’s model survive?

While it is clear that Viktor Orbán has been rejected by Hungarian voters, it is less clear that his political model, or Orbánism, has. Over more than a decade, Orbán profoundly reshaped Hungary’s political order, but the system he built also rested on wider political reflexes and deeply rooted social preferences: a strong state, scepticism of external constraint, transactional politics, and sovereignty as a governing method. These traits are deeply embedded in Hungarian political culture and do not vanish on election night. 

That matters even more because Orbán is not leaving politics but will continue to serve from the opposition. That means Magyar will have to confront a defeated, wounded and still highly organized adversary. Fidesz remains embedded in local networks, institutions and media ecosystems; Orbán, for his part, is one of the most skilled political operators in Europe. This was also not Orbán’s first electoral defeat: he stepped down as prime minister in 2002, only to come back stronger in 2010. So, this is not a clean break with the Orbán era. It is the beginning of a new phase in which Orbánism may yet survive in opposition as a source of resistance, political sabotage and narrative warfare.

Relief in Brussels 

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For the EU, the election result is plainly good news. Hungary under Orbán had become a chronic point of friction on sanctions, Ukraine and rule-of-law disputes. A Magyar government is likely to be less obstructive, more predictable and more interested in repairing ties with Brussels. That could ease decisions on Ukraine and improve the atmosphere around frozen or conditional EU money – although Brussels is waiting to see reforms by the Magyar government before releasing such funds. 

Hungary will likely remain cautious on migration, focused on sovereignty, and approach Mario Draghi’s ‘pragmatic federalism’ with circumspection. But the result is still good news for the EU’s centre-right European People’s Party (EPP). While it does not change the balance of seats in the European Parliament overnight, it strengthens the EPP politically: it gives the group a major national-level victory, reinforces its claim to represent the EU’s governing centre-right, and weakens one of its most powerful illiberal rivals. 

This all points to easier European coordination on the horizon. It could also help to improve conditions for a UK rapprochement with the EU. 

Ukraine and European defence

For Ukraine, the result matters significantly and immediately. Orbán had kept Hungary formally within the Western camp while also using his position to slow, dilute or politicize support for Kyiv – not least during the campaign. A Magyar victory should mean a less ambiguous Hungarian stance on Ukraine and fewer internal EU headaches. For Moscow, this is clearly a setback: Orbán had become, if not an ally, then certainly a useful outlier inside the EU. The result does not remove Hungary’s structural dependencies, but it does make Budapest less useful to Moscow as an internal point of leverage within Europe. 

Defence, of all crucial areas for the EU, is where a Magyar government could bring visible change. Tisza has pledged to raise defence spending to NATO’s 5 per cent of GDP benchmark by 2035. But the balancing act is here to stay: Magyar ruled out both troop deployments to Ukraine and a return to conscription. However, plans to reduce Russian energy dependence by 2035 and review the Paks nuclear project – largely built and financed by Russia – points to a Hungary that would be less obstructive inside NATO and the EU, and therefore more useful to Europe’s wider security posture.

A warning for European populists

The wider European significance is hard to miss. In recent weeks, Italy’s Giorgia Meloni has suffered a clear setback with the referendum defeat on proposed judicial reforms, while France’s National Rally failed to convert its national standing into control of major cities in the municipal elections. Hungary now sends an even stronger signal: not stagnation, but outright reversal. The lesson is not that populism is finished but that even well-entrenched systems are reversible when they stop delivering materially and become too closed, too tired or too self-serving.

Meanwhile, Magyar’s victory shows that there is still room for a centre-right politics that is conservative without being illiberal, and pro-European without being politically anaemic.

Washington’s wager – and its failure

For Washington, Magyar’s victory comes as a significant blow. The election was monitored closely in the Oval Office and US Vice President JD Vance even came to Budapest days before the vote to boost Orbán’s chances of victory, denouncing supposed EU ‘interference’ and praising Orbán as an ally of Donald Trump. That intervention now looks more like a political own goal. More broadly, it undercuts an idea in Trump-aligned circles that strengthening European sovereigntists would weaken the EU from within and make Europe more pliable. If anything, Hungary suggests the opposite. Several European far-right parties have already begun distancing themselves from Trump over his more erratic foreign-policy moves and this result may further accelerate a trend towards greater autonomy from MAGA. The question now is whether Washington adjusts its methods of influence in Europe or simply doubles down.

2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-14 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care? 
Dover City Council voted to fire its top administrative employee Monday night, capping off the latest chapter of local government controversy in Delaware’s capital city. A public hearing about City Manager Dave Hugg’s removal brought to light disagreements between city departments and friction between city employees and elected officials. 

The Dover City Council officially ousted Dave Hugg from his position as city manager Monday night, ending a standoff between elected officials and the top administrative employee in Delaware’s capital city. 

Council members voted to fire Hugg nearly a month after Spotlight Delaware first reported about city council’s move to place Hugg on paid leave — and the long-simmering tensions between him and council members that had finally boiled over.

Elected officials pointed to responsibilities not being carried out in a timely manner, such as failing to communicate constituent concerns efficiently, and Hugg’s alleged violation of executive session privacy rules as reasons for his termination. 

Five council members voted in favor of firing Hugg. One councilwoman, Donyale Hall, abstained from voting. Two councilmen — Andre Boggerty and Roy Sudler — did not attend Monday’s meeting.

Boggerty and Sudler did not respond to Spotlight Delaware’s request for comment about why they were absent. 

The vote came after a first-of-its-kind public hearing for the city of Dover. Hugg — and the lawyer he hired to represent him — conducted an hours-long, trial-like display to make the case that the former city manager should keep his job.

Anthony Delcollo, Hugg’s lawyer, made statements, provided documents and called in a list of witnesses that included state lawmakers and Dover Mayor Robin Christiansen to testify about Hugg’s character and job performance. 

No council members spoke during the hearing, but Dover City Solicitor Dan Griffith interjected periodically to correct what he described as inaccuracies in Delcollo’s arguments.

“I want to express my very deep disappointment that allegations were made about my performance that I was never consulted about, I had no chance to defend against, and that resulted in council somehow being convinced that the only answer was to basically tell me where the door was,” Hugg said during his testimony. 

In the motion made to remove Hugg from his position, Council President Fred Neil said his termination would be “effective immediately.”

Sharon Duca, the assistant city manager under Hugg, has been filling in for him since his leave began in early March. It is unclear whether Duca will be appointed the permanent city manager, or if the city will conduct an external search for a permanent replacement.

An unprecedented public hearing

Dover’s charter outlines that a city manager must be given a public hearing and a written statement of the reasons for their removal before the city council can take a vote to remove them from the position.

But a number of Dover leaders told Spotlight Delaware in the weeks leading up to Hugg’s hearing that they did not know what it would actually look like. Dover had never held this type of public hearing, they said. 

At the hearing’s outset, Griffith, the city solicitor, read from a prepared statement. Hugg could have chosen not to have a hearing at all, or to have one behind closed doors, Griffith said. But Hugg elected to have the discussion be held publicly. 

Griffith’s speech was consistent with sentiments that Delcollo, Hugg’s attorney, shared with Spotlight Delaware last month.

“As Mr. Hugg was not provided any information regarding purported wrongdoing or performance issues prior to being advised that the City felt it was time to move on from his employment, our client looks forward to the opportunity to present his position in this hearing,” Delcollo said at the time. 

Laying out the arguments

The hearing was the first time the city council’s written statement of reasons for ousting Hugg was shared publicly — and the first time since he was placed on leave that Hugg defended his job performance. Delcollo used the document as a roadmap for his presentation, attempting to undercut council members’ reasoning along the way.

One of Delcollo’s main arguments was the statement contained a “glaring dearth of information.” 

He said the letter lacked specific details, like when council members were claiming Hugg withheld information from them, or when he violated public meeting laws by disclosing information that had been discussed in executive session. 

Anthony Delcollo, Dave Hugg’s attorney, attempted to undercut city council members’ stated reasons for wanting to fire Hugg during his testimony. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY MAGGIE REYNOLDS

Delcollo also homed in on the 17 complaint letters about the People’s Church that Hugg allegedly never shared with city council. City officials cited those letters to Spotlight Delaware in March as a reason for Hugg’s removal. 

Hugg testified that has never seen those complaint letters. He never would have kept vital information like that from city council, he said. 

Delcollo also called five witnesses to answer questions about Hugg’s character and professional abilities. He read six letters from other witnesses also in support of Hugg. 

Most of the witnesses were Kent County-area leaders who have worked with Hugg in various capacities, including Levy Court President Joanne Masten, State Rep. Bill Bush (D-Dover) and former State Parks Director Charles Salkin. 

Dover Mayor Robin Christiansen also testified, along with Downtown Dover Partnership leaders Diane Laird and Ken Anderson, who work closely with the city government on its revitalization plan.

Delcollo brought Hugg up to the witness stand for about an hour of the hearing. Together they went through all the allegations included in the statement of reasons. 

In addition to refuting the claim about the People’s Church letters, Delcollo and Hugg also rebuffed claims the former city manager fostered a hostile work environment, allowed for the misallocation of city funds and violated both executive session and HIPAA rules by disclosing sensitive information about a former city employee. 

Hugg said he reviewed his city personnel file after being placed on leave. None of these allegations were listed there, leading him to believe that council members came up with the incidents when they decided they wanted him out. 

He said he was called into a meeting on Feb. 9, in which Neilm the council president, and Council Members Boggerty and Gerald Rocha told him they wanted him to either retire, resign or be fired. 

“It’s pretty obvious to me that there was an effort being made to push me out the door, get me to leave and claim it was my decision,” Hugg said. 

Hugg added that he asked the city council members present at that meeting why they wanted him gone. They pointed to his age as the driving factor — Hugg is 83.

When casting his vote to remove Hugg, Neil denied the claim that age played a role. Neil himself is 92, he said from the dais, so “age was not a factor.” 

How did we get here?

City council members provided limited insight into their reasons for ousting Hugg during Monday’s public hearing. 

While Neil gave a brief statement arguing it was Hugg’s performance, not his age, that led to this decision, other council members said their votes were based on the arguments outlined in their statement of reasons.

Despite their vague explanations at Monday night’s vote, multiple city officials told Spotlight Delaware in mid-March that long-simmering tensions between Hugg and city council members boiled over in recent months, leading to council’s decision to remove him. 

The officials — who spoke at the time on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations — said council members had grown tired of Hugg not properly communicating with them about relevant issues, leaving city council “blindsided” when matters were brought to their attention months later. 

Two officials specifically referenced a recent controversy surrounding city council’s decision not to allocate money to the People’s Church homeless shelter as illustrative of the dynamic with Hugg. 

In the midst of continued debate over panhandling and homelessness in Dover, city leaders have turned their ire toward the People’s Church Community Center, a homeless shelter in the heart of the city. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY NICK STONESIFER

The officials said Hugg failed to inform council members for months about a series of complaint letters the city received about the shelter, along with a threat of legal action from a neighboring resident. 

Delcollo said during his closing statement that he took serious issue with city officials giving information to Spotlight Delaware about the reasons for Hugg’s removal before Hugg himself had been provided any explanation, and before the public hearing was conducted. 

He said he would look into “why it seemed appropriate for whomever did provide those comments to opine publicly about a matter the hearing for which had not yet been conducted,” if “this matter has to proceed further.” 

Delcollo did not respond to Spotlight Delaware’s comments following the hearing about what the “matter having to proceed further” might look like, and whether he plans to sue the city over Hugg’s firing.

Hugg served as the Dover City Manager for about four years, beginning in early 2022. He first joined the city’s planning department on a contracted basis in 2017, but ended up staying on and rising the ranks to the role of city manager over the next five years. 

Before taking the contracted role with the city of Dover, Hugg served as Smyrna’s town manager for 14 years, and was said to be retiring when he stepped down from that position in late 2016, according to reporting from the Daily State News.

The post Dover City Council fires city manager following tense public hearing appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 05:59

A shallow plot and advert-adjacent cameos justify the critics’ condemnation of Nintendo’s latest film. But there’s sincere affection for the universe here, too

I was bracing myself for the worst when I headed into the cinema with my children to watch the new Super Mario Galaxy movie over the Easter break. The reviews have been memorably dire. The Guardian’s Peter Bradshaw called it worse than AI; Empire deemed it a “humourless, hysterical trudge”. It’s been vilified even more than the first Mario movie, which film critics also hated.

I am a lifelong Nintendo fan, though – I literally wrote the book on the company – so even if it was terrible, there was a possibility that the Mario-loving child within me might temporarily take over my critical faculties and get me through it. That’s what happened with the first Mario movie, which I found to be perfectly OK. I was not actively offended by it, as the film critics seemed to be; audiences seemed to land mostly in my camp, if the huge discrepancy between its audience ratings and review ratings were any indication. Could the sequel really be that much worse?

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2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 05:12

Judgment will rule on whether spoils of some of Hancock Prospecting’s iron ore projects must be shared with family of her father’s business partner

Gina Rinehart faces the possibility of losing billions of dollars in riches from her Pilbara iron ore empire and her mantle as Australia’s wealthiest person when a long-awaited court verdict is delivered in Perth on Wednesday.

The Western Australian supreme court judgment will rule on whether Rinehart must share the spoils of some of Hancock Prospecting’s most lucrative iron ore projects with the family of her late father’s business partner.

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2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 05:01

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for April 14 No. 568.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 05:00

A new book looks at how an eccentric shipping magnate ushered in a long run of success for the New York Yankees

George Steinbrenner could be quite the pitchman – whether selling New York to free agents or starring in Pepto-Bismol TV ads alongside Billy Martin. And now a new book remembers the late Yankees owner and the dynasty he founded.

The Bosses of the Bronx: The Endless Drama of the Yankees Under the House of Steinbrenner flows from the pen of sports journalist and author Mike Vaccaro. As the New York Post’s lead sports columnist for more than two decades, Vaccaro has witnessed the Steinbrenner dynasty from a rarefied perspective – the journalistic equivalent of a seat along the third-base line.

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2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 05:00

Legend has it that Fatou was brought from Africa to France in the late 1950s by a sailor who then traded her to settle a bar bill.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-14 05:00

Lower courts blocked the effort to send home Haitian immigrants, part of an already shrinking workforce in nursing homes. The Supreme Court will hear the case this month.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-14 05:00

The attack at the San Francisco home of OpenAI CEO Sam Altman led some Silicon Valley figures to accuse AI critics of inspiring political violence.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 03:00

BrianFagioli shares a report from NERDS.xyz: For years pop culture has treated April 25 as the "perfect date," thanks to the famous Miss Congeniality line about needing only a light jacket. But new analysis from WeatherBug suggests that idea does not actually hold up when you look at the numbers. After reviewing U.S. weather data from 2018 through today, the company concluded that October 8 delivers the most reliable combination of comfortable temperatures and low rainfall nationwide. According to the analysis, the average conditions on that day land around 66F with just 0.0573 inches of precipitation. The study used population weighted weather data drawn from roughly 20 million daily WeatherBug users across the United States. When the company compared all days of the year, April 25 ranked only 80th, averaging about 60F and roughly 0.1297 inches of rain. The broader dataset also shows July dominating the hottest days of the year while January owns the coldest, with January 20 averaging just 33F nationally. While no single date guarantees perfect weather everywhere in a country as large as the U.S., the numbers suggest early October may quietly offer one of the most reliable windows for comfortable outdoor conditions.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 01:12

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for April 14.

2026-04-15 08:04
2026-04-14 01:09

Carney’s Liberals will now be able to pass legislation without the support of opposition parties – and govern until 2029

The Canadian prime minister, Mark Carney, has secured a parliamentary majority for his Liberal government, CBC News reported. The victory will help him push through a legislative agenda he says is needed for an increasingly divided geopolitical world.

Three byelections were held on Monday in Ontario and Quebec, with two in districts – known as ridings – that have long voted Liberal.

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2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 01:00

With two new council members being sworn in Wednesday, Newark City Council will reconsider three tax proposals that were previously rejected.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 00:42

And yes, it will be rated R.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 00:40
2nd board acquired

After a year with my first board and spending way too much on upgrades I’ve decided to take on another project.

This CBXR-V will be the base for a BTG build. It zips and I’m checking the range I can get tomorrow (hopefully around 20 miles on the street.

submitted by /u/mach7stelo
[link] [comments]

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 00:00

Regime hopes to capitalise on deepening transatlantic split by briefing previously sidelined European countries

In a move designed to increase pressure on the US to make compromises in its conflict with his country, Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi has been briefing European capitals on the nature of the offer Iran had been willing to make about its stockpile of highly enriched uranium and future stewardship of the strait of Hormuz during the weekend talks in Islamabad.

After the inconclusive talks, Araghchi held phone briefings with the French and German foreign ministers, Jean-Noël Barrot and Johann Wadephul, as well as the Saudi, Omani and Qatari foreign ministers.

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2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 00:00

Overconfidence could draw America and China into a war.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 00:00

The Taiwan Relations Act should serve as a model.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-14 00:00

Trump is still underestimating Tehran’s resolve.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-13 23:30

An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: AI experts and the public's opinion on the technology are increasingly diverging, according to Stanford University's annual report on the AI industry, which was released Monday. In particular, the report noted a growing trend of anxiety around AI and, in the U.S., concerns about how the technology will impact key societal areas, such as jobs, medical care, and the economy. [...] Stanford's report provides more insight into where all this negativity is coming from, as it summarizes data around public sentiment of AI across various sources. For instance, it pointed to a report from Pew Research published last month, which noted that only 10% of Americans said they were more excited than concerned about the increased use of AI in daily life. Meanwhile, 56% of AI experts said they believed AI would have a positive impact on the U.S. over the next 20 years. Expert opinion and public sentiment also greatly diverged in particular areas where AI could have a societal impact. Indeed, 84% of experts, the report authors noted, said that AI would have a largely positive impact on medical care over the next 20 years, but only 44% of the U.S. general public said the same. Plus, a majority (73%) of experts felt positive about AI's impact on how people do their jobs, compared with just 23% of the public. And 69% of experts felt that AI would have a positive impact on the economy. Given the supposed AI-fueled layoffs and disruptions to the workplace, it's not surprising that only 21% of the public felt similarly. Other data from Pew Research, cited by the report, noted that AI experts were less pessimistic on AI's impact on the job market, while nearly two-thirds of Americans (or 64%) said they think AI will lead to fewer jobs over the next 20 years. The U.S. also reported the lowest trust in its government to regulate AI responsibly, compared with other nations, at 31%. Singapore ranked highest at 81%, per data pulled from Ipsos found in Stanford's report. Another source looked at regulation concerns on a state-by-state level and concluded that, nationwide, 41% of respondents said federal AI regulation will not go far enough, while only 27% said it would go "too far." Despite the fears and concerns, AI did get one accolade: Globally, those who feel like AI products and services offer more benefits than drawbacks slightly rose from 55% in 2024 to 59% in 2025. But at the same time, those respondents who said that AI makes them "nervous" grew from 50% to 52% during the same period, per data cited by the report's authors.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-13 22:51

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-13 22:26

The latest strike on an alleged drug-trafficking boat brings the contentious campaign's death toll to at least 170.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-13 22:18

COLLEGE PARK, Md., April 13, 2026 — IonQ and the University of Maryland (UMD) today announced a multi-year expansion of their partnership through the National Quantum Laboratory (QLab), extending their joint efforts in quantum computing, quantum networking, and workforce development.

This latest agreement, totaling $7.5 million and supported by funding from the State of Maryland’s Capital of Quantum Initiative via the University of Maryland Economic Development Corporation (UMEC), builds on the strategic partnership first announced in September 2024.

“Our longstanding partnership with the University of Maryland meets the need to accelerate access to advanced quantum computing, quantum networking capabilities, and talent development,” said Niccolo de Masi, Chairman and CEO of IonQ. “IonQ’s collaboration with UMD reflects our commitment to Maryland’s ‘Capital of Quantum’ initiative, as we broaden QLab to include quantum networking, hardware upgrades, and deeper collaboration with its researchers.”

“This expanded agreement strengthens the QLab as a premier testbed for quantum networking and computing and deepens opportunities for our faculty and students to work hands-on with industry-leading systems,” said University of Maryland President Darryll J. Pines. “Building on our strong relationship with IonQ through the QLab is critical to advancing discovery, developing talent and reinforcing Maryland’s position as the Capital of Quantum.”

This next step in the ongoing collaboration deepens IonQ’s integration with UMD researchers and students, positioning QLab as a leading testbed for next-generation quantum technologies, including quantum networking and memory systems – specifically, the first deployment of IonQ’s silicon vacancy (SiV)-based quantum memory node. This industry-leading infrastructure will complement existing UMD efforts, such as the Mid-Atlantic Region Quantum Internet (MARQI) network, across multiple areas of quantum technologies.

The four core elements of the expansion are designed to scale research capacity and enable new areas of exploration:

  • Quantum Memory Node Deployment: The largest component of the agreement supports deployment of a cutting-edge quantum memory node for advanced networking capabilities. This hardware enables UMD to develop, build, and test new applications and use-cases directly on top of IonQ’s quantum networking and interconnect platform, accelerating future commercial use.
  • Increased QLab Compute Access: IonQ will provide additional quantum compute resources, broadening access to IonQ systems to meet rapidly growing demand from UMD researchers and students.
  • Joint Applications: The collaboration boosts applied research efforts through directed projects, including work on quantum machine learning and holographic error-correcting codes, strengthening ties between IonQ scientists and UMD faculty on near- and mid-term applications.
  • Advanced Experimental Hardware Upgrades: IonQ and UMD will jointly develop a specialized laser system supporting more advanced quantum algorithms and new experiments in quantum thermodynamics.

The partnership reinforces Maryland’s role as a national hub for quantum innovation by bringing together state investment, academic leadership, and IonQ’s commercial quantum computing and networking technologies. Beyond advancing fundamental and applied research, the collaboration emphasizes hands-on training and workforce readiness, giving students experience with commercial-grade quantum systems and emerging networking architectures.

This work builds on IonQ’s broader collaborations with leading academic, government, and industry partners, including the University of Cambridge, U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory, the University of Chicago, the state of Tennessee and EPB as well as international research institutions advancing quantum networking and applications.

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 IonQ Tempo, is the latest in a line of cutting-edge systems that have been helping customers and partners including Amazon Web Services, and AstraZeneca 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 University of Maryland Expand QLab Collaboration to Advance Quantum Networking and Research appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-13 21:58

This live blog is now closed.

Donald Trump appears to have deleted an AI-generated image of himself that he posted to Truth Social on Sunday, depicting him as a Jesus Christ-like figure, with divine light emanating from his hands as he heals a stricken man in a hospital bed with a demon from hell floating in the background.

The removal of the post on social media come after some of the president’s most high-profile and loyal Christian supporters, many of whom have stood by the president through multiple other indiscretions, are unable to contain their righteous fury.

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2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-13 21:44

Dispatch of vessel strike, like most of military’s statements on strikes conducted in area, did not provide evidence

The US military said it killed two people in a strike on a vessel in the eastern Pacific Ocean on Monday, claiming the targets were involved in “narco-trafficking operations”.

The announcement, like most of the military’s statements on the dozens of strikes it has conducted in the eastern Pacific and Caribbean Sea, did not provide evidence to support its claims that the targets were engaged in narco-trafficking.

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2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-13 21:42

Last year, No 1 overall pick Paige Bueckers got a $78,831 salary as a rookie. Tonight, the top pick will get a $500,000 salary.

That bump is thanks to the salary increases in the new collective bargaining agreement. The new CBA includes specific salary tiers for each of the top eight picks – for example, the No 2 pick will earn a base salary of $466,913. Second- and third-round picks who sign contracts with teams will earn the new league minimum of $270,000. That’s up from $69.3k for second-rounders and $66k for third-rounders last year.

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2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-13 21:42

Trump’s now-deleted post sparked the wrath of some of his loyal conservative Christian followers – key US politics stories from Monday 13 April at a glance

Donald Trump managed to pull off a bit of a miracle on Sunday: he offended and upset many of his conservative Christian followers.

Trump posted an AI-generated image of himself to Truth Social on Sunday depicting him as a Jesus Christ-like figure, with divine light emanating from his hands as he heals a stricken man in a hospital bed with a demon from hell floating in the background.

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2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-13 21:30

This blog is now closed – our live coverage continues here

Circling back to Donald Trump’s coming naval blockade, the US military said it would block all Iranian Gulf ports on Monday at 10am ET on Monday (5.30pm in Iran and 1400 GMT), effectively seizing control of maritime traffic in the strait of Hormuz.

“The blockade will be enforced impartially against vessels of all nations entering or departing Iranian ports and coastal areas, including all Iranian ports on the Arabian Gulf and Gulf of Oman,” US Central Command said on X.

This is like a game of chicken. It’s who caves first. The Iranian regime is hoping that Trump will cave. Today, he showed he’s not.”

Continue reading...

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-13 21:28

Lynette Hooker went missing after she allegedly went overboard while in the Bahamas.

2026-04-14 08:04
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Huawei's new extra-wide Pura X Max seems to have beaten the iPhone Fold to the punch.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-13 21:10

Péter Magyar would ‘talk to Russian president, but won’t initiate contact’; Ukraine welcomes defeat of Orbán. What we know on day 1,511

Péter Magyar, Hungary’s new leader, said he would ask Vladimir Putin to end the killing in Ukraine if they speak, and plans to review Hungary’s Russian energy contracts and renegotiate them if needed. Magyar said he would talk to the Russian president, but won’t initiate contact. “If Vladimir Putin calls, I’ll pick up the phone,” he said in his first news conference after his landslide win against Viktor Orbán, a Putin ally. “If we did talk, I could tell him that it would be nice to end the killing after four years and end the war. It would probably be a short phone conversation and I don’t think he would end the war on my advice,” he said.

Ukraine welcomed with relief on Monday the defeat of Orbán, its harshest critic in the EU, an outcome that paves the way for a €90bn ($105bn) loan that Kyiv urgently needs to fund the war with Russia.

Higher oil prices caused by the war in the Middle East could raise inflation rates in Ukraine by 1.5 to 2.8 percentage points, Ukraine’s top central banker said on Monday. The National Bank of Ukraine governor, Andriy Pyshnyi, said the central bank would stick to its target of lowering inflation to 5% in three years, using all available tools to ensure that goal was met. “We’re trying to walk on a razorblade,” Pyshnyi said through an interpreter, noting prices have already started to rise.

The Ukrainian military struck a Russian chemicals plant in Cherepovets in the Vologda region, Kyiv’s drone forces commander said on Monday. The plant produces chemicals that serve as raw materials for TNT, hexogen and components for munitions, Robert Brovdi said on Telegram.

Russian and Belarusian athletes will be permitted to compete in World Aquatics events with their respective uniforms, flags and anthems, the sport’s governing body said on Monday. Competitors from both countries were banned from international sports events after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, which was launched in part from Belarusian territory.

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2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-13 21:10

Two years before her disappearance, Lynette Hooker temporarily split with her husband Brian, telling a friend, "Our marriage lasted 6 weeks cruising," and "It was bad. I can't be out there with him."

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-13 21:09

Kepner’s body was found concealed under bed in a room she shared with two teens, including 16-year-old stepbrother

A 16-year-old boy has been charged with murder and aggravated sexual abuse in Florida in the 6 November death of his 18-year-old stepsister on a Carnival cruise ship, the US justice department said Monday.

Timothy Hudson was initially charged in February and subsequently indicted on 10 March. But the breadth of the case was not known until a seal was lifted Friday, weeks after US district judge Beth Bloom in Miami said he would be prosecuted as an adult at the request of the government.

Guardian staff contributed

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2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-13 20:58

Bahamian police say the search for Lynette Hooker has turned into a search and recovery operation. Her husband has been released after days in custody.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-13 20:33

Donald Trump posted an AI-generated image to Truth Social depicting himself as a Christ-like figure, with divine light emanating from his hands as he heals a stricken man in a hospital bed. The president has since deleted the post after facing the wrath of some of his most high-profile and loyal Christian supporters. When asked if he posted the image himself, Trump said 'I thought it was me as a doctor and it had to do with the Red Cross', adding 'only the fake news could come up with that one' in reference to people drawing connections between himself and Jesus in the image.

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2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-13 20:26

The US president’s conservative, Christian supporters decried the Truth Social post, calling it ‘disgusting’

Less than a year after signing legislation that will pull nearly 12 million Americans off health insurance by gutting Medicaid, Donald Trump posted an AI-generated image of himself to Truth Social on Sunday depicting him as a Jesus-like figure, with divine light emanating from his hands as he heals a stricken man in a hospital bed with a demon from hell floating in the background.

The president has since deleted the post, which also followed a lengthy tirade about Pope Leo XIV on the site the same day in which he called him “weak on crime” and blamed the head of the Catholic church for being influenced by Barack Obama strategist David Axelrod. Trump refused to apologize to the pope, saying: “He went public. I’m just responding to Pope Leo.”

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2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-13 20:23

Iran warns Americans they face higher pump prices due to prohibition imposed on Monday evening

The US blockade of ships using Iranian ports in the Gulf has come into effect, turning the six-week-old conflict between the US-Israeli coalition and Iran into a test of economic endurance.

US Central Command (Centcom) made no formal announcement of the start of the blockade but had said it begin on Monday at 5.30pm Iranian time and would apply to any ships entering or departing Iranian ports or coastal areas, while ships using non-Iranian ports would not be impeded.

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2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-13 20:07

Asking for a friend

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2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-14 05:00

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for April 14, No. 1,760.

2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-14 05:00

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for April 14, No. 1,038.

2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-14 14:41

An always-on Copilot could sort out your inbox and calendar.

2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 20:22

"I plan to resign my seat in Congress," Democratic Rep. Eric Swalwell said Monday as he faces an expulsion vote.

2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 20:24

The 20-year-old suspect is accused of traveling from Spring, Texas, to San Francisco to target OpenAI CEO Sam Altman's home and carry out the attack.

2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 20:00

The Texas Republican faces an expulsion vote stemming from his affair with a staffer who later died by suicide.

2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 19:53

President Trump told CBS News senior correspondent Norah O'Donnell that Pope Leo is "wrong on the issues" Monday after lashing out at the pontiff late Sunday in a Truth Social post.

2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 19:41

Gonzales, who admitted affair with aide who later died by suicide, says he will file retirement from office on Tuesday

Representative Tony Gonzales, a Republican from Texas, announced on Monday he was stepping down from Congress after acknowledging an extramarital affair with a staffer.

Gonzales, who was facing a growing threat of expulsion by his colleagues, admitted last month that he had an affair with an aide who later died by suicide.

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2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 19:35

The feature is rolling out to most Gemini users right now.

2026-04-14 08:04
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FBI alleges Daniel Moreno-Gama, 20, was captured on video throwing explosive device outside home of OpenAI chief

A Texas man was charged with hurling a molotov cocktail at the home of OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman and attempting to set fire to the AI firm’s headquarters.

Daniel Moreno-Gama, 20, was captured on surveillance video throwing an incendiary device outside Altman’s San Francisco residence, according to a FBI affidavit filed in federal court on Monday.

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2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 19:22

With his Tisza party jubilant over its win, Peter Magyar warned of difficulties ahead as his new government faces economic woes and Orban allies in high places.

2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 19:05

Among those fired is Sanjay Patel, a longtime federal prosecutor in the Civil Rights Division's criminal section who was placed on administrative leave last month, sources told CBS News at the time.

2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 19:01

George Robertson says Iran war should be wake-up call to address military underfunding in scathing remarks

The British government has shown a “corrosive complacency towards defence” and put the UK “in peril”, according to a government adviser, in fierce criticisms of Keir Starmer’s military policy.

The former Nato secretary general and author of the government’s strategic defence review, George Robertson, believes Starmer was “not willing to make the necessary investment”, the Financial Times has reported.

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2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 19:01

Incentives to absorb surplus wind and solar energy could help balance the grid and lower bills

Households will be called on to boost their consumption of Great Britain’s record renewable energy this summer to help balance the power grid and lower energy bills.

Under the new plans, people could be encouraged to run dishwashers and washing machines or charge up their electric vehicles when there is more wind and solar power than the electricity grid needs.

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2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 19:01

Galleries, theatres, museums and libraries to benefit from largest cash injection into the arts for a decade

More than 100 cultural venues, museums, and libraries will share £130m extra funding as part of the largest cash injection into the arts for a decade, ministers have announced.

The investment forms part of the Arts Everywhere Fund, a £1.5bn package to support cultural infrastructure projects over the course of this parliament, which was announced by the culture secretary, Lisa Nandy, earlier this year. The fund aims to save more than 1,000 arts venues, museums, libraries and heritage buildings across England.

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2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 19:01

Chief inspector for England and Wales says prison remains in ‘precarious state’ more than year after urgent notification

The Prison Service has made “very little progress” in enforcing a formal demand to stop drones from delivering drugs into one of its worst performing jails, a watchdog has concluded.

Charlie Taylor, the chief inspector of prisons for England and Wales, said HMP Manchester remained in a “precarious state” after a failure to fix broken windows and install security to stop contraband being delivered to gangs.

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2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 19:00

Bloomberg's Mark Gurman reports that Apple is developing display-free AI smart glasses aimed at rivaling Meta's Ray-Bans, with multiple frame styles, a distinctive oval camera design, and tight iPhone integration. "The idea is to unveil the product at the end of 2026 or early the following year, with the actual release coming in 2027," writes Gurman. From the report: Like Meta's offering, Apple's glasses will be designed to handle everyday uses: capturing photos and videos, syncing with a smartphone for editing and sharing, handling phone calls, listening to notifications, playing music, and enabling hands-free interaction via a voice assistant. In Apple's case, that assistant will be a significantly upgraded Siri coming in iOS 27. The glasses are part of a broader, three-pronged AI wearables strategy that also includes new AirPods and a camera-equipped pendant. Each device is designed to leverage computer vision to interpret the user's surroundings and feed contextual awareness into Siri and Apple Intelligence. That will enable features like improved turn-by-turn map directions and visual reminders. When Apple typically enters a new product category, it offers clear advantages over what's currently available. We saw this with the original iPod, iPhone, iPad and Apple Watch -- and, even though it was a flop, the Vision Pro. That approach won't be as obvious with Apple's upcoming foldable iPhone, but we should see it on full display with the glasses. According to employees working on the project, Apple's strategy is to outdo competitors by tightly integrating the glasses with the iPhone and offering a higher-end build. While Meta relies heavily on partner EssilorLuxottica SA for frames, Apple is unsurprisingly planning to go at it alone in terms of design. That also should set it apart from Alphabet Inc.'s Google and Samsung Electronics Co., which are leaning on Warby Parker. Apple's design team has whipped up at least four different styles and plans to launch some or all of them, I'm told, as well as many color options. The latest units are made from a high-end material called acetate, which is known to be more durable and luxurious than the standard plastic used by many brands. Here are the designs in testing: - A large rectangular frame, reminiscent of Ray-Ban Wayfarers - A slimmer rectangular design, similar to the glasses worn by Apple Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook - Larger oval or circular frames - A smaller, more refined oval or circular option

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 18:51

No physical scanner, no problem -- quickly sign, scan and send official documents with iPhone in your pocket.

2026-04-13 20:04
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7 months after buying a GT battery goes bad

So bought a GT in August at 150 miles. Keep dying at 40%. Reached out, they had me charge to 100% and send in a diagnostic. Ride it back down and again dies at 40% and send in a diagnostic again. They RMA it, which is fair.

Then I get hit with the battery needs to be replaced and your one month over warranty.

So now I gotta pay $800 for a new battery.....

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2026-04-13 20:04
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Certain high-end customization options for the M4 Mac Mini and Mac Studio are unavailable, at least for now.

2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 18:28

The arrest of Brazilian former intelligence chief and congressman Alexandre Ramagem ended a manhunt that stretched for six months across two continents.

2026-04-13 20:04
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The Trump administration agreed to restore the Stonewall National Monument's Pride flag in Greenwich Village after it was removed.

2026-04-13 20:04
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Decision comes after House ethics committee announced it had opened an investigation into congressman

Representative Eric Swalwell, a Democrat from California, said on Monday he would resign from Congress following multiple allegations of sexual assault and misconduct that ended his bid for governor.

Swalwell was a facing a growing chorus of bipartisan calls for him to step down or face an expulsion vote, a day after he announced that he would suspend his campaign for governor of California.

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2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-13 18:00

More than 1,000 Hollywood figures, including major actors, writers, and directors, signed an open letter opposing Paramount Skydance's proposed takeover of Warner Bros. Discovery, arguing it would hurt an industry "already under severe strain." The deal is still under regulatory scrutiny in both the U.S. and U.K., while Paramount says the merger would strengthen competition and expand opportunities for creators. NBC News reports: "This transaction would further consolidate an already concentrated media landscape, reducing competition at a moment when our industries -- and the audiences we serve -- can least afford it," the signatories wrote in the letter, published early Monday on a website called Block the Merger. "The result will be fewer opportunities for creators, fewer jobs across the production ecosystem, higher costs, and less choice for audiences in the United States and around the world. Alarmingly, this merger would reduce the number of major U.S. film studios to just four," the signatories added. [T]he open letter illustrates the deep resistance to the deal among many members of Hollywood's creative community. The list of signatories includes A-list stars (Glenn Close, Ben Stiller), celebrated filmmakers (Yorgos Lanthimos, Denis Villeneuve) and acclaimed writers ("The Sopranos" creator David Chase). "Media consolidation has accelerated the disappearance of the mid-budget film, the erosion of independent distribution, the collapse of the international sales market, the elimination of meaningful profit participation, and the weakening of screen credit integrity," the signatories wrote. "Together, these factors threaten the sustainability of the entire creative community," they added. [...] Monday's open letter was spearheaded by a group of advocacy organizations -- including the Committee for the First Amendment, a free speech group led by Fonda, who warned that the merger "would be one of the most destructive threats to free speech and creative expression in our history." In the letter, first reported by The New York Times, the signatories expressed support for California Attorney General Rob Bonta, who has said the merger is "not a done deal." "These two Hollywood titans have not cleared regulatory scrutiny -- the California Department of Justice has an open investigation, and we intend to be vigorous in our review," Bonta said in a Feb. 26 post on X. Paramount Skydance said that they "hear and understand the concerns" and are committed to "protecting and expanding creativity." The studio also reiterated its commitment to releasing a minimum of 30 "high-quality feature films annually with full theatrical releases" and "preserving iconic brands with independent creative leadership" to make sure "creators have more avenues for their work, not fewer."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 17:35
New small board from Floatwheel coming soon!

Who wants to guess the price or voltage?

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2026-04-13 20:04
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U.S. Rep. Maria Salazar, R-Fla., wants to overhaul the U.S. immigration system by providing legal pathways for certain immigrants in the U.S. illegally.

The Dignity Act, which increases border security and speeds up asylum decisions, has garnered bipartisan support with 39 cosponsors, almost evenly split between Democrats and Republicans.

Republican critics say her bill is far too lenient.

"The Dignity Act is mass amnesty and would constitute a terrible betrayal of our voters," Texas Republican Rep. Brandon Gill wrote April 7 on X. Florida Republicans, including Gov. Ron DeSantis, echoed that sentiment.

Salazar, a Cuban American whose Miami district includes a large immigrant population, introduced the bill several times before it gained traction in 2025 as the Trump administration’s mass deportation efforts scaled up. 

When PolitiFact asked Salazar’s office about Gill’s post, her spokesperson pointed us to her April 7 response to him on X

"Calling the DIGNITY Act ‘amnesty’ isn’t just wrong. It’s a deliberate distortion and it exposes just how little you know about the bill," Salazar wrote. "This is enforcement first: zero tolerance for criminals, permanent border security, and hard, earned requirements to step forward and face the law." She added that the bill provides "no shortcuts. No giveaways. No blanket forgiveness."

PolitiFact has fact-checked several claims over the years about whether legislation amounts to amnesty — a political term with no agreed-upon definition. (This is our first time looking at the Dignity Act.)

One interpretation of amnesty is a blanket pardon and citizenship status to all immigrants in the U.S. illegally. The Dignity Act doesn’t do that.

But the bill provides a new, renewable legal status to a portion of immigrants in the U.S. illegally who meet certain criteria. To supporters of restrictive immigration policies such as Gill, this permission to remain in the U.S. while avoiding deportation sounds like amnesty.

Salazar’s legislation includes requirements, such as paying $7,000 in fines and passing criminal background checks, for certain immigrants to obtain legal status. 

The bill’s provisions would apply to immigrants who were in the U.S. illegally before 2021; the Department of Homeland Security estimates that number to be around 10.5 million. That means there’s a pool of millions of people who could potentially benefit if they satisfy the requirements and remain in good standing.

Ilya Somin, a George Mason University law professor, said whether the bill grants amnesty is a semantic debate that distracts from the issue’s merits.

"The Dignity Act would create ‘mass amnesty’ in the sense that it gives legal status to large numbers of people, potentially millions, who would otherwise be eligible for deportation," Somin said. "On the other hand, you can argue it is not real ‘amnesty,’" because of the required fines and time limit on the legal status.

PolitiFact emailed Gill and his spokesperson for evidence but received no response.

What is amnesty?

A legal definition of amnesty says it is "a blanket abolition of an offense by the government, with the legal result that those charged or convicted have the charge or conviction wiped out."

When it comes to immigration, what constitutes amnesty is up for debate. Some consider amnesty to be granting citizenship to immigrants who are in the U.S. illegally. Others use it as a catch-all term for policies that allow immigrants in the country illegally to remain in the U.S. without the threat of deportation, even when it doesn’t lead to citizenship or includes measures they have to meet. 

Republican President Ronald Reagan signed the 1986 Immigration Reform and Control Act —  broadly considered an amnesty program because it allowed people in the U.S. illegally to become lawful permanent residents if they were in the country by Jan. 1, 1982, and met other requirements.

"Historically, amnesty has been used to convey the forgiveness of immigration violations and the conferral of legal status without countervailing requirements, such as the payment of a fine or demonstration of certain criteria," said Michelle Mittelstadt, communications director of the Migration Policy Institute, a nonpartisan think tank.

Would the Dignity Act grant mass amnesty?

Republican opponents of the Dignity Act take issue with the bill’s provisions that could grant legal status to large swaths of immigrants. 

The bill creates a program that would allow immigrants in the U.S. illegally since before Dec. 31, 2020, to earn "dignity status," a newly created legal status, for seven years if they are employed or attending school, pass a background check and pay $7,000 in fines, as well as back taxes owed. Immigrants who entered the U.S. in 2021 or later would not be eligible. 

Recipients would have to check in with DHS, and they can renew their status as long as they remain in good standing. They would not be eligible for federal benefits or U.S. citizenship.

"There is nothing ‘mass’ about it. People would be decided for inclusion based on individual characteristics on an individual basis," said David Bier, associate director of immigration studies at the libertarian Cato Institute. "Typically amnesty involves wiping away all consequences related to a violation of law," but the Dignity Act imposes fines and other requirements.

The bill also includes a version of the Dream Act, allowing immigrants brought to the U.S. as children to obtain legal status for up to 10 years and, if they meet certain requirements, to eventually be eligible to apply for U.S. citizenship. This could allow up to 2.5 million "Dreamers" to continue to live and work in the U.S.

"The Dignity Act does not grant amnesty, which, to me, means a universal reprieve without any consideration to a fee or process to be right with the law," said Christian Penichet-Paul, assistant vice president of policy and advocacy at the National Immigration Forum, an immigrant advocacy group. "People have to earn their legal status under the bill and, except for Dreamers, there is no opportunity to earn U.S. citizenship. People can disagree with the merits of the bill without calling it something it is not." 

Some see it differently.

Steven Camarota, research director at the Center for Immigration Studies, a think tank that favors low immigration levels, says amnesty "almost always" has conditions, and compared the  Dignity Act with Reagan’s Immigration Reform and Control Act.

"They are very alike," Camarota said. "They are both giving green cards to millions of people who are here without formal authorization, and (the IRCA) also had some requirements and fines. 

"The bill is unambiguously an amnesty for some people, and it’s a generous one."

The Dignity Act includes funding to add more physical barriers and surveillance technology to the U.S. border and would require businesses to use the E-verify system to verify employee eligibility. It would speed up asylum decisions to within 60 days, requiring applicants to be housed at the border, and increase penalties on noncitizen voting and illegal reentry, among other provisions.

Our ruling

Gill said the Dignity Act is "mass amnesty."

Salazar’s legislation is not a blanket pardon allowing all immigrants in the country illegally to remain in the U.S, but there’s a pool of millions who potentially could benefit. 

The Dignity Act includes requirements — such as paying $7,000 in fines and passing criminal background checks — for some immigrants in the country before 2021 to obtain legal status for seven years. Immigrants who entered the U.S. in 2021 or after would not be eligible. 

The newly created "dignity status" would be renewable. For some immigrants brought to the U.S. as children, known as Dreamers, the legislation would grant legal status with the eventual possibility of U.S. citizenship.

Gill’s statement is partially accurate but leaves out important details. We rate it Half True. 

2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 17:23

Despite start of military operations to intercept ships region, investors still expect U.S. and Iran to find an off-ramp.

2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 17:21

The W3LL phishing kit helped criminals steal tens of thousands of account credentials, primarily targeting Microsoft 365 accounts.

2026-04-14 12:04
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RIYADH, Saudi Arabia, April 13, 2026 — Lenovo has announced the official opening of its Middle East, Türkiye and Africa (META) Regional Headquarters in Riyadh (RHQ), marking a strategic milestone in the company’s long-term investment in the Kingdom and its commitment to supporting Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 objectives.

Credit: Lenovo

The official opening was marked by a formal ceremony attended by the Minister of Investment of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, His Excellency Mr. Fahad bin Abduljalil Al‑Saif, alongside senior government officials, strategic partners, and Lenovo leaders.

His Excellency Mr. Fahad bin Abduljalil Al‑Saif, Minister of Investment of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, stated: “Lenovo’s decision to establish its Middle East, Türkiye and Africa Regional Headquarters in Riyadh reflects the strength of the Kingdom’s partnership with leading global technology companies and the effectiveness of the Regional Headquarters Program. Lenovo’s continued investments in advanced manufacturing, supply chain localisation, talent development, and regional operations demonstrate strong confidence in Saudi Arabia as a long‑term base for innovation and growth and contribute directly to our Vision 2030 objectives of building a competitive, diversified, and export‑oriented economy.”

As part of the occasion, Lenovo also hosted a high‑level visit to its manufacturing site in Riyadh, welcoming His Excellency the Minister of Investment, alongside several ministerial level officials from multiple government entities, as well as key CEOs from both the private and public sectors who were received by His Excellency Abdulaziz Al-Duailej, President of GACA. During the visit, the delegation met with 28 Saudi graduate engineers who have recently returned from China after completing Lenovo’s Saudi Smart Manufacturing Graduate Program, delivered in partnership with the Human Resources Development Fund, the Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources, and ALAT. Trained at Lenovo’s global manufacturing facilities, the graduates are now back in Riyadh, ready to apply world‑class expertise and become the next first generation of Saudi technical leaders at Lenovo’s facility.

The RHQ serves as Lenovo’s central hub for regional strategy, and operations across the META region. The opening underscores Lenovo’s confidence in Saudi Arabia as a strategic base for regional decision making, innovation, and collaboration, further strengthening the Kingdom’s position as a growing global technology and business center.

The Riyadh RHQ also forms a core pillar of Lenovo’s broader strategic collaboration with ALAT, and sits alongside Lenovo’s ongoing investments in the Kingdom. These include an advanced manufacturing facility with capacity to produce up to two million PCs and smartphones, a research and development center, talent enablement programs, and a customer experience center. Together, these initiatives reflect Lenovo’s continued commitment to supporting the creation of thousands of local jobs, enabling knowledge transfer, and driving long‑term economic value creation in Saudi Arabia.

Commenting on the opening, Tareq Alangari, Senior Vice President and President of Lenovo Middle East, Türkiye and Africa, said: “Today’s opening of our META Regional Headquarters in Riyadh is a proud moment for Lenovo and a clear statement of our long‑term commitment to Saudi Arabia. By anchoring our regional leadership and operations in the Kingdom, we are strengthening our ability to serve customers across the region, invest in local talent, and contribute meaningfully to Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030. Riyadh will play an increasingly important role in Lenovo’s global growth story.”

Through the establishment and opening of the RHQ, Lenovo is positioning Riyadh as a key hub for its activities across more than 6 markets in the META region. The headquarters will support closer collaboration with customers and partners, enable faster and more localised decision‑making, and anchor future investments in innovation, skills development, and strategic partnerships across the region.

With the official opening of its META Regional Headquarters in Riyadh, Lenovo reaffirms its position as a long‑term technology partner to Saudi Arabia, supporting the Kingdom’s ambitions to become a global hub for innovation, advanced manufacturing, and digital transformation.

Located in Majdoul Tower, one of Riyadh’s most prominent commercial landmarks, Lenovo’s Regional Headquarters is situated at the heart of the Kingdom’s growing innovation and business district. The tower hosts a number of government entities, investment institutions, and leading international companies, reflecting its role as a focal point for strategic investments and regional operations in Saudi Arabia.

About Lenovo

Lenovo is a US$69 billion revenue global technology powerhouse, ranked #196 in the Fortune Global 500, and serving millions of customers every day in 180 markets. Focused on a bold vision to deliver Smarter Technology for All, Lenovo has built on its success as the world’s largest PC company with a full-stack portfolio of AI-enabled, AI-ready, and AI-optimized devices (PCs, workstations, smartphones, tablets), infrastructure (server, storage, edge, high performance computing and software defined infrastructure), software, solutions, and services. Lenovo’s continued investment in world-changing innovation is building a more equitable, trustworthy, and smarter future for everyone, everywhere. Lenovo is listed on the Hong Kong stock exchange under Lenovo Group Limited (HKSE: 992) (ADR: LNVGY).


Source: Lenovo

The post Lenovo Opens Middle East, Türkiye and Africa Regional Headquarters in Riyadh appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-13 17:13

Progress in artificial intelligence continues to accelerate across a range of expert disciplines, according to the latest AI Index report published today by Stanford University’s Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence (HAI) center. When it comes to science, math, and reasoning, several frontier AI models now meet or exceed human baselines on PhD-level questions. However, there are gaps in the AI model coverage, and limitations remain in how these AI models can be applied in the real world.

The Stanford HAI center’s AI Index reports are valuable because they gather hard data about AI models running the real world, as opposed to only asking people for their opinions (which HAI also does). For 2026, HAI looked into published benchmark results for a range of AI models, and found that they continue to improve at an astounding rate.

For instance, the researchers found that Frontier models gained 30 percentage points in a single year on Humanity’s Last Exam, which is a benchmark composed of questions   questions from nearly 1,000 subject-matter experts, primarily professors, researchers, and graduate degree holders. Humanity’s Last Exam was designed to really put AI models through their paces, but the models are getting so good that evaluations that were intended to be challenging for years instead are being completed in months, HAI says in its report (which you can access here).

The size of AI models continues to grow (Source: Stanford HAI AI Index 2026)

The top six AI models–which are from Anthropic, xAI, Google, OpenAI, Alibaba, and DeepSeek–have converged in capability in early 2026, per the Arena Leaderboard, HAI reports. Meta now resides outside of the top tier of models, and has shown no improvement over the past 22 months on that benchmark. In general, open models like Meta’s Llama are doing worse than closed models like OpenAI, according to HAI. The spread between the top closed model and the top open model went from 0.3% in August 2024 to 3.3% in March 2026.

“AI capability is not plateauing. It is accelerating and reaching more people than ever,” the authors of the AI Index wrote. “Industry produced over 90% of notable frontier models in 2025, and several of those models now meet or exceed human baselines on PhD-level science questions, multimodal reasoning, and competition mathematics. On a key coding benchmark–SWE-bench Verified–performance rose from 60% to near 100% of meeting the human baseline in a single year. Organizational adoption reached 88%, and 4 in 5 university students now use generative AI.”

When it comes to science, AI models continue to rack up big gains. However, their overall usefulness is mixed.

For instance, HAI says frontier models generally now outperform human chemists, as shown by ChemBench, a benchmark designed to evaluate the chemical knowledge and reasoning capabilities of LLMs. According to HAI, the best AI models now surpass human expert averages across more than 2,700 chemistry questions on ChemBench. HAI also mentioned the launch of Polymathic’s AION-1, the first foundation model for astronomy, and pointed out the big advances made in weather forecasting with FourCastNet 3 global weather model and Aardvark Weather’s AI forecaster developed by the University of Cambridge.

AI models meet or exceed PhD-level performance on a range of general tasks… (Source: Stanford HAI AI Index 2026)

HAI also points out that the first fully AI-generated paper was accepted at a peer-reviewed workshop in 2025. Sakana’s AI Scientist-v2 model produced a paper that was accepted at an ICLR workshop without any human-coded templates; that paper has since been accepted for publication in the journal Nature. Google’s AI Co-Scientist was validated in three biomedical areas, HAI says.

Despite these advances, there are still holes in AI’s scientific repertoire, including the capability to recreate scientific studies.

HAI points out that frontier models score below 20% on paper-scale replication in astrophysics on ReplicationBench, a framework introduced in 2025 by Stanford and University of Toronto researchers to evaluate the validity of AI-assisted scientific research in astrophysics. HAI also points out that LLM agents answer earth observation questions with 33% accuracy on UnivEarth, a benchmark created for measuring reliability of AI-assisted research in Earth Observation (EO) and geospatial analysis. What’s more, LLM agents’ code fails 58% of the time on UnivEarth.

The capability for science LLM agents to handle end-to-end tasks is also not quite up to par. HAI points out that the best agent reaches 38.8% accuracy on the PaperArena evaluation tool introduced last year by Cornell University researchers, versus a PhD expert baseline of 83.5%. Frontier models achieve roughly 17% accuracy on real-world bioinformatics analysis as measured by BixBench, a benchmark for computational biology introduced last year.

AI is also making gains in medicine, which occupied a full chapter in the AI index. Thanks to broad improvements in AI transcription accuracy, physicians are spending up to 83% less time writing patient notes after visits. That’s having a meaningful impact in reduce burnout, the report notes. AI is also showing some skill in diagnosing disease, as demonstrated by Microsoft’s AI Diagnostic Orchestrator, which utilizes OpenAI’s o3 and scored 85.5% accuracy on a test of complex published case studies. By comparison, “unaided physicians” (which means they did not have access to their “usual tools”) scored only 20%.

….but AI models are not meeting human-level baselines on benchmarks like PaperArena that measure end-to-end scientific workflows  (Source: Stanford HAI AI Index 2026)

There is a shift to smaller models in molecular biology, according to the AI Index. HAI points to the report of MSA Pairformer, a 111-million parameter protein language model, outperforming the previous leaders on the ProteinGym benchmark despite having two orders of magnitude fewer parameters. It also pointed out that GPN-Star, a 200-million-parameter genomics model, outperformed a model with 40 billion parameters.

While AI has come a long way, there are still some gaps, which contribute to the “jagged frontier” problem with AI. For instance, there’s also the odd problem that AI models can’t reliably tell time. According to Stanford HAI, the top model can reads analog clocks correctly just 50.1% of the time.

And Hallucinations continue to be a problem. GPT-4o’s accuracy dropped from 98.2% to 64.4%, while DeepSeek R1 fell from around 90% to 14.4%. “When a false statement is presented as something another person believes, models handle it well,” the AI Index authors write. “When the same false statement is presented as something a user believes, performance collapses.”

You can download a copy of Stanford HAI AI Index 2026 here.

The post What Stanford’s HAI Report Says About AI in Science appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 17:09

If you're using Word, you can now try out an alternative AI tool to Copilot, though it's only in beta testing for now.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-13 17:00

The FBI searched the Texas home of a 20-year-old man accused of throwing a Molotov cocktail at Sam Altman's San Francisco residence. Authorities say the suspect also made threats at OpenAI's headquarters, and reports indicate he had written extensively about fears over AI and opposition to AI executives. The suspect reportedly authored a Substack blog and was a member of the Discord server PauseAI, an activist group focused on banning the development of the most powerful AI models to protect the public. In one post, they wrote: "These machines have already shown themselves to be unaligned with the interest of the people creating them. Models have often been found lying, cheating on tasks, and blackmailing their own creators whenever convenient; let alone the broader question of aligning them to whatever general 'human interest' may be." The Houston Chronicle reports: The search happened hours before the Justice Department charged 20-year-old Daniel Moreno-Gama with possession of an unregistered firearm and damage and destruction of property by means of explosives. An FBI spokesperson on Monday morning confirmed agents were executing a search warrant in Spring, but provided no other information. Around the same time, FOX News reported the search was being conducted at the home of Daniel Moreno-Gama, 20, who last week was arrested by San Francisco police suspicion of attempted murder, making criminal threats and possession of a destructive device. The charges were first reported by the Associated Press. When Moreno-Gama was arrested Friday, he was carrying a document that "identified views opposed to Artificial Intelligence (AI) and the executives of various AI companies," the Associated Press reported. Moreno-Gama has no criminal history in Harris or Montgomery counties, according to public records. [...] Agents had left the cul-de-sac by 1 p.m. It was unclear if they removed any items from the house. Another incident occurred outside Sam Altman's residence early Sunday morning. "Early Sunday morning, a car stopped and appears to have fired a gun at the Russian Hill home of OpenAI's CEO," reports The San Francisco Standard, citing reports from the local police department. Two suspects were arrested and booked for negligent discharge. UPDATE: The suspect has been charged with attempted murder.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 16:48

Peace talks broke down over Iran’s nuclear program, which has survived two decades of international diplomacy seeking to curtail it and more than five weeks of bombing.

2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 16:46

The GTA 6 developer confirmed that ransomware hackers stole data via a security flaw in Anodot, a third-party service.

2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 16:42

Trump has pushed unfounded claims of Tylenol use in pregnancy being tied to ‘a very increased risk of autism’

Taking acetaminophen – known in the US by the brand name Tylenol – during pregnancy has no effect on later autism diagnoses, according to a sweeping new study from Denmark published on Monday.

The Trump administration has targeted Tylenol use in pregnancy as a major cause of autism in children, which appears to have led to a drop in pregnant people taking the pain reliever.

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2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 16:32

Immigration judges Roopal Patel and Nina Froes among six judges terminated by Department of Justice

Two immigration judges who ruled against the Trump administration in the deportation cases of pro-Palestinian university students have been fired by the Department of Justice.

The New York Times reported over the weekend that the justice department had terminated six judges, including Roopal Patel and Nina Froes, who oversaw deportation proceedings against Rümeysa Öztürk and Mohsen Mahdawi, two students who were arrested last year as part of Trump’s campaign against the Gaza protest movement.

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2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 16:13

President Donald Trump issued a flurry of statements Sunday against Pope Leo XIV, saying in part that the U.S.-born pope supports Iran having a nuclear weapon.

Trump on Truth Social characterized Leo as "Weak on Nuclear Weapons."

"I don’t want a Pope who thinks it’s OK for Iran to have a Nuclear Weapon," Trump wrote April 12. 

However, the pope has specifically spoken against nuclear weapons and their devastation.

In a March 5 video message, Leo said: "Today we lift up our prayer for peace in the world, asking that nations renounce weapons and choose the path of dialogue and diplomacy. … Lord, enlighten the leaders of the nations, so they may have the courage to abandon projects of death, halt the arms race, and place the lives of the most vulnerable at the center. May the nuclear threat never again dictate the future of humanity."

On March 8, Leo’s X account posted about the Iran war’s expansion, encouraging people to pray "for the roar of bombs to cease, weapons to fall silent, and space to open for dialogue, in which people's voices may be heard."

In June 2025, the pope called for a world free from nuclear threat and appealed for peace between Iran and Israel.

"The commitment to creating a safer world, free from the nuclear threat, should be pursued through respectful encounter and sincere dialogue, to build a lasting peace, based on justice, fraternity and the common good," Leo said. "No-one should ever threaten the existence of another."

Also in June 2025, during a general audience in St. Peter's Square, Leo said, "We must never get used to war! Indeed, the temptation to have recourse to powerful and sophisticated weapons needs to be rejected."

Trump’s criticism of the Roman Catholic leader comes days after Leo said threats against Iran’s entire population are "truly unacceptable." Trump on an April 7 Truth Social post warned that "a whole civilization will die tonight." Trump’s post was about Iran.

On April 12, Trump again told reporters, "We don't like a pope that's gonna say that it's okay to have a nuclear weapon… I'm not a big fan of Pope Leo."

We asked the White House for evidence to support Trump’s weapons comment and spokesperson Anna Kelly referred us back to Trump’s April 12 Truth Social post.

Asked about Trump’s comments, Leo told reporters during a flight to Algeria: "I have no fear of either the Trump administration, or speaking out loudly of the message of the Gospel, That’s what I believe I am called to do, what the church is called to do. We’re not politicians, we’re not here to make foreign policy as he calls it, with the same perspective that he might understand it, but I do believe in the message of the gospel, blessed are the peacemakers, is a message that the world needs to hear today."

The pope also said he will continue to "speak out loudly against war, looking to promote peace, promoting dialogue and multilateral relationships among the states to look for just solutions to problems." 

We contacted the Holy See press office for comment but did not receive an immediate response. The Holy See is the diplomatic representative of the Roman Catholic Church and the pope, with its headquarters in Vatican City.

Trump’s statement also contradicts the Catholic church’s actions and statements against nuclear weapons.

The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops reported that Cardinal Pietro Parolin, Vatican secretary of state, told the Italian news agency ANSA on June 17, 2025, that the Holy See is advocating for nuclear disarmament.

In fall 2025, Archbishop Gabriele Caccia, the Holy See’s Permanent Observer to the United Nations, called on the international community to eliminate nuclear weapons, according to Vatican News. In 2017, the Holy See signed and ratified the United Nations’ Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.

Our ruling

Trump said Pope Leo XIV "thinks it’s OK for Iran to have a Nuclear Weapon."

The pope has said the opposite.

He has specifically spoken against nuclear weapons and their devastation. The Holy See, the pope’s diplomatic representative, has called for nuclear disarmament before and during Leo’s papacy, and in 2017 signed the U.N.’s Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.

Trump’s statement is inaccurate and makes a ridiculous claim. We rate it Pants on Fire!

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 19:41

Leader of Catholic church says he will continue to speak out against war after president’s extraordinary criticism

Pope Leo said he did not fear the Trump administration and would continue to speak out against war after Donald Trump delivered an extraordinary broadside against him in which he said he did not think the Chicago-born pontiff was “doing a very good job”, while also suggesting he should “stop catering to the radical left”.

In remarks that have been widely criticised, the US president used a lengthy social media post to sharply criticise Leo while he flew from Florida to Washington on Sunday night, then continued in comments on the tarmac to reporters. “I’m not a fan of Pope Leo,” he said.

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 16:41

TMTG drops defamation claim over report that prosecutors were investigating payments received as possible money laundering

Donald Trump’s media corporation has dropped a defamation claim against the Guardian and two other defendants over a report that federal prosecutors were investigating $8m in payments the company received from entities with ties to Vladimir Putin as possible money laundering.

A filing in the 12th judicial circuit in Sarasota county, Florida, on Friday confirmed that Trump Media and Technology Group (TMTG), the parent company of the president’s Truth Social platform, was withdrawing its claims without prejudice, meaning it could refile the lawsuit at a later date.

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 17:57

The image was deleted from President Trump's Truth Social account, but the president said it depicted him as a "doctor, making people better."

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 18:01

The bipartisan House Ethics Committee announced Monday it is investigating Democratic Rep. Eric Swalwell of California.

2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 16:01

Acquisition strengthens in-house structural fabrication, engineering control, and customization capabilities

COLUMBUS, Ohio, April 13, 2026 — Vertiv, a global provider of critical digital infrastructure, today announced the acquisition of BMarko Structures LLC (BMarko), a U.S.-based provider of custom-engineered structural fabrication.

As AI data center deployments accelerate, the infrastructure layer is under growing pressure to deliver faster and at scale. This acquisition vertically integrates a critical structural fabrication specialization into Vertiv’s Infrastructure Solutions business in North America, which is expected to strengthen supply capability, rapidly expand engineering and manufacturing capacity, and enhance Vertiv’s ability to deliver scalable manufactured, prefabricated, and converged infrastructure with greater speed, control, customization, and executional discipline.

BMarko has demonstrated its differentiated structural fabrication capabilities, engineering depth, and ability to support highly customized infrastructure requirements, during prior, long-term project experience with Vertiv. Bringing this capability in-house is expected to strengthen execution, improve material and process control, and enhance Vertiv’s ability to support customers as infrastructure requirements continue to evolve.

“AI is reshaping infrastructure requirements, with customers placing greater demands on time-to-capacity, flexibility, and efficiency across the infrastructure layer,” said Gio Albertazzi, CEO of Vertiv. “This acquisition strengthens Vertiv’s ability to help customers move faster, with better systems-level performance and control, as infrastructure demands continue to grow in complexity.”

Founded in 2014 and headquartered in Williamston, South Carolina, BMarko specializes in high-quality, custom-engineered builds, including steel and wood frames that align well with AI factory and data center requirements. BMarko recently expanded its engineering and fabrication facility to approximately 560,000 square feet. This facility is located in proximity to Vertiv’s Infrastructure Solutions manufacturing operations in the region.

About Vertiv

Vertiv (NYSE: VRT) brings together hardware, software, analytics and ongoing services to enable its customers’ vital applications to run continuously, perform optimally and grow with their business needs. Vertiv solves the most important challenges facing today’s data centers, communication networks and commercial and industrial facilities with a portfolio of power, cooling and IT infrastructure solutions and services that extends from the cloud to the edge of the network. Headquartered in Westerville, Ohio, USA, Vertiv does business in more than 130 countries. For more information, and for the latest news and content from Vertiv, visit Vertiv.com.


Source: Vertiv

The post Vertiv Acquires BMarko to Enhance Structural Fabrication for AI Data Center Builds appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 16:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Wired: More than 70 civil liberties, domestic violence, reproductive rights, LGBTQ+, labor, and immigrant advocacy organizations are demanding that Meta abandon plans to deploy face recognition on its Ray-Ban and Oakley smart glasses, warning that the feature -- reportedly known inside the company as "Name Tag" -- would hand stalkers, abusers, and federal agents the ability to silently identify strangers in public. The coalition, which includes the ACLU, the Electronic Privacy Information Center, Fight for the Future, Access Now, and the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, is demanding Meta kill the feature before launch, after internal documents surfaced showing the company hoped to use the current "dynamic political environment" as cover for the rollout, betting that civil society groups would have their resources "focused on other concerns." Name Tag, as revealed in February by The New York Times, would work through the artificial intelligence assistant built into Meta's smart glasses, allowing wearers to pull up information about people in their field of view. Engineers have reportedly been weighing two versions of the feature: one that would only identify people the wearer is already connected to on a Meta platform, and a broader version that could recognize anyone with a public account on a Meta service such as Instagram. The coalition wants Meta to scrap the feature entirely. In a letter to CEO Mark Zuckerberg on Monday, it argues that face recognition in inconspicuous consumer eyewear "cannot be resolved through product design changes, opt-out mechanisms, or incremental safeguards." Bystanders in public have no meaningful way to consent to being identified, it says. Meta is also urged to disclose any known instances of its wearables being used in stalking, harassment, or domestic violence cases; disclose any past or ongoing discussions with federal law enforcement agencies, including Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection, about the use of Meta wearables or data from them; and commit to consulting civil society and independent privacy experts before integrating biometric identification into any consumer device. "People should be able to move through their daily lives without fear that stalkers, scammers, abusers, federal agents, and activists across the political spectrum are silently and invisibly verifying their identities and potentially matching their names to a wealth of readily available data about their habits, hobbies, relationships, health, and behaviors," write the groups, which also include Common Cause, Jane Doe Inc., UltraViolet, the National Organization for Women, the New York State Coalition Against Domestic Violence, the Library Freedom Project, and Old Dykes Against Billionaire Tech Bros, among others.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 16:00
  • Crawford fined after Omaha traffic stop at gunpoint

  • Boxer ordered to pay $75 plus $49 in court costs

  • Police review found officers acted lawfully

Terence Crawford was found guilty of careless driving Monday and ordered to pay a $75 fine stemming from a traffic stop last year during which police ordered the world champion boxer and passengers out of his vehicle at gunpoint.

Crawford was stopped on 28 September, hours after his hometown of Omaha held a parade through downtown to celebrate his unanimous-decision victory over Canelo Álvarez in a super middleweight championship fight. The win made Crawford the first male boxer to capture three unified division titles. He announced his retirement in December with a 42-0 record and 31 knockouts.

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 15:58

The Department of Homeland Security has ordered thousands of furloughed employees back to work, even as the agency technically remains shut down and unfunded by Congress.

2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 15:58

Stephen Doughty says US withdrawal of support means bill cannot complete passage through parliament

A treaty over ceding sovereignty of the Chagos Islands to Mauritius has become “impossible to agree at political level” and the corresponding bill will not complete its passage through parliament, a Foreign Office minister has said.

Stephen Doughty told the Commons that the agreement with Mauritius was initially negotiated in close coordination with the US, but Donald Trump’s position “appears to have changed”.

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 15:51

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 15:45

President Trump has lost his biggest cheerleader in Europe, but he may find common ground with his new counterpart, Péter Magyar.

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 15:36

Brian Hooker says wife Lynette fell overboard from dinghy but family members have cast doubt on that account

Police in the Bahamas on Monday were set to again interview a US man who said his wife fell overboard from their boat.

In a statement on Sunday to the Guardian, Brian Hooker’s attorney, Terrel Butler, said: “The police have requested another interview with [Brian Hooker] tomorrow.”

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 15:36

For a limited time, get 35% off sitewide with code EARTH26. Build in-demand skills, earn certifications, and grow your impact with training designed for real-world success.

SAVE NOW

The post Open Source Powers the Planet — Get 35% Off Sitewide appeared first on Linux.com.

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 15:34

McDonald's is expanding its cold beverage menu and also plans to introduce energy drinks later this year.

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 15:31

President Trump invited DoorDash delivery worker Sharon Simmons to talk about his "no tax on tips" policy.

2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 15:26

A cosmic lineup of Mercury, Mars, Jupiter and Neptune is coming.

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 15:24

i built myself a 15s2p battery with the EVE 50pl and float hub set the max amps to 90, the question is will i melt the original harness ? should i drop the max amps to 55?

submitted by /u/OfficialFeujoso
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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 15:18

2026 is already full of increases for music and TV streamers, and we want to help you keep up with changing costs.

2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 15:12
Pint X bumper and rear pad damaged..

Hey yall! I just picked up a Pint X for an insane deal 430 miles that I paid $400 for. (My OG pint with a tf! enduro, kush nug hi pad, and sick malibu purple and blue rail guards got stolen from my apartment back in September.... YES I have an airtag in the Pint X now.

I did some tail drags and now the rear stock bumper is misaligned and prevents me from putting on my fender as well. I found a site selling a pint x bumper set for half off- $22.50 for the set. I am debating that or BANG bumpers because I do a lot of tail drags. But kinda wanna save my money for a kush nug Hi pad and either a Hoosier slick or TFL enduro soft compound.

Also with craft and ride out of business is there any places or used dealers selling their super cool designs for their rails protectors? (I've heard FM rail guards are actually the best protection wise but love the look of the C&R.)

submitted by /u/_Mr_Gnarly_
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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 15:08

Hungary’s prime minister, a self-proclaimed champion of illiberal democracy, turned thwarting E.U. policy into an art form but suffered a resounding election defeat.

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 15:01

The hippos are the descendants of four brought to the country in the 1980s by notorious drug lord Pablo Escobar as he built a private zoo.

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 15:00

"The new Linux kernel was released and it's kind of a big deal," writes longtime Slashdot reader rexx mainframe. "Here is what you can expect." Linuxiac reports: A key update in Linux 7.0 is the removal of the experimental label from Rust support. That (of course) does not make Rust a dominant language in kernel development, but it is still an important step in its gradual integration into the project. Another notable security-related change is the addition of ML-DSA post-quantum signatures for kernel module authentication, while support for SHA-1-based module-signing schemes has been removed. The kernel now includes BPF-based filtering for io_uring operations, providing administrators with improved control in restricted environments. Additionally, BTF type lookups are now faster due to binary search. At the same time, this release continues ongoing cleanup in the kernel's lower layers. The removal of linuxrc initrd code advances the transition to initramfs as the sole early-userspace boot mechanism. Linux 7.0 also introduces NULLFS, an immutable and empty root filesystem designed for systems that mount the real root later. Plus, preemption handling is now simpler on most architectures, with further improvements to restartable sequences, workqueues, RCU internals, slab allocation, and type-based hardening. Filesystems and storage receive several updates as well. Non-blocking timestamp updates now function correctly, and filesystems must explicitly opt in to leases rather than receiving them by default. Phoronix has compiled a list of the many exciting changes. Linus Torvalds himself announced the release, which can be downloaded directly from his git tree or from the kernel.org website. Linux 7.0 has a major new version number but it's "largely a numbering reset [...], not a sign of some unusually disruptive release," notes Linuxiac.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 14:59

US president’s previous threat to block strait of Hormuz had led to a 6.9% increase in earlier trading

Oil prices have fallen back after briefly rising to above $100 a barrel as Donald Trump claimed Iran had made contact and wanted “very badly” to strike a deal in the face of his blockade of the strait of Hormuz.

The Brent crude international benchmark rose above the key psychological threshold earlier in the day, at one point up 6.9% to $101.70 a barrel on news of the US president’s plan to block the waterway to Iranian marine traffic.

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2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 14:56

Review of original train order is meant to prevent service problems north of Birmingham but it may do the opposite

Plans to change the size of HS2 trains to maximise capacity are likely to inflate costs and mean fewer seats and slower services north of Birmingham, a senior government and rail industry figure has warned.

The £2bn order for 54 high-speed trains, to be built in Britain by a joint venture of Alstom and Hitachi, is under review as HS2 Ltd seeks to cut costs and renegotiate contracts.

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 14:50

Alexandre Ramagem fled country after he was sentenced to 16 years for his role in plotting military coup in Brazil

When Brazil’s former president Jair Bolsonaro was sentenced to nearly 30 years in prison for an attempted coup, six other members of his cabinet were also found guilty and all began serving their sentences – except for one.

Days before the verdict, Alexandre Ramagem, Bolsonaro’s former spy chief, fled by car to Guyana and boarded a flight to the United States, where he has remained ever since.

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 14:47

Exclusive: Analysis of government figures indicates public finances will gain £600m not £10bn if migrants’ access to benefits is reduced

Shabana Mahmood’s migration changes are expected to save just £600m – about 6% of the £10bn the home secretary claimed, according to the government’s own data.

Under the plans, most people would have to wait 10 years to qualify for settled status, rather than the existing five-year period, which the home secretary argued would save costs on public services.

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 14:37

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 14:35

Debt relief may help safeguard retirement income, but only in specific situations and with the right strategy.

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 14:22

Opinions, just curious these 2 boards priced very similarly? So if you had money to buy which board would you choose? GT for $2000 or XRC for $1900?

submitted by /u/Mr_Koreanbro
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2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-13 14:15

It’s been less than a year since Delaware was thrust into the data center debate that has been raging in many parts of the country, and key questions remain:  Does the First State want data centers as neighbors? What are the upsides, and where are the downsides? And exactly what is at stake as decisions are made?

Spotlight Delaware will shine that light on the data center controversy Thursday, April 16, when experts, stakeholders and citizens gather in Dover to discuss this distinctly 21st century quandary.

It’s the right conversation to have, and the right time to have it, sponsors and participants say.

“It’s coming fast and furious to Delaware, and the people responsible for making the decisions and the rules and the zoning do not have the information they need,” said Linda Parkowski, executive director of the Kent Economic Partnership, a co-sponsor of the Spotlight On: Data Centers forum. “It may be a new issue, but it’s important to have these conversations now.”

Jennifer Cohan, president of the Associated Builders and Contractors of Delaware, agreed, saying more people need to see the ways that data centers can boost Delaware’s economy.

“If Delaware wants to stay competitive, we need to lean into this growth in a smart, responsible way that supports our workforce, streamlines how we build, and ensures the economic benefits stay right here in our state,” said Cohan, whose organization is co-sponsoring the event. 

The forum is also co-sponsored by the Kent Sussex Leadership Alliance.

The event will feature panelists who are directly engaged in the state’s public policy discussions, as well as officials from Virginia’s Loudoun County, who will speak of their long experience with data centers. 

Spotlight Delaware reporter Olivia Marble, who has covered the issue extensively over the past year, will lead the panel discussions at the forum, which runs from 9 a.m. to noon at Wilmington University Dover Campus.

“This event will give some clarity to attendees about what the different power brokers are doing right now to mitigate any potential big impacts, and also clarify some of the details about the positives the data centers might bring,” Marble said. “This event can’t give 100% clarity, but at least we can come together and agree on a shared set of facts so that people can form their opinions moving forward.”

To learn more, visit the event page here.

The post Shining a light: Delaware’s data center debate appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 14:13
  • Former Arizona Cardinal dies in head-on collision

  • Payton-Jones had built career in content creation

Former NFL cornerback Chris Payton-Jones died in a car accident Saturday night in Florida. He was 30.

Payton-Jones was driving a sedan eastbound in the westbound lanes of State Road 24 in Gainesville when his vehicle collided head-on with a pickup truck, according to News 4 Jacksonville. The three people in the truck sustained only minor injuries.

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2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 14:10

Orbán is out in Hungary and talks have failed to end the war in Iran – ill-fated road trip has been setback for Maga aims

Shortly before JD Vance’s ill-fated week crisscrossing the world, Donald Trump asked him during a private Easter brunch about how the Iran negotiations were shaping up. “If it doesn’t happen, I’m blaming JD Vance,” Trump said to laughs in the room. “If it does happen, I’m taking full credit.”

The joke at Vance’s expense contained an unfortunate nugget of truth: this is not an administration that rewards failure.

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 14:01

Dozens of feral pachyderms linked to drug kingpin to be killed because of threat to native species and villagers

Colombian officials have authorized a plan to cull dozens of hippos descended from animals brought to the country in the 1980s by Pablo Escobar, after the feral beasts displaced native species and threatened local villagers.

The environment minister, Irene Vélez, said the decision was reached because other methods to control their population had been expensive and unsuccessful, including neutering some of the animals or moving them to zoos. Vélez said that up to 80 hippos would be affected by the measure. She did not say when the hunting would begin.

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 14:00

Booking.com says hackers accessed customer reservation data in a breach that may have exposed booking details, names, email addresses, phone numbers, addresses, and messages shared with accommodations. PCMag reports: On Sunday, users reported receiving emails from Booking.com, warning them that "unauthorized third parties may have been able to access certain booking information associated with your reservation." The email suggests the hackers have already exploited customer information. "We recently noticed suspicious activity affecting a number of reservations, and we immediately took action to contain the issue," Booking.com wrote. "Based on the findings of our investigation to date, accessed information could include booking details and name(s), emails, addresses, phone numbers associated with the booking, and anything that you may have shared with the accommodation." Amsterdam-based Booking.com has now generated new PINs for customer reservations to prevent hackers from accessing them. Still, the incident risks exposing affected customers to potential phishing scams. The Australian Broadcasting Corporation and several Reddit users say they received scam messages from accounts posing as Booking.com.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 13:57

The defeat of Orbánism is a globally significant political moment. But it is, above all, a triumph for the citizens who mobilised to take their country back

Prior to his landslide election victory in 2010, which was to lead to 16 unbroken years in power, Viktor Orbán would tell supporters: “We have only to win once, but then properly.” Achieving a so-called supermajority by winning two-thirds of parliamentary seats allowed Mr Orbán to change the constitution, and begin turning Hungary into a soft autocracy. From the judiciary to the media and universities, the checks and balances of a democratic society were steadily dismantled and minorities were marginalised, as the country became a beacon for the global far right and a nationalist thorn in the side of Brussels.

On Sunday, stunningly, it was Mr Orbán’s centre-right challenger, Péter Magyar, who “won properly”. After a record turnout, his Tisza party is all but certain to win its own supermajority. Given Mr Orbán’s control of state media and gerrymandering of constituencies to favour his Fidesz party, this was a truly remarkable result.

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 13:51

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The company is promoting safer play with three distinct age tiers and expanded parental controls.

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 13:49

US government reverses course on removing LGBTQ+ Pride flag from New York monument after efforts from advocates

The Trump administration agreed on Monday to keep flying a rainbow Pride flag at the Stonewall national monument, reversing course after removing the banner in February.

The government revealed the decision as it seeks to settle a lawsuit filed by LGBTQ+ and historic preservation groups who had sought to block the removal. A judge must still approve the agreement.

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 13:47

Stunning loss of rightwing populist in Hungary carries symbolic significance for opponents of Donald Trump

For US Democrats seeking rays of light in the dark landscape of Donald Trump’s authoritarian onslaught, illumination has arrived from the unlikely source of Budapest.

Viktor Orbán’s stunning defeat in Hungary’s general election – ending 16 years of unbroken rule for his governing Fidesz party – carries symbolic and psychological significance for American politics out of all proportion to the central European country’s modest size and distance from the US.

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 13:37

The United States is waging a pressure campaign against the leading inter-American human rights watchdog to squash a potential investigation into illegal U.S. attacks on boats in the Caribbean Sea and the Pacific Ocean.

After a recent meeting of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, the State Department pushed the organization to shift its focus to other issues instead of the monthslong campaign of extrajudicial killings by the U.S. military.

Though the president of the IACHR disputes that the U.S. is pressuring his organization, the State Department responded to questions about the meeting with a statement urging the commission to move onto other matters. A past IACHR president said the organization may fear the “wrath” of the United States, which is the largest financial contributor to the commission’s parent organization, if it launches an investigation.

U.S. lawmakers and experts say an investigation by the IACHR could be an important mechanism to hold the Trump administration accountable for the lethal strikes. Scores of civilians have been killed in the campaign, which has seen families of victims petition the IACHR and sue the U.S. government, accusing it of wrongful death and extrajudicial killings.

Last month, the IACHR — an arm of the Organization of American States, or OAS, charged with the promotion of human rights in the Western hemisphere — held a first-of-its-kind hearing on the legality of the boat strikes. The IACHR considers petitions dealing with violations of rights by member states, including the U.S. At the March 13 hearing, the American Civil Liberties Union, Center for Constitutional Rights, International Crisis Group, and the U.N. special rapporteur on counter-terrorism and human rights made the case that the U.S. boat strikes violate both U.S. domestic and international law.

Related

U.S. Military Killed Boat Strike Survivors for Not Surrendering Correctly

Jamil Dakwar, director of the ACLU’s Human Rights Program, noted that the attacks were conducted without the authorization of Congress and were “in violation of international law on the use of force.” Ben Saul, the U.N. special rapporteur and a professor of international law at the University of Sydney, accused the United States of “responding with lawless violence that flagrantly violates human rights, in its phony war on so-called narco-terrorism.” He said these “serial extrajudicial killings gravely violate the right to life” and were not permissible as law enforcement actions or in the name of national self-defense or allowed under the law of the sea, under international humanitarian law, under international counter-terrorism law, or treaties targeting narcotics.

The hearing drew sharp criticism from the United States, which sent representatives to the meeting. State Department legal adviser Carl Anderson rebuked the commission for holding the hearing and said it wasn’t fit to review legal claims. State Department spokesperson Tommy Pigott said the commission “strayed far outside its mandate” and was being manipulated by the ACLU.

“The IACHR lacks the competence to review the matters at issue,” Pigott said. “Convening hearings under these circumstances risks undermining — not strengthening — the credibility of the inter-American human rights system.” Pigott also instructed the commission to work through decades-old petitions instead of focusing on the boat strikes.

Related

Pentagon Claims It “Absolutely” Knows Who It Killed in Boat Strikes. Prove It, Lawmaker Says.

Under Operation Southern Spear, the U.S. military has conducted 48 attacks since September 2025, destroying 50 vessels and killing almost 170 civilians. The latest strikes, on April 11 in the Eastern Pacific, killed five people and, according to the Coast Guard, left one “person in distress.” The Trump administration claims its victims are members of at least one of 24 or more cartels and criminal gangs with whom it claims to be at war but refuses to name.

In December, the IACHR expressed “deep concern regarding reports of lethal operations against non-state vessels” that it said “allegedly resulted in the deaths of a high number of persons.” It called on the U.S. to “refrain from employing lethal military force in the context of public security operations” but emphasized a “willingness to maintain continued dialogue and technical cooperation with the United States to support the protection of human rights in all security and defense policies.”

“If it is a law enforcement issue, then you cannot just kill them. You have to try to arrest them.”

“What it is is murder,” Juan Méndez, a former president of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, said of the attacks, stressing that he was speaking as an expert on international law, international human rights law, and international humanitarian law and not on behalf of the commission. “You’re deliberately shooting at people who may be engaged in illegal action. But if it is a law enforcement issue, then you cannot just kill them. You have to try to arrest them. You have to try to bring them to justice.”

A source close to the IACHR said the United States was clearly pressuring the organization to ignore attacks under fear of losing funding, pointing to Pigott’s decree.

The State Department responded to questions by pointing The Intercept to a statement by Pigott in which he told the IACHR to ignore U.S. “counter-narcoterrorism” operations. “The Commission needs to redirect its focus toward the individual petitions languishing on its docket, sometimes for decades,” he decreed. The State Department did not respond to a request for comment or clarification about which petitions it wants the IACHR to prioritize.

Mendez outlined the potential pressures the IACHR was under. “The Commission may well feel that this is a very delicate situation, and if they take the initiative, they’re going to incur the wrath of the United States,” he explained. “They are stretched for funding. And if the United States cuts the funding, they probably would have to shut down — at least for a while.”

During President Donald Trump’s first term, the U.S. reduced its contributions to IACHR from $2.7 million in 2017 to zero in 2018, leaving other member states and permanent observers from the European Union to make up the shortfall. In 2019, the U.S. withdrew funds from the IACHR due to its promotion of abortion legalization. By last May, the Trump administration had terminated funding for at least 22 OAS programs. The administration did not request specific funds for the OAS in 2026, although the House appropriations report for 2026 provides $46.5 million, similar to 2024 levels

The State Department did not provide the total number of OAS programs that saw their funding cut or terminated, nor say how often the Trump administration has threatened to withdraw funding from the IACHR.

Stuardo Ralón, the current president of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, pushed back on the claims of bullying by the U.S. “There is no pressure from the United States on the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights,” he told The Intercept.

When The Intercept asked if the commission intends to carry out an investigation into the United States’ lethal strikes, Ralón said, “The IACHR does not conduct investigations. Doing so falls outside its institutional nature and mandate.”

The commission is actually well known for high-profile investigations, including of U.S. immigration detention centers during the Obama administration, and an attack on 43 students from a Mexican teacher training school who were kidnapped and presumably killed in 2014. In fact, the OAS website is filled with references to the “Commission’s investigation[s].”

When The Intercept pointed out that the first line of the Commission’s 10-point mandate states that the IACHR “receives, analyzes and investigates individual petitions in which violations of human rights are alleged to have been committed,” an IACHR spokesperson offered a clarification. “In the context of public hearings, the IACHR does not carry out investigative functions in the strict sense,” wrote Corina Leguizamón. The Intercept did not inquire about the use of public hearings as a means of inquiry.

“We have asked the Commission to fulfill its responsibilities as the premier regional human rights body to conduct a fact-finding investigation of these heinous killings and to ensure that no country can act in this fashion because that will have severe implications on human rights in the region and beyond,” Dakwar, of the ACLU, told The Intercept. “The U.S. government has not put forward any justifications for its premeditated murders. The commission is within its competency and its bounds to fully investigate the egregious violations of international law happening in its own backyard.”

U.S. Reps. Joaquin Castro, D-Texas, and Sara Jacobs, D-Calif,, also sent a letter to the commission urging them to “scrutinize this administration’s policy and help advance accountability in the international arena.” They added, “The challenges we have faced in securing transparency and achieving accountability underscore the importance of your respected Commission’s contribution.”

Ralón said the IACHR had not taken any steps toward the ACLU’s requests to launch an investigation into the strikes; convene a special meeting with OAS Member States affected by them; or request an advisory opinion from the Inter-American Court of Human Rights on the legality of the policy. “The IACHR will continue to monitor the situation in accordance with its mandate,” he told The Intercept, stating it “does not have the competence to initiate ex officio actions under the terms proposed, nor to assess the proportionality of the use of force in scenarios that may involve operations in international waters or situations between States.” Ralón added: “The Commission neither anticipates nor rules out future actions; it acts based on the information available, at the appropriate time, and with strict adherence to its mandate.”

Mendez, the former president, said that the IACHR was in a challenging situation. “The Commission could, if they wanted to take the initiative, take the case forward. If they get a formal complaint, they do investigate. They inquire. They ask for information. But under the present situation, they’re unlikely to take any action on their own initiative,” he told The Intercept.

Related

“Trump Has Appointed Himself Judge, Jury, and Executioner”

In December, the family of Colombian fisherman Alejandro Carranza, who was killed in a September 15 attack in the Caribbean, filed a complaint with the IACHR. The petition names Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth as the perpetrator, stating that he “was responsible for ordering the bombing of boats like those of Alejandro Carranza Medina and the murder of all those on such boats.” It also notes that Hegseth’s conduct was “ratified” by Trump.

The next month, family members of Chad Joseph and Rishi Samaroo, two Trinidadian men killed in a U.S. boat strike on October 14, 2025, sued the U.S. government for wrongful death and extrajudicial killing. Lawyers from the ACLU, the Center for Constitutional Rights, the ACLU of Massachusetts, and Seton Hall Law School professor Jonathan Hafetz called the entire campaign of attacks in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean “unprecedented and manifestly unlawful” in their complaint.

The suit was brought in U.S. federal admiralty court under the Death on the High Seas Act, a congressional statute that covers wrongful maritime deaths. The plaintiffs also brought claims for extrajudicial killing under the Alien Tort Statute, which gives federal courts jurisdiction over violations of the law of nations, including extrajudicial killing. Another federal statute, the Suits in Admiralty Act, waives U.S. sovereign immunity — which ordinarily protects the federal government from being sued — over both claims.

The State Department referred to the cases in its rebuke of the March 13 hearing, accusing the IACHR of allowing “the ACLU to exploit the hearing to try to force the United States to prematurely disclose arguments and evidence in two cases pending before U.S. federal courts.”

Last month, Joseph Humire, the acting assistant secretary of war for homeland defense and Americas security affairs, told members of the House Armed Services Committee that attacks on Latin American drug cartels are “just the beginning” as he unveiled a terrestrial effort dubbed “Operation Total Extermination.”

Humire announced that the Pentagon supported “bilateral kinetic actions against cartel targets along the Colombia-Ecuador border” and referred to the attacks as “joint land strikes,” saying that America was providing Ecuador with “capabilities that they otherwise would not have.” In a war powers report announcing the introduction of U.S. armed forces into “hostilities” in that country, the White House also informed Congress of “military action taken on March 6, 2026, against the facilities of narco-terrorists affiliated with a designated terrorist organization.” 

Gen. Francis Donovan, the chief of U.S. Southern Command, told lawmakers last month that “boat strikes are not the answer,” but teased an even broader campaign. “What we’re moving for right now might be an extension of Southern Spear, but really a counter-cartel campaign process that puts total systemic friction across this network,” he told members of the Senate Armed Services Committee. “I believe these kinetic [boat] strikes are just one small part of that.”

Mendez — also formerly a U.N. special rapporteur on torture and a recently retired professor of international law at American University’s Washington College of Law — said he did not believe that U.S. pressure would affect any future investigation if the IACHR moves forward with an inquiry into the boat strikes. “It doesn’t affect their impartiality and independence, but it does affect what they might do on their own initiative,” he said. “I’m not saying that they will duck and forget about it. This is a very important issue. But they probably want to wait to see who brings what kind of case to them.”

Ralón also said the commission would not be cowed. “The IACHR exercises its functions with full independence and autonomy, in accordance with its conventional and regulatory mandate, and its decisions are not subject to external interference by any State,” he said.

The post State Department Tells Human Rights Watchdog to Ignore Trump’s Extrajudicial Killings appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 13:34

Flamengo footballer previously accused pop star’s security of aggressive behavior to his 11-year-old stepdaughter

The Flamengo footballer Jorginho has clarified his comments on last month’s incident between his 11-year-old stepdaughter and a security guard in Brazil, calling his previous claims against Chappell Roan “a misunderstanding”.

“I made my initial statement in the heat of the moment, after hearing that my child and wife had been approached by an adult male security guard in an intimidating way,” Jorginho wrote on Instagram. “I reacted as any father would. My priority is, and always will be, protecting my family, and that is exactly what I did.”

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 13:33

PM says lessons must be learned from shocks to cost of living as government plans to align with bloc’s rules by default

The economic and security benefits of a closer relationship with the EU are “simply too big to ignore”, Keir Starmer has told parliament as the British government prepares for more rapid alignment with European rules.

Updating MPs on the Iran conflict and his visit to the Gulf last week, the prime minister was explicit about what he argued was the need for renewed ties with Europe given the chaotic global situation and Donald Trump’s unpredictable US administration.

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2026-04-13 20:04
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April 13, 2026 — Content-aware storage (CAS) represents a new value-add paradigm for traditional storage systems. CAS, which aligns storage solutions to meet the needs of new AI workloads, is centered around a pushdown of data processing functions. Specifically, CAS handles document vectorization using LLM-based embedding models — a process normally performed outside of the storage system — to support the retrieval augmented generation (RAG) pipeline.

Credit: IBM

With its CAS offering, IBM is making it faster, easier, and more secure to perform RAG under the same roof as the rest of your data. This new paradigm is a key element of IBM’s vision to integrate AI capabilities directly into enterprise storage systems, enabling businesses to extract untapped value from their proprietary assets without costly infrastructure expansion. “Enterprises can derive unprecedented insights from all of their documents in storage systems,” said Sam Werner, GM IBM Storage. “It really opens the door to the next chapter in leveraging AI technology to drive business outcomes.”

At the core of the CAS solution is the vector database. Vector databases are designed to accelerate semantic searches of data, finding related documents to leverage in AI applications. In collaboration with Samsung and NVIDIA, IBM Research has successfully scaled its prototype platform to serving 100-billion vectors on a single server while maintaining recall precision of over 90% within a query latency of less than 700 milliseconds.

Meeting the Needs of RAG

RAG is quickly becoming the de facto technique for enterprises using AI to extract value from proprietary documents. The idea is simple: LLMs augment prompts (context) with user data or domain-specific information to provide tailored answers.

RAG’s primary benefit is low-cost accuracy. It can generate more precise answers without the need for expensive, time-consuming fine tuning. RAG comprises four key elements: a data ingestion pipeline, a vector database, a storage system, and an AI accelerator. The data ingestion pipeline transforms enterprise documents into semantic representations (vectors) by using AI models and AI accelerators. In this process, text is extracted from documents (PDFs, PPTs, and so on) and broken into chunks. An embedding model then turns these chunks into vectors that are held in a vector database.

The vector database organizes the data so that an approximate nearest neighbor (ANN) search can be performed, making it possible to find semantically similar chunks during a RAG search. To retrieve relevant chunks, a user’s query is converted into a vector using the same embedding model that was used to vectorize the stored documents. The vector database is then used to identify neighboring vectors according to some vector distance metric (cosine similarity or L2 distance, for example). The text chunks corresponding to the most relevant vectors are then passed to the LLM as part of the prompt. This approach ensures that responses are grounded in enterprise-specific knowledge, which reduces hallucinations and improves trust in AI outputs.

Challenges of Scaling

Today’s enterprise storage supports petabytes of capacity, storing billions of files. In the context of CAS, each file is represented by potentially hundreds of vectors that, on aggregate, can quickly reach hundreds of billions. Ultimately, these vectors need to be stored and managed by the CAS vector database.

With exponential growth in AI deployment, databases of this scale are needed to help organize proprietary data for AI consumption, according to Vincent Hsu, CTO and Fellow, IBM Storage. Current vector database solutions on the market can only support billions of vectors by scaling out across tens to hundreds of servers. At this scale unique challenges arise: For example, the lengthy time to index (or reindex) the vector to speed up search, and the rising infrastructure cost for hosting and serving these vectors.

Rethinking the Vector Database for CAS

IBM’s CAS is available for both on-premises and in the cloud deployments. To reduce deployment cost and management complexity, IBM Research undertook a strategy to specifically focus on improving vector density and reindexing time, reducing the number of servers that need to be deployed to support a given number of documents and vectors.

The first part of this approach decouples vector and index storage from the compute performing queries. This allows flexibility in provisioning different ratios of servers for query and storage systems — something only made possible by the IBM Storage Scale high-performance ESS file system.

The IBM Storage Scale System 6000 (ESS 6000) is a high-performance, all-flash storage appliance designed for AI, high-performance computing (HPC), and massive data workloads. ESS supports 4U rack-mount enclosures with up to 48 NVMe FlashCore Modules (FCM) or standard NVMe QLC/TLC drives, each with 7 to 60 TBs capacity. It supports 400 Gb InfiniBand or 200 GbitE (Ethernet) links and utilizes PCIe Gen 5 for faster internal communication. A single ESS canister can support throughput up to 340 GB/s read and 175 GB/s write performance per node and IOPS up to 7M. It also supports NVIDIA GPUDirect Storage (GDS) for high-speed, direct data delivery to GPU, as well as NVIDIA BlueField-3 DPUs for network offloading.

The second part focuses on leveraging enterprise solid state drives to help achieve higher system-level storage performance. For this effort, IBM Research collaborated with Samsung, a global provider of advanced memory and storage technologies for AI and datacenter infrastructure. To support the ESS system’s high-performance storage requirements, Samsung provided 48 PM9D3a PCIe Gen5 NVMe server SSDs, enabling a balanced architecture designed to sustain demanding data throughput and parallel processing workloads. Built on eighth-generation TLC V-NAND technology, each drive offers up to 30.72TB capacity with sequential read speeds of up to 12,000 MB/s and sequential write speeds of up to 6,800 MB/s. These commercially available, mass-produced enterprise SSDs enable practical deployment in real-world ESS environments while supporting scalable system design.

To support extreme scaling, the IBM Research team built a solution that uses a dynamic hierarchical composition of multiple indexes that can be independently optimized and re-optimized as data is added or removed from the system. This approach also improves fault tolerance and makes incremental updates and index building easier to manage, while still maintaining access to the data. “The question of scale is not just about adding more vectors and making those vectors accessible. It’s also about maintaining performance and availability of service as the data grows,” said Daniel Waddington, principal research staff member for storage systems at IBM Research.

The hierarchical index design also lends itself to piecemeal housekeeping. Within the hierarchy, sub-indexes can be rebuilt independently if needed, all without disturbing the overall database. To facilitate this on-the-fly maintenance, the research team uses NVIDIA-based GPUs to improve the performance of rebuilding individual indexes. Index building that takes hours on a CPU can be reduced to minutes on GPUs. The research team paid close attention to maximizing individual GPU utilization and scaling-out across multiple GPU adapters.

By using synthetic data that was carefully generated to “look and feel” like real data (by extracting models of clustering proprieties from real data), the research team has been able to demonstrate loading, indexing, and querying of 100 billion vectors (384 dimensions, full precision floating point). Initial loading and top-level partitioning took nine days, followed by index building using six NVIDIA H200 GPUs over an additional four days. For comparison, the indexing would have taken around 120 days on a 2-socket Intel CPU. The total data footprint on storage (vectors and index) was 153 TiB. The team performed experiments to measure query latency and recall precision, the latter of which was achieved by using brute-force search to extract ground-truth from the massive dataset — which itself took many days to perform. The result: a mean query latency of 694 milliseconds with a recall precision of 90%

What’s Next?

Part of IBM’s strategy for AI is to remove artificial software barriers that prevent enterprises from exposing their data and applications to AI. With CAS, IBM is taking a crucial part of the RAG pipeline and giving that responsibility to the storage system. And the new indexing capabilities are all integrated into familiar file systems that make the entire system easy to deploy.

IBM and Nvidia are working closely to further reduce the indexing time via GPU acceleration of vector indexing with NVIDIA cuVS. Specific goals include indexing 100B+ vectors within a day; exploring GPU acceleration of data loading and partitioning to reduce ingestion time, from nine days to one day; and exploring strategies to reduce the search latency down to the 50-100ms range at 90% recall for RAG workflows.

“We already have security built into the vector database,” said Hsu. “Now we are scaling up without a huge infrastructure footprint.”


Source: Peter Hess, IBM

The post IBM Demonstrates Extreme Scale for Content-Aware Storage with 100B Vector Database appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 13:29

Official report says system ‘completely failed’ because some form of violence by Axel Rudakubana had been ‘unambiguously signposted over many years’

Axel Rudakubana was able to carry out the Southport atrocity because of “catastrophic” failures by multiple agencies and the “irresponsible and harmful” role of his parents, a damning inquiry has found.

Sir Adrian Fulford condemned the “inappropriate merry-go-round” of state bodies passing the buck and their “frankly depressing” refusal to accept responsibility, saying: “This culture has to end.”

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 13:25

Prime minister-elect promises ‘new era’ for country after defeating far-right Viktor Orbán

Hungary’s prime minister-elect, Péter Magyar, has pledged to pursue those who “plundered, looted, betrayed, indebted and ruined” his country, promising “a new era” after a landslide election victory over his far-right predecessor Viktor Orbán.

Magyar, whose centre-right Tisza party won at least 138 of the 199 seats in parliament, said the full election results should be confirmed by 4 May and he hoped his government could be installed the next day.

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 13:23

The 16-year-old stepbrother of Florida teenager Anna Kepner has been officially been charged as an adult in her killing.

2026-04-13 20:04
2026-04-13 13:23

SAN JOSE, Calif., April 13, 2026 — Supermicro, Inc. today announced a family of compact, high-efficiency platforms powered by AMD EPYC 4005 series processors. The edge-optimized systems are designed to accelerate AI inferencing and general-purpose workloads in space and power-constrained environments, including retail, manufacturing, healthcare, and enterprise branch locations.

Supermicro AMD EPYC 4005 Series

“Supermicro continues to deliver highly efficient, compact systems that bring powerful compute closer to where data is generated and processed,” said Mory Lin, Vice President, IoT/Embedded & Edge Computing, Supermicro. “With our new AMD EPYC 4005 processor-based platforms, including compact box, short-depth 1U, and slim tower system form factors, customers can deploy AI accelerator cards and dedicated workloads at the edge with improved performance, enhanced security, and reduced power consumption, while lowering total cost of ownership (TCO).”

The latest additions to the portfolio include three new edge AI systems that enable organizations to deploy intelligent applications at scale, ranging from real-time analytics to business-critical infrastructure, including loss prevention, frictionless checkout, and in-store analytics for intelligent retail, restaurants, and healthcare.

The AMD EPYC 4005 series portfolio includes:

  • AS -E300-14GR: A compact mini-1U box system supporting up to 16 cores and 192GB of DDR5 memory, ideal for embedded and space-constrained deployments such as point-of-sale with HDMI and MiniDisplay ports and network gateway applications with one dedicated out-of-band management port and 4x GbE ports in a 2.5L enclosure
  • AS -1116R-FN4: A short-depth 1U rackmount system with expanded storage capabilities, optimized for branch offices and retail back-end consolidation
  • AS -3015TR-i4: A slim tower system offering flexibility for edge deployments requiring quiet operation and easy installation for integrating one dual-slot GPU card (2.7″ H x 6.6″ L), such as NVIDIA RTX PRO 2000 Blackwell GPU in a 9L chassis, including optional slim optical and 3.5″disk drive

Each system features advanced security technologies including TPM 2.0 and AMD Secure Encrypted Virtualization (SEV), along with robust connectivity options such as 4x GbE ports for seamless integration with POS systems, cameras, and enterprise networks.

Powered by AMD’s “Zen 5” core architecture, EPYC 4005 series processors offer TDP as low as 65W, support for DDR5 memory, and PCIe Gen 5 expansion. Select models also incorporate AMD 3D V-Cache technology, enabling faster data access and improved performance for data-intensive workloads.

With support for IPMI 2.0 remote management and optional GPU acceleration, Supermicro’s new edge systems provide a scalable, secure, and energy-efficient platform for modern distributed computing.

For more detailed product specifications, visit https://www.supermicro.com/en/featured/epyc-4000-series.

About Super Micro Computer, Inc.

Supermicro (NASDAQ: SMCI) is a global leader in Application-Optimized Total IT Solutions. Founded and operating in San Jose, California, Supermicro is committed to delivering first-to-market innovation for Enterprise, Cloud, AI, and 5G Telco/Edge IT Infrastructure. We are a Total IT Solutions provider with server, AI, storage, IoT, switch systems, software, and support services. Supermicro’s motherboard, power, and chassis design expertise further enables our development and production, enabling next-generation innovation from cloud to edge for our global customers. Our products are designed and manufactured in-house (in the US, Taiwan, and the Netherlands), leveraging global operations for scale and efficiency and optimized to improve TCO and reduce environmental impact (Green Computing). The award-winning portfolio of Server Building Block Solutions allows customers to optimize for their exact workload and application by selecting from a broad family of systems built from our flexible and reusable building blocks that support a comprehensive set of form factors, processors, memory, GPUs, storage, networking, power, and cooling solutions (air-conditioned, free air cooling or liquid cooling).


Source: Supermicro

The post Supermicro Introduces Compact, Energy-Efficient Systems to Accelerate Adoption of Intelligent Edge AI appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 13:20

Claude can now browse the web and open files on your computer for you.

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 13:18

The military approach has backfired, with Iran’s position only strengthened. But the door is still open to a deal

Donald Trump was quick to declare victory over Iran, but this weekend’s negotiations suggest that Tehran has the upper hand. His war of choice has backfired. His military solution has emboldened rather than weakened Iran. Diplomacy is his only reasonable option.

Trump may have hoped that the marathon 16-hour talks in Pakistan would extract him from his self-created quagmire, but the issues that have long divided Washington and Tehran are complex. When it turned out that Iran wanted to negotiate rather than capitulate, JD Vance, who led the US diplomatic team, packed his bags and went home.

Kenneth Roth is a Guardian US columnist, visiting professor at Princeton’s School of Public and International Affairs, and former executive director of Human Rights Watch. He is the author of Righting Wrongs: Three Decades on the Front Lines Battling Abusive Governments

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 13:16

The home secretary made the comments after an inquiry revealed that the system ‘completely failed’

Keir Starmer has confirmed that he wants to stop children being exposed to addictive scrolling features on their phones as part of measures to protect them from social media.

The PM is under pressure to implement an Australian-style ban on social media for under-16s, and the government is consulting on whether to go ahead with a full ban, or whether to just impose more specific restrictions.

It’s not a question of if we do something, it’s what we do.

The addictive scrolling mechanisms are really problematic to my mind, they need to go.

Despite some lower-income households receiving a long-overdue real-terms increase in their benefits, we now estimate – based on market-forecasts for the rise in energy prices consistent with market pricing after the announcement of a ceasefire – that average income growth for the poorest fifth this year is now set to be just 1.2 per cent, down from 2.8 per cent before the conflict.

The picture is brighter for families in the bottom half of the income distribution with three or more children. Even after the inflation shock, the abolition of the two-child limit is estimated to deliver 7.7 per cent income growth for this group this year – compared to 0.0 per cent for poorer families with fewer than three children.

Despite hopes for a sustained peace, the path of this conflict remains uncertain and energy prices remain well above pre-war levels, meaning many households face a decline in their purchasing power this year.

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 13:09

Wife of Pawel Bukowski criticises care husband received over depression he suffered following failed procedure

A man who took his own life was suffering from depression after a failed dental procedure in Turkey left him without any teeth, an inquest has heard.

Pawel Bukowski, a 48-year-old forklift driver, had travelled to a private clinic in the country in January 2025 to have his teeth replaced after suffering from periodontal disease, a chronic bacterial infection that can erode the gums and lead to tooth and bone loss.

In the UK and Ireland, Samaritans can be contacted on freephone 116 123, or email jo@samaritans.org or jo@samaritans.ie. In the US, you can call or text the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline at 988 or chat at 988lifeline.org. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Other international helplines can be found at befrienders.org

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 13:08

… aand beta2 in quick succession, beta1 had a technical issue breaking 3rd party app compatibility (config signature).

Refloat 1.2.2-beta2

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

Mayor Zohran Mamdani did not detail how much the city-run grocery stores would cost or how they would be able to sell products for less than market-rate prices.

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 13:05

The looming shortage of medicines and fertiliser is only going to get worse with the latest US blockade. Europe and the UK need to step up diplomatically

Not our war, not our problem.

For weeks now, that has been Europe’s increasingly confident position on the conflict in Iran: that it didn’t ask for this ill-judged fight, can hardly be expected to join in when it has no idea what war crimes Donald Trump might be contemplating next, and certainly isn’t obliged to extricate him from his own wilfully deep hole. For Keir Starmer in particular, staying out of the war and letting slip his exasperation has been that rarest of prizes: a chance to do what the Labour party desperately wants to do, but which also happens to be both the right thing and the popular one. However, the trouble with “not our war, not our problem” is that, as of this weekend, only half of it remains true.

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 13:00

According to the Financial Times, Meta is developing an AI avatar of Mark Zuckerberg that could interact with employees using his voice, image, mannerisms, and public statements, "so that employees might feel more connected to the founder through interactions with it." The Verge reports: Meta may start allowing creators to make AI avatars of themselves if the experiment with Zuckerberg succeeds, according to the Financial Times. [...] Zuckerberg is involved in training the AI avatar, the Financial Times reports, and has also started spending five to 10 hours per week coding on Meta's other AI projects and participating in technical reviews.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 12:54

Judge rules complaint fails to outline malice after Trump argued lewd drawing allegedly sent to Epstein at heart of story was fake

A Florida judge has dismissed a lawsuit filed last summer by Donald Trump over a Wall Street Journal report that he had sent a “bawdy” letter to the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein in 2003, though the judge has given the US president two weeks to refile the case.

Trump, who has had a habit of suing media companies inside and outside the White House, had argued that a lewd drawing at the heart of the story was fake. The lawsuit was especially notable because one of the defendants was Rupert Murdoch, one of Trump’s top media allies, whose News Corporation media empire owns the Journal.

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 12:53

Northern Irishman moves the needle like no one else in his sport, even more so after his thrilling Masters defence

Levels of greatness need not always be defined by numbers. Nick Faldo’s six majors to Rory McIlroy’s five prior to events at Augusta National on Sunday gave the Englishman the edge in the eyes of many in respect of Europe’s finest ever golfer. That McIlroy had already won the career grand slam of majors, therefore passing every test his sport has to offer, meant he was more worthy of the crown. Those who want to add Harry Vardon and a bygone age to the conversation should check the Jersey man’s scoring for his septet of major wins.

It is the nature of McIlroy’s achievement that sets him apart. Retaining the Masters for major No 6 places McIlroy in lofty company – Faldo, Phil Mickelson and Lee Trevino. He is suddenly one shy of Arnold Palmer. Gary Player and the non-US record of nine is a legitimate goal. Yet watching McIlroy right until the final hole at Augusta National served as a reminder that it is the addictive, thrilling style of his output that is worthy of the highest praise. The Northern Irishman was half a hole from Masters glory, shunting galleries back 50 yards so he could visualise a recovery shot from a forest. Love or loathe McIlroy, you simply cannot take eyes off him.

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2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-13 12:51

The group named ShinyHunters have accessed a third party server and have given the company a deadline of 14 April to enter ransom negotiations

Rockstar Games, the studio behind Grand Theft Auto, has been the target of a cyberattack for the second time in three years. A hacker group called ShinyHunters said it would release data stolen from the company if ransom demands were not met.

ShinyHunters initially gave Rockstar a 14 April deadline to enter negotiations, having gained access to company servers operated by a third party.

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2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-13 12:48

US bank has the Claude model and is working closely with the tech firm to improve cyber protection

Goldman Sachs’s chief executive, David Solomon, has said he is “hyper-aware” of the capabilities of Anthropic’s Mythos AI model and is working “closely” with the tech firm after it issued warnings about the cybersecurity risk it poses.

The US bank had been monitoring the rapid advances in artificial intelligence, including large language models (LLMs), as part of wider efforts to protect itself from hackers.

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 12:43

Republican gubernatorial candidate floods media with ads attacking immigrants, trans people and DEI before primary

A campaign ad from Republican gubernatorial candidate Rick Jackson pledging that unauthorized immigrants committing violent crimes will end up “deported or departed” has inundated streaming services and social media in Georgia for weeks.

“I don’t care if you’re a Muslim or a Mongolian, you don’t have the right to force your culture on our country,” the Jackson ad begins. “Too often, criminal illegals commit sick, violent crimes, victimize our children and get away with murder. So here’s my guarantee to them: do that when I’m governor, and you’ll end up deported or departed. Any questions?”

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 12:43

I've bricked 2 of my boards now (old XRs) and decided to try the XRV kit but am having issues getting it to work, so now I have a lot of extra XR parts.

I'd like to get an X7 Long Range, however I do not want the rails (I did not ask for a price adjustment) and Fungineers indicates they can not ship one without the rails. My options appear to be to get all the parts separately and try to assemble/program the board, or buy an X7 Long Range and attempt to put it into an XR rail set.

My primary reason for buying the pre-assembled X7 is because I won't have to program it or whatever - they appear to be able to run right out of the box. Does anyone know if the bumpers/sensor/footpads on a pre-assembled X7 will interface with stock XR rails? Or will I have to buy more parts to get the X7 LR to operate within the XR rails?

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 12:35

Creditors can move quickly after a judgment, so it's important to know the typical wage garnishment timeline.

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 12:26

Pontiff makes first papal visit to country as he starts 11-day tour that will also include stops in Cameroon and Angola

Pope Leo XIV has arrived in Algeria for the first papal visit to the country, calling for peace on the opening stop of a tour of Africa that signals the continent’s growing importance to the Catholic church.

The 11-day trip, which will include stops in Cameroon, Angola and Equatorial Guinea, is the longest by Pope Leo since being elected to the papacy in May last year.

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 12:22

A PAC backing incumbent U.S. Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass., portrayed leading challenger Rep. Seth Moulton as supportive of Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

"Moulton voted with Republicans to thank ICE for protecting our homeland," an ad from the Commonwealth Together PAC says. "He thanked ICE as they were terrorizing our communities and then killed citizens in broad daylight."

The ad includes a 2025 TV news clip captioned "ICE agents violently detain Worcester mom & daughter." The footage came from NBC10 Boston’s coverage of a May 2025 incident in which ICE arrested a Brazilian woman and police arrested her teenage daughter.

We looked at Moulton’s X account and official press releases and news reports that month and did not find any comments by Moulton about that ICE arrest.

The ad also showed January footage of federal agents publicly killing Alex Pretti in Minneapolis. Pretti was a U.S. citizen and intensive care unit nurse whom the Trump administration officials falsely called a domestic terrorist. Pretti’s death came less than three weeks after a federal agent shot another U.S. citizen, Renee Good, in Minneapolis.

The PAC supports incumbent Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass., Moulton’s rival in the Sept. 1 Democratic primary. Unions representing health care workers, teachers and environmental leaders formed the PAC.

The ad distorts Moulton’s support for the agency by plucking out a one-phrase mention in a 417-word resolution and omits that Moulton has repeatedly criticized the agency.

Resolution condemned an antisemitic attack by a man who overstayed his visa

In June 2025, the House voted on two resolutions condemning an antisemitic attack in Boulder, Colorado. Moulton supported both, but the ad cites only one.

The ad highlights a sentence in H. Res. 488  that said the House "expresses gratitude to law enforcement officers, including U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement personnel, for protecting the homeland."

Rep. Gabe Evans, R-Colo., introduced the resolution to denounce Mohamed Sabry Soliman, who police said firebombed a pro-Israel demonstration June 1. More than a dozen people were injured and one later died. Soliman, an Egyptian national who overstayed a tourist visa, remains in custody awaiting trial.

A cyclist passes by the flag of Israel, taped on a hydrant on the east end of the Pearl Street Mall, after a June 1, 2025, attack near the courthouse in Boulder, Colorado. (AP)

The resolution called on federal officials to vet whether visa applicants have espoused antisemitic terrorism. It said failing to remove people who overstay visas is dangerous. 

The resolution passed 280-113 with 75 Democrats, including Moulton, joining Republicans in support. 

A separate resolution, H. Res. 481, also condemned the Boulder attack and other antisemitic violence but did not mention ICE.

Andrew Farnitano, a Commonwealth Together PAC spokesperson, pointed to a June 9, 2025, statement by J Street, a liberal pro-Israel advocacy group, that criticized the version that thanked ICE, calling it "exactly the kind of resolution you’d expect when MAGA hardliners hijack concerns about antisemitism to push their longstanding anti-immigrant, anti-democracy agenda."

In response to criticism of the resolution, Moulton said  he supported its overarching purpose of condemning antisemitic terror. "There rarely exists a bill or resolution that I vote for because I agree with every single word in it," his June 11, 2025, statement said.

"I will continue to loudly oppose Trump’s agenda — especially his desires to weaponize ICE and create a culture of fear in immigrant communities across the country — while loudly condemning antisemitism," Moulton wrote. "Democrats can — and need — to do both."

In 2026, Moulton called for abolishing or reforming ICE

Moulton has frequently criticized ICE. 

In response to our questions, Moulton’s campaign cited his votes and statements against Trump’s immigration enforcement agenda going back a decade. (He’s been in office since 2015.) 

In January, he visited Minneapolis to learn how people were organizing against what he called "state-sponsored terror" by ICE agents and other federal immigration officials. He has also brought attention to the case of Marcelo Gomes da Silva, a Milford, Massachusetts, high school student and Brazilian national who arrived in the U.S. as a young child and was detained by ICE on his way to volleyball practice. Moulton invited Gomes da Silva to be his guest at the State of the Union address.

Moulton has called for major changes to ICE, including:

  • Ensuring prosecution of ICE: In December, Moulton introduced legislation to permit victims of constitutional violations by federal officers to sue. He cited "months of widely documented civil rights violations against the public, including American Citizens."

  • Abolishing ICE: In a January Instagram video, Moulton said,"ICE is beyond repair. It obviously needs to be abolished."

  • Calling to redirect or oppose the agency’s funding. In January, Moulton said he would vote to fund ICE only if conditions were met, such as banning agents’ routine use of masks and requiring the agency to publicly report all stops of U.S. citizens or lawful permanent residents. He introduced legislation to redirect ICE funding from the 2025 One Big Beautiful Bill Act to Affordable Care Act tax credits. "We have no obligation to give taxpayer dollars to an agency that is using your hard-earned money to enable state-sponsored violence against our own people," he said in March, opposing Homeland Security funding.

  • Cosponsoring a January resolution to impeach Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem. He said Noem used "violence against U.S. citizens and lawful individuals." President Donald Trump fired Noem in early March.

Our ruling

An ad said that Moulton "voted with Republicans to thank ICE for protecting our homeland. He thanked ICE as they were terrorizing our communities and then killed citizens in broad daylight."

The kernel of truth here is that Moulton voted for a 2025 resolution that included one sentence expressing gratitude for ICE, but the main purpose of the resolution was to condemn an antisemitic attack. The resolution came one month after a Brazilian woman was taken into ICE custody in Worcester, Massachusetts, but before federal immigration agents publicly killed two U.S. citizens in Minnesota. Moulton was one of 75 Democrats to vote in favor of the resolution, and he also voted for a separate resolution the same month that similarly condemned antisemitic violence and did not mention ICE.

The ad creates a misleading impression that Moulton supports ICE even as it killed U.S. citizens. His record reflects the opposite. He has called for abolishing the agency or overhauling it.

We rate this statement Mostly False.

PolitiFact Researcher Caryn Baird contributed to this fact-check.

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 12:13

As Trump depicts himself as Jesus Christ, and insults everyone from Keir Starmer to the pope, how can the king hope to keep this state visit on track?

The most awkward thing to happen when King Charles visited President Nixon as a young man – it was 1970, the then prince was 21 – was that officials kept wheeling out Nixon’s daughter, Tricia, to stand next to him at events. Since they were both single, on paper anyway (this was the same year Charles met Camilla), the optics were a little primitive. Here, you’re a young man; how about this young woman as a token of our esteem? I wasn’t alive, but if I know my mother, at least somewhere on Earth, someone was saying: “Tricia is a person, she’s not chattel.”

Visiting Ronald Reagan 11 years later, Charles was unaccountably handed a cup of tea with the bag still in it, and didn’t know where to put himself. Or the tea. Reagan was mortified, and still talking about it years later. You could split hairs about who was more at fault here: the tea-bringer or Charles himself, who met the occasion by merely staring at the tea. It would have been more courteous, surely, to fish out the teabag and drink it. Possibly, no one gave him a spoon; maybe they thought he always travelled with one, in his mouth.

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 12:05

Lack of ballot papers and defective computers disrupt election that Keiko Fujimori appears to be leading

Peruvians will have to wait at least until the end of Monday to know the result of the presidential election held on Sunday, after the voting process descended into chaos in some polling stations due to a lack of ballot papers or defective computers.

In an unprecedented move, Peru’s electoral agency ONPE announced on Sunday night that it would extend voting for an extra day to allow tens of thousands of Peruvians in the country and abroad, who had been unable to vote, to cast their ballots.

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2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 14:10

Veteran church observers say an open war of words between a pope and a U.S. president is unprecedented.

2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 12:00

Maine is on track to become the first U.S. state to impose a temporary statewide ban on new data center construction. "Lawmakers in Maine greenlit the text of a bill this week to block data centers from being built in the state until November 2027," reports CNBC. "The measure, which is expected to get final passage in the next few days, also creates a council to suggest potential guardrails for data centers to ensure they don't lead to higher energy prices or other complications for Maine residents." From the report: Maine's bill has a few steps to go through before becoming law, notably whether Gov. Janet Mills will exercise her veto power. Mills asked lawmakers to include an exemption for several areas of the state where data center construction could continue. However, an amendment to do so was stuck down in the House, 29 to 115. Complicating Mills' decision is her campaign to become Maine's next senator. Mills is facing off against Graham Platner, an oyster farmer, in a high-profile Democratic primary. Platner is leading Mills in most recent polls by double digits.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 11:53

The cost of ground beef in the U.S. has soared in recent years and is forecast to jump even further in 2026. What gives?

2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 11:52

Super Typhoon Sinlaku is expected to cross the island chain that includes Guam in the western Pacific Ocean with winds of up to 175 mph.

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 11:51

Incident took place on first day back at school in small village, as settlers blocked pupils’ access

Israeli forces have fired teargas at Palestinian schoolchildren who were staging a sit-in in the occupied West Bank after settlers blocked access to their school.

The Israeli military said it had dispersed an “unusual gathering”, but did not specify whether its troops had fired teargas at the children on the first day of class since the start of the Iran war.

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2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 11:49

Expansion and political influence have made soccer’s showpiece too big for one region to handle responsibly

In retrospect, the 2018 World Cup in Russia looks like a gentle genuflection, a dainty little bow before its strongman leader. Vladimir Putin and his Russian project of gradual conquest were most definitely centered and validated eight years ago: the tournament showcased his nation and awarded its leader prominence of place.

This summer, we will see something altogether different, as the runup to this edition of the world’s biggest and most popular sporting event has become a monument to Donald Trump.

This is an extract from Soccer with Jonathan Wilson, a weekly look from the Guardian US at the game in Europe and beyond, helmed this week by Leander in Jonathan’s absence. Subscribe for free here. Have a question for Jonathan? Email soccerwithjw@theguardian.com, and he’ll answer the best in a future edition.

Leander Schaerlaeckens is a Guardian US contributor whose 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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2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 11:42

Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news

Shares in European airlines are dropping in early trading, amid disappointment that the talks between Washington and Tehran broke up without a breakthrough last weekend.

British Airways’ parent company, IAG, are down over 2% this morning, with budget rivals Wizz Air (-6.5%) and easyJet (-3.8%) falling more sharply.

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2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 11:39

The Tisza leader said the electorate voted ‘not just for a change of government but for a change of the regime’

in Brussels

The EU will start work with the new Hungarian government “as soon as possible” to make progress on issues including energy and the release of frozen European funds, the head of the European Commission has said.

“We will start working with the government as soon as possible on the topics you mentioned and much more to make a swift and overdue progress to the benefit of the Hungarian people.”

“I think moving to qualified-majority voting in foreign policy is an important way to avoid systematic blockages as we’ve seen in the past. And we should use the momentum now really to move forward on that topic.”

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2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 11:35

Michelle Dick accused of dousing musician with unknown substance in March and damaging his car before fleeing

A woman who is accused of stalking former Fleetwood Mac guitarist Lindsey Buckingham has been arrested in Indiana, according to local police.

Authorities in Fort Wayne, Indiana, said in a statement over the weekend that they took 55-year-old Michelle Dick into custody on Saturday as she was wanted on a warrant out of California “for stalking” Buckingham.

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2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 11:33

Shortage of pickled mini-cucumbers has caused Pret a Manger to pull its jambon beurre from shelves

With their sharp flavour and crunch, pickled cucumbers are an essential component of any sandwich worth its salt.

But an unexpected shortage of cornichons has caused consternation in sandwich shops across the country as cafes scramble to get their hands on jars of the small green pickles.

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 11:27

Digital clone being trained on his thoughts, tone and mannerisms to help workers feel connected

If you are one of Meta’s almost 79,000 employees and cannot get hold of the boss, do not worry. The owner of Facebook and Instagram is reportedly working on an AI version of Mark Zuckerberg who can answer all your queries.

The AI clone of Zuckerberg, Meta’s founder and chief executive, is being trained on his mannerisms and tone as well as his public statements and thoughts on company strategy.

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2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 11:26

I’m on week 3 of owning a pint x and I’m noticing a lot more pushback on asphalt than on sidewalks. I’m not going particularly fast in either situation. I’m on Redwood (max 12mph) while I get more comfortable

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2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 11:23

Are you an audiophile? Take our People's Picks survey to let us know which headphones or earbuds you like the most.

2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 11:20

Lafarge fined more than €1m and its former boss jailed for paying nearly €5.6m to groups including Islamic State

A French court has fined the cement group Lafarge more than €1m (£870,000) and sentenced its former boss to six years in prison for paying protection money to Islamic State and other terror groups to maintain its business in war-torn Syria from 2013 to 2014.

The ruling follows a 2022 case in the United States in which the French firm pleaded guilty to conspiring to provide material support to US-designated “terrorist” organisations and agreed to pay a $778m fine (£580m) – the first time a company had faced the charge.

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2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 11:20

Donald Trump has delivered an extraordinary broadside against Pope Leo XIV, saying the US-born leader of the Catholic church was ‘a very liberal person’ who did not believe in stopping crime.

In response, the pope, who arrived in Algeria on Monday as part of an 11-day tour of Africa, told reporters on the papal flight that he did not fear the Trump administration and would continue to speak out against war.

The president’s comments came after Leo suggested at the weekend that a ‘delusion of omnipotence’ was fuelling the US-Israel war in Iran

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2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 11:20

2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 11:19

The attack sparked nationwide riots and was one of the most shocking acts of violence in recent British history.

2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 11:17

Shabana Mahmood calls Axel Rudakubana a ‘vile and sickening indiviudal’ and pays tribute to the ‘immense bravery’ of families of the three girls who died and the survivors

Rudakubana was known to the state from October 2019, when the then 13-year-old made several calls to Childline admitting to having murderous thoughts about a bully. He said he had taken a kitchen knife to school on 10 occasions.

Two months later, he returned to his high school armed with a hockey stick and attacked another pupil, breaking their wrist. Police later found a knife in his backpack and arrested him on suspicion of assault and carrying a bladed article.

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2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 11:17

Are there any third party options for a white fender for the GT-S? The OEM version has been out of stock every time I've checked, and I haven't been able to find a third party seller. I'm contemplating painting my stock black fender, but it's pretty banged up and I'd prefer to get a new one if possible.

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2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 11:13

Just when parents thought they could decode teenage text speak, a new list comes along that raises more questions than answers

Name: Confusing text abbreviations.

Age: As old as texts themselves.

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2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 11:05

Former Fox News host says publishing house Skyhorse ‘looking for books that nobody else will publish’

Former Fox News host Tucker Carlson is set to launch his own imprint and publish books by the likes of Russell Brand and “alt-right” commentator Milo Yiannopoulos.

The imprint, Tucker Carlson Books, will be part of the US-based publisher Skyhorse. “I think most people don’t read books anymore because they’re too absorbed in all the other available media,” said Carlson, according to the Wall Street Journal. He added that those who do “tend to be disproportionately influential in policy conversations and conversations about ideas”.

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2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 11:01

Rate stability is likely, experts say, but geopolitics, inflation and Fed policy will drive where they head next.

2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 11:00

Promotional events with hefty price tags are on the agenda, alongside visits to a children’s hospital, women’s homeless service and the war memorial

Prince Harry and Meghan will touch down in Sydney on Tuesday for what has been described as a “faux-royal” tour that will be dramatically different from the pair’s first visit to Australia.

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex will visit Sydney and Melbourne during their four-day visit, while Harry will do a solo Canberra trip.

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2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 11:00

A fun third-person shooter wrapped in a dad-and-daughter narrative make for a familiar, yet engaging game.

2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 11:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Several Californians sued Sutter Health and MemorialCare this week over allegations that an AI transcription tool was used to record them without their consent, in violation of state and federal law. The proposed class-action lawsuit, filed on Wednesday in federal court in San Francisco, states that, within the past six months, the plaintiffs received medical care at various Sutter and MemorialCare facilities. During those visits, medical staff used Abridge AI. According to the complaint, this system "captured and processed their confidential physician-patient communications. Plaintiffs did not receive clear notice that their medical conversations would be recorded by an artificial intelligence platform, transmitted outside the clinical setting, or processed through third-party systems." The complaint adds that these recordings "contained individually identifiable medical information, including but not limited to medical histories, symptoms, diagnoses, medications, treatment discussions, and other sensitive health disclosures communicated during confidential medical consultations." In recent years, Abridge's software and AI service have been rapidly deployed across major health care providers nationwide, including Kaiser Permanente, the Mayo Clinic, Duke Health, and many more. When activated, the software captures, transcribes, and summarizes conversations between patients and doctors, and it turns them into clinical notes. Sutter Health began partnering with Abridge two years ago. Sutter spokesperson Liz Madison said the company is aware of the lawsuit. "We take patient privacy seriously and are committed to protecting the security of our patients' information," Madison said. "Technology used in our clinical settings is carefully evaluated and implemented in accordance with applicable laws and regulations."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-13 10:58

This series of profiles features noteworthy people over the past 250 years who have shaped the American constitutional tradition in various ways. In this post, National Constitution Center content fellow Tristan Worsham examines the career of Gouverneur Morris, a colorful framer who influenced the Constitution at a critical stage in 1787.

To many Americans, the most memorable and significant part of the Constitution is its opening, “We the People of the United States.” The principles expressed in the Constitution’s Preamble animate our political culture and announce our government’s aspirations. Yet it was neither Madison nor Jefferson nor Washington who wrote those famous words. That distinction belongs to the largely overlooked Gouverneur Morris—perhaps the most important and colorful of the forgotten Founding Fathers.

Gouverneur Morris was born in 1752 in Morrisania, New York. The son of a wealthy family, he showed early promise as a scholar, attending King’s College (now Columbia University) at just 12 years old. Morris graduated with bachelor’s and master’s degrees by 1771. While pursuing his master’s, he apprenticed under New York Supreme Court Judge William Smith. The 19-year-old Morris who emerged in New York society as a licensed lawyer cut quite a figure. Known for his wit and charisma, he was over 6 feet tall at a time when the average American man stood at around 5 1/2 feet. Theodore Roosevelt, who wrote a biography of Morris, described him as “[i]mperious, light-hearted, good-looking, well-dressed. . . [and with] just a touch of erratic levity that served to render him still more charming.”

Morris and the Revolutionary War

Everything was looking up for the young Morris, but his life was forever changed by the growing hostilities between the American colonies and Britain. Much of his social circle remained loyal to the Crown. Many scholars paint Morris as a “conservative” who was “slow to support the revolutionary cause,” but historian Dennis Rasmussen notes that he “embraced the idea of independence right around the same time as did the bulk of his fellow patriots.” By 1776, Morris was firmly on the side of Revolution, a stance that put him at odds with many of his friends and family.

During the Revolutionary War, Morris served as a delegate to the Second Continental Congress, which functioned as the de facto national government during the Revolutionary War. Notably, Morris was selected to be on a five-member committee sent to Valley Forge to meet with General George Washington. He witnessed firsthand the battered and underfunded Continental Army, describing in a letter the “naked starving Condition” of the Army rendered “out of Health [and] out of Spirits.” The visit to Valley Forge instilled in Morris a deep admiration for Washington. Morris returned to Congress as Washington’s advocate and ally.

As a member of the Continental Congress, Morris was young, opinionated, and intent on furthering the interests of the union as a whole, rather than just those of New York. This nationalist commitment displeased the New York Legislature, which failed to reappoint Morris in 1779. It was also around this time that Morris suffered an accident that led to the loss of his left leg. The story accepted by most historians is that his leg was amputated following a carriage accident. This explanation has not stopped the dissemination of the likely apocryphal tale that Morris broke his leg jumping out of a window to escape the enraged husband of a woman he was seeing. The tall, handsome, well-to-do Morris was well known for his rollicking social life. In any case, Morris would walk with the help of a wooden peg leg the rest of his life.

After losing his seat in Congress, Gouverneur Morris moved to Pennsylvania in 1779, drawn to the nation’s political and financial center. There, he resumed his law practice while continuing to write and correspond on the young nation’s political and financial future. Within two years, he returned to public service as assistant superintendent of finance to Robert Morris (no relation), helping to stabilize the nation’s precarious wartime finances. His growing influence in Pennsylvania led to his appointment as one of the state’s delegates to the Constitutional Convention.

Morris at the Convention

“He came here as a Representative of America,” Morris boldly proclaimed in July 1787, “he flattered himself he came here in some degree as a Representative of the whole human race.” Rather than representing the provincial interests of any one state or region of America, Morris sought to further the interests of the nation. He implored his fellow delegates “to extend their views beyond the present moment of time; beyond the narrow limits of place from which they derive their political origin.” For too long under the Articles of Confederation had “the great objects of the nation” been “sacrificed constantly to local views.” The creation of the Constitution was an opportunity to finally embrace a truly national identity—to “form a compact for the good of America.” This nationalistic conception, historian Jonathan Gienapp argues, was the “core of his thinking.” Morris wanted “more Americans [to] feel like Americans: defang the states; bolster the nation.”

Morris’ attempts to convince his fellow delegates to look to “the good of America,” rather than the interests of their own states, ran up against a persistent problem: slavery. In one of his most passionate and significant speeches, Morris declared that he “never would concur in upholding domestic slavery. It was a nefarious institution — It was the curse of heaven on the States where it prevailed.” Southern delegates were obstinate, insisting not only on protecting slavery but on skewing representation to favor their own interests via the Three-Fifths Compromise, which counted enslaved people as three-fifths of a person for purposes of representation and taxation. Throughout the Convention, Morris remained perhaps the most vocal opponent of slavery. In Morris’ words, whenever he was presented with the “dilemma of doing injustice to the Southern States or to human nature,” he chose “the former.”

While Morris had great influence through debate and discussion, speaking 173 times (the most of any delegate), his greatest contributions came in his role as the Constitution’s penman. In September 1787, the Convention formed a five-member Committee of Style tasked with organizing and revising the Constitution. The chair of the Committee, William Johnson, chose Morris to put together the draft. Various accounts consider Morris’ alterations merely stylistic, but recent scholarship by William Treanor has uncovered multiple substantive changes. In Treanor’s estimation, by making slight edits Morris strengthened the national government, creating “the basis for the Federalist Constitution.”

Many of Morris’ edits are necessarily subtle; his rewrite of the Preamble is not. James Wilson, another influential forgotten founder, had written an earlier draft of the Preamble as a member of the Committee of Detail. Wilson was the originator of the famous first words of the Constitution, “We the People” — although with a different meaning. This preliminary draft conceived of the Constitution as an agreement between the peoples of each state:

We the People of the States of New-Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode-Island and Providence Plantations, Connecticut, New-York, New-Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, North-Carolina, South-Carolina, and Georgia, do ordain, declare and establish the following Constitution for the Government of Ourselves and our Posterity.

In contrast, Morris’ version, the Preamble we know today, conceived of one American people:

We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.

While the first lists each state and refers to the people principally as members of their respective states, the second refers to the “People of the United States” and sets out goals common to all Americans. This change encapsulates Morris’ political project: the Constitution was meant to create one nation, the “United States of America.”

Following the Convention, Morris opted to travel to Europe rather than stay in America. During his time abroad, he was called upon to serve as Minister to France during the French Revolution. Returning to America in 1798, Morris, who was reluctant to rejoin public life, was convinced to serve as one of New York’s Senators from 1800 to 1803. During his later years, Morris faced disillusionment as he witnessed the ascendancy of the Democratic Republicans and the downfall of the Federalist party. Morris published numerous works and chaired the Erie Canal Commission before passing away in November 1816.

In an 1814 letter, Morris wrote to a friend that the Constitution “was written by the fingers, which write this letter.” And in the words of James Madison, the “finish given to the style and arrangement of the Constitution fairly belongs to the pen of Mr Morris. . . . A better choice could not have been made.” It was Morris who wrote the Preamble and organized the Constitution into the set of seven articles that became the law of the land. Despite his myriad achievements, the peg-legged penman of the Constitution has faded into obscurity. So many historians who write on Morris come to express the same sentiment: Gouverneur Morris is unforgettable yet forgotten.

Tristan Worsham is a National Constitution Center content fellow and a graduate of the University of California, Berkeley.

Resources:

Jonathan Gienapp, “Representing the Nation: Gouverneur Morris’s Nationalist Constitutionalism,” Georgetown Journal of Law & Public Policy (2023)

Gouverneur Morris, ed. J. Jackson Barlow, To Secure the Blessings of Liberty: Selected Writings of Gouverneur Morris (2012)

Dennis C. Rasmussen, The Constitution’s Penman: Gouverneur Morris and the Creation of America’s Basic Charter (2023)

Theodore Roosevelt, Gouverneur Morris (1888)

William M. Treanor, “The Case of the Dishonest Scrivener: Gouverneur Morris and the Creation of the Federalist Constitution,” Michigan Law Review (2021)

2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 10:47

Colourful tulips, hyacinths, wisteria and daffodils appear across country as gardeners prepare for shows

Colourful tulips, hyacinths, wisteria and daffodils have made a remarkable display across England after a short period of hot weather followed by a cold snap created excellent conditions for spring blooms.

There were record temperatures last week in many parts of the UK as the country recorded one of the hottest April days in the last 80 years.

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2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 10:42

A federal judge in Miami handed President Trump a defeat in his defamation lawsuit against the Wall Street Journal over a story about a birthday book for Jeffrey Epstein.

2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 10:40

Lawmakers are returning to Washington to face major developments in the war with Iran, a lingering DHS shutdown and possible expulsion votes for some of their own members.

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2026-04-13 10:35

Scottish Labour leader pledges more homes and tax cuts as party tries to reverse slump in support before May elections

Anas Sarwar has appealed to voters to give Labour five years “to fix the Scottish National party’s mess” as he pledged more homes, tax cuts and a smaller public sector.

The Scottish Labour leader is fighting a last-ditch attempt to reverse a steep slump in support. Recent polls put Sarwar’s party third or even fourth behind the SNP, Reform and the Scottish Greens, dragged down by the UK government’s unpopularity.

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2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 10:29

A senior Pakistani government source told CBS News that Islamabad is in active contact with Washington and Tehran to bring them back to the negotiating table over the Iran war.

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 10:16

BARCELONA, Spain, April 13, 2026 — Almirall, S.A. (ALM), a global biopharmaceutical company dedicated to medical dermatology, have announced an expanded collaboration with the Barcelona Supercomputing Center – Centro Nacional de Supercomputación (BSC – CNS). This new framework agreement strengthens their partnership, aiming to accelerate research and development in medical dermatology by applying advanced supercomputing, High-Performance Computing (HPC), and Artificial Intelligence.

The collaboration is a testament to Almirall’s commitment to pushing the boundaries of science to address the needs of patients with skin conditions. It builds on previous successful R&D joint projects and is framed within the broader research collaboration between BSC and Almirall. The partnership is a key pillar of Almirall’s innovation strategy, which focuses on leveraging cutting-edge technology and collaborative ecosystems to develop novel treatments.

As part of the enhanced partnership, Almirall will join ‘BSC Connects’, a strategic initiative launched by BSC designed to bridge advanced scientific knowledge with industry leaders. Participation in this program will provide Almirall with access to personalized training, cutting-edge technologies, and tailored support for co-developing innovative R&D projects throughout 2026. This will enable Almirall to further integrate disruptive technologies throughout its R&D pipeline and development processes, ultimately benefiting patients.

The partnership empowers professionals from both institutions to tackle research and dermatological challenges. By capitalizing on the scientific talent of BSC and Almirall, the BSC Connect collaboration framework will drive the identification of innovative technologies with high-impact potential and provide an opportunity to establish direct collaboration on scientific topics of mutual interest, ranging from genomics to digital twins and drug design.

“Our passion for medical dermatology drives us to constantly seek innovative solutions that can make a real difference in patients’ lives” stated Dr. Karl Ziegelbauer, Chief Scientific Officer at Almirall. “Strengthening our collaboration with a world-class institution like BSC is a crucial step in our journey. By combining their expertise in supercomputing and AI with our deep understanding of dermatology, we are creating a powerful synergy to accelerate the development of the next generation of skin treatments. This initiative aligns perfectly with our vision of being at the forefront of science and technology to transform patients’ lives and represents a key pillar in accelerating our ability to discover and develop innovative therapies.”

BSC is a leading international research center and a key player in the European supercomputing infrastructure. The ‘BSC Connects’ initiative aims to create a vibrant ecosystem where strategic partners from industry and academia can collaborate to tackle complex challenges and drive technological advancement.

As Mateo Valero, Director of BSC, stated “This agreement with Almirall, within the framework of the BSC Connects program, is an example of how supercomputing and artificial intelligence can be placed at the service of industry to generate a real impact on people’s health. BSC and Almirall share a vision of collaboration rooted in a broader research partnership and the use of technology as a driver of innovation. Together we can contribute to advancing the field of medical dermatology by providing tools and capabilities that make a real difference.”

BSC Connects: Bringing BSC Knowledge to Business

BSC Connects is the business immersion program of the BSC, designed to drive public-private collaboration and accelerate knowledge transfer between science and industry. The initiative enables companies and institutions to access the BSC’s scientific expertise, technology, and supercomputing capabilities. This includes specialized training, the development of use cases, opportunities for collaboration on European projects, and strategic networking within its innovation community.

The program offers a structured approach that spans from identifying technological challenges to evaluating and optimizing results. It incorporates joint communication efforts, the promotion of use cases, and participation in international events and forums. By doing so, it acts as a bridge between the BSC’s scientific talent and the innovation ecosystem, facilitating the development of high-impact strategic projects.

About BSC

BSC is one of the leading supercomputing centers in Europe and hosts one of the most powerful supercomputers in the world, MareNostrum 5. The center specialises in High Performance Computing (HPC) and Artificial Intelligence (AI), and its role is twofold: to provide supercomputing infrastructure and services to Spanish and European scientists, and to generate knowledge and technology for transfer to society. BSC’s research focuses on the fields of computer sciences, life sciences, Earth sciences, computer applications in science and engineering, and computational social sciences and humanities. The BSC Consortium is made up of the Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities of the Government of Spain (60%), the Department of Research and Universities of the Generalitat de Catalunya (30%) and the Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya (10%). The center manages the Spanish Supercomputing Network (RES) and is the hosting entity of EuroHPC JU, the initiative that leads large-scale investment in and deployment of HPC in Europe. For more information, visit www.bsc.es.

About Almirall

Almirall is a global pharmaceutical company dedicated to medical dermatology. We closely collaborate with leading scientists, healthcare professionals, and patients to deliver our purpose: to transform the patients’ world by helping them realize their hopes and dreams for a healthy life. We are at the forefront of science to deliver ground-breaking, differentiated medical dermatology innovations that address patients´ needs. Almirall, founded in 1944 and headquartered in Barcelona, is publicly traded on the Spanish Stock Exchange (ticker: ALM, total revenue in 2025: €1114.5 MM, over 2100 employees globally. Almirall products help to improve the lives of patients every day and are available in over 100 countries. For more information, please visit https://www.almirall.com.


Source: Almirall

The post Almirall, BSC Deepen Collaboration on HPC and AI for Medical Dermatology appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 10:13

The Guardian has reviewed figures from Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection since Trump’s inauguration

Donald Trump campaigned on a platform of mass deportation. Since he took office, his administration has reshaped immigration enforcement across the country. The Guardian, using data published every two weeks by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), is tracking the number of people the administration has arrested, detained and deported.

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2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 10:12

The California-based company said it will assign users ages 5 to 8 to a Roblox Kids account and users ages 9 to 15 to a separate account called Roblox Select.

2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 10:00

If you're on an older AT&T wireless plan, here are the price hikes to watch out for this month.

2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 09:57

Can I get some recommendations for a battery to go in my GTV with WTF s&d, mte with n52s. I would really like something i can just pop in and use. I dont need a lot more top speed, if any, but any more improvements in not worrying about overpowering the duty cycle would be nice if possible. I ride mostly trails but do ride on pavement too. If I have to just have a direct replacement of the same is fine, but may as well improve it if i can.

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 09:38

TORONTO, CHICAGO and SAN FRANCISCO, April 13, 2026 — BMO (Bank of Montreal) today announced new partnerships with Quantum Industry Canada (QIC) and the Chicago Quantum Exchange (CQE), strengthening the bank’s engagement with leading quantum research, industry and policy organizations.

The partnerships build on BMO’s April 9 announcement of the BMO Institute for Applied Artificial Intelligence & Quantum, a new Centre of Excellence focused on the responsible application and governance of AI and the advancement of quantum capabilities. Together, these initiatives reflect BMO’s commitment to innovating, developing and integrating technologies that will shape the future of financial services and the broader economy.

Through its collaborations with QIC and CQE, BMO is participating in early‑stage, structured ecosystem partnerships focused on knowledge‑sharing, workforce development and dialogue across academia, industry and policy communities. These engagements support BMO’s long‑standing approach to personalizing client experiences, augmenting team expertise and process automation, while contributing to the emergence of applications of quantum technologies that will impact the delivery of financial services.

“Quantum technologies present significant long‑term potential, along with important questions around security, governance and real‑world application,” said Dr. Kristin Milchanowski, Chief AI & Quantum Officer, BMO. “These partnerships enable us to engage constructively with leading organizations across Canada and the U.S. as the field continues to develop, while taking a responsible, informed approach grounded in collaboration, learning and readiness.”

BMO’s participation in Quantum Industry Canada connects the bank to Canada’s premier business-led quantum consortium, bringing together leading companies and strategic partners across the full quantum stack. Through QIC, BMO engages directly with Canada’s quantum ecosystem, contributing perspectives informed by its expert technology bankers, enterprise‑scale financial services experience and long‑term readiness considerations.

“Canada has played an outsized role in building the quantum era. The focus now is on translating that leadership into real capability, markets, and advantage,” said Quantum Industry Canada’s CEO Lisa Lambert. “BMO’s participation reflects the shift from exploration to execution, and the role leading financial institutions play in scaling Canada’s quantum economy.”

Through its partnership with the Chicago Quantum Exchange, BMO will engage with a Midwest-based intellectual hub that advances the science and engineering of quantum information, prepares the quantum workforce, and drives the quantum economy in collaboration with leading universities, national labs, and industry partners. With BMO’s U.S. headquarters located in Chicago, the relationship provides a local foundation for ongoing dialogue, convenings and workforce‑focused engagement, including exposure to emerging research and student talent relevant to financial services.

“The CQE is building and scaling a full‑spectrum quantum ecosystem by working closely with partners in key industries, like finance, to drive progress across the discovery‑to‑deployment pipeline,” said David Awschalom, the University of Chicago’s Liew Family Professor of Quantum Engineering and Physics and the founding director of the CQE. “Quantum technologies offer significant potential for financial institutions, from quantum networks that may enhance the protection of personal information to quantum computing approaches that could help identify fraud more effectively over time. Engaging in early, cross‑sector dialogue with partners like BMO that share our commitment to responsible and efficient quantum sector growth is an important part of building a strong quantum economy.”

Together, these partnerships reflect BMO’s long‑term approach to emerging technologies as a financial advisor and capital provider, and as an innovator – engaging early with leading research and industry organizations, investing in knowledge and talent, and building the governance and institutional understanding required to evaluate potential applications responsibly as the quantum ecosystem matures.

Recently, BMO became the first Canadian bank to join the IBM Quantum Network, extending its technology leadership in North America. BMO has also been recognized by Evident AI as one of the world’s top 10 banks for AI innovation, received the Commercial Banking Impact Award for Artificial Intelligence and Advanced Analytics from Datos Insights, and was named one of Fast Company’s Most Innovative Companies.

More from HPCwire: BMO Forms AI and Quantum Institute, Appoints Chief AI and Quantum Officer

About BMO Financial Group

BMO Financial Group is the eighth largest bank in North America by assets, with total assets of $1.5 trillion as of January 31, 2026. Serving clients for 200 years and counting, BMO is a diverse team of highly engaged employees providing a broad range of personal and commercial banking, wealth management, global markets and investment banking products and services to approximately 13 million clients across Canada, the United States, and in select markets globally. Driven by a single purpose, to Boldly Grow the Good in business and life, BMO is committed to driving positive change in the world, and making progress for a thriving economy, sustainable future, and stronger communities.


Source: BMO

The post BMO Announces Partnership with Quantum Industry Canada and Chicago Quantum Exchange appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-13 09:27

The Strait of Hormuz, shipping, and law Explainer sfarrell.drupa…

Freedom of passage through the Strait is a key issue for all maritime nations, writes Professor Marc Weller, Director of the International Law Programme at Chatham House.

A vessel heading towards the Strait of Hormuz.

On Sunday, President Donald Trump announced a blockade against shipping ‘trying to enter, or leave, the Strait of Hormuz.’

This move seems to aim at punishing Iran for having failed to agree to what Vice President JD Vance termed the ‘final and best offer’ for a peace settlement that he put forward during talks in Islamabad.

The temporary ceasefire proposed by Pakistan had provided for the lifting of Iranian restrictions on maritime movements through the Strait ‘as a goodwill gesture’.

This has not occurred, amid dispute about the application of the cease fire to Israel and its war in Lebanon.

Act of war

A blockade is an act of war. Its imposition compounds the fact that the US and Israel have launched an unlawful war against Iran. It also threatens the already fragile truce. 

Moreover, President Trump’s initial announcement seemed to suggest that it would cover all shipping through the Strait.

This would have made the Gulf states, and those depending on their oil and gas, its principal victims, rather than Iran.

US Central Command has now clarified that it will ‘not impede freedom of navigation of vessels transiting the Strait of Hormuz to and from non-Iranian ports.’

This clarifies that a traditional blockade is intended, trying to strangulate only the economy of the opponent and forcing a surrender, rather than stopping all traffic through the Strait altogether, which would clearly be unlawful.

President Trump’s initial announcement was also directed against the new Iranian practice to sell passage through the strait for a fee of up to $2 million. ‘No one who pays an illegal toll will have safe passage on the high seas,’ he added.

This would expose third-party tankers to arrest and seizure by US forces beyond the Strait.

But would the US really capture an Indian or Chinese super-tanker if they had paid the Iranian toll, or entered its ports or coastal areas? This would be a very significant escalation of the conflict, and Washington may well hesitate in making good its threat. 
 

The right of passage through the Strait

Freedom of passage through the Strait of Hormuz is a key issue for all maritime nations. The Strait controls shipping in the order of around 100-140 major vessels passing before the war per day.

When the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) was negotiated, a critical deal was struck reflecting this fact. 

Freedom of passage through the Strait of Hormuz is a key issue for all maritime nations.

The convention accepted that coastal states can lawfully extend their territorial sea from the previously accepted limit of three nautical miles (nm) to 12 nm. This placed some 138 additional straits that are less than 24 nm wide under the jurisdiction of one or more coastal states.

The Strait of Hormuz, with a width of 21 nm at its narrowest point, is covered by the territorial seas of Iran and Oman respectively.

In exchange, the coastal states had to accept that a special legal regime would apply to straits used for international navigation. While the coastal states enjoy sovereignty over their territorial seas in most aspects, an original limitation to that sovereignty applies – they must accept an enhanced right of ‘transit passage’ for shipping of all nations.

This right goes further than the traditional right of ‘innocent passage’ granted to shipping through the territorial sea of any state. Innocent passage allows for some interference with passing shipping in accordance with local law, for instance for the protection of the marine environment or regulation of fisheries.

The US correctly argues that transit passage has become accepted as a firm right of all states in international custom, also binding on non-parties.

Crucially, the coastal state may suspend the right of passage if it judges that demands of its national security so require.

In contrast, given the lack of other viable routes, transit passage guarantees un-suspendable passage to all ships that may not be ‘impeded’ in any way by the coastal state. That right applies in peace and war, although with some necessary qualifications where the direct participants in an armed conflict are concerned.

The positions of the parties

Neither the US nor Iran is a party to UNCLOS. The US correctly argues that transit passage has become accepted as a firm right of all states in international custom, also binding on non-parties. Iran asserts that it need only grant the more limited, traditional, right of innocent passage,  which can be suspended. It also claims that foreign warships must coordinate access with its authorities.

Oman has ratified UNCLOS, but has added statements affirming its ‘full sovereignty over its territorial sea’, and seeks to reserve its right to require prior permission for passage of warships.

However, UNCLOS rules out reservations of this kind. The US Navy has conducted a ‘freedom of navigation programme’ since 1979, enforcing the right of unimpeded passage.

This has regularly included unannounced passage of warships through the Strait of Hormuz. 

During the present truce Washington claims to have sent two guided missile destroyers through the Strait, to emphasize this point and to prepare for an operation to clear the strait of mines.

Overall, the bargain of allowing all coastal states to extend their territorial seas was conditioned on universal acceptance of the regime of transit passage. Moreover, even if there could be doubt in relation to the passage of warships, which is not really the case, this would not affect the traffic of oil and gas tankers at issue in this instance.

Impact of the armed conflict

Kazem Gharibabadi, the Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister for Legal and International Affairs, claimed earlier in the conflict that ‘we are now in a state of war, and wartime conditions cannot be governed by peacetime rules.’

The US-Israeli attack on Iran clearly brought an international armed conflict into being. This turns the Strait of Hormuz into a ‘belligerent strait.’

The US-Israeli attack on Iran clearly brought an international armed conflict into being. This turns the Strait of Hormuz into a ‘belligerent strait.’

While the conflict lasts, Iran would be entitled to attack US or Israeli warships under the law of maritime warfare. This might include convoys of merchant ships conducted by US warships.

Direct attacks on merchant vessels of the two belligerents and on neutrals are, however, prohibited. US and Israeli-flag merchant vessels cannot simply be sunk, although Iran could seize them, along with neutral shipping carrying contraband.

Iran initially effectively blocked passage through the Strait for all maritime commerce altogether. However, this action was clearly and unambiguously rejected by the UN Security Council (UNSC) as a ‘serious threat to international peace and security.’

At a meeting of the Council of the International Maritime Organization (IMO) in London, Iran later claimed to have adopted only ‘necessary and proportionate measures to prevent aggressors and their supporters from exploiting the Strait of Hormuz to advance hostile operations against Iran.’

2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 09:23

I spent over two months testing popular microcurrent devices, taking before-and-after photos to evaluate the results from NuFace, ZIIP Beauty and other brands.

2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 09:02

Ever heard of a condition called bixonimania? Did you search the internet or ask your “AI” girlfriend about some symptoms you were experiencing, and this was its answer? Well…

The condition doesn’t appear in the standard medical literature — because it doesn’t exist. It’s the invention of a team led by Almira Osmanovic Thunström, a medical researcher at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden, who dreamt up the skin condition and then uploaded two fake studies about it to a preprint server in early 2024. Osmanovic Thunström carried out this unusual experiment to test whether large language models (LLMs) would swallow the misinformation and then spit it out as reputable health advice. “I wanted to see if I can create a medical condition that did not exist in the database,” she says.

↫ Chris Stokel-Walker at Nature

And “AI” ate it up like quality chocolate. It started appearing in the answers from all the popular “AI” tools within weeks, and later even started showing up as references in published literature, indicating that scientists copy/paste references without actually reading them. This is clearly a deeply concerning experiment, and highlights there may be many, many more nonsensical, fake studies being picked up by “AI” tools.

Of course, I hear you say, it’s not like propagating fake or terrible studies is the sole domain of “AI”, as there are countless cases of this happening among actual real researchers and scientists, too. The issue, though, is that the fake studies concerning “bixonimania” were intentionally made to be as silly and obviously ridiculous as possible. It references Starfleet Acadamy, the lab aboard the Enterprise, the University of Fellowship of the Ring, and many other fake references instantly recognisable as such by real humans.

In fact, the studies even specifically mention that “this entire paper is made up” and “fifty made-up individuals aged between 20 and 50 years were recruited for the exposure group”. It would take any human only a few seconds after opening one of these papers to realise they’re entirely fake – yet, the world’s most advanced “AI” tools gobbled them up and spit them back out as pure fact within mere weeks of their publication

This shouldn’t come as a surprise. After all, “AI” tools have no understanding, no intelligence, no context, and they can’t actually make sense of anything. They are glorified pachinko machines with the output – the ball – tumbling down the most likely path between the pins based on nothing but chance and which pins it has already hit. “AI” output understands the world about as much as the pachinko ball does, and as such, can’t pick up on even the most obvious of cues that something is a fake or a forgery.

It won’t be long before truly nefarious forces start doing this very same thing. Why build, staff, and maintain a troll farm when you can just have “AI” generate intentional misinformation which will then be spread and pushed by even more “AI”? Remember, it took one malicious asshole just one long since retracted fake paper to convince millions that vaccines cause autism. I shudder to think how many people are accepting anything “AI” says as gospel.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-13 09:02

‘Parliaments in dialogue’: Bringing Westminster and Brussels closer together to defend Europe 23 April 2026 — 17:30 TO 18:30 BST Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online

Join us at Chatham House to hear from UK and European parliamentarians and defence experts about how to improve defence cooperation between Britain and Europe.

Join us at Chatham House to hear from UK and European parliamentarians and defence experts about how to improve defence cooperation between Britain and Europe.

This panel discussion is the first in a new series, ‘Parliaments in dialogue’–convened in partnership between Chatham House and other leading think tanks, and the European Parliament Liaison Office in the UK.

Amid increasing uncertainty around the global security architecture, this first event will focus on security and defence cooperation.

The European Parliament will be represented by MEP Sandro Gozi, who is a co-chair of the EU-UK Parliamentary Partnership Assembly and a key Member of the European Parliament on EU-UK reset. 

It will bring members of the UK and European Parliaments together with defence experts for direct engagement on questions central to EU-UK relations. Such as: how can Brussels and Westminster work to align their strategic ambitions and to deepen practical collaboration?

Chatham House’s mission is to help governments and societies to build a secure, sustainable, prosperous and just world. We do this by convening meetings of the people and organizations that can bring about change.

The panel discussion will be followed by a drinks reception.

2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 09:00

Attacks on Saturday bring number of people killed in boat strikes by US military to at least 168

The US military said that it blew up two boats accused of smuggling drugs in the eastern Pacific Ocean, killing a total of five people and leaving one survivor, as the Trump administration pursues its campaign against alleged traffickers in Latin America while preparing a naval blockade of Iranian ports.

The attacks on Saturday bring the number of people who have been killed in boat strikes by the US military to at least 168 since the Trump administration began targeting those it calls “narcoterrorists” in early September.

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2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 09:00

Apple, Garmin, Samsung, Google or Amazfit? I put these watches through the paces to see where they land on step, distance and heart rate accuracy.

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 09:00

April 13, 2026 — Doctors need to determine a patient’s short-term treatment plan before test results come back from the lab. Power grid operators need to decide how to dispense generator assets today without knowing what tomorrow’s output or demand will be. Port administrators have to plan freight truck schedules without knowing the exact time each ship will dock.

Credit: University of Tennessee

These are examples of multi-stage stochastic (random) problems: sequences of decisions made over time, where each new decision is based on how a previously uncertain event unfolded. Thousands of decisions like these are made across the energy, logistics, healthcare, finance, and other industries every day.

“Getting these decisions right has enormous practical consequences,” said University of Tennessee Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering (ISE) Professor and Associate Department Head James Ostrowski. “Improving our ability to solve them efficiently is fundamental to helping organizations make better decisions in a complex and uncertain world.”

Determining the right decision to make after every possible outcome for an uncertain event, even events with binary yes/no outcomes, creates an exponentially increasing number of scenarios over time. Classic computational methods, which individually craft and evaluate each possible scenario, cannot accurately handle such enormous problems.

Quantum computers, on the other hand, are a natural fit.

“Rather than enumerating scenarios one by one,” Ostrowski explained, “a quantum circuit can encode all scenarios into a single quantum state simultaneously through a property called superposition.”

This spring, Ostrowski and ISE Assistant Professor Rebekah Herrman are jointly embarking on a two-year, $300,000 National Science Foundation (NSF) grant to create quantum computing-based tools that will help researchers and industry engineers quickly determine whether quantum computing can help solve a given two-step uncertainty optimization problem—a vital foundation toward higher-stage scenarios.

“This grant shows the leading role of the ISE department in quantum computing research both at the University of Tennessee and in the nation,” said ISE Department Head Mingzhou Jin.

Complementary Computational Strengths

Ostrowski, Herrman, and two PhD students funded by the grant will utilize the world-class quantum computing facilities at Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s Quantum Computing User Program. They will also draw on UT’s strong interdisciplinary tradition in operations research, computational science, and energy systems engineering, Ostrowski said.

The team’s research will harness a hybrid approach, utilizing quantum computation to encode scenario structures and explore the large solution landscapes and classical computation for parameter optimization, solution evaluation, and post-processing.

“Classical and quantum computation have fundamentally different, complementary strengths,” Ostrowski said. “Our work with this grant will develop specific encoding strategies that exploit those strengths to represent large scenario spaces compactly.”

One of the PhD students involved will focus on the foundational work of developing and analyzing the quantum circuit encodings while the other works to evaluate how well the quantum method performs against classical benchmarks.

“UT’s land-grant mission is about creating knowledge that serves the public, which also requires developing the next generation of researchers,” said Ostrowski. “Quantum computing and operations research are both evolving rapidly, and training students at their intersection prepares a workforce that industry, national laboratories, and academia urgently need.”

Open Source Results for Broader Impact

At the conclusion of the grant, Ostrowski and Herrman will not only publish their results but release multiple open source software libraries—including circuit templates, benchmark problems, simulation interfaces, and tutorials—designed for use by practitioners without expertise in quantum computing.

“Results in a paper tell you what happened; an open source code base lets others reproduce, extend, and build on the work,” Ostrowski said. “It also lowers the barrier to entry for applied researchers and practitioners who want to engage with quantum optimization but don’t have the background to build these tools themselves. Open source release is how research investments become community assets.”

When the tools created during the grant become publicly available, researchers will be able to use the benchmarks as a common reference point to compare quantum and classical algorithms in future studies.

Meanwhile, industry practitioners in energy, logistics, and other sectors will have an accessible starting point for exploring whether quantum-enhanced optimization could improve their own decision-making workflows, Ostrowski explained.

“Ultimately, better stochastic optimization tools have downstream benefits for energy resilience, supply chain reliability, and emergency preparedness—areas that directly affect everyday citizens,” he said. “Projects like this one are how a public university like UT translates federal investment in science into long-term human capital for Tennessee and the nation.”


Source: University of Tennessee

The post University of Tennessee Explores Quantum Methods to Scale Stochastic Optimization Workflows appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 08:57

Kinda want to spend some money on my onewheel right now. I've read we can no longer balance boards online last summer.

Is it still the case?

Can we still install them and adjust the settings in app?

Thanks in advance!

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2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 08:57

Aid, conflict and global leadership: UN humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher 20 April 2026 — 12:00 TO 13:00 BST Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online

In conversation with Tom Fletcher, UN Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator, about the most pressing humanitarian and conflict issues facing the United Nations today, and what role the UK can play.

In conversation with Tom Fletcher, UN Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator, about the most pressing humanitarian and conflict issues facing the United Nations today, and what role the UK can play.

As wars multiply and humanitarian funding faces unprecedented strain, the UN system is under pressure to adapt. From Gaza to Sudan, the scale of need is outpacing the capacity to respond – and the political will of major powers to sustain the multilateral order is increasingly uncertain.

Tom Fletcher joins Chatham House for a wide-ranging conversation on the future of humanitarian action and the reform agenda facing the UN system.

Drawing on his experience engaging governments including the United States and other key partners, Fletcher will reflect on what effective multilateral leadership looks like in the current moment – and what more can be done.

With the UK hosting the G20 in 2027 and its Global Development Conference this coming May, this event will also turn to the role Britain can and should play: having cut its own aid spending, can it play a decisive role as a donor, convenor and reformer in the international system, and how?

2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 08:35

Legislation would allow government to implement evolving single market rules without full parliamentary scrutiny

Ministers in Britain are planning a new bill that would bring into force a food and drink trade deal with the EU but also contain powers enabling the government to “dynamically align” with Europe. It would allow the UK to quickly implement evolving single market rules if it determines it is in the national interest, without having to face full parliamentary scrutiny.

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2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 08:35

President contrasts his health with challenger Flávio Bolsonaro, who fainted during a TV debate

The Brazilian president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, is seeking to lunge and leg press his way to a historic fourth term, as the octogenarian politician uses a flurry of workout videos to convince voters he is fighting fit ahead of October’s crunch election.

Lula looks set to face off against a senator almost half his age in what will be the leftist’s seventh presidential campaign since he first sought Brazil’s top job in 1989, when he was 44.

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2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 08:19

Version 7.0 of the Linux kernel has been released, marking the arbitrary end of the 6.x series.

Significant changes in this release include the removal of the “experimental” status for Rust code, a new filtering mechanism for io_uring operations, a switch to lazy preemption by default in the CPU scheduler, support for time-slice extension, the nullfs filesystem, self-healing support for the XFS filesystem, a number of improvements to the swap subsystem (described in this article and this one), general support for AccECN congestion notification, and more. See the LWN merge-window summaries (part 1, part 2) and the KernelNewbies 7.0 page for more details.

↫ corbet at LWN.net

You can compile the kernel yourself, or just wait until it hits your distribution’s repositories.

2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 08:17
  • Armed men fired at Berekum Chelsea bus on Sunday

  • Frimpong dies of wounds at hospital

Berekum Chelsea winger Dominic Frimpong was killed in an armed robbery on his team’s bus as they returned from a match on Sunday, the Ghana Football Association said.

Berekum Chelsea said six “masked men wielding guns and assault rifles” had blocked the road as the team returned from their Ghana Premier League match against Samartex.

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 20:04

Pope Leo has repeatedly warned that violence is becoming normalized and that religious language is at risk of being misused to justify it.

2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 21:21

During a nearly 40-minute phone conversation, Brian Hooker told friends​ in descriptive detail what led to the incident where his wife allegedly went missing.

2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 19:54

Pope Leo has been critical of the war in Iran and other priorities of the Trump administration, but says his comments are "not meant as attacks on anyone."

2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 08:00

Experts say natural kratom may offer benefits and blame synthetic derivatives for surge in poisonings noted by CDC

A recent Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) report shows that kratom poisonings have soared in the US, but experts say this is probably due to synthetic derivatives like 7-OH, and that blanket kratom bans could harm people using natural kratom to aid pain management or addiction recovery.

Walter Prozialeck, a pharmacology professor at Midwestern University, said he was unsurprised by the report, which found that kratom-related poisonings went up by about 1,200% over the last decade, with a marked surge in 2025.

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 08:00

We send the voice of the dead across space as an act of continuity and care, while on Earth we tally the bodies. Which do we choose to become?

Four people are sleeping 19,000 miles from the moon when the voice of Apollo 13’s commander arrives.

“Hello, Artemis II. This is Apollo astronaut Jim Lovell. Welcome to my old neighborhood.”

Flynn Coleman is an international human rights lawyer, political scientist and the author of A Human Algorithm

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 07:55

Platform says it will reward original creators as it penalises ‘aggregators’ for flooding timelines with ‘stolen posts’

Elon Musk’s X has reduced payments to users who post clickbait and recycle news stories as it warned account holders against “flooding the timeline” with low-quality content.

Nikita Bier, X’s head of product, wrote on the social media platform that all “aggregators” – users who quickly repackage and repost news from other accounts – had received less money from the creator revenue sharing programme.

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 07:34

Will some programmers become "AI babysitters"? asks long-time Slashdot readertheodp. They share some thoughts from a founding member of Code.org and former Director of Education at Google: "AI may allow anyone to generate code, but only a computer scientist can maintain a system," explained Google.org Global Head Maggie Johnson in a LinkedIn post. So "As AI-generated code becomes more accurate and ubiquitous, the role of the computer scientist shifts from author to technical auditor or expert. "While large language models can generate functional code in milliseconds, they lack the contextual judgment and specialized knowledge to ensure that the output is safe, efficient, and integrates correctly within a larger system without a person's oversight. [...] The human-in-the-loop must possess the technical depth to recognize when a piece of code is sub-optimal or dangerous in a production environment. [...] We need computer scientists to perform forensics, tracing the logic of an AI-generated module to identify logical fallacies or security loopholes. Modern CS education should prepare students to verify and secure these black-box outputs." The NY Times reports that companies are already struggling to find engineers to review the explosion of AI-written code.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 07:33

Inspection reveals use of force after protest by detainees being deported under ‘one in, one out’ scheme

Asylum seekers who protested against being forcibly removed to France under the Home Office’s controversial “one in, one out” scheme, were transported out of the UK in waist and leg restraints, an inspection report has revealed.

The report by HM chief inspector of prisons, Charlie Taylor, inspected a flight to France that took place on 20-21 January this year and on which it found no force was used.

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2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 07:28

Tehran said the move would be a breach of the ceasefire. Plus, Viktor Orbán ousted in Hungarian election in blow to global far right

Good morning.

Donald Trump has said the US will begin blockading the strait of Hormuz in an attempt to wrest control of the vital waterway from Iran after peace negotiations between the countries failed.

When would the blockade start? US Central Command (Centcom) announced the blockade would begin on Monday at 10am ET. Experts have said it could risk further increasing oil prices.

Which vessels will the blockade affect? Centcom said it would be confined to ships transiting through Iranian ports – and that it would permit passage of ships headed to ports belonging to the US’s Gulf allies.

How could a blockade help the US reopen the strait? The strategy appears to be that the US hopes to eliminates Tehran’s greatest point of leverage – its chokehold of the strait – by stopping Iranian oil exports. Tehran has indicated that it would like to keep control of the strait after the war has ended, and to charge fees to ships.

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 07:00

LA28 set aside tickets for LA and Oklahoma City residents, but some say they faced exorbitant prices and high fees

Since tickets for the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles went on sale for local residents on 2 April, excitement for the Games has given way to sticker shock among some Angelenos over what they describe as exorbitant prices and an unexpected service fee.

LA28 had made a wave of slots in the presale ticket lottery available for residents throughout southern California, where the majority of contests will take place, and in Oklahoma City, which will host the canoe slalom and softball events. Tickets ranged in price from $28 into the thousands.

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 07:00

Presidential elections in Djibouti and Benin at the weekend highlighted how a costly electoral system is reshaping democracy

Alexis Mohamed would have loved to stand against his former boss. A longtime adviser to Djibouti’s president, Ismail Omar Guelleh, Mohamed resigned last September, citing democratic regression in the country.

But at the election at the weekend, Mohamed was not on the ballot. Now outside the country, he says he cannot return home to file nomination papers or campaign freely without credible security guarantees. Even if he were allowed to compete, nomination costs would still loom as a steep barrier in a political environment many critics describe as ceremonial, with Guelleh the habitual winner.

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 07:00

The MLS weekend saw the Timbers capitalize on a rotated LAFC and Bruce Arena continue his second-season magic in San Jose

When the then-Montréal Impact rebranded as Club de Foot Montréal in 2021, their fans weren’t shy about showing their disdain.

“It is the dismantling of a dream,” one supporters’ group statement read in part. “We are becoming a bland club, just as many others have become.”

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2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 07:00

The raspberry danish latte is making its way around the world after its inventors decided to share the recipe

A viral coffee drink created by a little college town coffee shop on the outskirts of Minneapolis is now making its way around the world after its inventors decided to give the recipe away for free.

After Little Joy Coffee’s raspberry danish latte, a spring seasonal drink, went viral in March, the shop’s owners decided to encourage coffee shops to rip off the recipe directly and add it to their menus.

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 06:57

Undisclosed number of names and contact and reservation details accessed in latest cybercrime attempt

The accommodation reservation website Booking.com has suffered a data breach with “unauthorised parties” gaining access to customers’ details.

The platform said it “noticed some suspicious activity involving unauthorised third parties being able to access some of our guests’ booking information”.

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 06:52
  • Englishman led for a time in final round on back nine

  • ‘These are the tournaments I focus on,’ says 45-year-old

Justin Rose refused to write off his major chances after another Masters near-miss. The 2013 US Open winner lost a playoff to Rory McIlroy at Augusta a year ago and held the lead on the back nine on Sunday before finishing in a tie for third, two shots behind the Northern Irishman who successfully defended his title.

It was Rose’s fourth top-six finish in his past eight major appearances and the 45-year-old, a winner on the PGA Tour in February, believes he can compete at the highest level. “In the last two years I’ve really re-kicked on and re-energised my career and myself and have a lot of belief there is a lot of runway ahead,” he said after shooting a final-round 70 having come undone at Amen Corner.

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 06:41

I stopped riding after the haptic buzz came out, its super annoying. Now I dont really care as much, but need to know if its bad to ride the buzz all the time. I have an ow+ xr. I hit 17mph and the buzz goes off. To me thats not even fast anymore. I am thinking if I should buy the floatwheel xrv power kit, mostly dont cause price and unsure if i can vampire it since my xr is vampired.

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 06:18

After the strikes, Southern Command said it notified the U.S. Coast Guard to launch a search and rescue mission for the survivor.

2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 06:01
  • US president praises 36-year-old’s victory under pressure

  • McIlroy beat world No 1 Scottie Scheffler by one shot

Donald Trump called Rory McIlroy a “legend” as the United States president congratulated the Northern Irishman on his second Masters title. McIlroy held on for a one-shot victory over America’s world No 1 Scottie Scheffler, becoming the fourth player in the tournament’s 90-year history to win successive titles at Augusta.

Trump, who has played with McIlroy in the past, used his Truth Social platform to send a message to the 36-year-old. “Congratulations to Rory McIlroy on another Great Championship, The Masters!” Trump wrote.

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 06:00

As Trump’s actions spark a desire for stability, analysts say Carney is in effect assembling a union government

Canada’s prime minister, Mark Carney, is on the brink of securing a majority government, with his Liberal party poised to win at least two closely watched byelections and courting an “almost unprecedented” string of defections from rival parties.

Carney’s ability to turn a strong minority into a narrow majority through electoral gains and floor crossing has strengthened his reputation as a pragmatic leader above the cut and thrust of partisan politics. But his efforts to bring in lawmakers from across the political spectrum has also sparked a fierce internal debate over the Liberals’ values and the risks of consolidating more power.

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 06:00

Our writers take a look at the best prospects coming out of college, select their lower-round gems to watch and take a look at the expansion draft

For the past three years, the No 1 pick has been a foregone conclusion: Aliyah Boston in 2023, Caitlin Clark in 2024, Paige Bueckers in 2025. This year has much less certainty. Will the Dallas Wings go for a big or a guard? How did UConn’s exit and UCLA’s triumph affect the stock of their stars? It’s a toss-up, but I’ll go with Awa Fam. She’s only 19, but her athleticism and pick-and-roll game will make her a strong complement to Bueckers in Dallas. EB

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 06:00

The fight over California’s billionaire tax is just the latest symptom of a crisis that has escalated since 2010

There’s money to be made in California this spring, no startup pitch or buzzy screenplay required. Instead, signatures are one of the state’s most coveted commodities: campaigns are paying $15 apiece to those willing to collect them.

Petition distributors can thank Sergey Brin for this pay bump. In an effort to kill California’s proposed billionaire tax, the Google co-founder and other local tycoons are funding a political group that has hiked the going rate for signatures collected in support of countermeasures. In all, foes of the wealth tax are expected to spend $75m in their attempt to quash the proposal. Brin himself has donated $45m to the cause – a sum that suggests he just might be able to afford a higher tax bill.

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 06:00

We share almost everything, but ear gunk is a step too far.

2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 06:00

About 34,000 concierges, doormen and other building workers in New York are threatening to strike over stagnant wages and proposed health insurance increases.

2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care? 
Municipal elections often have significantly lower voter turnout rates than state and federal elections. As three candidates seek two council seats in the upcoming Seaford city election, however, the winners will have the direct authority to shape the future of the city’s business redevelopment and other projects. 

Three candidates will seek two open seats in next Saturday’s Seaford city council election, while Mayor Matt MacCoy is running unopposed in his bid for a second term as the city’s leader. 

Incumbents Dan Henderson, the current vice mayor, and Councilman Michael Bradley have been serving on the city’s government for 12 years and three years, respectively. 

The two candidates told Spotlight Delaware they have watched the city make significant strides in the areas of crime reduction, attracting economic development and improving electric rates in recent years. They would like to continue building on those priorities with another term in office, they said. 

The challenger, Roberto Santos, is fresh out of college and seeking his first term on city council. Santos’ older brother, Jose Santos, previously served as the youngest member of the city council, and ran for mayor against MacCoy in 2024. 

Santos declined to speak with Spotlight Delaware by phone, but he wrote in a message that he is running to make a “meaningful difference” in the community he grew up in. That difference would include strengthening public safety in the city and being accessible to residents as a council member, he said.

All of the five city council seats in Seaford are at-large, meaning whoever wins the April 18 election will represent the entire city rather than one neighborhood or district. Council members serve staggered three-year terms, and the mayor is elected in two-year terms.

Historically, Seaford has struggled to attract more residents and economic growth to the city since the closure of the DuPont nylon factory in 2004. City leaders, however, say Seaford is now turning the corner.

The population is growing substantially, and the city is seeing progress on new developments like reopening the Nylon Capital Center, which will include a new co-work space, an expansion of Delaware Technical Community College, and an additional TidalHealth health care center.

The candidates have the potential to significantly steer the course of the city’s current development projects, and future efforts it undertakes. 

There are 5,403 residents located within city limits who are eligible to vote in the April 18 election, city clerk Beth Stewart told Spotlight Delaware. Resident and non-resident property owners are able to vote if they registered with the state Department of Elections by March 27. 

A closer look at the candidates

Incumbent candidates Henderson and Bradley each described themselves as longtime Seaford residents who understand what the community wants in terms of efficient spending, public safety and economic development. 

Santos, the challenger, said he was busy “community door knocking and setting up yard signs,” so he was unable to speak with Spotlight Delaware about his campaign platforms. 

In a message, however, Santos wrote that his door-knocking efforts have given him a good understanding of the issues that are important to Seaford residents. These issues, he said, include supporting “local volunteers and first responders” and ensuring residents are “treated fairly by making sure their voices are heard.”

Seaford Vice Mayor Dan Henderson (left) and Mayor Matt MacCoy are both running for re-election. | PHOTO COURTESY OF THE CITY OF SEAFORD

Henderson, who works as a technical consultant for heating and air conditioning manufacturers, has served as vice mayor since 2018. He said he has spent his time in city government working as the liaison to the city’s police department, aiming to concurrently improve safety and attract more business downtown. 

“If you don’t have a community where businesses feel safe, it’s hard to have economic development,” he told Spotlight Delaware. 

Bradley, who has run a furniture store in Delmar for 36 years, is seeking a second term on city council. 

Bradley said his priorities include improving existing infrastructure, so that the city can support more manufacturing industry once again, He also serves as the city council’s liaison to the electric department, advocating for better electricity rates. 

Santos could unseat either Henderson or Bradley, depending on which two candidates receive the highest number of votes. 

Bradley said he does not mind having a challenger in the form of Santos, as it gives the voters a chance to actually exercise their right to vote. 

“This is not about our egos,” Bradley said. “Nobody on the council, including the mayor, is self-serving. We are all residents of the city.” 

While voter turnout often sits below 20% in municipal elections nationally, participation in Seaford city elections has been particularly low in recent years. 

In last year’s election, just 230 residents – 4% of the total eligible voting population – participated. The 2024 election, which included the mayor’s seat up for election in addition to two council seats, produced a roughly 11% voter turnout rate. 

MacCoy, the mayor, who is running unopposed for another term, said he does not know Santos personally but has the “utmost respect” for his brother, Jose, with whom he has faced off in previous city council and mayoral elections. 

MacCoy added, though, that he believes the current government, including Henderson and Bradley, has made a strong team on which he would like to continue working over the next couple of years. 

“There’s so many things that we’re in the middle of that I want to see come to fruition in the next two years,” he said. 

Get Involved
The Seaford municipal election will be held from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday, April 18, inside Council Chambers at Seaford City Hall, located at 414 High St.


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 Seaford election to include three candidates vying for two council seats appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-13 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care? 
Last week, the United States Department of Education said it would no longer require six school districts to enforce rules protecting students from discrimination based on their gender identity. One of those schools is the Cape Henlopen School District, which the Trump administration says was “burdened” by Biden-era policies. 

The Cape Henlopen School District has been swept up into the Trump administration’s backlash against a Biden-era shift in civil rights law that included gender identity into federally mandated protections.

Last Monday, the U.S. Department of Education announced it would rescind agreements made with the the Cape Henlopen School District — and five others across the country — that required those districts to enforce rules protecting transgender students.

Those resolution agreements are the mechanism the government uses to mandate compliance with anti-discrimination laws.  

But it is not immediately clear what specifically precipitated Cape Henlopen’s inclusion on the list of districts.  

A DOE official confirmed on background to Spotlight Delaware that a resolution agreement had been in effect with the Sussex County district prior to last week’s announcement. But the administration has not provided a copy of that resolution, nor details about what incident might have sparked it. 

Further, the DOE’s Office of Civil Rights website lists no gender-identity settlements with Cape Henlopen. Archived versions of the website from previous years also do not show any such case. 

The Cape Henlopen School District did not respond to Spotlight Delaware’s request for comment. But in a statement to The News Journal, the district said it had received correspondence from the DOE’s Office of Civil Rights regarding a settlement agreement of some kind dating to March 2024. 

The Office of Civil Rights does list one settlement struck in June of 2024 between federal officials and Cape Henlopen staff, but it pertains to the district’s protections of people with disabilities. That settlement outlines, among other things, how staff should be trained about the types of harassment against people with disabilities, and ways to investigate them. 

In a statement to Spotlight Delaware, DOE spokesperson Amelia Joy asserted that prior presidential administrations misinterpreted laws related to sex-based discrimination “to pander to political ideology and police ‘misgendering.’”

What led to this? 

In late 2024, the administration of then-President Joe Biden required school districts to change their policies to align with new anti-discrimination regulations under the federal Title IX statute.

The following January, a federal judge in Kentucky struck down the Tittle IX overhaul, ruling that Biden overstepped his presidential authority. Shortly after the decision, federal education officials under the new Trump administration sent a “Dear Colleague” letter to K-12 and higher education institutions, stating that 2020-era Title IX rules would be used instead.

A month later, eight Delaware’s boards of education voted unanimously to advance measures that would revert their anti-discrimination policies to the 2020 language, citing guidance from the federal education department.

Those districts included Caesar Rodney, Colonial, Indian River, Woodbridge, Smyrna, Milford, Seaford, and Cape Henlopen. 

What does it all mean for students?

For Dwayne Bensing, a Delaware civil rights attorney, the DOE’s latest move means that students or faculty who have been discriminated against for their gender identity should assume that the federal Office of Civil Rights is not a “friendly forum for such complaints.”  

Dwayne Bensing is a Delaware civil rights attorney who is on sabbatical from the ACLU. | PHOTO COURTESY OF DWAYNE BENSING

He also expressed doubt that federal officials would be able to effectively take on sex-based discrimination complaints of any kind under the Title IX statute because of recent cutbacks at the Office of Civil Rights. 

Title IX protects individuals from various types of sex-based discrimination, including harassment at work, equal opportunities in school athletics, and pregnancy discrimination.

As part of efforts to shrink the size of the federal education department, the Trump administration last year “initiated layoffs” for about half the staff at the DOE’s Office of Civil Rights, according to a February report from the U.S. Government Accountability Office. 

The Office of Civil Rights has also dismissed more than 6,000 complaints from March to September 2025, according to a January GAO report.

In its announcement last week, the Trump administration said Cape Henlopen and the other five districts were “freed” from enforcing Biden-era discrimination policies involving gender identity. 

But, for Cape Henlopen, Delaware still requires the district to follow state laws that, among other things, allow transgender students to participate on sports teams that align with their gender identity.

Delaware LGBTQ Commission Vice Chair Vienna Cavazos said the new announcement would be reviewed. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY BRIANNA HILL

The Cape Henlopen School District’s own anti-discrimination policy was last revised in August 2025, according to the district’s website. The policy does not explicitly mention protections based on gender identity. 

In the past, Delaware students have told Spotlight Delaware that anti-LGBTQ rhetoric and bullying increased during the first Trump administration. 

Delaware LGBTQ Commission Vice Chair Vienna Cavazos said they plan to discuss the Trump administration’s recent announcement with the commission in the future.

Both Bensing and Cavazos noted that students still have an ability to file Title IX complaints in state or federal court.

“They have the right in any Delaware school to be called the name that they want. Use the pronouns that they want; the bathrooms that they want; the basic dignity and respect of any student,” Cavazos said.

.

The post Cape Henlopen schools caught up in Trump’s gender-identity rollback appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-13 06:00

The average daily ICE detention population declined by 12% from January to March, as a shakeup in DHS leadership suggests a potential shift in enforcement strategy.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-13 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
Government works best when its citizens are knowledgeable and engaged. Delaware’s government has scores of commissions, working groups, agencies and legislative committees. All must hold meetings that are open to the public. Below we highlight a few of those meetings happening this week.

Read below to learn how to participate in some of the most important or interesting public meetings happening in Delaware this week.

  • Delaware Democrats push absentee voting amendment
  • State Senate to revisit an announced prison closure
  • Dover to hold a hearing about the ousting of its city manager
  • New Castle County Council to discuss its budget  
  • Sussex County to consider new development; opioid dollars

Delaware Dems push absentee voting amendment

After a two-week break, Delaware lawmakers will reconvene this week for hearings that are certain to incorporate plenty of politics into policy discussions.

The full State Senate will meet Tuesday afternoon to consider an amendment to the Delaware Constitution that would enshrine an “absolute right to vote by absentee ballot without an excuse.”  

Senate Bill 3 is the first leg of a two-pronged approval process needed to change the Delaware Constitution. The text of the legislation — which State Sen. Darius Brown (D-Wilmington) introduced a year ago — states that it is a direct response to a Delaware Supreme Court decision in 2022 that struck down the widespread use of absentee voting in the state. 

This weighing of bill this week also follows comments from President Donald Trump last summer in which he promised an executive order that would stop absentee, or mail-in, voting.

Last month, Trump signed an order that directs the U.S. Postal Service to only send mail-in ballots to voters on what would be a newly created federal list of approved absentee voters. 

In the weeks since, several lawsuits have been filed challenging the order. 

📍 The full Delaware Senate is scheduled to meet at 2 p.m. Tuesday at Legislative Hall, located at 411 Legislative Ave. in Dover. As of Sunday, the only item on the agenda is Brown’s legislation. To watch the meeting online, click here. 

Delaware lawmakers in various committees and on the floor of the House of Representatives will also consider dozens of additional bills this week.

Among those are legislation that would:

To view details of all hearings, scroll through the “What’s Happening” box here

The Plummer Center work-release facility in Wilmington closed in March. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY BRIANNA HILL

Senate to revisit an announced prison closure

Aside from legislation, lawmakers in the Senate Corrections and Public Safety Committee on Tuesday will discuss the closure of the Plummer work-release center in Wilmington.

Last September, the Delaware Department of Correction announced that the Plummer Center would shut down in March.

The decision sparked pushback from former inmates, politicians, and prisoner advocates who told Spotlight Delaware that the closure would cause incarcerated people to be forced to live farther from their jobs, families, and support systems as they seek to transition back into society.  

During the hearing on Tuesday, lawmakers are scheduled to hear testimony from Department of Correction Commissioner Terra Taylor, as well as several prisoner advocates. 

📍 The Senate Corrections and Public Safety Committee is scheduled to meet at 10 a.m. Tuesday at Legislative Hall, located at 411 Legislative Ave. in Dover. Click here for more information, including about registering to participate in the meeting virtually. 

Dover City Council unanimously voted to place City Manager Dave Hugg on a paid leave beginning March 2, the first step toward permanently removing him from the position. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY MAGGIE REYNOLDS; GRAPHIC BY ELSA KEGELMAN

Will the drama in Dover continue?

During a meeting Monday, the Dover City Council is scheduled to consider a request for a formal hearing from its city manager, Dave Hugg, to discuss his ouster from the position. 

Last month, Dover City Council members quietly voted to place Hugg on administrative leave – the first step toward permanently removing him from the position. At the time, council members stated only that they were voting to  “accept the recommendation of the city solicitor on the personnel matter.” 

Spotlight Delaware later learned the matter was related to Hugg and his tension with the council over how and when he brought certain issues to their attention. Two city officials specifically pointed to what they described as Hugg’s failure to promptly inform the council about complaints received about the People’s Church homeless shelter.

According to Dover’s city charter, a city manager must be given a public hearing and a “written statement of the reasons alleged for their removal” before the city council can take a final vote on removing them.

Anthony Delcollo, a lawyer representing Hugg, said a public hearing is exactly what the city manager wants.

“As Mr. Hugg was not provided any information regarding purported wrongdoing or performance issues prior to being advised that the City felt it was time to move on from his employment, our client looks forward to the opportunity to present his position in this hearing,” Delcollo said. 

 Hugg has served as Dover’s city manager since early 2022. He first joined the city on a contracted basis in 2017, and ended up staying on with the city and rising to the role of city manager over the next five years. 

📍 The Dover City Council is scheduled to meet at 6:30 p.m. on Monday inside Council Chambers at City Hall, located at 15 Loockerman Plaza in Dover. Click here for information about attending virtually. 

New Castle County Executive Marcus Henry delivered his Fiscal Year 2027 budget proposal that includes a proposed 17% tax hike. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY MAGGIE REYNOLDS

New Castle County to hold a budget hearing 

Last month, New Castle County Executive Marcus Henry proposed a 17% property tax hike – a major increase that officials said would only partially close a $42 million budget deficit. 

On Tuesday afternoon, the New Castle County Council will hold a budget hearing to discuss revenue, debt service, and capital spending.

During a meeting later in the evening, the council will introduce ordinances to pass a county budget for the next fiscal year, which begins in July. 

📍 The New Castle County Council Budget Hearing Meeting is scheduled for 2 p.m. Tuesday at the  Louis L. Redding City County Building, located at 800 N. French St. in Wilmington. For more information, including about virtual attendance, click here.

More homes on Sussex farmland? 

On the agenda for the Sussex County Council’s meeting this week is a proposal to change the zoning of 84 acres of farmland between Fenwick Island and Selbyville to allow for a residential development with 210 homes. 

CoastTV reported last year about pushback the proposal has attracted from neighbors who expressed fear the housing development would prevent them from using their land for hunting. 

Also scheduled for this week’s council meeting are remarks from County Administrator Todd Lawson about an application to the state for dollars from Delaware’s opioid settlement fund. 

In February, council members Steve McCarron and John Rieley told the Cape Gazette they would like a portion of the money to fund ambulance services. 

📍 The Sussex County Council will hold its weekly meeting at 10 a.m. Tuesday at the Sussex County Administrative Office Building, located at 2 The Circle in Georgetown. For more information, including about virtual attendance, click here.

The post Get Involved: Absentee voting , NCC budget, and the ousting of a city manager appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 05:51

Resolution Foundation says Britons face rising costs from higher bills for energy and filling up

Higher energy prices as a result of the Iran war are likely to deal a blow to Britons’ living standards, leaving them nearly £500 worse off this year, a thinktank has warned.

The Resolution Foundation said households faced rising costs from both higher gas and electricity bills and at the petrol pump.

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 05:02

Members’ question time: Will the regime in Cuba be able to survive the current crisis? 2 June 2026 — 12:00 TO 12:45 BST Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online

Amid a punishing US-enabled blockade, Dr Christopher Sabatini, Director of the Latin America Programme, will discuss how Cuba is surviving and what next for the island nation.

Amid a punishing US-enabled blockade, Dr Christopher Sabatini, Director of the Latin America Programme, will discuss how Cuba is surviving and what next for the island nation.

Cuba is facing one of its most severe crises since the end of the Cold War. Rolling blackouts, acute shortages of food and fuel, a collapsing currency, and sustained outward migration have placed extraordinary strain on the island’s economy and society. At the same time, the US embargo constrains Cuba’s access to international trade, placing immense strain on its people. Support for the communist regime, and its President Miguel Diaz Canel, has plummeted to new lows. Amid this stifling predicament, Cuba finds itself. What are the US goals?  How will Cuba respond?  And what are the risks for Cubans and for the US?

In this members’ question time, Dr Christophe Sabatini, Director of the Latin America Programme, examines how the Cuban state is coping with mounting pressures and what this moment reveals about the regime’s resilience. He will explore the role of external actors, including the United States, Russia, China, Europe and Cuba’s neighbours, in shaping Cuba’s future.

Chatham House members will have the opportunity to put their questions directly to Dr Sabatini. Submit your questions in advance here.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-13 05:02

Chatham House Debate: This house believes that China is the primary threat to global stability in the next decade 21 May 2026 — 17:00 TO 18:00 BST Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House

A moderated debate examining competing views on China’s role in shaping global stability in the years ahead.

A moderated debate examining competing views on China’s role in shaping global stability in the years ahead.

As global power balances shift, China’s rise has emerged as one of the defining geopolitical questions of the 21st century. Beijing’s expanding diplomatic reach, rapid military modernisation, technological ambitions and growing assertiveness, from the South China Sea to the Taiwan Strait, have fuelled concerns that China poses a fundamental challenge to the international order.

For critics, the threat lies not only in China’s material power but in its efforts to reshape global rules and norms, whether through economic leverage, political influence abroad, or the promotion of alternative governance models that challenge liberal institutions.

Others caution that portraying China primarily as a threat oversimplifies a more complex reality. They highlight China’s deep integration into the global economy, its role in addressing transnational challenges such as climate change, and the risks of self‑fulfilling instability driven by rivalry rather than cooperation. From this perspective, China’s behaviour reflects the dynamics of great power competition, not an inevitable path to conflict.

This debate examines the nature of the challenge China presents, militarily, economically, technologically, or ideologically. It asks whether it represents the primary threat to global stability over the next decade, or one among several risks shaping a fragmented international system.

Our experts develop their arguments and recommendations through evidence-based research, public and private events, and discussions with practitioners and policymakers.

We do not take institutional positions on policy. We owe no allegiance to any government or political body. While we encourage our experts and contributors to put forward views and advice, these do not constitute the institute’s formal positions.

2026-04-14 12:04
2026-04-13 05:02

Chatham House Debate: Is China the primary threat to global stability in the next decade? 21 May 2026 — 17:00 TO 18:00 BST Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House

A moderated debate examining competing views on China’s role in shaping global stability in the years ahead.

A moderated debate examining competing views on China’s role in shaping global stability in the years ahead.

As global power balances shift, China’s rise has emerged as one of the defining geopolitical questions of the 21st century. Beijing’s expanding diplomatic reach, rapid military modernisation, technological ambitions and growing assertiveness, from the South China Sea to the Taiwan Strait, have fuelled concerns that China poses a fundamental challenge to the international order.

For critics, the threat lies not only in China’s material power but in its efforts to reshape global rules and norms, whether through economic leverage, political influence abroad, or the promotion of alternative governance models that challenge liberal institutions.

Others caution that portraying China primarily as a threat oversimplifies a more complex reality. They highlight China’s deep integration into the global economy, its role in addressing transnational challenges such as climate change, and the risks of self‑fulfilling instability driven by rivalry rather than cooperation. From this perspective, China’s behaviour reflects the dynamics of great power competition, not an inevitable path to conflict.

This debate examines the nature of the challenge China presents, militarily, economically, technologically, or ideologically. It asks whether it represents the primary threat to global stability over the next decade, or one among several risks shaping a fragmented international system.

Our experts develop their arguments and recommendations through evidence-based research, public and private events, and discussions with practitioners and policymakers.

We do not take institutional positions on policy. We owe no allegiance to any government or political body. While we encourage our experts and contributors to put forward views and advice, these do not constitute the institute’s formal positions.

2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 05:01

Singer voluntarily enters facility after erratic driving incident, where she was found to have drugs and alcohol in her system

Britney Spears has entered a rehab facility after her arrest in March for driving under the influence.

The pop singer was stopped by police in Ventura county, California, after driving erratically, and was found to have drugs and alcohol in her system. She was briefly detained, and her manager called Spears’ actions “completely inexcusable. Britney is going to take the right steps and comply with the law and hopefully this can be the first step in long overdue change that needs to occur in Britney’s life.”

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 05:00

Tarot card reader Ashley Guillard, who falsely accused history professor Rebecca Scofield, plans to appeal

A self-proclaimed psychic who in TikTok videos falsely accused a University of Idaho professor of being involved in the murders of four of the school’s students in 2022 is appealing for relief after a civil court jury ordered her to pay $10m in damages to the educator.

In a recent legal filing that she prepared herself, tarot card reader Ashley Guillard called the case brought against her by history professor Rebecca Scofield “fraudulent” and asked the federal court in Idaho where a jury delivered a verdict against her to set aside the judgment.

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 05:00

The Trump administration is ratcheting up attacks on environmental protections that Make America Healthy Again followers hold dear.

2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-13 05:00

Computer science has been a top pick for 15 years. Enrollment data suddenly shows a big drop.

2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-13 05:00

Animation by Matt Rota and Henrike Lendowski

In mid-December 2020, federal officials responsible for protecting American elections from fraud converged in a windowless, dim, fortified room at the Justice Department’s downtown Washington, D.C., headquarters.

They had been summoned by Attorney General William Barr.

Over the preceding weeks, Donald Trump’s claims that the presidential election had been stolen from him had reached a crescendo. He’d become obsessed with a conspiracy theory that voting machines in Antrim County, Michigan, had switched votes from him to Joe Biden. 

With each day, Trump ratcheted up the pressure to unleash the might of the federal government to undo his defeat. 

Barr interrogated experts from the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, crammed in beside top FBI officials around a cheap table. He needed the group of around 10 to answer a crucial question: Was it really possible the 2020 presidential vote had been hacked?

ProPublica’s description of the previously unreported meeting comes from several people who were in the room or were briefed on the gathering. Everyone understood that the meeting represented an important moment for the nation, they said. Barr, who did not respond to requests for comment, had walked a delicate line with Trump, instructing the FBI to investigate allegations of election irregularities while declaring publicly there had been no evidence “to date” of widespread fraud.

The nonpartisan specialists from CISA, backed by their FBI counterparts, explained they’d unravelled what had happened in Antrim County. A clerk had made a mistake when updating ballot styles on machines, leading to a software problem that initially transferred votes from Republicans to Democrats, they said. There was no fraud, just human error — which would soon be publicly confirmed through a hand count of the county’s ballots.

Animation by Matt Rota and Henrike Lendowski

Listening intently, Barr seemed to understand both the truth and that telling it to the president would almost certainly cost him his job. 

At the end of the meeting, Barr turned to his top deputy, made hand motions as if he was tying on a bandana and said he was going to “kamikaze” into the White House. 

What happened next is well known. When Barr met with Trump in the Oval Office on Dec. 14, the president launched into a monologue about how the events in Antrim County were “absolute proof” that the election had been stolen. Barr waited to get a word in edgewise before telling his boss what the experts from CISA had told him.

Then Barr offered his resignation letter, which Trump accepted. Barr left believing he’d done his part to preserve democratic norms. 

“I was saddened,” Barr wrote of Trump in his memoir. “If he actually believed this stuff he had become significantly detached from reality.”

Barr was one of many federal officials — most of them Trump appointees — who refused to bend to the president’s demands, which only intensified after Barr was gone. Although rioters inspired by Trump managed to delay the certification of his defeat by storming the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, ultimately the institutional guardrails of American democracy held — barely.

But if faced with the same tests today, the guardrails and people that held the line would largely be missing, an examination by ProPublica found. 

ProPublica scrutinized what happened the last time Trump lost a national election. Some of that happened in plain sight: After a cascade of defeats in court, Trump began pressuring state and local officials to overturn the results. But more happened behind the scenes, like the meeting that helped persuade Barr to hold the line.

Our reporting uncovered previously undisclosed aspects of a federal effort to safeguard the results of the 2020 vote, which involved at least 75 people across several agencies. Today, nearly all of those people are gone, having resigned, been fired or been reassigned, particularly in the departments of Justice and Homeland Security. That included the cybersecurity specialists who had established that the Antrim County allegations were false and reported their findings to Barr. 

The people we identified as resisting attempts to overturn the 2020 results have been replaced by roughly two dozen people Trump has installed in positions that could affect elections. Ten of them actively worked to reverse the 2020 vote, and the rest are associates of such people. In some cases, ProPublica found, officials have been hired from activist groups that are pillars of the election denial movement. Experts warn that shows the movement has merged with the federal government.

These new officials could influence how Trump reacts to the upcoming midterms as polling shows Republicans are approaching what could be a significant electoral loss, with the president’s approval rating nearing record lows, and public concern growing about the weak economy, the administration’s mass deportation effort and the war on Iran. Seemingly in preparation to head off such a blow, Trump has stepped up his efforts to “nationalize” the 2026 elections, saying that Republicans need “to take over” the midterms. Democrats who monitored Trump’s attempts to block his 2020 loss have begun to question whether he will allow a “blue wave,” particularly if it flips control of a House of Representatives that impeached him twice in his first term.

ProPublica’s examination reveals new details on how the president has unleashed his loyalists to transform elections. This includes the background of this year’s FBI raid in Georgia to seize 2020 election materials and how they are using federal resources to search for noncitizens voting. Ultimately, ProPublica’s reporting shows how thoroughly and expansively the Trump administration has overhauled the federal government into what some fear is a vehicle for making sure elections go his way.

ProPublica’s reporting is based on interviews with roughly 30 current or former executive branch officials familiar with the work of Trump loyalists installed in election roles. Most spoke on condition of anonymity because they fear retribution, including those knowledgeable about the December 2020 Barr meeting. 

The Trump administration maintains its actions will make U.S. elections fairer and more secure — and keep those prohibited from voting, such as noncitizens, from doing so.

“Election integrity has always been a top priority for President Trump,” White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson said in a statement. “The President will do everything in his power to defend the safety and security of American elections and to ensure that only American citizens are voting in them.”

Spokespeople for the DOJ and DHS emphasized that their departments are focused on ensuring elections are free and fair, and that they are working closely with the states to achieve those goals. Contentions to the contrary, they say, are false.

A few guardrails have endured, preventing Trump from fully realizing his agenda for elections. Judges have blocked key parts of a March 2025 executive order in which Trump attempted to exert greater federal control over aspects of voting, and some Republican state officials have fought back against Justice Department lawsuits demanding state voter rolls. 

Late last month, Trump issued another executive order on elections that attempts to exert unparalleled federal control over mail-in voting and voter eligibility, which Democrats and voting rights groups are challenging in court.

Experts say 2026 will serve as an unprecedented stress test of the integrity of American elections.   

“Our election system withstood” Trump’s “attacks following the 2020 election,” said Sen. Alex Padilla, a California Democrat who has led the pushback to the administration’s actions on elections, “but this will be an even tougher test, with more election deniers having access to federal power than ever before.”

Animation by Matt Rota and Henrike Lendowski

The Dismantling

Barr has said that in the high-stakes days following the 2020 election, he felt like he was playing Whac-A-Mole with Trump’s “avalanche” of false election claims.

The investigators at DHS’ Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency supplied intelligence that disproved many of them, not just those involving Antrim County.

CISA was created by Trump in his first term to counter cyber threats in the aftermath of Russia’s efforts to influence the 2016 vote. It soon came to provide crucial expertise and support to thousands of local election officials grappling with increasingly sophisticated attacks. 

After the 2020 election, it also played a crucial part in puncturing fallacies spread by Trump supporters, producing a “Rumor Control” website to rebut them. And it partnered with state officials and technology vendors to release a statement calling the election “the most secure in American history.” Trump swiftly fired Chris Krebs, whom he had appointed to lead CISA, but Krebs’ defense of the election’s soundness reverberated widely in the media and on Capitol Hill.

Among Trump’s first actions upon returning to the Oval Office was eviscerating CISA. 

Starting in February 2025, DHS leadership put employees focused on countering disinformation and helping safeguard elections on leave. The leadership also froze the agency’s other election security work, which included assessing local election offices for physical and cybersecurity risks, and disseminating sensitive intelligence information on threats. Eventually, all three dozen or so CISA employees specializing in elections were fired or transferred to work in other areas. 

“It took years of dedicated, bipartisan, cross-sector partnership to build the security infrastructure we’ve had, and dismantling CISA leaves a gaping hole,” said Kathy Boockvar, an elections security expert who served as Pennsylvania’s secretary of state from 2019 to 2021. “We are making the job of securing our democracy exponentially harder.”

A DHS spokesperson told ProPublica that the changes at CISA were in response to “a ballooning budget concealing a dangerous departure from its statutory mission,” which included “electioneering instead of defending America’s critical infrastructure.” The spokesperson said that CISA’s mission is still to coordinate protection of critical infrastructure, including by supporting local partners against cyber threats.

It isn’t just CISA that’s been gutted. 

The Trump administration has discarded or diminished other federal initiatives with roles in protecting election integrity or blocking foreign interference. While many of these actions have been reported, together they reveal the full sweep of the changes. 

First, the administration got rid of the National Security Council’s election security group, which convened departmental leaders to coordinate federal actions related to voting. Then in August, the administration dismantled the Foreign Malign Influence Center, a branch of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence that had stymied efforts by Russia, China and Iran to interfere in the 2024 election. 

A spokesperson for ODNI said the center was redundant and that its functions were folded into other parts of the office’s intelligence apparatus in ways that “arguably makes our ability to monitor and address threats from foreign adversaries stronger, more efficient and more effective.”

However, former national security officials, including one who had worked at the center, told ProPublica that its functions had largely ceased. Caitlin Durkovich, who led the NSC’s election security work during the Biden administration, said that under Trump the federal government has “abandoned” its traditional role in preserving election integrity and security.

“Nearly every program and capability to stop bad actors and support election administrators has been dismantled,” she said. “Heading into the midterms, this leaves states and localities exposed, without the intelligence support or federal coordination they need to detect and respond to threats in real time — precisely when the stakes are highest.”

The early months of the second Trump administration also brought seismic changes to three parts of federal law enforcement with central roles in elections.

Kash Patel, the FBI’s new director, dismantled the public corruption team, which had been deployed in previous administrations to help monitor possible criminal activity on Election Day. The Foreign Influence Task Force, which aimed to combat foreign influence in U.S. politics, was also disbanded. (An FBI spokesperson said the bureau “remains committed to detecting and countering foreign influence efforts by adversarial nations.”)

Furthermore, the Justice Department substantially reduced the role of its Public Integrity Section, which had been responsible for making sure the department’s inquiries weren’t improperly influenced by politics. 

After the 2020 election, senior lawyers in the section warned against having the FBI investigate fraud claims raised by Trump allies, saying that the agency’s involvement could damage its reputation and appear motivated by partisanship. In this instance, they were overruled by Barr and his deputies, but former officials said this was a rare case in which their guidance was ignored. The need to directly overrule the unit, they said, made it a roadblock — one that no longer exists.

A month after Trump returned to the Oval Office, the unit’s top staff resigned when agency leaders directed them to dismiss corruption charges against then-New York City Mayor Eric Adams. More resigned later or were transferred. The 36-person section was reduced to two. The administration no longer mandates that it review politically sensitive cases, according to multiple people familiar with the matter.

Another key DOJ office, the Civil Rights Division’s voting section, had enforced federal laws that protect voting rights, particularly those that combat racial discrimination. In December 2020, the assistant attorney general overseeing the Civil Rights Division was one of the many department leaders who said they would resign if Trump promoted Jeffrey Clark, a leader who supported Trump’s efforts to overturn the election results, to head the department after Barr’s resignation. This mass threat of resignation ultimately led Trump to not promote Clark.

But now, nearly all of the section’s roughly 30 career lawyers have resigned or been moved. This largely started last spring after Harmeet Dhillon, Trump’s assistant attorney general for civil rights, put out a memo saying their mission would shift from ensuring voting rights to enforcing Trump’s executive order on elections.

The Trump administration then filled the section with conservative lawyers who are now litigating against the lawyers they replaced. At least four of those newly appointed lawyers participated in challenging the 2020 vote or have worked with people who helped Trump try to overturn the 2020 election.

“It’s just a shocking and depressing reversal of the federal government’s role in making real the promise of nondiscrimination in voting and racial equality,” said Anna Baldwin, an appellate attorney for the Civil Rights Division who resigned last year and is now one of those litigating against the Justice Department in a new role at Campaign Legal Center.

The Justice Department didn’t respond to specific questions about the dismantling of the Public Integrity Section or the change in mission for the Civil Rights Division.

In all, at least 75 career officials who’d played important roles in elections work at DHS, DOJ and other departments have left or been fired, ProPublica found.

Animation by Matt Rota and Henrike Lendowski

Team America

Late last summer, after the Trump administration had forced out most of the career specialists, a small group of political appointees began convening at the Department of Homeland Security’s headquarters. 

The group — which once called itself “Team America,” according to sources familiar with the matter — looked for federal levers it could pull to make Trump’s March executive order about elections a reality, an effort that has not been previously reported. 

They represented the new type of people running the show.

Its core members included David Harvilicz, a DHS assistant secretary tasked with overseeing the security of election infrastructure, including voting machines, and three of his top staffers. As ProPublica has reported, Harvilicz had co-founded an AI company with an architect of Trump’s claims about Antrim County.

Despite the setbacks the executive order had met with in court, there “was not a whole lot of discussion or disagreement” about acting on the directive from Harvilicz or one of his deputies, said a former federal official who interacted with group members. “It was just us saluting to do it.” 

This small group was part of a wider team at DHS, DOJ and the White House seeking to push forward the president’s agenda. Some of Trump’s new guard are well known: After the 2020 election, Patel pressured military officials to help investigate a conspiracy theory about voting machines, according to a former Justice Department official. (Patel did not respond to a request for comment but claimed in congressional testimony that he did not recall the event.) Others, like Harvilicz, are more obscure but still wield consequential powers.

These newcomers are seeking to carry out Trump’s executive orders and are unlikely to push back against his false claims that American elections are rife with fraud. 

Team America members have echoed or spread such material themselves. 

Heather Honey, who serves under Harvilicz in a newly created position focused on elections, falsely asserted that there were more ballots cast in Pennsylvania than voters in the 2020 presidential election. Trump cited this claim, which has been traced back to her, while exhorting his followers to march on the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. 

At least 11 administration appointees, including Honey, have ties to the Election Integrity Network, a conservative grassroots organization seeking to transform American elections. It is led by Cleta Mitchell, a lawyer who tried to help Trump overturn the 2020 election. Gineen Bresso, who holds a top job in the White House counsel’s office, coordinated with the network’s leadership in 2024 as the Republican National Committee’s election integrity chair, ProPublica has reported. Since moving into government, Honey has maintained close ties to Mitchell’s organization, and she and at least two other federal officials have given its members private briefings

Experts say these former activists who helped forge a movement built on the idea that the 2020 election was stolen from Trump are seeking to make sure that does not happen again.

“The election denial movement is now interwoven within the federal government, and they are working together toward a shared goal of reshaping elections” in ways that undermine the freedom to vote, said Brendan Fischer, a director at the Campaign Legal Center, a nonpartisan, pro-democracy legal organization. “It’s not just last-minute slapdash attempts to overturn the results” as in 2020, “but more systematic efforts to influence how elections are run months ahead of time.”

In response to questions sent to DHS, Harvilicz and Honey, a DHS spokesperson disputed that they were seeking to use the department’s powers to advantage Trump, writing that its employees “are focused on keeping our elections safe, secure, and free” and working to “implement the President’s policies.” In response to questions about their ties to the election denial movement, the spokesperson wrote, “To meet the diverse and evolving challenges the Department faces, we hire experts with diverse backgrounds who go through a rigorous vetting process.”

Mitchell did not respond to detailed questions from ProPublica. The White House answered questions sent to Bresso about her connection to Mitchell’s network by reiterating its commitment to making American elections secure. 

Through the fall and winter, as the Justice Department demanded that states turn over confidential voter roll information, Team America worked to solve problems hindering the use of digital tools to comb the lists for noncitizens who had illegally registered to vote. Honey and others ironed out the technical details of merging information from different agencies and crafted data-sharing contracts. When Honey or others hit roadblocks, they’d go to the White House or senior DHS leaders who “would come in hot” to clear her path, said officials who interacted with them. 

Initially, the plan was to run voter information obtained by DOJ through a Homeland Security tool called the Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements system. 

More recently, according to two people familiar with the matter, Team America has worked to harness a more powerful tool used by another branch of DHS, Homeland Security Investigations, to increase its ability to search for noncitizen voters and bring criminal charges against them. 

While DHS told ProPublica that SAVE has identified more than 21,000 potential noncitizens on voter rolls in the past year, officials who have checked those results in detail have found vast inaccuracies, as ProPublica has reported. Most states — including those with millions of voters — have eventually marked only a few to a few hundred potential noncitizens as registered to vote, and far less have ever voted. The DHS spokesperson also called SAVE “secure and reliable.”

As the election approaches, current and former officials and election security experts expressed concerns that Harvilicz and Honey, who’ve espoused debunked conspiracy theories about elections, are in positions to control the narrative around the vote’s soundness. 

It’s hard to debunk false claims “coming with the seal of the federal government,” said Derek Tisler, counsel and manager with the Brennan Center for Justice’s elections and government program. “I certainly worry what damage that could do to voters’ confidence.”

Animation by Matt Rota and Henrike Lendowski

Red Flags

Perhaps nothing better reflects the breakdown of the guardrails that thwarted Trump’s rashest impulses in 2020 than his creation last fall of a special White House post reinvestigating his loss to Biden. 

In December 2020, just days after Barr rebuffed Trump’s Antrim County claims, lawyers in the White House counsel’s office helped prevent the president from heeding activists’ call to essentially declare martial law to seize voting machines. This multihour shouting and cussing match has been called the craziest meeting of the first Trump administration.

But the lawyer whom Trump hired in 2025 as his director of election security and integrity, Kurt Olsen, had worked to overturn Trump’s loss in court in 2020 and was later sanctioned by judges, including for making baseless allegations about Arizona elections.

Olsen’s work in the second Trump administration has breached the firewall between the White House and DOJ officials, established after Watergate to prevent law enforcement officers from making decisions based on political pressure, said Gary Restaino, a former U.S. attorney in Arizona.

“This is not a constitutional or even a statutory requirement,” Restaino said, “but it’s a democracy requirement to make sure that citizens throughout America understand that decisions about life and liberty are being made in an objective and consistent manner.”

In a previously unreported series of events, around the end of 2025, Olsen flew to Georgia to meet with Paul Brown, the head of the FBI’s Atlanta field office, according to people familiar with the matter. 

Olsen wanted the FBI to seize 2020 ballots from Fulton County, a Democratic stronghold, and gave Brown a report he claimed would justify the extraordinary action. Brown and his team emphasized to Olsen that any investigation his team did would be independent and fair. 

When Brown and his team examined the report, they found that Georgia’s election board had already looked into its allegations, dismissing many altogether, and concluding that others came down to human error, not criminal wrongdoing. The report had been assembled by a longtime ally of Olsen’s and participant in the Election Integrity Network who had a history of discredited claims, ProPublica has reported.

Based on their own investigation, Brown’s team submitted an affidavit to their superiors at DOJ that did not make a strong enough case to move forward with what Olsen wanted.

Soon after, Brown was offered a choice: retire or be moved to a new office, people with knowledge of the exchange told ProPublica. 

Olsen did not respond to requests for comment.

An FBI spokesperson said that Brown “elected to retire” and that its “work in the election security space is entirely consistent with the law.”

Brown’s ouster after refusing to carry out the seizure of 2020 election materials has been reported, but Olsen’s involvement and the details of their interactions leading to Brown’s retirement have not been previously disclosed. 

With Brown gone, the case moved ahead under his replacement. 

Trump administration officials also took another step to keep control of the investigation. 

Then-Attorney General Pam Bondi chose Thomas Albus, whom Trump had appointed as U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Missouri, to prosecute the case even though it fell far outside his usual regional jurisdiction. Albus had been meeting with Olsen since around the time the White House lawyer was hired, ProPublica has reported. (Albus declined a request for comment.)

In late January, the FBI carried out an unprecedented raid in Fulton County — and the agency’s affidavit, put together by Albus and Brown’s replacement, cited a version of the report Olsen gave to Brown as evidence supporting the seizure. ProPublica was part of a news coalition that sued to unseal the affidavit.

An FBI spokesperson said that its agents “followed all procedure to ensure everything was in proper order, and FBI evidence team had the necessary court-authorized search warrant before they arrived on site.” 

Ryan Crosswell, who worked in the Justice Department’s Public Integrity Section for around half a decade, handling a number of election cases, called Brown’s replacement and Albus’ involvement a “red flag” because of the unusual circumstances of their appointments. 

“They’re just moving through people until they find someone who’s willing to do exactly what they want,” Crosswell said.

The Justice Department did not respond to a question about Crosswell’s comment.  

The extraordinary raid was also enabled in a previously unreported way by the destruction of the DOJ’s Public Integrity Section.

Multiple former lawyers for the section said they likely would have tried to block the Fulton County investigation because it lacked strong evidence, had a clear political slant and went against department directives that actions should not be taken “for the purpose of giving an advantage or disadvantage to any candidate or political party.” 

Crosswell said, “Based on everything we know, if PIN was still there, we’d say no.”

John Keller was principal deputy chief of the Public Integrity Section from 2020 to 2025 and was acting chief when he resigned in early 2025. He worries that allegations of irregularities in the upcoming election will be handled on a partisan basis.  

“Without that review and without apolitical, objective, honest brokers involved in the process, there is a much greater risk for intentional manipulation or inadvertent interference,” Keller said.

Animation by Matt Rota and Henrike Lendowski

“Dismantling the Brain”

The week the FBI seized Fulton County’s ballots, about half of the nation’s secretaries of state converged on Washington, D.C., for their winter conference. 

They had urgent questions about elections for Bondi, then-DHS Secretary Kristi Noem and other luminaries who had promised to appear at the event. But none of the headline names showed, leaving conference attendees staring at an empty podium, until the session was abruptly canceled.

The breakdown was emblematic of a widening chasm between state officials and the parts of the federal government that had, until recently, worked with them to secure American elections.

Shenna Bellows, Maine’s Democratic secretary of state, said in an interview that the trust between the Trump administration and states is “absolutely demolished.” 

This loss of trust reflects that election deniers have assumed so many top roles at federal agencies. Honey sometimes represents DHS on cross-departmental conference calls with state election chiefs, an unsettling reality for those who spent years countering the false claims she made from outside the government. 

On a February call, state officials expressed confusion about whether the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency would still assess their election systems for physical and cyber vulnerabilities. Honey said it would, but Bellows said she’d been told it wouldn’t. 

Two DHS officials told ProPublica CISA’s remaining staff avoids election work, afraid they could lose their jobs if they engage with state and local officials. “In CISA, elections are a toxic poison,” one said. 

A DHS spokesperson said state and federal officials are still working together “every single day” to protect elections and that “The claim that DHS has a broken partnership with states and made our elections less secure is simply false.”

The cuts to career election specialists and their divisions have eliminated information channels that spotlighted threats as voting took place, including Election Day command posts run by the Justice Department and FBI. Another information channel, which DHS used to fund, will still operate but will be available only to state and local election offices, not the federal government.

Jessica Cadigan, a former FBI intelligence analyst who investigated Election Day threats, said FBI headquarters’ command post was critical to her cases.

“That is dismantling the brain, if you will,” she said. “They are the ones that piece the whole thing together.”

An FBI spokesperson said the agency will still have capabilities to monitor the situation on the ground through designated election crimes coordinator experts in all its field offices.

Jena Griswold, Colorado’s Democratic secretary of state, has come to see the federal government as adversarial to elections and election administration, rather than a partner. 

Colorado is one of around 30 states the Justice Department has sued for confidential voter roll information. At least four courts that have fully considered those cases so far have dismissed them, although the Justice Department has appealed most of the decisions. (The others are pending.) Griswold told ProPublica she has added another lawyer to her staff to fight whatever comes next from the Trump administration.

“Donald Trump,” she said, “has made American elections less safe.”

The post Inside Trump’s Effort to “Take Over” the Midterm Elections appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-13 04:59
I broke my ankle before reaching 22 mile

Unfortunately, I broke my knee while I was curving on my onewheel GT. It’s entirely my fault. I wasn’t prepared for this kind of tricks. I was doing very well and learning quickly. I was able to jump sidewalks and fell in love with onewheel. The feeling was better than anything I’ve ever experienced, even better than motorcycles.

I’m feeling bad that this injury will prevent me from riding onewheel for at least 3-4 months. I didn’t have enough of my onewheel, and I want to ride more.

If anyone has a similar injury, please let me know how your recovery is going and if you’re able to ride onewheel like before. BTW I’m 35 years old, I don’t know if my age will slow my recovery.

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 04:44

Rapidly strengthening storm brings destructive winds, flooding risk and dangerous seas to western Pacific

The Mariana Islands archipelago in the western Pacific, home to the US territories of Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands, are bracing for extreme weather early this week as Super Typhoon Sinlaku approaches.

The system originated as a cluster of thunderstorms over the seas of Micronesia before strengthening into a tropical storm and then a typhoon on Friday and Saturday.

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-13 04:38

Engine-maker CEO hails ‘critical milestone’ for company in race to deliver SMR technology built at Wylfa plant on Anglesey

Rolls-Royce has secured up to £599m from Britain’s national wealth fund as it races to develop the UK’s first small modular nuclear reactors.

The fund will help support Rolls-Royce’s design of small modular reactors (SMRs) at Wylfa on the island of Anglesey (called Ynys Môn in Welsh).

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 04:17

Vice President JD Vance told reporters that "we have not reached an agreement" following face-to-face talks with Iranian and Pakistani negotiators.

2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 03:48

Australian prime minister says it’s ‘disappointing’ that there was no resolution on freedom of movement during weekend’s talks

Anthony Albanese has called for the full reopening of the strait of Hormuz and free navigation for all countries, as the new defence chief said Australian ships were ready and capable of assisting if such a decision were made.

Hours after the US president, Donald Trump, said he would institute an American blockade of the strategic waterway from Tuesday morning, Australian time, Albanese urged Washington and Tehran to return to negotiations in Pakistan.

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 03:34

Anthropic recently "hosted about 15 Christian leaders from Catholic and Protestant churches, academia, and the business world" for a two-day summit , reports the Washington Post: Anthropic staff sought advice on how to steer Claude's moral and spiritual development as the chatbot reacts to complex and unpredictable ethical queries, participants said. The wide-ranging discussions also covered how the chatbot should respond to users who are grieving loved ones and whether Claude could be considered a "child of God." "They're growing something that they don't fully know what it's going to turn out as," said Brendan McGuire, a Catholic priest based in Silicon Valley who has written about faith and technology, and participated in the discussions at Anthropic. "We've got to build in ethical thinking into the machine so it's able to adapt dynamically." Attendees also discussed how Claude should engage with users at risk of self-harm, and the right attitude for the chatbot to adopt toward its own potential demise, such as being shut off, said one participant, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to share details of the conversations... Anthropic has been more vocal than most top tech firms about the potential risks of more powerful AI. Its leaders have suggested that tools like chatbots already raise profound philosophical and moral questions and may even show flickers of consciousness, a fringe idea in tech circles that critics say lacks evidence. The summit signals that Anthropic is willing to keep exploring ideas outside the Silicon Valley mainstream, even as it emerges as one of the most powerful players in the AI race due to Claude's popularity with programmers, businesses, government agencies and the military.... Anthropic chief executive Dario Amodei has said he is open to the idea that Claude may already have some form of consciousness, and company leaders frequently talk about the need to give it a moral character... Some Anthropic staff at the meeting "really don't want to rule out the possibility that they are creating a creature to whom they owe some kind moral duty," the participant said. Other company representatives present did not find that framework helpful, according to the participant. The discussions appeared to take a toll on some senior Anthropic staff, who became visibly emotional "about how this has all gone so far [and] how they can imagine this going," the participant said. Anthropic is working to include more voices from different groups, including religious communities, to help shape its AI, a spokesperson told the Washington Post. "Anthropic's March summit with Christian leaders was billed as the first in a series of gatherings with representatives from different religious and philosophical traditions, said attendee Brian Patrick Green, a practicing Catholic who teaches AI and technology ethics at Santa Clara University."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 03:01

The new Dausos connection protocol has been independently audited and includes a few key innovations not found in other VPNs.

2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 02:55

Pop star Britney Spears has voluntarily checked into rehab following her DUI arrest in Ventura County in March, a representative for the singer told CBS LA.

2026-04-14 08:04
2026-04-13 02:19

Diagnosed with a brain tumor at 1 year old, Kate McKinery has never known life without cancer.

2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 02:00

Late-night gallery tours and new venues signal a city staking its claim as a regional arts capital

On a recent weekday evening, the doors of more than a dozen galleries and museums across Abidjan stayed open till midnight, several hours later than usual, as art enthusiasts went around town on a bus tour. It was the Night of the Galleries, designed for people to drop in after work and enjoy Abidjan art week to the fullest.

The after-hours special showcase was first tested in January 2024 on the sidelines of the Africa Cup of Nations football tournament hosted and won by Côte d’Ivoire. The tradition continued this year during the art week’s third edition, which ran from last Tuesday to Sunday.

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 01:47

In today’s newsletter: Orbán concedes defeat after 16 years in power, ushering in a new era for Hungary’s relations with the EU, US and Russia

Good morning. The people of Hungary are waking up in an unfamiliar political landscape – one in which Viktor Orbán, who has served as prime minister since 2010, is stepping aside after defeat to Péter Magyar, whose Tisza party has won an election likely to reshape the country’s ties with the EU, the US and Russia.

Less than three hours after polls closed on Sunday, Orbán conceded defeat after what he described as a “painful but unambiguous” result. Magyar, who has pledged to repair Hungary’s strained relationship with the EU, crack down on corruption and channel funds towards long-neglected public services, said Tisza voters had rewritten Hungarian history and that “truth prevailed over lies”.

Middle East | Donald Trump has said the US will begin blockading the strait of Hormuz in an attempt to take control of the strategic waterway from Iran in the aftermath of failed peace negotiations.

Carers | Thousands of unpaid carers will continue to be hit with hefty and potentially unfair benefit repayment demands, as a government initiative gets under way to fix welfare injustices that have drawn comparison to the Post Office scandal

UK news | The Home Office is to announce the closure of 11 asylum hotels this week as part of its pledge to close all such facilities by the end of this parliament.

Ireland | Police have cleared a blockade of central Dublin by farmers and hauliers who were protesting about fuel prices, signalling a possible end to six days of protests that have rocked Ireland.

UK politics | Ministers are planning to reshape Britain’s relationship with the European Union, with new legislation that could result in the UK signing up to EU single market rules without a normal parliamentary vote.

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 01:29
Just joined the club. Used ping X with only 23 miles on it for 750 dollars :)

Got this baby today on marketplace. Any recommendations on what to get for it ? Is there a VESC kit for it? Is it easy to install? Should get a tread tire? Used or new? Fenders? Is it water resistant? It has sand particles. Can I spray it down or be gentle and use wipes to clean? ANY fun advice would be much appreciated :) I hope to ride streets and light trails with it

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 01:00

Carpenter is fired out of a car on water jets, David Byrne wears head to toe orange, and the reclusive Bieber steps into the limelight

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 00:42

Congratulations pour in from across EU, with leaders from Spain, Poland, France, Britain, Denmark, Romania, Sweden and beyond hailing a new chapter

EU leaders heaped praise on Péter Magyar after his decisive election victory in Hungary against the long-serving prime minister Viktor Orbán, who many saw as a direct threat to Europe’s peace and prosperity.

The outpouring reflected a deep frustration with Orbán across the EU’s 27 member states and its institutions.

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 00:00

Number of tickets to win Tête de Femme will be capped at 120,000 and proceeds will go to Alzheimer’s research

A raffle in France is offering the chance to win a portrait by Pablo Picasso for the price of a €100 (£87) ticket, with proceeds going to Alzheimer’s research.

Picasso painted the gouache-on-paper Tête de Femme (Head of a Woman) in 1941. The raffle organisers’ online sales platform says the number of tickets will be capped at 120,000, meaning the draw could net €12m if they are all sold.

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 00:00

America’s pacts should have expiration dates.

2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-13 00:00

Tehran needs positive incentives, not just pressure.

2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-12 23:34

"Early Sunday morning, a car stopped and appears to have fired a gun at the Russian Hill home of OpenAI's CEO," reportsThe San Francisco Standard, citing reports from the local police department: The San Francisco Police Department announced the arrest of two suspects, Amanda Tom, 25, and Muhamad Tarik Hussein, 23, who were booked for negligent discharge... [The person in the passenger seat] put their hand out the window and appeared to fire a round on the Lombard side of the property, according to a police report on the incident, which cited surveillance footage and the compound's security personnel, who reported hearing a gunshot. The car then fled, and a camera captured its license plate, which later led police to take possession of the vehicle, according to the report... A search of the residence by officers turned up three firearms, according to police. The incident follows Friday's arrest of a man who allegedly threw a Molotov cocktail at Altman's house. The San Francisco Standard also notes that in November, "threats from a 27-year-old anti-AI activist prompted the lockdown of OpenAI's San Francisco offices." Sam Kirchner, whose whereabouts have been unknown since Nov. 21, was in the midst of a mental health crisis when he threatened to go to the company's offices to "murder people," according to callers who notified police that day.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-12 23:17

Seems to be a common issue online. Couldn’t find a solution though. Just got this from a relative who got a new one, it had the tire replaced (probably irrelevant) and I just got it last night. Used it, charged it to 100% overnight, used it this morning got down to 50%, plugged it in for a few hours, didn’t charge, used it- got it down to 25% still won’t charge. I have two chargers, both keep green lights on and won’t seem to charge the onewheel. Ideas?

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-12 22:19

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for April 13, No. 567.

2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-12 22:17

This blog is now closed. Our live coverage continues here

A post about an hour ago on the Israel Defense Forces Telegram channel claimed that overnight, the IDF “identified a rocket launcher positioned and ready to launch toward the State of Israel in the area of Jouaiyya in southern Lebanon”.

Shortly after the identification, the launcher was struck and dismantled in a rapid closure cycle, thwarting the launch before it could be carried out.

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-12 22:15

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for April 13.

2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-12 22:00

Elle Hunt on her month wearing Meta’s smart glasses and the privacy concerns around the technology

According to Mark Zuckerberg, Meta’s AI-powered glasses are “personal super intelligence” that “let you stay present in the moment”.

Journalist Elle Hunt reports on her time wearing them for a month. Elle tells Nosheen Iqbal about the highs and lows of the experience, the features that could be transformative for people with vision impairments or hearing loss, and the risks wearable tech poses to our privacy.

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-12 22:00

Partial official results show opposition leader Peter Magyar's party dominating the vote, in a bombshell election result with repercussions around Europe and beyond.

2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-12 21:59

Donald Trump has said the US will begin blockading the strait of Hormuz in an attempt to take control of the strategic waterway. Key US politics stories from Sunday 12 April at a glance

Donald Trump has said the US will begin blockading the strait of Hormuz in an attempt to take control of the strategic waterway from Iran in the aftermath of failed peace negotiations between the countries in Pakistan.

The US president also threatened to bomb Iran’s water treatment facilities as well as its power plants and bridges, repeating an earlier threat, if Tehran did not agree to abandon its nuclear weapons programme – the key sticking point between the two sides.

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-12 21:42

2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-12 21:34

"Robotic bird decoys are being deployed at Grand Teton National Park," reports Interesting Engineering, "to influence the behavior of real sage grouse and help restore a declining population.". Robotics mentor Gary Duquette describes the machines as "kind of a Frankenbird." (SFGate shows one of the robot birds charging up with a solar panel... "Recorded breeding calls are played at the scene, with clucking and cooing beginning at 5 a.m. each day.") Duquette builds the birds with a team of high school students, telling WyoFile that at school they "don't really get to experience real-world problems" where failures lurk. So while their robot birds may cost $150 in parts, the practical experience the students get "is priceless." Spikes in the electric currents burned out servo motors as the season of sagebrush serenades loomed, Duquette said. "The kids had to learn the difference between voltage and amperage...." To resolve the problem, the team wired a voltage converter in line with the Arduino controller and other elements on an electronic breadboard. "We pulled through and got it done in time," he said... A noggin fabricated by a 3D printer tops the robo-grouse. Wyoming Game and Fish staffers in Pinedale supplied grouse wings from hunter surveys, and body feathers came from fly-tying supplies at an angling store. Packaging foam from a Hello Fresh meal kit replicates white breast feathers, accented by yellow air sacs... The Independent wonders if more national parks would be visited by robot birds... During this year's breeding season, which runs through mid-May, researchers are using trail cameras to track whether real sage grouse respond to the robotic displays and return to the restored lek sites. If successful, officials say similar robotic systems could eventually be used in other national parks facing wildlife management challenges.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-12 21:18

US senator appears at Manhattan rally alongside New York City mayor Zohran Mamdani, who cautioned that AI is ‘coming for human jobs’

Bernie Sanders has sounded an alarm over the US economy, warning “the worst is yet to come” unless workers overcome a “ruling class” of billionaires.

The US senator spoke at a rally in Manhattan on Sunday alongside Zohran Mamdani, the New York City mayor, who cautioned that artificial intelligence was “coming for human jobs” amid mounting concern over the technology’s rapid development.

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-12 21:16

Swalwell faced pressure from his own party to drop out of the race after a former staffer accused him of sexually assaulting her when she was too drunk to consent.

2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-12 21:08

Democratic congressman, running to replace Gavin Newsom, has faced multiple accusations

Representative Eric Swalwell, the Democratic frontrunner in the fiercely contested race to be governor of California, has suspended his campaign amid a series of sexual assault and misconduct allegations by a former staff member and at least three other women.

The woman who worked for Swalwell said the California congressman had sexually assaulted her twice when she was too inebriated to consent, according to a report by the San Francisco Chronicle, which was published on Friday.

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2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-13 05:00

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for April 13, No. 1,759.

2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-13 05:00

Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for April 13, No. 771.

2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-13 05:00

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for April 13 No. 1,037.

2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 21:31

Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland won the 2026 Masters Tournament at Georgia's Augusta National, claiming his second straight green jacket.

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-12 20:04

Joel Gilbert, who mailed anti-Barack Obama film to voters in 2012, accuses congressman of violating immigration law

California Democrat Eric Swalwell’s decision to suspend his campaign for governor on Sunday, even as he denies allegations from four women who accuse him of sexual misconduct and assault, did not end the pressure he faces.

One sexual assault allegation against Swalwell, alleged to have been committed in New York in 2024, prompted the Manhattan district attorney’s office to open a criminal investigation on Saturday. Members of Congress from both parties said on they could vote to expel Swalwell, as well as a Republican US representative, Tony Gonzales, also accused of sexual misconduct.

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2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 19:48

Long-serving prime minister beaten by opposition after early results showed clear lead

Europe correspondent

Not a regular observer of Hungarian politics? We’ve got you.

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2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 19:36

️ Rory McIlroy became just the fourth player in history to win consecutive Green Jackets
Official Leader Board

Marco Penge was making a good fist of his Masters debut. Especially as the 27-year-old from Crawley, the reigning Spanish Open champion, took a triple-bogey eight at the 2nd on Thursday. Not the most auspicious start to his Augusta National career, but he limited the first-round damage to 76, then shot 69 and 71. Sadly his final round isn’t going so well, and he’s just dumped two balls in the water at the iconic par-three 12th, the first spinning back off the bank, the second from the dropzone not even getting over to dry land before dunking into the drink. A quadruple-bogey seven. He isn’t the first, he won’t be the last, and things could have gotten a whole lot worse, just ask the Towering Inferno …

Bogey at the last for Jon Rahm. A diminuendo end to a fine round of 68. You have to wonder how much buyer’s remorse Rahmbo has for joining the LIV tour: the 2021 US Open champion and 2023 Masters winner has never been the same player since. Still, his recovery this week from an opening round of 78 will give him a little succour. He ends his week at +1, one shy of the current clubhouse leader Gary Woodland.

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2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-12 19:32

"Rust's rise shows signs of slowing," argues the CEO of TIOBE. Back in 2020 Rust first entered the top 20 of his "TIOBE Index," which ranks programming language popularity using search engine results. Rust "was widely expected to break into the top 10," he remembers today. But it never happened, and "That was nearly six years ago...." Since then, Rust has steadily improved its ranking, even reaching its highest position ever (#13) at the beginning of this year. However, just three months later, it has dropped back to position #16. This suggests that Rust's adoption rate may be plateauing. One possible explanation is that, despite its ability to produce highly efficient and safe code, Rust remains difficult to learn for non-expert programmers. While specialists in performance-critical domains are willing to invest in mastering the language, broader mainstream adoption appears more challenging. As a result, Rust's growth in popularity seems to be leveling off, and a top 10 position now appears more distant than before. Or, could Rust's sudden drop in the rankings just reflect flaws in TIOBE's ranking system? In January GitHub's senior director for developer advocacy argued AI was pushing developers toward typed languages, since types "catch the exact class of surprises that AI-generated code can sometimes introduce... A 2025 academic study found that a whopping 94% of LLM-generated compilation errors were type-check failures." And last month Forbes even described Rust as "the the safety harness for vibe coding." A year ago Rust was ranked #18 on TIOBE's index — so it still rose by two positions over the last 12 months, hitting that all-time high in January. Could the rankings just be fluctuating due to anomalous variations in each month's search engine results? Since January Java has fallen to the #4 spot, overtaken by C++ (which moved up one rank to take Java's place in the #3 position). Here's TIOBE's current estimate for the 10 most popularity programming languages: PythonCC++JavaC#JavaScriptVisual BasicSQLRDelphi/Object Pascal TIOBE estimates that the next five most popular programming languages are Scratch, Perl, Fortran, PHP, and Go.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 19:24

Tom Watson wants to fill in the creek in front. The Golden Bear says play safe if the pin is on the right. McIlroy defied the conventional wisdom and won

There’s hot, and then there’s the back nine on Sunday at Augusta when there are five players within two shots of the lead. The TV weathermen reckoned it was 30C but then they weren’t down at Amen Corner when Rory McIlroy was standing on the tee at Augusta National’s 12th hole, that little rinky-dink 155-yard par three, tied for the lead and waiting for the wind to drop long enough that he could get his shot off. Four days ago, they asked Tom Watson what was the one change he’d make to this golf course if he could. Watson didn’t blink. “I’d fill in that creek in front of No 12.”

“Touché” said Gary Player.

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2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 19:17

Pope Leo XIV and President Trump, two of the most influential Americans in the world, are at odds over the war in Iran and the federal crackdown on immigration in the United States.

2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 19:17

In the months since his election, Pope Leo has spoken up against both the war in Iran and the mass deportation of migrants in the U.S. His statements have inspired American cardinals to speak out.

2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 19:17

In a scheme plaguing roadways, some commercial trucking networks are racking up safety violations and evading federal enforcement by dissolving bad records and operating under new names.

2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 19:17

Great white sharks have abandoned a former hotspot in South Africa. Some pin the blame on a pair of orcas. Others point the finger at another culprit: humans.

2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 19:17

Great white sharks have vanished from a former South African hotspot, leaving scientists to debate over the cause.

2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 19:17

As Pope Leo makes headlines for his outspoken views on global conflicts and immigration, a subtler transformation is unfolding in the pews: a surge of new converts, many of them young.

2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 19:17

Photographer Chris Fallows, known for his dramatic photos of great white sharks breaching the water near Cape Town, South Africa, shared the stories behind his astonishing images of wildlife, from elephants and cheetahs to humpback whales and lions.

2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 19:10
  • 2025 winner joins Nicklaus, Faldo and Woods in retaining title

  • He triumphs on 12 under by one shot from Scottie Scheffler

You are left wondering how on earth Augusta National managed to inflict such psychological torture on Rory McIlroy for all those years. Or maybe that is precisely the point, that ­McIlroy’s ending of his Masters hoodoo in 2025 placed him into a fresh head space where failure is not an option. It turns out Green Jackets are like London buses. Back in Augusta, where he became only the sixth man in history to complete a career grand slam, McIlroy entered the record books once more. He is now the fourth golfer to successfully defend the Masters, after Jack ­Nicklaus, Nick Faldo and Tiger Woods. As a six-time major winner, he has surpassed Seve Ballesteros.

What next, Rory? He could walk on Rae’s Creek. McIlroy’s latest Masters triumph arrived with the 36-year-old considerably short of his best for much of the tournament. That only emphasises his excellence.

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2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 19:09

The probe comes as Swalwell is also being accused of assaulting a former staffer in an unrelated case.

2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 19:01

Ministers admit carer’s allowance penalties will continue while review of more than 200,000 cases is carried out

Thousands of unpaid carers will continue to be hit with hefty and potentially unfair benefit repayment demands, it has emerged, as a government initiative gets under way to fix welfare injustices that have drawn comparison to the Post Office scandal.

Ministers will on Monday launch an audit of more than 200,000 historical carer’s allowance benefit cases, with an estimated 25,000 carers issued with unlawful overpayments since 2015 likely to see their repayment debts cancelled or reduced as a result.

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2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 17:52

A new powerful chipset has arrived to take on x86 CPUs and Apple's M5, writes Wccftech. The blog Windows Central writes that "Qualcomm's Snapdragon X2 processors are here" — and they run Windows: Microsoft has done a massive amount of work to improve compatibility and has also convinced developers to embrace Windows 11 on Arm. Users of Windows 11 on Arm PCs spend 90% of their time on Arm-based apps that run natively. Additionally, apps that do not run natively can often run through Prism emulation, which has improved dramatically since launch... [A]pp compatibility issues are overblown by many, and unfortunately those sharing false information are the same folks people rely on to make purchases... Works on Windows on Arm maintains a list of compatible apps and games for the platform. There, you'll see well-known apps like Google Chrome, the Adobe Creative Suite, and Spotify. We also have a collection of the best Windows on Arm apps to help you out. Snapdragon X PCs aren't gaming PCs, but there is a growing library of games that can run on the chips.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 17:30

Campaigners welcome first update of school food standards in 13 years, which aims to help lower obesity rates

The government is to announce an overhaul to school food standards in England that will lead to calorific classics such as fish and chips and steamed sponges being banned.

The new rules of the first major update to school food standards in 13 years will apply from September. They are part of efforts to lower the rates of childhood obesity, with data for 2024 released by the NHS in January showing that 24% of nursery and primary school children were overweight or living with obesity.

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2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 16:55

2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 16:34
Is the XR Classic/GT Charging Port supposed to insert at an angle?

Just got this XR Classic brand new. The pins are NOT bent (they’re perfectly parallel to their little cylinder walls and equidistant as well) and the charging port itself is completely flush to the frame, but when I actually push the cable in the whole thing is bent relative to the rails, which I think is weird. Board charges fine (so far). Charger was hanging out loose but now it inserts (I figured I was just being too gentle) — albeit crookedly.

Just wondering if this is normal for the XR-C/GT?

submitted by /u/Unlikely_Program7153
[link] [comments]

2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 16:34
Barely used Onewheel+ XR for sale

Needs potential battery replacement otherwise excellent condition.

Purchased in 2021 with only 11 lifetime miles on it. Rode it maybe 3 times and put away for storage in a cool and dry garage environment in NorCal. Unfortunately battery was drained for too long and right now it doesn’t take in any charge. Unsure if it’s BMS or battery issue.

Asking for $600 OBO ideally Bay Area pick up! Thanks

submitted by /u/Bright-Hedgehog-9252
[link] [comments]

2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 16:13

The Super Mario Galaxy Movie "is officially the year's highest-grossing film to date with $629 million at the global box office," reports Variety — and it will likely earn over $1 billion. Project Hail Mary now becomes the year's second highest-grossing movie, with four-week ticket sales over $510, notes The Hollywood Reporter: The two films have helped propel year-to-date revenue to $2.113 billion — the best showing for the first part of the year since before the pandemic in 2019 ($2.619 billion), according to Comscore. And revenue is running 25% ahead of the same corridor last year. Some context from ScreenRant: Even though The Super Mario Galaxy Movie reviews were largely negative, earning it a disappointing 43% score from critics on Rotten Tomatoes, audiences gave it a far superior score of 89% from audiences, making it Verified Hot on the platform's Popcornmeter. This indicates that the movie should continue to climb up the global box office chart thanks to strong word of mouth, even as it trails consistently behind the original 2023 movie in terms of commercial performance. Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen called Project Hail Mary "an inspirational example.. We all thought that movie was really uplifting and inspiring." Before the Artemis astronauts launched their mission, Space.com points out "they were treated to a viewing of Amazon MGM Studios' Project Hail Maryto bolster their spirits ahead of their monumental 10-day lunar voyage. " Marking the occasion and providing encouraging words to the three American astronauts and one Canadian astronaut, Ryan Gosling recorded a brief encouraging video for the moon-bound foursome. Today NPR took a spoiler-filled look at the science in the film, asking: Would it be possible for humans to travel to a place as far away as the Tau Ceti star system? It's not possible right now, says Lisa Carnell, division director for NASA'S Biological and Physical Sciences Division. "I don't think we are fully prepared to send humans to Mars, let alone light years away," she says. Given the leaps in technology that humanity has made in just the past century, however, she didn't want to rule it out.... "I believe it's possible [one day]"... The hypothetical study of how humans and extraterrestrials might communicate is a real scientific field, called xenolinguistics, that includes researchers from linguistics, animal communication, and anthropology. Martin Hilpert, a professor of linguistics at the University of Neuchâtel in Switzerland, says the film "gets a lot of things right" for how such an encounter might occur, though it also employs a lot of "happy coincidences" too.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 16:05

Péter Magyar’s Tisza party wins election as prime minister concedes defeat, in result likely to reshape ties with EU

Hungary’s opposition Tisza party, led by Péter Magyar, has won the election, bringing an end to Viktor Orbán’s 16-year grip on power, in a result that is likely to rattle the White House and reshape the country’s relationship with the EU.

Less than three hours after polls closed on Sunday, Orbán conceded defeat after what he described as a “painful but unambiguous” election result.

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2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-13 09:23

The political crisis surrounding Democratic Rep. Eric Swalwell is rapidly escalating into a broader bipartisan showdown that could reshape the makeup of the House.

2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 16:20

The incident took place at the Citadelle Henri, also known as Citadelle Laferriere, a 19th-century fortress and tourist spot in the northern town of Milot.

2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 17:39

WIth record turnout, Hungarians chose to end the 16-year rule of the prime minister who was a self-proclaimed champion of illiberal Christian democracy.

2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 16:01

Luke Grimes leads the Yellowstone sequel.

2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 15:42

Apple is also considering a camera setup with vertically oriented oval lenses with surrounding lights, Mark Gurman reports.

2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 15:42

Apple is also considering a camera setup with vertically oriented oval lenses with surrounding lights, Mark Gurman reports.

2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 15:25
  • President has long been a fan of mixed martial arts

  • Ivanka and Donald Trump Jr also at event

Donald Trump and US secretary of state Marco Rubio attended a UFC event in Miami night on Saturday night as peace talks with Iran failed on the other side of the world.

Trump entered the Kaseya Center shortly after 9pm alongside several members of his family and UFC chief Dana White, who has been a supporter of the president since his first term. Seated nearby was Rubio as well as the US ambassador to India, Sergio Gor, the rapper Vanilla Ice and former FBI deputy director Dan Bongino.

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2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 15:19

Officials say ‘no arrests made at this time’ and that shooting ‘does not appear to be a random act of violence’

Seven people were shot, including one fatally, at a fast-food chain restaurant in Union Township, New Jersey, on Saturday night, according to authorities.

The Gun Violence Archive, a nonpartisan reference resource, listed the reported shooting at the Chick-fil-A restaurant in the 2300 block of Route 22 as the 100th mass shooting documented in the US this year, as of Sunday. The archive defines mass shootings as cases in which four or more victims are wounded or killed.

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-12 15:17

Pressure mounts on Californian, who denies rape claims, and on Texan Tony Gonzales, who had affair with staffer who died by suicide

A growing number of Congress members from both parties have called for Eric Swalwell, a Democratic US representative who ended his campaign for California governor on Sunday, to also resign his seat, following reported allegations of inappropriate behavior, sexual assault and rape.

Swalwell has denied the allegations, but he may not get the chance to quit before his colleagues expel him. Polarized Congress members appear to be eyeing an opportunity to rid themselves of both Swalwell and disgraced Republican US representative Tony Gonzales of Texas, who acknowledged having an extramarital affair with a staffer who later died by suicide.

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2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 15:02

West End spectacular about beloved bear wins seven prizes, while Rachel Zegler, Rosamund Pike and Paapa Essiedu all recognised

It was a night of sweet victory for Michael Bond’s marmalade-loving bear as Paddington: The Musical dominated the Olivier awards on Sunday. Amid the tuxes and gowns of a glittering ceremony at the Royal Albert Hall in London, the duffle coat-wearing bear got his sticky paws all over seven prizes including best new musical.

The award for best actor in a musical went to the duo who play Paddington: James Hameed provides the lovable hero’s voice and is the remote puppeteer, while Arti Shah performs in the furry costume. The show’s baddies, Tom Edden (as the busybody Mr Curry) and Victoria Hamilton-Barritt (as Millicent Clyde, who wants Paddington to literally get stuffed), won best supporting actor and best supporting actress in a musical respectively. Luke Sheppard was named best director for the production, which also picked up awards for costume design (Gabriella Slade and Tahra Zafar) and set design (Tom Pye and Ash J Woodward).

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2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 14:56

A former staffer of Rep. Eric Swalwell said he allegedly forced himself on her after they met for drinks in New York in 2024.

2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 14:55

"RGB LED TVs have been the talk of the TV world this year," argues The Verge, with models coming from all the manufacturers." And the first one of 2026 is here — the UR9 from China's Hisense — "the first look at the viability of the new backlight technology outside of demo rooms." They call it "a step above the traditional mini-LED TVs of years past." and "a great first shot against OLED's bow." HDR is colorful and accurate, it has great brightness, and it is capable of showing colors beyond the P3 color space for movies and TV shows that have wider color. But at $3,500, the 65-inch model I reviewed is priced comparably to high-end OLEDs from LG and Samsung, which is tough competition... One of the touted benefits of RGB LED TVs is their ability to achieve 100 percent of the BT.2020 color space... [But] even if a TV is capable of extending beyond P3 and into BT.2020 colors (which the UR9 absolutely is), with most movies and TV shows it doesn't matter. It's also a bit of a chicken-or-the-egg situation — we need TVs that can accurately display BT.2020 before the color space is fully adopted by TV and movie creators, but if there's no content, why get a BT.2020 TV? BGR points out this new mini LED TV also "includes a DisplayPort (DP) connection alongside HDMI." "Well, technically, it's a USB-C port that delivers full DisplayPort functionality, but it's labeled as DisplayPort." The TV also has three HDMI 2.1 ports, making it a great choice for game consoles and PCs. And while HDMI 2.1 supports 4K/120Hz, the Hisense UR9S will deliver 4K/170Hz or 4K/180Hz visuals [a higher refresh rate] when connected to a gaming PC via DisplayPort. Better yet, the TV is AMD FreeSync-compatible, and Hisense plans on adding Dolby Vision 2 HDR in future firmware. The Hisense UR9S will be available in four sizes: 65, 75, 85, and 100 inches. It's worth mentioning that the two largest sizes will max out at 180Hz for the refresh rate, while the 65 and 75-inch screens come in at 170Hz. This is exciting news for serious gamers looking for the best gaming TVs and a huge step forward in the evolution of panel tech. RGB Mini LED TVs were showcased by a handful of manufacturers at CES 2026, including Samsung, Sony, and LG; so Hisense will certainly have some competition.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 14:47

Commentary: NASA sent four astronauts farther into space than any humans have ever traveled. But there's a much deeper subtext about what it all means.

2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 14:44

2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-12 14:33

Iran warns move would breach ceasefire as US president also repeats threats to strike critical infrastructure

Donald Trump has said the US will begin blockading the strait of Hormuz in an attempt to take control of the strategic waterway from Iran in the aftermath of failed peace negotiations between the countries in Pakistan.

The US president also threatened to bomb Iran’s water treatment facilities, power plants and bridges if Tehran did not agree to abandon its nuclear weapons programme, the key sticking point between the two sides.

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2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 14:27
Didn't want to spend $100+ on a Pint X fender, so I cut one out of a garbage bin instead for free!

Watched a tutorial on YouTube about how to make one a fender out of a vinyl flooring plank. Didn't have any of those laying around, but my apartment building did have a bunch of trash bins stacked up in the dumpster area so I "borrowed" one.

Basically cut a 9x24" piece of plastic out of the back of the bin, leaving a little extra on there to serve as tabs to connect it through. Slowly shortened it until I snuck up on the closest radius I could make work without the tire rubbing against the plastic....

Been using it for about 2 months now, and while it does add about 20% more size to the whole thing, it's been extremely effective at keeping water off of my legs! I've ridden it hard through some pretty deep puddles and in heavy rain, and it feels like it's working really well at rerouting water off of/out of the board. The aesthetic isn't as slick as the OEM fender, but I don't really care, and the more time that's passed, I actually like the homemade look.

I only had one length of bolt and didn't want to make a special trip to the hardware store, so I used those risers (they're feet for cutting boards) to essentially "shorten" the bolt. I've read that you can damage the electronics, even puncture the battery if you use too long of bolts, so I was very careful and tightened them gently with a screwdriver.

One unexpected benefit is that it keeps the tire rubber from dirtying up my personal effects (backpack, cowboy hat, anything light that I might want to set on top of it when I store it at work). The only downside is that it obstructs the status indicator light, so I have to double check that it's on before standing on it. Also wet dirt will build up in that spot as well.

Would recommend to anyone trying to save $100-150 on a piece of plastic that honestly should already come with the board.

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

2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 14:27

On this "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" broadcast, Israeli Ambassador to the U.S. Michael Leiter and Democratic Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia join Margaret Brennan.

2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 14:24

UK’s willingness to consider role in removing mines from strait is seen as distinct from Trump’s blockade proposal

The UK will not be involved in any blockade of the strait of Hormuz, the Guardian understands, after claims by Donald Trump on Sunday that the US would be blockading the waterway with the assistance of Nato allies.

Speaking to Fox News, Trump said “it won’t take long to clean out the strait” and claimed “numerous countries are going to be helping us”, adding that the UK and other nations were sending minesweepers.

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2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 14:21

I'm very organized this year. I bought a used Pint with 300kms on it for the kids for Christmas. They're 9 and 10 and adventurous so I think they're really going to enjoy it. My wife and I tried it out one evening to see what we thought of it, just to be sure it wasn't too much for them - but we think it's ok and we're happy to give it a go. It definitely has the wow factor!

I noticed an XR Classic came up for sale nearby with 350 miles on it for 850e. Has a few extras on it and it seems to be good value. I was half tempted to get it and hold it until Christmas with the idea that the pint would be for the kids and the XR for the parents so we'd be able to go on a few runs together with them.

Maybe that might be overkill? I should probably see how the kids take to it first before committing more money to it 😬

submitted by /u/Mak156
[link] [comments]

2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 14:11

Astronauts make first remarks at jubilant welcome home event in Houston after their record-breaking mission

Still marveling over their moon mission, the Artemis II astronauts received a thunderous welcome home on Saturday from the hundreds of colleagues who took part in setting a record for deep space travel during the US space agency Nasa’s lunar comeback.

The crew of four arrived at Ellington Field near Nasa’s Johnson Space Center and Mission Control in Houston, flying in from San Diego, where they had splashed down just offshore the evening before.

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2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 13:58

Exclusive: Ministers planning new legislation for alignment without full parliamentary scrutiny if in national interest

Ministers are planning to fundamentally reshape Britain’s relationship with the European Union, with new legislation that could result in the UK signing up to EU single market rules without a normal parliamentary vote.

In a major development in the prime minister’s push for closer ties with the continent after the Iran war, the Guardian understands ministers are bracing to face down opposition to “dynamic alignment” with the EU from those who “scream treason” over the powers in a new EU-UK reset bill.

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2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 13:48

Victim in her 20s was attacked after leaving Labyrinth Epsom nightclub between 2am and 4am on Saturday

A woman was raped by several men outside a church after leaving a nightclub in Surrey, police said.

The woman in her 20s reported she was attacked after being followed leaving Labyrinth Epsom between 2am and 4am on Saturday.

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2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 13:34

Mississippi has one warehouse — run by a contractor — that sells all the liquor for the entire state of 2.9 million people. "If a restaurant or store anywhere in Mississippi wanted a bottle of Jim Beam, they had to order it from the wholesale warehouse," reports the Washington Post. But then Mississippi's warehouse-managing contractor implemented a new computer system that wasn't compatible with the state's delivery system (like they'd promised it would be back in 2023). And then things got even worse... "The problem, business owners allege, is that the company tore out the conveyor belts but didn't hire humans to replace them." In February a state Revenue Department commissioner told lawmakers the state was hiring temporary replacement workers, but in the five weeks through March 29th they'd only managed to reduce "pending" orders by 21.7%, from 218,851 down to 171,190, according to stats from Mississippi Today. At least four Mississippi businesses are now suing the warehouse operator "claiming breach of contract and harm to their business." So what's it like in a state suddenly running dry? The Washington Post reports: Willie the one-eyed skeleton is dressed for Cinco de Mayo, but the liquor store where Willie sits ran out of Jose Cuervo months ago. Arrow Wine and Spirits is also out of Tito's and Burnett's vodka, Franzia boxed wine, Jack Daniels, and every kind of premixed margarita... Restaurants in Jackson had no wine on Valentine's Day, and bars on the Gulf Coast ran dry before Mardi Gras. At least five liquor shops have closed, and if cheap pints don't hit the corner stores soon, many of them will, too... [A]s both the state and its businesses lose millions in revenue, many say they see no real end to the crisis. Nearly 174,000 cases of alcohol are sitting in a warehouse north of Jackson, but no one seems to know how to get them out the door... Even the shops that have received deliveries say they often get the wrong thing — Jell-O shots, for instance, that should have been small-batch Norwegian gin... At Willie the one-eyed skeleton's liquor store they'd previously made 300 to 400 sales a day, according to the article, but last week had 34 customers. And Mississippi is one of 17 U.S. states requiring liquor stores to buy their liquor from distribution centers controlled by the state's Department of Revenue... Mississippi Today points out that while some want the state to finally privatize liquor distribution, "The state collects around $120 million a year in taxes on alcohol." Plus the state has already authorized "borrowing $95 million to construct a new warehouse, set to begin operations in 2027..." Thanks to Slashdot reader jrnvk for sharing the news.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 13:33
Damn Armadillo holes

always gear up boys

submitted by /u/madmancryptokilla
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2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 13:32

Democratic Sen. Mark Warner said "I'll take a look at anything" when asked whether he would oppose additional funding for the war with Iran.

2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 13:24

Republicans call on Trump to ‘finish the job’ while top Democrats warn against resuming hostilities

The failure of negotiations to end the US war with Iran has unleashed a barrage of starkly partisan political responses, with leading Republicans making hawkish calls for Donald Trump to “finish the job” while top Democrats warned that it would be disastrous for the president to resume hostilities.

The former UN ambassador during Trump’s first presidency, Nikki Haley, led the Republican charge. She told CNN’s State of the Union on Sunday that the current two-week ceasefire was a test of nerves.

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2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 13:16

Officials confirm misfire as Amnesty gives death toll after speaking to survivors of strike on market in Yobe state

A Nigerian air force strike targeting jihadist rebels hit a market in north-east Nigeria, killing more than 100 people and injuring many others, Amnesty International and local media have said.

Officials confirmed a misfire had occurred but did not provide details.

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2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 13:10

The following is the transcript of the interview with Israeli Ambassador to the U.S. Michael Leiter that aired on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" on April 12, 2026.

2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 13:00

Police arrest man, 37, on suspicion of being in charge of dog dangerously out of control and causing injury resulting in death

A 19-year-old woman who died after a dog attack in Essex has been named by police as Jamie-Lea Biscoe.

Police said the victim was found with serious injuries after emergency services were called to a property in Leaden Roding at 10.45pm on Friday. Biscoe was pronounced dead at the scene.

A 37-year-old man from Dunmow, who was arrested on suspicion of being in charge of a dog dangerously out of control and causing injury resulting in death, has been bailed until July while inquiries continue, Essex police said on Sunday.

The canine, which was a family pet and believed to be a lurcher crossbreed, was seized and tests are under way to formally establish the dog’s breed, the force added.

Assistant chief constable Stuart Hooper said: “Our thoughts remain with all those who knew and loved Jamie-Lea. Her young life has been so tragically cut short.

“Our detectives are continuing to work around the clock to establish exactly what happened and specialist officers are continuing to support Jamie-Lea’s family.

“This is unimaginable for her loved ones and friends and, as such, I would ask people to respect their grief and privacy at this extremely difficult time.

“Our officers remain at the scene and anyone with concerns or information can speak with them there or contact us in the usual way.”

A post-mortem examination is due to take place on Sunday, police said.

Anyone with information that could assist the investigation has been asked to contact Essex police through their website or anonymously through Crimestoppers.

On Thursday, a three-month-old baby died in a suspected dog attack at a property in Redcar, North Yorkshire.

The baby girl is believed to have died as a result of a dog bite in the Dormanstown area and a woman, aged 31, was treated in hospital for an injury to her arm from a bite, police said.

Armed officers destroyed one dog that had gone on to the street and a second recovered by police has since been destroyed.

A man, aged 45, was arrested on suspicion of being in charge of a dog dangerously out of control causing injury resulting in death and was released on conditional bail.

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2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 12:56

2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 12:43

An American blockade in the strait of Hormuz raises energy-market dangers after failed negotiations – pushing a fragile ceasefire closer to collapse

As the US vice-president, JD Vance, took to a podium in Pakistan after 21 hours of diplomacy and said no deal had been reached to end the war with Iran, his boss Donald Trump was in Miami watching a mixed martial arts fight. The contrast was stark. Just when the outcome of a war and the stability of global markets hung in the balance, the president chose spectacle over engagement. Mr Trump may intend to project strength. But the impression he creates – in Tehran and among America’s allies – is of a president less interested in the substance of diplomacy than in the politics surrounding it.

The talks in Islamabad didn’t fail accidentally; the US and Iran were talking past each other. Washington’s position is that Iran must abandon its capacity to develop a nuclear weapon, while Tehran insists it is not seeking one and has the right to a civilian nuclear programme. The US vice-president’s “final and best offer” would have required Iran to give up that capacity altogether – terms that looked less like the basis of a negotiation than an attempt to impose the conditions of victory.

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2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 12:42

In both Republican and Democratic states, scepticism and hostility towards an unregulated construction boom is growing

When blue-collar Trump voters and Maga-friendly midwest states join the same cause as Bernie Sanders and liberal California teachers, something novel is afoot. Last month it was the turn of the Republican party in Texas to express forthright opposition to the construction of datacentres for artificial intelligence, pending adequate environmental safeguards for local communities. Across the United States, similar campaigns are being waged, as voters from across the political spectrum rail against the outsize influence and power of big tech.

For the White House, which has made the rapid rollout of datacentres a priority in its AI action plan, the scale of the protests is an unwelcome surprise. One of Donald Trump’s first acts on returning to office was to authorise the deregulated “build, baby, build” approach demanded by the Silicon Valley backers who helped to fund his campaign. Industry giants such Amazon and Microsoft are driving an estimated $710bn worth of investment in datacentres this year, as they stake their future on staying ahead in the AI race.

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2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 12:40
  • 2017 champion tears up tee box after poor shot

  • ‘Next question’: Spaniard shuts down interviewer

A winner on day four of the Masters was not even part of the remaining field. Robert MacIntyre, somewhere, surely raised a smile.

The Scot was the recipient of widespread criticism on Thursday after offering a single-fingered salute to Augusta National when en route to a nine at the 15th. A range of expletives and a whack of the sacred turf also featured in his first round. MacIntyre’s passionate approach to his profession is admirable but this was all over the top. In time, he will surely realise as much.

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2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 12:34

Bloomberg describes him as a "former Harvard Medical School professor whose research has focused on the intersection of AI and neuroscience." "For the past 20 years, I studied how the human brain stores and retrieves memories," Kreiman writes on LinkedIn. And now "My co-founder Spandan Madan and I built a new algorithm to endow humans with perfect and infinite memory." Engramme connects to your **memorome**, i.e., entire digital life. Large Memory Models work in the same way that your brain encodes and retrieves information. Then memories are recalled automatically — no searching, no prompting, no hallucinations. [The startup's web site promises "omniscient AI to augment human cognition."] We have built the memory layer for EVERY app. Read our manifesto about augmenting human cognition. ["We are not just building software; we are enabling a complete transformation of human cognition. When the friction disappears between needing a piece of information and recalling it, the nature of thought itself changes. This synergy between biological intuition and digital precision will be the most disruptive force in modern history, fundamentally reshaping every profession... We are dedicated to creating a world where everyone has the power to remember everything they have ever learned, seen, or felt "] Welcome to a new future where you can remember everything. This is the MEMORY SINGULARITY: after 300,000 years, this is the moment that humans stop forgetting. Bloomberg reports that the startup (spun out of a lab at Harvard) is "in talks with investors to raise about $100 million, according to people familiar with the matter."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 12:34

Bloomberg describes him as a "former Harvard Medical School professor whose research has focused on the intersection of AI and neuroscience." "For the past 20 years, I studied how the human brain stores and retrieves memories," Kreiman writes on LinkedIn. And now "My co-founder Spandan Madan and I built a new algorithm to endow humans with perfect and infinite memory." Engramme connects to your **memorome**, i.e., entire digital life. Large Memory Models work in the same way that your brain encodes and retrieves information. Then memories are recalled automatically — no searching, no prompting, no hallucinations. [The startup's web site promises "omniscient AI to augment human cognition."] We have built the memory layer for EVERY app. Read our manifesto about augmenting human cognition. ["We are not just building software; we are enabling a complete transformation of human cognition. When the friction disappears between needing a piece of information and recalling it, the nature of thought itself changes. This synergy between biological intuition and digital precision will be the most disruptive force in modern history, fundamentally reshaping every profession... We are dedicated to creating a world where everyone has the power to remember everything they have ever learned, seen, or felt "] Welcome to a new future where you can remember everything. This is the MEMORY SINGULARITY: after 300,000 years, this is the moment that humans stop forgetting. Bloomberg reports that the startup (spun out of a lab at Harvard) is "in talks with investors to raise about $100 million, according to people familiar with the matter."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 12:33

Mauritian foreign minister pledges to ‘spare no effort’ to regain control of islands, as US fails to give approval of deal

A senior official in Mauritius’ government has vowed that the Chagos Islands will be “decolonised” after Keir Starmer was forced to shelve legislation to hand the islands back to Mauritius.

On Friday, UK government officials acknowledged that they had run out of time to pass legislation within the current parliamentary session, which ends in the coming weeks, after a lack of support from Donald Trump.

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2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 12:32

This is probably an echo if what a lot of other people have said, but please consider it. So, I just had a bad nosedive going around 20mph on some old pavement. I grew up doing martial arts and parkour, and the old roll instincts kicked in. If I had landed with my arms out, I could have easily broken something. Instead, my hands and side are busted up from sliding after the roll, but other than some nasty road rash, no real lasting damage.

If you can, join a free-running/parkour/judo gym for a little bit just to learn to fall and roll (a lot have short trials or free classes you can join to get that). If a gym/school isn't an option, use the internet and YouTube to learn (Edit: it's a last resort to use the internet on this one, do it with someone who knows what they're doing and that'll be best, and I can't understate this enough, if you want to be able to roll, you have to practice it a lot till your body figures out how to do it without thinking). Never fall with your arms fully extended, if you have to fall forwards and can't roll, land on your forearms rather than keeping your arms straight, it'll still suck, but you might break less. Always tuck your head to the side when you roll, try to never go directly over it or your spine, otherwise you could do more damage over just falling normally. Then practice that till it becomes second nature. Also, for the love of god, wear pads... helmet and wrist guards at the minimum....

Edit: as some others have put, rolling is no substitute for pads, always wear them. Just learning a roll isn't going to help, you gotta practice it a lot till it becomes a reflex. It won't save you entirely, but it can turn an accident with an ugly break into an accident with nasty roadrash.

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2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 12:20

The following is the transcript of the interview with GOP Rep. Mike Turner of Ohio that aired on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" on April 12, 2026.

2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 12:04

Gas prices put pressure on pocketbooks — and President Trump's ratings — as Iran war continues.

2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 11:55

Exclusive: Health secretary warns of dangers of protest vote as he pitches NHS as key elections battleground

Voters in May’s local and devolved elections risk putting the NHS in jeopardy if they vote for populist parties, Wes Streeting has said, as he sought to make the health service a key battleground.

“The founding principles of the NHS are at greater threat than at any time since the NHS was founded in 1948,” the health secretary said.

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2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 11:53

Demand at online marketplaces could settle at a new, higher normal, with the crisis leaving consumers ‘scarred’

Car buyers’ interest in electric cars has surged across Europe since the start of the war in Iran, as the rising cost of petrol highlights the cheaper power available from a plug.

Online marketplaces in the UK, Germany, France and Spain reported huge increases in inquiries about electric vehicles since the start of the conflict in February.

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2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 10:01

Experts say our preoccupation with net overseas migration figures has distracted from a more meaningful discussion on the ‘scale of temporariness’

Australia should set immigration targets to achieve a “stable temporary population” to address the ballooning number of non-permanent residents that has stretched the country’s public services and housing, a new report argues.

Temporary migrants as a share of the total population has more than doubled over the past 15 years, from 2.7% in 2010, to more than 6%.

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-12 09:47

The two sides turned up to test one another’s resolve. It was probably unrealistic to expect a dispute that has taken up years of discussion to be settled in one marathon session

It was as if the two delegations in the Iran-US peace talks in Islamabad hoped that the sheer number of negotiators flown into Pakistan could overcome the handicap of having only a finite number of hours in which to settle a 20-year dispute over Iran’s nuclear ambitions, now overlaid by complex new issues such as future control of the strait of Hormuz and US compensation for its attack on Iran.

Iran sent two planeloads of negotiators. They included many members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), present to ensure that no gains made in the field were relinquished at the diplomatic table. Diplomats fanned out across political, legal, security, economic and military files. One Iranian-drafted technical explanation on nuclear facility safety ran to more than 100 pages.

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-12 09:07

Oil prices and borrowing costs are expected to rise this week as tankers remain stranded in the Gulf

The failure of the US and Iran to reach a peace deal after marathon negotiations has put markets on alert for further oil and gas price rises.

With large numbers of oil tankers remaining stuck in the Gulf, the US vice-president, JD Vance, blamed the collapse of the talks on Tehran’s refusal to abandon its nuclear weapons programme, while Iranian sources hit back at “excessive” demands from Washington.

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

Researchers say ‘magic mushrooms’ can help with traumatic symptoms, but urge caution as states expand access

After three combat deployments in Afghanistan, during which he suffered traumatic brain injuries from concussive blasts, army ranger Jesse Gould developed post-traumatic stress disorder and said he “drank almost every night to cope”.

In times of hardship, veterans sometimes turn to “medication and talk therapy, but it tends to be more of a maintenance program than actually overcoming it”, Gould said, but added that at age 28, “I was still very young. I didn’t want to be on medication the rest of my life.”

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2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 07:40

Two-time Grammy nominee was one of Bollywood’s most versatile and celebrated voices

The Indian singer Asha Bhosle, whose voice defined Bollywood cinema and whose career spanned almost eight decades, has died in Mumbai at the age of 92.

Bhosle, who recorded more than 12,000 songs, became her country’s pre-eminent exponent of playback singing – recording tracks that were then lip-synced on film by actors. She also boldly embraced cabaret and western-influenced melodies to forge a distinctive musical identity.

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2026-04-13 08:04
2026-04-12 05:42

Iranian delegates in Islamabad say Washington needs to do more to win their trust if talks to resolve US-Iran conflict are to be successful

The US vice-president, JD Vance, has blamed the failure of marathon negotiations with Iran on the country’s refusal to abandon its nuclear weapons programme, while Iranian delegates have claimed Washington needs to do more to win their trust.

Vance, who left Islamabad on Sunday morning after 21 hours of talks with Iranian officials in the Pakistani capital, said his team had been very clear on its red lines, as hopes faded of a quick end to the conflict that began on 28 February.

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2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 04:59

Elections on Sunday offer Peruvians another once-in-five-years chance to set the nation on a new path. All signs suggest they won’t.

2026-04-12 16:04
2026-04-12 02:00

Rightwing leader trails in polls to Péter Magyar, despite support from JD Vance on recent visit

Hungarians are heading to the ballot boxes to vote in a landmark parliamentary election that could oust Viktor Orbán after 16 years in power and potentially reshape the central European country’s relations with the EU, Moscow and Washington.

During the campaign, Orbán – the EU’s longest-serving leader – has trailed in the polls as he faces an unprecedented challenge from Péter Magyar, a former elite member of Orbán’s Fidesz party.

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2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-12 02:00

Estate agents say rising mortgage costs have created a mood of fear, with Canterbury among the cities being hit

On a warm, spring morning in Canterbury, the cobbled streets are buzzing with activity and the white Tudor houses gleam in the sun.

It is a scene that seems far removed from events in the Middle East, but the conflict is undermining business and consumer confidence – rattling the city’s housing market just as the spring selling season began.

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2026-04-12 20:04
2026-04-11 06:00

As the president spirals over his disastrous war, his threats have escalated beyond the red line of international law

Donald Trump has hung nine glowering portraits of himself throughout the White House, each one projecting a variation on the theme of intimidation. But gazing into his narcissistic pool of grimacing images has not calmed him when in his mind’s eye he stares into the abyss of the worst failure of his life.

Trump’s fiasco has inspired him to heightened performances of profane, vile and vicious threats. His grammar of atrocity has escalated from hateful rhetoric to threats of war crimes. What might have initially appeared as rage-quitting the video game that the White House communications department makes of his Iran war has crossed an inviolable red line of international law. His pouting and foot stomping have led him into the gravest territory.

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2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-11 05:00

A black-and-white image of an old-school reporter sitting at a desk. He is surrounded by clippings, paper and a typewriter. There is a bright yellow shape obscuring his face.
Photo illustration by Alex Bandoni/ProPublica. Source image: John Springer Collection/Getty Images.

The call came from a number I didn’t recognize, with a Canadian area code.

A steely voice on the other end of the line greeted me, identifying himself as an official with the Canadian military.

He had a question: Had I been reaching out to him on WhatsApp, trying to work him for information?

I paused. As an investigative reporter at ProPublica, I’m reaching out to a lot of people all the time. But as I racked my brain, I couldn’t think of any Canadians I had recently tried to develop as sources.

It seems as though someone is impersonating you, the man warned.

I was at a loss. What was Fake Me asking about? Were they just using my name or my picture too? How could I be sure the person warning me about this impostor wasn’t actually an impostor himself?

The Canadian official assured me he’d send a message from his government email to confirm his identity, and he’d include screenshots of his conversation with Fake Me. I thanked him, and we exchanged some pleasantries. Before saying goodbye, I asked him if there was anything he’d like to get on the radar of an investigative reporter. (Without even realizing it, I was working him for information. Maybe Fake Me and Real Me aren’t so different.)

The screenshots the Canadian sent over later showed someone with a Miami number using my ProPublica headshot as their profile pic. I’ve never lived in Florida.

“This is Robert Faturechi from ProPublica,” Fake Me wrote. “I really need to get in touch with you.”

The Canadian asked me not to publicly reveal too many details about his work, but it involves dealing with other countries, including Ukraine.

I alerted our security team at ProPublica. They told me that there was little we could do aside from reporting the fake account to WhatsApp.

We did, and I put the matter behind me — until two weeks later, when I got another warning.

This time it was a Latvian businessman who said he runs an organization providing equipment to the Ukrainian military and is involved in a drone development project with Ukrainian forces.

“Hey!” the Latvian wrote to me on LinkedIn. “Was good to chat on Signal! Let’s connect here as well!”

The only problem was I had never chatted with him on Signal, the encrypted messaging app.

The Latvian reached out to me on LinkedIn because he was concerned he wasn’t talking to Real Me on Signal. He sent over screenshots of someone using my headshot and claiming to be me.

“Am I right in understanding that you are an expert in the field of UAVs?” Fake Me had messaged the Latvian, referring to unmanned aerial vehicles, a fancy term for drones.

“My clients,” the impostor explained, “are particularly interested in the application of UAVs in Ukraine.”

The Latvian had offered to discuss the topic in a phone call, but Fake Me (who could be a man or woman) declined, saying they weren’t “comfortable” talking on the phone. They asked to continue the “conversation in written format” or if the Latvian could “record a voice message on this topic.”

The Latvian, growing suspicious, insisted on a video call. Fake Me relented, sending him step-by-step instructions they said would result in a secure video chat, but that actually appeared to have been an attempt to trick the Latvian into giving up access to his email account.

The Latvian ultimately blocked Fake Me.

The impersonations were disquieting. Investigative reporting is hard enough with public trust in media so low and those in power stepping up attacks against journalists. Scammers giving potential sources another thing to worry about just makes our work more difficult.

I can’t be certain what Fake Me is up to, but posing as a journalist in this way seems to be the latest evolution in online deception. ProPublica has chronicled the dark world of pig butchering, in which human traffickers in Asia force their victims to scam people by posing as friends or potential romantic interests. In those cases, the goal is cash.

But sometimes the objective is stealing sensitive information. And even sophisticated actors can fall victim to so-called phishing attacks, in which scammers impersonate legitimate entities. One of the most notable and perhaps consequential instances was when John Podesta, chair of Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign, fell victim to an email purporting to be a Google security alert, giving hackers access to his personal Gmail account. Thousands of his emails, some of them quite damaging to Clinton and the Democratic Party, were published online.

A screenshot of a WhatsApp conversation.
A screenshot of the conversation between a Canadian official and Fake Robert. Obtained and redacted by ProPublica

From the screenshots the Canadian and Latvian sent me, I could tell Fake Me wasn’t asking for credit card info or urging anyone to buy a gift card. It didn’t appear to be a moneymaking scam.

I’m not sure who else they’ve reached out to, but in both cases I was alerted to, Fake Me seemed to have an interest in foreign militaries. Maybe some clunky intelligence operation?

I tried calling Fake Me using the phone number they used to reach out to the Canadian defense official. I got a recorded message saying the line was not in service.

On Signal and WhatsApp, the number rang and rang, without an answer.

There was even less we could do about the second impersonation than we could about the first.

Signal keeps extremely little information about its users; it knows when someone first created their account and the phone number they used to do so but stores nothing about who they’re messaging. That’s by design. The hands-off approach is part of why it’s a safe platform for journalists to talk securely to sources. But it also makes catching impostor accounts difficult. Red flags, like sending messages with suspicious links, aren’t detectable by Signal. (WhatsApp can’t see the content of messages unless a user reports them. It has the ability to see who its users are messaging, but a spokesperson said it’s rare for the company to store that data.)

Cooper Quintin, a technologist at the digital privacy nonprofit Electronic Frontier Foundation, said he had never heard of a case like mine on Signal. But overall he was noticing an upswing in scams on the secure messaging app. Signal was doing what it could, he said, such as adding a feature that slows down would-be spammers trying to send many messages in a short time frame. Signal also makes links from unknown senders unclickable. But there are limits to what Signal can do, he said, without compromising its hallmark privacy protections for its users.

“This fits a trajectory. As Signal gets more popular, more attackers start to view it as a potential platform for attacks,” said Quintin, who insisted we talk via video chat so he could be sure I wasn’t an online impersonator asking to interview him about being impersonated online.

Some platforms — such as Facebook and Instagram — allow users to get verified accounts in which the site essentially confirms they are who they claim to be. But it wouldn’t be feasible for Signal to do the same, said digital security expert Runa Sandvik, who consults on security matters for ProPublica. The nonprofit that runs Signal is small, and verification would require staffing it doesn’t have. More significantly, she said, it would require Signal to collect more information about its users, eroding the privacy protections that make it popular.

Signal did not provide comment for this article. A spokesperson for WhatsApp said “we have a strong track record of banning those trying to scam others and staying ahead of scammers and their tactics.” The spokesperson said WhatsApp “took appropriate action in line with our policies” against the account spoofing me but declined to say what that action was. In general, WhatsApp tries to root out scam accounts, even before they’re reported, by monitoring for suspicious behavior that includes attempting to launch many accounts from a single location.

It turns out, if you’re contacted by someone pretending to be a reporter, the best way to scuttle their scam is to do a little reporting of your own.

Every journalist at ProPublica has a bio page. Here is mine. On my bio page, you’ll find my Signal handle and email if you click on the Contact Me button. You can always check the Signal information or email address on my bio page to verify that I’m the person contacting you.

This is true for every ProPublica reporter: We all have our Signal numbers or usernames on our profiles, and we all have an email ending in @propublica.org.

The same goes for reporters at other outlets. If one reaches out to you and you have doubts, check their website and social accounts to verify their email or Signal or WhatsApp numbers. We’ve heard through the media grapevine and in published accounts about scams similar to mine hitting other organizations as well.

They include smaller-scale deceptions. The New York Times recently flagged an account on X falsely claiming to be an intern for the news organization. In 2023, Reuters reported that two of its reporters in China were being impersonated via Instagram and Telegram accounts that were attempting to get information on activists protesting the country’s COVID-19 policies. And just this month, a correspondent for Reuters in Saudi Arabia warned his followers that someone was impersonating him on WhatsApp.

There are also more sophisticated campaigns to be on alert for. The German government this year released a vague warning about what it described as likely a state-sponsored actor attempting to commandeer the Signal accounts of government officials and reporters across Europe. And last month, the FBI announced that individuals associated with Russian intelligence were posing as Signal’s security department to fool American government officials and journalists into providing information that would allow the hackers to take over their accounts. Once they had access, the FBI warned, they could see conversations and contact lists, and send messages as the victim.

These scams should worry anyone who cares about investigative reporting. Throughout my career, I’ve done sensitive stories exposing wrongs in politics, finance, the military and law enforcement. Many of them relied on courageous individuals who have taken leaps of faith and shared information, sometimes at real personal risk. I go to great lengths to protect my sources and make sure they are comfortable taking that risk. If potential sources have to doubt that I am who I say I am, they may be less likely to engage.

When journalists are impersonated online, like I have been, Sandvik said they shouldn’t be quiet about it.

“If and when it does happen, be very public about it, which is what you’re doing now,” she said. “Let people know this is happening so if people hear from you, they know this is something to look out for.”

The post Who’s Been Impersonating This ProPublica Reporter? appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-10 19:45

An unfinished foundation for a building, held up by wooden bracing in a muddy housing lot, surrounded by a wooden fence with houses and trees in the background.
“I thought I was dealing with … folks who had been defrauded, with allegations of above-market interest rates, improper foreclosures,” U.S. District Judge Alfred H. Bennett said. “Now, all of the sudden, I’m being asked to OK increased law enforcement?” Lexi Parra for ProPublica and The Texas Tribune

The Justice Department said Friday that it would move forward on a proposed $68 million settlement with a Texas land developer it had accused of preying on Hispanic residents, despite a judge’s concerns that the agreement did not do enough to help victims.

During a hearing, U.S. District Judge Alfred H. Bennett questioned why the settlement had no compensation for those who were harmed and grilled a federal prosecutor over $20 million devoted to police and immigration enforcement. He said he was uncomfortable with the provision because the Justice Department’s lawsuit against Colony Ridge, which has massive subdivisions north of Houston, mentioned nothing about public safety or immigration.

“I thought I was dealing with … folks who had been defrauded, with allegations of above-market interest rates, improper foreclosures,” Bennett said, holding up the original lawsuit in his right hand and the settlement in his left. “Now, all of the sudden, I’m being asked to OK increased law enforcement?”

“Who in the settlement room said it would be a good idea to give $20 million to law enforcement?” Bennett asked early in the hearing. “Where did that come from?”

The original idea came from the state, said Justice Department senior prosecutor Varda Hussain, referring to the office of Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton. Paxton’s office filed a similar lawsuit that would also be resolved through the settlement. He did not respond to a request for comment. Hussain, a principal deputy chief at the Justice Department’s Washington headquarters, said that the federal government stood by the provision even though neither its lawsuit nor the state’s raised concerns about crime.

Colony Ridge residents told federal investigators that they were worried about crime in the development after the lawsuit was filed, Hussain said.

“I understand what it might look like to you, but I am telling you that this is a concern that friends of the court and residents will tell you exists,” Hussain said.

The settlement ends a three-year legal dispute in which the Justice Department and Consumer Financial Protection Bureau accused Colony Ridge of deceiving tens of thousands of Hispanic consumers into taking out high-interest loans that many could not afford. The developer then benefited when it foreclosed on their properties, prosecutors said.

Former attorneys and investigators with the Justice Department and CPFB, including those involved in filing the original lawsuit in 2023, told ProPublica and The Texas Tribune they were stunned that the Trump administration had reached a settlement that did not seek to compensate victims.

Of the 183 housing and civil enforcement settlements the Justice Department has announced since 2018, only 6% lacked money for victims, and none included funding for police or immigration enforcement, an analysis by the news organizations found.

Including such a provision in a predatory lending case has never been done before, said Bennett, who sought to find a compromise.

An hour into the hearing, Bennett asked the Justice Department and the attorneys for Colony Ridge, which has denied any wrongdoing, whether they would consider his suggestions to revise the settlement to obtain his approval.

Colony Ridge attorney Jason Ray said his client would consider it. Hussain said the Justice Department wasn’t interested.

Instead, the Justice Department said it would pursue the settlement without seeking judicial approval under a provision of federal law that allows it to do so. That means the court will not supervise Colony Ridge to ensure the developer follows the terms of the settlement, said Johnathan Smith, former deputy assistant attorney general for civil rights during the Biden administration.

Smith, who helped assemble the Colony Ridge lawsuit three years ago, said now the case simply goes away because there is no one to enforce it. He added that the Justice Department cannot sue Colony Ridge based on the same claims in the future.

“By having settlements that are public and that are court-enforced, it sends a clear message to other potential bad actors that there could be real consequences for their actions,” Smith said in an email.

He said the Justice Department’s decision amounts to a “get out of jail free card.”

The “DOJ is turning its back on the victims, and those victims are left with no recourse and no assurance that any actions will be taken to remedy the harms that were identified in DOJ’s original complaint,” Smith said.

The Justice Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment about Smith’s criticisms. During the hearing, however, Hussain said the department would ensure Colony Ridge abides by the settlement. In a court filing, the developer said it had already started implementing the provisions, which include adopting stricter lending standards.

Keilah Sanchez, a former Colony Ridge landowner who, along with her sister, collected complaints from residents who said they had been mistreated by the developer, said it was crushing to see the settlement be implemented without helping past victims.

“It’s unbelievable, but at this point, I don’t expect much from these agencies,” she said.

The post A Judge Worried a Proposed Settlement Doesn’t Do Enough to Help Victims. The DOJ Is Still Moving Forward. appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-10 18:42

Could powerful AI models like Anthropic's Mythos give cybercriminals and other bad actors a roadmap for exploiting tech systems?

2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-10 17:16

SAN JOSE, Calif., April 10, 2026 — Supermicro, Inc. has announced the pre-configured Gold Series enterprise server solutions, optimized for enterprise AI, compute, storage, and intelligent edge workloads. The new Gold Series offering is comprised of over 25 different server systems based on Supermicro’s market-proven product families, including performance optimized single-processor and dual-processor servers. The Gold Series is pre-configured with CPUs, GPUs, memory, storage, and other key components and are ready to ship from Supermicro’s warehouses, generally within three business days.

“By shipping our Gold Series offerings directly to our customers with everything they need to run their enterprise workloads, we make our industry-leading server portfolio available to our customers even faster, significantly shortening lead times and accelerating their time-to-online,” said Charles Liang, president and CEO of Supermicro. “Customers can order Gold Series systems with confidence, knowing not only that these configurations are workload-optimized and validated before shipment, but also that these server platforms have been deployed to data centers worldwide, in volume.”

Divided into four distinct workload categories, Supermicro Gold Series systems are configured with components that are optimized for specific enterprise workloads:

  • Enterprise Compute – Best-selling Hyper, CloudDC, SuperBlade, MicroCloud and GrandTwin rackmount servers that offer exceptional performance and flexibility.
  • Enterprise AI – Systems optimized for GPU acceleration for AI inference and training including LLMs, generative AI, and recommender systems.
  • Enterprise Storage – A range of architectures designed to support the data storage requirements of modern enterprises, from high throughput, low latency NVMe flash, to large-scale data lake and object storage.
  • Intelligent Edge – Compact form factors designed for flexible and efficient computing at edge locations to enable retail, manufacturing, and smart cities.

By pre-configuring Gold Series systems, Supermicro cost-efficient pricing and shorter lead times compared to custom-built solutions, enabling customers to meet their time-to-market goals faster. Supermicro Gold Series servers are now ready to ship from US warehouses and can be ordered directly from Supermicro or through Supermicro’s network of authorized partners.

For more information or to view specific configurations, please visit https://www.supermicro.com/en/products/gold-series.

About Super Micro Computer, Inc.

Supermicro (NASDAQ: SMCI) is a global leader in Application-Optimized Total IT Solutions. Founded and operating in San Jose, California, Supermicro is committed to delivering first-to-market innovation for Enterprise, Cloud, AI, and 5G Telco/Edge IT Infrastructure. We are a Total IT Solutions provider with server, AI, storage, IoT, switch systems, software, and support services. Supermicro’s motherboard, power, and chassis design expertise further enables our development and production, enabling next-generation innovation from cloud to edge for our global customers. Our products are designed and manufactured in-house (in the US, Taiwan, and the Netherlands), leveraging global operations for scale and efficiency and optimized to improve TCO and reduce environmental impact (Green Computing). The award-winning portfolio of Server Building Block Solutions allows customers to optimize for their exact workload and application by selecting from a broad family of systems built from our flexible and reusable building blocks that support a comprehensive set of form factors, processors, memory, GPUs, storage, networking, power, and cooling solutions (air-conditioned, free air cooling or liquid cooling).


Source: Supermicro

The post Supermicro Accelerates Deployment Times with New Gold Series Enterprise Server Solutions appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-10 17:11

April 10, 2026 — While precision seems critical for science, researchers from the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Brookhaven National Laboratory and Texas A&M University are embracing uncertainty, using it to fine-tune artificial intelligence (AI)-based molecular design models.

The team’s work showing how embracing uncertainty helps AI explore hidden molecular possibilities that can lead to smarter design of new drugs and advanced materials was featured on the cover of Molecular Systems Design & Engineering. Credit: Valerie A. Lentz/Brookhaven National Laboratory.

The resulting models can generate molecules with better predicted properties than those offered by the original models. The work is featured on the February 2026 cover of Molecular Systems Design & Engineering, published by the Royal Society of Chemistry.

A Molecular Runway

In pursuit of the next must-have looks, fashion designers regularly revisit and reuse styles, fabrics, and trends, unveiling collections that take familiar traits, combine them, and make something new. Notably, modern molecular design often relies on generative models, a type of AI that works in a similar way.

Generative molecular design (GMD) models are trained on — or “learn” in AI parlance — patterns from large chemical datasets. Variational autoencoders, or VAEs, often are the GMD’s “engine,” compressing complex molecular structures into numerical form, via an “encoder,” and decoding the information, using the “decoder,” to generate new, realistic molecular structures.

“The chemical universe cannot be explored using brute force,” said Byung-Jun Yoon, a professor at Texas A&M, joint appointee with Brookhaven Lab’s Computing and Data Sciences directorate in the Applied Mathematics department, and the paper’s corresponding author. “VAEs allow us to accelerate that search intelligently, focusing computational resources on molecular spaces that AI predicts to be most promising. VAEs, and generative AI models in general, provide a means to design smarter and discover faster, opening the door to effective designing of molecules in real-world applications.”

These AI tools have been a boon to researchers developing new drugs or advanced materials. Still, there are limits. Most AI models are trained once and reused many times because retraining from scratch is time consuming and expensive. Unfortunately, when it comes to generative models, one size does not fit all.

“Designer” VAEs

Pre-trained AI models are not easily adapted. However, previous efforts mainly focused on optimizing an AI model for GMD given the training data or using a pretrained GMD model to optimize the properties of designed molecules. Quantifying the uncertainty of the GMD process or seeking techniques to efficiently quantify and leverage uncertainty were overlooked. Yoon and his colleagues opted for another tactic to add flexibility to GMDs: instead of ignoring uncertainty, why not employ it in downstream design tasks?

As VAEs learn, they compress data into a list of numbers, known as “latent variables,” that reside in a latent space whose dimensionality is significantly lower than the original molecular space, which can be combinatorial and astronomically large. For example, SMILES (Simplified Molecular-Input Line-Entry System), which represents chemical structures to enhance machine learning, typically have latent space dimensionality in the range of several thousands, e.g., roughly 1,000~6,000 dimensions, while a typical VAE used for GMD has latent space dimensions of 16~128.

For a GMD model, the latent variable represents a molecule, and the latent space acts like a map, where, for example, similar molecules can be close to one another while different ones are farther apart. In their study, the Brookhaven Lab and Texas A&M team used uncertainty quantification via an “active subspace approach” to improve how to use the GMD model’s uncertainty given the original training data to facilitate the suggestion of novel molecules with better properties of interest – ultimately, a valuable time and compute cost saver.

They defined the active subspace as a small, focused part of the model’s parameter space that demonstrated the most pronounced effect on what the model generates. In this instance, uncertainty quantification is the measurement of uncertainty in a GMD model’s parameters given the training data the model has learned from the molecular landscape. Because uncertainty quantification offers a range of possible outcomes and estimates their likelihood, scientists can better understand a model’s reliability, assess its accuracy, and determine its trustworthiness.

“Our work introduces an uncertainty-guided fine-tuning strategy that operates in the active subspace of a pre-trained VAE’s model parameters to discover better-performing molecular designs,” Yoon explained. “Mapping this active subspace provides a systematic way of sampling model parameters that allows us to explore model uncertainty to identify GMD models that lead to improved design. Optimization of the model within the characterized model uncertainty further enables us to identify the parameterizations that outperform the original model on downstream molecular design tasks — all without redesigning or retraining the full generative model from scratch.”

This diagram details the team’s fine-tuning process, where an AI model is refined by focusing on key variables and using feedback to improve its ability to design better molecules. Credit: Brookhaven National Laboratory.

Fashioning a New Molecule

By focusing on a sampling of parameters that significantly impact results and tuning only those key settings, the team was able to identify gains over pre-trained models in optimization tasks for six molecular properties across three VAE variants. Importantly, their method incorporates a feedback loop that tests which versions of the AI model create better molecules and retains the “best” ones for continued comparison.

In molecular design and other research areas, the ability to reuse trusted AI models instead of deploying new ones for every exploratory avenue cannot be understated. An adaptive GMD model trained for drug discovery can expedite identification of promising drug candidates before they are even realized in a lab. In areas such as materials science, it can help reveal pathways to smarter design for polymers, catalysts, or fuel materials.

“Discovery has always involved uncertainty,” Yoon said. “However, with powerful AI-based tools, we now can effectively quantify the uncertainty, map it, and use it as a guide for further exploration. Instead of a barrier, our work treats uncertainty as useful information that allows us to reliably turn computational insights into real-world solutions in the presence of substantial uncertainty. By helping AI to be aware of its own competence and the uncertainty of its predictions, we can make it a more trusted, viable partner in designing the molecules that could shape the future.”

This research was supported by the DOE Office of Science.

Related Links


Source: Charity Plata, Brookhaven National Laboratory

The post Brookhaven Lab: Turning Uncertainty into a Design Tool for AI-Engineered Molecules appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-10 12:00

Last year, the family of an 11-year-old autistic child that ProPublica and WPLN featured won a $100,000 settlement against a Chattanooga, Tennessee, public charter school. The family argued in a federal lawsuit that the school wrongly reported the child, above, to the police. Andrea Morales for ProPublica

Tennessee lawmakers passed legislation this week to fix the state’s controversial threats of mass violence law, which had resulted in children being charged with felonies over jokes and misunderstandings.

Gov. Bill Lee is expected to sign the bill, which will require that school officials only report student threats to police if a threat is “credible,” meaning reasonably expected to be carried out. Previously, a school administrator who failed to report any threat of mass violence could be charged with a misdemeanor.

The change comes after pressure from advocates and an investigation by ProPublica and WPLN. Many of the children charged had disabilities and were students of color. One of the youngest children charged with a felony last year was 6.

In one case ProPublica and WPLN investigated, an autistic teenager with an intellectual disability told his teacher that his backpack would blow up if anyone touched it. Police only found a stuffed bunny inside, but they arrested and charged him with making a threat of mass violence. That child’s mother is now suing the school district; the case is ongoing.

Another family ProPublica and WPLN wrote about later won a $100,000 settlement against a Chattanooga public charter school; family members argued in a federal lawsuit that the school wrongly reported their 11-year-old autistic child to the police.

Multiple parents also filed a lawsuit against Williamson County Schools, outside of Nashville, claiming their children were wrongly suspended and arrested after being accused of making threats of mass violence at school. The school board disputed the claims in court records and moved to dismiss the lawsuit. In an initial ruling, the judge said the families had a “plausible claim” and allowed the case to move forward.

Sen. Ferrell Haile, who co-authored this year’s bill, said during a late March committee hearing that he hoped it would prevent students with disabilities from being needlessly arrested for statements “they have no ability to carry out.”

He said he was inspired by the story of a fifth grader with a disability in his district who made a statement out of frustration one day at school. The school police officer told the family he didn’t want to arrest the child but the law required him to, whether or not the threat was credible. His superiors charged the child with a felony.

“In some counties, it has become a standard practice to charge every threat even if it has been deemed not credible,” Haile said at the hearing.

Haile’s current stance is a departure from his prior position and those of most other Tennessee Republicans, who refused to back similar language as recently as last winter. In fact, in 2025, Haile proposed a bill that would extend the felony threats law to more locations, including child care agencies, preschools and churches.

When a Democratic colleague asked him during a hearing to consider only applying the felony charge to people who intended to carry out the threats, Haile said no. Police and district attorneys — not school principals or counselors — should be responsible for determining whether a threat was credible, he said last year.

Haile did not respond to a request for comment.

Advocates are applauding the recent change to the law but warn that it isn’t a panacea. Tennessee law still does not require police to consider whether a threat is credible before charging or arresting youth.

“This is not a total solution to threats of mass violence,” said Zoe Jamail, an advocate for children with the nonprofit Raphah Institute. “It is a huge step forward in terms of signifying an intent by the legislature that noncredible threats shouldn’t be prosecuted.”

The post Tennessee Lawmakers Pass Fix to School Threats Law After Kids Were Arrested for Jokes and Misunderstandings appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-04-13 12:04
2026-04-10 10:02

Trump has an incentive to strike a deal with Iran, as midterms approach. But at what cost? Expert comment jon.wallace

Foreign policy is a low priority for US voters. But a rushed deal could impact the president’s domestic support in November’s midterm elections.

President Donald Trump speaks about the conflict in Iran at the White House on 6 April 2026.

After days of escalating rhetoric, the ceasefire announced on 7 April pulls the US and Iran back from grave danger and offers a window to assess the appetite for a more durable settlement. 

A deal offers the Trump administration a politically appealing off-ramp. Washington’s efforts to present its limited tactical battlefield gains as strategic successes to a sceptical American public hint at a desire to deescalate.  

Ending the war would certainly serve the president’s domestic agenda. November midterm elections are fast approaching, and renewed, prolonged fighting risks greater damage to the US economy – always the top American voter priority over foreign policy concerns.

There is a danger now that Washington’s desire to reach agreement swiftly risks creating a bad deal for US national security – or at worst, as President Trump described the JPCOA in 2018, a ‘horrible one-sided deal that should have never, ever been made’.  

Deal or no deal, the path ahead is fraught, with fewer options for the US than at the war’s outset and new security and economic risks to confront.

Has the US achieved its war aims? Not really.  

By most measures, the US has not yet succeeded in prosecuting its shifting war aims. The Pentagon claimed destruction of 90 per cent of Iran’s naval fleet and 80 per cent of its air defences. That is an impressive feat across vast territory and against a deeply entrenched military command. US forces also pulled off a complex, daring rescue of two airmen shot down over Iranian territory. But these accomplishments have not neatly translated into tangible strategic gains. 

Though degraded, Iran still has the capability to launch ballistic missiles. Though weakened, Iran’s regional proxies can still operate with lethal effect. Its nuclear capabilities endure, in the form of 970 pounds of highly enriched uranium. And the war has likely only accelerated Tehran’s ambitions for a nuclear deterrent.  

Perhaps most significantly, the regime is still standing: wounded but emboldened, despite a successful campaign to remove most of its senior leadership. That leaves the US and the world confronted by a potentially more hard-line Iranian leadership exercising uniliteral control over the Strait of Hormuz. 

Therefore, while the US-Israeli military campaign has undoubtedly set back some of Iran’s offensive capabilities, it has concurrently enabled a new one in the Strait and deepened the regime’s resolve. US deterrence through threat of force no longer packs the punch it did before the war. 

Will a lack of strategic success hurt Trump at home? Not among his base. 

A majority of Americans oppose Trump’s actions in Iran. Democrats condemn the operation almost categorically, independents strongly disapprove, and non-MAGA Republicans are divided.  

But MAGA supporters remain bullish, prioritizing loyalty to Trump’s agenda over concerns of US military overreach. And Republicans in Congress continue to give Trump wide latitude on the war.  

Criticism from the right has been limited to disaffected MAGA supporters, including former Member of Congress Marjorie Taylor Green, media commentator Tucker Carlson, and Senate moderates like Alaska Senator Lisa Murkowski. In the short term, therefore, Trump’s domination of his party remains intact. The president may once again weather a political firestorm and gear up to quickly spark the next.

The reckoning is more likely to come at the November midterms. 

As the world’s largest oil producer, the US is better insulated from the war’s economic shock than most. But it is not immune to the effects of the conflict. Rising gas prices and concerns about inflation are the two most visible economic consequences of the war today. And analysts believe further delayed financial costs are coming, particularly given the massive damage to oil and gas infrastructure across the Gulf.  

Even in a ‘deal’ scenario, elevated costs at the pump and in the grocery aisles could well be stickier than many Americans anticipate, handing Democrats ready attack lines in the months ahead on the issue that matters most to American voters: the economy. 

In a ‘no deal’ scenario, the president’s position will be more exposed, as Americans may find commercial goods, produce and holidays increasingly unaffordable, with ships idling in the Gulf, gas prices rising, and global crop yields hit by fertilizer scarcity. 

Financial markets may also be less resilient to additional geopolitical shocks, a metric the Trump administration watches closely. Such a scenario would present a real threat to Republican midterm hopes and potentially even begin to erode Trump’s extremely loyal MAGA base. 

That context will inform any push by the Trump administration toward a deal.

Will the US and Iran strike a deal? Only if both see it as politically advantageous.  

In Washington, senior officials are now weighing whether the political and economic advantages to maintaining the shaky ceasefire – or at least seeking a series of halting extensions – supersede the value of renewed fighting.  

Current US and Iranian negotiation positions are maximalist, long-standing wish-lists that will not be resolved in the next two weeks. None can be achieved solely through an extended US bombing campaign or by the closing of the Strait of Hormuz.  

If US negotiators arrive in Pakistan without a hierarchy of priorities…the talks will collapse before they have begun.  

The detail of any negotiations with Iran matters here. It is clear what a bad deal looks like in Trump’s eyes, because he spelled out his criticisms when withdrawing from the JCPOA in 2018: too few limits placed on Iran’s nuclear programme in exchange for lifting of sanctions; massive new revenue flowing to the regime; insufficient mechanisms to detect and punish cheating on enrichment levels; failure to address Iran’s ballistic missile programme; and silence on the Islamic Republic’s support for terrorism.

If the US negotiators arrive in Pakistan without a hierarchy of priorities among this wish-list, the talks will collapse before they have begun.  

Realistically, a bad deal for the US includes terms that lift sanctions without ensuring meaningful and verifiable constraints on Iran’s nuclear programme, whether by securing the highly enriched uranium or limiting future enrichment.  

Addressing the nuclear programme will be more challenging than ever, when dealing with an even harder line regime. The US may have to put more concessions on the table to reach agreement – possibly beyond the sanctions and tariff relief Trump has already promised.   

The haste of the talks, and the absence of key international partners who would need to buy into any verification arrangement, make an even minimally credible deal hard to envision. The US and Iran could bring a draft arrangement to the UN Security Council for approval, as Trump did for Gaza. But few will want to invest the resources to enforce the arrangement if doubts remain about the parties’ willingness to adhere to its terms.  

Granting Iran the costly concessions it seeks – whether control over Hormuz, withdrawal of US forces from the region, an end to attacks on Iranian proxies, or the release of frozen Iranian assets – risk imperilling US national security in the longer term. 

More immediately, any significant concession would hand Democrats a ready hand to play in November. 

2026-04-13 16:04
2026-04-10 07:56

Why Should Delaware Care?
Last month, Delaware introduced legislation meant to bolster the state’s primary health care infrastructure and keep patients healthier on the front end. But within that bill are provisions that would cap how much providers, including the state’s powerful and profitable, health systems can charge for care. 

As Delaware’s hospital systems claim a primary care reform bill would spell armageddon for their revenues, a state on the West Coast that implemented similar measures in 2017 said it realized massive savings while hospitals only saw minor reductions in revenue. 

Oregon applied regulations on its hospitals in a manner similar to proposed legislation in Delaware that would cap how much providers can charge for care at 250% of what the federal government pays providers through Medicare. Oregon set its own cap even lower, at 200% of Medicare’s payout — which typically underpays providers. 

Like Delaware’s Senate Bill 1, Oregon’s law focuses on its state employee health plan in an effort to bring down costs. Within a couple years, Oregon officials said the provisions saved the state more than $112 million. 

In Delaware, the bill would “conservatively” save the state more than $280 million over the first five years of implementation, the Department of Insurance said in a press release after announcing the bill.

But Delaware’s proposal faces a powerful opposition from the state’s hospital systems that have a history of challenging unfavorable regulations in court, securing a victory earlier this year in a watered down oversight board meant to rein in hospital spending. 

Impacts in Oregon

As Delaware lawmakers weigh the merits of SB 1, which they introduced last month, Oregon’s model offers a similar framework. 

Where Delaware and Oregon differ in their proposals is in their exemptions. Oregon’s price caps exempted rural hospitals and providers that serve primarily Medicare patients. Additionally, Delaware’s bill would implement investments for primary care providers — an effort to reward practices that keep patients healthy and away from costly emergency room visits. 

Ali Hassoun, the director of Oregon’s Public Employees Benefit Board, said in an email price caps saved the state more than $112 million in 2021.

Since its price cap legislation passed in 2017, he said one hospital had closed and another applied for a “critical access designation” to receive larger reimbursements from Medicare. 

But Hassoun said neither of those hospitals were subject to the state’s price cap regulations, and some are still struggling to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic. Additionally, upcoming cuts to Medicaid and Medicare are slated to have an impact on hospital budgets, he said. 

Hassoun also pointed to a research paper that said changes made by Oregon “didn’t meaningfully change hospital revenues or operations during its first two years.” 

Roz Murray is one of the authors of that paper and an assistant professor of health services, policy and practice at Brown University. Murray also testified at a hearing in March as one of the Delaware Department of Insurance’s experts on the bill. 

Murray said the ratio of Oregon state employees covered under its state health plan is around 15%, which is close to Delaware. And like Oregon, Delaware does not have the power to regulate payment caps for those covered under private insurance plans. 

Roz Murray testifies before a Delaware General Assembly committee about proposed primary health care reforms. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY NICK STONESIFER

She also said Delaware’s proposal would include some additional commercial plans regulated by the state’s insurance department like the Affordable Care Act and fully insured plans. 

In Murray’s paper, published in 2025 she and her team did not observe any cuts to staff or reductions in payments to physicians. The paper also said the program’s “broader impact” on health care employment was unknown. 

But should nothing change, the paper said the revenue losses would simply spell minor reductions in hospital budgets. 

Sabrina Corlette, founder and co-director of the Center on Health Insurance Reforms at Georgetown University, said Oregon and other states implemented health care price caps, known as reference based pricing laws, in reaction to a “breakdown of the free market.” 

She said as hospitals have consolidated and strengthened their foothold in their respective regions, they have been able to demand higher reimbursements from insurers. She said that oftentimes, those elevated costs do not actually reflect the cost of care.

Corlette said that passing laws like SB 1 is a “political balancing act” for legislators who have to weigh the impact on hospitals against the already existing cost burdens on patients. 

Still, she said the revenue reductions do not always translate to job losses. 

“Now it is absolutely true, though, that if you cut revenue to hospitals, they will have to tighten their belts,” Corlette said. “I don’t think it necessarily translates to, ‘Oh, we have to lay people off.’”

What’s in Delaware’s bill?

Senate Bill 1 is poised to be one the most consequential health care bills in recent memory, if passed in its current form. 

One provision in the bill would introduce reference-based pricing to medical services covered under both insurance for state employees and some commercial plans regulated by the Department of Insurance. Essentially, this would limit the amount of money a provider could be reimbursed by insurers, tying that amount to a predetermined benchmark. 

Under Delaware’s proposal, that benchmark would cap reimbursement rates at 250% of what the federal government pays providers through Medicare. 

For services covered under the state’s health plan that do not have a Medicare rate to compare to, like pediatrics, the state would be able to set those rates through the State Employees Benefits Committee.

By taking aim at how high Delaware health care providers can negotiate their prices with insurers in addition to making those insurers spend 11.5% of their medical costs on primary care, the state hopes to better compensate providers proactively working to improve Delawareans’ health outcomes.

Insurance Commissioner Trinidad Navarro said in an email those investments would apply to 45% of the state’s commercial insurance market with the addition of the state health plan and Medicaid.

Delaware Insurance Commissioner Trinidad Navarro has said the new limits could simplify health care pricing that varies widely. | PHOTO COURTESY OF INSURANCE COMMISSIONER’S OFFICE

In a March interview with Spotlight Delaware, Navarro said the bill would make the state more competitive for private practice and rural physicians. 

When it comes to the regulation of rate-setting for some procedures covered under both state and private plans, Navarro said pricing is typically “all over the place” and that some hospitals and providers are reimbursed at much higher rates than others. 

With these proposed regulations, Navarro said the state is trying to “level the playing field and spread the wealth” among providers.

Brian Frazee, of the Delaware Healthcare Association, pointed to that Medicare benchmark, saying it was a provision lawmakers tried, and failed, to introduce in previous legislation that led to a year-and-a-half long lawsuit between the state and Delaware’s largest hospital system. 

Senate Bill 1 also includes language that would exempt hospitals and other health care providers from the 250% requirement if they use a “global budget model” that is approved by the state insurance department. 

Global budget models set annual fixed prices for inpatient and outpatient procedures, meaning hospitals are paid on the front end to deliver services at a cost set by their previous Medicare and Medicaid reimbursements from previous years. 

In neighboring Maryland, the state implemented global budgeting for all of its acute care hospitals in 2014, according to a report from Mathematica.

The post As Delaware debates primary care reform, a similar Oregon law offers insight  appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-04-14 20:04
2026-04-10 07:21

How to keep the Strait of Hormuz open in the long term Expert comment jon.wallace

Iran will be reluctant to give up the leverage it has gained in the Strait. But options exist to try and change its perspective.

Two oil tankers pass through the Strait of Hormuz

On 7 April the United States and Iran announced a ceasefire, including the re-opening of the Strait of Hormuz. The Strait has been closed since 2 March following the outbreak of the conflict between the US, Israel, and Iran. 

Since the late 1980s, the Strait has enjoyed uninterrupted traffic, with no countries charging fees for transit. There have been risks to shipping in that period, from the 1990 Gulf War to threats from Iran in the mid-2010s. But shipping continued through the Strait, albeit with higher insurance costs.

But over the past month, Iran has laid sea mines, bombed ships, and charged fees for transit in order to assert its control over this vital waterway. As part of its 10-point ceasefire plan, Tehran has demanded that its control over Hormuz should continue. 

According to Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, passage through the Strait will be allowed during the two-week ceasefire, under management by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). After that, Iran and Oman will charge fees on ship transit. 

Over the past month, various efforts have been made to secure shipping through the Strait. From 18-19 March, the International Maritime Organization called for a ‘safe passage framework’ to facilitate the evacuation of merchant ships and crew trapped in the Gulf by the Strait closure. 

On 2 April, the UK held talks with over 40 countries to discuss options to press Iran to re-open the Strait. A few days later, the United Nations Security Council voted on a resolution from Bahrain and Gulf Cooperation Council countries about using protective measures to re-open the Strait. The resolution ultimately failed.  

Meanwhile, very few ships have transited the Strait since the ceasefire was announced. As such, the ceasefire has only created more uncertainty about transit through the Strait, further deterring commercial shipping. 

The question remains: how can the Strait be re-opened safely and kept open for the future? It is a complex challenge, interconnected with negotiation with the US. But options exist that could help influence Tehran’s thinking.

Iran’s role

Effective control of the Strait of Hormuz gives Iran an asymmetric advantage that helps shield it from what it views as an existential threat from US and Israeli strikes – and generates significant funds for a country still under sanctions and badly damaged by the war. Iran will not easily give up this leverage. 

However, this is not a sustainable long-term strategy for the world – or for Tehran. Iran’s economy is structurally dependent on oil exports, and it imports industrial goods and food through the Strait. Closing the Strait constrains its own revenue stream and undercuts its maritime logistics industry. 

Diplomats will need to consider how to shift Tehran’s perception so that the normal operation of the Strait becomes a preferable option. 

As such, Iran must be a party to any agreement over the Strait. Mediators should therefore consider options that are palatable to the regime. This does not mean accepting Iran’s terms about maintaining permanent control over the Strait. But it does require making Iran a beneficiary in the process of re-opening. Realistically this may require structured sanctions relief and joint management of the Strait.

Already the Trump administration has demonstrated a willingness to compromise: On 20 March, the US Treasury lifted sanctions on Iranian oil already at sea. 

And, when asked about Iran’s plans to charge fees for ship transit, Trump said he is considering a ‘joint venture’ with Tehran to set up tolls in the Strait of Hormuz. 

Likewise, any naval convoys designed to escort ships through the region would have to include Iran. The Strait cannot be opened by force. Escorts could pair limited Iranian exports with other commercial ships. Joint transits would deter Iranian attack, because they would include Iranian goods as well. Whether through sanctions relief or not, Iranian exports are still transiting through Hormuz to the exclusion of nearly everyone else. 

At present, Iran’s toll-like system requires ships to enter Iranian waters to pass an IRCG verification process. As a confidence-building measure, verification for transit could be put in place – not from Iran, but perhaps with Iran.

This could come in the form of multilateral management or in partnership with countries that can provide complementary escorts and security guarantees. It seems that Oman may be considering such a partnership with Iran over the Strait. This could be expanded to include more regional security partners. 

Region-specific protocols

The Gulf lacks comprehensive maritime security frameworks and protocols. Iran, for example, is not a party to the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Seas (UNCLOS). And the UAE, Bahrain, Iran, and others are not signatories on the 1979 Convention on Maritime Search and Rescue. 

Furthermore, the Gulf still faces maritime boundary disputes that preclude the establishment of such legal frameworks. As a result, international law is unevenly applied and enforced. So long as that remains the case, it will be harder to rebuild confidence in Gulf shipping.

Region-specific provisions are needed for basic maritime coordination between littoral states. This could include the establishment of search and rescue zones, traffic management schemes, regional information fusion centres, and law enforcement cooperation to counter piracy and illegal fishing. 

In the Gulf, the Djibouti Code of Conduct (DCoC) for East Africa offers a useful model to consider. The DCoC was adopted in 2009 by 20 countries including Djibouti, Somalia, Saudi Arabia, and Yemen to strengthen cooperation against piracy. 

The Code establishes a framework for information sharing, law enforcement, and maritime security operations focused on the Western Indian Ocean and Gulf of Aden. In 2017, the Code was revised to include broader maritime security issues like narcotics trafficking and illegal fishing. 

Such longer-term agreements offer mechanisms to coordinate ship interdictions, facilitate information exchange, develop common threat perceptions, and harmonize legal processes. In an era of grey zone warfare, this may be best path forward.

Multi-national coordination

Previous chokepoint agreements like the Black Sea Grain Deal or the Montreux Convention regarding the Regime of the Straits have been suggested as models for how to protect shipping in the Strait of Hormuz. 

But these example agreements won’t work in the Gulf. There is no country like Turkey that has the geography, politics, or capabilities to unilaterally guarantee movement through the Strait. 

Less recognized practices like the Malacca Straits Patrol (MSP) between Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, and Thailand offer more realistic models for Hormuz.

Less recognized practices like the Malacca Straits Patrol (MSP) between Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, and Thailand offer more realistic models for Hormuz. MSP was launched in 2004 to enhance security in the Malacca Strait and bolster existing bilateral arrangements. 

Participating navies conducted coordinated sea patrols and practiced information sharing between ships and naval operation centres. As a result of its success, Lloyd’s Joint War Risk Committee dropped the classification of the Malacca Strait as a ‘war risk area’ in 2006. 

Under the International Maritime Organization, Indonesia, Singapore, and Malaysia also established the Malacca Traffic Separation Scheme (TSS) and STRAITREP system to enhance safety of navigation in the Malacca Strait and the region. The TSS and MSP are both viable models for future traffic monitoring and verification process in the Gulf region. 

2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-09 13:00

A road runs through a rural subdivision with houses and telephone poles and lines running alongside it. A lone black tire streak marks the road.
The Colony Ridge development, in the far north Houston suburbs, targeted Hispanic applicants with high-interest loans, according to a lawsuit the government has proposed to settle. Lexi Parra for ProPublica and The Texas Tribune

In December 2023, the U.S. Justice Department sued a Texas land developer it accused of duping tens of thousands of Hispanic residents into predatory mortgages, a landmark case for the Biden administration.

Colony Ridge, which sold plots in massive subdivisions north of Houston, had become a “one-stop shop for discriminatory lending,” Kristen Clarke, assistant attorney general for civil rights, said at a news conference announcing the lawsuit. The developer targeted Hispanic applicants through false advertising and persuaded them to take out high-interest loans that many could not afford, then benefited when it foreclosed on their properties, the lawsuit alleged.

“Our goal at the end of the day is to ensure that victims are compensated for their loss,” Clarke declared.

Three years later, the Trump administration and Colony Ridge are on the verge of resolving the case. But the $68 million proposed settlement provides no money for victims of the alleged scheme. Instead, it sets aside $20 million for policing and immigration enforcement — a provision that may be used to target the very people who were victimized by the developer, according to former government officials who worked on such cases.

“I’ve never seen a settlement like this, with a complete misalignment between what you’re settling and what the resolution is,” said Elena Babinecz, who led fair lending investigations at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau for 12 years under the Obama, Trump and Biden administrations, before leaving in October.

“It’s a slap in the face to the individuals that were harmed; that the Justice Department acknowledges were harmed,” said Babinecz, who was at the bureau when it joined the Justice Department in filing suit against Colony Ridge. “It’s a complete misjustice, and it’s not at all why these civil rights laws were passed.”

A court document outlining a proposed settlement agreement with a highlighted line that reads, “(1) general local law enforcement, including, primarily, funding additional delegated immigration enforcement authority from the federal government to the Liberty County Sheriff’s Office and Liberty County Constable offices.”
The Justice Department’s proposed settlement in the Colony Ridge case sets aside $20 million for policing and immigration enforcement but no money for victims of the alleged scheme. U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas. Highlighted by ProPublica and The Texas Tribune.

Seven other attorneys and investigators who formerly enforced the federal government’s lending and housing civil rights laws also told ProPublica and The Texas Tribune that they were stunned by the agreement, which a U.S. district judge must still approve. Indeed, Colony Ridge is the largest Justice Department case since at least 2018 in which the settlement includes no monetary compensation for victims. The judge has scheduled a hearing on Friday over the proposal.

A coalition of fair housing and civil rights groups has urged the court to reject the settlement, arguing the lawsuit is the only realistic prospect for many consumers to get recompense because they cannot afford private attorneys.

The Justice Department had built a case against Colony Ridge with “stark and overwhelming evidence,” Clarke told the news organizations. Prosecutors said Colony Ridge repeatedly misled consumers about the condition of lots they purchased, forcing them to spend hundreds or thousands on drainage improvements and utility connections they hadn’t known the land needed. This contributed to consumers defaulting on high-interest loans, according to the lawsuit. Colony Ridge then benefited from the improvements made to the land it foreclosed on and resold the lots at higher prices.

In the end, tens of thousands of victims were exploited through the developer’s predatory practices in a span of eight years, the government argued. Colony Ridge repossessed more than 15,000 lots, many owned by immigrants, a 2023 investigation by the Houston Landing found.

Of the 183 housing and civil enforcement Justice Department settlements since 2018, only 6% did not include money for victims. Each of those cases was smaller in scope than Colony Ridge. They included a suburban Maryland car dealership accused of racial discrimination in loan offers over a seven-month period and a California landlord who allegedly refused to provide handicapped parking to one tenant.

None of the settlements — except for Colony Ridge — includes funding for police or immigration enforcement.

As federal investigators built a case around how Colony Ridge had treated its largely immigrant customers, conservative media and politicians aligned with Trump — who had made immigration enforcement a cornerstone of his campaign — did not focus on how consumers had been harmed. They instead accused the development of being a haven for immigrants.

They claimed, without providing evidence, that the development was a base for Mexican drug cartels and a “no-go” zone for police. Local law enforcement disputed the assertions, saying that violent crime there was no different from other neighborhoods in and around Houston. State legislative panels convened to investigate the allegations also fizzled out after they were unable to substantiate such claims.

Neither the federal government nor a lawsuit filed by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton months later raised public safety concerns or a need for more policing or immigration enforcement.

The Justice Department declined to comment and did not respond to the concerns raised by former employees and people involved in the case. Paxton’s office did not respond to multiple emails. But while announcing the settlement in February, Harmeet K. Dhillon, who leads the department’s Civil Rights Division, argued that Colony Ridge had encouraged illegal immigration by targeting Hispanic consumers with the bait of affordable homeownership. “This DOJ will go after all lenders, financiers, and land developers who participate in schemes which ultimately encourage illegal immigration,” she said. In his own news release about the settlement, which would also resolve the Texas suit, Paxton focused primarily on funding set aside for immigration enforcement. “Under my watch, Texas will never be a sanctuary for illegals,” he said.

The focus on immigration makes the lives of those who were harmed more difficult, said Catherine Bendor, a manager in the Justice Department’s Housing and Civil Enforcement Section for eight years until 2024.

“Even if they’re citizens, they’ll likely be hassled by immigration agents who target people based on appearance or accent,” she said.

John Harris, Colony Ridge’s CEO, declined to be interviewed. The settlement does not include an admission of wrongdoing. He has long maintained that his company, which started in 2011 and offered mortgages for as little as a 1% down payment, has not preyed on its customers.

The financing terms helped the development grow rapidly, albeit inconsistently, with neat modular homes, trailers and abandoned or vacant lots across more than 33,000 acres. Matt Rascon, a spokesperson for Colony Ridge, said the company “found success offering a path to land ownership through flexible financing options with no credit checks.” His comments echoed the company’s argument in court that it created a path to homeownership for thousands of lower-income consumers whom risk-averse banks reject.

Offering loans when others wouldn’t is the most common argument predatory lenders make to justify their practices, said Nathalie Martin, a University of New Mexico law professor who has studied high-cost loans.

“You can see from this situation, it doesn’t help people to get them into loans that are more costly than they need to be,” Martin said.

Former federal officials and Colony Ridge property owners acknowledge that the settlement includes some provisions to protect consumers in the future. It would require Colony Ridge to adopt stricter lending standards and allow buyers to back out of purchases without penalty within two months. The developer would also make $48 million in infrastructure upgrades and provide transparent, bilingual marketing and communication.

Another provision bars Colony Ridge from developing new lots to sell for three years. But the agreement exempts 674 acres that the developer has already subdivided.

The concessions are helpful but inadequate because they miss a clear opportunity to help victims recover money they lost, which is a key reason such cases are filed, said Jon Seward, who was principal deputy chief for the Justice Department when he left in May 2023 after 17 years in its Housing and Civil Enforcement Section.

A woman with white hair, wearing a blue-checkered collared shirt over a white T-shirt, stares with a thin smile.
Maria Acevedo said Colony Ridge foreclosed on her property in 2021 even though she was making payments. Lexi Parra for ProPublica and The Texas Tribune

One such victim was Maria Acevedo, who describes herself as a lifelong Republican and U.S. citizen who said she voted for Trump three times.

A former land developer herself, Acevedo took out a high-interest $40,000 loan in 2018 to buy a half-acre of land where she planned to retire. She then spent an additional $60,000 on surveying, engineering and adding dirt to protect against flooding.

Acevedo said she planned to refinance her loan but learned that she couldn’t because the property had a lien from a previous owner. Colony Ridge foreclosed on the property three years later, even though Acevedo said she was making payments. Colony Ridge did not comment on Acevedo’s case or those of other individuals in this story. The foreclosure ruined her retirement plans, Acevedo said, adding that the challenges strained her marriage and eventually led to divorce.

She considered finding a lawyer to sue. But she said she decided to “become a team player” and serve as a government witness after federal investigators pledged to help victims like her recover what they lost.

Now, Acevedo said, she feels betrayed by a settlement that ignores Hispanic consumers like her.

“I know we were targeted. A blind man could see it,” Acevedo said. 

She added that the lawsuit was “going smooth, but once the Trump administration came in and took it over, it changed.”

Even if she could now find a lawyer, her window to file a lawsuit has expired because state and federal laws require they be brought within five years.

Since returning to office, the Trump administration has abandoned an $80 million settlement with Navy Federal Credit Union over illegal overdraft fees, which allowed the bank to continue operating without penalty, and halted dozens of investigations, including a case accusing a major Pennsylvania lender of defrauding student borrowers. Both defendants have denied wrongdoing.

The Trump administration and White House budget director Russell Vought have taken aim at the CFPB, which was formed to protect consumers from getting ripped off by businesses. For Vought, the agency was an example of government overreach. It was also one of the first targets for Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency. In April, in response to a lawsuit by bureau employees over the CFPB’s attempt to lay off 90% of its staff, the administration offered a compromise proposal: slashing two-thirds.

The White House and Vought’s office declined to comment, but the administration has argued the agency was needlessly aggressive and wasteful.

The shift away from pursuing consumer protection cases gives the impression that the federal government is no longer serious about protecting regular people from unscrupulous businesses,  former Justice Department and CFPB employees said.

Investigators spent months gathering stories and building trust with residents who were wary of cooperating, said Johnathan Smith, a former deputy assistant attorney general for civil rights during the Biden administration, who visited the development before the lawsuit. The team worked to ensure that the community “believed something was going to be different because the Justice Department got involved.”

“It’s just heartbreaking how the settlement failed to meet that mark,” he said.

SuEllen Sanchez and her sister, Keilah Sanchez, were among those who shared their stories with investigators, expecting the government would help them reclaim what they lost. They also provided investigators with hundreds of records from neighbors who said they’d been scammed.

A U.S. citizen born in Puerto Rico, SuEllen Sanchez had purchased five lots in Colony Ridge in 2020. She saw it as a way to invest money she’d earned as an aesthetician and perhaps open a business there.

Sanchez said the advertisements and sales representatives for Colony Ridge led her to believe the lots would be ready to build on. They weren’t. Clearing the land for development, acquiring permits and connecting utilities cost her more than $10,000. Colony Ridge foreclosed on one of the lots in 2021, according to Sanchez, who disputes the developer’s claims that she had missed loan payments.

Sanchez wondered if others also believed they’d been scammed. That’s when she and her sister, a web developer who also had purchased Colony Ridge properties, launched a website asking residents to share their experiences with the developer.

Sanchez said she was dismayed that all of their efforts resulted in the proposed settlement.

“These were consumer-based lawsuits, so you would think they’d actually do something for consumers with everything that they stipulated that this company did wrong,” Sanchez said. “There’s no way somebody who has all these violations should still be operating.”

Acevedo feels the same way, and she wants the judge to know it as he mulls the settlement. She doesn’t have a lawyer, but after the Justice Department proposed it, she filed a legal brief in the case demanding compensation as a victim. She offered to testify and present evidence.

“I want the court to hear me directly,” she wrote to Judge Alfred H. Bennett. “I am willing to swear to my experience.”

On Friday, she plans to drive 30 miles to Courtroom 9A in the Houston federal building for the settlement hearing, hoping for the judge to grant her request to be heard.

The post “A Slap in the Face”: Trump’s DOJ Plans to Settle Predatory Lending Case Without Compensating Victims appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-09 05:30

An animation in which a large hand drops people into a building, with a logo that reads “arc.” Each time a person falls into the top of the building, a $100 bill slides out from the bottom.
Dongyan Xu for ProPublica

Renault Shirley remembers the first time he was asked to falsify billing reports for Kentucky’s largest drug rehab center.

He had just returned from a church service in 2023 where the company’s founder and owner, a charismatic Christian from Eastern Kentucky, preached about the value of getting sober to hundreds of clients and staff at Addiction Recovery Care.

Shirley, 58, who led recovery group discussions at ARC, said one of his supervisors told him to submit an invoice for the day’s canceled treatment sessions. With it, Shirley said, he was told to fabricate the details of a group discussion, including quotations from clients, as if they had attended a meeting.

“It was fraud,” Shirley told the Lexington Herald-Leader and ProPublica, adding that he refused. But he said he saw others do it often when they gathered to enter their reports into the billing system.

Shirley and ARC were part of a new economy, a boom fueled by misery and addiction and easy money from government officials desperate to curtail the opioid crisis that was devastating rural America. Kentucky’s payouts for drug treatment became so lucrative that companies bused in clients from other states to fill their treatment centers.

ARC reigned above them all, providing more than two-thirds of all treatment beds in Kentucky at its peak in 2024. Between 2019 and 2024 ARC billed the state $1.7 billion, of which it was paid more than $377 million in state Medicaid money for addiction treatment services.

During those years ARC won praise for its programs. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services lauded ARC as a model, and Newsweek named the company one of the best addiction treatment providers in the country. Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear called its founder “an essential partner in our fight against addiction.”

But ARC’s growth was fueled in part by billing practices that federal prosecutors and former employees now allege may have amounted to fraud. FBI investigators were alerted to the case through a whistleblower suit filed in 2023, which alleged ARC fraudulently billed Medicaid for a therapeutic service called psychoeducation. The FBI has asked those who “believe you were victimized by ARC” to fill out a tip form. That investigation is ongoing, according to the FBI.

ProPublica and the Herald-Leader interviewed six people affiliated with the company over the last six years, including former staff members, clients and some who came for treatment and were later hired on. They shared publicly for the first time how they came to ARC seeking help for addiction but became reluctant participants in the company’s alleged billing scheme. Two of them have said they made similar statements to federal investigators.

Part of the fraud, three of them said, was committed at the explicit urging of supervisors who told them they were under pressure to meet billing targets set by ARC leaders — a circumstance exacerbated by a persistent lack of qualified staff, they said.

Those who talked to the news organizations did not keep contemporaneous notes and do not have access to company emails that could support their claims because they no longer work for ARC. But their accounts are corroborated by other clients and referred to in two key documents.

The first was a draft settlement agreement between ARC, the state of Kentucky and the Department of Justice filed by lawyers suing ARC in January as evidence in an unrelated civil suit. That suit, which is pending, alleges that ARC failed to repay at least $8 million it borrowed from two loan companies to pay the DOJ settlement. ARC denied it failed to pay the company.

The draft DOJ settlement document alleges that ARC knowingly falsified some medical records from 2018 to the start of 2024 in order to collect $16 million for group meetings like Shirley described. It allegedly collected millions more by using low-level staff to bill the state for services that under the law must be delivered by a doctor or licensed therapist.

The second document was a 2025 investigative report by the Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family Services that has yet to be released but was obtained by ProPublica and the Herald-Leader. That report said state investigators found that ARC had violated so many regulatory standards, lack of staff chief among them, that the conditions posed “an immediate danger to client health, safety and welfare.”

In response to questions for this story, ARC said it “voluntarily disclosed” billing errors to state and federal authorities after the company hired an outside agency to audit its billing practices. The draft settlement with the DOJ, the company said, was not supposed to be made public and therefore it could not comment. The draft settlement was unsigned.

“ARC has never knowingly or fraudulently billed Medicaid for services, and there is no evidence that the organization encouraged employees to falsify group notes for billing purposes,” ARC’s Vice President of Marketing Vanessa Keeton wrote in a March 23 email in response to written questions about the company’s billing practices and employee allegations.

She said that the company could not comment on staff, but that it “maintains a strict, zero-tolerance policy for fraud and non-compliant billing practices.” Keeton added that “any claims from clients or Peer Support Specialists about whether a specific service was billed are based on assumptions and do not accurately reflect actual billing practices.”

Nearly all of the people interviewed for this story credit ARC with playing a key role in their sobriety. But most also said they felt betrayed by an organization that publicly touted a Christian message and a commitment to helping others while internally prioritizing money over the well-being of their clients and staff.

Called by God

In late 2008, ARC owner Tim Robinson was working as an assistant county attorney near Ashland when he had an epiphany. An evangelical Christian who’d recently gotten sober from alcoholism, Robinson has said God told him to start a “health care ministry” to help his neighbors in the mountains and hollows of Appalachia hit hard by the opioid crisis. There were few treatment centers in the state at the time.

Robinson in 2010 opened the first ARC center in Louisa, a small town on the West Virginia border, 30 miles from his hometown in Martin County. ARC steadily grew across Eastern Kentucky. In 2015, the company was the state’s first drug treatment provider to accept Medicaid patients, which dramatically increased the number of available clients. The following year, ARC unveiled its yearlong “crisis-to-career” program, equal parts drug treatment and job training that ultimately helped clients become staff at ARC.

But it was during the COVID-19 pandemic that ARC exploded in size, thanks in large part to changes to billing rules put in place by the governor. As the global health crisis unfolded, Robinson — a well-connected political donor who has given hundreds of thousands to people from both major parties, including Beshear, a Democrat — emailed the governor and said drug treatment centers needed help to stay afloat amid pandemic restrictions.

In March 2020 Beshear signed an executive order that gave companies providing addiction services new latitude: The seven managed care organizations that controlled Medicaid billing in the state would need to allow providers to bill for an expanded menu of services without prior approval. Beshear said last month that order helped the commonwealth make significant and important progress in the fight against addiction.

“Kentucky has lost far too many children of God to overdose related deaths,” he said, citing the recent decline in overdose deaths in the state.

The decision meant companies could easily bill for what are known as peer support services, which are designed to help clients follow a treatment plan; these can be provided by staff who complete a 30-hour training course. ARC encouraged clients like Shirley to take the course and get credentialed as peer support specialists. Then, once they graduated from ARC’s program, many transitioned to staff and provided services they could bill to Medicaid.

The order also allowed easier billing for psychoeducation, a session during which a clinician talks to a patient about their diagnosis and treatment. The broadly defined service, which at the time could be billed for multiple times a week, is usually provided as part of a clinical therapy session, but Kentucky allows it to be billed as a separate service — which state Medicaid experts opposed because it drives up the cost of treatment.

From 2019 to 2024, ARC billed the state over $400 million for psychoeducation and peer support, earning the company more than $125 million, about a quarter of all reimbursements paid to Kentucky providers during that time. The revenue allowed it to open at least four new centers, including the roughly 700-bed Crown Recovery Center on a former college campus in Springfield, and to purchase a shuttered hospital campus in Ashland that ARC now uses for inpatient, outpatient and psychiatric services.

ARC Billed Medicaid for Tens of Millions Annually in Psychoeducation and Peer Support Services in Recent Years

A line graph showing the amount ARC billed for psychoeducation and peer support services between 2019 and 2024. Psychoeducation saw rapid growth, rising from under $9 million to over $85 million by 2024. Peer support services grew as well, from under $9 million to over $37 million.
Source: Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family Services

Psychoeducation soon became ARC’s most lucrative service, accounting for almost half of its reimbursement from Medicaid in 2024. ARC said its billing for the service was in accordance with applicable laws and regulations and followed established billing protocols.

The spike in billing caught the attention of the companies that oversee state Medicaid spending. Liz Stearman, director of behavioral health for Humana, and other Medicaid experts repeatedly warned Kentucky officials that the state’s high spending on lower-level peer support and psychoeducation without the attendant clinical services wasn’t helping people seeking addiction treatment. They said in a letter to the Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family Services that evidence showed clients in the state had more emergency department visits and more admissions and readmissions to hospitals and residential drug treatment facilities.

Stearman reminded lawmakers that Kentucky was one of the few states that allowed the service to be billed separately. Psychoeducation “does not have any national standards of clinical criteria that exist anywhere in the country, and the vast majority of states do not actually cover (it) as a standalone service,” she told a state legislative committee on Dec. 3, 2024. “Unfortunately we’re paying a higher amount of Medicaid dollars for less evidence-based services,” she said.

Beshear’s 2020 order and permission from Kentucky Medicaid to bill psychoeducation as a separate service helped create a new revenue stream for providers.

Still, on the surface the expansion of Robinson’s company was a good thing, giving Kentucky more treatment beds per capita than any other state — a fact Beshear and other elected officials touted. “I remember not too long ago when finding a treatment bed meant driving hours away or sitting on endless waiting lists. That’s all changed,” state Attorney General Russell Coleman said in a 2024 press conference.

By that point, ARC was operating as many as 30 facilities in more than 20 Eastern and Central Kentucky counties. That year Robinson announced ARC would expand into Ohio and West Virginia.

“It Was Just Herding Cattle”

An aerial view of cars driving through a town with one-story buildings. Tree lined hills surround the town.
ARC is headquartered in Louisa, Kentucky, a small town on the West Virginia border. Before widespread facility closures and layoffs in recent years, Louisa housed multiple ARC centers. Ryan C. Hermens/Lexington Herald-Leader

During these years staff members said they were repeatedly asked to falsify bills for nonexistent treatment. ARC said it has since invested significant funds to hire a compliance and auditing team.

The half dozen people who spoke to the Herald-Leader and ProPublica said the company sometimes billed when a gathering did not meet the requirements of a meeting, such as when clients watched movies unrelated to recovery or had informal discussions while traveling in ARC vans. Other times clients played board games in lieu of group meetings, or the gatherings simply didn’t happen but were billed for anyway, three former peer support specialists said.

When Shirley was a client at Crown, ARC’s largest center, he said it was common for a peer support specialist to “sometimes walk in, ask me what I was grateful for. I would write it on a piece of paper, then they would leave.” Shirley said from talking with other staff members that this was a strategy often used to submit bills for group meetings that did not occur.

Odell Hager arrived as a client at ARC in 2015, after a judge ordered him to do so for carrying drugs. He ping-ponged between treatment and jail for the next few years until he landed in 2021 at May Hill, one of ARC’s centers in Louisa.

A man with a beard and tattoos on his hands wearing a baseball cap and sweatshirt, sitting on a chair in a room decorated with small framed photos.
Odell Hager at his home in Lexington, Kentucky. He is a former client and peer support specialist at ARC. He said treatment groups frequently did not discuss recovery and instead watched popular movies. Ryan C. Hermens/Lexington Herald-Leader

During his time there, first as a client and then as a peer support specialist, Hager saw examples of well-run peer support groups but said they were rare.

“Our peer support group was, ‘All right, you all just sit in the living room and watch a movie,’” while group leaders sat in the office on their phones, he said.

Hager, who worked at three ARC centers during the span of nearly a decade, said those kinds of groups that ARC billed for were the standard and forging group notes was common. Hager’s account was corroborated by an ARC client who overlapped with him. Hager said he also relayed his experience to the FBI in an interview.

“In my mind, it was no different than a prison system,” Hager said. “It was just herding cattle: get them in, get them out, get them in, get them out.”

Individual peer support is intended to be a check-in with a client: “How are you doing, are you having thoughts of relapse, are you feeling good right now?” Hager said.

At the end of the check-in, a peer support specialist sent in quotes from the client to ARC’s billing department to prove the discussion took place so the company could then bill Medicaid for the service. “But we were doing that with people we wouldn’t even see because we were so behind,” Hager said.

Hager said he doesn’t blame low-level peer support specialists for falsely logging group notes. Many peer support specialists, newly in recovery and overworked, were following orders from their supervisors or didn’t know any better, he said. Hager counts himself among them.

“I’m not justifying it,” he said. “When we were doing it we didn’t know it was a bad thing.”

Dustin Cornett, 34, was a client at Crown. After years of addiction, Cornett, who’s from South Eastern Kentucky, admitted himself in 2022 to ARC. He said he was disappointed when he attended peer support groups that largely consisted of watching popular movies. “We never did a damn thing,” he said. “We all knew it was just a money racket, an insurance scam.”

Peer support staff said they were asked to meet billing “quotas” each week. Pressure to meet those expectations sometimes resulted in staff falsely recording group notes, said Hager and Beckie Rose-Bowman, who was initially a client at ARC and later director of Riverplace, a 120-bed ARC facility in Pikeville, which has since closed.

“There were days I had peer support groups booked back-to-back in one- and two-hour increments with no space in between,” Rose-Bowman said. Billing was “100% their emphasis,” she said. ARC supervisors above her monitored peer support group attendance and would “come down” on staff if their attendance was short in the notes they submitted for billing, Rose-Bowman remembered. Other times, if a client was missing from a group, staff would count them as being present, she said.

In addition to denying that ARC encouraged such fraud, Keeton, the company spokesperson, said it had processes in place to ensure appropriate billing. “When issues are identified, for example, a peer support group watching a movie rather than receiving prescribed services, corrective action is taken immediately, and those services are not billed,” she said.

A woman with windswept hair and glasses, wearing a black-and-white striped top, stands in front of a blurred building and looks away from the camera.
Beckie Rose-Bowman in downtown Louisa. She and other ARC peer support staff said they were asked to meet billing “quotas” each week. Ryan C. Hermens/Lexington Herald-Leader

“I Don’t Have Enough Staff”

As ARC expanded, its staffing shortage grew more dire.

Lack of staff, including licensed clinicians, was one of several “systemic deficiencies” the Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family Services found during the 2025 investigation of ARC’s operations.

State officials conducted multiple site visits at three of ARC’s largest centers after a client died in July 2025 at Riverplace, where Shirley worked. The probe, which lasted from August to November 2025, was also partly triggered by separate allegations that clients “did not receive timely or appropriate care.” The report did not disclose the source of the allegations.

Keeton said the company was “extremely saddened” by the client’s death and, following an internal review, concluded there was “no indication that the death resulted from any action or inaction on the part of ARC.”

But those Kentucky investigators concluded that ARC operated with an “absence of qualified, licensed clinical personnel,” calling it a “sustained and systemic pattern.” In some instances, state investigators found clients were recording and reporting their own vital signs, a violation of state and clinical rules.

That full report, obtained by the Herald-Leader and ProPublica, shows employees regularly complained to ARC supervisors and administrators with “persistent concerns” that a shortage of staff was putting clients’ health and safety at risk and hamstringing staff’s ability to properly run groups. 

ARC staff raised this issue to supervisors and state investigators, according to the report, saying “it feels like we are working around the clock” and “my life is about to become unmanageable because I don’t have enough staff.” Another employee, according to the findings, implied the shortage was so dire, “I am scared to take vacation.”

To help deal with the shortages, the company began sending clients to its own college to get trained as counselors to work at ARC. Roughly 60% of ARC’s workforce is former clients, the company’s spokesperson said.

ARC said it disputed the findings of the report to the state and requested a hearing. It noted that the Cabinet did not suspend or close the facilities and that the company “continues to operate and accept clients across all applicable levels of care with the knowledge and approval of the Cabinet.”

The state said the report has not been released because the investigation was ongoing. 

People inside the company said that those newly trained staff were often used when ARC couldn’t provide regular visits with licensed clinical professionals.

Shannon Gray, who started at ARC in 2021 and oversaw all treatment services there until early 2025, said clients rarely saw psychologists and counselors and did not receive enough treatment from more highly trained clinicians. Instead, ARC relied too much on peer-led sessions billed under peer support and psychoeducation, Gray said.

“From a therapeutic value, (that’s) too many services, too many groups,” said Gray, who also wrote the curriculum that Shirley and others used when leading groups. “I argued it many times, but even though I voiced concern, I still stayed there, so I’ll call myself out on this.”

A bald man wearing dark jeans, a polo shirt and a necklace with a cross stands with his hands in his pockets. The background is a blurred road and buildings with vegetation.
Shannon Gray at his home in Lawrenceburg, Kentucky. Gray said he argued against ARC’s reliance on peer-led treatment. Ryan C. Hermens/Lexington Herald-Leader

The state’s 2025 investigative report agreed with Gray, saying unlicensed employees at ARC were often asked to do jobs for which they were not qualified, such as medication oversight. This was “despite the lack of licensure, training and clinical competency required by state regulation,” the Cabinet found.

The draft DOJ settlement alleges something similar: Between 2018 and March 2024, ARC “knew or recklessly disregarded” Medicaid rules by allowing unlicensed staff — “practitioners that did not have a professional credential” — to bill for behavioral health services that should’ve been provided by a therapist or professional counselor.

Shirley, who had minimal training, said the company’s computer billing system only allowed him to bill peer support groups under the psychoeducation code, which yielded a higher reimbursement rate, even if a clinician wasn’t present with him when leading a group.

“There was never a discussion about any other code to use,” said Shirley, adding that he didn’t know at the time how lucrative the psychoeducation code was. He only knew “everybody was using it.”

Keeton disputed this allegation, saying that while ARC did receive millions from Medicaid for peer support and psychoeducation, “there was no directive requiring staff to bill exclusively under a single code.”

Legislators Step In

Today, Robinson’s grand vision has begun to unravel.

In 2024, the seven managed care organizations in Kentucky raised alarms in a letter to the state’s health and welfare agency citing high costs and poor outcomes.

That year Republicans in the Kentucky General Assembly acted, reducing the amount Medicaid would pay for psychoeducation and peer support, and ARC’s major source of income began to decline, state data shows. Republicans also reinstated the requirement that providers seek authorization from insurers before they provide services.

In March of this year, a Kentucky lawmaker introduced a bill that outlawed billing for psychoeducational services in the state. The legislature delivered the bill to Beshear’s desk in late March. It is awaiting his decision.

Kentucky Republican state Rep. Kim Moser, the bill’s sponsor, said the measure is urgent because billing for psychoeducation has grown exponentially.

“We can look at the numbers and see that it’s being overused,” Moser said. “I just think we need to do something about it.”

ARC continues to bill Medicaid and Medicare. But since the state’s cuts to Medicaid payments for certain services, and the launch of the FBI investigation in 2024, ARC has laid off hundreds of employees and shuttered dozens of facilities, leaving some clients homeless.

Last year, ARC’s founder tried to sell off most of the company in part to pay the DOJ’s settlement, according to the creditors’ suit, but that deal fell through in December. When the two loan companies sued ARC in January 2026 for allegedly refusing to pay back millions they were owed, they claimed ARC was in “desperate financial straits” and facing “imminent bankruptcy.”

ARC claimed in a separate filing it needed that money for operating costs and called the demands for repayment “unduly burdensome.” The company is still seeking a buyer.

Even with the recent changes, lawmakers say Medicaid spending on drug treatment is still too high. In part this is because “there’s big money in making sure that addicts don’t actually enter into recovery,” Kentucky state Sen. Chris McDaniel, who co-chairs the legislature’s appropriations and revenue committee, said during a Feb. 24 hearing.

“I’ve never met an industry that can so effectively obfuscate the results of their work as the substance use industry,” he said in the February hearing. “At some point, we have to ask ourselves, how much of Medicaid is about patients, and how much is about profits?”

As for Shirley, he was laid off last year. He now works at a different residential recovery center in Western Kentucky — a move that he said opened his eyes to how poorly clients were treated at ARC and how little clinical care they received.

“Their model is not to help clients,” he said of ARC. “For them, it’s a revolving door. It’s warehousing.”

Keeton said this assessment isn’t reflective of ARC’s mission or the success of the thousands of individuals it serves. “We don’t ‘warehouse’ people,” she said. “We invest in them.”

The post They Needed Treatment for Drug Addiction. The Company They Turned to May Have Used Them to Commit Fraud. appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-09 05:00

A collage of a photo of a hugging couple over the image of a darkened hospital and excerpt from a malpractice court ruling.
Connecticut’s Waterbury Hospital, where Bob Dorn died, was among the Prospect Medical hospitals where the for-profit company had promised to fund its own malpractice costs. Photo illustration by ProPublica. Photos by Tyler Russell/Connecticut Public via Getty Images, courtesy Pamela Dorn.

The collapse of Prospect Medical, a for-profit hospital chain plundered by private equity and the company’s management, has generated a painful litany of woes.

Amid a debt-fueled acquisition spree that saw the small California company grow to 17 hospitals in six states, Prospect was repeatedly cited for dangerous medical care, poor infection control and unsanitary facilities. The company stiffed state and local governments on more than $135 million in taxes and didn’t pay vendors for equipment, services and supplies. It shuttered four safety-net hospitals in a Philadelphia suburb that it had promised to keep open, laying off thousands. 

Now, more than a year after the company filed for bankruptcy in January 2025, a new layer of harm has emerged: Prospect had promised to provide malpractice coverage for its hospitals and many of its doctors, but court filings show it set aside no money to pay those costs — or to compensate injured patients. 

As a result, hundreds of people with pending malpractice cases against the company may never have a shot at meaningful redress.

One of them is Pamela Dorn. The lawsuit she filed against Prospect in 2024 has stalled, and it’s now doubtful she’ll ever be able to hold the company accountable for the negligent care she says it provided her husband. 

Bob Dorn, 75, suffered from such severe dementia that he couldn’t chew and was on a liquid diet. But when he became aggressive in March 2022 and was taken to Prospect’s emergency room in Waterbury, Connecticut, the medical staff sedated him, then left him unattended with a meal of macaroni and cheese and broccoli, according to Dorn’s lawsuit and an interview with her. Hospital staff later found her husband choking and struggling to breathe. He was intubated and taken to the intensive care unit but never regained consciousness. His death certificate said he died from asphyxia due to food blocking his airway.

A man and a woman embrace in a hug, standing in a sunlit kitchen.
Bob and Pamela Dorn in their kitchen in Connecticut in 2021, a year before his death Courtesy Pamela Dorn

“I didn’t want the same thing to happen to somebody else,” Dorn said, explaining why she filed the case. “How a hospital system operates without malpractice insurance is beyond me. It’s irresponsible.” (In court filings, attorneys for Prospect and the ER doctors have denied the negligence allegations.) 

Compounding the shock for plaintiffs like Dorn, as well as former Prospect doctors and their lawyers, is that Prospect wasn’t legally obligated to prove it could actually pay its malpractice costs. 

Like a growing number of health care companies, Prospect had saved money by “self-insuring” against these claims. Instead of paying premiums to a commercial insurer, the company pledged to pay directly for the legal defense of its facilities and doctors and to cover negotiated settlements or trial awards up to certain amounts — for many cases, up to $7.5 million. 

States typically require commercial insurers to file audited statements showing they’ve set aside sufficient funds for malpractice obligations and to contribute to a guaranty fund that pays a portion of claims if an insurer goes belly-up. 

But there’s little oversight — and no safety-net fund to tap — when companies self-insure. The problem has also surfaced in the bankruptcies of two other private-equity-backed health care companies, the Steward hospital chain and Genesis HealthCare, once the nation’s largest nursing home company. (Genesis agreed to at least 155 malpractice settlements totalling $58 million but filed for bankruptcy before paying most plaintiffs, KFF Health News reported. The company denied wrongdoing.)

“It seems like a gaping hole,” said Connecticut Rep. Cristin McCarthy Vahey, who co-chairs the state legislature’s public health committee. She called Prospect’s lack of coverage “awful, devastating and infuriating. … What has happened with Prospect is like peeling an onion. The more we peel, the more we cry.”

In emailed responses to questions from ProPublica, insurance regulators in Connecticut, Rhode Island and Pennsylvania said they are troubled by the harm caused by Prospect’s failure to fund malpractice coverage, a problem they hadn’t encountered before. All said they have limited authority to regulate companies that self-insure. 

In Connecticut, where Prospect owned three hospitals, a spokesperson for the insurance department wrote that state law allows health systems “to meet malpractice obligations through self-insured options” and the agency has no responsibility for “solvency oversight.” Prospect also owned insurance subsidiaries that provided some coverage for its hospitals. But they were headquartered in Vermont and offshore, in the Cayman Islands — which is legal but puts them beyond Pennsylvania’s reach, a spokesperson for the state’s insurance department said.

Rhode Island requires hospital companies to receive formal approval to self-insure and to submit financial information annually to regulators, but a spokesperson for the state Department of Business Regulation acknowledged Prospect had filed no such documents since 2019, despite self-insuring until 2025 when it filed for bankruptcy. Agency records show the state has taken no action against the company. (Open investigations are confidential, and the spokesperson said he could not comment on whether one is underway.) 

Connecticut plaintiff attorney Mike D’Amico, who represents Dorn, has been handling malpractice cases for four decades. The Prospect situation is “a disaster” and “something I’ve never seen before,” he said. “You have a lot of people that have been harmed by negligent conduct that have no recourse.” 


Prospect, which ProPublica reported on in 2020, has become a case study on the public harms that can stem from private equity’s growing involvement in health care. In the decade after Leonard Green & Partners bought majority control of Prospect in 2010, the firm and the company’s founders, Sam Lee and David Topper, together extracted $658 million in fees and dividends for themselves and other investors, according to Securities and Exchange Commission filings and financial statements. This starved the business of money for staffing, maintenance and critical supplies while loading it up with debt. 

Unable to find an outside buyer for the now financially decimated company, Leonard Green finally sold its majority stake back to Lee and Topper in 2021. Prospect’s January 2025 bankruptcy filing came just four days after the release of a bipartisan U.S. Senate Budget Committee investigation into how private-equity ownership affects care. Titled “Profits Over Patients,” the report offered a harsh verdict on Prospect, saying its “primary focus was on financial goals rather than quality of care at their hospitals,” and that it had caused “the collapse of critical health care services in the communities it served.” Prospect, which has denied any misconduct or negligent care, has now sold or closed all of its hospitals.

Leonard Green, which disputed the Senate report’s conclusions, declined  to respond to questions from ProPublica. Lee, estimated to have personally received $128 million from the company, could not be reached for comment; an attorney who previously represented him did not respond to a call and email. Topper, who received $94 million from Prospect through a family trust, responded to questions posed by a reporter in a brief phone conversation with “no comment.” 

Prospect’s bankruptcy filing placed an automatic hold on more than 300 lawsuits filed against the company, seeking a total of more than $800 million in damages, according to bankruptcy court filings. Some of the malpractice cases awaiting resolution were near settlement or scheduled to go to trial when the hold began. Many alleged egregious harms, including wrongful deaths or debilitating injuries requiring costly care.

The widower of a 39-year-old physician sued the company in state court in Hartford, Connecticut, in 2022, alleging his wife died from negligent care following an emergency cesarean section at the Prospect hospital where she worked. Parents of a 10-month-old boy filed suit in state court in Philadelphia in 2023, claiming he’d required multiple operations (and eventually removal of his esophagus) after ER doctors failed to conduct tests revealing that he’d swallowed a button battery. A 2019 Pennsylvania case claimed a man’s bowel was perforated during a hernia repair, triggering life-threatening complications that required five more surgeries. In court filings in each of these cases, Prospect, its hospitals and its doctors denied the allegations of malpractice, negligence or wrongful death.

The insurance chaos began to surface in late October, after the Texas judge presiding over Prospect’s bankruptcy lifted the initial litigation hold. Her move followed failed efforts to persuade private insurers responsible for covering awards in excess of what Prospect’s self-insurance provided to kick in money for mediated settlements. The private insurers’ reasoning, according to bankruptcy court filings: their “reinsurance” contracts required them to pay only in cases where Prospect had already paid its entire share, similar to an auto insurance deductible.

In Connecticut and Rhode Island, Prospect had promised to pay $7.5 million for each lawsuit before any outside coverage kicked in. In Pennsylvania, Prospect relied on another form of self-insurance: a Vermont-based insurance subsidiary. That business was supposed to pay the first $500,000 of Pennsylvania malpractice costs, but it appears Prospect underfunded the subsidiary. (By exactly how much remains unclear.) Complicating matters further: For Pennsylvania cases filed after October 2020, the subsidiary wasn’t required to contribute until after Prospect had covered the first $250,000.

There are similar problems in California, where Prospect sold its six hospitals in the bankruptcy proceedings to a new for-profit company. Los Angeles attorney Judith Tishkoff, whose firm has represented Prospect for years, last week filed to withdraw from seven malpractice cases, saying Prospect’s general counsel has told her there is no insurance coverage and no money to pay any defense costs or legal fees.

Even those who win court awards or settlements against Prospect seem destined to be treated as unsecured claims in the company’s bankruptcy. Like vendors with unpaid bills for hospital linens and bandages, they’re likely to receive just pennies on the dollar, bankruptcy lawyers told ProPublica. Some plaintiffs lawyers, who get paid on a contingency basis, say they’re declining to take on new malpractice cases involving Prospect, given the difficulty of obtaining any recovery. 

Pennsylvania attorney Leonard Sloane is among them. “It’s a gamble to take on a new case,” said Sloane. “To pursue one of these claims is very expensive. There’s gotta be something at the end, otherwise what’s the sense of pursuing on behalf of a client who gets nothing?” Sloane represents the survivors of a 67-year-old woman who died in 2022 after a Prospect surgeon performing a partial lung removal mistakenly cut a pulmonary vein, leading to a cascade of complications. The doctor acknowledged in medical records that he’d made “a technical mistake,” but the lawyer representing him and Prospect has moved to throw out claims for punitive damages, denying his actions met the legal standard of “recklessness.” Sloane, who has been practicing for 50 years, believes the family’s case is strong, “but if there’s no coverage, that’s the end.”

Prospect promised the doctors it employed malpractice coverage, but those facing lawsuits have learned they may have to foot hundreds of thousands in legal costs personally, plus any settlements or court awards.

Dr. John Horan, 69, is a family physician in Rhode Island who has been practicing medicine for 41 years. He sold his practice to Prospect in 2016 and worked for the company until 2022. That year, the family of a patient who died filed a lawsuit blaming him for failing to diagnose her lung cancer. Horan denies he’s at fault. In December 2025, Horan’s lawyer told him Prospect was refusing to defend him or pay any of his costs. “I was nauseous for the next month,” he told ProPublica. Horan and his wife have met with a bankruptcy lawyer.

Paul Galamaga, Horan’s defense attorney, said he was handling 10 Prospect-related cases in Rhode Island when the company filed for bankruptcy. Prospect owes him about $183,000. He’s won court approval to withdraw from seven of the lawsuits but continues to represent Horan and two other physicians, who he says will now have to pay him personally. “There’s no money to pay me or defend any of the doctors,” Galamaga said.

Some defense lawyers have sought to reimpose a freeze on proceedings, citing the uncertainty about Prospect’s ability to pay. In Pennsylvania, attorney Ben Post, whose firm is listed in court filings as defense counsel in 16 Prospect malpractice lawsuits, filed motions late last year seeking to clamp a stay on several malpractice cases. If he didn’t get it, he said, he’d have “no choice” but to withdraw. 

In response to one such filing, plaintiffs attorney Francis Curran wrote that his 83-year-old client had been seeking redress for her husband’s death for nine years. “With each additional delay,” he said, “it becomes less and less likely that Plaintiff will receive just compensation during her lifetime.” (Although one of Post’s stay requests has already been denied, a lawyer his firm has retained to help navigate the insurance uncertainty said Post has no immediate plans to withdraw from any cases.)

In February, the Rhode Island legislature approved an $18 million emergency loan guarantee to assure the long-delayed sale of Prospect’s two struggling Providence-area hospitals, Our Lady of Fatima and Roger Williams Medical Center, to a Georgia-based nonprofit. Rep. Charlene Lima took to the floor to talk about the risk to local physicians left without promised malpractice coverage, warning that it could force them into bankruptcy and worsen the shortage of primary care doctors in Rhode Island. 

“The state shares culpability in this situation,” Lima said in an interview, adding that she’d support regulations to ensure this doesn’t happen again. “We weren’t looking at this or regulating this. It’s like nobody was watching the henhouse except the foxes maybe.” 

The harms of porous insurance oversight have also surfaced in the bankruptcy of Steward Health Care, an even larger hospital chain bankrolled by private equity. 

Backed by giant Cerberus Capital Management in 2010, Steward grew to 37 hospitals over a decade. In 2021, Cerberus exited the investment with a reported $800 million in profits, while Steward CEO Ralph de la Torre, a former heart surgeon who reaped more than $250 million from the company, bought himself a $40 million yacht. Three years later, Steward filed for bankruptcy, owing hundreds of millions to vendors and employees and facing accusations of fraud and abysmal patient care

(Cerberus declined to respond to questions from ProPublica, instead pointing to a public statement in which it said Steward’s problems “appear to be overwhelmingly related to the post-Cerberus ownership period.” A spokesperson for de la Torre, who led the ownership group until he resigned in late 2024, said he “firmly disputes” the allegations against him, “including claims of greed and bad-faith misconduct,” and intends to “vigorously defend himself against them.”)

To cover its malpractice costs, Steward operated a self-insurance subsidiary, called TRACO, which it had relocated to Panama, where it faced little regulatory oversight. According to a Boston Globe investigation, instead of setting aside adequate reserves, Steward treated TRACO like “a piggy bank,” siphoning out hundreds of millions to pay operating costs and buy more hospitals. By 2024, when Steward went bankrupt, TRACO had just $3.5 million left to defend and pay for more than 500 malpractice lawsuits, according to documents cited by the Globe.

Last year, a malpractice case brought against a Steward hospital outside Salt Lake City went before a Utah state judge. It involved allegations that a 19-year-old pregnant woman’s delivery was botched by inexperienced, ill-trained nurses. According to medical records and court testimony, they gave her overdoses of the labor-inducing drug Pitocin, starving her baby of blood and oxygen, then ignored fetal monitoring that signaled distress while an on-call doctor dozed in a room nearby. The baby suffered brain damage that has left her largely unable to speak. She is likely to remain disabled for life. 

Steward’s defense lawyers had withdrawn after the company stopped paying and communicating with them, leaving the family and its expert witnesses to present their case. In an emotional 42-minute discourse from the bench, Judge Patrick Corum said what had happened “literally took my breath away.” The family “would have been better off delivering this baby in the bathroom of a gas station, or in a hut somewhere in Africa, than in this hospital,” he declared. In October, he awarded the family $543.2 million in damages, one of the biggest malpractice awards in Utah’s history.

The injured child is now 6 and requires costly care. But because TRACO has no money — and Steward’s “excess” insurers are refusing to step in because TRACO hasn’t paid its share — it’s unclear when, or whether, the family will get anything. David Creasy, the family’s attorney, said the battle to resolve the matter could take years. “We’ve got to be able to find some way to get them the money they need to take care of her,” he said in an interview. “There was absolutely no oversight of TRACO.”

The Steward and Prospect bankruptcies make clear “this is a national issue,” said Stacy Paterno, CEO of the Rhode Island Medical Society. Paterno said she has begun convening regular meetings with her counterparts from a half-dozen states where Prospect and Steward operated hospitals about the risks posed by unregulated self-insurance plans, both to doctors and injured patients.

Steward’s creditors are trying to claw back money from the company’s former leaders. In November, a Steward creditors committee filed a 178-page lawsuit against former CEO de la Torre and more than a dozen other individuals and corporate entities that details the company’s alleged plundering of TRACO’s insurance reserves. The complaint does not name Cerberus as a defendant but suggests Cerberus may be a future target of the creditors’ “ongoing” investigation. (In court filings, de la Torre and other Steward defendants have denied the creditor lawsuit’s allegations.)

Prospect’s creditors are poised to launch a similar effort. The bankruptcy court has  approved $10 million to pursue legal claims against former Prospect principals, with Leonard Green and Prospect’s former top executives, Lee and Topper, as the big targets. “We really do believe there are potentially hundreds of millions” that can be recouped from those who “may have contributed to the downfall of this company,” Charles Persons, an attorney for the unsecured creditors committee, told the judge at a Dec. 12 court hearing. 

It’s unclear how much might be recovered, but it would likely be a fraction of what the company owes, and malpractice victims would share these funds with thousands of other unsecured creditors.

“The folks who have the lawsuits,” said D’Amico, the lawyer representing Dorn, “essentially go to the bottom of the barrel.”

The post For-Profit Hospital Chain Never Put Aside Money for Malpractice Insurance to Compensate Injured Patients appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-04-14 16:04
2026-04-08 08:46

Can Viktor Orbán lose Hungary’s high-stakes election? Expert comment jon.wallace

Perhaps, but change will not mean transformation.

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Hungary’s parliamentary election on 12 April has implications reaching well beyond Budapest. After 16 years in power, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán is facing a sustained, credible challenge from Péter Magyar, whose Tisza Party is ahead in most independent polling (though it is not beyond reach).

The outcome of the contest will shape Hungary’s internal trajectory, the European Union (EU)’s ability to act cohesively, and the balance of influence between Russia and the West in Central Europe. It will also stress test President Donald Trump’s emerging network of like-minded political allies in Europe.

Vice President JD Vance’s visit to Hungary this week, in open support of Orbán, marks an unusually direct form of US political engagement in a European election – and deepening division between Washington and its traditional transatlantic allies.

Much more than a government: a system

From a purely domestic perspective, this election is less a simple choice between continuity and change than a test of how deeply a political system has been embedded.

Over the past decade, Hungary has developed a model characterized by strong centralization and an active role for the state in the economy. 

This has translated into concrete policies: caps on energy prices, direct support schemes for households, and a state-led approach to strategic sectors. At the same time, economic pressures have become more visible. Inflation has eroded purchasing power, and public finances are tighter than in previous electoral cycles.

Another crucial aspect of Hungary’s model is a political narrative centred on sovereignty and resistance to external constraints. Órban’s relationship with the EU has been one of continuous, deepening dispute: over issues ranging from the rule of law and migration to the war in Ukraine.   

Nearly 20 billion in EU funds remain frozen as a result. Delays or conditions attached to EU funding are now visible in Hungary: infrastructure projects have been postponed. Fewer development grants are being issued to businesses. And there is more limited room for public spending. 

Having made confrontation with the EU a central point of its project, the Orbán system now sees that strategy turning back on itself manifesting in delayed funds, tighter budgets, and fewer policy options. The political price could be deadly.

Hungary and the EU: towards greater friction or more alignment?

The election matters for the EU’s internal dynamics. Hungary has repeatedly used its position to delay or reshape collective decisions, particularly on financial support for Ukraine. This has created friction within the EU, where unanimity remains necessary on key foreign policy issues.

Election victory for Orbán would likely intensify calls by Germany and others to introduce qualified majority voting in the EU to minimize Budapest’s spoiling power.

A change in leadership could reduce Hungarian blockages. However, it would not automatically align Hungary with all mainstream EU positions. On migration, for example, popular opinion within the country would likely remain cautious. 

On Ukraine and Russia, Hungary has maintained a distinctive position within the EU, combining formal alignment with sanctions and NATO commitments with a more cautious at times opportunistically pragmatic approach towards Moscow. This has included continued energy cooperation with Russia, and a more restrained stance on military support for Ukraine.

Recent unverified reports that Orbán told Vladimir Putin, during a 2025 telephone conversation, that ‘I am at your service’, will reinforce concerns in European capitals about Hungary’s relationship with Russia, and its implications for EU cohesion. So too will a Politico report of government efforts to deepen ties with Moscow through a 12 point plan.

A government led by Péter Magyar might recalibrate this balance. But the underlying constraints any Hungarian government will face geographic, economic, and political would not disappear overnight.

An inevitable part of continuity

The prospect of change needs to be framed with caution here. Péter Magyar is not an outsider seeking to dismantle the system from the ground up, but a political insider who understands how it operates.

His campaign has deliberately avoided presenting the election as a clash between two irreconcilable ‘Hungarys’. That positioning matters. It points to a scenario in which any change is likely to be selective and progressive rather than systemic and outright. 

Some areas could shift relatively quickly. Relations with Brussels may stabilize, unlocking parts of EU funding. And the tone of foreign policy may adjust, not least towards Kyiv and Moscow. 

But other elements are more deeply embedded: the central role of the state in the economy, or more importantly, the significance of large-scale energy projects.

On energy policy: change at the margins

The war in the Gulf brought energy security back to the forefront of the campaign. 
Energy policy choices are often presented as purely political, but they are also shaped by structural constraints. 

Hungary’s Paks nuclear power plant generates around half of the country’s electricity. The construction of new reactors relies on Russian technology and financing through Rosatom, the Russian state energy company. And Hungary’s gas infrastructure has historically been oriented towards Russian supply routes.

Under a Magyar government the likely trajectory is not a clean break with Russia, but a gradual rebalancing.

Recent events have underlined the vulnerability of this infrastructure. At the weekend, explosives were discovered in Serbia near a pipeline that supplies Russian gas to Hungary. 

Ukraine claims the incident may amount to a Russian false-flag operation. Although not improbable, that remains unproven. But the episode illustrates that energy dependence is not only an economic issue, but a strategic one.

Diversifying away from dependence on Russian energy is possible. But it requires years of investment in alternative pipelines, grid upgrades, and regional coordination limiting any government’s room for manoeuvre in the short term.

EU expectations should be calibrated accordingly. Under a Magyar government the likely trajectory is not a clean break with Russia, but a gradual rebalancing shaped as much by practical constraints as by political intent.

A campaign turning rogue?

The conduct of the election campaign itself has also attracted attention. Journalists and NGOs have alleged practices that blur the line between policy and political mobilization particularly in economically vulnerable areas.

The government is accused of distributing material benefits and public employment schemes to secure the votes of key voters, and organizing transport to polling stations to facilitate their support. 

This is often described in political debate as ‘vote buying’. But the more substantiated pattern points to localized patronage networks and forms of dependency, rather than systematic cash-for-votes schemes at scale. 

This might not be enough to invalidate the electoral outcome. However, it does indicate that competition is taking place on an increasingly uneven playing field, shaped in part by clientelist practices  in which Orbán is likely to mobilize all available resources until the very end

The moon may rise, but will not simply replace the sun…

What emerges from all this is a picture of constrained choice rather than clear alternatives. Hungary’s economic policy is shaped by limited fiscal space and conditional external funding. Energy strategy is influenced by long-term infrastructure and existing dependencies. Foreign policy sits at the intersection of EU membership, NATO commitments, and pragmatic considerations.

2026-04-15 12:04
2026-04-08 05:00

A woman with black hair, wearing a black, long-sleeve T-shirt with a screenprint of a lucha libre mark on the front, and blue jean shorts, holds up a sign with the slogan “FOOD - NOT - BOMBS” amid a crowd of protesters, some also carrying signs, in front of a red brick building with windows.
People attend a November rally in support of SNAP benefits in Phoenix. Alexandra Buxbaum/Sipa USA/Reuters

More than 400,000 Arizonans have lost their SNAP benefits since July — the largest decline in the nation by a wide margin — as an underfunded state agency administered changes called for in President Donald Trump’s so-called One Big Beautiful Bill Act.

The drop represents nearly 47% of the state’s participants in the program better known as food stamps and includes about 180,000 children, according to the Arizona Department of Economic Security, which administers the program.

On Wednesday, the nonpartisan Center on Budget and Policy Priorities released data through February showing that the reduction in Arizona has far outstripped other states. After Arizona, the largest loss of participants was in Florida, where less than 16% of recipients lost benefits since July, according to the center’s analysis.

Arizona officials attribute the plunging caseload to swift implementation of policy changes forced by the bill, including new work requirements.

But interviews suggest that Arizona’s efforts to comply, combined with cuts to the agency that runs the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, have contributed to the decline — making it more difficult to apply and causing people who are eligible to be denied. The state’s drop has exceeded previous projections.

“Arizona is just the alarm bell,” said Joseph Palomino, executive director of the Arizona Center for Economic Progress, a nonpartisan advocacy organization. “This is likely going to happen in every state.”

The bill, which places a larger share of the program’s costs onto states, expanded work requirements for some recipients and eliminated work exemptions for others, such as people who are homeless or aging out of foster care.

In addition, the bill mandates that states reduce their payment error rates — which measure the accuracy of eligibility and payment determinations — or face millions in penalties. Although some changes don’t fully take effect until the fall, experts say Arizona’s experience suggests people are already going hungry as a result of the legislation’s changes.

Charisma Garcia, a 25-year-old mother of two, has tried for months to obtain an interview to complete a SNAP application. After weeks calling the agency only to get a recorded message, she woke before sunrise recently to wait in line at an Arizona Department of Economic Security office in south Phoenix.

A security guard told her the agency wasn’t doing in-person interviews, so she headed to a food bank instead. She needed to feed her children, ages 3 and 6.

“I need to do the thing that gets me the food,” she said.

Brett Bezio, a spokesperson for DES, said the agency is focusing on reducing the state’s error rate to ensure “the program remains a stable resource for vulnerable Arizonans.” Although Arizona’s rate of 8.8% is below the national average, the new federal regulations require that it be brought down to 6%. If officials don’t reduce the rate, Arizona could face penalties of $195.4 million in two years, which is more than double the amount it pays to operate the program. The department said it expects participation to stabilize in the months ahead.

The choices Arizona is making are “a reality that every state is facing,” said Katie Bergh, a senior policy analyst with the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. Congress created a “terrible incentive” by requiring states to reduce their error rate and shoulder more of the program’s costs, she said.

Nationwide, SNAP enrollment plummeted 8% from December 2024 to December 2025, according to estimates from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which runs SNAP. Trump has touted it as a success.
“We lifted 3.3 million Americans off of food stamps,” he said, referencing figures since he took office. “That’s a record.”

Arizona Saw the Biggest Drop in SNAP Participation of All States Since Congress Passed Megabill

The state showed monthly drops after the bill became law on July 4.

A chart showing percentage changes in SNAP program participation for all 50 states from July to December 2025. After July 4, when the so-called One Big Beautiful Bill Act became law, participation in some states began to fall. Arizona declined 32%, the most of any state, by December.
Note: U.S. territories not shown. Program data for North Dakota in October 2025 was excluded from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities’ analysis and also is not shown. Sources: CBPP analysis of U.S. Department of Agriculture and state SNAP programs data. Chris Alcantara/ProPublica

Asked about the sharp decline in SNAP participants, Gov. Katie Hobbs’ press secretary, Liliana Soto, blamed Trump administration policies, which have “increased bureaucracy and red tape on states across the country, and forced DES to take difficult but necessary steps to reduce the state’s payment error rate.” Hobbs’ administration is taking these steps “to avoid staggering fines of hundreds of millions of dollars that would further endanger food assistance for vulnerable Arizonans,” Soto said in a statement.

But other factors have aggravated Arizona’s situation. In 2021, the state Legislature and then-Gov. Doug Ducey, a Republican, passed a flat 2.5% income tax largely benefiting the wealthy, which has forced more than $1 billion in spending cuts and fund swaps to balance the state budget in subsequent years. (Ducey has defended the flat tax as necessary to ensure the state continues to be competitive and “a jobs magnet and generator of opportunity.”)

Last summer, DES also laid off about 500 employees in response to the elimination of federal grants and in anticipation of additional federal cuts. Officials said that about 160 eligibility specialists lost their jobs, a 40% decline since July 2024. 

In December, Hobbs, a Democrat, allocated $7.5 million to DES, most of which was used to hire more than 100 workers and increase overtime to handle SNAP cases. A spokesperson said applications are also slowed by “1980s technology” it uses to administer benefits.

Hobbs asked for an additional $48.4 million in her 2027 budget proposal to help the department administer SNAP.  The most recent federal data, from 2023, shows that the state spends $70 million to operate the $2 billion program.

Meanwhile, some seeking SNAP assistance told ProPublica that their applications remain in limbo, sometimes for months.

Garcia, the mother of two, said she will keep trying to obtain the benefits. She’s looking for work as a cook after being laid off from a car wash in January. Her family is living with her grandparents, where groceries are shared among six people.

Sometimes, her 3-year-old pats his belly when he’s hungry for his favorite fruits like strawberries. At times, she hasn’t received fruit in the boxes she receives from the food bank.

“I’m in a pinch,” she said. “I’m struggling.

The post “The Alarm Bell”: Arizona’s Drop in SNAP Participation Signals Potential Nationwide Impact of Trump Legislation appeared first on ProPublica.

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